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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1899)
THE DYING WAIF. By Blance Langdon Ammen. It was while I was resident physician at the Emergency hospital that the following case came under my notice. There had been brought Into the char ity ward a boy of about twelve years of age. He was badly mangled, and 1 knew from the moment 1 saw him that be could not recover. “Jimmie,” I said one day, "how did you happen to get all broken up this way?” “Well, yer see, I'm a newsboy on the P. & R. road, and I was a paasln' through the train a lappin' all the lat est novels, (Yer know how they does In trains). And as I was agoln’ from one car to the next with my arms piled high, the train give a lurch and my books took a tumble; next 1 knowed I was here.” After a pause he mur mured, “I spose I must have fell over board tryin’ to catch ’em.” “You had better have lost them, Jim mie,” I said, stroking his thin little hands. "Oh, but yer don’t know what a time there’d a been with the boss when I checked up.” Hts eyes flashed, and his hand trembled with emotion, “Them’s awful times, sir, when yer comes In short.” Peeling that he had talked enough, I went on down the ward ex amining others. As each day passed, he grew steadily worse. In his de lirium, he talked incessantly of “check ing up." Sometimes he would cry piteously, “Am 1 short, tell me, tell me, am I short?” Then there would he Incoherent words and moans ending, oftentimes, in heart-rending sobs, I concluded that he must be worrying about these books, therefore i decided, the next time his mind was clear, to set him at rest about them. So I said to him, "Jimmie, you needn’t worry any more about those books, x ve paid the debt, you won’t come in short.” He looked at me blankly for a mo ment; then he sighed. "I ain’t a worry in’ about no books.” "Well," I said, sitting down beBide him, "what Is it? Tell me.” He lay perfectly quiet for a time, and I wondered, as I stroked the long locks back from the oldish face, what bur den there could be that could so torture the soul of this dying child. Suddenly he turned his large hollow eyeB upon me, and looked piercing into my face —"I’m agoln' to die—I know that straight.” "We are doing the best we can for you, Jimmie.” “Oh, I’m not a-klckln’ about you, nor the nurse, neither; you've been real good to me. I wlsht I could tell yer, though, all what worries me; but "AND I’VE NEVER DONE NOTHIN’ FER HIM.’’ you’ve no time to listen to the likes of me,’’ he added, turning wearily from me. I longed to shed some comfort into the little life that was slipping away so fast, so I said, ‘’Jimmie, tell me; — I have time." Then he told me his story—words that touched my heart as nothing else had ever done. “There was a feller on board my train tother day,” he began, "a nice lookin’ old chap—and he says to me, ‘‘soon aB you’re through, I want to talk to you about yer Job and some other things. I tell you I was Beared awful; I took him to be a ‘Spotter,’ and I thought he’d got on to me sellln' my own stuff now and then; 'taln't right, yer know, but all the fellers do It. Well, I 'lowed I had to fare what was up; so directly 1 went and set along side of hltn. That was the day afore 1 got hurt. I'm glad I seen him. I never kuowed about them things he talked about afore." Ills lip quivered, “I oughter a kuowed afore. It's too late now." "What la too late, Jimmie?" "Tbeu thing* he talked about" "What did he say?” "He asked me about the ottire. amj i told him aa how things wua. Yer know, I work* the t So train to New York. The boa* gives me a basket ol stock, and I'm held responsible. | carry all the luteal novels, candy, ci gars. Florida oranges. bananas, yer know them thing* yer get on lb* train W* gela go per rant on all wa sells. Hvsry night w* luma In our money and stoch to th# boas, and ha checks us up: aomatlmaa we're right, and sometime# ws‘r# short. This old chap ha listened and ashed th* must ques tions about all I'm •-(•Ilia1 y*r Final ly ha says, saya ha. "Wa'va all got to ‘shark up' some day. do you ever tklnk •r tbair "I asked him * hat business be was la Me said h* was coageried wlik somethin or auther I don't Just re member now. then he said he wueu't referrtn to business but that we all, when we died, would have to gtv* an account to the One what give us uur lives as to what we I done with *« lie said H was suwihla’ similar