The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 01, 1902, Image 7

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    W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 & $3£9 SHOES made
W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by
more men in all stations of life than
anv other make, because they are the
only shoes that in every way equal
those costing $5.00 and $0.00.
W. L. DOUGLAS $4 SHOES
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
$l,10:i,S20{Wist. S2.340.000
Best imported and American leathers. Heyl’s
Patent Calf. Enamel, Box Calf, Calf. Ifid Kid, Corona
Colt, Nat. Kanaaroo. Fant C'olnr Kyelet* ummI.
Cfllltinn ! The genuine have W. L. DOUGLAS’
vau ,iuii • name and price >tamped on bottom.
Short by mail, 25c. extra. Hint. Catalog free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS.
.Good |
Things I
to Eat i
Z, irl'' X
X from Libby's famous Hygienic kitchen*. a>
m where purity prevails. All meats used in ip
I LIBBY’S •
| Natural Flavor |
| Food Products
« arc II. S. Government Inspected. <p
*>
Keep In the house for emergencies—for $
^ suppers, for sandwiches — for any time dk
d> when you want something good and want dk
4f> it quick. Simply turn a key and the can ^S>
isopen. Au appetizing lunch is ready in <£>
<S> au instant. <*>
| LIBBY, McNEILL A LIBBY, CHICAGO. |
^ Write for our free booklet, “How to Make dk
^ Good Things to Eat." X
SOLD ON MERIT
CHANDLER S CREAM EXTRACTOR
Tee It two weeks; 1f not as represented,
money refunded Immediately. No wa
ter In the milk. Removes“ofT' odors,
leaving pure, sweet milk. KslMescream
quickly. Save# money and labor tw Ice
every day. Agents price to first buyer
In each locality. 0. F. CHANULKR &
CO., 421 W. titb St., Kansas City, Ho.
K OMAHA INSTITUTE. One of the
PP| ETV dipped of the Keeley system.
C.K«Lk ¥ oulv Keeley Institute In Ne
braska. Cures Drunkenness. Cures Drug Users,
booklet free. Home treatment f *r Tomioeo
llttblt, cost ©5. Address 724 S. JWth Street.
Large Gifts for Libraries.
The reimrt submitted to the Amer
ican Library association showing
that while then* have been a greater
number of individual gifts to libra
ries this year the average amount,
as well as the grand total. Is below
last year, is somewhat astonishing at
first glance. Probably the popular
misapprehension on the subject aris
es from a failure to distinguish be
tween libraries and library buildings.
While the gifts to the former aggre
gated $3,075,247, the money given
for library buildings amounted to no
less than $8,312,550, of which amount
Mr. Carnegie gave more than three
quarters. It may reasonably be
doubted if the year's gifts for library
buildings have ever been exceeded in
amount within the same space of
time.
Baring-Gould Chops Trees for Health.
Though close upon 70 years of
age, Mr. Baring-Gould, the author of
more books than any living English
man, is as upright today as he was
thirty years ago. He attributes this
erectness to his inyariable custom of
writing at a high desk in a standing
position. Mr. Gould always writes
with a quill pen, and his manuscript
is not beloved by printers. As a re
laxation from literary work Mr.
Gould, like the late Mr. G.adstone,
often spends a couple of hours chop
ping down trees.
Burnished brass shines brighter
than nuggets of gold.
A sister's love isn't supposed to be
expensive—unless it happens to be
some other fellow’s sister.
DEFIANCE STARCH
should be In eve-v household, none eo
good, besides 4 o* more tor 10 cents than
any other brand of cold water atarch.
If a man has a good memory ae
knows when to forget.
ST. MARY’S ACADEMY.
Notre Dame, Ind.
We call the attention of our readers
to the advertisement of St. Mary's
Academy which apears in another col
umn of this paper. We do r.ot need to
expatiate upon the scholastic advan
tages of St. Mary’s for the catalogue of
the school shows the scope of work
included in its curriculum, which is
of th? same high standard as that of
Vassar and Bryn Mawr, and is carried
out faithfully in the class rooms. We
simply emphasize the spirit of earn
est devotion which makes every teach
er at St. Mary's loyally strive to de
velop each young girl attendant there
into the truest, noblest, and most intel
ligent womanhood. Every advantage
of equipment in the class rooms, lab
oratories and study rooms, every care
in the matter of food and clothing,
and exceptional excellence of classic
conditions—all these features are
found at St. Mary's, in the perfection
of development only to be obtained
by the consecration of devoted lives to
educational Christian work, in a spot
favored by the Lord.
