The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 24, 1899, Image 6

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    GET A BIG ‘•AD" CONTRACT.
Ur(Ht Advertising Contract Ever IMnnect
•a Clileago.
The N. K. Falrbank Company, whose
advertising amounts to several hun
dred thousand dollars per annum,
has Just completed arrangements to do
all its advertising through the Mahln
Advertising Company. This Includes
all advertising in newspapers, high
class magazines, street cars, etc John
I^e Mahln, the president of the Mahln
Advertising Company, is widely known,
and the securing of the N. K. Fair
hank Company contract is a compli
ment to his ability. J. H. Snltzler, the
secretary and treasurer has had a long
and honorable business career in this
city. Since opening ibelr office Oec.
28 last they have secured, aside from
the N. K. Falrlmnk Company contract,
forty-eight customers whose business
will aggregate $200,000 per annum
They will move from their present
rooms to the fifth floor of the New
York Life Building Into greatly en
larged quarters, to accommodate their
rapidly Increasing business. Chicago
Times Herald, Feb. 17. 1899.
For the celebration next Anrll of
the seventieth birthduy of General
Booth, the Salvation Army rroooses
to raise by volunteer subscription and
presents to him $3'50,000 to be used
in army work.
•3.000 for a N>w Corn.
Thst's what this new corn cost. Tleld#
113 bushels per acre. Big Four Oats 2.V)
bushels—Bailer's Itape to pasture sleep
ami cattle at 2fw per acre yields 50 tons;
potatoes $1 2<) per bbl. Ilrumus Inermis.
the greatest grass on earth; Beardless
Barley 60 bushels per acre; 10 kinds
grasses and clovera, etc.
Bend ttda nolle# to JOHN A. BAI.ZKFl
BKICh CO., I .A FTtoSSK, WIS With 10c
stamps and receive free great Catalogue;
$3,000 Corn and 10 Faint Seed Barn
plea. [w.n.J
It frequently happens when a gnl
Imagines she is wearing a sad and in
teresting expression, some one will a k
her what she is looking so cross about.
The little good poetry In the world
has resulted in a flood of doggerel that
creates the suspicion that every man
and woman on earth believes that he
or she is a genius.
They Work will's Von Nlrrp
} While your mind add body r«»< •r#t < andy < *
tlmrite re|*‘r your rtfgrMloii. your liver, your
! bowel*, pul ihem in perferi order. All drtifctflttt*.
j JUT. **>5i, Sue. _________
| Don't cover your neglected duties
j with '.he cloak of excuse.
klftoo Per Week
Me will pay a salary of fl.i per week mid
| expenses tur innit wll li 1,‘lir In InI roduce IVr
I fed Inn I’liiillry Mixture and luxeci Iteatroy*
cr in the cimintry. Address with simnp.
i PerfectIon MnniifiK liirliia < u.. I’nrsons, Ivan.
Some people can't see what pleasure
those who mind their own business And
in living.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Hyrnp.
Fori'hllilrcm (sflihlna, softens the Burns, nolium It
naiiuiisllon sllsys pain,cure, wind colli:. dio s l>ut:;o.
| An old bachelor says that a woman s
' change of mind is an effect without a
cause.
Am d.llghlsd with PR surtt AUVOI.P S r otTlill
Kll.l-Ki: li <uie« flveiy Uni®, itev. J. a. Coruith,
j Wtyn«»rlll#,HI. 'oft**, a bottle.
Bread may the stuff of life, hut what
I (lie average man wants is u fat pud
ding.
row'* Cmiicti HuUkiii
Ik !hr oltjf s» an.! ' #*si 11 will brink up • cold quicker
iliNii mi) thing It !» aiWHy* reliable. Try It.
Some actions, like frescoe work, only
reveal their color after they have been
done awhile.
Plso’a Cure for Consumption has Imon
a (>od send lo lus. — W'm. It. McClellau,
Cuo.Ur, Florida. Kept. 17. Ibkft.
