The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 01, 1908, Image 8

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    DR. RICH’S CATARRH REMEDY
S Home Treatment Price $3.00
DR. RICH
Master Specialist
Grand Island, Neb.
9V~FIVE YEARS IN GRAND ISLAND'VO
Order the treatment you need. Write me a per
sonal letter if you wish. I 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 tht
illustration below is a true representation of the $3.00 catarrh outfit
for catarrh of the head, nose and throat, herein advertised, and tha\
any one ordering same and finding it not satisfactory may have hii
money returned upon demand.
DR. RICH.
Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 25th day
tf February, 1908. JOHN ALLAN, Notary Public.
Aly Commission expires Jan. 5. 1912.
Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drug Act of June JO, 1906
Serial Number No. 18752. The above outfits contain no Morphine
Opium, Cocaine, Heroin, Eucaine, Chloroform, Cannabis Indica, Chlora
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
within the reach of everybody. During the five years Dr.
Rich has been in Grand Island he has carefully avoided
the treatment of Catarrhal cond itions 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 not on
ly assured of excellent results, but that he will make many
new friends, which will assist in increasing his already
large practice. A photograph below shows one of the
$3.00 outfits, and should give a perfect idea of the value
offered. Dr. Rich's treatment for Catarrh is a Home
Treatment in every sense, and can be used without deten
tion from business. A full month’s treament of these rem
edies will be sent for $3.00. Y ou may order as often as
you like at the same price, or have the treatment sent to
your friends. As there will be a large demand from the
many people familiar with Dr. Rich's reputation as a 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 treatment.
Frontal hcadacha.
Dull feeling in head.
Ringing noiiea la head and eari.
Deafnesa.
Unnatural and excessive d ischarge from net*.
Hard bloody crusts and scabs in nos*.
Hawking and spitting of mucus
Mucus dropping from nos* into the throat
Tickling In the threat.
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 head
Nos* stopped up.
OUTFIT NO. 2
For Catarrh of* the Stomach and
Bowels
If 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.
Gas 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.
If 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 dizzy spells.
The blues, mania. Insanity and melancholy.
Unnatural drains and losses in men.
St. Vitus's dance.
Neuralgia and cramps.
Lost power in any part.
Pain or congestion of spinal cord (The cause 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.
LlmbB go to sleep.
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
send me $3.00 for a full month's treatment.
Failing vision. Great thirst.
Making water during the night.
Flatulence (gas in stomach and bowela.)
Breathless on exertion.
Ringing in ears and dizziness.
PufTiness 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.
P&in under and between shoulder blades.
Palpitation of 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.
OUTFIT NO. 5
For Female Catarrh.
II you have any or all of these symptoms
send me $3.00 for a full month's treatment.
Chronic Inflammation, congestion and enlargemrat
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.
Loss of weight and displacements.
Uterine derangements. Irregular menstruation.
Leucorrboea (whites). Itching. Burning.
Loss of appetite, energy and ambition.
Nervous prostration and depression of spirits.
An elegant tonic for nursing mothers.
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.
K 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
Girls Kept in Woods by Bear
Two Young Women Are Scared by An
imal and Lose Their Way.
Lock Haven, Pa.—Two young ladies,
one from this city and the other from
Williamsport, spent a night of terror
in the Clinton county mountains in the
vicinity of Hyner. The ladies were in
search of game, became frightened . y
SSS'SC• • -v ••■icy
WCie IlUt 1UUI1U UUUl uuuuaj UIWIH
ing by the searchers who scoured the
mountains all night with flaming
fagots of pitch pine.
G. A. Simpson, of Williamsport, is
the superintendent of the Hyner Rail
road company, which is operating in
that vicinity. His daughter, Miss
Murial, accompanied by Miss Levina
Kmerick, of this city, started on a
turn to camp before dark. In tholr
explorations they encountered a fierce
black bear who thoroughly frightened
the girls, who made a hasty retreat
and in doing so lost their way and
were compelled to spend the night in
the dreary mountains.
They were afraid to lie down or
even stop to rest and continued walk
ing, and traveled across three moun
tains and were far front their starting
point when found by a searching
party. They were assisted to the rail
l hv their rescuers, nlaced on
£•»-- f 1 b' iHT iliir-^" jfil r ■ - •;
board the train and taken back to
camp.
Longfellow's School Days.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the
poet, received his early education in
a school in Portland, Me. He was
pronounced by Hie master to be "one
of the best boys in school." He was
a studious child and preferred the com
pany of books to lively companions
He passed the entrance examination
to Bowdoin college at It He graduated
fourth in his class in lts-o.
Don’t Say Cologne.
She sprinkled eau (le cologne liber
al1.' in the bath of pink marble. “It
is this perfume," she said learnedly,
“which makes us think that the town
of Cologne must be scented. Johann
Maria Farina invented. 200 years ago
in Cologne, a perfume made of the oils
of neroli, citron, bergamot, orange and
rosemary. He called the perfume after
his city—eau de Cologne—water of
Cologne. By the same token, had he
hern a Londoner, he'd have called it
eau de London. In that case the iiiit
-i-'t -I i . — i ->• '■§ .
erate would now think London a
scented city, and instead of saying
correctly, “Put a few drops of perfume
on niy handkerchief.’they would say,
‘Put a few drops of London on it.’ In
fact, it is a very vulgar and silly error
to call all perfumes cologne. You
might as well call them Chicago or
Denver.”
