The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, July 19, 1906, Image 2

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    Loup City Northwestern
J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher.
LrOUP CITT, . - - NEBRASKA.
Indian Eduaction That Counts.
The Indian school at Chilocco has
just gtaduaied the largest class In its'
history, and some of its graduates and
many of its other classes will help the
sugar beet raisers in the vicinity of
Rocky Ford, Col., during the vacation.
Over 150 of the young Indians are now
engaged in this work in that district,
and will remain there until the crop is
all gathered. They will be back in the
school in the fall, ready to resume their
studies.
At Chilocco and many of the other
government schools the young Indians
get the right sort of education to fit
them for their new role in life. The
education is equally divided between
the books and the workshops. The
boys and girls are taught all that is
imparted in the ordinary grammar
schools of the country, and a little
more, in some cases. In addition the
boys are taught to make and repair
harness, to shoe horses, to build
houses, to do farm work of various
sorts, to raise and care for cattle, and
some of the rest of the things that
need to be done in the average com
munity in the west or east. The girls
are instructed, by actual practice, in
cooking, baking, laundering, nursing,
sewing and other work suitable to
their stx.
This is the education that counts,
says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
The Chilocco school was in practical
operation at the St. Louis world’s fair,
and was one of its most attractive fea
tures. It was visited by hundreds of
thousands of people during the seven
months of the fair. Admiration for its
system and for the intelligence and
good behavior of its pupils was ex
pressed on every hand. Superintendent
S. M. McCowan, the head of the school,
was here with it. and won u.gh praise
for the thoroughness and practical
character of the work of his pupils.
The United States government made
many mistakes in its dealings with the
Indians in the old days, but for the
past quarter of a century it has been
on the right track. Chilocco, Carlisle,
Haskell and the rest of the great gov
ernment schools are doing a good work
in training the young Indians of both
sexes to help to intelligently bear so
ciety's burdens.
Chinese Students’ Uniforms.
The establishment of government
schools in China, and the equipment
of students in uniforms is furnishing
a market for military clothing. Ac
cording to the British consul at Wu
chow 60 of these schools have been
opened in that prefeetorate alone. The
uniform consists of a coat and trousers
of foreign cut, with brass buttons and
peak caps, and shoes of foreign pat
tern. The material used is either
serge, union cloth or cotton tweed for
winter uniforms, and for summer
wear any light cotton cloth. In the
strictly military schools khaki is
worn. All the uniforms seen appear
to be of British cloth, but there is a
rule, which is evidently ignored, that
only native material be used. Caps,
buttons and braid all come from Ja
pan. The shoes are said to be of
Hongkong manufacture, but a very in
U or kind is made locally of native
leather. The cost of a uniform of cot
ton tweed, the cheapest, is only $3.60
Mexican ($1.80 American currency)
made tc order; a set of buttons, five
in a set, costs 20 cents, and cap from
40 cents to $2.20; shoes from $1.10 to
$2.20. Quality in every case is ex
tremely poor. This uniform, the con
sul adds, is becoming fashionable
among the younger male generation in
that part of China, and every child
whose parents can afford the expense
is now decked out as a miniature stu
dent.
If "Mary. Mary, quite contrary,’”
be an Algerian, perhaps her garden
grows with silver bells and cockle
shells and sponges all in a row. The
cultivation of vegetable sponges is
making progress in Algeria. About
ten species-’ of the plant are known
and they are cultivated in Asia and
Africa, being extensive in the regions
of Algiers and Oran. Prior to ma
turity the fruit is edible; when the
stage of ripeness, however, has been
passed the pulp becomes separated
from the fibrous matter which then
forms the spongy mass entitled the
vegetable sponge. Fine specimens
when bleached in a weak lime bath
are sold at about a nfckel apiece.
Paris is at present the chief market
for most of the vegetable sponges
grown in Algiers. They are suitable
not only for toilet and bathroom, but
also for domestic purposes.
