Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1902)
* MRS. KULDA JAKEMAN Wifo of President Jakeinan of Elders of tho Mormon Church, Salt Lake City, Utah, Recom mends Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound For Wo man’s Periodic Pains. i '■ “Dear Miw. Pi^kham :—Before I knew of Lydia E. Pinklmm’s Veg etable Compound 1 dreaded the approach of the time for my menstrual period, as it would mean a couple of MRS. HULDA JAKEMAN. days in bed with intense pain and suf fering. I was under the physicians care for over a year without any relief, when my attention was called to Lydia U. l’inkham’s Vegetable Compound by several of our Mormon women who had been cured through its use. I began its systematic use and im proved gradually in health, and after . the use of six bottles iriv health was completely restored, and for over two rears I have bad neither ache or pain. You have a truly wonderful remedy for women. Very sincerely yours, Mrs. Ilt'T.OA Jakf.man, SaltLakeCity.Utah.” —45000 forfeit if about testimonial Is not genuine. Just as surely as Mrs. Jake man was cured just so surely w ill Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of fe male ills. Mrs. Pinkliam advises sick wo men free. Address, Lynn, Mass. I The Literary Success of ths day in New York and London SiR RlC^RD C By L **Th© Wage© of Sin •‘This remarkable novel sets the daughter of Charles Kingsley almost at her lather’s side. Compared to the • phenomenally successful ’ novels of the day, it towers like a Colossus.”—The Literary Digest. DODD, MEAD & CO., Publishers SxUersKape SPet-TX— ,'YiiTI"™ *IrY. VVUat •» at green . FARM tol1* #SEEDS\ ppf SAT.ZERS SEEDS NEVER FAIL! TO ffl ij,030,000 Customers m Bf Proudest record of a” y seedsman on earth, Jjj and vet we are reaching cut lor more. W© mu desire, by July 1st. 300,000 more and hence Jm| tum unprecedented offer. Eyfl £$10 WORTH FOR 10c! We will mail upon receipt of 10c in stamp* flTZJ VJV our great catalogue, worth liaO OO to any wide awake fanner or gardener, to irefher with many farm seed Ham pie i, /tv l&X*po%»itlvely worth $10.00 to get a AgW start with, upon receipt of but Ay 10c in stamps. 35 pkgs. *v earlieft vegetable Pleaae teed*, ft.00 . . send Ill^iryXIm gi'Qil Catalog an>■ witn alone. 6c, 10c to Halrcr. Bend at onre M«i*Maieei«tMtM(ieti*ii*i»ii*ii*iiei wna. wti*t»tt*i«ii*ii*ii«iwo I The Lincoln Eye and Ear Infirmary I i ■ Successfully * treats all curable ! diseases and in-1 juries of the \ EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT, i Including ! BLINDNESS, DEALNESS dfld CATARRH, j | Conla?lous and incurable cases not admits g f ted. l'atiem* boarded, nursed and treated, g | Letters of inquiry promptly answered, i Write for announcement. f DRS. OARTEN & COOK, t Oculists and Auriits in attendance. Lincoln.Neb. | o« tsnwt*, so* ism •, ■•tiatiaoa'isiiao an stiMtwi* JUST THINK OF IT Every farmer his own landlord, no Incum brances, his hank account increasing year by “|year,lttnd value Increas ing, stock increasing, splendid ollmate, ex cellent schools and churches, low taxation, high prices lor cattle and grain, low railway rates, and every tossl ble comfort. Thlsls the condition of the farmer in Western Cunadu— Province of Manitoba and districts of Assinl boin, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Thousands of Americans are now settled there. Reduced rates on all railways for bomeseekers and set tlers. New districts are being opened up this year. The new forty-page Atlas of Western Ca nada sent free to ail applicants. F. Pedlev, Superintendent of Immlgrutlon.Ottawa.Cunadu or W. V. Bennett. Canadian Government Agent, Wit New York Life Bldg., Omaha, Neb. NO HUMBUG0 strum ents In one. Humane Swine V, Stock Marker and Calf De horner. Stops twine of all agon from rootlns. Makes 41 different ear marli, large or small, with same blade. Si* i tracts horns. Testimonials I free. Pries $1.60. or rend 111 00. get It on trial; if it /suits send balance. Fat'd I April S3, 1901. FARMER BRIGHTON, Fairfield, la. OKLAHOMA 500 homestead rvwj! urvi.niiumn DICK T MORGAN. El Reno. 0. T. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Taper. W. N. U—OMAHA. No. 2—1902| < y ♦♦_♦ | Some Pecutiari £ tie* Noted in the t ( American System J i_; ♦♦ ♦♦ AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Ought a man to have a better right to the name of some one else than to hi3 own name in his own business? This is the question which, accord ing to the Washington Times, a good many manufacturers and solicitors are trying to answer. The Patent Office now allows a man to register some other mail'd name as a trademark, but not nw 0%rn Trade-marks are registered nnder the acts of 1881 and 1882. The first act had a clause providing that the com missioner of patents should not regis ter a trade-mark which was “merely the name of an applicant." Many surnames had become irre vocably attached to certain articles of manufacture. Therefore, to prevent any injustice, congress the following year passed a short act providing that nothing in the preceding act should “prevent the registration of any law' ful trade-mark rightfully used before the passage of” the former act. There fore, from almost the beginning of the