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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1898)
His Sweetheart—When yon know I wanted to hear from you so much, Harry, after that battle, why didn’t you send me at least two words by ca j*ial Try Allen’s Font-Eaae. A powder to he shaken Into the J shoes. At this season your feet feel I swollen, nervous and hot, and get tired j easily. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Koot-EaBe. It | "ools the feet and makes walking easy Cures swollen and sweating feet, blis- | ter» and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest , and comfort. Try It today. Sold by ! all druggists and shoe stores for 25c. j Trial package free. Address Allen B. Olmsted, L* Roy, N. Y. If we cannot live so as to be happy let us at least live so as to deserve it. To Coro vo.igiipauon Forever. Take < asoarets Candy Cathartic. incor"*. j U C. C. C. full to cure, druggists refund money, j Dare to do your duty always; tills i is the height of true valor. Wtirat 40 Cents » llunliel. How to grow wheat with big profit at 40 cents ami samples of Saber's Red Cross (so Bushels per acre) Winter Wheat, Rye, Oats. Clovers, etc., with Farm Seed Catalogue for 4 cent a postage .JOHN A. BARKER SEED CO., La Crosse, Win. w.u.u. A man’s wisdom Is his best friend; folly his worst enemy. ..I., ..-■ -■ ■ ... —-— • For a perfect complexion and a dear, healthy akin, use COSMO BUTTEEMIRk. SOAP. Bold everywhere. If you want to please some men Just tell them they look like actors. 1 miiimimiimni The way of truth is like a groat road It is not difficult to know It. The evl: is only that men will not seek It. To those visiting Denver we cannot say too much In praise of the American House. The table Is one of the best In the country, and the service is unsur passed any place. The artesian water used throughout, the house is known everywhere for its purity. These facts and rate, >2 per day, make it the most desirable house in Denver. To silence the voice of conscience, follow its dictation. Rlood-( .r»n ii£. Hon Eft-clean in# I* a duty iu every well regulated household. Feoide don't wait until the filth heroine* painfully apparent, but it stand* to reason that in every day use more or lees dust or dirt accumulate. It is so wit h the human blood. From the enormous variety of eatable* taken into the Ntonsaeh. a ijuautity of u*ele-* ma terial i* bound to accumulate iu the bloo i and clog the free and wholesome flow iu the veswfdx. Kvery per on should from limetot.m" have a “blood-cleaning' and the best cleanser and blood purifier is Crura ret* Candy Cathartic. W# recom mend them to all our reader*. Zeal without knowledge la worst, than dynamite. COSMO BCTTKllMILu YOiLET SOAP makes the skin soft, white and healthy. Sold everywhere. Departing modesty never buy* a re turn ticket. Meanly i* Hinou DMp. Clean Mood mean* acleun akin No beauty without It. Case u re I*. I’un-.y «*u»h.trMc cleans your blood and keep* It clean, by »tlr rlng up the lar.y liver hm<I driving allliupu rbies from ttie body. Begin today to bantnh pimple*, boll*, blotche*. b acklieuu*. and that •IcUly billou* complexion by taking c’nsca n*ii» beuuly for ten emu. All druggists, satisfaction guaranteed 10c. 89c. 50c. nmnmee e 19W¥¥ tsss 0m 110 ffhe hair is like a plant. What makes the plant fade and wither? Usually lack of necessary nourishment. The reason why I)r. Ayer’s Hair Vigor restores gray or faded hair to its normal color, stops hair from falling, and makes it grow, is because it supplies the nourishment the hair needs. “When a girl at school, in Reading, Ohio, 1 had a severe attack of brain fever. On my recovery. 