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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1908)
V ' I ! Home Treatment Price $3.00 Master Specialist Grand Island, Neb. BV~FIVE years in grand island*^ Order the treatment you need. Write me a per sonal letter if you wish. 1 will read your letter and re ply to it myself, telling you just what to do. When you receive the outfit you order, if you do not think it is the greatest value you ever received for $3.00 send it back at my expense and I will return your money. GUARANTEE STATE OF NEBRASKA,) Hall County. )**’ Dr. Rich, being first duly sworn, deposes and says, that the illustration below is a true representation of the $3.00 catarrh outfit i f or catarrh of the head, nose and throat, herein advertised, and that any one ordering same and finding it not satisfactory may have his money returned upon demand. DR. RICH. Subsanbed in my presence and srvorn to before me this 25th day of February, 1908. JOHN ALLAN, Notary Public. My Commission expires Jan. 5, 1912. Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drug Act of June 30, 1906. Serial Number No. 18752. The above outfits contain no Morphine, Opium, Cocaine, Heroin, Eucaine, Chloroform, Cannabis Indica, Chloral Hydrate, Acetanilide, or any of their derivatives. Dr. Rich, the well known Grand Island Specialist, has arranged a system of Home Treatment for Catarrh of the various organs of the body, and is now prepared to sup* ply to any sufferer from this prevalent disease a course of remedies that will be found to be not only satisfactory in every respect, but at a price certainly reasonable, and I within the reach of everybody. During the five years Dr. Rich has been in Grand island he has carefully avoided the treatment of Catarrhal conditions of the body, not be ing prepared to take up a work requiring time from his already extensive office business. During the past year, however, Dr. Rich has perfected a method which he offers below, for treating Catarrh in the home, and feels net on ly assured or excellent results, but that he will make many new friends, which will assist in increasing his already i large practice. A photograph below- shows cue of the £3.00 outfits, and should give a perfect idea cf the vain® Difered. Dr. Rich s treatment for Catarrh is a Home Treatment in every cense, and can be used without deten tion from business. A full month’s treament of these rem edies will be sent for $3,00. You may order as often as you like at the same price, or have the treatment sent to your friends. A3 there will be a large demand from the many people familiar with Dr. Rich’s reputation as t. Skill ful Specialist, you are kindly requested to order early and avoid delay. OUTFIT NO. 1 ~ For Catarrh of the Head, Nose and Throat. If you have any or all of these symptoms send me $3*00 for a full month’s treatments Frontal headache. Dull feeling in head. Ringing noises In bead and eara. Deafness. l'nnatural and excessive discharge from iota Hard bloody crusts and scabs in nose. Hawking and spitting of mucus. Mucus dropping from nose into the throat Tickling in the throat. Bad breath. Bad taste. Loss of appetite. Coughing and gagging. Vomiting. Nausea. Dizzy spells. Loss of memory. Confusion of Ideas. Irritability. Insomnia. Bad dreams. Pain in back and top of bead. Nose stopped up. OUTFIT NO. 2 For Catarrh of the Stomach and Bowels 17 you have any or all of these symptoms send me $3.00 for a full month's treatment. Distress after meals. Pain, soreness, burning, weight, uneasiness, pressure, full ness in pit of the stomach. Bloating over stomach and bowels. Belching part or all of the time. Gaa in stomach and bowels. Heartburn. Sour stomach. Choking sensation in throat and chest in the evening and during the night. Bad dreams. Nightmare. Vomiting and nausea. Constipation. Nervousness. Irritability and crankiness. Insomnia. Headache. Pain over chest, shoulder blades and around the body. Pain over the heart and palpitation. Difficulty in breathing. Dizziness. Bad taste. Coated tongue. OUTFIT NO. 3 For Catarrh of the Nerves. IV you have any or all of these symptoms send me $3.00 for a full month's treatment. Mental dullness and forgetfulness. Epileptic fits. Headache and dlssy spells. The blues, mania. Insanity and melancholy. Unnatural drains and losses in men. BL Vitus’s dance. Neuralgia and cramps. Lost power in any part. Pain or congestion of spinal cord. (The oause of most backaches.) Sleeplessness and restlessness. Loss of memory. Confusion of ideas. Nervousness and irritability. Despondency and dull mind. Heart fluttering and excitability. Twitching muscles and easily frightened. Limbs go to sloop. Wandering pains over body. Bad dreams or nightmare. Varicocele and sexual weakness. Hand trembling and anxiousness;. Loss of appetite and ambition. Nervous debility, and weakness. OUTFIT NO. 4 For Catarrh of the Liver and Kidneys. If you have any or all of these symptoms ssciiid me §3.00 for a full month’s