The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, June 16, 1910, Image 2

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    Loop Cih Northwesters
I » lltUJOGH P»biak.t.
LSlP CITY. - . . KESHAS K k
POUR DOGS CRUELLY USED
Tell* of the Horrible Safer
of !** tiped<
tion Aft *.
Vow That the terraii*- e ever polar
wrpee-rSr** is dy:ug <kn* fennart"
Joereals are pnisstteg not that a j*»r
t*no of the praise b.-^n«el apoi
Perth jeSe ecpSm* sboc'J be award
ed to the eafartanate dog*, mil boot
whose Mliki*. ri>* at great fort of
s®r,<r-.ag to tbejnss-Ste*. the attempt*
at joe T»artrfct *osM hat* brew t-a
|«»IVe As a rale tbe Cooks tod the
FVarr* have been ae eager M min
the giaadits cf the world shat the*
have forget tew to acknowledge their
Indehtelwes* to the fast 1 fa! animals
wha smwd the~n aad they partner
However, la tl« book. “Farthest
Xerth.- Vsrsew has confessed the bar
rthde ernetf «f atrl the evpkicer is
is®* a*d which be declare* cun
Voc*s back apaa w:*h horror He has
grace to aar. "Wbw I think ef all
these spiepdti ar.'mai*. faTtpg for ns
wsrbcnp a carver as ioag as The?
coaid trove a tsnse’e. never getting
c? thanks, or so mwch as a kind
word, dai'ry writhing under the lash
... I have gaoeaest* of b T*«r se’.f
reproach . . . It is a aad part ef
egpedtriows cf this kind "hat one sva
tematw-ai!? hi!"* all better fee tags ur
til cmij hard hearted egaism re
nafct ~—Vogue
FeT M < Independence.
A tcarbrr ta a Philadelphia pnh’lc
school reeeatly narrated tbe fallowing
•troost of bow as aspiring yoatt
lulat efttaen was beginning to show
tba effects at as Amenran euvtroo
Best Tbe steer, which was told at
a teachers association meeting runs
somethin* like this: Tony had been
away from school about a week and
when be showed wp one morning tbe
tenches asked him where be bad been.
"I raa away." said Tony “Ran iwtr'
Wbat dtd son 4a that for*- asked tbe
tewcber “My father was p>bc to
Bek me. so I thought I'd run away."
was tbe r^rdy The teacher by fur
tber ciestioutug brought set tbe fact
that T-wy. for some trifling derelie
tbm. bad been tbrenteaed with a beat
ing and bad stayed away from home
tbe best part of a week. "But ycrar
father has the right to whaj> you."
said tbe teacher “Tes. be may." add
ed Tons, “hot I was torn ta this
country and I don't want no foreigners
to Ork me *
Pipo'cgy.
The {dp* is tbe man." said a tohuc
racist “The rfgarefie and the cigar
are cncmopolt'aa. be? ta tbe pipe the
characters of men and nations are re
scaled.
“A nation's activity is measured by
tts pipestem Hard seeking folk, like
the Irish, smoke dhwdeew*—fdpes w rtb
a stem awls an inch long Tbe lacy
_ Orientals, on tbe other hand, loaf all
day in their cafes o»*r hookahs which
have textile stems ids fee? in length
or more.
“A stTVn’i cr»jtK.my is measured
by its pipe bowl Tbe Japanese and
Chinese. wvling to Bee on two or
three c-eats n day. smoke pipes whose
bowls. Sko laager nor deeper than a
teoeent piece. boM only a pineb of
tobacco Tbe German. who begrudge!,
seat of the creature comforts, smokes
a pipe *wh a bowl bold mg a quarter
«f a pound "
Tk« Price cf Et9cue-.ce.