registration of trade-marks up to the middle of 1898 the Patent Office at Washington allowed the registration act, so that they had become associat ed with the goods of a certain person. As late as the first half of 1898 sev enteen fsnma.jre's were registered as trade-marks by applicant* of the earn# name. Then the policy of the patent office suddenly changed; the letter of the main act of congress was stuck to like grim death, but the spirit of the supplemental act was entirely crushed out. of it. The reason at the base of the prin ciple that a surname must not be used as a trade-mark is that a surname cannot be the exclusive property of any one person as against all others who own the name. YTYtYTYYYYYTYYYTTYTYTYYYTY^ : Socialism ♦ ♦ ♦ in Japan ♦ ♦ 444 444444444444444444444444 'TTyVTTTYTVYTTTVTTTTTVTTT i t Newspaper Thinks 7 There is Little J Opportunity for t Its Development ^ The recent action taken by the home department with regard to socialistic publications and organizations will probably create an Impression that Ja pan is In some danger of being invaded by the enemy which continental Eu rope finds so much difficulty in holding at bay. it would not be a correct im pression, we think, and our belief is confirmed by the Jiji Shimpo, which, while admitting that the reign of plu tocracy cannot be altogether prevented in this country, denies that any tondl tions suggesting the growth of social ism have yet become visible. The Jiji evidently thinks that the rich and Ihe poor in Japan are not sep arated by a gulf comparable with that dividing the plutocrat and the pauper in the West. Here the poor man him his compensations. He takes his holi days, goes to fetes and festivals and enjoys himself thoroughly on occasion. There is nothing intolerable in bis lot. The Jiji might have added that the rich man's manner of living is by no i means so conspicuously superior to tlie poor mail's, as it Is In Europe or Amer ica. Concerning the actual possession of wealth, we really doubt whether the Japanese plutocrat of this twentieth century is a much richer man than was his predecessor of Tokugawa times. But apart from the mere question of dogiees of wealth, there is the fact that a Japanese rich man la singularly care ful not to make any striking display of opulence. He seems to have an in stinctive desire to avoid contrasts which might excite public envy. There are not. indeed, quite as large possibilities of differentiation in Japau as in Europe or America. The Japan ese house and the Japanese manner of living do not offer such extensive op portunities for magnificence and lux ury, in outward appearance at least. But when due allowances are made on that account, the conviction is still I forced upon any careful observer that [ opulence in Japan is deliberately de ; prived of many of the ostentatious fea tures which in the West render it so ugly in the eyes of intligpnce. Which of us knows of even one very wealthy Japanese who makes a parade of his riches or devotes his money to pur poses of glitter and display? So long as that spirit of effacement prevails the advent of socialistic ideas will De deferred.—Japan Mail. VU\UV\MV\M\W«WWUMW } Dinner that | Cost $25,000 -* A f*. A A. A. A A. A A. A. A. A ^ Expensive Entertivin- J mervt Given J at Deltnonico's $ Probably the most expensive dinner given at Delmonlco's restaurant, on i Fourteenth street. New York, was that j given by Morton Peto to the tea and I coffee merchants of New York, two hundred in number. It cost twenty-five housand dollars. The rarest wines and the most elaborate decorations were mere incidents. The menu cards were of gold and the guests sat on silk cush ous on which their names were em broidered. In the center of the table was a miniature lake in which swam swans taken from Central Park. Clara Louise Kellogg received $1,000 for singing two songs at this feast, and a present besides of a diamond bracelet. The salon was smothered in flowers. Another dinner given at one of the Delmonico establishments, for ten peo ple, cost four hundred dollars a plate. It was luxurious enough to he classical. The waiters, five of them, were dressed as sailors. The host was a wachtsmao. and he bought the waiters' clothes. The guests drank, or, rather, tasted, every vinted liquor that ever has been brought to America. They finished with a pousse cafe made of eleven liqueurs. Before each plate sat a cut glass basin about twenty Inches in di ameter and four inches deep. Kach was nearly filled with water perfumed with attar or roses, on the surface of which floated half-open pond lilies. In the basin a perfect model of the yacht owned by the host was placed. It was cut in red cedar wood, with cabin, rail, wheel for steering, brass work, such as belaying pins and binnacle, man-ropes worked and trimmed with sailor knots, scraped pine masts and booms, rigging of silken cords colored as it would bo in the original, and sails of satin. There was a gold oar and many other gewgaws. FORGET WHERE THEY LIV E. .nitanre of For* etfnlnesr That Occa sionally Come to Notice. It was a diplomat, according to Ribot, in his book on “Disease of Memory,” who, when about to make a visit, could not tell his servant his name. “For heaven’s sake,” he