The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 26, 1911, Image 3

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P ISO’S
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«6* --c o»co e.o*
The Man Who Got Even
I
By CARL JENKINS
. hi: Singleton had owned and run
a faci tv for 40 years Those who
■..-.• v :h him in a business way
-l.'-d him an eccentric-, his employes
d him as a skinflint and a
* • • r. No one could say that he
had i-t e ven a ent to charity
W : si km-ss came to one of his
• ..at r ue w as bounced right out
» ■ ■ j’ a word of sympathy Appeals
1* • so w it him. H had started
. • vt‘ -h* fe lias that the whole
• r.i» us d< wn on him. and in being
what be was he fell that he was
• ng the acrid and bolding his
CUE.
th* age of seventy Mr Single
*ot . ;• business to retire ,
i.e 1* ft 'he factory for the last ,
m- workmen apjieured at the
.i d wit:d » - and s-. t-t a chorus
~ ms after him and the street
- - .r- i and ;ur~‘-d it along
: • 'ca fe-c fcomt—a home presided
• i>> an i z-d sister—to find that a
v. • mid walk-.d the streets
r wo days with: it food had sat
i-«: «. his steps - weep and rest
ai.ed the p .. e and had her re
A iit~ey d man 1 afing on
•’ - s;d- of "he street when
- - • k place estimated
* a* : as he was besi known,
h. — n the m- ..ns of sending at
ty mend--acts a year to
the : c land
• ■ ■ ■ a‘er
-C mat i.i:i. retired from business
-on pet. n>« and had nothing to
• -ausic- around 'here might
Lai- ome a change in him for the
Nothing of the kind hap
' ' H- was still scrapping with
i and ht was still aggressive
lrs ead if sympathetic.
" ne day he haite-i cr. a i~omer.
» * ; ..k u fuss w ith anyone who
gu i ; him A young man
:*• if a workingman leaned
- -ii.si th- lamp post in dejected at
• ' de Twrc met. ame out of a sa
le t. and began to fight.
He
lik-d see- on-half -.he world ham
m- —.ng the beau of the other.
Tpot -ame running One of
•i d me young man of the de
Gres’" Crusaied Old John.
'• 1 st'.tud' u:.d at ; ped *he side
wall. *l.;m and then started lor
ti- -'alien « its him.
•■’t' k>c Old John again.
' -• ■ ' i-r aet into Trouble
Seer reached out for the fight*
i c r«d 1 :ra and ran
- Tr- • • : .rned oc Old John
• - ;:< ■ aim oc th* bead with
•'- ’k—hBbmd him by the coat col
' a.—J:;t»d bin; up and
! . and then bore him
i- m 'r. • A hen he had landed
L . " - • r sr. 'fce s’- • on he pre
• •. a • ■f drunkenness and
disorderly conduct.
■ i- ' ' d ni. ’ protested the
I rt ~ n-r
' ^ttiT u;
- • 'tti r. r :j brought in
*3* 1 .an anything”
Wi.s-c That* What s that’” n
r *'* .? t . i. of the precinct
a • '-a::.- fr :. t ~ room.
V: pay you out for this'”
■ ■ ■ :
t '.n.'"
'! a* * cv*n v -h you tf it takes a
hundred years’”
J r.c .nd *h< young man were
loci:* up ti gether until it should be
time ' them to stbe night court.
F - ten riinuti - *he old man fairly
rai d Then he calmed down and
said to the ->th-r:
You c.dE'T say a wo-d What’s the
matter?”
N :s» \ "op's word cnes and I
re’t her ;v i r money It's the
Is.and :or - lor m* . Mehbe you
can lay your fine"
"What; Will they fine me? 1 was
doing nothing 1 was only standing
there I'd like to see them fine me;
Say. they don't know me. but they will
when I'm through with them. Oh,
I’ll get even for this"'
At the night court the officer who
had made the arrest got up and
mumbled something or other, and
his honor announced $10 fine or 30
days at Blackwell's.
"What for? What for?" demanded
Old John as he danced around.
“Keep quiet, or I'll fine you $10
more'"
■ Judge, you hear me when I say
that I'll get—"
But he w as hustled off. He went out
on the street raging. He would im
peach 'he magistrate He would
break the captain. He would have
'he patrolman arrested and tried for
perjury. In his little world he had
bussed and bluffed and been the law.
It ame hard to put up with the new
-der of 'Ling;. The old man was
h aded for the office of a lawyer when
h«- saw a young woman in a doorway
crying. He forgot himself for a mo
r. ent and turned aside to ask the
cause
' 1 was just in the court down
there'" she whimpered.