1 found myself perfectly bald and, for n long time, 1 feared 1 should ho permanently so. Friends urged me to use Dr. Ayer’s Hair Vigor, and, on doing so, my hair immediately began to grow, and I now have as heavy and fine a head of hair as one could wish for, being changed, however, from blonde to dark brown.” -Mr*. J. H. HoRSNYDKIt, 152 Pacific Ave., Santa Crux, Cal. jlyer’s JCair Vig or. j | FAIRLY JUMPED INTO SUCCESS KEITH'S ENAMEL STARCH. RIGHT FROM THE VERY START ^Notwithstanding all the other starches on the market. Now, why was it, why Is it, that millions of packages of KEITH'S EHAMEL STARCH have been used in the lew years since this starch was invented? Just do vour ironing one month with KEITH'S ENAMEL STARCH and you will see. It makes ironing so easy, it puts on that beatiful enamel finish, that it puts it at I the head of every known aid for ironing. Manufactured by ' QjBggir KEITH ENAMEL STARCH CO.. CHICAGO, ILL. “DIRT IN THE HOUSE BUILDS THE HIGH WAY TO BEGGARY.” BE WISE IN TIME AND USE _SAPOLIO FROM FACTORY TO USER DIRECT, We imtke flue Surrey*. Buggies. Phaeton# nod IPad Wasroue.i |laiM ^ w#re* <mr K«M>d* haw been favorably known to the trade i- r year*.I Ra* one*. We now Sell direct «• the aarr ai Whalraal# Prirea. 'I be aluewdi (Nun mb *1. \VM« buyer prefer# to deal with the factory. He get# of ua flue'. ■ ' ■ " \UAUOT work at lea* price then agent* iok for low grace vebit lea. We ahlp anywhere. subject to ejtamlnatlAu. WE DK1.IYKK on board «art Kau*a« City. M<>.. or tbiahen. /V1 /* Ind., a# may *uM purchaser. Send for catalogue wlih price* plainly printed. r_ j | if'K PM if a. Write today We *ell >ewlng Mavbioe* and tbe GOkHK> lilt Yt LK a* \r~A | well. AH At WM»i*»*le Prirea ALL GOOD. \o metier where you ||\e. you are Dot \/ t«M» far evray to d<» htielne** with ua end *av* money. Addre»a. ^_ KDWAKl) W.WALKKKt AARIAbK VO.. <AONIIKN. INDIANA. W. N. O.OMAHA. NO. 30-1898 „ ^ ^ •'veft When Answering Advertisement* Kindly Mention This Taser. FURNITURE. fftO.OOO Stock of all trailek of Furniture reuently bought at the very lomat rash price will !*■ «(• fervddurlng tin' next few months at special prices. Customers visiting Omaha will timi this the largest ami oldest furniture store here, snd we will uiaue every effort to ptense both in goods aud prices Chas. Shiverick & Co., FLI'KITl Hit. 1206 Douglaa St. Omaha, Hill lu Kllltra Haiti tot* T*» MutU a* •>» • *•*.»•* tfe’t Atllvflltfib.dl M r«ftl ** fttil ft 4ift*<->«ftl »l i Ml • Ml -Ht |||« {i.r,fcft*» *»f ft.** t'Mlu**- fla «l ildtt ft* >M| *• •!»#*•* i*4 Vm •*« ftp II u<| lift* Ift#* • In r*< wft.ft.aft4 ho It* tlta** iftftli >) tfta | «A****f r«s» ftdft *«ft.ft ft ttefl lw»>*l ft UiM IN |n* Ii«4m| i ; DCIlQinUC^^^ rCHOIUHO count quick *1*1:01 otyuutlt Smm t,eu • ««* See tut <>HM. ft tutwiltlis p C •». Ipf l RdA*»*t*f. Ounrw.tNMM* ft*ft 9t»ftMl*ftllOft »>»<» ftdhid I »ft 'IN tftwf* Nil I'Mppwlft*** wfthft>ift* i*‘. “Aft At tiM stftfft >N eft 0, |l. CiftCIM! VCMOflS I Mm*s* tsaew ft *4*1 , ft ftftf ..pi ft *4fftft1-- | ft,,. tt *Pftft Nl t , A* tftftft % « tft*** 1 * % TAPE WORMS “A tape worm eighteen reel lou* at leant came »n the n.ein- aftci my taking two CASi AHETs. Thla I aui aure han cauneil my bait health for the pant three veura I am atilt taklug Caararete, the only catUartlc worthy of notice by aouaihlo pci<|i|r " lim W Bowiga. Ho.rd. Jtlaaa CANDY M CATHARTIC ^ kauzcjttiunb mJWVtfrlrff f#AO« MMS •IS4H4IO P'mmbi Tim*# u«mi f*o Uuuti "•*•« *•<'*•* WNlfb tt# Mr ft*' Ini ... OURt CONSTIPATION. ... » '»•* In* tlMIHP «MtPN>. (Ml Mi ■••TOMc ;Miri¥fcTSsULU:r o *.