THE NORTHWESTERS. BKKbCHOTBR * t !»«na Pub* LOUP CITY, ■ * NEB. After a woman succeeds In getting the wedding ring where she wants ij she begins to 6ay what she means. A bachelor says that love is a com bination of diseases—an affection of the heart and an inflammation of the brain. There was a remarkable gathering at the funeral of Dr. J. S. Trexler, at Kutztown Pa. Before his death ha provided that every man attending his funeral should have a free dinner, and over a thousand persons availed them selves of his offer at the two leading hotels, where arrangements had been made to feed the multitude. Harry Mangtim and Jim Robinson, two colored men. disputed over a game of craps in Jackson, Tenn. Mungura drew a pistol and Robinson fled, pur sued by the other. After Mangum had fired two shots lie fell dead from heart disease. The intended victim is re garded with awe, and it Is believed he was saved by a providential mir acle. “Don't watch the clock,” was Mr. Edison’s advice to a young man who recently asked him how to succeed. Profoundly significant is that old jok"1' about the laborer who left his pickax hanging in the air at the stroke of noon. A hanging pickax is the fittest emblem for a confirmed clock-watcher —and the pickax hangs always in the air, never digs out a path for him to advance upon. Earl Fitzwilliam of England, who began his 87th year a few days ago, has sat forty-four years in the house of lords and received his training as a parliamentarian in the house of com mons, which he entered sixty-five years ago as a young man of 22. The earl, who is active in spite of his great age, has been for some years the oldest of the Knights of the Garter, which dec oration he received from Lord Palmer ston early in the '60s. and he is also , in years the oldest knight companion, i although he has not held that decora tion as long as the Duke of Cambridge, j who received his blue ribbon from Wil liam IV. When is a cigarette not a cigarette? When it is a pipe. The answer to the conundrum was given by English magistrates. The taking of a tobacco pipe into a certain mine was prohib ited. A partly smoked cigarette was found in a workman's pocket. The man was arraigned and fined. The Judges held that a paper charged with tobacco was a pipe within the mean ing of the rule. It was an instance of applied common sense. Human life is of more value than literal construc tion. The petty court was merely il lustrating a working principle observ ed in tribunals of a more august or ganization and a larger jurisdiction. The American boy is ahead of the English boy. in the judgment of Sir Thomas Lipton, because he gets a bet ter chance to show what is in him. In America the managers of large con cerns are often very youthful. In Eng land the'r youth would be a disqualifi cation, since there a man must look old before he is thought to look wise. Sir Thomas believes that to be "a great error of policy in the affairs of a na tion, a business firm or a family.” He himself came to this country when he was fifteen years old. He declares his experience here “the best commercial training I ever had.” and holds that “it would be a good thing to send every English boy to America when he is seventeen, and to keep him there for a couple of years.” This is generous and even flattering to us, but Sir Thomas' countrymen may find a flaw’ in the argument, reasoning from their point of view—that after the English boy had been here two years they might not be able to get him back. Arizona is interested and the camp of Dos Cabezas is in a fever of ex citement over the discovery of a new placer fields in the southern part of Arizona, which are so extensive and rich that a small army of prospectors expect to become rich. The diggings thus far discovered are five miles in length and three miles in width. A party of placer miners just returned found very rich dirt. Many claims have been staked out. but numerous par ties are outfitting, and there will be a rush to locate all available ground in the district outlined and prospect for new placer ground. The gold discov ery was made by a sheep herder em ployed by George Vandcwalker, who picked up nuggets in a wash and filled a beer bottle with coarse gold. The Mexican continued herding sheep, meanwhile enriching himslef daily with gold. During a debauch at Dos Cabezas he showed considerable gold dust. Friends wrere let into the secret, and all prospered before the news leaked out. One hundred tons of cats’ tails were recently sold in London in one lot. They are intended as ornamentation for ladies’ wearing apparel. Each tail weighed an average of two ounces, and this means that about 1,792.000 cats were slaughtered to complete the con signmeut. A rigid liquor law prevails in Grin nell, Iowa. It is a crime for two or more persons to drink alcoholic stim ulants in company. When a man thinks he needs a