Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 25, 1903)
B Mrs. Weisslitz, president of the Ger-B man'Womans’ Club of Buffalo, N. Y., after doctoring for two years, was finally cured of her kidney trouble by the use of Lydia E* Pinkham fs Vegetable Compound* Of p.ll the diseases known witii which tlie female organism is Rfllicted, kiilney disease is the most fatal. In fact, unless prompt and correct treatment is applied, the weary patient seldom survives. being fully aware of this. Mrs. l’inkham, early in her career, pave careful *>tudv to the subject, and in producing her great remedy for woman's ills — ! Lydia. E. Pinkham’s Vegetable C'ompouial—made sure that it con- I •tained th s correct combination of herbs which was certain to control that .dreaded disea. e. woman’s kidney troubles. The Vegetable Compound acts in harxhouy with the laws that govern the entire female system, and while -there are many so called remedies for kidney troubles, Lydia E. Pink— * 11inn’s Vegotablo Compound is the only one especially prepared ^fo»‘ women. Read What Mrs. Weisslitz Says. 1 “Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—For two years my life was simply a bur den. I Buffered so with female troubles, and pains across my back and Joins. The doctor told me that 1 had kidr.ey troubles and prescribed ibr me. For three months I took his medicines, but grew steadily worse. My husband then advised mo to try Lydia E. Pinkhani’s Vegetable Compound, anti brought home a bottle. It is the greatest blessing ever brought to our home. Within three months I was a changed woman. My pain had disappeared, my complexion became clear, my eyes bright, and my entire system in good shape.”—Mrs. Paula Weisslitz, 170 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y. fr#rf that Kidney Trouble fan lie Cured by Lydia E. Pinlham’s Testable Compound. “Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — I feci very thankful to you for the good your medicine has (lone me. I had doctored for years and was steadily growing worse. I had trouble with my kidneys, and two doctors told we I had Bright’s disease; also had falling of the womb, and could not walk a block at a time. Aly back and head ached all tho time, and I was bo nervous I could not sleep; had hysteria and fainting spells, was tired all the time, had such a pain in my left side that I could hardly stand at times without putting my foot on something. “ I doctored with several good doctors, but they did not help me any. I took, ill all, twelve bottles of Lydia E. Pink bum’s Vegetable Com pound, five 1(0X08 of Liver Pills, and used three packages of Sanative Wash, and fool like a new woman, can eat and sleep well, do all my own work, and can walk two miles without feeling over tired. The doctors tell mo that my kidneys are all right now. I am so happy to lie well, and I feel that I owe it all to your medicine.”— Mus. Ural Strono, Dalton, Mass. Mrs. Pinklmm invites all sick women to write her for advice. She lias guided thousands to health. Address Lynn, Mass. pORI’EIT II wo cannot forthwith produce tho original letters and signaturesct abjve tintUuaaiaU, which Will prove their absolute genuineness. Lydia E. Plukham Medicine C*., Lynn, Matt. I _ Was there ever a v/omnn who didn’t regard her baby as a marvel of beauty; PIVP permanently cure** rro amor nervonwc** a*t©f ■ • I O I1r*» day’* tine of Iir Kiine'*Cfrrt*ut Nerr# Heston* c*r fiend far KltUK K|‘«5 OO Irial nottlc arid treatise. Da- R li KUNt. Ltd .«Si Arch Street. PJitlade phi*. *' The man who squanders the money that belongs to bis family Is a mean thief. Try me just once anu 1 am sure to come again. Defiance Starch. It takes more than the wind to make a budding mustache full blown. When a woman finds she has met her matcn in shrewdness she assumes the injureu innocent air. •» State Farmer's Mutual Insurance Co., of S. Omaha, Nehr., is one of the most successful farm insurance com panies in the West. Organized 1895, has $20,000,000 insurance in force. Is sues a perpetual policy that does not expire just before a fire. Annual meet ing Jan. 12, 1904. We want live Agts. B. R. STOUFFER, Secy. T B HOLMAN. Pres. The port side of a vessel is not nec j essarily the captain's wine cellar. St. Jacobs Oil The old surety, through its penetrating power, promptly cures Rheumatism Price, 25c. and 50c. THRIFTY FARMERS Are Invited to settle In the state of Maryland, where they will find a delightful and healthy cirnate. Claas markets for their products and plenty of land at reasonable prices. Map and aescrlptlve patnph* leu will bo sent free on application to H. BAOENHOOP. Bee*» State Board Of Immigration. BALTIMORE. MD. nunesiNGLE IftJMS BINDER STMIfiiSl5tCI6AR ALWAYS RELIABLE Your Jobber or direct irutn factory, I'eoria, 111. 