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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1900)
Til K NOHTII WESTERN. «►>.»» IIOIKIi * lllllMIJI, R<a*an<l I'nha BilCP CITY • NEB. ...— . ■ 'i ■ 1t! The empire of Morocco Is the most important state that is absolutely with out w newspaper. Within the last 95 years the popu lation of Belgium has doubled itself, rising from 3,000,0u0 to 6,000,000. Sound passes through air at the ve locity of 1,142 feet per second; through water, 4,900 feet; through iron, 17,500 (Mt The queen’s autograph fetches about 12; that of BJackmoro, 12s; Mr. Glad stone, 10s; Lord Byron’s cannot be bought as a rule for, less than 15. Moscow has the largest hospital In Europe, with 7.0JQ beds. There are ninety-six physicians and 900 nurses, ahd about 15,000 patients are cared for annually. fhe famous clock ”Les Trois Graces,” now on view at the Paris ex position was once bought for $20,003. Fifty thousand pounds has now been offered for it. In Java a small state exists which Is entirely controlled by women, with the single exception of the sovereign, who is a man. He I*, however, entirely de pendent on the three women who form his state council. An example of patient Industry is the sorting of hogs' bristles as it Is carried on at Tientsin, China. Each one of the bristles has to be picked out, measured and placed In the bun dle of hairs of corresponding length. The new Duke of Argyll made a statement at Oban recently to the ef fect that he was Innocent of mu 1c, and could not tell the difference be tween "Pop Goes the Weasel” and “God Save the Queen.” A group of miners In Queensland, have clubbed together and presented Major General Baden-Poweil with a cake of pure gold, on which Is In scribed, "This is 24 carat, what the Croydon miners take you to be.” An effort is being made to Induce the Prince of Wales to open the Glas gow exhibition next May, and It is expected his royal highness will ac cept. There is to be a corner in the exhibition devoted to matters pertain ing exclusively to Scotland, showing what the country was like some centu ries ago and what it is like at the pres ent day. Railroads have taken little interest In acetylene gas for car lighting an l there have been many failures in this field. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway company aro making ex periments In the laboratory on a gen erator for lighting a car. One advan tage of acetylene gas in that each car can be made a separata unit. The >• are to be service trials of llio appara tus on the cars. A curious coincidence Is mentioned In the latest Melbourne ptipers. An Australian lady, who was just conclud ing her visit to London, left or lost her purse on the roof of a bus in th Strand. As It happened, the next pas senger to take the seat she vacate 1 was also an Australian and he foun 1 the purse. One of her visiting cards was inside, and the tinder recogniz ing the name, communicated with th lady in Melbourne and the purse was restored intact. A curious fact is related by th > ‘ Sydney Morning Herald" In connec tion with the realization of the estat of the late Mr. James Tyson, the Aus tralian millionaire. It appi ars that on his private office at Felton being "tldted up," fixed depo.slt receipts for ,t;30,0b0 in the Queensland National Hank, scrip for 97 shares in the sam • bank, and fixed deposit for titiu.OO; shares in the City Bank, and o'he snip were found strewn about ainorr , a mass of valueless papers. 1 he Eng lah war offli is < xpi-rttnent lug with a new magazine ride. It i the invention of an Australian and it possesses several advantage, over the Lee-Meuord arm, which is at present employed in the British army. Th automatic feed of the cartridge f o i the fi.ajtauiue Into the L-i<- efi is a •hiking feature. It was trie I at Ha ley In the recent t otupetl <>na and tir*! thirty shots in the minute. with 2» hits, of which 17 were bull s eyes The rifle Is raid to be vastly a ip* no lo either the L> r M tforJ or me Man ser in stretiRtn cfBcitsm y an I sitnpil city of eonetrw'ilo# while it is 3S pc - cent cheaper to maaofartitie ami lit on and one fourth pounds tlgtier than th present l,*« Met ford rifle It hr* bee i •trobgiy rsrtrn.ni* n l-il t»y Lor (harlot IWesford and th- re is I ttl dueht that It Will be Intro lured intr the Ilf Utah arm* al t*»e end of tbs Month African campaign. the famous |ti ant L'ttunion go non*, whuh for years has b< -u tn chief gold prodoesr