Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1907)
NERVOUS COLLAPSE 18 OFTEN PREVENTED BY DR. WILLIAMS’ PINK PILLS. Taken When the First Warning Symp toms Are Noticed Much Needless Suffering May Be Saved. Are you troubled with pallor, Ion of spirits, waves of heat passing over the tody, shortness of breath after slight exertion, a peculiar skipping of the heart beat, poor digestion, cold extremi ties or a feeling of weight and fullness? Do not make the mistake of thinking that these are diseases in' themselves and be satisfied with temporary relief. This is the way the nerves give warn ing that they are breaking down. It simply means that the blood has become impure and cannot carry enough nourish ment to the nerves to keep them healthy and able to do their work. Rest, alone, will sometimes give the needed relief. The tonic treatment by Dr. 'Williams’ Pink Pills, however, pre vents the final breakdown of The nerves and the more serious diseases which follow, because the pills act directly upon the impure blood, making it rich, red and pure. Mrs. E. O. Bradley, of 103 Parsells avenue, Rochester, N. Y., says: “ I was never very healthy and some years ago, when in a run-down condi tion, I suffered a nervous shock, caused by a misfortune to a friend. It was so great that I was unfitted for work. ‘‘I was just weak, low-spirited and nervous. I could hardly walk and could not bear the least noise. My appetite was poor and I did not care for food. I couldn’t sleep well and once for two weeks got scarcely an hour’s sleep. I had severe headaches most of the time and pains in the back and spine. “ I was treated by two dbctors, being under the care of one of them for six months. I got no relief and then de cided to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. I soon began to feel better and the im provement was general. My appetite became hearty and my sleep better. The headaches all left and also the pains in my back. A few more boxes entirely cured me and I was able to go back to work. I felt splendid and as though I had never been sick. ” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are invaluable in such diseases as rheumatism, after effects of the grip and fevers, neuralgia, St. Vitus’ dance and even partial paralysis and locomotor ataxia. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all druggists, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. Napoleon’s Famous War Horse. Marengo, the famous war charger of : Napoleon, is said to have been the . greatest horse known to modern his tory. 'yhe emperor rode Marengo for the last time in the battle of Mount St. Jean, where the horse received his seventh wound. The steed died at the age of 36 years. Every time a woman makes a fool j of a wise man he simply charges it up to experience and lets it go at that SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dls tress from. Dyspepsia, In ITTLE digestion and Too Hearty |\tp n Eating: A perfect rem I V L rt edyforDizziness, Nausea, PILLS* Drowsiness, Bad Taste _roj la the Month. Coated Tongue, Pain In the Side, .. I TORPID UVER. They pegulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SHALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature JBEFUSE SUBSTITUTES. RFADFR^S °.f this •"'per de IlL/nUJLfllJ siring to tiuy any thing advertised in Its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing aU substi tutes or imitations. THE DAISY FLY KILLERiV”*™*"ail the — fl,eg an<j affords comfort to every home. It lasts the e n ti r e season. Harmless to per sonq. Clean, neat and will not soil or I injure anything. I Try them once and | you will never be | without them. If I not kept by deal. -■ ■.■■■■■. — ere, pent prepaid HAKOl* B09KRB. ii» Math A«e.fBfeeklya,!. ¥. LITTLE CAUSE FOR WORRY. More or Leas Glittering Bait Held Out to Cevy Puncher*. Orer in. the Salmon river meadows country, In Idaho, ranged a wild and woolly bunch of long-haired cow punchers, whose knowledge of the world was confined mainly to trips after cattle into surrounding counties, into this reckless but verdant com munity there came the smdbth tongued representative of a wild west show, who hired several r ders at a high salary to do a hair-raising act, the chief feature being that they Bhould appear to be thrown f*om their horses and dragged by the foot. After they had practiced in a corril for a while one of them loosened himself and rising from the dirt, dis heveled and dazed, inquired: ' "Say, mister, ain’t this ruther dan gerous? We might git killed.” “That’s all right,” chirped the show’s representative cheerfully. “Tour salary will go on just the same.”