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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1908)
MANY .STRIKIN'} EXAMPLES,IN FRANCI LEAST. Of INTERNATIONAL MATCHES WHlt BROUQrtT HAPPINESS THAT YEARS HAVE NOT* ALTERED. \J) PARIS.—Not al! our girls who j marry titles are unhappy. I We hear of the shipwrecks, wasted millions and a lore j girl drifting westward on a . gilded craft: but the mass j of the contented, doing vast good to ! America and Europe, pass unnoticed, declares a writer in the Washington Evening Star. As to France. I know these girls are . missionaries of the great American idea. Sente get love; some fill empty hearts with worldly satisfactions, and all merit admiration. France's shat- • of their $300,000,000 may have heeled old families: but the breezy push, the bright initiative, independence, energy and judgment with which they invigor ate a sleepy aristocracy are equaled only by the splendid prestige they have given the tinted States abroad. There are two ducal families, for example, the Rochefoucaulds and T'zes. called, respectively, "the pre mier dukes" and "premier barons" of the old regime, is it a smail thing that Miss Shunts becomes the sister in-law of one. while Miss Mattie Eliza beth Mitche! is the duchess of the ; other? One True Love Match. Miss Mitchell may have brought the Due de la Rochefoucauld but ] $200,000. The duke—who, in old days, would have been nearest royalty, like the Norfolks in England—could have j r : * married any heiress nf his class. in stead, he chose Miss Mitchell, with her modest dot—a true love match For trade, he is captain of hussars. His private life is most passed at Montmiraii, his seat, where his lovely American duchess wields queenly in fluence. She is the friend of all stir Is who want to marry their true love: of the country nobility: rich farmers' daughters: middle-class git’s curse 1 with ambitious parents: peasant girls discouraged by small cash She has opened French eyes to American agricultural machinery . made known hygienic plumbing, the check system, social mixing, farmers' trolleys, Indian corn, bath tubs, out door life for girls above the peasant class. How can a high-hearted Oregon girl, become chief personage of sev eral counties, not spread The idea of go ahead and trust to your strong arm? She taught the duke to take his place. He was easy-going lovable and army-locoed: for some years they held aloof from high Parisian society, but now they have a son. aged three: the' take their preponderating place in th * set of the Dowager Duchess d'I'zes hunting the red deer with dogs and horses and the melancholy horn, like Francis de la Roche, his ancestor, god father of Francis !.. and consulting ■with five other seignieurs to change the director of the Paris grand opera by mere force of social influence. , I Place for Duchesse de Chaulnes. t Miss Shonts. as Duchesse de Chaulnes. has her place like this "air ing for her in the Fzes set. Much de pends on the woman. The emoluments are often worth the money. Indeed, there are American girls who have so valued the emoluments that they held to them after they divorced the man— ; and no hard feelings. Such is the happy case of Miss Cur tis of New York, first wife of the pres ent Due de Dino. The whole French aristocratic family mourned her when she quit. “You are still of us!" they insisted. She still calls herself the marquise de Talleyrand-Perigord. Her noble daughter married a Roman Rus poli, title princess of Piggio-Suasa. her four sons are bona fide Gotha no- . biHty; and she has always been ex : tremeiy happy. When her divorced husband found he could not live without an American woman on the premises, his good old father kind of abdicated, so that, as ■ principaiitr or untenom. American Girls ",n Demand. All is not one-sided. It has been ob served that when French families get a taste for our girls they go in for them quite wholesale. Thus .Miss Hooper of Cincinnati was brought up in Patis. where her mother enter tained so lavishly in one of the 12 mansions around the Arc de Tri omphe. Well. Comte Horace de Choiseu! saw that his elder brother, the Due de Choiseul-Praslin. was so happy with Miss Forbes of New York for such a long time, that he espoused Miss Hooper. Both these Choiseul-Praslin wives are absolutely happy, quite as similated to French life, while keeping hold of all that is best in their patri mony of America: and it is known that their steady influence is part of that mysterious something that is put ting new push into the French aristoc racy. The de Choiseul-Praslins. for