Loop City Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY, . - NEBRASKA. It appears that King Daddu was the daddy of all kings. “Baby born on steamship Romanic and named after the vessel.” Poor baby! Dr. Wiley, chief of the government bureau of chemistry, still insists upon having his whisky straight. A Brooklyn man advertises that raw food has cured his dyspepsia. How he will enjoy eating cooked food now! Air ships get bigger, but it is not clear whether the increase of size will make them fly longer or fall harder. The nurse who killed two of her pa tients by giving them carbolic acid for water should have her sense of smell repaired. Japan needs $400,000,000. If she gets it she can make big money by copyrighting the recipe and putting it on sale. They say there are fewer and fewer men in the co educational institutions. It looks like the ultimate survival of the prettiest. Don’t you feel sorry for the Sunday school teachers at Strasburg. Pa., j who have just voted that there isn't any Santa Claus? Sweet potatoes are quoted higher and it is understood that the 'possum is also being a little more careful these moonlight nights. Rich Americans residing in England have begun to marry their wealthy country-women who live over there. Nobody seems to know why. A New York girl has been driven insane by the pictures on the bill boards. The wonder is that so many other people have escaped a similai fate. If Alfred Austin had had any sense of humor he would never have pub lished that essay of his on “The Grow ing Distaste for the Higher Forms of Poetry.” A Syracuse court has decided that wearing French high-heeled shoes is not a sign of insanity in a woman, but it doesn’t lend its indorsement to the fashion. Some day an enterprising insurance company will make a hit by putting out a line of “Halloween insurance” in addition to its fire, lightning and tornado risks. That young man who forgot he mar ried in the morning and married an other woman in the evening will get a year in the penitentiary to strength en his memory. Every man who hunts deer in Ver mont has to pay $15 for a license. This goes to the state, however, and his friends are supposed to look after the funeral expenses. A New York World reporter de plores the fact that the campaign cigar is a thing of the past. But what’s the use of exhibiting our sore spots to the public gaze? It is a great thing for the world that the dispute between Russia and England is to be settled by the big guns at The Hague court, instead of the big guns of the warships. A Boston judge, in sentencing a cul prit to six months, said, “Drunk or sober, I won’t stand for any man beat ing his mother.” One of these sen tences is unhappily ambiguous. The light of hope dawns. The wom an purchasing agent of a great Chi cago store was rebuked by the man ager of the house for buying the plumes of birds that are protected by law. Still that cataract in South America, which is bigger than Niagara, has a long and strenuous campaign of adver tising ahead of it before it can hope to attract the bulk of the wedding tour trade. The new king of Saxony refuses to recall his former wife to share the throne with him. but he will probably not be so cruel as to neglect to send her a picture of himself, seated in his solitary splendor. A New Jersey minister announces that he has made arrangements to give free rides to and from his church by automobiles, carriages or trolley cars, to all who wall attend his serv ices. It is a question whether ne couldn’t get larger audiences by charg ing an admission fee instead. Four firemen in New York were ov ercome by the smoke from several cases of tobacco leaf in the cellar of a burning building. It will be interest ing to know whether the experience cures any of them of the smoking habit. In England people who drive their automobiles at unreasonable rates of speed and without regard for the rights of others are called just plain “road hogs.'* It isn't an elegant ex pression, but politeness is only wasted on such offenders. John Bull wants Tibet to pay him an Indemnity of $3,750,000 for the trouble he has had in sending his boys to Lhassa. Tibet didn’t urge the neces sity jpf the expedition, but Mr. Bull, being a funny old fellow in some re spects, will not permit that to bother him now. —» A Chicago professor declares that women with dark eyes are always ihe most attractive. Strange how some persons will insist on setting u? their own tastes and preferences as pniversiri standards of merit. “FIRED” ON THE FIRST LOCOMOTIVE Edwin Entwistle, Who Ran on the “Rocket” Seventy-three Years Ago, Still Alive ----- -----— - - - TXe, o c'kie'b Locomo-bive. A model of the famous Rocket, the flrst engine to draw a passenger train stands in the Transportation building of the St. Louis exposition, and Edwin Entwistle, the man who acted as fire man on the epoch-marking day sev enty-three years ago, when the first passenger train in the world left Man chester for Liverpool, lives in an hum ble cottage in East Des