—Lippincott’s Magazine. THOUGHT CHILD WOULD DIE. Whole Body Covered with Cuban Itch —Cuticura Remedies Cured at Cost of Seventy-Five Cents. “My little boy, when only an Infant of three months, caught the Cuban Itch. Sores broke out from his head to the bottom of his feet. He would Itch and claw himself and cry ail the time. He could not sleep day or night, and a light dress is all he'Could wear. I called one of our best doctors to treat him, but he seemed to get worse. He suffered so terribly that my hus band said he believed he would have to die. I had almost given up hope when a lady friend told me to try the Cuticura Remedies. I used the Cuti cura Soap and applied the Cuticura Ointment and he at once fell into a sleep, and he slept with ease for the first time since two months. After three applications the sores began to dry up, and in just two weeks from the day I commenced to use the Cunicura Remedies my baby was entirely well. The treatment only cost me 75c, and I would have gladly paid $100 if I could not have got it cheaper. I feel safe in saying that the Cuticura Remedies saved his life. He is now a boy of five years. Mrs. Zana Miller, Union City, R. F. D. No. 1, Branch Co., Mich., May 17, 1906.” With a Proviso. “When universal peace is finally es tablished,” said Alfred H. Love, the president of the Universal Peace un ion, in an interview in Philadelphia, “then many a man who now ridicules the peace movement will claim to have been its lifelong champion. It is always so. We thump and kick a poor, weak, struggling movement at its inception, and when it has succeed ed and no longer needs our help, we give it the most solicitous support. There was once a young lady whose betrothed, a very poor young man, was about to set out for South Ameri ca to seek his fortune in the rubber trade. As he took his leave of her the night before his departure, he said, tremulously: ‘And you swear to be true to me, Irene?’ ‘Yes, Heber,’ cried the girl; ‘yes—if you’re successful.’” State op Ohio. City op Toledo, I Lucas Codtt. I 8S‘ Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior Eartuer of the Arm of F. J. Cheeky * Co., doing usleess la the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNOSED DOLLARS for each and erery case of Catarrh that cannot be cared by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Core. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D.. 1886. —a— . A. W. GLEASON. lifAL| Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Care Is When Internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface, of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, O Sold by all Druggists, T5c. Take Uall’eFamliy Plus for constipation. Her Disease. One day Marjorie, aged three, want ed to play doctor with her sister. Marjorie was the “doctor,” and she came to make a call on her sister, who made believe she was sick. “Do you want to know what you've got?” the doctor asked, after a critical ex amination. “Yes,” faintly assented the sick woman. "You’ve got dirty hands,” said Marjorie, dropping in dis gust the wrist on which she had been feeling the pulse. The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a, matter of great im portance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Itsgreat strength as a stiffener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new'. A woman derives more pleasure from planning things that never come oft than a man does from the actual happenings of things. Smokers have to call for Lewis’ Single Binder cigar to get it. Your deader or Lewis’ Factory, Pecria, 111. We gain strength of the temptation we resist.—Emerson. Guaranteed ^ under nil flat Food Uwi Stands for: Quality Economy Purity tn providing the family’s me don’t be satisfied with anything bi the best. K C'is guaranteed perfec tion at a moderate price. It makes - everything better. ^ . Try and see. mk A SAFEGUARD THE HOME GOOD CITIZEN'S ARE THE BUL WARK OF THE NATION. EDUCATION AND PROTECTION Two Vital Things to Be Considered by Those Who Would See the , Greatest Progress and Advancement. Where Is found the greatest ad vancement and civilization there is also found among the people the high est type of fealty and love of home. The American homes are the most substantial pillars of the nation’s greatness, and in American citizen ship is found the bulwark of our re publican government. ' Where the home life is ideal, there is found genuine patriotism which is always commensurate with the en lightenment and the domestic happi ness of the people. How important it is then that every safeguard be thrown about the home, which is the hotbed where are produced for devel opment all the strength that is neces sary for the perpetuation of a govern ment and the maintenance of a na tion’s greatness. The student who will study into conditions of the countries that are continually wrecked by internal tur moil, such as Russia and the Central American republics, will discover the homes are far from ideal homes, and that there is an absence of the love of country that should be found in the hearts of its citizens. There is jj. duty that involves upon all, and which is due to the'generations growing and to come. The duty is to surround the home with such environments as will make it attractive and develop in the growing youth the highest qualities of manhood and womanhood. Where the people are oppressed by monarchy and feudalism there is no incentive to develop the highest state of home life. In America where all are upon an equal