The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, July 14, 1904, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Hats in Elevators.
Men In New York are not called
“cads,” “bad-mannerea“ nor “horrid
[ things,’ If they do not remove their
hats when riding in elevator cars with
women. * The question of removing
the hat has been settled there for
good. In office buildings stores and
other public places men do not re
move their hats as a rule. Once in
awhile a man does, but he has all the
earmarks of being from some other
city than the metropolis. In elevator
cars or hotels, if a man removes his
hat when women are present he
doesn t do it because it is the custom.
omen of New York do not expect
men to remove their hats because of
their presence any more than it would
be expected of them In street cars.
Depew’s Parting of the Ways.
Senator Depcw states that when he
wa6 20 years old he was elected sec
retary of state, after he had served
in the assembly, and that he was of
fered the position of minister to Japan
with a salary of $9,000 a year and an
equal amount to fit him out, but he
realized that it was the parting of the
wavs for t and he accepted a sal
ary of $2, , a year from Mr. Vander- ,
bilt as attorney for the Harlem rail- ;
road.
It Pays to Read Newspapers.
Cox. Wis., July 4.—Frank M. Rus- j
sell of this place, had Kidney Disease i
so bad that he could nut walk. He I
tned Doctors’ treatment and many dif
ferent remedies, but was getting
worse. He was very low.
He read in a newspaper how Dodd’s
Kidney Fills were curing cases of ;
Kidney Trouble, Bright's Disease,’and
Rheumatism, and thought he would
try them. He took two boxes, and now i
he is quite well. He says:
“I can now work all day, and not
feel tired. Before using Dodd’s Kid
ney Pills, I couldn’t walk across the
floor.”
Mr. Russell’s is the most wonderful
case ever known in Chippewa Coun
ty. This new remedy—Dodd’s Kidney
Pills—is making some miraculous
cures in Wisconsin.
The most precious necklace a wom
an can wear is made of the two arms
of her child meeting behind her shoul- ;
ders.
Piso's Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. Sahckl,
Occaa Grove, X. J., Feb. 1”, 1900.
Always tell the girl you love that
you love her in the same old way and
in the same words. That is the one
occasion where originality and conse
quent variety would be extremely ill
advised.
FREE TO TWENTY-FIVE LADIES.
The Defiance Starch Co. will give
25 ladies a round-trp ticket to the St.
Louis exposition to five ladies in
each of the following states: Illinois,
r Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Missou
ri who will send in the largest number
of trade marks cut from a 10-eent, 16
ounce package of Defiance cold water
laundry starch. This means from your
own home, anywhere In the above
named states. These trade marks must
fee mailed to and received by the De
fiance Starch Co., Omaha, Neb., before
September 1st, 1904. October and No
vember will be the best months to
visit the exposition. Remember that
Defiance Is the only starch put up 16
oz. (a full pound) to the package.
You get one-third more 6tarch for the
same money than of any other kind,
and Defiance never sticks to the iron.
The tickets to the exposition will be
sent by registered mail September 5th.
Starch for sale by all dealers.
I have been told that every crime
carries with it its penalty. True. And
not infrequently it carries that pen
alty out of the reach of justice.
Do You Want the Lowest Rates
either one-way or round-trip excursion,
to any point east of Chicago or SL
Louis? Ask the Erie Railroad Com
pany, 565 Railway Exchange, Chicago,
for complete information. Three fast
trains daily from Chicago and SL
Louis through to New York, Boston.
Buffalo, Pittsburgh and other eastern
points. Stop-over without charge at
Niagara Falls, Cambridge Springs and
Beautiful Chautauqua Lake.
In their secret hearts the most of
men seldom forgive their fellow man
a failure, and never forgive him a suc
cess.
Try One Package.
If "Defiance Starch” does not please
you, return it to your dealer. If it
does you get one-third more for the
same money. It will give you satis
faction, and will not stick to the iron.
True friendship can afford true
knowledge. It does not depend on
darkness and ignorance.
World** Fair Accommodations.
Reliable and reasonable accommodations: ad
joins Worlds Fair irrounds on the south side,
■with private pate: direct from Union Station by
Market street car. Write for reservations.
Srand View Fraternal Hotel, St. Louis, Mo.