This selling of song birds for hats
is a pitiful business. There ought to
be no necessity for going to law to
stop it, and there would not be, if
all women were as tender and merci
ful as they like to be thought. A dead
bird in a hat does not advertise pleas
ant qualities.
It must not be supposed that the
manufacturers of black pepper ar«
confined to the use of lampblack and
tapioca. They can make an excellent
article out of ground cocoanut shells.
Now doth the little busy mosquito
improve each darkening hour. Coin
cidentally the weeds are sprouting on
the vacant lots and there be many
signs that it is time for the first gun
in the annual summer war of ex
termination against the pestiferous in
sect that bangers and thirsts for hu
: __- Jf'v!
MILLIONAIRES GO PACE THAT KILLS
Pittsburg Men of Wealth
Unequaled in Furnishing
Sensations for the Lovers
of Scandal—Allurements
of Painted Stage Beauties
Fatal to Domestic Peace
and Harmony.
New York.—Now that the crime of
murder has been added to the eccen
tric doings of the dozen or more Pitts
burg millionaires, it is probable that
the limit of their capacity for sensa
tioralism has been reached.
made affidavit that he cut off her per
sonal allowance and household allow
ance and put at the head of the house
hold a butler, who was objectionable
and very insolent, and over whom she
had no control. He was given the
money to pay the servants, and was
empowered to hire and discharge them.
Mrs. McKee protested, but was told
that she had no power to discharge
him.
McKee became acquainted with Mrs.
Genevieve Phipps, the wife of Law
rence Phipps, another Pittsburg mil
lionaire, then living in Denver. Mc
Kee and Mrs. Phipps were frequently
seen together, and an estrangement
sprang up between Mr. Phipps and his
wife. The breach gradually widened,
and Mr. Phipps brought suit for di
vorce, naming Hart McKee as co
respondent. Pittsburg society was
Remarkable divorces, remarriages, |
breaches of promise, alimony and
chorus girls have hilherro been or
dinary features of their lives. They j
seem to have become rich so suddenly i
that they have lost their heads. Never
before, however, has any one of them
been accused of murder.
Years before Harry Thaw ever heard
of Evelyn Nesbit or Stanford White he
was eccentric to the verge of crazi
ness. He was known as a cigarette
fiend, a heavy absinthe drinker, an ad
mirer of chorus girls and a reckless
spendthrift. He gave dinners costing
tens of thousands of dollars, and like
the general run of Pittsburg million
aires he always had one or more “af
fairs” on hand with women of the foot
lights.
It is a strange fact that chorus girls
and actresses seem to appeal to the
Pittsburg millionaire past ail power of
resistance. Four of them who have
made New York their home during the
past few years, and whose wealth
amounts to $50,000,000 in the aggre
gate,have become infatuated with stage
beauties more or less widely known
throughout the country, according to
the World of that city.
Three of them have married ac
tresses, and the infatuation of the
fourth for a beauty of the footlignt is
being used against him in divorce pro- i
ceedings. Although Harry Thaw was 1
probably the wildest among the Pitts
burg high rollers who have sowed in
the wild winds of the Tenderloin,
ypung Hart McKee was almost as well
known, but in a different way.
Forgot Marital Obligations.
His father, E. Sellers McKee, a mul
ti-millionaire glass manufacturer of '
Pittsburg, supplied him with practical
ly limitless funds, with which the
young man preceded to cut a wide
swath. He was handsome, dapper and
fastidious, with the red and white com- !
plexion of a healthy girl. Soon after i
leaving college he married a Miss Sut
ton, from whom he separated a year \
or two afterward, giving her $300,000
outright in lieu of alimony.
In Mrs. McKee's allegations against
her husband she testified that he was
not with her much during the two
years of their married life, and that he
became more neglectful as time pro
ceeded. Finally Mrs. McKee left him,
“owing to his entire neglect.” She
disrupted by the news, and the Mc
Kee and Phipps factions waxed bitter
in their denunciations.