plane and opportunities are open to every citizen, and where the people are secure in their rights to homes, there is every reason why each one should make the greatest en deavor to found for himself and his progeny a residence place that will be sure from intrusion and be an in centive to higher mental and social development. Education is all important and no other country in the world offers to all such glorious advantages to re ceive enlightenment as does the Unit ed States. It is important that the home be located near good schools. Good schools are generally found where there are good homes and good towns. The quality of citizenship of a community can generally be gaged by the standard of its educational insti tutions. It is important to the home builder that the town wherein he is lo cated <jr which he may reside near, be a progressive place. And the bet ter that this town be, the better will be its educational facilities for the youth. It is essential to the greatest good of a community that it be real ized by all residing within it that the more wealthy it can be made, the greater will be its advantages both as to education and otherwise. By sup port to home institutions the home is made better in every way. Patriotic citizens will make it their first aim tb be loyal to their own home interests and then their state and nation. One who is loyal to home is generally faithful in the performance of all the duties that good citizenship implies. Who Makes the Town? The editor of the paper at Coyle, Okla., asks in large letters, ‘ Who makes the town?” To make a town requires the work of many people. It is surely not the man who earns his wages in the town and then spends his earnings elsewhere: not the farm er who sells his produce to the home merchant and then takes the money to the express or post office and sends it to the Chicago mail order house for the goods he needs ; nor the minis ter who is paid for preaching by the business interests Of the place, and spends his spare time in working up grocery clubs for an outside concern. No, brother, these men do not make towns. Gov. Folk on Home Trade. “We are proud of our splendid cities and we want them to increase in wealth and population and we also want our country town to grow. We wish the city merchants to build up but we also desire the country mer chants to prosper. I do not believe in the mail order citizen. If a place is good enough for a man to live in and make his money in, it is good enough for him to spend his money in.” Misfits in Songs. i “I’m going to see a new American | play to-night,” she was saying. “It’s by an English author. All the best American plays these days are written by English authors.” “I hope they are more apropos than the songs they write,” remarked her friend. "Have you forgotten the Eng lish song that had a chorus about the ‘Cotton fields way down in Old New Jersey’ ?” Killing the Small Towns. It is impossible to build up towns without there being business to em ploy the people who reside in them. The mail order system of doing busi ness is killing off the small town, and as a result the farmers residing near them suffer by having a poor market, and poor /schools and other blessings of the kind that go with the live town. Not alone this but farm values are kept down. First Aid Sartorial ist. The wedding expert is now in com mission. His duties include selecting cravats, gloves and other incidentals of dress for bridegroom, best man and ushers. Of course, the prospective hubby standB the entire MIL Enter prising haberdashers catering to fine trade find it profitable to employ such functionaries, as a high price is usual ly exacted for this character of profes ; service. j Be the nuptial knot tied at church | or * bome,-a representative|g NO TIME FOR STUDY. People Who Are Either Too Busy or Too Indolent for Self-Improvement. That person who takes no interest In affairs of his fellow.men, who fails to keep himself informed as to what is transpiring around him, is far from being either progressive or well-in formed. These days when papers and magazines are so plentiful and 60 cheap, there is little excuse for the average person not keeping closely in touch with events, and particularly keeping enlightened as to what is transpiring that may affect his own individual interests. One of the great beauties, and an extraordinary privilege of our Amer ican form of government, is the right of ever citizen to take a part' in pub lic affairs and particularly in gov ernmental transactions. How many follow party leaders, perhaps blindly, and too late find that they made er rors through not having understood the; situation? How many who are negligent in the study of measures that are brought up for consideration both by state and national legislative bodies, and too late find that unwise laws were enacted that directly op pressed certain classes to the ad vantage of others? How many people are gathered in by alluring promises made in the finely printed literature sent broadcast through the country for the purpose of exploitation of