^ The surest way to make ourselves
agreeable to others rs by seeming to
think them so. If we appear fully
sensible to their good qualities they
will not complain of the want of them
in us.
Even the blind man can find his
way through an open door.
A man cannot make much headway
If his cranium is swollen.
If a friend pulls his watch on your
funny story, cut it snort.
If fowls roll in the dust or sand,
rain Is near at hand.
Does smoke come out of a fireles3
chimney?
Birds an fowls oiling feathers Indi
cate rain.
Love your neighbor, but don't tear
down the fence.
Deep down in the bottom of her
heart every woman entertains the fear
that her husband is really too good
looking.
It is well that there Is no one with
out a fault, for he wcnld not have a
friend In the world. He would aeem
to belong to a different species.
A soft answer Is never useful for
CBgSJDf
_ and
Invention.
Emergency Street-Car Brake.
On nearly every railway the passen
ger cars are provided with an emer
gency brake which can be operated
by any of the passengers or trainmen
the instant an accident occurs, often
serving to bring the train to a stand
still before the engineer is awTare
that there has been an accident. Thus,
in case an axle breaks on a rear car,
the train can be brought to a stop by
any one in the car long before the
engineer could be notified and have
time to reverse the engine and apply
the brakes. It is now proposed to ap
ply practically the same idea to the
street car, though in this case the
motorman, being the one most likely
to discover an emergency requiring
prompt action, is given control of the
brake. This mechanism may consist
of a pneumatic pressure system or an
electro-magnetic arrangement, as de
sired, but to actuate it the inventor
utilizes an electro circuit The
switch by which the circuit is closed
and the mechanism put in opeiation
is located directly beneath the motor
man's arm. being attached to his body
by shoulder and waist straps. The
instant he sees the necessity of stop
ping the car to avoid a collision or
running over some one he has only
to drop his arm and close the circuit,
when the automatic brake is applied,
bringing the car to a standstill before
he could have made the first move
Actuated by Movement of Arm.
toward stoping it in the ordinary man
ner.
Andrew J. Brislin of Brooklyn, N.
Y., is the designer of this brake.
Cheap and Safe Lights.
In Great Britain an invention
which, it is claimed, gives absolute
safety to oil lamps is being applied to
practical uses. The device consists
of a circular metal box, the size vary
ing according to the candle power re
quired. in the box is a deposit of salt,
over which is a layer of cotton waste
special}- prepared.
Running through the cotton pack
ing is an asbestos wick, woven by
hand, and which is practically indes
tructible, and requires only occasional
attention. By immersing the box
in petroleum or* paraffin the cotton
waste absorbs the requisite quantity
of oil in a few minutes through small
lateral interstices. That accomplish
ed and the metal being dried exter
nally, the application of a light to the
asbestos wick produces a bright,
steady white light, the candle power
being in proportion to the size of the
box, the consumption of oil being
less and, accordingly, the cost being
correspondingly cheaper than if the
light were oltained from an ordinary
lamp.
Moreover, it is claimed absolute
safety is assured. The asbestine
lamp may be inverted, may exhaust
itself, may be thrown down or whirled
about, but there is no danger, it is
averred, as there is no free oil or oil
gas that can be ignited, and conse
quently there can be no fire or explo
sion. The patent is said to be appli
cable to every species of lamp from
the modest night light necessary in
the nursery through the entire gamut
of domestic illumination, to the draw
ing-room lamp. In the industrial world
it could be utilized id every direction,
especially when a bright, steady light
is essential, such as engine headlights
and lights on ships.
The Great Northern and several
Scottish and Irish railways are engag
ed in testing the capabilities of the
new process with a view to its adop
tion in railway work. Every descrip
tion of lamp—the bicycle lamp, the
motor lamp, the carriage lamp, lamps
for domestic purposes, lamps in
mines—can, it is declared, be fitted
with the asbestine patent, and oil of
any flash point can be used with per
fect safety and with the additional
advantage of considering economy.
The problem of the safety lamp would
appear to have been solved.
Sewing Machine to Cure Insomnia.
The electric sewing machine is de
scribed as good remedy for insomnia.
A Philadelphia physician has been
prescribing it successfully for several
months.
Electrical sewing machines are or
dinary ones, with a small motor at
tachment. An electric light current
runs them—they are attached to the
light as electric fans are—and in op
eration they give forth a singularly
smooth sound.