te my business. My Heavenly Father had gimme some stock,—such as my health, my right senses, lots of chanc es fer doin’ good, and so on the like o' that, and when I died. I’d have to check up, and He’d ask me what I’d done with all He’d gimme; then if I’d used all them things Just for my own pleasure, and not tried to do no good fer Him, I'd be short when I checked up. He told me of a beautiful home prepared for them uh wub all right In their stock. When he talked about havin’ a home, I fell to longin’—I never knowed what that wus—to have a home, yer know." Jimmie paused for a moment, then with the saddest expression I ever saw, he murmured, “but that’s not fer the likes o’ me, It’s too late now; If I'd only a-knowed sooner, I might have had some show, but I’ve got to cheek up Just as I am, and I never done noth in' with all He gimme.” There was silence—silence which 1 could not break. Why could I not comfort this dying boy? I was able to relieve his body, but his bou! was suf fering now. Several times I essayed to speak, but no words came. I knew the old, old story, but my own mis spent life reproached me. Should I tell him that that which he had lis tened to was a mere fable, or should I give up, now and here, the stand which I had taken for so many years, and own to myself that all the doubts I had held to so tenaciously were false? Here In the presence of death. 1 knew I did believe—there was a God this child had Hhown Him to me. Jimmie was looking to me for com fort; his large eyes fixed on my face, wondering why I did not speak. All at once the words came, and I preached to him Christ I, the doubter, the athe ist, told him of Jesus and His love; how many, many years ago He had died that we, believing on Him, might enter that home and be saved. He had paid all our debt with His life, and set us free. Jimmie listened eagerly, tears trickling down his cheeks—"And I’ve never done nothin’ fer him," he said, slowly.” "Yes, you have, Jimmie, you hava been the means of saving my soul.” The next morning the nurBe told me that Jimmie had been asking for me. I went over and stood by his bed. He lav very quiet,—JuBt drifting away. I took his hand. "Jimmie,” I said, "I am here, do you know me?” A bright smile overspread his face as he pressed my hand. Then all the life that was left exerted Itself, and I bent low to hear the whispered words— “I’ll not be short. He’ll make It right. I’m—” I could not hear what he would have said, for the spirit, which a moment before had been speaking to me, was now giving an account of the deeds done In the body. Jimmie was "checking up.”—Ram’s Horn. MOTES IN A SUNBEAM. Th«y May Now Ila Counted and Classi fied. Counting the dancing motes in a bar of sunlight sounds like one of those hopeless, never-ending tasks with which malignant fairies delight to break the spirits of little heroines in the German folk stories. Something more than this, however, has been achieved by modern science, which is now able to count the particles float ing in any given portion of the atmos phere, says Pearson's Weekly, and de termine what proportion of these are dangerous germs and what are mere dust. Dr. Frankland’s experiments have shown us how to count the micro organisms, and now a Scotch scientist, by a totally different method, has been enabled to take stock of the more harmless but hardly less Interesting dust motes. Thirty thousand such par ticles have been detected by him in the thousandth of a cubic inch of the air in a room. In the outside atmos phere in dry weather the same meas urement of air yielded 2,119, whereas after a heavy rainfall the number was only 521. That this power of prying into atmospheric secrets will eventual ly yield very important results must be obvious to all. Among the most curi ous discoveries already made is the direct and constant relation which ex ists between dust particles and fogs mist and rain. Dress Fronts. On most of the redlngote dresses and many of the princeas gowns for dressy afternoon functions the familiar straight fronts are avoided, and the edges cut in long curving scallops— thus, when the length of an ordinary coat is reached a curve is made and the material cut away in the space of three-eighths of a yard or more. When two-thirds of a yard of the skirt-length is traversed another backward scallop lit made as before, terminating at the skirt edge. The tiodire portion is usually open-fronted and low cut, above a gimp of shirred silk muslin over silk or satin, gathered into a (leaded hand around the neck. At a public entertainment of a fashionable hotel recently a gown exactly after the style described was worn. A nar row Hue of otter fur tlnlshed the edges of skirt and walat. the gown waa of gray, rvpped silk and wool, and the gimp of pink, crimson and green mu - trias»e on a deep cream ground, MmIssss Ptsessvs, "Are you much rushed uow, h'uwg er V* "'Hushed* If I were to die to-uight my employer would expect me to come down town to morrow and worh un til the hour set for the funeral."