«••«•••»• 'Mft • ■ a« 1*4 *M# r# M ■ i*4 «44« Sn ti «■»•*•* ««4 MM4f tatlkl |w« * || *| I*. I.if |MB , ••***. I* *• (NM ll»** HM>I I 4«*.n i««m Mm Ism. •» ami 4 N«v»* •sMt.aai j DROPSY ***** *■ 0,4 ki fcwwft •**«**- •<***-« .<Mi 4 » 4*y*r W«iMb4M4l tVMSB IMI MMM owMMh MM—M 4* FAIRBANKS SCALES » PENSIONS, MATIN Tt CLAIMS ||OHN. IfOIIPIIJpjM •**«,«, • ft Abe. lOMM) MttlttMWMI I *4I| <I4I<« I Am r.pil. ETONE IN HER STOMACH. From the <iazrttr. BlantiiutvtIU, III. The wife of the Rev. A. R Adams, pasli i of the Bedford Christian Church at Blau i diusvilla 111., was for veara compelled tc | live a life of torture from disease. He case baffled the physicians, but today sin | is alive and well and tells tha story of hat j racovery as follows: 'About six years ago,” said Mrs Adams “I weighed about 140 pounds, but ray i beal.h began to fail and I lost flesh. My food did no; agree with me and felt like r. { stone in ray stomach. 1 l agan to bloat all i over until 1 thought 1 had dropsy. "1 had pains ami soreness in my left side which extended clear across my hack am! | also into the region of my heart. Durin these spells a hard ridge would appear in | the left side of my stomuch and around the left side. These attacks left me soro and ex hausted. AM last summer I was so nervo , | that the children laughing ami playing ! nearly drove mewild. 1 suffered also from female troubles ami doctored with ten dif ferent physicians without receiving any help. •'31y husband having read iu the news impel- of Dr. \V i 11 i a ni s’ 1’iuk Pills for Palo Peo ple, induced me to try them. I be gan taking the m last Novem be r but experi enced no re lief until 1 Im<l taken six I«iw. I am now tak „ ing the alev —» enth box and hare bean greatly Iteucflted. "I was also troubled with nervous pros tration and numbuasaor my right arm and hand so that at times I could hardly endure the pain, but that has all pasaad awav. I now have a good appatitt and am able to do my own work. Hare done more this summer than in the pait four years put together. Dr. Williams'Fink Pill's for I'ale People cured me. and I think it my duty to let other sufferers know it." I Hundreds of equally remarkable cases | hart baencured by I»r. Williams Pink Pills. Argument—Something that it takes a lot to get Ilea well established. "Murats your iiom ls yytth Caecarats. Canity Cathartic cure constipation forev, 10c, ;LVc. If CL CL C. fail, druggists refund money Usurer—The only man who takes tco much interest in hlx business. FROM TORONTO TO QUEBEC. .Something About an Attractive Pleasure Trip s d How to Ylake It. The famous Canadian corporation, the Richelieu and Ontario Navigation Company, hHs letued a Guide Hook, en titled "Niagara to the Sea,” which may he had by writing to the general offices of the company, 1!S8 St. Paul street, Montreal. Canada, anti which anyone who may be thinking of mik ing a pleasure trip through Lower | Canada this slimmer will lind It ad | vantageous to consult. The handsome anil commodious steamboats of the company traverse a route which for picturesque beauty and historic inter est is not surpassed, is barely equaled by any water highway in the world. Toronto, the western let minus of the line, a handsome, prosperous, bustling city. In Itself is well worth a visit, is easily and expeditiously reached from Niagara Palls, and from there the salt across Lake Ontario and down the St. Lawience River, past Kingston, Brock ville, Prescott and Cornwall and other well-known places to Montreal and Quebec is distinguished by a varied and abiding charm. The tourist passes among the far famed Thousand Islands, and, althougn he must not expect to spc the best of them from the