example, have yet a third nice Ameri can girl among them. Miss Coudert. die heiress of the New York-Paris law firm, also married into it: and yet more. Wait. There is. indeed, a fourth! lu the days of the kings who gave these titles, a king could have quickly decided whether the Prince de Bearn et de Chalais is a real de Choiseul Praslin. The courts of the French re public could not. Therefore, to this day, we do not know if Miss Winans of Baltimore married into this old family of the minister of Louis XIV. I ! magnificent chateau of l'Empery Car I rieres and the Mttsee Snciale—was a ! groat personage in several lights. Hr ! died a few years since. Socially a Paris leader, he found time to himself j to make the Musee Sociale. where | many American students have been ■ welcomed to learn everything done in France in th? line of university settle ments. model houses, pure milk and | all that sort of thing. The funds of the Musee Sociale—in part American girls' money—have per mitted several French sociologists to visit the 1'nited States to study what we do in the same lines. Its director. Leopold Mabilleau. appointed by De Chambrun, gave one of the French lecture courses at Harvard. 1 could thus go on for pages. For ! each American girl who has wasted ! love and fortune in undignified Euro ! pean title-buying. I ran name you 15 j others who. in France at least, have ■ made love matches, reasonable bar gains. settlements in life continuing | happily and usefully. Why belittle our girls who come j here and marry, making the name of American a thing to be proud of, by | their fortunes, by their adaptability? Became French Social Leader. Shall 1 speak of the Marquise de \ Ganay, who was a Miss Ridgeway of Philadelphia? She is now a grand mother, with children and grandchil dren married into great French fam ilies. a portentous, awful social lead er! Or shall 1 mention the Baronette i wrong one.' “ 'I know." said .lake, bracing him self again: but now 1 can get at the : other handier.' ” “The Morning Tub.” A few rears ago a sister of mine j called in to see an old lady who lived I in a little cottage in Lincolnshire, and in the course of conversation happened j to mention that she had a cold sponge down every morning. "Law. miss!" said the old lady, "and does your mother know?" “Yes. certainly: and she quite ap proves." "Well,” said the old lady, "a washes me faace ivvery daay, an' a washes mi neck once a week, but a've nivver bin washed a I ower since a was a habbv.” This good old lady lived to the ripe old age of 93.—Letter to the London Daily News. Proper Discrimination. A party of New Yorkers who go down to Virginia each year for an ex tended fishing trip were one day dis cussing the merits of the various fish in the streams of the Old Dominion, when one of them finally turned to the old darky who served the party as guide and boatman, and said: "Zeke. don't you think yellow perch is altogether the best fish in this vicin ity?" "Yessah," promptly responded Zeke. "yaller perch am de bes' fish heah. always excusin’ de white shad." —Illustrated Sunday Magazine. MATTER EASILY GOT AROUND. A man with a waistcoat and dia mond shirt stud that fairly screamed •'Prosperity!” at all within seeing dis tance blew into the public stenog rapher's office in a New York hotel, a “Say,” be demanded, "can you write & a letter to my goil?" The stenographer assured him that she could. "Well,” declared the sport, after giving the name and address, "tell her I've connected with a barrel of money on the ponies and that I'm goin' to Narragansett Pie! for no weeks, see?” For a few seconds the typist's fin gers flew. Suddenly she stopped. ”1 can't for the life of me remetn ber," she explained in a puzzled voice, 'how to spell Narragansett.'” The man behind the waistcoat tossed his cigar and scratched his head. ”N-a r-nar-r-e-r-rer-r—oh, the dick ens; cut it out. I'll go to New port ! ” PIRATES SENSE OF CHIVALRY. That even a Chinese pirate may have a strong idea of chivalry is proved by the following excerpt from an item in the North China Dally News: "The launch at once stopped when ordered to do so. The leader of the pirates was then heard to order his men that they were not to molest anyone on board who voluntarily handed over his or her valuables. Among the passengers, however, were a father and son, the latter of whom. it seemed, was a little too slow In obeying tbe pirate's order to band over his money, with the result that he was shot. Upon hearing the Bhot the pirate chief, who was on deck, came down into the cabin and seeing the