A peculiar ilcath cam- t > Carl Ifr.s
mer of Bellalre, Mich, iwas rawing
down a hollow tree and his saw. being
short, he went inside the tr* • and con
tinued his work. The tr-?e fell and
crushed him.
MANY a dutiful daughter pays in pain for her mother's
ignorance or perhaps neglect.
The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter
must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No
excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform her
_self for her own sake and especially
for the sake of her daughter. Write
to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.,
for her advice about all matters
concerning the ills of the feminine
organs.
Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at
time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers with
mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless
about physical health.
Miss Carrik M. Lamb, Big Beaver, Mich., writes: “ Dear
Mrs. Pinkham—A year ago I suffered from profuse and
INDULGENT
MOTHERS
irregular menstruation
and leueorrhoea. My
appetite was variable,
stomach sour and bowels
were not regular, and
was subject to pains like j
colicduringmenstruation. '
I wrote yon and began to
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound and
used two packages of
Sanative Wash. Youcan't
imagine my relief. My
courses are natural and
general healthimproved."
Mrs. Nannie Adkins,
La Due. Mo., writes: '
••Dear Mrs. Pinkham— j
I feel it my duty to tell |
you of the good your/
Vegetable Compound has
done my daughter. She
suffered untold agony at
• time of menstruation be
fore taking your medicine;
but the Compound has
renevea tne pain, Riven her a hctter color, and she teels
stronger, and has improved every way. I am very grateful to
yon for the benefit she has received. It is a great medicine
for young girls.”
Every Desirable New Feature is Embodied in
Hartford and Vedette Bicycles
Columbia CHalnlatt, Models 59 and 60, , . $75
Columbia Chain, Models 57 and 58, ... 50
Hartford*, Patterns 19 and 20.35
Vadattot, Patterns 21 and 22.$25, 26
Our ISO1* Models were (he leader* of la.t teuton. We are closing
•nit a limited numlier of < olnuibias, Model 4tl, < ladies ) at ft , MudeU
4'* a ml 40 (improved) |t", Hurt fords, i'atUrn* ? and s, at greatly re*
duced price*
Hr* it .r Ni » .•
POPE MFC. CO,, Hartford, Conn.
FOR 14 CENTS
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THE SCHOOLS
Of (iirtlrt N*‘* \utli, IkiMun, ami
nun) utliri place* u«« < alter'* lull
• tilu%nel) ai»4 wuit'i u<« an) oil it'I,
I Ii4t Hf|| ||||
CARTER S INK
•ihI ghv* |«m» IiimJ |ur liiwwghi*
'uwm uiaraut?
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MISS COULD'S REFUSALS.
So Man/ Offer* That Stereo
typed An* war I* Xereaaary.
Helen Gould suggests in no way the
owner of millions. She goes about her
sitting room, which b the second
story front of tfcfe old house In Tarry
town, dressed In the sort of gown
which a maid or a country seamstress
might have made, her hair brushed
soberly away from her face, and some
times even an old-fashioned white
apron to protect her dress. There are
thousands of girls in New York whose
fathers wonder where the money to
buy their clothes and matinee tickets
Is to come front who lead a more ele
gant existence than tills simple young
woman. Miss Gould has all the old
fashioned habits of thought as well
as the old-fashioned virtues. Four
years ago she gave a confidence to an
Intimate friend, says the New York
World, "There are," she said, "three
things that I want to do. I want to
bring up Frank to be a fine man, as
good a man sh my father was, for I
believe he was the best man who ever
lived. I want to make the world un
derstand how fine and tender a man
ray father was; and 1 want to make
the name of Gould is loved In New
York as that of Burdett-Coutts In
London." Frank Gould has Just at
tained his majority, and he bids fair
to carry out his sister’s plans for him.