deck of the bout, he will be able to get an idea of the secret of their singular attractiveness, ft the season is propitious—that is, during the months of July and August— ne will experience the peculiar sensation known only to those who have shot the Lachine and the Long Sault. Rapids, and when he reaches Montreal he will find himself In a city which combines many of the graces of the Old World with all the energetic progresslvene i of the new. Should he continue bis ■fnnrnrv In Onp}»pr* h« will fat*) c; though he had crossed the Atlantic and arrived at some ancient European cap ital. Montreal is in insist things rn modern as New York, hut Quebec, al though by no means wanting in the conveniences of life, seems to belong to a bygone century and to a noli', r world. It is essentially foreign an a I! the varied aspects of its life. From Quebec it is but a short jour ney to the Saguenay Itlver. which, oi the wild and awful sublimity of its environment, is Iteyoiid compare. Chivalry That good old age when people actually married for love. Mrs. miisiows Mouth lug My top ••hiunri. I e.tni g affb t— |WMI Nitilt •» Ml# mUob, tilt)e |«Ih, t’urw via*t • *» »•vuui •mill.' Qrntist -A man who looks ilonn in the mouth when he has to work A hath with COSMO Hl’TTKRMll.K SOAI*. eii|Ui>itely m eiited, I* sooltuug uiul beneficial. Sold everywhere. tiltinders-ln others synonymous with our own mistakes Csa’i Cssys HaIsass * Ihs hM*rt A*. I hMl It -III toes* MSSSSM SWlcSsr ISSA »s> I Ale# It A* slasi • tel**-.* hi II Kiss i wireless le egraph mer age to l he heart Me will forfeit fl.ww ll aa* «’ our pu>> itsheil iwuisiais i ara itutau le i« set geaaiae Ins i’i*u In, ii errs*. I'a Agreeable A p s-m who always agrees suit you tui t it v tas sum miiih| mi a AS 4s A * » itiusi.1 III ll. » A' I Is If 4 ara a is Ignorant he suut pub 1 tabes the fact its* To-Mae Ihs t.riy teal** ti*44■ !>♦ *■"« VajfMMi *r** to®**-! rkt^ #W*t## 4*Mtk «4«**«*^ W* 4 *»*»• * 41 |i kli 4f'•## **•* llti‘ W irM*f A Mxfl a I III# if) fell* I • I I ***** It I <|«# MltiMitf hk*, tV Uf mm m4h **> «Mty M I#* I ELECT Alt' LIGHTING. METHODS OF OPERATION ON STEAM RAILWAYS. Inn Not It* Hun lijr Regular Train I'otirr ou Arruant of Mo|it—Mftta'ul* In \ugu* on Kuropvau Railroad* - home Novel Idea*. From I ho New York Tribune: T.ic two systems of electric lighting wbb h are best known In America rely chiefly on the generation of the iteier: sary current by a dynamo In the bag rate i ur. In ore there Is a strum ert rine coupled to the dynamo and tab Ing strain from the locomotive boiler. Thb is tlie practice on the Chicago. Milwaukee anil ;>t. Patti road. Oi other line- Hip attempt ha-, been made to drive the dynamos with be t Ing or a sprocket. < liairr. from un extra wheel on the car axle. The latter plan would work only when the car was la motion were not a few cells of stor age battery employed to supply tli" lights with current when ihe tra' i tame to a it op. This resource hi ah > necessary in sleepers which stand In u terminal station for half an hour before the train slarts or on a slde tiack at a Junction, waiting for th? train on the trunk line to come along. In iMIUfitui /in t Via . >1 ime ti.ivi.