Moines; and when he thinks of his inability to visit the exposition and see the Rock et model, tears come to his eyes and course down his cheeks. “I’d give anything I possess just to see and handle it again ” the aged man said recently, as he told the story of that memorable trip. “But I’m old now and feeble. I’m not the lad I was when George Stephenson gave me a word of cheer and I climb ed into the Rocket and we started on our trip.” Edwin Entwistle was a lad of 16 when the trip was made. He was recommended to Stephenson by the Duke of Bridgewater, whose steward declared that Entwistle was the best mechanic in his shops. It was in September, 1831, that the Rocket made its trip. Stephenson had triumphed over many difficulties and the test was to be made. He had completed his plans, obtained a char ter for the railroad between Liver pool and Manchester, and laid his track. Stephenson had one strong friend, the Duke of Newcastle. When he heard that Stephenson was to appear before the committee the duke bade him be careful of his answers, lest the committee refuse the charter. “George heeded well the instruc tions of the duke,” said Mr. Entwis tle. “The committee asked him all sorts of questions, but the answers were always cautious and hard-head ed. In particular they tried 10 find out what the capacity of the train was to be in the way of speed and the handling of freight. “ ‘It will travel fast enough and pull freight enough,’ answered Stephen son, ‘to pay the interest on the money invested.’ “That was all they got out of him, but the charter was granted. Work was begun on the road at .once, but there were ten miles that were a bog, and gravel and dirt h^d to be hauled in, so that it was four years before the rails could be laid, “When the track was completed and Stephenson was ready to enter the competition he was without a fireman. He applied to the Duke of Bridgewater and was sent by the lat ter to his machine shops. Here Ste phenson repeated his request to the foreman of the shop. The latter re plied: “ ‘I haven’t a man to send, but that lad will serve your purpose, if you care to take him, and get an order from the steward.’ “The order from the steward was not long in coming, and Edward Ent wistle, then a machinist's apprentice, went on the Rocket. Stephenson took Entwistle out the following Sunday to let him try his hand at the throttle. They ran the engine down to the bog, a distance of fifteen miles, and return. Stephenson was more than pleased. The next day was the day for the competition. Ent wistle, speaking of the trip, said: “I don't remember much about the weather. All the days in England are pretty much the same, and along the seacoast there !s always more or less of a fog. The thirty-one miles were what might be called level country. Where the bog had been filled in. of course, was level. It was slightly down hill between Manchester and Liverpool. The country was not rough. “I don’t remember the time we made on the trip, but it didn’t mean much, as the trip was marred by a fatal accident. We were about half way down when a stop was made. The Duke of Wellington was talking to Mr. Huskisson, and they were standing on the second track. Sud denly a construction engine came around the corner and bore down on them. The Duke of-Wellington jump ed and escaped safely, but Mr. Hus kisson was struck down and the wheels passed over his legs above the knees. He was taken to Liverpool, where he lived about ten hours. “Strange as it may seem, this ac cident did not prejudice the people against the railroad. They understood that it was an accident and did not blame the road. “The Rocket pulled on that trip five coaches. They were small affairs and looked much like stage coaches on wheels. Each coach contained three seats, each accommodating three people, making nine to a coach. People rode on the tops, however, and hung on the sides of the coaches, so that in all seventy-five persons rode that day. Thousands of persons were lined up along the railroad track on both sides to witness the strange performance.” After operating the Rocket thirty months young Entwistle found him self almost a nervous wreck and re fused to serve any longer. “When I was eighteen—that was in 1837—I left England and came to this country. Fifty years ago I came west and built a house right on this very spot.”—New York Herald. It Puzzled the Expert. The customs official was greatly puz zled. He knit his brow and frowned darkly. He even tapped his foot nerv ously on the polished floor. “What seems to be the difficulty?' inquired a sympathetic subordinate. The chief turned to him with a trou bled stare. “I’m bothered," he growled. “I’m badly stumped. And yet I am the very man w-ho classified frogs’ legs as ‘dressed poultry,’ and admitted a colt from Canada as ‘household furni ture.’ ” “And what’s the question now?” the subordinate respectfully asked. The chief ran his hand through hi9 matted hair. “I’m worried to death,” he cried, "over a proper classification for a three-legged stool. It isn’t a biped and it isn’t a quadruped—and there you are!”