16 Views of Atlantic l,ny at Its best mailed to anyone Bending in name and address of taro or more friends who are suffering from < atarrb J. C. RICKEY A CO. HU Walnut Sr. I'iiii.a, W. N. U., Omaha. No. 52—1903. -(■'JIJ. !■ i • '•* i-r r—~ ' " The city of Bath ought to be somo where near Watertown. Try One Package. You never hear any one complain about "Defiance Starch.” There is none to equal it in quality and quan tity, 1C ounces, 10 cents. Try it now and save your money. Few would-be poets can say. "My lines have fallen in pleasant places." “World* Talr." A St. Louis World's Fair Informa tion Bureau has been established at 1G01 Farnam St.. Omaha, Neb., in charge of Harry E. Moores, where all Information will be cheerfully fur nished free of charge. We may not thoroughly appreciate the grass, but nature gives it is dew. Defiance Starch is guaranteed big gest and best or money refunded. 1G ounces, 10 cents. Try it now. speak softi —the lovesick youth. I n«^/Wcw^lv --*!/*-**—'If - ——tfl *i-r[pr n I m i^tiM-r 0**y f R o y a 1 Christmas Festivities i ELABORATE CELEBRATIONS ARE UNIVERSAL IN ALL THE PALACES POF EUROPE-SCENE IN THE KING'S RESIDENCE AT STOCKHOLM piF= fl7T^r jQg&il J^zz^cz:,. ^tocx&olst (n ^ j^?zz2£tz7^ znp/Tssr z^rzozzp or tzzzt zfocz5Z7Z7C>zzj' \\ ■ ZZP&ZZ TT^ZT JfTTVG- ' | Nowhere in the world is Christmas celebrated so elaborately and with so much preparation as in the royal pal ices of Europe. There are many mil lionaires in America who doubtless spend quite as much or more money upon their Christmas gifts, while many millions, it is safe to say, suc ceed in their own way in having an equally jolly time. In the household [if a king, however, Christmas day must be spent in the traditional man ner. formally, while a hundred exact ing precedents established centuries back must be rigidly observed. To begin with, the presents which the members of the royal family make to one another form but a part of the royal gifts. In addition to these, each servant of the royal reti nue must be remembered. Especial significance is attached to every act of a member of royalty, ami to slight one of these servants would be re marked. There are usually several sets of tables in the royal apartment where the Christmas gifts are exhib ited. The presents intended for the entire household are displayed here on Christmas morning. An excellent idea of the number and variety of these gifts may be had from the accompanying picture. The ceremony is much the same in all the i royal palaces of Europe. A large i apartment similar to one of our great ' banquet halls Is required for the dis ! play. When decorated the room, as ! the photograph suggests, looks more | Tike a large and well stocked depart i ment store doing a thriving business | than a private parlor. The presents : are set out attractively on a score of I tables. Elaborate dresses, sets of furs, cloaks and similar presents are often displayed on regular forms or lay fig 1 ures. Meanwhile, of course, the entire i apartment is beautifully decorated I with greens, while a variety of gayly I bedecked Christmas trees fills every • nook and corner. This work is done by professional decorators; who work for days before Christmas in prepar ing it. On Christmas morning the royal family first' take possession of the apartment to enjoy their tree and ex change gifts. Later, it all the pres ents are in the same’ room, the royal suite or court retinue enters, the li dies and gentlemen in. waiting and. others; next in turn come the higher 1 servants of the household and so on until every one has bee* remembered! The celebration includes every one w’thln the palace grounds, even to t-ie i workmen of the gardens and stable. A MATTER OF GROWTH. Difference in Culture of the Old and New Worlds. If one-tenth as much attention were devoted to the fools among the middle and working classes as is devoted to the fool sans of the rich, we should be in danger of believing with Carlyle that the people are ‘‘mostly