This sound is what makes them
good for insomnia. The victim of in
somnia has nerves that are. as it wrere,
inflamed. He needs something that
will lull and soothe him. Certain
sounds will do this—the sound of rain
on a roof, for instance, or the sound
of a running brook. But brooks and
rain are not always at hand, and
hence in their stead the electrical sew
ing machine is prescribed.
Automobiles on Railroads.
The automobile has been adapted to
railroad tracks by the use of steel
flanges which are fitted on the wheels
outside the rubber tires. Light ma
chines have been introduced on vari
ous railroad lines for the use of track
inspectors. Owing to the absence of
obstructions on the railroad tracks
and the smoothness of the rails a
much higher speed can be attained
than could be got out of the same ma
chine on a road.
Too Thin.
“He's nothing but a hypocrite. Isn’t
it disgusting for a man to use his re
ligion as a cloak?”
“Yes, and what’s more it’s foolish,
for religion such as his is necessarily
so flimsy that he’s liable to catch
cold in it.”
EQUALIZING WORK OF HORSES.
Simple Mechanism That Can Be At
tached to Any Wagon.
H. D.—Please publish a plan for a
three horse equalizer for a wagon.
The accompanying drawing shows ;
the working parts of a three horse j
equalizer attached to the front axle
of a wagon. It also shows the man
ner in which the three neck yokes
are attached to the two poles. The
main trippletree is not attached to the
tongues, but to the axle, as shown by |
the dotted lines. The tongues are not
fastened to the wagon, but slip into
slots attached to the circle. The long
piece to which the three neck yokes
are fastened lies loosely on the
tongues. Three horses hitched to a
Working Parts of Three Horse Equal
izer.
load by the form of equalizer repre
sented herewith will each draw an
equal share of the burden.
Floor Paint.
The mixing of paints is a somewhat
troublesome process, and as the ready
mixed paints can now be purchased sc
cheap, they are used almost exclusive
ly, especially by amateurs. If. how
ever, you want to mix your own paint,
you might try the following recipe,
which is highly recommended: Soak
two ounces of good glue for twelve
hours in cold water, and then melt it
in thick milk of lime( prepared from 1
one pound of caustic lime) heated tc i
boiling point. To the boiling glut
stir in linseed oil until it ceases tc
mix. About fluid ounces of oil u
sufficient for the above proportions.
Too much oil is corrected by the ad
dftion of lime paste. Mix this with
any color not affected by lime, and
dilute with water if needed. For vel
low-brown or brown-red colors, boil in
the ground color a quarter of its vol |
ume of shellac and borax, making an
excellent paint for wooden floors
This mixture is easilj' applied, covers
well, and is a great deal cheaper than
the ordinary paint.
Cutworms.
E. C. W.—How can I make a kero
sene emulsion to destroy grubs whict
cut down cabbage plants?
The simplest way to make the kero
sene emulsion is to boil up one quar
ter of a pound of hard soap in twe
qlarts of rain water. When all the
soap is dissolved remove from the Art
and while boiling hot turn in one gal
Ion of kerosene or coal oil and chum
vigorously with a syringe or spraj
pump for five minutes. This gives the
6tock emulsion which must be dilut
ed with nine times its quantity 01
water before using. I do not think
however, that this would be a prac
tical remedy for cutworms on cab
bages. I think you will have far bet
ter success by using the poisoned bran
remedy, or by wrapping a piece oi
paper around the stem of each planl
at time of setting out.—J. F.
Moles.
L. E. A.—I have a sod dam which if
being honeycombed by moles. The
pond usually dries up in summer
What remedy can you suggest?
I know of no remedy' other than
killing the moles, this could be done
either by catching them in the ordi
nary mole trap, or by suffocating
them with bisulphide of carbon. The
best way to do this is to put aboul
an ounce of bisulphide of carbon on
a piece of rag, roll this in a bundle
and push it as far as possible down
the hole with a stick, and close up
all entrances. Bisulphide of carbon
vaporizes and the poisonous vapor
runs along the tunnels and kills all
of the animals it overtakes. Care
must be taken to keep lights of all
kinds at a distance from this inflam
mable substance.
Wild Oats.
D. R.—How can I get rid of wild
oats?
