The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 19, 1908, Image 8
RICH’S CATARRH REMEDY * Home Treatment Price $3.00 — ■ Mil MIIMI i—3BOTI' ii li— a mn—im I'l aam ... — DR. RICH Master Specialist Grand Island, Neb. ^ BBTFIVE YEARS IN CRAND ISLAND*MB ^ 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 the illustration below is a true representation of the $3.00 catarrh outfit for catarrh cf 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. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 25th day if 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 bo 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 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 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 53.00 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. You 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. IV you have any or all oV these symptoms send me $3.00 for a full month's treatment. Frontal headache. Dull feeling In head. Ringing nolaaa la head and tars. Deafneaa. Unnatural and excaaclre disoharge from im. Hard bloody crusts and acabs In noso. Hawking and spitting of mucus. Mucus dropping from noae Into tha throat Tickling In tha throat. Bad breath. Bad taste. Lou of appetite. Coughing and gagging. Vomiting. Nausea. Dizzy spells. Loss of memory. Confusion of Ideas. Irritability. Insomnia. Bad dreama. Pain In back and top of head. Nose stopped up. OUTFIT NO. 2 For Catarrh of the Stomach and Bowels IV you have any or all oV 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. r Bad dreams. Nightmare. VomitlDg 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. ,.*!*#*’ fc* 1 *•_'MW® 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 bowels.) Breathless on exertion. Ringing in ears 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. Pain 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. If you have any or all of these symptoms send me $3.00 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 ulceratlone. 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. Leucorrhoea (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. Leucorrhoea. 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___ / _ _ - PRETTY IDEA FOR A WEDDING. ChlM Attendants All Attired in Pic turesque Costumes. It ts rare than an attempt Is made to convert a small boy who takes part in wedding procession into something picturesque. But it has just been done at a smart wedding in London, so brldes-to-be take notice! The costumes of all the children preceding the bride were copied from ^ jtoMre by Hoppnerr. The costumes of tho girls were not remarkable, although they were quaint and charming. They wore thin white frocks in the Kate Greenaway style, with very short waist c, long, scanty skirts, blue sashes under the arm and blue ribbon wound in the hair. The beys wore the little old-fash ioned nicturo suits, with hlgh-waisted trousers that went to the ankles, made of white nankeen, and fale blue shirts. The effect was said to be very pretty. He preaches well that lives well. DEWEY HAS YOUTHFUL CHUM _ fl Ten-Year O!d Charlie Taft la Admiral’s Great Friend. Wouldn't It be nice, boys, to have a real, sure enough, big, Uvo admiral Tor your best chum? That is what Charlie Taft, ten-yea' old son of the Republican candidate for president, has In Admiral Ceo.ge Dewey of Uncle Sam s big navy. The admiral is Charlio's next door neigh bor. They’re great chums, says the Toledo News-Bee. Charlie wont to the Philippines with his father just when the admiral’s fame was at its zenith. There he heard a whole lot about the admiral. The first thing he did when he returned was to go down to his home and ask for his autograph. * Ho got it. More than that, he won a stanch friend in the admiral. Since then he has visited him often, and they're taken many a carriage ride to gether. About a year ago the admiral moved down town nest door to the Tafts. Since then Charlie and the admiral have become real cbums. Charlie doesn’t think half so much of the army as he used to, and he is disgusted with the idea of his father being elected president. “I'd rather be in a big battle like you were," he told the admiral the other day, “than to be president a dozen times. I don’t think much of being president, anyway. If we were to have a war do you think they'd let the president fight? Not much. All he could do would be to sit in the^White House and read the dispatches. Indication of Doath. At the approach of death the thumb of the dying, as taken with some vague fear, takes refuge under the fin ger, which announces the near end. Man alone, because he has thumbs— that is to say, reason—knows death. NEBRASKA POINTERS STATE NEWS AND NOTES IN CON DENS'D FORM. THE PRESS. PULPIT AND PUBLIC What is Going on Here and There That is of Interest to hte Read ers Throughout Nebraska. In a fight near Lexington Dave Fish er wasjdlled by Emery Matthews. Tne body of Miss Wersell, who suicided in Omaha, was sent to Cum ing county for burial. I Hampen, a farmer of Hayes coun