Oh. Then you saw how I was
used ?
' Yes. sir. and my Jim with you. He
was fined $10 and I’ve only five to
pay He'll go to the Island.”
"Was Jim the one arrested with
me?"
"He was. sir. We were to be mar
ried a month ago, but he lost his Job
I'm don't drink, sir. and I'm sure he
wasn't fighting Yes. sir. we were to
be married and now—and now—!“
She fell to weeping while Old John
paced up and down the walk and did
seme thinking. No one's tears had
c. ■ r affected him before. No one's
sorrows and griefs had ever been lis
tened to. *'
"Come to the house with me.” he
said after a w hile.
In an hour his plans to get even
were laid. The law did not enter into
them Lawyers were tricky fellows
and -he law was uncertain. While the
young woman went one way he went
back to the police station and stand
ing before the captain be said:
"1 am John Singleton. I have been
clubbed, arrested, locked up and
fined."
The captain had heard of John
Singleton and he began to protest and
apologize.
"And I am going to get even!” con
tinued the calier ‘ Yes. sir—get even.
I'll make the whole lot of you wish
you had never been born. Don't try
any soft talk on me. for it won't go.
I'm a hard man. sir—a hard man. and
I'll lave satisfaction for this!"
And when he had departed the cap
tain and sergeant wore very serious
faces. Old John would go to a lawyer
—to thr- alderman—to the police com
missioner—the mayor He was an
; id bulldog and he had been clubbed
and misused and humiliated. The
sword of Damocles would be sus
pended for the next month.
Old John was seen on the Etreets
with a young woman. He was seen in
furniture and hardware stares with
her They were even seen to go into
a bank together. Those that knew
him winked at each other and said
that the old boy was going to take
a wife
Three weeks passed away and then
as the magistrate of the night court
was .'-'ting md chatting with the po
lice captain during an interval Old
John Stitgle'on appeared.
''Sir,” he said to the captain, “!
vowed to get even with you. I have
kept my vow.”
' Sir, he continued, turning to the
magistrate. "I vowed to get eve n with
you also. I have kept my vow."
-w hat is this?" asked the mag
istrate as he recovered from his sur
prise.
"A young man was arrested at the
- ame time 1 was He was innocent of
any off. use. He was also clubbed ar.d
locked up and you sent him to the
island, i have paid his fine. I have
got him out. I have got him a job. I
have seen him married to the girl he
i -ves I have rented and furnished a
fiat for them and put $500 in the bank
in her name. Sir, I am even with
you! i have beaten you! You don't
amount to shucks!"
"And I?” asked th? captain.
"Sir. you will have to pass that fiat
every day. You will see the wife’s
happy face You will see a goat at
one window and a parrot at the other.
You will see flowers on the stoop and
a poodle dog on the steps. And you
will grit your teeth, sir, and your
heart will throb and ache and your
conscience w-ill accuse and within a
year, sir, you will hang yourself and
be no more! Gentlemen, Old John
Singleton is a hard man to beat—a
very hard man!"
Friendly Advice
<~i.-i.ent J Driscoll. New York's
T and efficient commissioner of
; . ppok« frankly. In a recent ad
dr- f -he Am-rican woman's poor
shopping abilities.
The Ant"- an woman." said Mr.
I>—- oil. could make no better reso
•n f r ’h« \cw Year than at han
!i~ her 1 usekeeping money more
e t. - ent American husbands
l.;i ■ e a Sr;-- reptratirm for being gen
*■ but I an. afraid in many cases
their curiosity is much abused.
"I am also afraid." continued Mr.
Driscoll, -that, no-withstanding their
f icrosity American husbands are
subjected to a good deal of bickering
st t iw about money.
"The following conversation be
tween a Hrooklyn father and his lit
tle daughter bears out this fear:
■papa." said the child, ‘what is the
difference between parsimony and
economy T
“ "I win explain the difference by
at example the father replied. If I
cut down my own expenses, that is
economy, but if I cut down your
mother's, then it is parsimony.' ”
An Accomplished Linguist.
“Did you learn any French while
you were in Paris?" asked Bildad,
meeting Siithers shortly after his rtr
turn from Europe.
“O. a little." said SEtbers. "Not so
much, though. I got so I could say
cigarette in French.”
“Good.” said Bildad. "What Is cig
arette in French?"
“Cigarette," said Slithers. — Har
per's Weekly.