of Montana, u vtr taally Idle. only a Midi fur-* of m t Mtf engaged ib dttdipWMI bora I'gie IMS* II ■. « l • of ||el«na to |hs lt c tr,.l» yf I ** Jim fits |ts atllooo ljuinri set* a years sf<>. sate# w*o, g tints II ktt rspill 1 it* ’ id sods. lift' ' 1 t ii—I M drop *fi * s * ady gri I fu ys«>a The «••»•* 4 he S4S h»*et-r. that the at me a -» ns rnwa hid decs eeeiia TALMAGE’S SERMON. GOD'S JUDGMENTS ARE SWIFT AND SURE. National Sin* Are FunUhed by Keen Instrument* — No Calamity Happen* by Chance, but la Directed by Divine Wladotu. (Copyright, 1900, by Ijouls Kiopsch.) Dr. Talmage, In his journey west ward, through Europe, has recently visited scenes of thrilling historic events. He sends this sermon, in which he shows that nations are Judg ed in this world and that God re wards them for their virtues and pun ishes them for their crimes. The text is Isaiah vii, 20, "In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor that is hired, namely, by them beyond the river, by the king of Assyria." The Bible is the bolde. t book ever written. There are no simiitudes in Osslan of the Iliad or the Odyssey so daring. Its imagery sometimes seems on the verge of the reckless, but only seems so. The fact is that God w’oiud startle and arouse and propel men and nations. A tame and limping simll tude would fail to accomplish the ob ject. While there are times when he employs in the Bible the gentle dew and the morning cloud and the dove j and the daybreak in the preaen'.at on | of truth, we often find the iron chariot, the lightning, the earthquake, the spray, the sword, and, in my text, the ' razor. This keen-bladed instrument 1 has advanced in usefulness with the ages. In Bible times and lands the beard remained uncut save in the saa sons of mourning and humiliation, but the razor was always a suggestive ! e umKaI Tin vrl d an 1,1 ci # T lr.n cr h iu an. tagonlgt, "Thy tongue la a sharp ra- j zor working deceitfully"—that is, It pretends to clear the face, but is really used for deadly incision. In this striking text this weapon of the toilet appears, under the followin’ circumstances: Judea needed to have some of its properties cut off, and Gol j sends against It three Assyrian k ngs —first Sennacherib, then Earhad.'.on and afterward Nebuchadnezzar. Thesj 1 three sharp invasions that cut down [ the glory of Judea are compared to so many sweeps of the razor across the face of the land. And these devasta- ) tions were called a hired razor because God took the kings of Assyria, w.th whom he had no sympathy, to do the ! work and paid them in palaces and spoils and annexations. These sing; were hired to execute the divine be hests. And now the text, which on its first reading may have seemed trivial or inapt, is charged with momentous import, "In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor tiiat is hired, namely, by them beyond the river, by the king of Assyria.” IUr,om of Well, if God s judgments are razors, we had better be careful how we use them on other people. In careful sheath these domestic weapons are put away where no one by accident may touch them, and where the hands of children may not reach them. Such instruments must be carefully handled or not bandied at all. But how reck lessly some people wield the judg- I ments or God! It a man meets with business misfortune, how many there ! are ready to cry out: “That is a judg | ment of God upon him because he was | unscrupulous or arrogant or over | reaching or miserly. I thought he ! would get cut down. What a clean sweep of everything! His city house and country house gone. His stables emptied of all the fine bays and sorrels and grays that used to prance by his door. All his resources overthrown and all that he prided himself on tumbled Into demolition. Good for him!'' Stop, my brother. Don't sling around so freely the Judgments of God, for they are razors. Some of the most wicked hus'ness men succeed, and they live and die in prosperity, and some of the most hon est and conscientious are driven into bankruptcy, l’erbaps the unsuccessful man's manner was unfortunate, a: d he was not really as proud as he lock ed to be. Some of those who carry their heads erect and look imperial are : humble as a child, while many a m: n in seedy coat and slouch hat and un blacked shoes Is as proud as Lucifer, You cannot tell by a man's look. I’, r lutps he was not unscrupulous in busl I ness, for there are two sides to every story, and everybody that accomplish aft anything for himself or others g> ts industriously lied about. Perhaps his bustne*.