ty, committed suicide on account of domestic difficulties. He leaves two daughters. In Seventy-seven counties in Nebras ka the socialists cast a total of 1,943 votes and the prohibitionists 3,233 votes on electors. Trenmore Cone of Wahoo has de cided to become a candidate for tie chief clerkship of the Nebraska ho i of representatives. In the village election at Cambridge voting on the issuance of $23,000 bon for a system of waterworks, the pro position carried by 190 to 47. Governor Sheldon has allowed ro quisition for John Bedford, under ar rest at Beatrice and wanted in Mc Henry county, 111., for alleged murrf. r. There has been so much nightly mischief perpetrated at Norfolk lately by boys that the city authorities hav determined to rigidly enforce the cur few law. Alfred Werner, a stranger, was ar rested in Ogalalla by Sheriff Beal on the charge of forging the name of Mr. Kealen, living near Big Springs. He languishes in jail. Omaha shippers are disturbed over what is termed the sudden enforce ment by the railroads of a provision regarding shipments by Rule 27 of tb~ western classification. Miss Heimina Beckard of Utica. Men., has returned from Germany, where she has been studying for some time, and has registered for work in the Peru State Normal. Sheriff Fischer of Otoe county ar rested suspect and held him in jail un til he confessed to stealing a horse at Ashland and taking it to Greenwood, where he sold it for $9. W. O. Forde, about 45 years of age, traveling for the Ross B. Curtice Piano jcompany of Lincoln, dropped dead of heart failure in the office of the Grand Central hotel in Broken Bow. In looking into the affairs of one of the inmates at the poor farm in Otoe county !t has been found that he was possessed of some $8,000 in real estate and some personal property. Dr. C. P. Fall, a prominent Beatrice democratic politician denids the re port that he is after the appointment of superintendent of the feeble mind ed institution to succeed Dr. Osborn. Farmers should all have telephones. Write to us and learn how to get the best service for the. least money. Ne braska Telephone Company, 18th and Douglas streets, Omaha. “Use the Bell.” George Robertson, who for four year- has been manager of the Mark M. Coad stock ranch at Fremont, has resigned his position to accept an other with the Greeley Horse Import ing company at Greeley, Iowa. It is reported that Governor Shel don expended $10,000 more during the last two years than his salary amounts to. In other words it cost him $10, 000 in cash to hold the office of gover nor and perform the duties of that office as he thought they should be. Miss Emma Paulus, living at the family home, eight miles northwest of Harvard, shot herself with a rifle, and is not expected to recover. Miss Pau lus is the eldest child and only daught er of the late Peter Paulus, who early in the summer of this year shot him self at the same home. Soon after her father’s death, Miss Paulus’s mind gave way and she was taken to the Hastings asylum. Samuel Bowers, a farmer living near North Platte, has been arrested by the deputy United States marshal from Omaha, on an indictment from the federal grand jury charging him with intent to defraud the government bv making a false declaration in affidavit for pension. Mr. Bowers has resided in Lincoln for over twenty years, and has sustained a good reputation. His indictment has occasioned much sur prise. Perry A Yeast of Hyannis, Grant county, was taken to the Hall county jail at Grand Island and turned over to the authorities there to begin his three months’ term of imprisonment for his complicity in land frauds in Banner and one or two other western , Nebraska counties. Yeast was con i victed in the United States district | court last spring of dabbling in sol l diers’ declaratory statements and pro ! curing fraudulent land filings after a trial lasting several days. A distressing accident happened at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Parkhurst. living near Taylor. The adult mem bers of the family were in the barn milking when one of the children was burned to death in the house. A charitably inclined womawat Ne braska City went to the home of a poor family, the members of which were ill aiid had neither food or medi cine in the house. The good Samarit an found a mother who had been sick for weeks lying on a bed made of rags, neglected and starving children with out a crumb. Succor was at once furnished. It was not discovered until Monday morning, when W. E. Smith, jeweler at Grand Island, went to work on the watches in the store for repair that someone had entered the store on Saturday night and stripped the watch rack of eighteen timepieces. The police have no clue. The preliminary hearing of the four young men who broke into a Burling ton freight car at the depot in Platts- * mouth and stole some clothing belong ing to William Baird, the superintend ent of the Burlington shops there, was held before Justice Archer and they were bound over to the district court.