Japan’s Poetic Mikado.
The Emperor of Japan is one of the
few poets who are content to write
verses for their own pleasure rather
than for the admiration of the pub
lic. It is said that he often composes
10,000 lines a year, but with a most
praiseworthy self-denial rare among
poets he reserves most of them for
| his own private reading.
Twenty Thousand to One
Is the proportion of the Capital Prize in the Omaha Auditorium Stock
Contest To the Price of a Ticket. !
$5,000.00ln °old
Has Been Contributed by The Defiance Starch Co. of Omaha. ;
This Magnificent Prize, Together With One Thousand Prizes of i
Lesser Value, Will Be Given Away Free To Purchasers Of Shares p
Of Common Stock In The Omaha Auditorium Company. 5
Price ot Shares—Twenty-five Cents.
Eight SPECIAL SEMI MONTHLY CASH PRIZES, Of Not Less
Than $50 Nor More Than $500 Each, Will Be Distributed During the
Next Four Months. The Capital Prize and 1,000 Other Prizes Will
Be Distributed Immediately After the Election, November 4, 1902.
Prizes Will Be Awarded for the Best 1.001 Guesses on the Total j
Vote Which Will Be Cest for ALL the Candidates for Governor in j
New York State Next November. Here is the vote cast at the last j
i five elections: 1891, 1,165,085; 1894, 1,275,671; 1896, 1,434,046; 1898,
1,359,190; 1900, 1,556,620. Guess what It will be in 1902.
i Special prizes will be awarded to persons guessing nearest correct
■ amount in larger of two sacks Into which the special prizes have each
been divided without being counted.
8END IN YOUR GUESSES AND QUARTERS.
Address, for Information and tickets, 3
THE OMAHA AUDITORIUM CO.f §
OMAHA, NEB. |
Mention this paper when you write. Agents wanted in every ■
town. S
^mJ
$5,000 IIN COLD-FREE
For IS Trad© Marks Cut from lO©
Packagea of DEFIANCE Starch
To everyone who will
send lo the Auditor
ium Co. or the De
fiance Starch Co., fo
Omaha, Neb., 15 trade
marks cut from 10 ct. 4
or M os packages of 5
DEFIANCE STARCH
will be sent an Adul*
torium Stock and
Guessing ticket which
sells for 25 cts giving
you a guess In this
great contest to win
$5,000 X3ST OOX_,IO
or some one of the 1,000 other prizes. If you cannot get Defiance Starch
of your grocer we will send it to you express prepaid Including one
ticket upon receipt of the price *f the starch.
^_The Defiance Starch Co., Omaha, Nebraska^
HOW BRAYK MAX DIKI
PATHETIC ENDING OF GRANDSOh
OF JOHN BROWN.
J. A. Adams Wandered Away frorr
His Camp on the Colorado Deser
and Perished for Want of Water—
Body Not Found.
J. A. Adams, a former resident o;
Arizona and a grandson of old Johi
Brown, whose “soul goes marchinj
on,” wandered away from his rami
on the Colorado desert on May ID ant
perished for want of water. Tht
story of his disappearance is graphl
rally told by Charley Fay, one of tht
party, as follows:
“We went out on the desert pros
porting for gold. An Indian wham wt
had employed to show us where tt
And water on the desert caught hii
foot In the stirrup while mounting his
horse and fell on his back.
“The horse started to run, dragging
the Indian by one foot. As the ground
was covered with jagged rocks the In
dian would have been killed had no'.
Adams run up and taken the horst
by the bit. The animal, wild with
fright, reared and plunged. Adams
was twice thrown upon the rocks, anti
once the horse's hoofs hit him, but ht
still gripped the bit until Mr. La
mere and I succeeded in releasing tht
Indian.
“After the danger was over, Adams
sat down upon a rock and bogav;
laughing, and when asked if he was
hurt, he replied. ‘Oh. no, I’m only s
little tired, but I guess you'll have tc
help me set this arm.’ We then start
ed for Yuwa, Adams riding some 2S
miles that afternoon and never once
complaining, though we could see by
his drawn features that he was suffer
ing intense pain.