* misfortune was n .t a puulsi nient, but the fatherly discipline to prepare blzn for heaven, and God may love him fur more than he loves you, Mho can pay dollar for do lar and a «• put down lu the commercial catalogues a* At Whom tb** 1. **d luveth ti» fives |lOtt iKOI and lets .He on einbi II tred pillows'* No, wh<>m the laird loveth he eh isteneth lie iter keep your hand off the Lot I a razor*, 1 at they rut and wound p*wipo> that do not deserve H If yon want to shave off some of the bristling pi id* uf your own heart do so but be very ca • cl how you put the shtrp edit* an othrra How | do dislike (to hei,avoir of ito** pvrsous who when p- opl« are u *f»f iunale say. ‘ I told you so getting punished *erv*d him right’ ‘ If tho « I loll you so t got their desert, they • out l k ng ago have t«< n pits he I over the hatilenieiti. The m •(»• in t #1 I neigh tail a *>••* so sMialt that It t the a micro** *u** to Rat It, glvea lb m more trouble thru the • kt h s'c wam tbeir usa opto* It th atr wawitWM super* Hum* and • ->oe<iu.*« pharwMoai m l aiwaya hbkaphwptotM they babe th* r«*uf of 4>vi»e |wdeh* hi and aha*pea it **« th* h**ae of their ‘ ut»b bard h«*ru awi then rm I* * •* on men sprawled out at full length under disaster, cutting mercilessly. They begin by soft expressions of sympathy and pity and half praise and lather the victim all over before they put on the sharp edge. Mti'lct of Kind Word*. Let us be careful bow we shoot at others lest wo take down the wrong one, remembering the servant of King William Rufus, who shot at a deer, but the arrow glanced at a tree and killed the king. Instead of going out with shafts to pierce and razors to cut we had better imitate the friend of Richard Coeur de Lion. Richard, in the war of the Crusades, was captured and imprisoned, but none of his friends knew where, so his loyal frien t went around the land from stronghold to stronghold and sang at each win- j dow a snatch of Rong that Richard j Coeur de Lion had taught him in other days. And one day, coming before a Jail where he suspected his king | might be incarcerated, he sang two i lines of song, and Immediately K ng Richard responded from his cell w,th j the other two lines, and so his where abouts were discovered, and a success- ! ful movement was at once made for his liberation. So let us go up and , down the world with the music of kind words and sympathetic hearts, sere- ! nadlng the unfortunate, and trying to get out of trouble men who had noble natures, but by unforeseen clreum- I stanees have been incarcerated, thus liberating kings. More hymnbook and less razor. Nothing Kmr "Happen*." Again, when 1 read in my text that the Lord shaves with the hired razor of Assyria the land of Julea I think myself of the precision of God’s provi dence. A razor swung the tenth part of an inch out of the right line means either failure or laceration, but God's dealings never slip, and they do not miss by the thousandth part of an inch the right direction. People talk as though things in this world were at loose ends. Cholera sweeps acres i Marseilles and Madrid and Palermo, and we wateh anxiously. Will the epi demic sweep Europe and America? People say, "That will entirely depend on whether the inoculation Is a suc cessful experiment; that will depend entirely on quarantine regulations; that will depend on the early or lat" appearance of frost. That epidemic is pitched into the world, and it goei blundering across the continents, and it is all guess-work and an appalling "perhaps." I think, perhaps, that God had something to do with It and that his mercy may have in some way pro tected us; that he may have done aB much for us as the quarantine and the health officers. It was right and a ne cessity that all caution should be used, but there have come enough macaroni from Italy, and enough grapes from the south of France, and enough rags from tatterdemalions, and hidden in these articles of transportation enough cholera germs to have left by this time all the cities mourning in the ceme teries. I thank all the doctors and quarantines, but more than all, and first of all, and last of all, and all the time, I thank God. in all the 0,000 ■ years of the world’s existence there has not one thing merely “happened so.” God is not an anarchist, but a King, a Father. National Minn rut)Ulie<l. Further, my text tells us that