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Hypnotism Again. “A little lad in Limingten,” said F. S. Black, ex-governor of New York, • must have studied the records of t^e criminal courts, and noticed a certain rather absurd plea that for some years had been advanced in extenuation of all sorts of crimes. The lad was ab sent from school one fine spring day, and on his reappearance the next morning he brought no excuse. “ ‘James,’ said the teacher, ‘where were you yesterday?' “The boy began to cry. “ ‘It was Joe Mullen’s fault,’ he said. ‘He hypnotized me and made me go flshin’ with him.’ ” Courage the Enemy of Disease. The way to avoid contagion is to keep the mind pure and sweet, having due regard also for the body. Culti vate optimism and hopefulness and avoid gloomy thoughts and forebod ings. Seek the society of those who are buoyant and helpful and if at any time you are overtaken with the real ization that your lot is not what it should be, think of the condition of many who are not so fortunate as yourself, who are suffering from ac tual want. The woman who would avoid mi crobes will not fear them, says a writer in Madame. Courage and the consciousness of right living and high thinking are the enemies of disease. Congregation vs. Choir. Crowds attend the Church of St. Aldan's, Boston, England, every Sun day, to hear a musical contest be tween congregation and choir, the for mer insisting on singing against the wishes of the latter and the organist. The congregation usually succeeds in drowning out the choir and organ, fin ishing rather hoarse, however. Use for Automobile. Belgium is getting up an antarctic expedition with Dr. Henryk Arktoweki as a member of it. Dr. Arktowski thinks an automobile can be worked into the scheme. The machine would have to be built very strongly, and on a special model, to take apart when necessary, and work in very low tem peratures. The theory brought for ward is that except at its rough edges the ice cap of the southern pole is smooth, and that once mounted on it a machine would go flying to its des tination like a racing car on a Long island road. Growing Use of Petroleum. It is not yet half a century since Col. Drake discovered petroleum on the waters of Oil creek, near Titus ville, Pa. The total production of crude petroleum from 1859 to 1902— forty-three years—has been no less than 1,165,280,727 barrels. Of this out put Pennsylvania and New York con tributed 53.9 per cent; Ohio, S4.3 per cent; West Virginia, 11.3 per »ytnt; Indiana, 3.9 per cent; California, £.6 per cent and Texas 2.1 par cent. Collegiate Discipline. Syracuse university is a good Meth odist institution whose chancellor re cently declined a bishopric. The odor of sanctity which clings to the plajpe has led frivolous persons to call the hill on which the university is built “Piety Hill.” Some worldly minded students recently associated them selves into a “Piety Hill Dancing club.” That was too much for Chan cellor Day. “Any attempt to hold a dance after this,” he told the girls and boys, “will be taken as a deliber ate notice of your intention to be no longer one of us.” Dog Breaks Up Show. In the Lyric theater, Oakland, Cal., on Oct. 8, when, during the perform ance of “Everyman,” the procession of players tried to pass up the center aisle, a Great Dane, which had been asleep there, attacked the processio*. chased Manager Greenbaum when he came to the rescue and held the aisle against all comers till a policeman was called to shoot him. Then his owner, an old woman, arose and led him out. When the girl had gathered all her gifts in her boudoir on Christmas night and closed the door, she picked up a silky object, surveyed it for a moment, then put it back on the table with a pat. “And I really like you best of all,” she whispered, “because mother’s love went into the making of you.’' That is a common feeling. A home j made Christmas present has more value and is more appreciated than any article purchased in a shop; in every stitch is a loving thought for the one who is fortunate enough to re ceive it. It is amazing how beautiful an ob ject can be made with a yard of linen, a few skeins of embroidery silk, and an attractive design. Here are a few hints for the woman who always makes it a point to put love into her gifts to family and dearest friends: An Attractive Veil Case. In this age of many veils a con venient and dainty receptacle for their safe keeping becomes al most a necessity. This extremely pretty one is practical as well as orna mental. and can be made from a num ber of materials. The peculiar and es sential feature is the arrangement of the ribbons on the inside. These are four in number and each should be an inch in width. The ends of each piece are attached to different sides of the case; tnat is to say, the two ribbons that are crossed at the center are attached to the outer edge of the upper section of the cover and to the inner edge of the lower section, and