bracer he must flock by himself and drink alone. A QUESTION OF TIME. TARIFF REVI9ION WILL COME WHEN NECESSARY. No rndoe Haste Will He Taken That Might Injnre American Industries— Great Care Will Me Taken to Sets That Our Smaller Capitalists Are Protected. From American Economist: The Schenectady Star exhibits astonish ment at the statement of the American Economist that the time will come when it will be necessary to revise the tariff. It thinks that: “When sane folks read the admis sion in the Economist that there ever will arrive a time when it will not be sacrilege to tinker the blessed Dingley bill, they will pinch themselves to see if they are awake and will surely con clude that the millenium Is i sight. ‘Every one agrees that the tan.'. • ill have to be revised in time.’ Wh.it time? Babcock says, ‘Now is the ap pointed time; now is the day of sal vation,’ and invites sinners to repent ance. The Economist admits that it must be done in time, but belabors poor Bab for setting the time prema turely.” This shows how difficult it Is for the average free trade intellect to correct ly grasp the true principle of protec tion. It is, in fact, impossible for the free trader to understand that there Is a wide gulf between the rash and reckless ripping up of a tariff in the interest of free trade and the conserv ative. level-headed adherence to a tar iff that has thus far produced a pros perity unequaled in the world's history until such time as experience and the development of events shall show' the wisdom of changing that tariff. The Star is right in one thing. It is, in deed, a question of time. Unlike Mr. Babcock and his revisionary brethren who would tear open the tariff sched ules as a means of attacking real or imaginary evils which did not grow out of the tariff, do not flourish because of the tariff, and would not be remedied by the removal of the tariff, the Amer ican Economist says, Go slow, let the tariff alone; give business a chance; and when It becomes clear that the greatest good of the greatest number will be conserved by revision, then the work of revision will be undertaken by the only party to which tariff legisla tion can be safely intrusted, the party of patriotism, progress and protection. But not until then. WHY THE MILLS RESUMED. The Washington Times says editori ally. referring to the Dingley law: "We may concede that there was not a general reopening of the mills until after that measure was passed; but that was merely because the man ufacturing interests were desirous of pointing to the idle mills as an argu ment in favor of the tariff which they wanted.” When so rabid a free trade organ as the Washington Times is willing to concede even such a self-evident fact as that the mills were closed under the operation of the Wilson law and did not reopen until the Dingley law was enacted, there is hope. The only thing which can account for the free trade delusion is the failure to recognize in dustrial facts. The second part of th'’ sentence quoted Is so manifestly ridic ulous as almost not to call for com ment. Men are in business for the purpose of making money. They are not so blindly loyal to any economic theory as to let good business oppor tunities go by for the sake of bolster ing up their theories. If the mills were Idle, as they were, it was because it would not have paid to run them. The pleasure of being able to point to the Dingley law as a restorer of prosper ity would hardly have been sufficient Lo make up for the lost dollars. When the free traders are driven to take ref uge In such absurd statements as this in order to support the claims of the policy they advocate, they but make more evident the weakness of their position. BABCOCK MAY NOT PUSH HIS BILL. Mr. Babcock of Wisconsin, author of the bill to put Iron and steel products and some other things on the free list, which he introduced in the last Con gress and which he has said he would introduce in the next house, seems to be changing his mind. Asked today as to whether or not he intends to push the bill at the coining session he replied: "I won't develop my plans until 1 confer with my colleagues, but I may say that this is recognized in th Northwest as a principle that will gc on, regardless of whether it is pushed by me or not. The people of the North west are with me on this question and I would not have the least fear ol stumping my district on this question alone." Some of Mr. BabcocK’s discreet friends have been saying all along that he would, when he had fuller informa tion on the subject, abandon his prop osition to destroy the protective tariff as that would be the result of the pas sage of his bill, and they now asser that he has secured that knowledgi and will drop the subject. If senators and representatives fron the West are any guide to public sen timent there the Babcock hill has n< support In the Republican party In the West. The Senators from Wisconsin Michigan. Illinois, Indiana, Ohio am other states ha" e declared that tie Republicans of Heir respective state would not supp Tt any measure do signed to destro; the protective tarin as would be the result of the passag of the Babcock 1 11. Every Republlcai member of the 'ays and means com mittee of the la t congress, excepting Mr Babcock an on* other, has rtc i i clarcd against the proposed measure. Mr. Babcock evidently begins to ap ' predate the mistake he has made and will act accordingly.