Kidnaped His Children.
Following the return of Mrs. Phipps
to this country, her two little children
were forcibly taken from the Waldorf
Astoria by Mr. Phipps and hurried
away to Denver, where he had resided
for some time. It was openly stated
that when the divorce proceedings
were over Mrs. Phipps would marry
Hart McKee, but in the meantime that
eccentric young man had become en
thralled with Mrs. Hugh Tevis, who
a few years previous had been wed
and widowed within six weeks.
Mrs. Tevis and Mr. McKee sailed
away to Europe on the same steamer,
and shortly afterward were married.
Things were rather dull in the Pitts
burg colony for awhile until Mrs.
Phipps went out to Denver, where the
divorce case was brewing.
Mrs. Phipps began a contest for the
possession of the children, but event
ually terms were reached under which
a divorce was granted on the ground
of desertion. Then almost before their
friends had ceased talking about their
case Mr. and Mrs. Phipps made up,
and it is said that they will be re
married. This seems to have finished
the calendar of sensations as far as the I
Phipps and McKee millionaires are
concerned.
Another Pittsburg millionaire who
had a varied and noteworthy career
was James King Clarke, known to his
friends as "Jamie.”
Young Clarke inherited a part of
the millions of his father, Charles J.
Clarke, of Pittsburg. He was in the
habit of spending a part of his time
in Washington, and it was there that
he met Miss Esther Bartlett. They
were married on April 26, 1899, in
Washington, and with the best man.
Mackintosh Kellogg, journeyed to New
York, where they took rooms at one
of the big hotels.
As related by Clarke in the suit for
divorce, which began a month later,
upon their arrival in this city he left
his bride in his room with Mr. Kellogg
while he went downstairs to look after
some baggiige. He was detained for
some time. On his return he found the !
door locked, and when it was finally !
opened Mr. Kellogg's shirt front was j
stained with the violets which Mrs.
I
Wmtfwnwvnmiinm1
Clarke wore as a corsage bouquet.
That settled It. Mr. Clarke waxed
wroth and left his briae.
Mrs. Clarke afterward sued for and
obtained a divorce, after which she be
came the wife of L. T. Whitehead, of
Erie, Pa. Mr. Clark then married a
Miss Katherine Willoughby, of St.
Augustine, Fla., thus closing another
chapter of Pittsburg millionaire sensa
tionalism.
Career of A. R. Peacock.
Mr. Alexander Rowland Peacock is
another Smoky City candidate for
fame. Mr. Peacock is worth many mil
lions of dollars. When he came to
New York he evidently made up his
mind to live up to the traditions and
habits of the lively Pittsburgers who
had preceded him. To perpetuate his
name he had a $17,U00 peacock made
of genuine diamonds, sapphires and
emeralds and gave it to his wife. He
also had a peacock put on the livery of
his servants.
They tell how when Mrs. Carnegie
was buying her wedding trousseau in
this city years ago she was waited
upon by a handsome young saleswom
an to whom she told her secret.
“I'm to be married, too,” confessed
the young woman. “That is my in
tended over there—Mr. Peacock.”
"That’s a Scotch name,” said the
future Mrs. Carnegie. "Where does he
come from?”
"From Dunfermline, ma’am,” replied
the salesgirl. Andrew Carnegie
learned about the incident, and in due
time the ironmaster brought Peacock
to Pittsburg anti made the floorwalker
a millionaire.
At the Waldorf one morning Mr.
Peacock was discovered scribbling on a
sheet of paper in the writing-room. A
friend asked him what he was doing.
“Oh. my wife at breakfast ust now
insisted that l was worth $10,000,000.
I think it is only $7,000,000. She is
usually right, but I can’t find the other
$3,000,000 this morning.”
Married Mother's Maid.