father of the unlucky young man lamenting over his son's death, ad dressed the old man and condoled with him on his son's unfortunate and 'undeserved' death. The chief finally brought out of his pocket a roll of $50 and handed the sum to the old man as a solatium.” (he Due de Dino. he could make Mrs j Frederic Livingston (nee Sampson) a! real Almanack do Gotha duchess. She I is very happy, too, though separated , front him: and 1 never shall forget the frank American decision of character with which 1 once saw her jerk hint front the Monte Carlo trente-et-quar ante table, saying: "You have blown enough of my money: cut it!" Two Mere Happy Marriages. Two Misses Singer of the sewing machine trade, brought $2,000,000 apiece into the Almanach de Gotha— ! and never regretted it. Isabel married the great social high priest, the Due Decazes. who really caused the death of poor old Haritoff two years ago. Haritoff. who formerly had his own lacing stable and could point out. in the Avenue of the Bois. three man sions he presented to three ladies in his prime, lived hard broke of late years: but everyone felt pitying and friendly to him. At Monte Carlo Decazes, with a live ly party on his yacht, invited Haritoff to dinner. After coffee, talking old ' times with a mature lady of the thea ter. poor Haritoff explained he had a system to beat roulette. With a 1,000- | franc note he could attain to fortune, i 1 Here's one," said the lady: but as i days passed, after, and she saw no more ot Haritoff. she sought him out and asked her money back. ' The sys- j tern broke." said the unhappy mar.: | the 1,000 francs are gone: please . wait a few days more;" but the indig - nant lady told Decazes: and Decazes ostentatiously kicked Haritoff in the posterior before the great public of the atrium of the Casino. Everyone called it a savage ac . | Friends represented to Decazes it was his fault to have left Haritoff alone with anyone who had 1.000 francs; his’ weakness and necessities were known. Therefore the duke, kindly at heart, consented to meet Haritoff in a duel ! where no one was hurt; but his old friend never recovered from the dis grace. and died a few months after. Prince Polignac. who married Win naretta Singer—and in time left her a happj widow, with his noble family all. devoted to her. Even their old mother, after Isaac Singer died, went into the nobility by wav of the duke of Carnpo Selicp. There are dukes and dukes In the old kingdoms of Naples and Sicily three acres and a cow constituted a principality or dukedom. ! or not; but it does not prevent her from being glad she did it. There is no kick coming from the Princesse de Bearn et de Chalais. Romance of Caroline Fraser. All but two of 1he American women I have mentioned are the happy mothers of young nobles of proud lineage. Could you find a more roman tic case than that of Caroline Fraser and her issue? When the princely Murats—history makers—took refuge in Bordentown, N. J., Caroline was governess in the family. The heir married her—and stuck tight to her always. She is dead several years since; but her children, keeping her blue eyes and corn-yellow hair, have married everywhere. The most romantic of these Ameri can-mothered Murat men espoused the utterly romantic Circassian Princess Daien. Zephita by name, lovely beyond words, daughter and sole heir of the sovereign house of Mingrelia—which land you can hunt in southern Russia. He is there, a king to-day, the boy from Bordentown! Of all the French counts, none stand higher in history or society than the Chambruns. When Louis XV. erected all those marquisates, a Comte de Ohambrun got one of the first, and the Chambruns always have had sense. They kept much of their land through :he revolution; they had shifted a good lot of liquid cash ot England, and at the restoration they were among the first to gei a whack at the <132, 000.000 voted as compensation to the martyred nobility. Chambrun s Good Sense. To prove that horse sense has not left the family, the Marquis de Cham brun snapped up an American girl, of the Rives-Niehols family of Virginia, when he was attache at Washington. Good. It worked. The family liked the innovation. "Go ahead." they said to the Comte de Chambrun. when he was old enough to marry; "find an other like her!" What he found was Miss Longworth. Alice Roosevelt's sis ter-in-law. The Chambruns are playing a most prominent part in the great effort to inij.rove the social situation of the French working classes. At home, in their Hire*' chatteaux, they are patri archal masters of land as far as the