fraudulent stock companies, just through not keeping informed as to the means; and methods employed by schemers to entrap the unwary? It is conservatively estimated that each year more than $50,000,000, are taken from the .earnings of the people just through the operations of fraudulent mining, oil, insurance and like con cerns. It would be impossible for the promoters of such frauds to exist were the people careful readers of tbo newspapers and the magazines, the pages of which are filled with ac counts of the doings of “get-rich quick” schemes. inese days tnere is every oppor tunity for self-improvement. Rural deliveries carry papers to the most remote farms, and telephones connect the farmhouses in the average com munity. If the people were only to utilize the means so close at hand, and to take the time to read, and ex amine into' such propositions as inter est them, there would be less cause for complaint on the part of those who perchance get their “fingers blis tered.” It is evident from the success that exploiters of schemes meet with, that the majority of people lack good business judgment, or that they are blinded by some inherent gambling de sire. It is always a safe plan to avoid any investment that offers more than legitimate returns on an investment. Any proposition that will pay even ten per cent, a year, and where the principal is secured, can find all the capital that may be required for its operation, without calling upon the general public. It is only the# uncer tain kind of investments, the ones that are a “gamble,” such as mining, and the like, that are most prominent in the advertising columns of the pa pers. The basis on tlrhich the promot ers work, is the inclination of the peo ple to seek great returns for little money. It is the same sentiment that allows numerous establishments lo cated in different parts of the country to dispose of cheap goods at enormous profits through holding out to the peo ple the promise of extraordinary values. The well-informed man will avoid all kinds of investment schemes that are designed to draw money from the pockets of the people, and will also refuse to buy any “pigs in bags,” it matters not whether the matter of barter be stocks and bonds or the nec essaries of life. Contrary to Home Building. Trade is the life of the agricultural town. Any system that diverts this trade is injurious to the community. Here lies the evils of the mall order system. By drawing the trade from the towns, the principal support goes, and with its going disappears the em ployment for the people, the school system, and the churches and all the advantages that the town affords to the people of the community. Not alone this but home markets are de stroyed and the farmer finds the value of his land reduced. Have the impor tance of home trading and home sup port instilled into the minds of the farmers in general, and there will be a rapid falling off of the catalogue house patronage. Importance of Good Roads. The town that has good roads lead ing to it is blessed. Surely there is no more disagreeable thing, nor any thing more adverse to the business interests of a place than impassable boggy roads. There is a little excuse in the well settled community for poor roads. It may in the beginning be somewhat expensive to put the roads in order, but in the end it will prove that the saving in wear and tear on wagons and horses will well repay all the additional expense. And to the town good roads are almost vital. The average farmer would rather drive three or four miles farther to a town over good roads than do his trading when it is necessary to go hub deep in mud to the nearer place. Adulterated Foodstuffs. Recently a number of samples of feoffee, extracts and canned goods sent out by a premium giving concern were examined by chemists in Mis souri and in South Dakota and found to be greatly adulterated. These goods were sold at prices as high as the local groc ers charge for the best class of articles. Those who are careful of health should not buy foodstuff that/ comes from the mail order houses, or from the premium giving concerns. mm mm Sami dence to properly adjust sartorial ac cessories prior to the processional march. The operations of this author ity are not necessarily confined te matrimonial sessions. He Is available on order at social gatherings, gener ally. goiter, indeed, la « The really good not so much the product of tional shin-as ef a finely blended tore, which; always hugs tbs side ef tfiefqptl. married to a rotative -• Historic Island for Qa!e. Raasay island, in the inner Heb rides, which lies between the main land of Scotland and the Isle of Skye, has failed to find a purchaser at the upset price of $225,000 placed upon it Its name is the Scandinavian for “the place of the roe deer,” an'd the shoot ings, with the mansion house and grounds at the southern end, const! tute the chief value of the island. Near the northern end are the ruins of Brcchel castle, the residence of its ancient lairds, the MacLeods. In Celtic lore Raasay has a place and in England literature it is mentioned In Samuel Johnson’s "Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland.” Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty 'and fineness of the fabric is bidden behind a paste of varying ;hickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great er strength than other makes. Just the Size. "I understand dat dere will be sev eral bogus animals on de stage,” said the long and lanky tramp as he read the sign “Supes Wanted.” “Yes,” replied the short and stout wayfarer, “I am going to play de head of de elephant and me fat pardner is going to play de hind legs.” “Hm! Then I suppose dere Is no chance for a tall, thin supe like me?” "Oh, yes, pard, you could play de neck of de giraffe.” Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOR!A. a safe and eare remedy for infanta and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Dae For Over 30 Years. • The Kind Yon Dave Always Bought. Paper Pails for Milk. Paper pails are the latest sanitarj device for the delivery of pure miH in London and other large English towns. They are used only once They are made of pulp and are steril ized by a heat of 500 degrees Fahreu heit. By following the directions, which ire plainly printed on each package of Defiance Starch, Men’s Collars and Huffs can be made just as stiff as de sired, with either gloss or domestic finish. Try it, 16 oz. for 10c, sold by all good grocers. Water Remarkably Pure. The water of Loch Katrine, in Scot land, is wonderfully pure. It holds only quarter-pound of alluvial deposit to every 1,000 gallons of water. The 'fhames averages four pounds to the 1,000 gallons. Temperature and Water. At sea level water boils at 212 de grees, F.; at a height of 30,000 feet at 193 degrees, F. When Darwin crossed the Andes in 1835 he boiled potatoes for three hours without making them soft. Does Your Head Ache? If so, get a box of Krause's Headache Capsules of your Druggist. 25c. Norman Lichty Mfg. Co., Des Moines, la. Care of Submarine Cables. Fifty fine vessels are constantly employed in laying and repairing the submarine cables of the world. Lewis’ Single Binder Cigar has a rich taste. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111. A lawsuit is the thief of time and money. Mrs. Wlnslow’i Soothing Sjrap. For children teething:, softens the sums, reduces llammatlon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle, Men with long heads are capable of using ^them on short notice. NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN a more potent remedy in the roots and herbs of the field than was ever produced from drugs. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers few drugs were used in medicines and Lydia E. Pinkham, of Lynn. Mass., in her study of roots and herbs and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. LYDIA. E. PINKHAM Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its record of more than thirty years, its long list of actual cures of those serious ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache, flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E, Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable compound and what it has done for them. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pink ham and as her assistant for years before her decease advised under her immediate direction. Address, Lynn, Mass. 4 ALLENS FOOT-EASE A Certain Cure for Tired, Hot, Aching Feet. DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. This signattre For . ^8. Olmsted, on every boi- LeRoj N.Y. MINNESOTA-HEALTH1'1 INDEPENDENCE Why not sell where you are. Bank some of your profits for income and take up a new home, and start the boys too. Fine water; beautiful lakes; quick, fertile soil, fine climate. 35,000 acres. Farm any size. Title absolute. Investigate anywhere before buying. Write for maps and truthful representations. Address ROGER. C. SPOONER. Pres. Donald L. St L. Co.. Bemidii. Miniv. LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS In great variety for sale at the lowest prices by ▲.I.&£LLO<tf KBtY8PAPKKCO»v 13 W.ldaas SC, Chicago ELECTROTYPES “»«e,e£wu«} Thompson’s Eye Water PIT & PiTLESS SCALES. For Steel and Wood Frames, $25 and up. Write us before you buy. •Wo save you money. Also Pumps and Wind Mills. KKCKJUX BUGS., De» Mofneii, la. W. N. U„ OMAHA, NO. 26, 1907, Whenever you buy oatmeal always buy Quaker Oats It’s the best oatmeal made;* and in the 25c family package, in addition to the oatmeal, you get a beautiful piece of American china. * There is a nice assortment of cups and saucers, plates, bowls, etc.; an easy way to furnish your table. The Quaker Qats Qmparvy CHICAGO Quaker Wheat Berries are the newest thing in cereal foods—delicious. This Is What Catches Me! l6oz«a*K)ne«ThIrd More Starch. ftfv: f// fry i 7// *//. r/v ROJUIflESNOaXJKWG wwreorer UUNOWURfOSaOHLY 01• ceSiarchCg Omaha. Nb*. A„ FULL POUND lOc No premiums, but oneWbird more starch than you get of other brands* Try it now, for hot or cold starching it has no equal and will not stick to the iron* V- . ;. r'' ' / '