John Alston Moorhead is one of the
latest. He was a heavy man on the
Yale football team and also pulled in
the crew. He never did anything else
to deserve particular distinction. Only
a few weeks ago he eloped with his
mother’s French maid. They have
not been entirely forgiven yet, but it
is understood that John Alston is be
ing treated in a New York sanitarium,
his father paying the bills, and it is
said the little French maid is crying
her way back to sunny France, welj
paid, if cash can make it good, but
with her foolish little heart broken.
More recently the limelight of noto
riety has been turned upon W. E.
Corey, one of the best known of the
Carnegie group of Pittsburg million
| Harry K. Thaw the Only One
of Gay Crowd That Has
Essayed the Novel Sensa
tion of Murder, But All
Have Sought in Startling
Manner to Dissipate Their
Easily Earned Millions.
—
-
Corey's Lurid Exploits.
Some time afterward Sir. Corey gave
Mr. Schwab a Lucullian t'east. The
costliest wines, the daintiest iat-ioi.se
fruits and the rarest flowers were lib
erally provided. The waiters wore
1 colonial costumes with powdered wigs,
and the souvenirs were silver card
cases. Previous to this, however, Mr.
Corey had emulated other Pittsburg
rich men by figuring in q swimming
party of which Miss Maybelle Gilman,
an actress, was a member. The party
I took place at the Pittsburg natatorium.
i There were hot birds and cold bottles
| and some very pretty exhibitions of
j plain and fancy swimming.
At this party an infatuation for Miss
| Gilman is said to have sprung up on
the part of the millionaire. An es
trangement took place between Mr.
; and Mrs. Corey supposedly on account
j of Miss Gilman, and at present Mrs.
Corey is in the west, where she is re
siding with a view to securing a di
vorce.
During the course of business in
Pittsburg Andrew Carnegie trans
formed Gibson D. Packer from a poor
man into a millionaire. Mr. Packer
did not miss his chance to get before
the public. Mrs. Mary I. Vetter, armed,
it is said, with 140 love letters, pre
pared to sue Mr. Packer for $100,000 for
breach of promise. There were many
pledges of affection in the shape of
jewelry.
Contemporaneously with the Thaw
murder Mrs. Scott Hartje, the wife of
Augustus Hartje, Pittsburg millionaire
paper manufacturer, has begun suit
against her husband for divorce. Mrs.
Hartje says that her husband wore
paper collars for years; that he would
buy a $1,500 horse over the telephone
and the next minute refuse Mrs.
Hartje's request for three dollars for a
pair of shoes. Some of the charges of
both Mr. and Mrs. Hartje cannot be
printed here.
Frank Galcv, nephew of John H.
Galey, partner of Col. James McGuffey,
the millionaire oil producer, of Pitts
burg, distinguished himself by com
mitting a burglary.
The suicide of young T. O'C. Jones,
the only son of the millionaire steel
j
Jones Killed
H/LfoELEfOR
Loveoems
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1m tfmjED Anatc/iMm
aires. He dawned upon New lork sev
eral years ago on a special train con
sisting of one dining car, four sleeping
cars and two baggage cars, which car
ried the entire office forces of the Na
tional Steel company ana the National
Hoop company. In the baggage cars
were 50 trunks filled with ledgers and ;
account books and 12 typewriter girls j
who took down dictation as the train !
rolled along.
■imimiimiumiHaraviii
man of Pittsburg, a few weeks ago, fit
tingly rounds out the record of the
young Smoky City high rollers. He
had lost his mind because of his love
for his first cousin, a charming Pitts
burg girl. He killed himstelf when she
married another.
This almost exhausts the crop of
Pittsburg's gilded youths, but there is
a new crowd growing up. They arc as
yet in knickerbockers.
. Ulbere Cborus Beauties
Come Tror
=^=sasssssss5s=r=s=ssss==s=s=s=
By FRANK HENNESSY.
Theatrical Manager and Student of Sociology.