eye can see. There are no wretched poor in their villages. Their farmers are the proud and prosperous master of blood stock, newest agricultural machinery, silos, distilleries, grain mills, canning factories—and what do I know ? The American girls who came to the Chambruns showed the way to the men. who profited intelli gently and thankfully. No Chambrun has wasted a dollar of American money. Founder of Musee Sociale. In Paris the head' of the family— who divided his time between the Louis de La Grange and the Comp tesse Jean de Kergorlay? They were the daughters of Gov. Carroll of Mary land, descendants of Charles Carroll of Carrollton. They were sis children, inheriting $20,000,000. Shall 1 tell you of the Marquise de | Breteuil. who was Miss Garner of St. I Louis? Suppose that she did bring the marquis $4,000,000. We can afford it. Do you want the money? One of her j sisters married Comte Leon von Moltke. who represents Denmark in Paris, and his brother, seeing it was good and fair, espoused Miss Bona parte of Baltimore. The other sister. Edith Garner, married Gordon Cum i mings. made the present king of Eng | land's scapegoat in the baccarat affair of years ago. The Marquis De Mores never had a good hour when not with his wife, j Miss von Hoffman of New York. James j Gordon Bennett's niece. Rita Bell, no toriously made a man of Count Paul | d'Aramon—himself already half an i American, as his mother had been a | Miss Fisher. They lead a patriarchal I life. The lady never lost a dollar of her money. And so on America is rich enough to let her daughters marry where they will. England spends billions to build up ber prestige with a lot of iron-clads. men-of-war. cruisers and line-of-hattle ships. If we Americans prefer to make a smarter, lovelier kind of repu tation for our land and folk, why, let | our girls come and show Europe how i to live! They do it. Whoop! JUST CLEARING THE WAY. After All, What Was One Tooth. More or Less? "Tbp late Edmund Clarence Sled man.” said a Chicago publisher, 'used j to entertain bis friends with amusing memories of country journalism He once edited, you know, a littie paper in Connecticut. "At a dentists' banquet in New York, where he read an original poem, i he told a story about an amateur Con j necticut dentist, one of his oldest sub I senders. I "This man's name was .lake. .lake was at work in a corn field one dav when a neighboring farmer came to him. holding his jaw. i "The farmer had the toothache, anil to save a trip to Winsted and a den tist's fee he wanted Jake to pull tht aching tooth. "Jake led hint to the barn, seated him on a saw-horse and took from the ! harness room a pair of very large. ! rusty pincers. " Here goes.' he said, and bracing himself extracted a huge tooth. "The farmer clapped his hand to his jaw. He pointed reproachfully to : the large white tooth in the pincers. " Why, Jake.' he said, 'that's the run HH-+++++++++++++++++++++++ +-VI-+H ! AN INTERESTING CHEMICAL EXPERIMENT | Any Child Can Do It—The Result Is ; Almost Like Magic—Useful, Too. Anything in the nature of a chem ical experiment is always interesting and usually educative. Here is a sim ple experiment which any child can perform and which is instructive in a very practical way: Get a bit of White Lead about the size of a pea, a piece of charcoal, a common candle in a candlestick, and a blow-pipe. Scoop out a little hollow in the charcoal to hold the White Lead, then light the candle, take the charcoal and lead in one hand and the blow-pipe in the other, with the large end of the blow pipe between the lips; blow the flame of the candle steadily against the bit of White Lead on the charcoal and if the White Lead is pure it will pres ently resolve itself into little shining globules of metallic lead, under the intense heat of the blow-pipe, leaving Ho residue. If. however, the White Lead is adul terated in the slightest degree, it will | not wholly change into lead. So. it I will be seen, that this experiment is I not only an entertaining chemical ) demonstration, but also of practical I use in the home. White Lead is the ; most important ingredient of paint. ! It should be bought pure and unadul terated and mixed with pure linseed | oil. That is the best paint. The I above easy experiment enables any ' one to know whether the paint is the kind which will wear or not. i The National Lead Company guar j antee that white lead taken from a j package bearing their "Dutch Boy ■ Painter” trade-mark will prove abso { lutely'pure under the blowpipe test; and to encourage people to make the test and prove the purity of paint be I fore using it. they will send free a i fclow-pipe and a valuable booklet on paint to anyone writing them asking for Test Equipment. Address Na tional Lead Company. Woodbridge Building. New York City. BUT WAS IT THE SAME MELON? Paper Carried by Darky Amounted Almost to Perpetual Permit. “A negro just loves a watermelon." said Representative .lohnson of South i Carolina. 