Tom’s Mistake.
Mildred—Tom and his girl have
quarreled.
Arthur- -They have?
Mildred—Yes. They went together
to the archaeological museum and
they saw a mummy, and Tom was
indiscreet enough to say: "Once she
may have been as beautiful as you!"
New “Flexible Hats”
SOMF invective designer of miili- j
nary, taking note of the strong
points of the oriental turban, and
seeking for something new. brought
forth the new flexible h«}t of velvet !
The queer but charming "ding-a-ling"
hat burst upon New York and prompt
ly captivated it. Naturally it has been
followed by any number of soft hats
and caps of velvet and other mate
rials suitable for winter.
The "ding-a-ling'' hat is a pointed !
cone of velvet with a rolled up rim
next the face. It is guiltless of wire
except for a single small shirring
wire Inserted about the brim edge. It
is lined with silk or satin and inter
lined with rice-net. The crown is i
made of four conical pieces sewed to
gether except in cases where a manu
factured cone of felt or beaver or |
velvet is steamed into the proper j
shape over a block. The original !
hat was trimmed with a single quill,
placed flat against the crown at the ;
back. The whole affair is chic if ex
treme. but becoming to only certain
types. It is full of snap and crisp
style, but impossible for many wear
ers.
For those who cannot wear this
jaunty (not to mention somewhat
rakish > little bit of new millinery ary
number of new designs have been
and are being invented. One of them
is shown here. It is a crusher hat o!
black velvet, the brim lined with
white sarin and edged with a heavy
satin-covered wire—the only wire in
the hat. Such a hat. with the brim
dented against the crown and orna
mented with a smart aigrette or stifi.
fiat, cockade, may be seen at any of
the cafes, completing very handsome
toilettes.
Odd effects in trimming are sought
for these odd hats, and many of them,
for the street, are untrimmed. They
net d a finishing touch, how ever, hut it
must be just a touch. A single skele
ton plume, in peculiar colorings, or a
long feather from the pheasant tail,
or a narrow, gold quill, are favorites
and illustrate the character of trim
ming which is appropriate.
A soft turban of velvet and fur
with fur buckle, is partly flexible.
There are no wires except in the
brim, which is very cleverly draped
with velvet. This is a sensible hat
for midwinter. With the dark fur
crowns one sees combined the most
vivid and beautiful colors in velvet,
mink and coral, black fox and bright
green, plush or broadtail, dark mole
skin with cerise or coral velvet and
very dark brown furs with cardinal
red. have the vigor and warmth of
color needed for midwinter.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
DRESSING GOWN.
Flannel or flannelette are materials
most suited for making a gown like
this if for present wear; it is quite
a simple pattern slightly shaped in at
waist; the deep collar may be faced
with the same or some contras;in i
color; It is trimmed with a simple
braiding pattern that is continued
down front.
The fulness of the sleeves is drawn
in at the back by a short-braided strap
pointed at each end; the wast-band
which draws in the fulness is also
braided, the pointed ends are hooked
OV T.
Material required; 7 yards -10 inches
wide.
NOW COMES THE NEW TURBAN
Expensive Models Shown in Which
Wings Are the Most Genera:
Trimming.
Of course, the little hat. as a
few milliners call the clo- iy Sued tur
ban of fur and velour, has had its day
and few nights, too. an. ;: is no; sur
prising that. ;he price L.tving reached
the attainable, makers are exploiting
new and more expensiv models.
Wings are the most general trim
ming. Such lovely wing, that cnc s
j appreciation cf the beauty submerges
1 the humane instincts—iridescent
j wings, snowy feathers and all the
made varieties that are more attrac
tive than ever.
Some of the turbans are combina
tions of fur and wings, each being ap
plied in square or pointed tabs "hat
are turned back over a ma.ine or satin
foundation.
Brtasts are run through slots in fra
crowns and on brims; feathers are
used to edge fur wings, and fur edges
leather forms.
As to the place at which wings rise
to the millinery occasion it would be
difficult to say. They are everywhere,
of all sizes and shapes, and give a fair
ly durable ornamentation for hats.
They are decidedly less expensive
than plumes and are invariably be
coming. So what more can you re
quire?
HAVE REGULAR WENDING DAY
Surprising Results Will Be Effected if
a "System" is Put Into
Operation.
There ts nothing on earth like sys
tem. and nowhere do you realise this
more than in matters of dress. The
tiny hoie in your stocking, that you
might have mended in two minutes,
press Into an undarnable "run;" the
rip under the arm in your new blouse
extends alarmingly; nothing that must
be mended stays “where it Is put.”