The beauty of the
New York girl in such
a mass as we see in the
front rows of the mati
nee seats, and in the
front rows of the
chorus, is due entirely
to the constant recruit
ing to the whole with
pretty faces from Oil
Pennsylvania produce the real stunning, faces that freshen up the
chorus ranks from time to time.
Indiana is another state that despite its malaria and swamps pro
duces some remarkable beauties, and Ohio has almost as great a rep
resentation by its good looking girls on the stage as it has by its men
in politics. Colorado has contributed some "peaches." as the term
goes, and California seems to have a pretty-girl atmosphere when you
come to count the amount of San Francisco girls who lead in beauty
contests on the stage.
There is a distinct difference in the temperament of t' • girls who
come from the interior states, so-called, and that of the girls of New
York or California. There is something in the spirit of the girls from
these latter places that seems to impel them to go on and up in the
work they have chosen, and they are looking for a chance to improve
and take advantage of their beauty to shine as “stars,” while the girls
from the interior states are always looking for a chance to get married.
The New York girl has a chicness and a spirit that none of the
other types possess, but the reputation the New York girl has in the
wide world for the beauty of her as an entirety is due to the constant
migration of the pretty girls from the country who come to New York
for fame, husbands or both.
EXCELLENT SANDWICHES.
There Are Sandwiches and Sandwiches
—Ones Here Given Not of Res
taurant Order.
V. ______
The following attractive recipes for
sandwiches appeared originally in the
Ledger Monthly;
Chicken or Turkey.—Cut cold roast
ed chicken or turkey into fine slices,
spread some thin slices of bread
with a canape sauce; put two slices
of bread together with a slice of
chicken between, trim the sandwiches
neatly, cut them in three-cornered
pieces and serve on a folded napkin;
or spread the bread with butter, lay
on the chicken, sprinkle over a little
salt, lay over the other slice. When
they are all prepared in this way,
cut in round or diagonal pieces, and
serve on a folded napkin.
Another way is to mix two table
spoonfuls of butter with one table
spoonful of French mustard, spread
the slices of bread with the mustard
butter, put a slice of roasted chicken,
turkey, cold roasted veal or boiled
ham between two slices, and finish
the same as above.
Lettuce Sandwiches.—Spread some
thin slices of bread with a canape
sauce, put two or three young lettuce
leaves between; cut them even all
around, then into three-cornered
pieces.
Club Sandwiches.—Have some bread
cut into fine slices and toasted to a
nice brown color: on to a slice lay a
crisp lettuce leaf, on to which put
two very thin slices of fried crisp
bacon, then a slice of turkey or roast
ed chieken, again a slice of boiled ham,
two small slices of crisp fried bacon,
last a lettuce leaf, and place on all
another slice of toast. Press firmly
with the hand to pack it, then cut it
diagonally in half.
Sandwiches a la Brigum.—Cut 12
thin slices of bread; mix four ounces
of butler with one tablespoonful of
English mixed mustard, spread this
over the slices of bread, lay on this
butter some finely chopped pickles,'
dip some lettuce leaves in mayonnaise,
lay them over the pickles, and lay
over the lettuce leaves a thin slice
of chicken meat, then some more let
tuce leaves, mayonnaise and finely
chopped hard-boiled eggs: cover with
a slice of buttered bread, trim them
neatly, and cut them in triangles, and
arrange the sandwiches on a folded
napkin.
some" salad' recipes.
A Nice Fruit Salad, a Peanut Salad.
One cf Cabbage and Two Kinds
of Salad Dressing.
Fruit Salad.—Peel four oranges and
separate the lobes, cutting each lobe
into four pieces. Scald and blanch
and skin a cup of English walnut
meats, then dry the kernels and set
away to cool. Mix the oranges with
the kernels and add a half cup of
skinned white grapes. Set all in the
ice for an hour, then heap on crisp
lettuce leaves and serve with mayon
naise dressing.
i-eanui ouiaa.—snen ana siun roast
ed peanuts and soak for an hour in
salad oil. Drain, chop fine with half
as many pitted olives, and as much
celery. Season with salt and pepper,
and scatter over leaves of crisp let
tuce. Serve with a cream dressing.