'Strange, too. that when a j policeman sees a negro with a melon at an unreasonable hour he has it : right down that the darky has stolen that watermelon. 1 heard a story about a policeman who met a negro in the early hours of the morning, and he had a big melon on his shoulder. “ ‘1 see you have a melon there?' " Yes. salt,’ answered the darky, i T'se got er melon: but I'se fixed fer you. sah.' and pulling out a paper he handed it to the officer, who read: 'This bearer of this is C>. I\. He paid me ten cents for the melon, and he is a pillar in the church. James Eld-r.' “ You are fixed.’ said the officer. “ Dat's what I 'lowed.' answered the negro, and he moved on. "—Washing ton Herald. NEURALGIA The real meaning of the word Neu ralgia is nerve-pain, and any one who has suffered with the malady will not be so anxious to know of its nature as to hear of its antidote. Though scarcely recognized by the profession and people half a century ago. it is now one of the most common and pain ful ailments which afflict humanity. As now generally understood the word signifies an affection of the nervous system, with pain in the course of the principal nerves. The two great causes of Neuralgia are. Impoverishment of the Blood and Deficiency of Nerve Force; and the treatment of it is not so obscure as many w ould be led to suppose. The first thing is to relieve the pain, which is done more quickly and satis factorily by ST. JACOBS Oik. than by any other remedy known: the second object is to remove the cause, which is accomplished by the abundant use of nourishing food, of a nature to strengthen and give tone to both the muscular and nervous systems. Nor Fire Nor Water. Secretary A. M. Downes of New York's department of fire, related at a dinner a fire story. “At the end of the first act of a drama." he said, “a man leaped hur riedly to his feet. “ ‘1 heard an alarm of fire.' he said. ! ‘I must go and see where it is.’ "His wife, whose hearing was less j acute, made way for him in silence, j and he disappeared. | “ ‘It wasn't fire,’ he said, on his return. | “ ‘Nor water, either,’ said his wife, ! coldly.” Don’t Try Uncertain Recipes. It is entirely unnecessary to exjieriment with this, that and the other recipe. Get from your grocer, for 10 cents, a package of "OCR-PIE” Preparation—Lemon. Chocolate or Custard—for making pies that are sure to be good. "Put up by D-Zerta Food Co., Rochester, N. Y.“ Tactless. “One of those fellows that is always doing the wrong thing, eh?” “Is he? Why, say, that fellow would ] put a frieze around a hothouse.” Pettit's Eye Salve First Sold in 1807 100 years ago. gules increase yearly, wonder ful remedy: cured millions weak eyes. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. How many times have you won out when invited to go up against anoth er mans game? — There Is Only One “Bromo \ That /• Laxative Br USED THE WORLD OVER TO Always remember the full name. ] tor this signature on every box. PUTNAM Cator sore ood* kriehter and taster colon than any •»» saiwaot »itheut ripping apart Writs tar trsa See LANGUID AND WEAK. A Condition Common with Kidney Trouble snd Backache. Mrs. Marie Sipfle. 416 Miller St., Helena. Mont., says: “Three years ago my uacK grew weuK and lame and I could not stoop without a sharp pain. It was just as bad when 1 tried to get up from a chair. I was lan guid and listless and had much pain and trouble with the kidney secretions. This was my state when 1 began with Doan's Kidney Pills. They helped me from the first and four bcyos made a complete, lasting cure.” Soid by all dealers. 50 cents a ber. Foster-ililburn Co.. Buffalo, X. Y. Trollope's Earnings as an Author. As an author Anthony Trollope re ceived $500,000 during his lifetime. Mm. W ihhIow'b Soot tune Sjrnp. For children teething. nut leas the srurr.a. reduced In fiamniaiion.allays puln. curtt wind colK Si5c u l*»ttlc A man isn't absolutely a too! unless he can be fooled the same way twice FOUR OIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Read What They Scy. STOLTZMANf 3 Miss Lillian Ross. 53C East 64th Street. New York, writes: “ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ihle Compound over j came irregularities, pe [riodic suffering, and Jnervous headaches, (after everything else had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it.'’ K at harineCraig,2355 , Lafayette St., Denver, ICol., writes: “Thanks [to Lydia E. Pinkham's j Vegetable Com pound I i aintt ell, aftersuffering for months from ner vous prostration.” Miss Marie Stoltz Iman, of Laurel, la., writes: “ I was ina run down conditionandsuf f ered fromsuppression, indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me well and strong.” Miss Ellen M. Olson, [of 417 N. East St.. Kts Jwanee. 111..says: "Ly jdiaE.Pinkham's'Vege I table Compound cured me of backache, side ache, and established my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tioiL, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency,indiges tion,di7.ziness,ornervous prostration. Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkhnm invites all sick women to write lier for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. ixeivsveii. ~ snocs m fns wopio io-aujr* W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Anj Price or • Al'TJOV. W. !.. BoukIm name and prioe Is stamped on bottom. Take So Suhotltiite. Soli! by the t**6i shoe dealer* everywhere. b^o» mauled from fartpry to any part t>f the world. 1 Hi fwaxu t/. 0*10 oHdoooo V«a Utl 1 GLAM, tratad dauuug free to any address. Brocktou, Mm | f You save money i and avoid failures in your baking if you use Here is true economy. You cannot be sure every time or have your food dainty, tasty and whole some if you pay less or _J accept a substitute. ^pP ounces^ 'ues f'« chicaoo MAWS*3. IRRIGATED LANDS WRITE US FOB BOOS LET C0NCEBN1N0 IRRIGATED LANDS IN TBE GREAT TWIN FALLS AND JEROME COUNTRY. IDAHO. Altitude only 3TCI0 feet above the sea level. Inexhaustible water supply, taken from the great Snake River, the seventh largest river in America. No alkali, no cyclones. 430,000 acres of the finest fruit and agricultural land in the West. The man who wants a home w here everythin? prows that makes farming profitable on easy terms—or the man w ho wants land for investment should write ns, as we quote nothing but absolutely reliable in formation. Address H. A. STROLD S COMPANY, Twin Falls. Idaho Quinine ” omo Quinine WIRE A GOLD IK OKE DAT. /ook 15c. SWA THE DUTCH BOY PAINTER\ STANDS FOR PAINT QUALITY IT IS FOUND ONLY ON k PURE WHITE LEAD f MADE BY THE OLD DUTCH ' PROCESS.^ FADELESS DYES ”*»*- .T*> die li» cow —tw bettor th»i» «w oWw tn. T«en uii-iiiw n an, Bieicb ind in dion. MOB, ROE DRUB CO., Qmtnoy, tttSnoBm* ik. »--- - » Typical Farm Scene. Showing Stock Raising in WESTERN CANADA Rome of the choicest lands for grain growing. Stock raising and mixed farming in the new dis tricts of Saskatchewan and A;t**rta have re cently been Opened for Settlement under the Revised Homestead Regulations Entry may now be made by proxy (on rerta n conditions), by the father, mother son. daugh ter, brother or sister of an intending home steader. Thousands of homesteads of 160 acres each are thus now easily available in ih#-s* great grain-growing’, stock-raising and mixed tanning sections. There you will find healthful din.ate. neign bors. '-hurdles for family xor-h, |.. sriit,, ; for your children, good laws, spiendid crops, and railroads convenient to market Entry fee in each case is $10.00 For pamj ' let. “Last Best West.” particulars as to rate** routes, best time to go and where tc lt*au apply to W. V. BENNETT. 80! New York Life Building. Omabx, Nebraska. Money Making Possibilities For the farmer, truck pardoner, stockman and merchant were never better than they are today tn the Dakotas and Montana alonp the new line to the Pacific Coast Mild climate: ample rainfall: pro ductive soil: pood crops; con venlent markets; cheap fuel. More stores, hotels and other in dustries are needed in the prow.rip new towns on the new line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Trains are now operated on this new line to Lombard, Montana - 92 miles east of Butte—with con nections for Moore, Lewistown and other points in the Judith Basin. Daily service between St. Paul and Minneapolis and Miles City; daily except Sunday service beyond. Send for free descriptive books and maps repardinjj this new coun try—they will interest you. F. A. MILLER, Ceneral Passenger Agent, Chicago. DPATIFRQ 01 this <te llLill/LAu sinng tc tru) ar> thing advertise- !' its columns should insist upon having what they ask for. refusing all substi tutes or lmitabons. DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 or. pkg. 10c. W. N. U.. OMAHA, NO. 14, 1908.