fools." It Is true that the culture of the sudden ly rich is cruder and narrower than the culture of those who have had generations of wealth and leisure; but culture is relative. The culture of the most cultured classes in the Old World is the result of large wealth possessed for generations. Culture is a matter of growth; but it never grows in pov erty. The cheapness of the culture of the very rich in this country, as com pared with that of the aristocracy of old countries, is simply the difference between youth and age—a difference of experience. There is a compara tive cheapness in the culture, bearing and manuers of the people of the West as compared with those of the East, and for the same reason. The aristoc racy of the South and of New England have a refinement quite unlike that of the newly made rich in New York and Chicago and the West. They have been longer In the making.—Gunton’s Magazine. Privileges of English Mayors. At Newcastle-on-Tyne at periodic in tervals the mayor and corporation as sert their rights over the shores of their native river by proceeding in state to various points, where they pro claim their authority. Perhaps as an inducement for the mayor to under take this particular duty, on landing on the green he is permitted by an cient custom to kiss the prettiest girl present, conferring upon her a sov ereign as compensation. At Bourne moutn. where the kiss mayoral is also conferred, it is an ancient and loving custom for the retiring mayor to give his successor an oscillatory salute. Progressive King of Siam. The king of Siam, who bears the musical name of Chulalongkorn. al though only years old. is celebrat ing his golden Jubilee with unprece dented magnificence In Banyko*. Chu lalongkorn has given Siam an en lightened government and yet zealous ly guarded native customs and insti tutions. Hence, while he has built canals, railways, lighthouses and hos pitals, he still serves as a priest in the Buddhist temple. He has organ ized his army on the German model, hut his bodyguard is still composed of am*Koo«— 400 daughters of his nobles. CURED HIM OF “HOLLERING." Picture Showed Cowboy How He Looked in His Specialty. On one of his trips West, Frederic Remington, the artist, made the ac quaintance of a cowboy who was called by his associates “Hollering Smith.” In appearance the man was typical of his kind, and Mr. Remington made several studies of him, both in repose and when in his favorite pastime of “hollering.” 1-ater, when j hack in his studio the artist embodied j a rather close portrait of the exuber- \ ant Smith in several drawings for a magazine, most of them showing him in a state of eruption. l.ater Mr. Rem ington again visited Smith's neighbor hood, and on the afternoon of his ar rival was approached by that worthy bearing one of the pictures torn from the magazine. Pointing to the cen tral figure he said: “Say, is that me?” “Well,” replied Mr. Remington guardedly, “I got the idea from you, of course, but—*’ “Oh, it’s all right," broke in the man; “no offense. if it’s me just say so.” “Well, yes; it’s a fairly close por trait of you.” “That’s what the boys at the ranch said. I look like that when I holler, do I?” “I think you do.” “Well,” said the man as he slowly returned the leaf to his pocket, “if that’s the state of the case then all I've got to say is that Hollering Smith lias hollered the last holler that he'll ever holler. Hereafter when I cele brate I blow a tin horn. I don’t con i sider that no man has a right to look 1 like that—not around amongst white folks, at least.”—Philadelphia Post. English Humor. Senator Perkins of California re turned recently from a tour of Eu rope. The unprecedented rainfall in terfered considerably with the Sena tor’s pleasure, but it gave him an op portunity to sample the humor of Lon don bus conductors. One rainy day, Mr. Perkins boarded a bus and took a seat inside. He be-, gan soon to feel the patter of rain drops upon his head. The to<Jf of the bus leaked, and the American was suffering. The conductor just then came in to j collect the fares, and Mr. Perkins j said to him: < "What's the matter with this roof? Does it do this always?” “No. sir. only when It rains.” the conductor answered smiling.