The auctioneer held op a hat'er. d
fiddle
"What am 1 offered 'or Itli arti<jue
eloiaT" be pathetwar y ingrirtd
"hook It oxer See tbe blurred finger
marks of r> morst ies* time. Not- the
iU.tt of tbe barrripg rears To tbe
merry cede* of this fin# rostrum. nt
tbe brocaded dames of (or France
may base danced tbe minuet in g :t
tensg Versa til t perhaps tbe westal
rtrgics marched to Ks stirr.es
rhythms la the feast* at Ujeroilx
Ha* It hears as abrawloe— perhaps
a touch of fire Why. tb:» may have
bee* the eery fiddle os t fckk Nero
played wb-a Rome burned "
“Thirty cents.- said a red-nosed man
la tbe front row
"ft's tour* “ cried the auctioneer,
cheerfully "What next*'
Ptscsterial Repartee.
One of the old »i cards of the line
and amber was dflatitg on tbe excel
lea' fishing off City Island to Eugene
McGwire tbe Rrocs political leader,
aad snK:
“ft would be great sport for you to
"Tea. 1 may be able to Join you
noose time.' was tbe smiling reply.
“PVne." exclaimed tbe old man
"We'D start out about four o'clock In
the mot-cleg: that will g we os three
bfcrr*' fishing before breakfast and — ”
"Its all offT" exclaimed Mr Mr
Gtdre. throwing up bis hand* "1
wes t go. for I *e newer learned to
fish while asleepX-w Tork Herald
An E ft to Biisintu.
Former Hayseed—Jus* returned
from church. George? U hat was the
oertE'.c about*
George—Something about Joseph
gejB down to Egypt to buy corn
Firmer Hayseed—Did the parson
aay what corn Is worth dons there?—
MAP.
Taking The*.
“Is the young 5ady yon rroke to at
the bazar, a friend of yours"”
"Oh. m>; merely a chance acquaint
Wiais* in Chicago.
"glut cute do we lire in?" asked
the teacher la the prtstmry geography
And Utile Elmer, thinking of his
£uada> school cat< chum, promptly re
piw “la a state of sis and misery "—
News
Dangerous to Dy«.
-go yon thick Its dangerous to dye
the hair?"
“Bather I dyed mine, and married
_ vaman coos after who led at each
• Ufa that I coca became bald."
GREAT ERY DOCK DEWEY SINKS IN MANILA HARBOR
NA'SAL DRY OOC/PEiHEY
M ANILA—Tbe dry dock Dewey, which sank the other day while it was being prepared to receive a torpedo
beau Is now wholly submerged in the waters of the harbor. The divers and engineers, however, be
lieve ft can be saved practically uninjured, though the electrical machinery which operates the valves is
badly damag'd. Reports th3t the Dewey was purposely sunk by the station employees, who are Jap
anese are discredited. The Dewey is the largest Coating dry dock in the world and was towed here from the
Letted Stales
ROMANCE OF LEIF
harvard Botanist Shatters Pret
ty Story About Landing
of Norsemen.
liilerijst Have Lorg Deputed as to
Mr nether D terrcarnatian Wat Near
Enough to Massachusetts to
Warrant P.acmg cf Statue.
Boston —A wild cranberry tis shat
er ed ail tbe pretty romances about
elf. tbe son of Erie, landing bis
•rawny Norsemen in Boston bay or
be Bay of Fundy. or anywhere nearer
o us than north of the St Lawrence,
historians have disputed loud and
ang as to whether or cot Leif d.sern
•arsed near enough to Massachusetts
«* warrant the placing ot his statue
an Commonwealth avenue, and as to
»helper or cot he touched the Aaier
can toast at ail It remained for a
‘•olacst to settle the controversy.
**r°f M. L Femaid of the Gray
nerbartum, Harvard university, was
Hawn into the question quite by ac
tiaect Hu conclusions are printed
n a recent n umber of Khodcra. the
•o-rnai of the New England Botanical
•hub They are in part as follows:
The writer was recently asked for
phe ographs taken in eastern Canada
u* tee wnd grape and of the wild nee
U* be used as evidence that the early
.‘»v:«:iiei! Cad made a Settlement in
Nova Scotia, but he was lorced lo
repiy that, so lar as botanists are
definite,y informed, neither of these
p-afits is known u> be indigenous in
Nova Scotia.
from this simple incident it be
came apparent that much ot the evi
desce that the Norsemen had landed
•bout the year lww upon the coast oi
Nova biotia o: of New England is
found In the statement that they dis
covered wild nee or lnd.an coin or
Crap*-*.