-t l« t • customary to rely entirely on (h? storage battery, and not to general? the electricity on the train at all. At certain stations, usually terminal sta tion*, the battery Is taken out for charging, and one already c harged is quickly substituted. Where runs of only loo. 300 or 300 miles are made, the number and weight of the accu mulators would not be a serious con sideration. perhaps, but In America, where a person rides 1,00‘), 3,000 or 3,000 miles in the same car. the stor age battery system is almost out of the question. The cells would be so numerous and bulky ns to require more space than can v.ell be spared. In some respects America Is ahead of Europe In the matter of electric con venience* on railway train*. On cer tain western road* the limited ex presses, like flrst-daxc hotels, have electric heaters for women's curling Irons. A correspondent of the Rail road (Jazette. complaining of the* slow progress of electric' train lighting in this country, supplies sonic partic ulars a-- to the extent of the practice on the other side of the Atlantic. He writes from Berlin, and says: ' The electric system of car lighting e; tenrl* itself every day more over all Europe, and It certainly Is a queer co incidence • that at the same- period when Secretary Tbtelen. in whose sphere of administration garllght is exclusively e mployed, proclaimed him self against the electric system tin* general direction of the; slate railroads of Denmark resolved to intrcsline electric car lighting on all its lines. All the? railroads on the isle of Zea land, on which Copenhagen Is situa ted. have already electric lights. A few clays ago we received orders to furnish the storage batteries for llghl Ing the trains on all the lines of the Islands of Halster and Euhnen. At the same time they resolved to estab lish a charging station for storage butteries at Sirucr, In Jutland, to pli ably them to begin next year with the Introduction of electric car lighting on all the lines In Jutland. The railroads in Sw itzerland w ill now adopt electric car lighting, following the example of the Jiira-Slmplon railroad, so that in a few years all cars on the Swiss rail roads will be provided with electric light. Almost all the private railroads of Sweden and Norway have electric light, also nianv Hetman and Austrian private railroads, for Instance tits Dortmund-Oronau-Enscheder. Hie pro vineial railroad of Westphalia, the Mtd.i miu-Oolburg. the Marienburg Mlawka, the PrlEnllzthal. the Meoh lenbtiiK I'redetle-William, the Witten berg-I'erleberg. the Arad-t'zauud, ete. The Kmparor I'erdlnaod Northern and the Royal Hungarian railroad intru duee the system more and more. While in the beginning of 1890 In all Europe about ",000 ears had electric light, there must he now more than 6 00V Knew On* of i Usui. One day a pompous little fellow at a dinner table was boasting of the great men with whom he was on In timate term* lie hail been in lousiant correspondence with l.uiisf-lluw. had lunched with Tennyson, was in friend ly relations with the Ihirne of Wales, and. In i-hntt. knew everything and i everybody vt length a quiet tndtvl ! dual at the further end of the room ! broke In on the ion versa! Ion with the | question My dear sir did you hap ! pen to know the if lames# Twins when . they were In this country*'' Our hetu, who evidently had a tat- j j ut fur lying l>v no real g<nlu*. at j ! nice replied "The yttainese Twin* air’ Vt*. sir, j I l he* ins* very inuma'e with uae of! thsni t-r l never bsd the goad fnrtuno i to Sirtl the Other," rs fsisi ss vna Hues#. *1 have patnlsd all soils of k»iri in 1 n.v itios said the painter, "but I | never had mot* satisfaction ecu of a j ; job then I did ssl uf Ike work I $ . j ■ . iwpUeb*d an iHannigan's old hutir* j I *v be sisikukSoMi ware old and grey [ I I Sue w thev wwo'd srtab op a let of > pant nod to*I * experiment Ooi of rye g»»r and glue I mad* s strong j l a ii I pa* e osleg * ah' pound* of goto j 1 h» ik* wbof* hoo>* mbb h ns# n *mad j MO* I Tb* pvasft* I applied as bed SC pwwHUbh and Is I dev thorn *ah,y Its . this body" I psis'ed svisi gaud nhHa j *»• Inch b*v.