He Is clear-headed, good-looking,
grave and tender toward his sister,
and he gives her the worship for her
devotion which she deserves. The final
idea of Helen Gould to be a second
Baroness Burdett-Coutts has been dis
covered by persons who live by their
wits. As a consequence she is be
sieged on every hand by people with
schemes, philanthropic and personal,
as well as by frank beggars. Then
there are the schemes. They range
from dally newspapers and theatrical
ventures to boarding schools for young
ladles and patent incubators. On an
average of two a week come Ideas for
everything from a flying machine to
a thumb thimble that would triple the
Gould millions If there was only money
enough to patent and exploit it. As
for the offers of marriage, they are
legion. These letters are by no means
from illiterate or ignorant persons in
all cases. The names signed to some
of them would surprise the world were
they published. Miss Gould has had
a card engraved as daintily as an in
vitation, which she sends in reply to
all these offer. It reads: “MIbs Gould
does not feel that she can respond to
your request. Not, she hopes you will
believe, from any la< k of sympathy or
Interest In the matter you present,
but because numerous and exacting de
mands, together with the countless ap
plications she has received, make it in
‘his Instance Impossible "
MADE COMPANIONS BY PERIL.
Wild llraili Hard Toga!tier to Kicapi
■ Foreat Fire.
An incident of the forest flies in the
hills of the De.'-eanso neighborhood,
in southern California, Illustrates the
comradeship that common peril brings
about among beasts as well as among 1
men. After the flames had completed
their work of destruction and spread a
pall over the hills, a rancher went
forth among the charred stumps and
smoking brush heaps to look for a
number of cattle and colts which he
feared had been hemmed in by the
Are, He went across gully and ridge
in his search, until at last he saw his
stock some little distance ahead. He
was more than astonished upon com
ing up to the group to And not only
his cattle and colts, but a deer, three
wildcats, a crjyote, and several rab
bits, all alive and apparently in no
fear of him. They watched his ap
proach with indifference, the timidity
gone from the big-eyed deer, no ven
om in the wildcats' purr, and honesty
shining in the gray coyote's face. The
rahhK.s sat on their haunches, as meek j
as the pets of children. But the poor
coyote was In pain, and as the farmer '
came close the erstwhile robber of the
roost dragged his helpless hind-quar
ters toward the man In mute suppli
cation. The legs of the animal had
been frightfully burned. The rancher
was In no ntood to make friends of
stich strange creatures, and at once
drove his stock through tin* smolder
ing brush, the deer going along with
tile cattle, the rabbits bopping along
at the rancher's heels, the wildcat*
slouching along behind, anil (tie coy
ote. unable to follow, whining a pa
thetle appeul for sue. or. When the
I burning Held was passed the deer
| broke into a run for the distant bills.
1 the rabbits were uway like a flash, and
| the old della are and snarling leer
! came back to the wildcats, who
| scorned to make a show of haste They
walked slowly out of sight, Aar
j liiego t'nloii
Sulitters aiol I Hilxo.
The effort to persuade wotneu to
cease adorning their hats with birds or
| their plumage ha* not tieeu very am
oolul for I* m!itine vanity has d*
j itianded th a slaughter of ihe tnno
! 'eats KnglUhtneii have op this urea
j stun prove I themselves more human*'
than the women of the band stir John
i I.illilnn k Its* »*<nr*.| like atndillon of
i the use of osprey pltinoa m the llrlt|-n
army lie pointed out that these
t plumes were stripped from the biida *n
' their bleeding istun Involving the
; desth and the destruction of i telr
young by ^utitilou tin h truing i*ii»
{ the military authorities ,|r. r ,| th
u!S> . tv* old I > longct 4* t o tbw
wanton de»trw*ttoa by sealing wnpter
j pin Wes ttt their h> Intel*
Canada needs only fi' ao nutate
I tulles to la a* large as the eh ■!• eon
j tinsnt of Korop* it la nearly n Fines
ns large ns to eat Britain an I Ireland
| and la ftstm squats milsa larger thav
S ths Called fftatss .*» biding Ala«ha
/ KjRqALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS ; LOUISVILLE, KV. .- ^
-PRICE 5Q«tPER BOTTLE NEW YORK , N Y U S A LONDON,ENG. %
w
m
in amtNfeoMBiRsri#
TTIK pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well-known remedy, Syrup op Figs, manufactured
A by the California I*‘ig Syrup Company, illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxative principles
of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste
and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxative,
CLEANSING THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY, DISPELLING
COLDS AND HEADACHES, PREVENTING FEVERS,
OVERCOMING HABITUAL CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY.