said to a friend, who accompanied him, "tell the servant who I am.” Worse still was the case of on« of Dr. Aber nethy’s patients, he knew his friends perfectly, but could not name them. One day when out walking in the street, he met a friend, to whom he was most anxious to communicate something concerning another friend. But unfortunately he could not re member the other friend’s name, and at last, frantic with his ineffectual attempts to make his friend under stand who was the person meant, he seized him by the arm and dragged him through several streets to the residence of the other and there pointed to his (the second friend's) name on the door. A complicated Instance of mental eclipse Is that of a gentleman living in Edinburgh. He was once found early in the morning seeking in vain for his residence. He appealed to a house maid cleaning a doorstep. “Lassie, can you tell me which is Johnnie —’s house?” he asked. “Eh, mon," replied the girl, “but you're Johnnie — your self.” “That’s not what 1 want to know,” was the angry retort. “I want to know where Johnnie-8 house Is?” That distinguished lawyer, Lord Eldon, was the lord chancellor of Eng land, and had to keep a cumbrous piece of the national machinery known as “the great seal.” His house in Queen Square caught lire and to save the seal from robbers he buried it in his garden, but unfortunately forgot the exact spot. The story is told in many forms of the man who went home to dress for a party, but un happily wound up his watch before taking off his clothes. This set up a sequence of automatic actions which ended in his going to bed instead of going to his party.—Rochester Poet Express. Elephant Catcher Needed. An elephant catcher rather than a cow catcher seems to be needed in In dia. On the railroad between Bengal and Assam according to the Railroad Gazette, as the superintendent of the line was making an inspection trip, while passing through the great Nam bar forest, the train came to a stop with a jolt that threw the travelers out of their berths. The train had run into a herd of wild elephants which were trotting down the track, the last of which had both hind legs broken and was thrown into the ditch, while the engineer counted seven oth ers which got away. This is not the first time that wild elephants have got on the track, and ordinary fences and cattle guards are no protection.—Sci entific American. Her Majesty, the Spring. The empress of Japan is nearly 61 years of age, but she shows to this day ihat she is rightly entitled to her fam ily name, Maruko, the spring. Her majesty belongs to the few women who seem never to grow old and who in the autumn of life possess the charm of knowing how to preserve the smiling loveliness of their youth. William Shakespeare, “the chief lit erary glory of England," was a yeo man's son. A Nm» Hotel Luxury. Hotels become more palatial day by flay both in outward appearance and Interior equipment. A Chicago hotel now proposes to exceed the height of luxury heertofore reached by any of its neighbors. Not content with ordinary bath rooms, the management Is about to add a new feature in the ihape of an atrima. corresponding to the inner courts of the old Homan palaces, with a pool of water In the center, lounging rooms adjoining, and every facility for luxurious idleness which the Chicagoan of the future may find time for. (7oco7er«d foul Is Costly. If a load of coal is left out of doors, exposed to the w'eather. say. for a month, it loses one-third of its heat ing qualities. If a ton of the coal is I placed on the grouud and left there ! and another ton is placed under a j shed, the latter loses afrcnt 25 per cent of its heating force, the former about 47 per cent. Hence It is a great sav ing of coal to have it in a dry place, covered over on all sides. The softer I the coal, the more heating power it loses, because the volatile and valuable \ constituents undergo a slow combtis- i tion. A Grateful Man. Cox, Wis., Jan. 6.—With Kidney dis ease so bad that he could hardly walk across the room for pain, Frank M. j Unwell of tills place was a man greatly to lie pitied. He tired out with the slightest exer tion and in spite of all the doctors could do for him he was growing grad ually worse. He had tried many medi cines and treatments without benefit, but recently he read in a newspaper about Dodd's Kidney Fills, and these | helped him from the very first dose. He took several hoses before he was completely cured, but now he is well and strong as ever he was, and feels very grateful to Dodd's Kidney Fills j for his restoration to good health. It takes a great man to escape un- ] deserved glory. The average husband imagines his wife is a part of the property he owns. | When in doubt use Wizard Oil for pain; both suffering and doubt will vanish. Your doctor and druggist know it. Money is the sugar that sweetens the miser's life. Stops the Cough anti Works Oft" (he Cold T.axative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25o. Religion makes good armor, but its no good as a e!suk. Beware of ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell und completely derange the whole system w tien entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by 1'. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O., contains no mercury, and is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get tliegenulne. It is taken internally, ami made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonialsfree. Bold by Druggists, prior 75c per bottle. Hails Family Pills are the best. Sincerity is the one great secret of success. DON'T FORGET A large 2-ox. package Red ( ross Ball P.luo, only 6 cents. The Kuss Company, tsouib Bend, lnd. The heart that sings, wings itself to heaven. When a man asks a favor he al ways puts his worst foot forward. Don't try to keep your pigs aud your pearls together. CHE THE FAMOUS Red Cross Ball Blue. lutrge £ oz. package 8 ceuis. Ibe Kus»Company. .South Bend, Inti. Just when a man flatters himself that he has reached his prime he be gins to get bald. Mrs. It/lmlow i Soothing •yrup. For children terit'nc »<>ftrn« I he gnan, reduce* tir ttaumiaiiun. allay t psin. cures wind colic. ZJcabottlw. White lace sleeves in a dark velvet dinner gown are much in demand DEFIANCE STARCn should be In everv household, none so good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water starch. The gloomy church preaches a sun less heaven. Brooklyn. N. Y„ Jan. nth -A very time- \ lv and practical suggestion conies from a i physician of this city, lie says. "Take Uarlleld Ten, the Herb Medicine. It ts , especially needed at this season when the system is apt to be out of order from ; eating rich food. Tills wonderful remedy cleanses the system and regulates the \ liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. It Is simple, pure and effective, and is good I lor young and old." Do not smoko a pipe which has a short stem. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color more goods, per package.than any other. Mold by druggists, iOo. per package. No man finds his work till he loses himself in it. Ttheii mutism cured promptly by the use of MATT J. JOHNSON'S CCSS. Try It. All druggists. if these is any love in a man's heart lie cannot tie totally depraved. AM, t’P TO DATE HOUSEKEEPERS use Defiance Cold Water Starch, because It Is butter and 4 oz. more of it for same money. Don't kick about the weather. When it rains it settles the dust: when the sun shines it dries the mud. A Disabled Man is certainly not in it, and Sprains and Bruises disable, but this is where St. Jacobs Oil comes in (or a prompt, sure cure. It Conquers Pain ; Price, 25c. and 50c. BOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE. •AIJL WR10HT FOR MORP THAN HALF A CENTTTRT* Carr CoMi'MtkiA, Cliilln an4 Fmr, lad all Mb Iuun < obi plainu. All Drafjl.U. Prlrr 2b main a Hat. WRIGHT* LNDIAN VEGETABLE PILL CO.. New York. THE LINCOLN IMPORTING HORSE CO. LINCOLN, NEB. The larreat Importers of HIOH CLASS STALLIONS In all the west. At the present time our EXTENSIVE BARNS are Oiled with Percbcron unit Shire Stallions: TWO. THREE am! I'OUft rear olds WHITE PS EOU DESCRIPTION or CATALOGUE. COME and see us AT t INCH. Our long distance phone 575. Barns and ofilee. 33rd and Iioldrege Streets. /A. L. SULLlVdN, IVlgr. i Yellow, musty looking linen can be avoided by using DeOanco Starch, which whitens the good3 and makes them like new. Ask for the 16 <>z. package Defiance Starch. All other starches weigh 12 ounces. ' 11 ' i Don’t forget It—a better quality and one-third more of it. I At Wholesale by All Grocery Jobbers. ! .. ...-.. .'■■■* The Distinctive Value of Syrup of Figs is due to its pleasant form and perfect freedom from every objectionable quality or substance and to the fact that it acts gently and truly as a laxative, without in any way disturbing the natural functions. The requisite knowledge of what a laxative should be and of the best means for its production enable the California Fig Syrup Co. to supply the general demand for a laxative, simple and wholesome in its nature and truly beneficial in its effects; a laxative which acts pleasantly and leaves the internal organs in a naturally healthy condition and which does not weaken them. To assist nature, when nature needs assistance, it is all important that the medicinal agents used should be of the best quality and of known value and Syrup of Figs possesses this great advantage overall other remedies, that it does not weaken the organs on which it acts and therefore it promotes a healthful con dition of the bowels and assists one in forming regular habits. Among its many excellent qualities may be mentioned its perfect safety, in all cases requiring a laxative, even for the babe, or its mother, the maiden, or the wife, the invalid, or the robust man. Syrup of Figs is well known to be a combination of the laxative principles of plants, which act most beneficially, with pleasant aromatic liquids and the juice of figs, agreeable and refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system, when its gentle cleansing is desired. The quality of Syrup of Figs is due not only to the excellence of the combination, but also to the original method of manufacture which ensures perfect purity and uniformity of product and it is therefore all important, in buying, in order to get its beneficial effects, to note the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package.