The remedy for all this is a regu
lar mending day—or a regular mend
ing evening. If you are a business
woman. As aoon as a garment needs
mending—If It be only a button or a
book that must be replaced—put It
aside, unless It is so necessary that
you must attend to the trouble at once,
and when mending day rolls around
do the required sewing. Tou will be
surprised to find out bow much lighter
your work becomes when you can thus
catch rents and tears at their start
Instead of at their disastrous finish.
The other point to remember is aJ
ways to have your sewing implements
where you can get them and in perfect
order. Do not wait until the very mo
ment for mending to And that you are
out of white thread or that your
needles are rusty. When a thing
needs repairing, repair it; when it
needs replacing, replace it.
A Few Fads.
Silk and satin Aowers. each petal
edged with beads, ate used on the
crown and under the brim of an
evening hat.
White coney is an inexpensive fur
and much in faTor for cloaks, long
shoulder scarfs and hats for young
girls.
Very effective is the banded trim,
ming of cut steel heads outlined on
either edge with two rows of fine jet
beads.
Silver on black tulle, steel beads
on bleu de nuit (a dark blue) ard
coral on pink or blue, are some tf
the beautiful combinations used.
For evening there is a great de
mand for brocades, crepe de chine
and all supple weaves that lack
luster, but abound in wonderful color*.
TEN MILLION PEOPLE
IN THE CANADIAN
WEST BY 1920
"Toronto Star." Dec. 16th. 1910.
The prediction is made that before
1920 Manitoba, Saskatchewan. Al
berta and British Columbia will have
ten million people. It is made not by
a sanguine Western journal but by
that very sober business newspaper,
the New York Commercial. It is
based upon actual observation, upon
the wheat-growing capacity of the Ca
nadian West, and upon the prospects
of development following the build
ing of railways. The writer shows
h -w the position of leading wheat
market of the world passed from
Milwaukee to Minneapolis and thence
to Winnipeg. Canada's wheat-grow
ing belt is four times greater than
that of the United States, and only
five per cent of Canada's western agri
cultural area is under cultivation.
There are 170.000,000 acres of wheat
lands which will make these Western
Provinces richer, more populous, more
dependable for food supplies than the
Western States can ever become. The
cer.'er of food supremacy will change
to Canada, and 25 years more will
give this country 40."0 *. >0 popula
t::n west of Ontario.
All these estimates of population
are m the nature of guesses, and must
not be read too literally. But the
er.vrmous area of wheat-growing land,
the rapid construction of railways,
and the large volume of immigration
are tacts which must be recognized.
They point to the production of an
ever-increasing surplus of wheat and
ether cereals. However rapidly the
urban, the industrial and commercial
fiopulation oi Canada may increase,
the increase of home consumption Is
hardly likely to keep pace with that
I of the production of wheat: for a sin
gle acre of wheat will provide for the
average annual consumption of four
people.
While production In Canada is thus
running ahead of consumption at a
prodigious rate, consumption In the
United States is overtaking produc
lion, and the surplus for expert is
crowing smaller year by year. It is
true that the limit of actual power to
produce wheat is as yet far away.
By methods of intensive cultivation,
such as prevail in France, the produc
ion could be greatly increased. Bat
with the oversowing granary of Can
ada so close at hand, it seems likely
that our neighbors will begin to im
port from us. turning their own en
ergies more largely to other forms of
agriculture.
It must be remembered that while
the Northern States resemble Canada
in climate End products, the resem
blance diminishes as you go south
ward. The wheat belt gives place to
a corn belt, and this again to semi
tropical regions producing cotton, to
bacco, cane-sugar, oranges and other
tropica] fruits.
The man who secures a farm in
Western Canada at the present time
secures an investment better than the
best of bond of any government or
bank. It Is no unusual thing for a
farmer in Western Canada to realize
a profit of from $5 to 510 per acre.
There are thousands of free home
steads of 160 acres each still to be
had. and particulars can be obtained
by writing your nearest Canadian gov
ernment agent.
Teil Wellman.
"So you have a new idea for a di
'igible balloon?”
• "Yes. Make the equilibrator larger,
put a motor into it. and let it pull the
balloon."
WEAK BACKS MADE STRONG.