Its
liver anc
In t
perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and substance, and its acting on the kidneys,
bowels, gently yet promptly, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative.
ie process of manufacturing figs arc used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but
THE MEDICINAL QUALITIES ARE OBTAINED FROM SENNA AND OTHER AROMATIC PLANTS.
by a method known to the California Fig Syrup Company only. In order to get its beneficial effects, and
to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package.
Consumers of the choicest products of modern commerce purchase at at>out the same price that others
pay for cheap and worthless imitations. To come into universal demand and to be everywhere considered
the best of its class, an article must be capable of satisfying the wants and tastes of the best informed
purchasers. The California Fig Syrup Company having met with the highest success in the manufacture
and sale of its excellent liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, it has become important to all to have a
knowledge of the Company and its product. The California Fig Syrup Company was organized more than
fifteen years ago, for the special purpose of manufacturing and selling a laxative remedy which would be
more pleasant to the taste and more beneficial in effect than any other known. The great value of the
remedy, as a medicinal agent and of the Company’s efforts, is attested by the sale of millions of bottles ^
annually, and by the high approval of most eminent physicians. As the true and genuine remedy named
Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only, the knowledge of that fact
will assist in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other parties.
For cSale by All Dru^gishs , Price 50 $ Per Bottle.
Mon. Coo P. Semis
Hon. Geo. P. Bemis, the most popular man ever elected an mayor of
the city of Omaha. Neb. Lie is also one of the oldest and Isist known real
estate dealers and negotiator* of loans in the west. - Ilia huaineaa ia very
extensive. lie ia not only one of the boat judges of real estate but he knows
a good thing when he area it, whatever it may be. So we eall attention to
the follow ing statement made by him and several other men w ho are not
only jopular in Omaha but are known from oeean to ocean. They are Hon.
A. U. Wyman. Ex-Treasurer of the United States and now President of the
Omaha Loan and Trust Co., one of the largest and moat prominent nego
tiators of Western farm and city loana. Hon. W. .1. Connell, Ex-Congress*
man and now Omaha's City Attorney. Hon. W. A. Paxton, Pros., Union
Stock Varda. Hon. T. S. Clarkson. Ex-Commander in Chief G. A. K. lion.
C. J. Smyth. Attorney General of Nebraska. Hon. A. S. Churchill, Ex-At
torney General of Nebraska, and many others as well known, each
of whom has personally signed the follow ing statement.
At this season, your system needs renovating. The internal organs are
inuetive. The waste matter is not eliminated but absorbed, thus contam
ination the blood and debilitation the entire system. ’The nerve force is not
replenished, consequently you are tired and have no oucfgy. I lux* symp
tom* are present !n th»* Spring and after an epidemic of La-lirippo. To renovate the system and remove all
bad affect* <»f I.n-Grip|»e or Spring lassitude use Dr. Kay.'s Innovator. It certainly bus no equal. Send for
proof of it. It I* a perfect renovator and regulator of all internal organa, curing tint very worst cum** of
stomach trouble*, constipation and oiteeure liver and kidney comnlalnts. Try it and you will vtonder at
It* marvelous effect*. Write us describing your ease carefully and we will give you valuable advice free
and send you a lid page illustrated Imok of rocelnf* etc. If druggist* do not have It don’t take any substi
tute they sav I* “Just a* go«*l” for It has no equal. I? can lie bad by return mail from us. Prlcn AVct*. aud
II. Hr. II. J. Kay Medical(’o.. Saratoga Springs. N. V. ami Omaha, Nth.
“A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR
GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES
SAPOLIO
SUCKER
WILL KELP YUU DRY.
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A CATARRH REMEDY
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kHca A*n»trUt| MvcrtlVkiMtS Mindly
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