— Chit ago it re Old Wifirn Mr naturally tender heart sd No woman ever willfully steps un g mouse I ^Society Women I ana.m fact.neatly all [ women who undergo n a nervous strain, arc v compelled to regret i fully watch the grow* ' ing pallor of their cheeks, the coming i wrinkles and. thinness } that become more ''distressing every day. Every woman knows that ill-health »is a fatal enemy to beauty and that good health gives to the plainest"* face an en (during attractiveness. Pure blood and strong nerves — these aTt the secret of health and beauty. Or.Williams' PmH > ’ Pills foT Pale People build up and purify the blood and strengthen the nerves. Te the young girl they are invalu* I able, to the mother they are a necessity, to the woman ' approaching fifty they are the best remedy that science has devised for this crisis of her life. Mr*. Jacob W’rnver, of Iluahncll, III., la fifty *1* year* old. She any*. "I Buffered for five or ala year* with the troublr that comr* to woitim at tins time of life. I wua much weakened, wua unable, much of the lime, to I do my owu work, and Buffered lieyono my power to deaerilar. I waa down hearted and melancholy. Nothing aeenied to do me any good. Then I made up iny mind to try I»r William*' I’luk I'illa for 1’ale People I bought the firat bo* In Murch, i»</7, and waa lieiiefiled from the atart, A t>o* and n half cured me compteuly.r >1 J am now i ugged uud atrong.’’ —l)u Jimt/l (///.) Ktcord. The genuine package always bears the full name M i all druggists or stnt postpaid on receipt of price 50* per bo*by the Or Williams Medicine Co, Schenectady M Y ullR 60c NERVE AND BRAIN PILLS. pontlvw^y nimranPiml tocunnny <J|Moa** for which they are .ulendwt, THIN WILL CUBE YOU * you feel ksiimi ulljr miserable or suffer with » thousand and owe iudoecrihahia had fueling*, both mental and physical, among them low spirit*, nervousness, weiirinesn, lifeles«rie**, weakness, dlexineea, feeling of fullness, Ilka bloating after eating, or senna of goueniws or emptiness of stomach In morning, f1e»h soft and lacking in firm news, headache, blurting of eyesight so* ks floating la fora the eyas, nervous Irritability, poor memory. chUlinsee, alternating with hot flushes, lassitude throbbing, gurgling, or rumbling senaaliomi in bowels, with heat or nipping pains r_. occasionally, palpitation of tbs heart, short breath ou exertion, slowcirculathm of nood, cold feet, pain and oppression In chest and bar k, pain around tha loins, aching and weariness of tha owar II mbs. drowsiness after mauls but nervoua wakeful nans at night, languor In the morning, and a con stant feeling of dreud as if something awful was going to happen. If you have any of these symptoms our -1,1- No matter wnat the cause may lie or how eevere your trouble fa Illeureyoa. These pills have a remarkable effect on both old and young. other medicine as a cure for Impotence, spermatorrhoea, night sweats, emlsah ___..—i veins), weakness of both brain and f»ody, arising from aiceseea and ebiiMea of an/ L_ It will tone up the whole nervous system, no uoitttar bow much worn out. overworked or depressed you mar bei the weak and timid young man made strong and bold again; they will give youth ful vigor and a now lease of life to the old, Ubwabb or guAC'g i»u< r«»ua who advertise to scare men Into paying money for remedies which have no merit. Our Nerve and liraln rills are compounded from a Pre scription of one of the most noted of German scientists, end are the same aa have been used In German hos pital* for years with marvelous success HoWTOCUBE YoUkMXLF, and full and explicit directions, are enclosed with every box. Allordersand Inquiries concerningthese pills will be treated confidentially,and all shipments made In plain sealed packages. OWLT #8 00 roa six HOXEg. Fnough to enre any case; no mat ter how long standing, whether young or old no matter from whatoanse. Hand ue $8.00 and we will send ton six boxes by return mail, postpaid, In plain sealed package, with full fnatroctions, full directions. No. d(514). Price per box.die ;• boxes (an amount to cure anyone), A8.00. If »o« new! those pills, don't delay, tills Is the first time tha American people have had an opportunity of getting the genuine Dr. Chase's Pills, a%i the lir st time they have tjyien sold any whereat anything like our price. , Larue Dm o Cat a loo in Fkbk. 81/.