The wild oat is an annual plant like
the cultivated oat and differs from the
latter by its lighter and almost worth
less seed, its iregularity in ripening
and its persistence in the ground
when once ihtroduced. The best way
to get rid of this weed is to plow
and harrow the land well in spring, or
at any rate give the land a stroke
with the harrow in spring, and then
sow with early barley or oats and as
soon as the wild oats, which are early
in maturing, begin to head, cut the
whole for green feed. There may be
two cuttings taken of this fodder and
the stubble may then be plowed
down. The next year the land should
be put in to a hoed crop. It will then
be ready for grain again.—J. 3*.
Building a Stone Foundation.
E. F. Man—Please tell me how to
build a stone foundation under a
house that has rather light timbers
The frame work of your house be
ing of light material it would be well
to leave the house where it stands,
and build the stone wall under it
This can easily be done by building
the wall up to the sills between the
supports, then take the supports out
and fill in the space with stone. In
order to have the supports out of the
line of wall, have a beam diagonally
across each corner of the building
resting on blocks on the outside. By
having one at eaoh corner it will brace
the building. Along the sides and
ends run a beam under the gill, rest
ing it on a block on the outside and
a post on the inside.
Until a year or two ago the em
peror of Japan was an enthusiastic
wrestler. He threw out challenge af
ter challetge to the members ot the
court and U counsel and advisers and
defeated fii.'ly and completely every
one* who tried conclusions with him
until he met Count Tetsu, who proved
one too many for him. Since that
encounter, although he encourages the
sport in every possible way, he has
kept out ot tae arena. “Count Tetsu
is now champion,” he would say; 1
have failed to throw him. Some one
eise must try."
Prof. William James ot Harvard Is
very popular with the more intelligent
and studious of the undergraduates.
When these youn< men, however,
make rash, or bold, or unbecoming as
sertions he does not hesitate to take
them down. Not long ago a sopho
more aired some rather atheistical
views before Prof. James. “You.” the
latter said, “are a free thinker, I per
ceive. Y’ou believe in nothing.” “I
only believe—haw—what I can under
stand,” the sophomore replied. “It
comes to the same thing, I suppose,”
said Prof. James.
A Paying Washington Industry
Cascara bark peeling has become
an active industry in the forests of
western Washington. The bark is
taken from tl* barberry and chittim
wood trees that grow profusely in the
Grays harbor district. It has a com
mercial value of 8 cents per pound.
An ordinary tree yields from 50 to
100 pounds of the dried bark. Whole
families are engaged In collecting the
bark and selling to dealers. Some
men make $5 a day at the work. En
tire sections are contracted by eastern
buyers and peelers engaged to supply
the bark. There is talk of petitioning
the legislature tc en-.ct laws for pre
serving the trees, which are more val
uable than any timber grown Ifl the
native forest. The bark is used for
medicinal purposes. It is estimated
that one pound of dry bark will make
enough liquid extract to sell for $2
at wholesale.
Clear white clothes are a sign that the
housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue.
Large - oz. package, 5 cents.
The Brooklyn Bridge.
The twenty-first anniversary of the
opening of the Brooklyn bridge took
place recently. It has been a busy
place since 1S83. The total receipts,
thereform from 1S83 to 1898, when
the structure passed into the posses- j
sion of the railroad companies, were
$17,272,890, and the expenditures for j
the same period were $18,151,301. The 1
railroad earnings from 1883 to 1898.
were $13,734,818, and the earnings
from the roadway in the same period
$1,205,400. The Brooklyn bridge cost 1
iL the neighborhood of $16,000,000.1
j he cost of the structure itself was
$11,500,000, while the cost of acquir
ing real estate, etc., for the terminals
was about $4,500,000. The cost of the
Williamsburg bridge, the second of
the East River bridges, will be in the
neighborhood of $20,000,000. The cost
of the Williamsburg structure will be
loss than that of the Brooklyn bridge
structure, but the expense of acquir
ing real estate for terminals and ap
proaches was greater.
First Daugerreotype in America.