Cabbage Salad.—Choose white cab
bage and shred it. Set in the ice for
an hour, put into a chilled bowl and
serve with sour cream dressing.
Sour Cream Salad Dressing.—Set a
cupful of cream in the ice until thor
oughly chilled, then beat for five min
utes. adding as you do so a table
spoonful of powdered sugar and a
half teaspoonful of lemon juice. Serve
at once.
Cream Dressing.—Beat two eggs
very light, add salt and pepper to
taste, half a teaspoonful of mixed
mustard and three tablespoonfuls of
whipped cream. Beat hard and
serve.—Farmers’ Review.
CUSTOM HARD TO FORGET
Employe Simply Couldn't Help Jug
gling with the Scales When
Hogs Were Weighed.
Even before the days when Mr. Ar
mour was able to step to the tele
phone every morning and fix the meat
prices of the world, it wras almost a
universal habit of the individual hog
buyers to see to it that they stood no
chance of loss in purchasing the hog
raisers’ products. The method was to
juggle with the scales.
An honest hog-buyer started up in
business and guaranteed the farmers a
fair deal. He always weighed the
porkers twice to guard against mis
takes. Once , in weighing a bunch of
pigs the second time, he found their
weight had increased to the amount
of 200 pounds. i
He was at a loss to account for the
condition until an employe confessed
that at the first weighing he had in
serted the toe of his boot under the
scales and pried it up, thus cheating
the farmer out of one hog. The buyer
was indignant.
“What did you do a trick like that
for?” he asked. “You couldn't have
profited by it, anyhow.”
“I know it, John.” said the guilty
man, "but 1 just couldn’t help it.”
It had always been the custom to
cheat the farmer and the man couldn’t
bear to see the old customs passing
away.—Kansas City Times.
Summer Squash.
A very pleasing way to serve sum
mer squash is as follows: Wash two
of them, pare anil cut in pieces about
an inch square. Cook them in boiling
salted water until tender. Drain in a
colander, pressing hard to extract all
the water, turn into a bowl, and mash
perfectly smooth. Beat two eggs lighf
and whip into them a small cupful of
rich sweet milk and a tablespoon of
melted butter. Beat this mixture into
the squash, season with salt and pep
per, and turn into a greased baking
dish. Sprinkle with breadcrumbs and
bits of butter and bake until firm.
A Poor Excuse.
The boy got back from church un
usually late, his clothes awry, his hair
suspiciously wet.
' “Well,” said his father, in a stern
voice, “where have you been?”
“Why,” said the boy. “the minister
told us in his sermon that cleanliness
was next to godliness, so after church
some of us fellers thought vre’d better
go ia swimmin'.”
BAD COMPLEXIONS
Depraved Blood Causes Pimples and1
Boils—Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
Make New Blood and
Cure Follows.
*' I abused my stomach, my blood got
out of order aud tbeu my face broke out
with pimples aud boils,” says T. E. Rob
ertson, of 197 Addison street, Washing
ton, Pa. “This was over two years ago.
My stomach was in bad shape. After
eating I would have to rest awhile or I
would suffer the most severe pains iuj
my stomach. On arising I would ofteu
be so dizzy that I could hardly stand up.
The slightest exertion would start my
back aching so that I often had to sit
down and rest awhile. At times I ex
perienced a pain around the heart which
alarmed me but which I suppose came
from my stomach trouble.
“I began to break out on the face with
pimples and later with boils which con
fined me to the house a week or more at
a time. One day I saw Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People advertised in a
pamphlet which was left at the door and
I thought I would give them a trial. I
took several boxes of the pills before all
the pimples and boils left me, but I am
now glad to say that my blood is g'KHl.
