The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 16, 1911, Image 2

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    Tbe Loop City Northwestern
J. W BT RLKHIH. Publisher
LOUP CITY. • . NEBRASKA
LUXURY OF BAR BERING.
There U mas in thi* li&rheri&g
haoit sit boost) 1: is ub* of luxury
Van; on ash ah so to the aiiop and
l*'!u|s aaste tea or taeiit; minutes
fi-r '««-'• turn and then j«a> ten «*r Bf
te*'.4 re.*- as4. |M-rka!>« a tip. for a
wucartbin* one nia> hate at home at
■' I'tri'iii no «-t • of v or
tune'* The espianiJtion i» easy, say*
the f'iiM-tsttati Csquirer \t the shop
* **» ■ an ha the habit of > ar- for a
particular rhair and ak:W aai'ibn di*
tmm he iatert Beau or s«r >ip There
la rrvtfulBe** to ihe a ait ins Then
the latori of rha*r at a *e
•eetei ans** til- Lind t *!aa*->- and nod
trots *i. faiorite •.■it r :! • -nothing
admistur* of nmai a* ujxm the
* eatiier » . »»r. «ith the father
and the dextrxnm a* pin a'tot- ol the
k* et e, ,e * cl th. eSd of .i "rlOM
►hate. *h n the b*»* towel and i»*i
t -> the Butoifr Vo this ir a habit
of loin;-* ha* on.- Rifttfied by the
»*••». tram - f_r .. k a*- t da;* of
the |»r»»|.*et Kt k .-i doss ' nroagh the
restsrtra is a hie a The Arabian
N'st.i»" •••leiirsted tn»- tusru. u to the
t-tse* of Reward IV of E.is’and »bo
Is I MI iseor)avatml the Cetsfiwn; of
Hart* rdurte, t.» -..the date when an
•hr pel sad ivutin! niw;«.M r ree
esatzrd the but.: Toil* '-a are- of the
trade i h«t irt.rr a a* a pr< >*••►► ioo in
tv* unitedl alth it that of the rhir
®r*ea The ha tilt of tike bat hr: < hail
l* a* old a* ao*we of ibr hi!!*.
The statistics r*!*tt&* t-. ly. bold
vrclaHia. U. 'he army. are lmih In
teresting and cte oaraglng ‘.bout one
.!»!» of th. I ,i!.-d Sta' * art.:' ma* in
urptaied «Mb the ' • pin .! %ac; 'tie. and
tie re’ urn* »i.i» the' .*ilv ot. - ;.er*on
a I •“*» lad th* iisea.- • a:.4 mac of
’fie* .-d sktJi :n the utivar mated
port of the anr < on* oat of had
’h* di* at*, aad th.-re w*r. many
death* The*- figure* **v certainly
»e*t -tit ficaat. and indicate dial ij
l hold {*•. ~r i» going ifc.- any of rraali
l®t. ao agata to t»- owe a r.-aJ tc-.mrge
U» th* country »ay* me OMu State
lonraa! There adit h*. boa. ver. some
serious speculation abou' this a* *0
*-ucfc tnocu.*’un and uhru ioi. a*
tb. »arw»«* maiadie* ait! rcjuirc, that
men *,J under*.* ran&id. ra . * - haage
» their geaecgJ makeup if a man in
--ocporai. > into hit t .*ai jr.. th.
varum* pfopfcylactic* tat.-s k-d to *ar l
«■* disease. be wiil become a • om
l«nnd of relating medium* and occupy
•• Buidwa; an a* :'id* as to m vita
•sheg trouble*, for there *0 01» to be
l :*at> of them waiting to avail :hem
•rive* of every opportunity.
A l*s a’or in Mi -.-cr. w!. > »*» a
friend both of Hosscy ani Juh:.»'oae
We ainti*.! a cm. in-;..red by the
raged} of their death* making ii an
*<•»• under the t end of attempted
.ujcide for an aviator to ascend high
-T than feet and ro)«ir>ii< a bond
f flat*** for tdrdsem. a* a guarantee
that tb. *111 not violate the law A
pena • j f five year* .n prie.11 ir pro
vided flat 11 la litt * likely such a hill
-an pas*. Low ever niurh iovers of the
***»ctif> of human life may desire it.
•ays the Halt image American. K\i*ri
m*eat Is always arrow pan ** f with reek
•ea*ae»*. and stUr a via: am i* in its
»i.e-riue-atal stage no amount of
threatened punishment wifi deter ei
P>flu*a'er* from using their own lives
a* they e» St ia it* service
Once ear* the “didn't knou it mas
loaded juke ha* had a deadly result.
A joas man in X*s York city idrked
Up a resolver Uhteh be says he
thoaght ana *t*i|dy and playfully .nap
ped the weat«a at his friend and room
aate uad the Utter was kilted (aslant
*T- The t/*az*ed youth ran out of ibe
Bifcti to ft |oa< f-iiim,
aad i» bus larked up an a . barge of
hnuitrid*. says the Tn>; Times Prob
ably ae one believes bin. guilty of any
hftebiioaal crime Hut ev.« tt.«ugfe
aeaui.ted of each a purpose, shat a
ufetm.* of self-re; coach lie* before
him ia cons*91*.ace of that hasty and
Hi-advised hit of humor?
The better Has* of i'hltteae in New
fork are trying to •Umiuait queues
and jmi a ora tip from their up-to
date JKe Krtdently. the Host hide^
bmmd id the anrtent nations w sur
mj(S#rj!g lo mod* ra • ivtiizatioti with
PreHo** riowt are being iiaiorted
this re—try Hi Urge quantities
this year, not eoun’itg the oner that
bass been mimed by the customs in
•parlors It is likely to be a great year
for tiaras
The csiege man.' aiers Professor
Pmall. is tbe ideal man in an organ!
catkin to better conditions" History
kaa leaved, also, that tbe college man
is tbe ideal foot bail coach.