It Is perhaps not generally known
that the earliest practical information
as to Daguerre's process of catching
and holding the figure of his camera
obscure came to America through
Prof. S. F. B. Morse. In a letter to
a friend in America, to be quoted in
Abraham ogardus’ “The Lost Art of
Daugerreotype’’ in the May Century,
Prof. Morse tells of constructng the
first daguerreotype apparatus made
In the United States from drawings
furnished by Daguerre. “My first ef
fort.” Prof. Morse writes, “was on a
small plate of silvered copper pro
cured at a hardware store, and, de
fective as the plate was, I obtained a
good representation of the Church of
the Messiah, then on Broadway, from
h. back window of the New York City
university This ,1 believe to have
been the first daguerreotype made in
America.”
If a woman can’t keep a secret she
can always find some other woman to
help.
TWO STEPS
The Last One Helps the First.
A sick coffee drinker must take two
steps to be rid of his troubles and get
strong and well again.
The first step is to cut off coffeo ab
solutely.
That removes the destroying ele
ment. The next step is to take liquid
food (and that is Postoa Food Cof
fee) that has in it the elements na
ture requires to change the blood
corpuscles from pale pink or white
to rich red, and good red bleed builds
good strong and healthy cells in place
of the broken down cells destroyed by
coffee. With well boiled Postum Food
Coffee to shift to, both these steps
are easy and pleasant. The experi
ence ef a Georgian proves how im
portant both are.
“Fr6m 1872 to the year 1900 my
wife and I had both been afflicted
with sick or nervous headache and at
times we suffered untold agony. We
were coffee drinkers and did not know
how to get away from it for the habit
is hard to quit.
“But in 19C0 1 read of a case simi
lar to ours where Postum Coffee was
used in place of the old coffee and a
complete cure resulted, so I concluded
to gpt some and try it.
“The result was, after three days*
use of Postum in place of the coffee
I never bad a symptom of the old
trouble and in five months I had
gained from 145 pounds to 163 pounds.
“My friends asked me almost daily
what wrought the change. My an
swer always is, leaving off coffee and
drinking Postum in its place.
“We have many friends who have
been benefited by Postum.
“As to whether or not I have stated
the facts truthfully I refer you to
the Bank ef Carrollton or any busi
iiess firm la that city where I have
lived for many years and am weH
known." Name given bff Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
"There's a reason."
Look in each pkg. for the famous
Bttie book. "The Bead to WeUrWo.”
A Great Engineering Feat.
The Oroyo railroad, which now runs
from Callao to the gold fields of Cerro
de Pasco, is cmsidered one of the
wonders in the .Peruvian world. It is
certainly the greatest feat of railroad
engineering in either hemisphere.
Commencing in Callao, it ascends the
narrow valley of the Rimac, rising
nearly 5,000 feet in the first 5G miles.
Thence it goes through the intricate
gorges of the Sierras till it tunnels
the Andes at an altitude of 16.645
feet, the highest point in the world
where a piston rod is moved by steam.
He Was a Good Risk.
The Marquis of Donegal, who died
the other day, was some years ago
made the subject of an insurance gam
ble. In 1890 some one took out a pol
icy against the marquis, who was then
in his seventieth year, and as he had
no children, this looked a good thing
for the insurance company, but in his
eighty-fifth year the marquis married
again and left a son, who is six months
old. The lucky individual who took
the policy has thus, by the payment of
a single premium of $665, received
$12,500.
. I_
Hint for the Sick Room.
Never ask a sick person what she
would like to eat or drink. Let the
meals always be nicely cooked and
their exact nature unknown till they
appear. Little surprises in the way
of food do much to tempt the appetite.
Results of Marriage.
Every 1,000 marriages mean an in
crease to the population of 6,500 in
Russia, 4,000 in Scotland, 3,600 in Eng
'and, 3,000 in the United States and
2,700 in France.
Don’t envy the rich; they have
corns on their feet the same as you
have.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local application*, aa they cannot reach the dis
eased portion of the ear. There la only one way vo
cure deafness, and that 1* by constitutional remedlea.
Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube 1« Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Im
perfect hearing, and when It la entirely closed. Dear
ness Is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi
tion, hearing will l*e destroyed forever: nine cases
out of ten are caused by < etarrb. which 1* nothing
but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surface*.
A'e will give One Hundred D illars for anv case of
Deafness (caused by catarrht that cannot be cured
by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHEXEY ii CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation.
With poetry second-rate in quality,
no one ought to be allowed to trouble
mankind.