I do not have any eruptions aud I no
longer have the head and stomach
troubles I have described. I am very
grateful for what Dr. Williams’Pink Pills
have done for me and I have recom
mended them aud always will advise
those who are suffering from bad blood
or stomach trouble to try them.”
If you want good health you must have
good blood. Bad blood is the root of most
common diseases like anaemia, rheuma
tism, sciatica, neuralgia, St. Vitus’ dance,
nervousness, indigestion, debility, par
tial paralysis and locomotor ataxia
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold ' v
all druggistsor sent, postpaid, on rec >t
of price, 50c. per box. six boxes for$2 >,
by the Dr. Williams Medlmne Ooxupa:. .-,
Schenectady, N.Y.
Even an electric button won't accom
plish much unless it is pushed.
Mrs. Winilow'K Soothing Syrup.
Por children teething, softens the gums, reduces h>
hsminBiluo »llaj-e psln. cures wind colic, 25c u joule.
There’s no need to hunt for trouble;
it will find you just as quick.
lewis’ Single Binder — the famous
straight 5c cigar, always best quality,
lour dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, ill.
The parson was talking to little El
mer about bis habits, and asked him
what time he was usually called for
breakfast. "They don’t have to call
me,” answered Elmer. “Fm always
Johnny-on-the-spot”
Attractive Colorado Booklet.
One of the most attractive of the
summer vacation booklets that have
been issued is "A Colorado Summer.”
put out by the passenger department
of the Santa Fe railroad. The pic
turesque mountain scenery and the de
scriptions of it which the booklet gives
impress the reader with a new idea
of the grandeur of the mountain crags
of Colorado, and will start one day
dreaming of the time when he can
view for himself the magnificence
which the booklet describes. After
reading the booklet one must certainly
be convinced that Colorado offers both
pleasure and health for every summer
tourist. "A Colorado Summer” may he
secured from Mr. W. J. Black, Pass.
Traffic Manager, Santa Fe Railway,
Chicago.
WISDOM S WHISPERS.
Force of circumstances is a poor
excuse for the taking of a wrong path.
The bearer of unpleasant tidings
rarely appreciates how hard he strikes.
Hold fast to a truth without re
gard to what others may think of you.
The value of wealth cannot be es
timated by those who do not possess it.
It does one no harm to call atten
tion to the good that may De seen in
others.
An assumption of humility does not
always carry with it the appearance
of honesty.
Because others may overestimate
your value is no reason for your do
ing likewise.
Jumping at conclusions without
facts shows a ready mind, if not a
well-balanced one.
Words can be used so as to increase
their importance even in telling an
ordinary story.
The ravages of time come creeping
along no matter how effectively they
may be concealed.
MiVCA TfOXAL.
The Greatest Boarding College in the World
University of
Notre Dame
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA
IVe guarantee two taints: Pur students
study and our students behave themselves
18 BoiMiags 75 Professors 800 Students
Course* In Ancient and Modern LanKua*res. En«r
Hsh. History, and Economics. Chemistry, Biojotrv
PhaiTnacy. nyil, Electrical, and Mechanico] Fnirt'
ZSZSZSKSS?”* *"• 8hort,“ud- *&&&
SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR BOTH
UNDER THIRTEEN
TERMS: Board. Tuilion. and Lanodrr S4M
Send len cents to the Begisirar hr Catalogue
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"Sti % r;| LIf Catalogue and samples vust.
99 111 * M<WM«II's.anW.|.uCi-■],
U. S. NAVY
enlists for four years young men of rood
character and round physical condition Tto
S5 Tears, as apprentice seamen, aid men
SSSS^aKSSS?* “d
Young men who are skilled mechanics on*,
sessing some knowledge of fdecMSr^;
^fsjssssnsey «
men. must have a goodrvlw,.^ ' Au such
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