Backache in most cases is kidney
ache. and usually accompanied by ir
regularities of the urine. To remove
the pain and weakness, you must cure
tne moneys, do so
with Doan's Kidney
Pills. J. E. Dunlap,
Kennet, Mo., says:
"My condition was
terrible. I was in
bed for six weeks
and could not move
owing to intense pain
mr hart "\Tv fppt
and hubs were swollen and urine
scant and distressing. After taking
doctor's treatments without relief, I
began with Doan's Kidney Pills. They
straightened me up in a hurry."
Remember the name—Doan's.
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
bos. Foster-Miiburn Co.. Buffalo, N Y.
A Friendly Tip.
"Now that provisions are lower.
Mrs. Hasher." said the fussy boarder,
'don't you think you ought to reduce
your rates?"
"No, indeed." replied the landlady.
"I find it hard to pay my debts as it
Is.”
"But,” suggested the fussy boarder,
"if you paid in advance as you maka
others do. you would have no debts.”
Constioaiion cause* and sertasgm
1 rates many diseases. It is thoroughly cured
br Tw Pierce's Pellets. Tiny sugar-c Kited
granules.
Modern life pushes a man into the
mud and then chides him for ma
terialism.
I
-—
ritES CrRFD TV P TO 14 DAYS
Tor - - wrii. T'-tnTKl t.: coy if PAZU <.-7>TT
MKVi t^... car*- arv ras.- of iUtad,
B-eovi:r^ v: Pruiruidc-: Piles .c C lo 14 days. iuc.
Love may make the world go round,
but it doesn't always seem to be able
to make both ends meet.
Le" :*' Single Binder give* a man what
he wants, a rich, mellow-tasting cigar.
Hiding a tallow dip under a bushel
does not make it an arc light.
You Want a
Proven Remedy
to correct a bad stomach
—to restore the appetite
—to relieve constipation
and keep you strong and
healthy. Then, by all
means, get a bottle of
Hostetter's Stomach Bit
ters. It has a proven
record, extending over a
period of 57 years, in
cases of Poor Appetite,
Headache, Belching, In
digestion, Costiveness,
Colds, Grippe and Mala
ira and you will find it
just the medicine you
need. Its results are quick
and certain. Try it today.
■EB3CSB£79EH33nB5Z3^HCE9BBnHHKSKSI3fi>
I_
ever^uuog, uui yuix
P OOT have kidney, liver or
bladder trouble it will be
found just the remedy you need. At drug
gists in fifty cent and dollar sizes. You
may have a sample bottle of this wonder
ful new discovery by mall free, also
pamphlet telling all about it.
Addres-. Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y.
HI Vpi|Vr>Tir Ideas, st-pagn hook and
k pN I adT’.re FKKF. h-uV'-.ned Is-i.
I H I kll I hu^enkAU.B&xk, ^auutgkMukU
The Change of Life is the most critical period of a
woman’s existence, and neglect of health at this time
invites disease.
Women everywhere should remember that there is no*
other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully
cany women through this trying period as Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from native roots
and herbs. Here is Droof:
Natick, Mass.,—“I cannot express what I
went through during the Change of Life before
I tried Lydia E. PinkbanTs Vegetable Com
pound. I was in such a nervous condition I
could not keep still. My limbs were cold. I
had creepy sensations and could not sleep
nights. 1 was finally told by two physicians
that I had a tumor.
“ I read one day of the wonderful cures made
by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
and decided to try it, and it has made me a well
woman. Mv nei?rblwrrs and friends declare it
has worked a miracle for me. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is worth its weight in gold for women during this
period of life. If it will help others you may publish this
letter."—Mrs. Nathan B. Great on, 51 No. Main St., Natick,Mass.
ANOTHER SDTIEAR CASE.
Cornwallville, X. T.— “I have been taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for
some time for Change of Life, nervousness, and
a fibroid growth.
“ Two doctors advised me to go to the
hospital, but one day while I was away visiting,
I met a woman who told me to take Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I did so and I
know it helped me wonderfully. I am very
thankful that I was told to try Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. —jits. \Yin. Bo ugh ton,
Cornwall ville, X. Y, Greene Co.
The makers of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound have thousands of such letters as those above —
they tell the truth, else they could not have beer obtained
for love or money. This medicine is no stranger—it has
stood the test for years.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound been the standard remedy for
female ill*- No sick woman does justice to
herself who will not try this famous medicine.
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and
has thousands of cues to its credit.
Mrs. Pie'ham invites all sick women
tffv to write her for advice. She bas
; guided thousands to health free of chargew
i Address Mrs. Pinhfcam, Lynn, Mass*