—Detroit News-Tribune. NOT SO MUCH OF A JOKE. What Happened to the Hat Told in One Chapter. In the back room of a store on South Main street, Fall River, a prac tical joke is being worked which is furnishing no end of amusement to the frequenters of that place. An old hat is kept in a convenient place, and when an unsuspecting individual comes in to have a chat or get into an argument he is liable to have a stren uous time, provided he wears a hat similar to the one which is kept on hand there. After he lias been there for a time someone, who is in the ring, gets the old hat and conies up behind the un suspecting individual and takes his hat off and conceals it behind him. Then he throws the old hat on the floor. Immediately all those present who are onto the joke begin to dance on the hat. and they soon make a wreck of it. The unsuspecting individual believes that it is his hat they are jumping on and naturally he begins to make a row right off. When he has got sufficient ly wild to satisfy the jokers his hat is returned to him in good condition and the old hat is laid away for the next victim. A variation was worked the other day. A man who was onto the trick came in, and his hat was taken from his head and thrown onto the floor. He naturally thought it was the old hat. and he immediately got into the spirit of the game and jumped on it as hard as the rest. He was wild when he found out that he had been jumping on his own hat.—Fall River Globe. A National Conclusion. Recently W. S. Gilbert, the English librettist, was so unfortunate as to lose his umbrella while dining at the Carlton club in London. In a rather waggish mood the librettist caused the following notice of his loss to be posted in the cloakroom: “The noble man who took the undersigned's um brella will confer a great favor on Mr. Gilbert by leaving it (the umbrella) with the clerk of this club.” When a friend remonstrated with Gilbert, say ing that ne thought it was a gratuitous affront, and asked why Gilbert should assume that a nobleman had taken the umbrella, the witty Gilbert ex claimed: “Oh, according to the first article of the club's rules its member ship ‘is composed of noblemen and gentlemen.’ And. since the person who took my umbrella is certainly not a gentleman, it follows that he must be a nobleman.” CALLED BEFORE THE FEAST. City Derelict Disappointed in His Last Hour. The missionary had finished his talk to the crowd of derelicts in a Bowery mission and went around the room to shake them by the hand. There was one man sitting on a bench whose face was so utterly loathsome that the missionary's gorge rose in his throat, and he was compelled to pass him by. The man's dulled eye marked the look of disgust, and in a tone of mingled dejection and res nt ment he cried out: , \ "Say. mister, why don't you shake hands wid me?” The young missionary turned, con science-stricken, looked into the sin scarred features and grasped the Plan's hand. ‘ Really, brother, you must, forgive me.” he stammered. “I—I couldn't help it when l saw your—your face. ( But i'll make amends. You must take dinner with me to-morrow night.” The broken man glanced at his rags in confusion, blushed like a girl and gasped: "Wot? Me take dinner wid you! Me go to your house! Me?" “Yes. I mean it. I’ll come tn mor row night, and get you.” True to his word, the missionary presented himself at the lodging-house the next evening and Inquired for the man. A corpse was lying on the table, a handkerchief spread over its face. The clerk jerked his thumb in the di rection of the body. “That’s Wilson,” he said. “He had fixed himself up and was waitin' for you. Dropped dead half an hour ago." —New York Press. Lady Was Still There. The invitation list of the Governor General of Canada Is made out strict ly in accordance with precedent, but £ is not kept up to date always, the * aide who has to send the invitations out, generally an Englishman or Scotchman, not always being an cour ant with changes «n the list. The late Sir Antoine Dorion, Chief Justice of Quebec, was once invited to some function, as was proper; but Lady Dorion, who was dead, was in vited likewise. Sir Antoine accepted for himself, but declined for her lady ship, on the ground that she was in the cemetery. The next year, how ever, the same mistake was made; so the old judge wrote back to the aide de camp in waiting: “Sir Antoine Dorion accepts, etc., but her ladyship being still in St. Anne's cemetery. Sir Antoine Is com pelled again to decline the invitation for her.”—New York Times.