"At dusk we camped for the night
and within an hour the injured mac
was delirious and raving like a ma
niac. Some time during the night he
left camp. As soon as we discovered
that he had gone we made every ef
fort to tind him, but could not dc
much until daylight, when we found
his tracks in the sand. We followed
the tracks all that day and until about
9 o’clock the next day, when we came
to a hard, rocky place at the foot ol
some rock hills. Here we lost the
trail and try as we might we could
not find it again.
"For three days we searched the
hills, but not a trace of the man could
we discover, tnough we well knew
that somewhere within a radius ol
twenty or thirty miles lay the body of
one of the bravest men that ever lost
his life in that great death-trap, the
Colorado desert.”—Yuma Sentinel.
Worry Causes Dyspepsia.
Worry is a cause and a source of
much unhappiness. It seams the face
with lines and furrows and has a
most depressing effect upon that hy
persensitive organ, the stomach,
which at such times becomes a most
unwilling and laggard servant. In
deed, it is safe to say that unless en
couraged by a cheerful temper and
bright or, at least, hopeful thoughts,
the stomach will play truant or sulk
or do no good w?ork. The physiolog
ical explanation of this is the close
alliance of the great sympathetic
nerves, which are worse than the tel
egraph for carrying bad news; the
work and anxiety which depress the
brain cause simultaneously a semi
paralysis of the nerves of the stom
ach; gastric juices will not flow, and,
presto! there is indigestion. One
sign of mental health is serenity of
temper and a self-control that ena
bles us to bear with equanimity the
petty trials and jars of life, espe
cially those arising from contact with
scolding, irascible, irritating persons.
Serenity of mind comes easy to some
and hard to others.
Anecdote of Fitzhugh Lee.
Maj.-Gen. John Gibbon thus de
scribes his meeting with Gen. Fitz
hugh Lee at the McLean house. Ap
pomattox county, Virginia, in April,
1865, at the time of the confederate
surrender: “Going to the door, I found
Gen. Fitz Lee seated on his horse
and looking, as I thought, somewhat
uneasy. He had been a cadet under
me at West Point, and I had not seen
him for years. As I looked at him a
vision came up before me, and I could
think only of a little rollicking fellow,
dressed in cadet gray, whose jolly
songs and gay spirits were the life of
his class. My salutation of ‘Hello,
Fitz! Get off and come in,' seemed to
put him at his ease at once and
brought him to his feet. He came in
to the house and told me his story.
Before leaving, with a grim humor,
he took from his pocket a $5 confed
erate note, and, writing across its
face, ‘For MrB. Gibbon, with the
compliments of Fitz Lee,’ he said,
Send that to your wife and tell her
it’s the last cent I have in the
world.’ ”
Snails Used as Medicine.
According to the Ixmdon Spectator,
one of the current medical fads
among the English laboring classes is
the following. Snails crawling up a
church wall are caught—those crawl
ing down possess no virtue—placed
in a pan with a little water and
boiled, being stirred meanwhile wit>
a quill plucked from a black crow.
When the mixture has boiled down to
the consistency of a salve it is ready
for use. When rubbed on the soles
of the feet it is a sure preventive of
disease, being especially efficient in
the case of what is locally known as
“hinfooenzy.” It is also valuable in
strengthening weak spines, bnails,
whether raw or cooked Is not evi
dent, are als* considered a valuable
rsmedy for consumption.
The great secret of success Is en
thusiasm, carefully revised and edited.
Stops the Cough and
Works Off the Cold
Laxative Brotuo yuiuineTablets. Price 25c.
Flattery Is always dished out to
other people—never to us.
THE REST RESULTS IN STARCHING
can be obtained only by using Defiance
Starch, besides getting 4 oz more for
same money—no cooking required.
An old bachelor says the best pet
flogs come in glass cases.
If you don’t get the btggest and best
it's your own fault. Defiance Starch
is for sale everywhere and there is
positively nothing to equal it in quality
or quantity.
Common sense is not so common as
tome men think it is.
Hall's Catarrh Cora
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
Few men have will power enough
:o do things they don’t want to do
»nd don't have to but ought to.
Clenr white clothes are a sign that the
housekeeper uses Ked Cross Boll Blue.
Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents.
The meek will of necessity have to
inherit the earth if they will ever
get it.