the ribbons that are placed straight in exactly the opposite manner, or to the inner edge of the upper section and to the outer edge of the lower. By this arrangement the case is made to open at both sides, and the simple act of closing and opening it causes a veil, laid tiat on either side, to be held fast beneath the ribbons, which are transferable. The outside of the case can be of linen, silk, suede or leather, decorated with painting or needlework; or, again. It may be of brocade or flower ed silk and left without further orna mentation. In any case the inside should be padded and perfumed and covered with some soft silk. The foundation for the case is two pieces of cardboard of equal size. Each of these must be covered inside and out and completely finished before the ribbons are attached. When this first step is taken the two are held togeth er, but a ribbon tied neatly about the whole makes an attractive finish. Group of Novelties. Pincushions, photograph frames and pretty bags always find a welcome, no matter how many already may be pos sessed. The convenience of a pincushion, which can be hung at the side of a mirror or in some similar position, is self-evident. A novel and useful one can be made from a large size doll’s parasol. To get the best results one of some bright colored silk should be used. It must be closed and the cov er tacked to the stick at each rib; then each of tne sections becomes separated from every other and can be fitted at the top and stuffed either with bran or wool wadding picked into bits. When the cushions are slipped into place they can be tacked firmly to position and the parasol fur ther ornamented with bows of ribbon tied on wherever fancy indicates. To Curious Test. Engineers judge of the condition of their machinery by the tone it gives out while running. Every engine, whether stationary or locomotive, has a particular tone of its own; the en gineer becomes accustomed to that, and any departure from it at once excites suspicion that all is not right, j Tne engineer may not know what is | the matter, he may have no ear for music, but the change in the tone* of his machine will be at once percep tible, and being instantly recognized will cause him to start on an imme diate investigation. British Coal Is Cheap. The coal mine owners in the south of Austria have been obliged to re duce the price of coal because Eng lish ships on their way to the Black | sea for corn have taken British coal i from Cardiff to Trieste at the rate of $1 a ton, whereas the usual rate is be tween $1.60 and $2, and has even been as much as $3.75. The price of British coal is so low that unless Aus trian mine owners reduce their prices British coal will find its way into Aus tria in large quantities. j m\Wm (CAW (BE RlADDE mm ymriLE LAggo^ make the best foundation the parasol should have a hooked handle, by which it can be hung, but should such not be obtainable a ribbon loop can be attached to a handle of any sort. Novel Photograph Frame. The demand for photograph frames , knows uo limit. Any slightly novel j sort, meets with as hearty an approval j as if it were the first of its kind. A really charming novelty can be evolved from a bit of chamois skin left in its original shape. The chant lies in the irregularity of the edges, which should not be trimmed. The opening is cut round, square or ob long, as preferred, and is supplied with four brass paper holders, the points of which are pressed through the leather and turned back agains* the skin until needed. When the photograph is put in place one point of each holder is turned down against the back, where the other remains, as already placed, the* holding the picture firmly. The lower edge of the skin is slash ed into narrow strips to form a fringe, and its surface is decorated with painting or fire etching, as preferred. The upper edge is turned under to form a hem, and into this hem is slipped a little brass rod. which keeps the frame in shape. To the ends of this rod is attached the ribbon hang er, which terminates in big bows or rosettes. Gifts Made of Handkerchiefs.— Handkerchiefs seem ever to be serv ing some new use. One of the latest is the making of dainty bags for fancy work and the like. A particularly pretty bag of‘this sort requires two handkerchiefs, the size used by men, or small mufflers. They should be of fine linen. The upper handkerchief, embroidered with a border of forget me-nots within the hem, is cut at the center to form a circular opening, the edge of which is faced to form a cas ing, in which is inserted an ordinary wooden embroidery ring as narrow as obtainable. The embroidered handker chief is then laid over the plain one, and the two are stitched together on the line of the hem. Ribbon bows are attached to each of the four corners, and a ribbon hanger to the edge at the opening, with full bows at each end. Another equally charming gift that can be made from handkerchiefs is a bureau cover. For this three or four are required, according to size, and they