V laliH has been located at various
point, on the coast o! southern New
hug.ai.d sua Nova Scotia, near the
northern limit* of the range of wnd
Crap.* A search of botanical wri
ting, irem the earliest berbals to the
iatest publication* upon the colloquial
t-arn-, of plant* in Scandinavia and
Great Britain fall* to reveal any use
U either the name vinber or wine
berry for the grape
But. on the other hand. In the more
northers countries of Europe at the
present day. the names ’vinber' and
wine-berry' are still used as folk
name* for some of the Identical wild
IruiI* which bore those names In the
Kiddie ages.
"It teem highly Improbable, then,
that the grape should have been
familiar, at least from personal ex
perience. to the early Norsemeu who
a-iied lrom Iceland and Greenland to
the western continent. And. in view
<jt the fact that the true grape Is
called In Scandinavian vindrufva. It
■s not likely that the Norsemen, If
they knew Un foreign fruit at all.
would have applied to It the name
vinber. when they already used the
lvtl'T came for a common and very
different wild fruit of Norway
"Prior and Britten aDd Holland tell
«• that the red current Is slill known
In the northern countries of England
and of Scotland as ‘wine-berry, and
the halck currant Is also called In
northern Scotland 'wine-berry.' The
use of currants In making wine, a
common practise in New England,
was also known to the Norse. Swedes,
Russians. Germans. French. English
and otter northern peoples.
"Without question, the "vinber' of
the early Norse was either the red or
black currant or the mountain cran
berry The 'self-grown wheat' was
long interpreted as Indian corn, but
in recent years the theory advanced
by Schubeier has been generally
adopted, that the wheat seen by the
Norsemen in Vinland w as the Amer-;
ican w ild rice.
“It now remains only to determine
our representative of the Scandina
vian white birch. This is obviously
the canoe birch. Thus it will he seen,
that the three plants which have
been most depended upon in at
tempts to locate Wineland the Good,
instead of being the grape, the In
dian com or w ild rice, and the maple
some of which species, by their
known distribution, exclude from
onsideration all coastal regions
e rth of the maritime provinces) are
In reality the mountain cranberry or
possibly one of the native currants,
the strand wheat and tha canoe
birch. And. although the canoe
birch extends very locally southward
on the coast to Long Island sound,
the mountain cranberry to Essex
county. Massachusetts. and the
strand wheat to the Isles of Shoals,
the area of their greatest abundance
is from the lower St- Lawrence river
northward along the coast of Labra
dor The inevitable conclusion from
these facts and its far reaching sig
nificance must be obvious."
Eggs Hatch in Snake.
Long Beach. Cal —W. B McCracken
tells the latest snake story.
For 13 days one of his hens had
been "setting" when a hungry snake
drove her ofT the nest and gorged
itself with three of the eggs.
The reptile lingered about the prem
ises and McCracken shot it. Wonder
ing at Us odd proportions, he per
formed an operation and found the
eggs.
They were put back under the hen.
At the end of the regulation time ail
three were hatched. The chicks are
now a few days old and healthy.
Its Narrative.
“A comet presages wars, disasters
and all kinds of misfortunes.”
"Then Its end is a tail of woe.”
TAXICAB IN TURKEY
Another Revolution Due to Take
Place in Constantinople.
I
| English Ccm;;ny Finances Deal to
Supply Eastern Metropolis With
Up-to-Cate Cab and Bus Serv
ice—Roads Are Paved.
1 Ixmdon.—Another revolution Is due
•o take place In Constantinople in one
! month, an 1 preparations are being
-teadily pushed forward in London to
effect it at tbe destined time. ►
For about this time next month 21
taxicabs and 55 omnibuses will be
running through many of the 6tree:s
of that aged city, and the Turks, it
is said, are looking forward to the
day when they can deftly take a taxi
and career In It to Ortakeuy, Chichill,
i or some such place.