Go I sometimes shaves nations. "In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor that is hired." With one sharp sweep he went across Judea, and down went its pride and power. In 1861 God shaved the American nation. We had allowed to grow Sabbath desecration and oppression and blasphemy and fraud and impurity and all sorts of turpitide. The south had Its sins, and the north its sins, and the east its sins, and the west Its sins. We had been warned again and again, and we did not heed. At length the word of war cut from the St. Lawrence tv the gulf and from the Atlantic seaboard to Pacific seaboard. The pride of the land, not the cowards, but the heroes, on both sides went down. And that which we took for the sword of war was the land's razor, in 1862 again it went across the land; in 1863 again; In 1864 again. Then the sharp instru ment was incased and put away. Never In the history of the ages was any laud more thoroughly shaved tl/f.n during those four years of civil combat, und, my brethren. If we do not <|iiit some of our Individual and national sins the laird will again take u* In hand. He has other razors with in reach besides war—epidemic*, droughts, deluges, plagues grasshop per and locust—or our overtowering success may «o far ex-lte the jealousy of other lands that under some pre text the gnat nations may combine to put us down. Our nation, so eazlly np pma* hed on north and south and from both oceana, might have on hand at once more hostilities than were ever array* 1 against any one power. I hope no such i un hi nation against us will ever be for mud, but 1 want to show that, as Assyria was the hired ' against Jud* * and Cyrus tbt tn 'I razor against itabylon, and ths Until* the hired razor against the Goths, there are now manv razors that the laird could hire If, bei auae of our national sins, he should undertake to shave us In lllu t)*inizzy was the tazor with whivh the laird shaved France Japan waa the razor with * ■ H he shaved China and A'nefh a the mof with wht- h he shaved arro gant oppressive aa I Mlhle haling - ■ I • *. »•,..**« •».« 1 • r. ..4 ,,t It a la* V«y a speedy and worl latte tNMWtng lo »i«d hinder on both si-lea the sea ail national vahsmily It it dw n«d let u as a nation either by un righteous law at Washington or bad U»»a among outsell** defy the AP ! mighty Hrrailth of lM»ln- Lot#, King Henry II. of England crowned bis son as king and on the day of coronation put on a servant’s garb, and waited, he, the king, at the son’s talde, to the astonishment of ail the princes. But we know of a more won drous scene—the King of heaven and earth offering to put on you, his child, the crown of life, and in the form of a servant waiting ou you with blessing. Extol that love, all painting, all sculp ture, all music, all architecture, all worship! In Dresdeniaa gallery let Raphael hold him up as a child, and in Antwerp cathedral let Rubens hand him down from the cross as a martyr, and Handel make all his oratorio vi brate around that one chord—“He was wounded for our transgressions, bruis ed for our iniquities.’’ But not until all the redeemed get home, and from tho countenances in ail the galleries of the ransomed shall be revealed the wonders of redemption, shall either man or seraph or archangel know the height and depth and length and breadth of the love of God. At our national capital a monument In honor of him who did more than any one to achieve our American inde pendence was for scores of years In building, and most of us were dis couraged and said It would never he completed. And how glad we all were when in the presence of the highest officials of the nation the work was done! But will the monument to him who died for the eternal liberation of the human race ever be completed? For ages the work has been going up. Evangelists and apostles and martyrs have been adding to the heavenly pile, and every one of the millions of re deemed going up from earth has made to it contribution of gladness, and weight of glory Is swung to the top of other weight of glory, higher and higher as the centuries go by, higher and higher as the whole millenniums roll, sapphire on the top of Jasper, sar donyx on the top of chalcedony an.l (hrysoprosus above topaz, until far be neath shall be the walls und towers and domes of our earthly capitol, a monument forever and forever, rising and yet never done, "Unto him who hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and made us kings