DO YOUR CLOTHES LOOK YELLOW*
If so. use Red Cross Ball Blue. It will make
them white as snow. 2 oz. package o cents.
Many a first-class kitchen mechanic
is made over into a thirty-third class
actress.
Is It Not Worth While
ff you travel, on business or pleasure,
to get the best service for the lowest
rates? Ask the Erie Railroad Com
pany, 555 Railway Exchange, Chicago,
for full information. Booklets free de^
scribing Summer Tours and the Beau
tiful Chautauqua Lake Region; also
Cambridge Springs.
A woman is seldom as strict with
her children as she is with her hus
band.
The Best Results in Starching
can be obtained only by using De
flanoe Starch, besides getting 4 os.
more for same money—no cooking re
quired. __
A successful man roots while his
unsuccessful brother stands around
and squeals.
When You Buy Starch
buy Defiance and get the best. 16 ox.
Tor 10 cents. Once used, always used.
It is said that every man has his
price, yet lots of men give themselves
away.
Defiance Starch Is put up 16 ounces
In a package. 10 cents. One-third
more starch for the same money.
When horses and cattle stretch out
their necks and sniff the air it will
rain.
Do Your Clothes Look Yellow?
Then use Defiance Starch, it will
keep them white—16 oz. for 10 cents.
Every time a man goes to church he
hears a lot of preaching that hits
other men.
EITS permanently mred. !»r> fits or _
■ 11 w first day’s i»»e of Dr. Kline's Orest Nerre Restor
er. Send for FBEK SX.OO trial bottle and treatise.
Da. B- a. Kuxx, Ltd., ta Arch Street, riuiadelplUe, P*
It is up to a man to remember Sam
son’s fate and be careful how he uses
his jawbone.
Sensible Housekeepers
Will have Defiance Starch, not alone
because they get one-third more for
the same money, but also because of
superior quality.
A man is bothered when called upon
to give the deails of a wedding cere
mony.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
a safe and sure remedy for Infanta and children.
and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Tears.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
True wit is never better for travel
ing through gutter mud.
An empty purse fills the face with
wrinkles.
THEMISY FLY HILLER SSKSM—
come—in dining-room, *leeplng-roo«o end places where
•lies are trouble
some. Clean. neat
and will not sol 1 or
injure anythin?.
Try them once and
you will never be
without th^m. If not
keptbvdealers.sent
prepaid for 20e.
HABOLO SOSKRH,
lW Drkilb iifiaa
Bnakiya, S. I. '
Illpans TiMlfi are the best dys
pepsia medicine ever made. A
bundled mfUl.mj of them have
been sold In tbc Vetted States in
a single year. Consttpa'lon. heart
burn. sick headache, dlxslaess, bad
breath, wore threat, and every ill
ness arising Trim a dlntrdered
stomach are vdheved or cured by Rlpam Tabu lea.
One will generally give relief within twenty min
utes. The flee-cent package Is enough for ordinary
occasion*. AU druggists sell them.
Jh^vktiMriy sMtattittgin m «mKb
mnssimu iwier
Mr
direct
He who takes good care of the
days need give himself no worry
over the rear.
Character consists in a man rteadily
pursuing the things of which he feels
himself capable.
What a miserable world is this—
trouble if we love and trouble if we
do not love.
Every cloud may have a silver lin
ing, but the airship route is not yet
completed.
Lovers see only each other in the
world, but they forget that the world
sees them.
„ The man who is too meek to speak
in meeting gets over it before elec-'
tion.
When the tiger is gone, the fox is
master.
If one is not observing, one seei
nothing.
A soft answer may be a hard argu
ment.
j
Surely the Eastern rabbit kuows its
business better than the hen, since
the eggs it lays come ready boiled.
Beware of suretyship for thy best
friends. He that payeth another man's
debts seeketh his own ruin.
Some creatures have the faculty of
swallowing insults and growing fat
on the strength of them.
You may have noticed that the man
who says he can take a trink or let
it alone always takes it.
It’s difficult to find a man who is
willing to hold the ladder of success
while another ascends it
Occasionally a girl marries a man
just to keep him from hanging around
the house evenings.
It ia more profitable to read on|
man than ten books.
One always has time enough if one
will apply it well.
Ann was never as old as she was
painted.
RIFLE ®> PISTOL CAR.TRIDCES.