P|YC P^rmancnti.y nirra. No fit* or nervousness After
b I 0 0 Mr«t day's utM? of Dr. KHdp'r (Jrcut Nervr Heston*
fi* Mend for FKI'K ll'J.OO trial bottle and treatise.
DJi. h. Ii kLlK". Ltd.. US1 Arch Street. rhiUtdelplua. fK.
If a man owned the earth he would
try to dodge the tax collector just the
same.
The new woman always departs
when the new baby arrives.
Wanted flood. Energetic Men
to si'll our line of High Grade Lubricating
Oils, Paints, etc., direct to the Threshing
and Farming Trade on a salary or com
mission. Reply with reference and state
territory wanted, and experience.
The Industrial Uil & Supply Co.,
Cleveland. Ohio.
Any candidate who is knifed at the
polls is apt to feel somewhat cut up.
Don’t you know that Defiance
Starch, besides being absolutely su
perior to any other, is put up 16
ounces in package and sells at same
price as lz-ouuce packages of other
kinds?
It may be the first straw that really
breaks the camel’s back.
SPECIAL LOW RATE EXCURSIONS.
To New York City and Atlantic City,
$18.00 for the Round Trip,
via the Lake Shore & Michigan
Southern Railway, on July 17th and
81st; also August 7th and 14th. Re
turn limit twelve days. Tickets good
by boat between Cleveland and buf
falo and Albany and New York, if
derdred. Stop at Niagara Falls and
Chautauqua. Full information on ap
plication at City Ticket Office, ISO
Clark St., or to C. F. Daly, Chief
A. G. P. A., Chicago.
Unless a man is satisfied with him
self he is not in the self-made class.
Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces
In a package, 10 cents. One-third
more starch for same money.
The music ceases when the instru
ment must listen to itself.
The majority of us are free except
for the shackles we fasten upon our
selves.
PELVIC CATARRH
CAUSES
Palpitaiion of the Heart, Cold Hands and Feet, Sinking
Feelings—Pe-ru-na Cures Catarrh Wherever Located.
ItUkAA AAAA AAA* AAAOAAAAA* ♦ A
« y—--J_«_
* \ Mrs.X.Schneidetw »
j —— :
« 'v _t
«**«***vw*'f»»»*»****»v<r»f
Mrs. X.Schneider, 2400 Thirty-seventh
Place, Chicago, 111., writes:
••After taking several remedies
without result, I began in January,
1901, to take your valuable remedy,
Peruna. I was a complete wreck.
Had palpitation of the heart, cold
hands and feet, female weakness, no
appetite, trembling, sinking feeling
nearly all the time. You said I was
suffering from systemic catarrh, and
1 believe that I received your help in
the nick of time. I followed your
directions carefully and can say to-day
that I am well again. / cannot thank
you enough for my cure. I will always
be your debtor. I have already recom
mended Peruna to my friends and
neighbors and they all praise it. I
wish that all suffering women would
try It. I testify this according to the
truth. ”—M.rs. X. Schneider.
Over half the women have catarrh in
some form or another. And yet, prob
ably, not a tenth of the women know
that their disease is catarrh. To dis
tinguish catarrh of various organs it
hus been named very differently.
One woman has dyspepsia, another
bronchitis, another Bright's disease,
another liver complaint, another con
sumption, another female complaint.
These women would be very much sur
prised to hear that they are all suffer
ing with chronic catarrh. But it is so,
nevertheless.
Each one of these troubles and a great
many more are simply catarrh—that Is,
chronic intlummation of the mucous
lining of whichever organ is affected.
Any internal remedy that will cure ca
tarrh in one location will cure it in any
other. This is why Peruna has be
come so justly famous In the cure of
female diseases. It cures catarrh
wherever located. Its cures remain.
Peruna does not palliate—it cures
Hon. Joseph B. Crowley.Congressman
from Illinois.writesfrom Robinson, 111.,
the following praise for the great ca
tarrhal tonic Peruna. Congressman
Crowley says:
“Airs. Crowley has taken a number
of bottles of Peruna on account ol
nervous troubles. It has proven a
strong tonic and lasting cure. I can
cheerfully recommend It "—J. B.
Crowley.
A catarrh book sent free by The Pe
runa Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio.