In the words of Signor Molse Maz
; za. the mainspring of the enterprise,
| "We are going to wake Constantinople
up."
"The management will be In the
hands of Englishmen," Sig. Mazza
raid, "because they have a better
1 knowledge of the handling of omni
buses than any one. and there Is no
| other country where they have so
! many omnibuses.
"Two English managers are going
out. one for the motors and one for
the horsed vehicles, and six mechan
| les as well to teach the Turks.
"The people of Constantinople are
I looking forward to the omnibuses as
i a great boon. for. with the exception
j of a horse-tramway service, there la
no cheap way of getting about.
"Several of the directors of the com
pany are members of the Turkish par
liament. and the company, which has
a capital of (225.000 holds an trade.
signed by the sultan on December 7,
1909. giving the sole concession for
60 years, and this does not apply only
to Ccnstantinople.
“Under the old regime it was Impos
sible to get a concession, and It Is
only thanks to the young Turk govern
ment. who are as civilized and en
lightened as any Europeans, that we
have secured it. Had it not been for
the revolution, we should have had to
pay at least $1,000,000 in bribery for
it.
“The Turks are very clever mechan
ics. and we have already engaged a
number of them as chauffeurs who
have been in the military service on
the gun cars.
“The horse omnibuses will be run
in the streets which are too roughly
paved for the motors. The motors
will only run on the routes which are
properly paved, such as from Galata
to Ortakeuy. a distance of three miles.
“Another route will be across thu
Galata bridge, a distance of three
quarters of a mile. This connects the
two parts of Constantinople.
“From Tunnel (Pera> to Chichill. a
distance of three miles, is another of
the several routes we shall run on.
"The drivers and conductors of all
the omnibuses, which are of the usual
London types, will be Turks, and they
wlli do the work quite well.”
Many at Dog’s Funeral.
Grafton. W. Va.—At Huntington,
this state, hundreds of people attend
ed the funeral of a dog. Calo. a
French bulldog, owned by Garland
Robertson, was buried. The dog had
the reputation of never missing a ball
game. In his funeral train were prin
cipally school children and they scat
tered wild flowers, while a baseball
bat was placed over the canine's
grave.
Old Man Renews Business
- <
Harreunaker of Eighty-seven ,
^e*ra to Conduct Store Following
the De2th of His Son.
Lewiston. Me. — At eighty-seven
years of age. Joseph Niles is one of
the busiest men in Sabbatis. a subur
baa village. Ry the death of his son
he fcas gone into business again, and
early and late be is at his bench.
Seme 12 years ago Niles, then a
comparatively old man. after having
far many years conducted tae harness
store on the main street, gave up the
business to tis son. Amasa Niles.
A few weeks ago the son arose one
morales, went to the store and
dropped dead from heart failure. To
uay past ti* eighty serenth birthday,
j Joseph M. Niles is at the little work
shop, conducting the business again
that he thought be had left for ait
time.
Mr Niles does not look or feel
eighty-seven years of age. but he is
probably the oldest man in the state
actively conducting a business, and
one of the few who have conducted
the same business in the same place
tor more than half a century.
The little shop Is older than he is
—one of the oldest buildings in the
township—a little one story affair that
formerly stood where the postoffice
now is. and has been twice moved
since then.
CETS 35 CENTS. LOSES $100
Thief Invading California Railroad
Station Is Real Victim—Causes
Much Joking.
Santa Rosa. Cal.—A thler who broke
Into the office of the Northwestern
Pacific railroad at Schellviiie the other
night stole 35 cents from the cash
drawer in the ticket office. During bis
brief stay in the office be dropped
from his pockets an envelope contain
ing two greenbacks, one tor $10d and
the other for a single dollar. The visit
of the thief, intended to net him some
easy money, resulted In a net loss to
him of $100.65.
The officers are desirous of catching
the marauder who broke into the de
pot, not for the purpose of returning
to him the sum of money which he
dropped during his thieving expedi
tion, but they would like to secure
him and prosecute him for his crim
inal act. The officers have no fear
of tie man calling for the lost money.