treatment. Failing vision. Great thirst. Making water during the night. Flatulence (gas in stomach and bowels.) Breathless on exertion. Ringing in ear3 and dizziness. Puffiness of face and ankles. Dropsy. Discharge from bowels light gray color. Discharge of mucus from bowels. Urine dark green color. Enlarged and tender liver and stomach. Jaundice and loss of strength. Pain over kidneys. Insomnia. j Pain under and between shoulder blades. Palpitation cf heart. Dark spots (liver spots) on body and face. Hot flashes and spots before the eyes. Nervousness and irritability. Great depression of spirits. Sleep during day. Pain and soreness under right short ribs. i ---—-“-“ For Female Catarrh. If you have any or all of these symptoms send me §3.G0 for a full month’s treatment. Chronic inflammation, congestion and enlargement. Dysmenorrhoea (painful menstruation.) Melancholia, irritability and despondency. Backache, insomnia, ready fatigue. Inflammation of the womb and ulcerations. Ovarian pains. Neuralgia. Pelvic congestion. Dragging pains in front. Spine-ache. Nervousness and sick headache. Impoverishment of the blood. Irritable bladder. Pains in back and lower limbs. I.os3 of weight and displacements. Uterine derangements. Irregular menstruation. Leucorrhoea (whites). Itching. Burning. Loss of appetite, energy' and ambition. Nervous prostration and depression of spirits. . An elegant tonic for nursing mothers. I OUTFIT NO. 6 For Catarrh of the Bladder. If you Have any or all of these symptoms send me $3.00 for a full month's treatment. Painful urination, especially In women. Passing a little urine at a time, and often. Straining, spasmodic urination. Pain over the bladder. Swollen and tender parts in women. Inflammation and soreness. Passing of blood in urine. Passing smoky colored urine. Itching and burning of parts. Burning, scalding urine. A general feeling of restlessness. Irritability and crankiness. Great nervousness. Dribbling of urine. Incomplete urination. Sediment in urine (muco-pus). Distress- in sitting down. Urine is heavy, brown or dark yellow. Leucorrboea. Cut out this order blank and send to Dr. Rich, Grand Island, Nebraska. No Shipment of medicine will be made unless this order blank is used in ordering. THE LOUP CITY NORTHWESTERN Dr. Rich, Grand Island, Nebraska:— I enclose you $3.00, for which please send me One Month’s Treatment for Catarrh of the Fill in above the treatment you desire. Name_ Age__ Address___ “Boston’s Stump.” “Boston’s stump” is the local name of the tower of the parish church of St. Botolph, in Boston, England, which was damaged by lightning not long ago. The church dates from the four teenth century, and its tower, 272 feet high, is the tallest but one among the parish churches of England- It has 366 steps, one for each day of the year, and the church has seven doors, 52 windows and 12 pillars, for the days in the week and the weeks and months in the year. For the 24 hours in the day there are 24 steps in the porch by which the library is reached. Two flights of 60 steps lead to the roof, one for the seconds, the other for the min utes; and the tower is in four stories, for the four seasons. Thus does time stand 8till in Boston.—Springfield Re publican. , National Dish of Brazil. “After existing in South American countries for the last eight months it's good to get back to town where one can get something to eat,” said Mr. R. G. Breeden, a San Francisco mining engineer. “Most of the time I’ve been in the south was spent in Brazil. In that country the national dish is jerked beef and black beans, and one sees nothing else. Nowhere in South Amer ica, except Buenos Ayres, can a stran ger from the United States get a meal •chat will tickle his palate. The South Americans surely don’t know the ru diments of cooking. Every dish they bring you is something in grease and garlic, and so dosed with pepper as to nearly strangle you.” Couldn’t See It. “Poor man!” said the kind lady. “How did you go blind?” “Well, mum,” answered Tired Tread well, “de foist time dat I noticed it was when 1 was out lookin’ fer work.” —Chicago Record-Herald. Why He Kicked “Some people are chronic kickers,” growled the hotel clerk, “and it's no use trying to satisfy them.” “What’s the trouble now?" queried the reporter. “You saw that solemn-looking chap making a get-away as you came in?” rejoined the man behind the ten-carat sparkler. “Well, he registered about halt an hour ago and was shown to his room. Now what do you suppose happened?” "I pass,” said the pencil pusher. “A few minutes later,” continued the key juggler, “he rushed back to’ the office, mad as a March hare, and jumped all over me, figuratively speak ing. It seems that he had come here for the purpose of doing the suicide act, and I assigned him to a room lighted by electricity.” STATE NEWS AND NOTES IN CON DENSED FORM. THE PRESS, PULPIT AND PUBLIC What is Going on Here and The'® That is of Interest to hte Read ers Throughout Nebraska. The Ootoe