—Philadelphia Bress. SENATOR HOAR S WISE WORDS. American manufacture, as its friends predicted, has outgrown the American market. Now' the manufacturers of the country are girding their loins for that ! struggle. I see it is proposed to begin : operations by making reciprocity trea ties with leading manufacturing na tions of the world, especially with our manufacturing rivals. Now I do not wish to be understood as opposing altogether and in all cases such commercial arrangements, when made carefully and wisely and in a constitutional way. I shall pay the highest respect and deference to the conclusion wh.ch the president, a great authority, perhaps the greatest living authority on that class of questions, j may deliberately form. But I am bound to caution the man ufacturers of the country not to enter upon this great struggle with all rnan i kind for an antagonist by placing any i fetters upon their own limbs. The possession of your own market j is what has gained for you the power i and the opportunities to enter upon foreign markets. Be careful that you do not throw' away that vantage ground. Remember that nearly every i considerable reciprocity treaty we have ever made, especially our old reciproc ity treaty with Canada, has been a j source of unmarked vexation, and you were eager to get rid of it as soon as its term expired. If you make a mis take in this matter the mistake is ir reparable. The national faith becomes pledged. A FREE-TRADE STAR GAZER. /V/y / \ / An astronomer used to walk out every night to gaze upon the stars. It happened one night that as he was wandering in the outskirts of the city, with his whole thoughts wrapt up in the skies,he fell into a well. On halloo ing and calling out, one who heard his cries ran up to him, and when he had listened to his story said, “My good man. while you are trying to pry into the mysteries of heaven you overlook the common objects that are under your feet.” THE FARMER S HOME MARKET. If there are any farmers who im agine that their branch of industry is not benefited by the tariff on steel, and in fact by all tariffs that tend to pro mote the establishment of manufactur ing industries in this country, let them reflect what would happen if all the workmen now engaged in turning out domestic manufactures wTere removed from this country and set to work, say in England. Would not the home mar ket for foodstuffs and other agricultur al producers be curtailed by such de portation? Instead of selling such a large percentage of farm products to home consumers, the farmer would be obliged to sell them abroad, and would be mulcted for the freight and charges. The home market is the most profit able market for the farmer, and any thing that tends to increase the home consumption of products is of benefit to the men on the farms as well as to the men in the workshops and the stores.—Minneapolis Tribune. FREE-TRADE AND SAVINGS. There is no better way to judge the future than by the past. From their experience, the people of this country, especially the “middle class” and the workingmen, can readily foresee that the abolition of protection, which has enabled them to increase their savings a billion dollars in the past four years, and the adoption of free trade, with the idleness and want which followed that policy before, would not present any necessity for postal savings banks. During free trade in this country the "middle class” and the workingmen were more interested in and had more use for free soup houses than savings banks, and the same conditions would obtain if free trade were again inaugu rated.—Helena (Mont.) Record. HOME FIRST. I i i Some men, most all free traders, ar« fools enough to argue that because Germany and a few other countries dc not like our tariff we must materially modify if not replace it. Well, it makes no difference whether Germany likes it or not, as long as Protection enriches our country, develops our re sources, builds up manufactories, giver more employment and better wages tc our people, and furnishes us the best market In the world right here at home for our products, we will main tain Protection. We are legislating for the United States, not Germany England, or any other foreign country —London, Ky., Echo. Out of 156,000 houses or flats in 9 Glasgow 86,000 were found to have but ins room, and 70,000 but two roemn. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON IX., DECEMBER I, EXODUS III: 1-12. Golden Text—Certainly I Will be with Von—The Call of Moaea The Inner Summon* to Ileliver the lVopIe from Houdage. I. "The Inner Summons to Deliver the People from Bondage."—Ex. 2:11-15; Acts 7:23-29; Hob. 11:21-27. From the New Tes tament \ve learn not a little about this crisis In Moses' life when he came to be 49 years old. In some way there came Into his heart the desire to help his suf fering brothers (Acts 7:23). It was a call 1 from God to be their deliverer. He felt | their needs, lie knew the promises to ! them, lie saw how fearfully they were | treated. He could not hell) them without i allying himself to them so far as actually | to take their part. Possibly he was re | i|Hired from his position to take part I against the people, or to join in Idolatrous ceremonies. But in some way he had eome to the place where he must either wholly go with the Eg\ ptlauB in religion and life, or he must choose God, the truth, and the afflicted people of God. See Hcb. ll:21-2i. | H. "Forty Years’ Schooling in the \\ ild 1 erness of Arabia."—Ex. 2:15-25. After his 1 high-handed act against the rulers 111 be 1 half of the oppressed, which to Pharaoh seemed like treason, and was dangerous j to the government as uk« i> to Indie an insurrection. Most s was compelled to escape from Egypt, lie went to the bor ders of the MIdlanites. In the southeastern " part of the Arabian triangle, where was a well for the watering of the docks. W hile ’ Moses was sitting by the well, the seven daughters of Itaguel, or Reuel, also called Jethro, the pi » st and sheik of the Mid lanite tribe occupying that region, came to water their father’s docks. Some of the shepherds wa re rude to the young ladies, and Moses gallantly came to their rescue. ; The result was that he married one of them, Zipporah by name, and for forty years remained In the family, and was a I. Jn these years his own character would be disciplined and ripened, and ev ery noble trait confirmed, his faith strengthened, and his knowledge of God., of religion, and of man enlarged. The man surrounded with pride and autocratic power, whose first act in his new life was to smite an Egyptian, was to become the meekest of men. 111. "The Divine Call to a Hard Duty” Ex. 3:1-10. 1. Now Moses kept (was keep | ing) the flock of Jethro. This was when ' Moses was about SO years old, after forty ! years in the wilderness. The backside of ; the desert. Or uninhabited land, tho other side from Jethro s home, away from the shore of the sea. The mountain of God. So called by the writer because here God afterwards proclaimed his law to the Israelites. Horeb. Another name for 1 Sinai. $. 1 am come down. I manifest myself. 1 take hold of the work. I nto a good land and a large. Much larger than the land of Goshen, and affording room for a great population; in fact, too large for Israel to occupy all of it at once (Dout. 7:22>. Flowing with milk and hon j ey. A proverbial expression: In use also among the Greeks, it was literally true, however, in reference to Palestine. As a 1 pasture-land, it flowed with milk. The abundance of Its honey, the stores of wild bees, is still remarked by travelers.—F. Johnson. t IV. "Three Great Obstacles Removed."— Vs. 11, 12 ff. to 4:31. 11. Who am I. that I should go unto Pharaoh? An exile un der the ban of death, a shepherd going into a splendid court, for an impossible work to muk- the Egyptians free two mil lion slaves, to teach and organize these slaves Into a free nation. First Answer. 12. Certainly I will be with thee. My power, my wisdom, my protection, shall be in and around you. Those that resist you must overcome God himself. So to the ancient Persian Academy of Silence strictly limited to 100 came Zeeb. a most learned man. But the number was full. To show this the president tilled a glass full of water, so that it could not hold another drop. Rut Zeeb floated a rose leaf upon it. as a modest token of him self. They elected him. When he signed his name to be added to the 1UU, he put a i cipher before the I'M, Unix tnou. St til tne i number was 100 only. But the president changed hix cipher Into o 1, anil made it read 1100. Ills simple presence multiplied the 100 ten times. Second Answer. The ! visible assurance of God's presence as an | uld to faith. This (the burning bush) | shall be a token, tangible proof. How do you know that I can do this great work in you? Here is a miracle by my own hand. I will be to yon as the ilame to this bush, a common bush when alone, but a darning glory by my presence, and yet unharmed as a bush. Another token was the mountain itself. It bore witness to the promise, it should bear witness to the fulfilment, for ye shall serve Ooil upon this mountain. Third Answer. The ap pointment of Aaron to be his