*>04xI2H Be sure and send for It. We can save yon money on Drugs. All order* filled by registered Bharrnactsts. There Is no line of food* you Pay so much for as Drugs when you buy them at retail. T. M. Hubert’s Nnjtplj House, MInneupolls, Mlun. JuBt as Bure a« a woman la left alone 1 in a house, and gets Into a bath tub the door bell rings. How's Tills! We offer One Hundred Dollars reward forany fSM* of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hali t Catarrh Cure. r. J. CHKN’KY 4 CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known V. J. Cheney for the last l» years and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions end financially ubie to carry out any obliga tions made by their linn. West A Truss. Wholesale Drugs 1st*, Toledo, C ; V< aiding, Kliiiiun it Alarvlu, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hail s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous surface* of the system. Tcyilmnnlnls sent frets fries The per bottle. Sold by all druggist* Hall's family fills are the best, _ It In said that the present annual output of chewing gum Ih about $0,000, 000, and 1b Increatilng. Oh That Delirious Coffee! Costs but lr per lb. to grow. Halier ha* the seed, (Ionian Ooffei Kerry, i>kg. 16c; Juva Coffee pkg, 16c Hulsur'g New Am erican Chicory ilk.', t'ut this out and send 16c for any of above puikag H or send »«• and get ull 3 jikga, Mild great Cata logue free to JOHN A. HAL.ZKH BRED CO., Lu Crosse, Wis. tw.n.J The Bhlpyardu of Great llrltaln could turn out a big BtoarriBhlp every day of the year. Dropsy treated freo by Dr. FT. H. Greens Hons, of Atlanta, (la. The greatest dropsy specialists In the world. Head their advertisement la another column of this paper. Summer cars were running In Han Francisco last week. The temperature was 90. America'* groat ext physician* have con quered La Grippe and it* after effect*. Their treatment Iia» been thoroughly tested In the hospitals of Kuro|ie and of till* coun try, and is embodied m Hr. Kay's Luug Halm. ltev. 11. B. 1 lye of Morrison, Iowa, write* —"Mr*, Dye bad a had attack of LaOrlppe w hich settled oil her lungs. Hlie used Dr. Kay's Lung Halm, with most decided good effect*, wliieli I* a repetition of past exper ience with her Nothing is so prompt and positive In its effect* oil Iier lung*." You should write for free odvioe and a copy of Dr. Kay’s Home Treatment, an Il lustrated book of llfl papes of receipts, etc. Dr H. J. Kay Medical Co., Saratoga, Springe, N. Y. A man without an occupation Is usually a man without a character. Coe’* Cough Italian! I* lb* elded suit bed. It will l>n »k up * cold quicker tbaii euythlu* alee. It I* *1 wny» rrlldile. Try H. When you don’t believe In silly thlnga, fools call you a pessimist. Dr. Hot h Arnold'* Cough Killer I* sn excelleat remedy f r clillilren. Mr*. Wm. M. Frogue, Columbus, Ksu. Itflo. a bottle. In Berlin sheet music is sold by weight. Every cough makes your throat more raw and irritable. Every cough congests the lining membrane of your lungs. Cease tearing your throat and lungs in this way. Put the parts at rest and give them a chance to heal. You will need some help to do this, and you will find it in Ayer’s Cherry pectoral From the first dose the quiet and rest begin: the tickling in the throat ceases; the spasm weak ens; the cough disap pears. Do not wait for pneumonia and con sumption but cut short your cold without delay. Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pec toral Plaster should be over the lungs of every per son troubled with a cough. Write to the Doctor. b.