and priests forever.” Alleluia, amen. MASSACRES ALTER HISTORY. A**a«*luutli>iui Have ('hanged Heroril* of the World. Massacres have profoundly affected the history of the United States, aside from the way in which it was affected, by the influx of Huguenots as a conse quence of the St. Bartholomew and kindred crimes in France. The mur ders of the French protestants, under Ribault, iu Florida, by the Spaniard Menendez in 15G5, sent the French to Canada instead of to the South Atlan tic coast of the present United States, gave the latter to Spain, and thua made Florida far easier to win by the United States after this country's in dependence was gained. Devastation along the northern border of New England by the French and Indians in the various Intercolonial 'wars, which ended with 1763, Incited the resistance on the part of England aid its depen dencies which drove Fvance out of Canada and the Mississippi Valley In that year and hastened the revolution, which, a dozen years later, expelled England from the thirteen colonies, says i/oslle's Weekly. Onslaughts on the French in Santo Domingo by the negroes In 1S01 and 1802, that Island being then a French colony, prevent ed Bonaparte from sending an army to take possession of New Orleans, which had been retroceded to France by Spain, and was one of the causes of the cession of Louisiana by France to the United Statea iu 1803. which was the first and greatest expansion ever made in this country, and which made all subsequent expansions—Florida, Texas, Oregon, California. New Mexi co, Alaska, Hawaii, Porto Rico and the Philippines—inevitable. DPraell'a as sertion in the case of Lincoln, that “assassination has never changed the history of the world,” needs to be mod ified when the assassinations affect a race, or a large element of a people, especially when incited by religion or politics. tool lull |:i«‘4 tlo'l lift 4. This Ih the time of the foolish elec tion bets. One man In Coldwater, Mich., lias wagered that If Bryan la elected, he promises to support Ins contestant's mnther-ln-law for life, in Indianapolis u real estate firm nn uoutn eH that a 3-t O-acre farm, a cottage and live lots have been placed In Its hands to be sold on the following con dition*. The deeds to all the property are to lee made out and deposited by the owner* with the cash paid for them. If Bryan Is elected the owner ship of the property passes to the par ties putting up the cash and the money goes to the owners of the property. If McKinley Is elected both the deeds and the i a«h arc passed over to the tu-rson or pci -on* who put up ths money, thus the property I* sold at what la [claimed to h« It* fair rash value If Hryan I* elected, and given away la M Kinby wins I •>.*••! *••! I I* VV t'robabi) Ih* t»»ug**t heard la the world Is that of a metal worker ta Marseille*. I'rsnif The man la sev enty tour years wt 1 When fourteen years of age he had a heard all tm he« lung It grew from year to year and now hie hirsute alia hment when un rolled reaches the re*pe-table hasth of ten feel ten lie 'o s >Vlon this man giwi (ml • he sort l«s h<* l« ir I rutted up In a Mg akeln under hM arm Mine* he la rather him all In else, lag a' it *>• f* et th e luchr* the heard la mors than twke the area • height THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON XIV., SEPTEMBER 33— A QUARTERLY REVIEW. (ioldeu Text: H:* Ye IIiich of tho Word, irnil Not Hearer* Only, Depriv ing Your Own Bel von.— Jus. 1: 22.— Tho Clock liptlaw. 1. There should he n brief review of the life of Christ from the beginning up to tho close of the third yturs of hi* ininls try. 2. This quarter's les«nns extend over a period of about eight month*, from April to December, A. 1>. 2;*. They nil bciong to the third years of the ministry of Jesus, the year of development, a large part of (he teachings, being the enforce ment and enlargement of those that had been uttered to Home extent before. 2. As to places, the events belong to the last part of the Galilean ministry anil the earlier part of the 1 orean ministry, with excursions east to Deeapolis, north to Ce*n.ren I’hlllppl, ntnl west to the re gion of Tyre and fcldon. The Trumpet Cull presents the following plan for a review by Professor Hamltl: "Note to Leader. About three weeks before Review Sunday give each scholar a diagram of u clock face with the name CHRIST In center a* below, and say, T wish each of you to make a Review Les son Clock in this way. On the line from the word Christ to No. 1. write one thing which yon learned about him In the lirst lesson, tin the next l.m- write one thing learned about Christ from Lesson IL, and so for each lesson of the quarter.’ "Tell the scholars that for Review Sun day you will have a large clock face on the hoard. Tell them to bring their com pleted diagrams to you on the third Sun day In March and you will use the beat one as a copy for Idling out your large diagram. "The above plan may he adopted either for single class or entire school. If a General Exercise Is desired, conduct the review as follows: Select the twelve scholars who have shown most Interest In this work; assign one lesson to each, and have each prepared to make a brief statement of that lesson. Have a real Bliiklng dock placed where all can see It. ot'iivr THE CLOCK RKVIEW. When nil Is ready, turn the hands to one o'clock; as the (lock strikes one, let first scholar tell of Lesson I. In his own words. Then turn the hands to two o'clock, and as the clock strikes two, have next scholar give statement of Lesson II. Fol low this plan with all the lessons. Inter sperse with songs." We look at the life of Christ from an other point of view, and It gains reality and vividness If we trace out the move ments of Jesus upon the map. Like the Greek scholar in Tom Brown at Oxford, who traced on a map by means of colored pins the famous retreat of the ten thou sand under Xenophon, we may trace In the same way the Journeys of Jesus re ferred to tn the lessons for this quarter. At each place we may call for a brief de scription of the town, and for the chief events which cluster around It. hut es pecially those connected with the life of Christ. If we have a large map we may use pins with llyers on them marking the name of each place as we come to it. Alliance of Marriageable flirle. The Mutual Protection Alliance so ciety is the name adopted by an asso ciation of wompn In Plymouth county, Mass. To be eligible for membership one must be between 17 and 30 years old, and must agree to let the society examine into the qualifications of any suitor for a member's hand. The meth od of looking into the character of a young man is simple. The society J holds one of Its stated meetings, and each young woman who has a swain of whom she is at all doubtful gives his name and as many particulars as she deems desirable to the club. All is held in strict secrecy. A committee is appointed from among those pres ent. and then there commences an in vestigation. Woe to the young man who has been engaged and broken it nfT without good cause, to him who i runs off to Boston and puts poison in- I to his mouth to steal away his brains, nr to him who is mixed up in any ma trimonial entanglement. By the time the committee lias got through with its inquiries there is not much left to find out about the victim. If the report Is unfavorable the young man soon finds himself ostracised, anil It Is said that j already several have left the county without making good explanations. CnbwHM PMlfoy 1 «-l«-i;rn|ib Mire*. A peculiar but very serious difficulty besets tlie operation of telegraph lines in Hie Argentine Itepubllr. The small spider, of the variety that spins a long cobweb and floats it In the air, is so plentiful there that the floating webs settle ou the wires ill enormous quantities As soon as dew falls or a shower of rain come# up every mi croscopic thread becomes wet and es tablishes a minute leak. The eflf et of thousands and millions of such leaks Is practically to stop the operation of the lines, and the government tele graph department, •specially la lt'i*#m Ayres, lias ben put to vast lUconvent eme by the cdhwetHs A nuniter of expedients have been tried, hut to ftu avail. t attests Tln» in ns. A well known It t i*r «f fa»M »*» in i Philadelphia Is nmktna a quaint little j collection ul tiny «lre*ael «l«a# that | are models of the fristi ake wears herself Wbm the dt*««mahrr sends home * new garment he duplnaiss It by % tiny model us a dwli Meiy.htng must he (srfiKl, even down to ike »*t»! l,o and ootid silver or gu'4 hilton* 114 dt tin w*l hie kies The Jutli are (stud in s (In* case In their own . dressing r«»om. wMh the Is to ol thetr tisallow ukdsrnsolh l ord HumpI'S Soldlrr Hoy. The youngest son of the late Lord Russell sailed for South Africa, early in the year as a lieutenant in th© Royal artillery. The occasion was marked by one of those intimate touches cf family affection