“ It’s the shots that hit that count. " Winchester
Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that is,
they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene
trating blow. This is the kind of cartridges you will get,
if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make.
ALL DEALERS SELL WINCHESTER MAKE OF CARTRIDGES.
r mow
nowr
FORGET
SL
Don’t forget when you ^
order starch *o get the
best. Get DEFIANCE. No
more “yellow” looking clothes,^
no more cracking or breaking. It
doesn’t stick to the iron. It gives satis
faction or you get your money back. The
cost is 10 cents for 16 ounces of tne best
starch made. Of other starches you get
but 12 ounces. Now don’t forget. It’s at
your grocers.
rUNUPACTURED BV
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.#
OMAHA. NEB.
r ANTISEPTIC PILE CONES
DRUGGISTS. Sample Free. ANTISEPTIC PILE CONE CO., Crete, Neb.
CURE
WHILE
YOU
SLEEP.
NEW HOMES
IN THE WEST
Almost a naif million acres of the fertile and
well-wa-cr? J K:nus of the ltosebud Indian Res
ervation, in South Dakota, will be thrown opeu
to settlement by the Government in July. These
lands are best reached by the Chicago & North
Western Railway’s direct through lines from
Chicago to Bonesteel. S. D. All agents sell
tickets vin tuis line. Special low rates.
HOW TO GET
A HOME
Send far a copy of pamphlet giving hill Informa,
tlon as .o dates of opening and how to secure 160
r„cres of land at nominal cost, with full descrip
tion of the soil, climate, timber and mineral
resources, towns, schools and churches, oppor
tunities for business openings, railway rates,
etc., free on application.
W. B. KNISKERN,
Passenger Trallic Manager,
wmw* CHICAGO. ILL
Lnkhrd TimaDf Cottsc F:l!*d Collar.
We absolutely guarantee It to
cure an* prevent Gain* <*r s>ore
Shoulder*. Noatoppln^ the plow,
for It doe* It* work vblle the
anlnt'j 1 d>«b hla. Collar and pml
combined. Economical and
cheap. Last* two to 11 ve season*.
If your dealer d<e*n't handle
them send us *1.3 and get one
p»e paid to your start, .u. Write for
circular arid memorandum hook.
Ll« IVirera JU^. to., tt at,rlua, Iuwa.
PORTRAIT AGENTS
Deal Street wlti
JLiaufact uriri
- — — -- — — —— . . w ud Save Haicv
Oar goods the beet. Prfoee the lowest. Promptship
xdouu. Delivery of all pertrults guaranteed, bead
Prloe I 1st. Address
AlDEX l. KEOLL X CO., Hew Era Bldg., Chicago.
W. N. U., Omaha.
No. 23—1904
FREE to WOMEN
A Large Trial Box and book of in*
structions absolutely Free and Post
paid, enough to prove the value of
PaxtineToi'et Antiseptic
Paxtine la In powder
form to dissolve It
water — non-puisonous
and far superior ca liquid
antiseptics conlilriot
alcohol which Irritate*
Inflamed surface*. an4
have no cleansing prop,
ertles, The ceateata
of every box makes
more Antiseptic Solu
tion — lasts laager—
, goes further—has awr*
! us*« la the fatally and
doss more good than any
antiseptic preparation
yea can bay.
The formula of a noted Boston physician,
! and used with great success as a Vaginal
Wash, for Le* !Corrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasri
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts,
and all soreness of mucus membrane.
In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is
invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash wa
challenge the world to produce its eqnal for
thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleansing
and healing power; it kills all germs which
cause inflammation and dischargee.
All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price. BOe.
a box; if touts does not, send to us for it. Don’t
take a substitute — there is nothing like Paxtine
Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day.
* PAXTON CO., Pope Bldg., Boston, w.m.
"follow two ruo.v
TAKE THE WABASH
SAINT LOU IS
THE ONLY LINE
TO
THE WORLD’S FAIR
main entrance.
BaujfaKP rliftkrj to World’s
Vulr tfruiuds.
Stopovers allowed. All Agents can
route you via the WABASH. For beau
tiful World's Fair folder and all Infor
mation address HARRY K. MOORES,
Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept.. Omaha. Neb.
BEGGS’ BLAOD PURIF1EB
CURES catarrh ot the rfcnmi Ti