Loup City Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY. - - NEBRASKA. Dangerous Exhibitions. The time has come for a note of warning regarding certain public ex hibitions that are becoming increasing ly popular—those where the performer earns his livelihood by deliberately risking his life. The interest to the onlookers in these performances arises from the fact that life for a moment hangs by a hair. Agility, muscularity, beauty of movement have become sec ondary, whether the feat is “looping the loop,” riding the bicycle round and round the sloping sides of a huge basket with no bottom to it, or taking chances in a cage with some wild beast. It is one and the same appeal to something within us that craves unhealthy excitement. It is true that the “gladiator" in these days does generally escape with his life, but the quality of the amusement demanded proves us akin to those far-off ances tors whose one idea of a good holiday was a batch of Christians and plenty of wild beasts. Nothing grows so quickly by what it feeds on as this de mand for excitement, and it is well understood by the caterers to the pub lic taste that the “shocker" of to-day is the platitude of to-morrow. For a season we could hardly believe in “looping the loop." but the dish rapid ly grew insipid, and tabasco had to be added, so the loop was looped in a motor-car, then in a motor-car with a piece of the track removed, and so on. The “thumbs down" of the ancients is represented to-day by the girl who stops chewing gum long enough to re mark indifferently to her escort, "Well, ain't he got the nerve!" as the trainer enters his den of beasts still wearing the bandages left from his last encoun ter. If these things must be. let us at least spare the little children, urges the Youths' Companion. They need the placid quiet of their childhood, with its simple pleasures, just as they need bread and milk. Bad taste as well as good grows by what it feeds on, and your child does not really need to have Christians butchered for his holiday any more than he needs curried lobster and champagne. Before Mr. Taft had retired from the head of the war department it was his privilege to direct the quartermas ter general of the arm}- to reserve a suitable plot in the National cemetery at Arlington for a monument to negro soldiers who lost their lives in the civil war. This action is taken in compliance with a request from the Colored Soldiers' Monument associa tion, which is raising money for the purpose indicated, an object with which Secretary Taft is in full and cordial sympathy. It is most suitable that a memorial of the kind should be raised at Arlington, in sight of the capital of the nation and the seat of the government which thousands of negroes fought bravely to save. Since Andrew Jackson, five vice presidents have become presidents through the death of the incumbents of the White House. Some of them would have never been honored with second place on the ticket had this contingency been seriously consid ered. Tyler was nominated because of his lamentations over Clay’s defeat. Fillmore got the job because Webster wouldn't take it. Johnson was picked by Lincoln, who made the mistake of his life. Arthur was chosen because Morton refused under the conviction that he could not win. Roosevelt was literally forced into fhe place from which fate led him to exalted pre eminence. If a "pied piper" who would entice away all the rats and leave the chil dren should appear in the coast cities of the world, he would be welcomed by the sanitary authorities. The sani tary department of Cuba is the latest to start a crusade against rats. A quarantine against Venezuelan ports has been declared on account of the bubonic plague, and an appropriation has been made for the extermination of the Cuban rats. Robert Vernon Hareourt, who was elected to the British parliament to succeed John Morley, elevated to the peerage, is half-American. His mother, the second wife of the late Sir William Harcourt, was the daugher of John Lothrop Motley, the historian of the Netherlands. There are in parliament a number of other Englishmen with American mothers, not the least con spicuous of whom is Winston Church ill, grandson of the late Leonard Jer ome of New York. What will the women say to the as sertion recently made by John Burns, president of the British local govern ment board, that the "servant prob lem” arises not so much from the scarcity of good servants, as from the incompetency of present-day mis tresses to manage their help? Whether his charge is true or not, a girl without training for the work will find it as difficult to run her house and direct her servants as her husband would find if he tried to direct a business without first learning how. Mark Twain has the right idea of living. He says: “I don’t eat accord ing to the food experts, and I don’t do anything according to rule, but I take precious good care to do the things that agree with myself, and not the things that somebody else has found good for them.’’_ Club wTomen in Boston are about to solve every problem except those in regard to women’s hats and gar ments. They leave such perplexing question? to tha me" I : I BEWARE! END OF THE WORLD ONLY 12,000,000 YEARS AWAY! By G. FREDERICK WRIGHT, A. M., LL. D. Then the Sun Will Shrink^ Lose Its Heat and Inhabitants of the Earth Will Freeze and Starve to Death. EASOXING from the prfnci pies of the pretty gener ally accepted nebular hy pothesis_ the end of the world Is to be reached very gradually through the Increasing reign of cold and the 'lengthening of the earth's day. For !t is evident that the sun cannot keep) on radiating heat at High Droteted Scientists Hatfe It All Worked Out—“Things Are in a Dad Way," Warns Adherent cf fiehular Hypothesis — World’s Center Gio/ing Forth Warmth May Sa-Ve Us for a Time, Dut "Ultimate Destruction is Ine-Vstable, Wise Ones Say. sun will have become so far cooled oft that wo shall be indifferent to everything else that happens. Another limit to the future of the habitable portion of the earth is brought to light by the rapid prog ress of erosion that is going on all over the land surface of the world. Wallace estimates that otic foot of Five MILES 0ECOV.V AM O POUR. HUMPR-ED DC 6 PIPES, ABOVE IT PPIfLS % Ai IF / TWS /*w»j 4 6 h T ce tup Place.'/: yjow.'/y happens to be trying to catch the train Weary Willie's Complaint. i , William J. Ryan, president of tl ** • i supreme council of public ha kn • : , New York, said the other day tha: winter panic had reduced the hark ; men’s receipts considerably. “We'll have to come down to Eng lish rates—12 cents a mile inst<; d 50 cents—if we have many more s;, 1 panics,-’ Mr. Ryan said. "Every!' . felt the pinch. I overheard a tramp grumbling in a public square “‘The trade ain't like it used to be. he said. 'Here ten times running ■ day I’ve asked for a bit of bread. : 1 what do they give me? Why, durn it, just a bit o’ bread.’ ”—Exchange. The extraordinary popularity of fir*-* white goods this summer makes tl* choice of Starch a matter of great i: portance. Defiance Starch, being fr* *■ from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffen er makes half the usual quantity f Starch necessary, with the result of Perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new. The Wife Did It All. Hewitt—Couldn't you get the per son you called up by telephone0 Jewett—Oh, yes. Hewitt—But I didn’t hear you say anything. Jewett—It was my wife I called. Your Druggist Will Tell You That Murine Eye Remedy Cures Eyes. Makes Weak Eyes Strong. Doesn’t t. Soothes Eye Pain and Sells for 50c. There is at least one woman in the worid for every man in the world to think the worid of. Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c _■ r Made of extra quality to!u *•*. Y .r dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Cirls are partial to automobiles be cause they have sparkers. A SURGICAL OPERATION If there is any one thins: that a woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hun dreds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hos pitals which are entirely unneces sary and many have been avoided by LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman, Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “ For eight years I suffered from the most severe form of female troubles an 1 was told that an operation was mv only hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman.’’ Mrs. Arthur B. House, of Church Road, Moorestowu. N. J., writes: “I feel it is my duty to let people know what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound has done for me. I suffered from female troubles, and last March my physician decided that an operation was necessary. My husl- 1 objected, and urged me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and to-day I am well and strong.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. ror 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, ult * ra tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkham invites all siek women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.