Sees Things Differently.
When a woman gefs past 40 she
car.'t understand why any old widow
er wants to marry a young girl.
Alfoi
TAKES UP PRAIRIE STATE OIL
AND GAS CASE.
HE SCORES GOV. HASKELL
Declares Him Unfit for Association
with Patriotic and Moral Men
—Hot Reply from the
Oklahoman.
Washington. — President House
veil Wednesday night, following
upon a prolonged conference with
members of the cabinet at the White
House, prepared and gave out his re
ply to William J. Bryan, the O- ne
cratie candidate, relative to W. K
Hearst's charges that Gov. llu.sk.
treasurer of the Democratic campaign
committee, had represented Standi
Oil interests both in Ohio and Okhi
homa.
Mr. Bryan had demanded proof uf
the charges, promising that in th"
event of their substantiation Gov Ha
hell would be eliminated from th*
campaign.
Dismissing the Ohio case, which in
volved an allegation of attempted
bribery, with the explanation that he
had made no direct charge agains'
Gov. Haskell as regards that particu
lar instance, President Roosevelt tak<
up the matter of the Prairie Stale Oil
& Gas Company, and argues tha
(iov. Haskell's action in stopping l< ga:
proceedings begun by the atiorm
general of Oklahoma demonstrati
conclusively that he was controlled
by the great corporation to which th*
Oklahoma company was subsidiary
Declares Haskell Unworthy.
After contrasting Mr. Bryan's de
fense of Gov. Haskell with Judge
Taft's repudiation of Foraker in cor.
nection with the Hearst. chargi -
against the Ohio senator, the president
proceeds to declare that Gov. Ha
kell's “utter unfitness for association
with* any man anxious to appeal to
the American people on a moral issue,
has been abundantly shown by other
acts of his as governor of Oklahoma
Haskell Makes Reply.
Guthrie, Okla. — Gov. C. N. Has
kell Wednesday night issued a
statement in reply to President Roose
velt’s letter to William J. Bryan, deal
ing with four specific charges against
Mr. Haskell, namely, that he is sub
servient to Standard Oil, that he ve
toed a child labor bill; that he dealt
extensively in Creek Indian lauds, and
that he had allowed politics to donii
nate him in the removal of members
of the faculty of the state university
and the appointment of others to suc
ceed them.
Gov. Haskell took up the four
charges as dwelt upon by President
Roosevelt in turn, dealing with each
in a characteristic manner.
The Prairie Oil & Gas Company
charges Gov. Haskell declared to be a
“joke on Roosevelt's stupidity," as
serting that he had done nothing
which would confer upon the Standard
Oil subsidiary company more authori
ty than it already possessed under a
franchise granted it by Secretary
Hitchcock.
Declares He Acted Properly.
Continuing, Gov. Haskell says:
"President Roosevelt comes lo Ok
lahoma and finds a substitute for his
Ohio failure. Does he, in the case of
the state against the Prairie Oil A
Gas Company which he complains I
compelled to be dismissed?
"Yes, I did have It dismissed We
all know that the Prairie company is
a Standard Oil offspring, and don't for
get the president claims to have
known this also, and 1 charge that the
political allies, Hearst and Roosevelt,
both knew that 1 acted properly.
“First, the Prairie Oil Company got
its franchise in the state not from me.
but from Roosevelt’s secretary of the
interior, long before statehood began,
and had its main line built and operat
ing, and congress in our statehood bill
was careful to declare that our new
state when organized must respect all
such vested rights and existing fran
chises. That was ali I did, and the
federal courts stood ready to call me
down if 1 violated the Roosevelt terri
torial franchises. . . .
Sarcasm and Abuse.
“The president comes to the local
affairs of our state and assails me for
vetoing a child labor bill. True. 1 did
so, simply because the bill went too
far and included things not desired by
our people. Union labor representa
tives approved my veto. I hope the
president will survive this veto of a
local bill and permit us to run our lo
cal affairs.
“The president complains that we
removed certain professors from our
state university, our three state nor
mal schools and preparatory school in
violation of civil service rules. That
is, the president in his usual impetu
osity and reckless disregard of others,
misstates the facts. Less than one
fifth of the faculties are changed. All
changes were for good cause.
His Indian Land Suits.
The president complains that there
are several suits pending against me
to reclaim Creek Indian land. The
president should have gone further
and said that I was not a dealer in
Indian land and only came in as a sub
sequent purchaser and only Incidental
ly a party without personal interest
at all, and especially he should have
said that it is quite apparent that
those who are being sued in those
land cases appear to be and apparom
!y are the victims of political ehican
ery which the president can better
explain than 1.
Requisite Hours of Sleep.
Nu definite standard of the number
of hours’ sleep required by any man
oan be laid down, it depends abso
lutely on yourself. One man needs a
great deal of sleep, just as he needs
food Another can get along with four
or five hours. Dismiss the Idea that
It Is a virtue to be able to do with a
small quantity of sleep
Not Dependable. '
When a cocktail talks in a
<l-ml. do not pin your faith cu
says.—Boston Post.
business
what it