«Q with our f horry 1 „ J will rw.lv. • prompt r.plj, without C°‘'' Addroat. DR. i. C. AYKR, Lowoll, Hut. W.N.U. OMAHA. No. 0-180® When Answering »<ivertisci.ients Hindi)) Mention This Taper. This Signature (o Wx&ms&h on every boi of LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. Accept no substitute represented to be “just as good." “"’liSF1' A GRIP CURE that DOES CUBE! -«5HI A Maryland man estimates that dur ing the eighty-four years of his life he has consumed 28,560 loaves of bread, at 3 cents per pound, value $856.80; 26,880 pounds of meat, at 5 cents, $1,340; 7,728 pounds of vegetables, eggs fish, etc., at 2 cents, $154.56, and 11, 760 gallons of water, tea, coffee, beer, wine, etc., at an average cost of 1 cent per gallon, $117.60; total, $2,468 96. He also figures that of the 30,660 days of his life 10,080 have been spent in sleep, 10,920 in work, and 9.760 in eating and pleasure-seeking. Try Qraln-ol Tty Ormla-al Aak your grocer today to show you a package of GKAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of eaffee. The children may drink it without in jury as well as the adult. All who try It, like it. GKAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or java, but It la made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives It without distress. One-fourth the pries of coffee. 15c. and 25c. per package. Sold by all grocers. Happiness does away with ugliness, and even makes the beauty of beauty. —Amici. Health fur Ten Cents, 'ascaret* make bowels ami kidneys act naturally .destroy intends**, cure headache, biiliousues'*and cmi»t ipaitun. All druggi»ts. Borne tailors give customers fits while others give them convulsions. Mr*. VVlinlow s n,m,thing Strap. Far rbturss trstbuut, tb* ruriit, r*4u< ** la* AautiusUua. sU*f*e*i*,etir*s wlsUeuilo. itwabutti* You can't prevent the sun from set ting by stopping your dock. There can be no course of true love If true love never dies. TO CFRK A COLD IN ONE DAT Take Laxative llromo Quinine Tablet* All druggist* refund I he money if it fail* to cure. 26c. The genulue ha* L. B Q. on each tablet The less a man amounts to the more he boasts of the deeds of his ancestors. The Rochester Democrat and Chron icle has in James H. Kelly a subscriber who has taken and paid for the paper for slxty-one years beginning his sub scription February 8, 1838. CRESCENT HOTEL, KCHKKA HI'HINUK, ARKANSAS. Open* February ‘.Wrd. In the Oxark Moun tain*. Delightful climate Beautiful scen ery. Unequaled medicinal water*. Cheap excursion rate* Through sleepers via Frisco Line. AdreMs J. O. Flank, Man ager, Hoorn H, Arcade, tVntury Building, or Frisco Ticket Office, No. 108 N. Broad way, St. Louis. The recent decree of the Court pro viding for the foreclosure and sale of the main line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad la directly In line with tb* reorganization proceedings. Auger Is an expensive luxury. In which only men of a certain Income an Indulge. I believe nir prompt use of Piso'a Curs prevented quick consumption.- Mr*. Lucy Wallace, Marquette, Kan , Bee 12, id. The powers :nai be loo frequently alt down on an evil a* If It were an In verted tack $16.95 einreea Mfflcfl and If you Aad It agt-aula# INWj ki«ti mra<1« 940.00 At■■ JKWKi. aa renreaented. i »nrl the vraadMl her«ela iyon «v*r heard of, pay tithe eiprae* agent the Hhalanca, *19.69, and |!u«l>nuw churn**. j|THE ACME JEWEL r la one of the bail ktcyelee made, ftmataUel tubing, ln*Mt material through out, drop forge iniineo tlon*. full ball bearing, two-piece banger, high grade guaranteed -ingle tune tiren, High trrarie'‘ijutiiment ihrou(rn<*'ir, finest finish. enani«u»l black, pr**a er liaml»<>iue nicks! trimmings, any gear 20.1B, U or » Inch frame. WR HUM) A MINIilHti h*k VRAM tit AMARTRR. OMIIKM to lul. Add...., SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (lie.), CHICA60, ILL. MIF AT FIRST YOU DON’T SUCCEED,” TRY SAPOLIO WHEAT wasasr* aa£ " ** ■ 4 Natural Blaok by FIELDS Buckingham's Dye, °» W«*U»rn CMMfe. and VMtaeaa Bod |*rt,. w .,nu all d.ufaUU M |irodu«'tivt>Baau. and ilia broad anpanaa uf Ilia „ „ .. .. - .... „ (.rut lit* t'lalna ra.l of lha tinahv Mouniaiu. u. a l naiiaia., Mluw, K “• wall aa lb* Ixwullful r. »»r.|. I be I .. — .. ..... ... liu.lMHiitii.au. »i> aiial liui>rvaae.l |i.r Wlaun- _ . . „ _ . .la t.lllor. on ib.lr trip t(rt>u«b tbai ...uulry Qr Al ClfTAJC* 6lt TOW PlMlOl laat i.aih. r Inn l.ii.ea ran l« bail lh«*r» B*P M XII |M|^ a...an an.l |..'ll. ular. nldalind Inw l be In (Mri | hllvIUllw DOUBLE DUCK .. of 'ha lai. rl r OUaaa. « anada . r * * JT „T,”,TT W V lu in.. It Mi N« W Yufb UK UulldUM. OIAUHIM PtaeUn* A,««l UttAb*. NtU. 141,'NwVaiA.lM. W AMIIMIlUfb. U «. 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