can be as simple cr elaborate as desired. While embroidered kerchiefs are always dainty, yet there are also many novelties in color that can be utilized with good effect. But to get the best results the edges should be plain. Whatever the number and whatever the style, each handkerchief should Automobiles in the Desert. In the matter of Soudanese com munications much interest is taken in the expected arrival at Khartoum of experimental motor cars for passen ger service in the desert. The diffi culty has been to find motors which are capable of traveling over the sand, but it is hoped that the recent experi ments will lead to a solution of this problem. Give Few Degrees. Asked why California’s two univer sities—State and Stanford—had grant ed so few doctors of philosophy de grees—only twenty-five in seven years —President Jordan of Stanford said: “By wider introduction of the ‘trading j stamp principle’ in higher education ( the number of degrees could be in creased. but with no gains to science and art.” Rains Raise Price of Beans. The excessive rains in California have raised the price of Lima beans from 3M to 4 cents a pound. They are profitable to the farmers at 2% cents. have J >ee insertion at the ends, and then ail be joined together to form a strip by means of beading. Around the entire edge of the cover is a frill of lace, which forms a finish A still further decorative < ffect can be gained by threading all the beading with colored ribbon, terminating in bows of many loops. Fine plain hand kerchiefs, with embroidery of small flowers in color, are exceedingly dain ty and attractive, and many other va riations can he made. Some Useful Trifles.—The gift that combines utility with beauty is often the most welcome cf all. Catch-alls can never be too numerous. Th sim ple three-cornered form is by no means new, but becomes novel when made from unfamiliar materials. Such a one consists of a square of plain Japanese or Chinese fine quality of malting, painted in a bold yet simple design. It is then folded and bound two edges together and two separate ly, and is finished with ribbons and a hanger. When painting is beyond the skill of the maker, embroidery in crewels can be substituted, or, again, the square can be of denim or heavy linen, lined with the same and interlined with stiffening, and the decoration, painting or embroidery, as preferred. Poppies painted in bold strokes on the dark blue of the denim are singu larlv effective, and many other novel designs will suggest themselves. The problem of how' to care tor the necktie is ever present to the mascu line mind, and any practical device for its safekeeping becomes a boon. It was long ago conceded that hanging is the best and really only desirable method provided for its preservation. To make an ornamental hanger, ob tain a level board, half an inch thick, oblong in shape, and as long as de sired and cover it with embroidered linen, or with some handsome bit of brocade. Then complete the board with a brass rod, attached at each end by means of protruding rests, after the manner of a miniature towel lack. Supply the upper edge with brass screw rings, by which it can be hung against the wall, and the rack will be complete. Amateur photography has become so general an accomplishment that it is quite safe to offer an attractive re ceptacle for views and the like to any friend. A novel one is made with a number of gray mounts, covered and held together by means of silk cords, passed through holes made near one edge. The mounts, as many in number as may be desired, are laid one over the other. Then two covers of the exact size are made and placed one beneath and one on top of the pile. The holes ar^ carefully drilled through each one. and the cords are threaded in and out. through the entire number, binding them together, and terminate in knots and ends. The covers can be of leather, fire etched; of linen, embroidered; of vel veteen, fire-etched; of handsome bro cade. or of any one of a dozen ma terials. Brides of Berlin. The oldest woman who married in Berlin last year was 72; 228 were over 50 years, and one under 16. A trifle more than one half of the brides were under 25 years of age. About one fourth of the bridegrooms were under 25; the oldest was 81. The total num ber of pairs was 20,141. Of the men 2,191 married the second time, 214 the third, 15 the fourth, 1 the fifth and l the sixth time. Of the women 1.4(6 married the second, 99 the third, 6 the fourth and 1 the fifth time. Mansion for E. H. Harriman. E. H. Harriman, the railroad mag nate, has begun the erection of a splendid residence at Arden, near Middletown, N. Y. The house is to be solid granite, 350 feet long and 180 feet wide, two stories in height, and having fifty rooms. The structure and terraces will occupy three acres. European Population Increases. A German contemporary states that within the last decade the population of Europe has increased about 38,000, 000, of whom Russia contributed 14, 0on 000 and France less than 100,000.