Th* idea of the rich tramp burglar
robbing the poor railroad corporation
and incidentally making a donation of
$100.65, is causing joking here at the
expense of the unknown man who lost
his money, and has no hopes of its re
covery.
The Celestial Empire.
Celestial empire is derived from
Tien Chau, that Is the heavenly
dynasty, meaning the kingdom which
the dynasty appointed by heaven
rules over. The inhabitants are called
celestials because they are subjects
of that empire.
ARRANGE FOR SPECIAL I
ATTENTION TO THE EWES
Animals Need Plenty of Exercise, Good Food and Clean*
Comfortable Quarters—Ration Is of
Greatest Importance.
General Purpose Barn.
If ewes have been well fed and are ,
strong and vigorous at time of lamb
ing the loss of the youngsters will be
small.
Ill-fed ewes produce sickly lambs. A
young lamb Is very tender, the first
few days of Its life.
If they come Into the world weak
and puny It requires but a breath of
cold wet weather to kill them.
The ration for ewes Just prior to
lambing is of the greatest importance.
An excellent grain ration Is oats,
bran and corn in equal proportions by
weight. This of course makes bran
much larger in bulk end some farm
ers seem to be afraid to feed bran.
This is a great mistake because it Is
one of the best rations to use at this
time. Alfalfa makes excellent rough
age.
If bran Is not availab'e a little oil
meal makes an excellent substitute.
The ration mentioned will make plen
ty of milk without laying on too much
fat and when the lambs are dropped
the ewes will be in good condition to
take care of them.
Good shelter for the ewes Is also
very Important. They require plenty
of ventilation, but their quarters must
be perfectly dry and free from drafts.
It is a mistake to confine sheep in a
barn with large openings around the
bottom and windows at the top be
cause such an arrangement is sure to
be drafty.
It is a good plan to build In front
of the shed an extension roof of about
six feet not sloping enough to prevent
the sun from shining In but sufficient
to carry off the rain. This will en
able the ewes to have more light and
air and It will be found that they will
spend most of their time at the front
of the shed. Sheep do not like damp,
dark quarters.
It Is highly Important that pregnant
ewes should have plenty of exercise.
Confined In close quarters three weeks!
prior to lam Mr* renders them weak
and listless and is often, we believe,,
the cause of dead lambs at birth.
Clean, pure water should be pro-i
vided always. An excellent arraage-(
mont Is to have a trough running'
through the shed Its entire length Intol
which water can be discharged out-'
side the shed. Sheep will actually!
starve before they will drink dirty*
water or eat unclean food.
Ice water will produce abortion In'
ewes If they are forced to drink it aik
the time and some arrangement!
should be made by which the water
can be somewhat tempered.
The illustration shows a general
purpose barn near Columbus. It W
40 by 56 and has five single horse
stalls and one box stall. It has nine
single cow stalls and one box stalU
It also has a large open stable which
can be used for either sheep or cattle,
A large oat bln and a corn crib are
on the basement floor, both of which,
are filled from the Boor above. The
main floor is entirely unobstructed.
Grit for Chicks.
One of the first things to be fed to
chicks is coarse sand or suitable grit
of some kind, w-hlch may be bought at
supply houses or gathered at home, al
ways selecting sharp, small sub
stances. Dry bread crumbs, millet,
seer, hard-boiled eggs, and after a few
days. cracked wheat, oat meal an<^
finely ground bone may be fed. With?
in reach of the chicks at all times
should be grit, small bits of charcoal
a fresh, clean supply of water, so pro
vided that the chicks can not get
their feet into it.
BREED OF SILVER CAMPINES
This breed Is popular In Belgium,
where conditions of soil and climate
are not unlike portions of the desert
areas of California. In type and habit
they strongly suggest the Mediterra
nean and Dutch classes, especially the
Leghorn or Hamburghs. They are ra
ted as great foragers, the birds almost
hustling their entire living; the hens
are good layers of medium-sized hen
fruit. They are non-sitters. The breed
is represented by two varieties, viz.,
the Silver and the Golden. The breed
takes its name front the Campine dis
tricts of Belgium—the dry sandy
plains between Antwerp and Hasselt.
where activity is essential if life is to
be maintained. They are bred sparing
ly in this country. Cocks weigh 4V£ to
| 5 pounds: hens 3^ to 4 pounds. The
! body, though small. Is long, with a
rather full breast, as In the Hamburgh,
which type It much resembles, ex- j
cepting in comb, which Is single In
both sexes.