If you do not derive prompt and satis
factory results from ttie use of Peruna,
write at once to l)r. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad
vice gratis.
Address Dr. Ilartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio.
flLL SET OF TEETH $3.00
WORK OU.ARAN TKKD-WE HO AS WE
ADVERTISE NO STUDENTS. WEAR* Afl
HERE TO STAY. CONSULT THE ROE'EB- Y\
sons at once:. ____________ 1C
Boft Elllinc# .... V
Silver Kilting# - - - small Charges N||
Tretli ( loaned • - - lor ITaterial. '
Set at Teeth • • *S.O0 _
Hitkdu fPUTEffl
UNION DENTAL COLLEGE,
ni IBTI mr #■% I incn Nn Knikk. NO VAIN, no detention
K LB wM | HI pH R“ 1 a H 1 jT"fT 8“ |J from business. Wo refer to thousands of
cured patients In Nebraska and adjacent
territory. Why patronize Eastern "fakirs" when you can deal with a reliable company at
homey An absolute guarantee in eyery case Send for circulars. THE EMPIRE
RUPTURE CO., 032-33 Now York Ufa Building, Omaha. Natraaka.
I--'-— - ■ " ■ .- .. ■ ——
There are many critics who are de
structive, but seldom constructive.
Mrs. WIiihIow'b Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softenn the kotiih. reduces In*
tlainuiatlou, allays palu, cures wind colic. 23c a bottle.
You must catch your hare before
you can cook for bim.
Send .11 your order. In Or.hi. Provision. »»d
Stock, to tlmd J. « umpbrli who have
private wire to alt American market., and are
member, or Chicago Hoard ot Trade. Malu Office,
lo ard of Trade nulldlug, Oui.ha, hell. T*ie
phone. KUtSJ.
Pair I apo Piirtainc ^R€E with 12 rake§ Cream
1(311 LObw GUI lulllo Co mt) 1 ex Ion Toilet Soap. $lper
UcjUlud. Kerrigan & Go..477 Bowen Ave.,Ohioafo,IU.
-ALL WRIGHT TOR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY"
•'ur* llradnrhp, .'oasiipatiou, Chills and F«-*»r, sod all Mia
luaa t out plaints. Ail lirs(flili. frlia lb mall a llti.
WRIGHT'S INDIAN VEGETABLE PILL CO. New York.
(Issued under* ttie Authority of the Mnilroadr* of Nebraako.l
Statement of Taxes Paid by the Following Railroads that are Operated at a Loss in Nebraska
with Comparisons Showing What is Done in Other States with
Lines of Railroads that arc not Profitable.
COUNTY. AMOUNT OF TAX PAID.
Pacific Railway in Nebraska....o..Clay $ 25674
” “ " ” .Adams 5,077 27
” “ ” ” ..Webster 25 20
* * ” ” ..Nuckolls 5,079 96
71.22 mile-. $10,439 *7—$*46-57 per mile
This road received in gross earnings the sum of.$30,923 07
Operating expenses.60,918 22
Loss in operation.129,995 15
ANOTHER INSTANCE
COUNTY. AMOUNT OF TAX PAID.
Kansas City, Northwestern.Pawnee $1,859 63
.Gage 351 68
. t 20.10 miles $2,211 31—$110 per mile.
This road received in gross earnings the sum of.$10,519 14
Operating expenses. 37431 35
Loss in operation.$26,912 21
The reason these two lines of road are kept in
operation is that in time of disaster to railroad prop
erty, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company pur
chased the securities and took possession of the
roads which are parts of branches of roads that
possibly never should have been built. However,
as they are built and serve the people in several
■TATES. RAILROADS. MILES.
Wisconsin.. Marinette T. & W. R. R. 33.3
Maine.Washington Co. R. R.102.28
Pennslyvania Bellefonte Cent.21.34
Michigan... Manistique & Northwestern.... 62
Nebraska... Pacific Railway.146.37
Nebraska... Kansas City, Northwestern.20.10
counties, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company
keeps them in operation, hoping that in time they
will pay operating expenses and taxes even though
they pay no profit to the stockholders.
In other states arrangements have been made in
such cases, so as to not work a hardship on the
stockholders of non-paying investments, instances
of which are given below j
taxes paiu tax per mil*.
$ 181 $ 6 oo
64 00
51 40
*°>439 r 14$ 57
.31 no 00