« Iasi lohsci «. In otmtf I I THANKFUL TO JfB& PINKHAM. -arrest Words From Women Who Have Been Relieved Of Backache —Mrs. Plnkhom Warns Against Neglect. Dear Mrs. F;:iehau :—I have been thankful c. thousand times, since I wrote you, for what your Vegetable Compound hna done for me I followed your ad vice carefully, und now I feci like a different person. My troubles were buck iche, headache, nervous tired eeling. painful menstruation und tcucorrhcca. I took four bottles of Vegetable Compound, ono boa of Liver I’ills, and v <«! out; package of .Sanative Wash, end am now well. I thunk you again for tho good vou have done for me.—Ki.i.a K. IIhexxkii, East Rochester. Ohio. (treat numbers of such letters as the aVove urcconstantly being re reived by Mrs. I'inUlium from wo men whoowc thuirln a!thin <1 hap piness toherndvice nml rued" inc. Mrs. I’inkhum’s aildresa is Lynn, M:.'-s. ller advice is of- V fered fr: o to nil suffering wonn n L. whosrc puzzledabout themselves. V If you l.nvi ba i:n< hedon'tneg- L leeSitor t ry In .a..cully to "work it down."yon must reach the root of the trouble, und nothing' will do this so safely und surely us Lydia E. I’inkiuun'i, Vcgcluhlo Coin pound. liackuche is uceompunicd jy a lot of other Belies und wearying sensations, but they nearly always cornu from tho name source. Remove tho cause of these distressing things, and you ■jccomc well und strong. Mrs. H. J. Mwaxson. of Hibson City, 111,, tells her ex perience in tlio following letter: “ Dr. All Mus, I’ixsiia m : Ik-fore using your medicine I was troubled with Inad iclie und my back ached so that I could not rest. Yorr medicine Is the best I have •ver used; it hus relieved me of my troubles, und J feci like myself again. Thunks to Lydia E. 1’inkham. “ I would advise uny one troubled with female weakness to take yo:ir mo.di •inc. 1 shall ulso recommend It wherever I can us u great reliever of ^itin." K Million Women Have Been Benefited toy Mrs. Plnkhatn'sAdvicc and Medicine A Beautiful Present Free For a few months to al! users of the celebrated ELASTIC STARCH, (Flat Iron Brand). To induce you to try this brand of ttarch, so that you may find out i for yourself that all claims for its superi ority and economy are true, the makers have hid prepared, at great expense, a series of Game Plaques i ---- -- exact reproductions of the $10,000 originals ty Muvi'lc, which will be given yon ABSOLUTELY FREE by your grocer on conditions named below, These Plaquesane 40 inches in circumference, arc free of any suggestion of advertising whatever, and will ornament the most elegant apartment. No manufacturing concern i ever before gave away such valuable presents to its customers. They arc not for safe at any price, and can be obtained only in the manner specified. The subjects arei | AMERICAN WILD DUCKS, AMERICAN PHEASANT, ENGLISH QUAIL, ENGLISH SNIPE. The birds are handsomely embossed and stand out natural as life. Each Plaque it bordered with a band of gold. how TO GET THEM, I Elastic Starch ! wetllwc'hM."'’KliSTit si'.™!tsiil TWENTyIVwo^MIUJON p«E Iron Kraut!,, are entitled to receive from a.ea „i ,k(. brand weie told last their grocer one or those beautiful Oamc ages oi tni* erana weie soia last Plaque* free. The plaques will not to year. That f how good it It. sent by mulL They cun bo obtained only ► from your arm or. Ask Your Dealer , Every Grocer Keeps Elastic Starch. f0 sh0w you the Plaques and tell I Do not delay. This offer Is for a short vou at,out Elastic Starch. Accept • time only. 7 . ► ______________ no substitute* , TfeMMMt iiy« «•*«. Oc. kay i Li*f tfito SHR&S1