County Tteachers' Instt tute had an attendance of 160. Senator Brown has announced number of speaking dates for Augr When a saloon in Nebraska ( was attached for debt It was found t .proprietor had removed most of goods. Sophie, the eight-year-old dan of L,. P. Hansen, west of Farv. shot and instantly killed by a : of four years. The shooting was ; accidental. M. L. Richardson, an old sold resident of Hay Springs, . cut to pieces by falling in f; self-binder while harvesting wk- i is not expected to live. C. G. Baker, appointed a appraiser for estates from w heritance tax is collectable, i . his reports on several estates county court of Gage county. Johnson Teten who tried > wife by shooting her some dir and since that time has b< . . county jail cf Otoe county, bailed out by his relatives, fiv them giving a $5.0i < bond. The 16-year-old son cf Clink droff, a farmer living fif; southwest of Broken Bow, 1 : by being dragged to death ’ y • As he fell from the anim i k - caught in the stirrup. He wa half a mile, being horribly man The York Independent T ■' company has purchased all the toll lines between Seward mid (. Island and Seward and David City is now constructing a toil li:. ; Grand Island to Ravenna, count y; - with thp T!>nl-on p. GXP rrunnem* Mary Brooking, the 21-year- • daughter of Henry Bracking, a weak farmer, was driving a team to Lor Otoe county, and tried to eras.- the tracks ahead of a local Missouri Pa cific freight train. The vehicle wa? struck and she was thrown twenty feet. Her neck was broken, the v > hide destroyed and the horses kill i. Frank Hooper, a young man who claimed to have been employed at th • farm heme of J. H. Losee, near Has tings for several days, succeeded a cashing a check for a little over seven teen dollars at Picken’s store, hut be fore he had made his escape he was taken into custody. V. hiln Campbell Bros, circus was showing in Alliance three lion cubs were born, one of which was a rare curiosity. In the fact that it was al most pure white. This makes this end of their menagerie similar to the show itself. inasmuch as it Is strictly a Ne braska production. An Old Settlers' association has aeen organized at Ashton and will hold a reunion September 22 and 23. Th^ following officers were elected: Presi dent, Theodore Ojendyk; secretary. Thomas Jaenroj: vice president. S. flolczinski and I. Sondburg; treasurer, HI Smelser. The old settlers’ association of Cherry and Keya Paha counties will hold their sixteenth annual reunion at Sparks on August 28 and 29. The pro gram of races and sports, including a big baseball game, . is larger than usual, and there will be speaking and music also, a well as a big bowery dance in the evening. Sioux Falls (S. D.) dispatch: While traveling through the country in a cov ered wagon in the hope that open-air life would restore his broken health. George Johnson of Yutan, Saunders county. Neb., died in his wagon while it was at a point about a mile and a quarter from the town of White Lake. Aurora county, in the central part of the state. He was a victim of con sumption. Edward Lundsford was arrested at ■ St. Deroin and taken to Syracuse, whe$-o he was arraigned on the charge of wife desertion. He waived exami nation and was bound over to the dis trict court. The couple were 16 and 18 years of age. respectively, when j they were married about two years ago. Kingston (N. Y.) dispatch: The mar riage in this city Monday night of George Faulkner, 62 years old, and Mrs. Sarah E. Seymour, 61 years old, both of Schuyler, Neb., was the cul mination of a romance begun in Ulster county more than forty years ago. Faulkner was a native of Kingston and Mrs. Seymour was a native of Saugerties, twelve miles from here. ^ They became engaged in their youth, but a lovers' quarrel separated them and each one married some one else. Both lost their partners by death and were of course privileged to marry again. But few people realize the enor mous amount of improvements that are being effected at the state fair grounds at the capital pity this year in view of the annual state fair to be held during the last week of this month. An immense new cattle barn is being built, located just west of the administration building, and erected at a cost of $30,000. Dr. G. T. Irons, chief inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry at Ne braska City, leaves Monday for Lon don. England, to visit his old home and with his mother. Dr. Kane will be in charge during his absence. A prairie fire started by a Burling ton engine traversed a section east of Oxford and destroyed many tons of hay for A. Walter. Four large stacks of oats, belonging to O. Schlenseuer were also consumed. Ed. Wood of Mankato, Kas., was drowned at Superior while In swim ming. He was taken with cramps Hi3 body was recovered. Tom McCaulley, a farmer living near Goehner. was painfully Injured. A bot tle of nitric acid which he had pur chased broke and seriously burned him. Neighbors assisted in relieving