which ex cite universal sympathy. As the great troopship swung slowly from her mooring the lord chief Justice, stand ing on the quay, failed to descry his son among the crowd of faces that lined the hullmarks. At last he gave a shrill whistle, using his fingers In a manner well known to schoolboys, and the evidently fambiliar call quick y brought young Russell to the side of the ship to wave farewell: Th© touch of nature evoked a hearty cneer from all who witnessed it. Shirt Walat Kuehrn I'r.rty, At a Rath beach progressive ourhro party the women wore white shirt waists and black skirts, the inen wliito duck trousers and shirt waists of rain bow uues No one was admitted in other than shirt wast attre. Itlana'n ftWIlguriMl Deg. During the thunderstorm In Phila delphia a few evenings ago lightning struck a marble state of Diana at an entrance to Pair mount park. Imme diately afterward the left leg of the statute turned brown. Next morning all the coloring had disappeared ex cept one large spot, which has so far resisted persistent scrubbing and th® application of powerful acids. liner filrl »t ChnnlntiqiM. A typical Boer young woman of tno wealthier class is a student at Chau- * tauqua, N. Y: She la Miss Carrie Rousseau, of Kenilworth, a suburb of Cape Colony, and is the daughter of a cousin of President Steyu, of th® Orange Free State, and a grandnieco of General Bntha. She and hor mother left South Africa at tae outbreak of the war and have been traveling in this country since. It Is a noteworthy fact that in th® state of Utah there is not one Irish Mormon. OMAI1A AND «r, I. Of IS H. II. CO. II AJ.F RATEH, ST. LOUIS, Sept. 30th, Oct. 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th. KANSAS CITY, Sept. 20th, 30th, 0<-t. 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th and 6th. On Aug. 21st, Sept. 4th and 18th HALF RATES (PLUS $2.00) for round trip to most all points South. Now Is tho time to take your vacation. All Infor mation at Omaha A S». 7-ouls R. R. Office, 1415 Furnam St, (Paxton HO TEL Hloek), or write Harry E. Moores, C. P. L T. A., Omaha, Neb At one time the kaiser called Victor Emmanuel III. "The wandering royal encyclopedia.” UmI for the Bowel*. No matter what alls yon, hendaobe to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right CASCARETS help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you Just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CASCARBTS Candy Cathartic, tho genuine, put up In metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Re* ware of Imitations. Ftrmt for m> on #*My t«rm«. or ti*n ro, !■ It , l»eb., Mina, or h. D. J. Mulball, hlooi illy, low*. In driving a nail a woman either drives it crooked or hits her finger. LOW RATE EXCURSIONS, vis MUnourl J itrlllo Kjr., anil Iron .Moun tain Ituule, To points in the West, Southwest, and Southeast at half-rates (plus $2) for the round trip. Tickets on sale Tues days, September 4 und 18, October 2 and 16. November 6 and 20, and De cember 4 and 18, 1900. For full Infor mation, land folders, etc., address any agent of the above lines, or H. C. Townsend, O. P. & T. Agent, St. Louis, Missouri. «S^£, ^Sfl 1 WILL KEEP YOU DRY. | t>on't bn fooled «nth a mackintosh f or rubber cost. If v«u want a cost | that wlH keep yu 4ry In the h*r<J fi •st •♦vriA buy th« Pish Br«n«|1 Slkkvr. If not for &Ato In yvuf J tool*, writs for tus to A. J. TOW UK. Ik.»tnn, Mj««. j Don't stop Tobacco suddenly It luJnrpM nerrnm «t**i*b’ to do no. PA' O CUrtl' l>< ihr aalr pure that fHAC, Y C'Hi* and hatltee ran when to xton oaM »uh it vuuruntre ihat three aeter will pure eat Pe^ RAPA Pl'iR’l I« I't'oi'i” »' 'ihx'inle»i It hat on>tq tin i ihou sail*. It will rura tt«i. A ail dr :a;UM ar M »x*tl pen'll (I a lux; S tw*«» 11TT< ItueMwl ftro. Wr'Mi tUftPKA CHIMlCAU CO., La tiruxxa, Wk TVtatrd a 'he m»t arUetle Banner fro u »»'!* II u ra*r»trU t»pe «•« la* *x»«t l.urlhut I ap" 1 a* ear 1 Bw»tt t*r1»•*> nelta'loa taxi >>" M> had at «ur M'lat piiflu it am » A ln*i • ttdunuriaaard"**pate wittered ftea hr mail. 4) < hua<t el At * x»'t.iM'iwe«<a M» «a a< ! • A r u« tvyt p ami • AX' a- a. ItAMTNuA | WI .It X i lit. Mlituu. Pm* VfyteG/4TT» ^Tll'.ou&nA • eaa raat w f 1! ^ . MmUxww lUrlt J lew HAMi ff' #- • f«* l| H M Ml M< * I* * hr • f •« % •* l\*l «« I* $ I •* A • A A M««*l 4 tildt U I mf M* % • 1 4 t * Ha 4 O I »d ll«f \ t •• *« * j |4 * H 4 h i % n»l« 4 %44 « U(l !%•*«••« I « 4** • 4 « V •» 4 • i .« « . AN OHAtIA, Su. |t Nat