spokesman, for like many a great thinker and work er he was not a natural speaker (1:10-16). The people had to be prepared, and made willing to run the great risk. How would they know that God would do what Moses said. First Answer. The ever-living Je hovah. personal, self-existent, eternal, in visible hut real, who gave this command, was the God who had made the promises to Abraham. Second Answer. The prom ises renewed. Third Answer. Visible tok ens. The miracle of the rod changed into a serpent. This was continued in the miracles of the plagues, which were done not merely to make 1 naraoh willing to let the people go, but also to make the people willing to go. This required faith and courage. Indeed, this was a great deal to expect. It is hard for even the most Christian nations of the twentieth century to do it. This obstacle was re moved by the series of plagues which we study in our next lesson. Courtesy J» Second Nature. One of the most attractive features of Swedish life to s rangers is the po liteness of the children. As soon as a boy is able to stand on his legs he is taught to make a bow and to shako hands, and a little girl must be able to make a bob courtesy before she has learned to talk. As soon as the right hand is known from the left it must be offered in greeting, or when a gift or favor lias been received, and one of the first words learned by the children after “papa” and "mamma” is ' tack.” the Swedish term for thanks. It is heard more frequently than any other word of the language.—Chicago Rec ord-Herald. Man Who Shot Wilke* Ilooth. Boston Corbett, the cavalryman who shot John Wilkes Booth, the slayer of President Lincoln, is still alive, and not dead, as was reported some thir teen years ago. Corbett, now a man of sixty-three, is perfectly sane, and trav els In Texas for a Topeka. (Kas.) firm, and is fairly well off. The government owes him thirteen years' back pension money, and he has claim to eighty \cres of good farming land in Cloud county, Kansas.—Springfield, (Mass.) Republican. Hftlry Note! (From the Farmers’ Review.) The American home market (of dairy products Is the one that should engrave the attention of American cow keepers. We have the best market In the world and a market that is con tinually Increasing Its demand. Many of our states and territories do not make enough butter to 6'ipply their home demand. In a recent report of the dairy commissioner of the State of Washington we find that last year that state imported from other states t.400,000 pounds of nutter and 1,413, 500 pounds of cheese. Though there ire 200 creameries and 100 cheese fac tories in the state, the supply of dairy products is that much short. The copulations in these western states is increasing at a greut rate, as well as are the populations in the great cities of the country. Although some of the western states that import dairy prod ucts are really so situated that it would bo possible to produce the dairy foods needed, yet the habits of the people are such that no great and rapid advance in that di rection can be looked for. They are absorbed in other pursuits that they de«m more profitable. These markets are susceptible of great development, and with proper methods of distribu tion the amounts consumed would be very much greater than at the pres ent time. •cxu .^usiraiiun uairymau, *». Wylie, Kapunda, South Australia, makes a rather remarkable statement as to the gain arising from the cover ing of his cows. We have seen cows covered at night in the stable and have heard of dairymen that even per mitted their cows to go into the pas tures with the blankets on. More over, it is well known that in some parts of Europe the dairy farmers cover their cows in the pastures. But as a scheme that brings profits we have not seen it generally recommended. It looked like carrying the care of cows to the extreme. But the Australian In question believes that he reduces the cost of making butter nearly one half. In fact, he says that before the use of blankets the cost of making a pound of butter was 22 cents and after the practice had become well estab lished the cost was only 12 cents per pound. We doubt if this remarkable decrease in cost was due to the con servation of heat, but the Australian seems to have no doubt on the matter, n part he says: “It took me two years to get the whole of my twenty six cows under cover, because I want ed to proceed cautiously, and see what the result would be, and I was so sur prised that I had to go over the work again and again to be sure that 1 was making no mistake. Every cow that was put into a cover gave the same satisfactory results, by increasing her produce on a smaller quantity of food, and getting into better condition. The effect of the covers on the cows was j marvelous. My system of managing the covers is to keep a record of the outside temperature, and when the