--
Early Com Pays Well.
If you have a good market, early
sweet corn is a paying crop. It can
be planted thick and an enormous
number of ears grown to the acre. 1
have had as high as 1.000 dozen ears
to the acre, and It generally sells at !
8 cents to 12 cents a dozen. While
the later sorts are much bigger and 1
sweeter ears they do not, as a rule,
pay as well as the earlies. Plant Cory,
White Mexican and Early Minnesota. .
PROFIT IN
RETAIL MILK
Many Dairymen Who Live Near
Towns and Cities Make More
Money In Small Trade Than
In Any Other Manner.
Many dairymen living near towns
and cities find it more profitable to
market milk to the retail trade than
to dispose of it in any other man
ner.
The day has already come when
people who buy milk or any other food
products demand the best and they
will patronize the man who is cour
teous, businesslike, and who handles
his goods in a neat and clean way.
More depends upon the man who sells
the milk than the quality of the milk
itself. If you want people to buy
your milk, you must first get their at
tention and then win and hold their
confidence by affable manners and the
most honeat dealing.
No one can afford to enter the re
tall milk trade if he does not produce
the very best quality of milk. You
must have good, healthy cows, the
cleanest kind of stables for them, to
gether with a sanitary milk house.
Let your customers know what you
have and frequently invite them to
visit your farm and 6ee what you
have.
The few who do visit you will tell 5
all the others what they saw, hence j
it will be necessary to keep things ,
clean and in good order at all times.1
so that your goods will always pre- j
sent a good appearance. If your dairy
is large enough to warrant it, get out
a small booklet describing your dairy. |
Illustrate it with a few photo halt i
tones if possible and make a strong
point in your booklet of the cleanli
ness of your surroundings and the
sanitary way in which you handle your
milk.
One of the best ways to advertise
your goods is through a fine wagon
and equipment. If you have every
thing the best and cleanest you can
get from one to two cents more a
quart for your milk.
Tomato
Chicken
Vegetable
and ten other kinds. IV'light
ful natural flavor and made
from the very best materials,
with the care of experienced
chefs, in the great White Enam
eled Kitchens.
Libby's Seeps are tt«4y
for immediate use by adding
an e^ua. portion or hot water
Ask yocr grocer
for Libby's Soaps
Libby, McNeill
& Libby
WESTERN CANADA
Senator DolfTver, «f Iowa, eaye i -n
I
The Army of
Constipation
b Growing Smaller Every Day.
n
new, IndigTitien, Sick Headache. Salfaw Skm.
SHALL PILL SHALL DOSE. SHALL PUCX
Why Jones Was Sad.
Jones' rich grandmother died and
Jones seemed unnaturally depressed
and sad. His iriends tried to cheer
him.
"She left a last will and testament,
i suppose," said Jenkins, carelessly.
"Oh, yes.” said Jones, raising hi*
head at last, "she left a will and tes
tament.”
"Ah.” chimed in Rrown. “yon wero
always a friend of hers! Of course
your name was mentioned."
“Yes," answered Jones, bursting
Into floods of tears, “my name was
mentioned, boys. I—I am to have—“
They hung expectant, while wore
sobs choked back his words.
“I." he declared at last, "am to bar*
the Testament!"—Scraps.
The man who improves his talent
always gets God's reward tor doing It
STOCKERS & FEEDERS
white facet or anjtus botagfet on
onlers Tea» of Tho«>aSla to
tseloct from. Sati.faetioo ti«.2
atiteetl. OotTespoadenee Invited.
Come and see for yourself.
National Live Stock Com. Co.
CaesaaCity.Ma. S,^'^