thermometer goes above 60 degrees I take the covers oft. When it goes be low CO degrees I put them on, and al ways keep them on in wet weather. The material I use is grainsacks, two of them sown together, forming the cover, with a rope round behind, fast to each corner to keep It from going forward, and a leather strap fastened in front, behind their forelegs to keep ; it from going back. I thought at first that I would have to oil the covers, but was surprised to find that after a cow had worn one for about a month, the grease and hair from her skin made the sack waterproof underneath, so that in the heaviest rain we have had I have never known the cover to wet through. To see cows feeding in the rain with covers on when it is blow ing a gale and taking no notice of it, is a surprising sight, and gives me great satisfaction.” Fnnrmoti* E;z Wait*. Reports from Western shipping sta tions indicate a degree ol waste In current egg collections that is almost unprecedented. A prominent Nebras ka collector reports three days’ col lections amounting to 9,873 dozen, of which 4.5G4 dozen were bad, 653 dozen checked, 2,633 dozen seconds, and only 2,023 dozen, or about 20 per cent, No. 1 grade. Another collector in the same state writes that the stock coming in varies from 4 dozen roto to the case up to total loss, and says: “Of about 1,000 cases received this week, I doubt that we get 300 cases No. 1.” Prices I have necessarily been put down so low ' at country stations that receipts are ! expected to fall off still further, and there is every probability that Eastern consumptive trade will have to depend I considerably upon refrigerator eggs ! for some time to come.—N. Y. Produce I Review. Snvo I l>* n tut. Awakened early by his pet cat, which was crawling up his arm and crying loudly, Peter White of Stone ham found his house on fire. He had just time to move his aged mother and other members of his family to a place of safety when the flames burst '«rth. The dwelling was practically de stroyed, causing a loss of $3,000.~-Bo» ton Evening Transcript. The Clmrin of It# “I’m goin’ to school now," gaid Wil lie. “Oh, are you? Do you ’.ike it ” “Yes.” “That’s good. That’s a sure sign that you'll learn fast. I suppose your teacher is a very pleasant lady, isn’t she?” “Naw. I don't like her very well. But there's a boy in our class that can make his ears go up and down and wiggle the top of his head.” —Chicago Record-Herald. lie llail to Tip. “How did you enjoy the change from cottage life to being a guest at the hotel last summer?” “Guest! I wasn’t even a patron. 1 was a victim.” —New York Herald. PRINCESS VIRCQUA, H. D. Endorses Lydia E. Pinkliam’f* Voerctablc Compound After Following Its Record For Years. _ ••Dear Mrs. Pixbham : — Ilcalth i3 the greatest boon bestowed on human ity and therefore anything that can restore lost health is a blessing. I consider Lydia K. I*initialIU*S V ojg etablc Compound as a blessing to State and Nation. It cures her moth ers and daughters und makes them well and strong. PRINCESS VTROQl'A. Practicing Physician ami Lecturer. •« For fifteen yearn I have noted th® effect of j our Vegetable Compound in curing special diseases of women. “ 1 know of nothing superior for ovarian trouble, barrenness, and it has prevented hundreds of dangerous operations where physicians claimed it was the onljr chance to get well. Ulceration and inflammation of th® womb has been cured in two or threo weeks through its use, and as I find it purely an herbal remedy, I unhesitat ingly give it my highest endorsement. —Fraternally j-ours, Db. F. Viuoyi’A, Lansing, Mich.”—f5000 forfeit If aboue tes timonial is not genuine. If you arc ill do not hesitate to pet a bottle of Lydia E. lMnk liam’s Vegetable Compound at onee, and write to Mrs. Pink ham at Lynn, Moss, for special advice; it is entirely free. Containing thirty-two new maps, pub lished expressly for us by the largest map and atlas publishers iu America, is just out. It is complete to March ist, 1901. Indexed, and gives new maps ot China. South Alnca, the I’hilippines, Cuba, Porto Rico, and is ot as much practical use as any atlas published. We mail it to anv address for five 2 ccnt stamps. Address AJvertlsIna L'epai tment Libby, McNeill & Libby, CHICAGO. THE WORLD’S GREATEST CATERERS SEfiS * SEAFARING MEN / KNOW THE VALUE OF $ ♦$♦♦♦■$♦><*>$♦♦«"$■ ■!>#<#>$< WEJty OILED CLOTHING IT WILL KEEP YOU DRY \l I IN THE WETTEST WEATHER LOOK fOfi A30VE TRADE MASS ON SALE EVERYWHERE /•at A i r\r.\ ic«. cnce vovw SHOWING PULL ONE OP GARMENTS AND HATS A J.TOWER CO. BOSTON, MA55. J r th9 s Sawpr’s dickers Sawyer'* “Fxrelsior Ilrand” Sait* tna SJick'Ti srcttio bt*M xmiorpronf unr «» nfs in the world. .Made from th«* t est ins tvnulrtAnd warranted wnterprool. Mude to stand tho ro-ighet-t work and westhnr. Iiook i«r tliHriulciuark. 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