Kt range that the family di*|« user of
tbe kltcpea door handout has never
bars railed span to give espert bctl
many as to she* her or not the doara
•ad-outer can come bark
Pajamas for swtr.eti doing houaa
boid seek is tbe latest Possibly we
sia.il soon have kimonos for everyday
a sat la luackmaifk shops
It owe at tbe Washington dubs <7
d*9cr*-ct kinds of cocktails are served
It see-ms as If it;man ingenuity might
be pot io a better use
An ov. rranguine contemporary sara
~tne bubble skin is passing." In this
kitali:y u scents to be elingmg.
1 SIEMENS - SCHMUCKERT DIRIGIBLE BALLOON
A - r <►
+"•***-»&? Am 4j .-mat+SUl
T.IK m. -t powerful dirigible balloon built up to date is the Siemens-Scbmuckert. which made its trial trip suc
. e»full> not long ago at Merlin It is 1.000 meters long and has four motors and three gonuolas for carrying
re» and passengers. One of its first trips it carried twelve men.
CHICAGO IS LOVABLE
Eishop of Salisbury Says City Is
Unchristian.
Still Sn-acks cf Frontier and Has Not
Acquired Enough Civilization to
Mine People Calculating in
Kindliness.
'Li ago -Chicago Is not Christian
i: is Athenian, although dollar
a orship is less r vident here than in
New York or Washington.
It has cot vet gathered sufficient
e'owr of civilization to make it cal
ulanng in its kindliness.
It still smacks of the frontier, al
h< jgh its opera is crowded, its art i
gallery has more interested observers
than ever were se- n in London, and it
has one of the most wonderful of uni
versities.
\nd one comes to Chicago to learn
the mightiness of man
so -cmeluded the bishop of Saiia
.ury. from observations taken in this i
lt> covering a period of several
»- ek- At least Chicagoans who have
bees reading the keen and, on the
whole sympathetic criticisms of Chi
ago and American life that are ap
pearing in th- London Church Times,
and are the frankest discussion of
Xirerica from a distinguished foreign
er r viewpoint since Charles Dickens I
• e hi- Xmerican Notes, believe the
anonymous critic to he the English
bishop If it is not the bishop, it is ;
-ome one who came at the same time,
and did many of the same thing? the |
bishop did. clergy at the Episcopal
athedral said
Tic- writer of these criticisms lived
it a Michigan avenue hotel, visited the
Clilren.it y of Chicago and described
'he services at an unnamed fashion
■bk- hurr’: which many are certain i
'bet rec. gnize as Grace church, where 1
the bishop delivered his lectures in
December. The fact is known, it was
add*>d. tha! the bishop wrote extensive
omments on his visit here.
I found the greatest surprises of
my American visit in Chicago and
Cirsburg." says the '.•liter "The Chi
c;.gn of Mr St.-ad's dreams Is not the
tree Chicago I had ex;>ected a hideous
city; I found a city of promise. I had
v.ectej sordidness of aim; I found
readiness to appreciate literature and
art. g*-nerous-mindtduess in criticism
and a d< -ire for the sweeter things of
life Chicago gives one the impres
ts >n of frontierism Not yet is it set
tled down Some day they will tear
down the hideous 'loop- elevated and
make a center for commerce worthy
>f the vast enterprise. Then Chicago
will begin to show the world wbat a
"Ity can be.
Her university is most wonderful
>f all. Hoys and girls crowd the lec
ture-rooms; experiments in psycho
physics are treated as intimately Im
portant affairs, and are not relegated
to hark rooms for isolated research
-• .dents Economics draws them in
hundreds, and at close quarters the
re-pert which an Englishman has for
Chicago's work in sociology is vastly
Increased. •
"And as Chicago Is open-minded, so
is it op> n hearted Such charities!
Such boundless giving in the very
streets! Such a passionate desire to
give the poor children a Santa Claus
on Christinas morning. There are
verses and pictures in the papers, all
pleading the same good cause. It is
cold by Lake Michigan today. There
are pillars of ice within a few yards
of my hotel. There is a heavy fall of
snow. But Chicago hearts are win
somely warm. Not yet have they gath
ered sufficient of the veneer of civil
ization to make them deliberate in
rheir love of their feliows, or to keep
them calculating in their kindliness.
"I could wish it were a Christian
Chicago also. It is so Athenian, so
welcome!}- Athenian, so anxious not
to overlook any deity whatever. But
that is not sufficient. Chicago needs,
more even than New York, the rigor
of discipline. Here is a fashionable
church. It Is well attended. It is
ablaze with organization. It has ac
complished so much that the tempta
tion to deify humanity must come
very near to it. There is no God in
its theology."
DUKE GREAT COTTON RAISER
South African Experiments in Culture
Give Good Returns—Satisfactory
in Yield and Quality.
London.—The duke of Westmin
ster, who recently returned to this
country after a visit to his estate in
northwest Rhodesia, has taken an im- j
! portant step in the development of the '
resources of South Africa—he has be
come a grower of cotton.
Last year the low lying Country on j
! his estate was utilized for the experi- ;
mental growing of cotton. The re- j
suits were such that the area of land
under cultivation has been increased
i from 30 acres to 300 acres, which is
expected to yield 60 tons of cotton.
In yield and quality the first crop—
ten tons—was more than satisfactory,
and when placed on the market at
Liverpool the first consignment to
this country was sold at from 20 to 23 j
cents a pound.
The duke of Westminster's estate in
South Africa comprises 10.000 acres
of land in northwest Rhodesia, in the
vincinitv of the Kafur river. The value
of the land when the Dutch bought it
was four cents an acre: its value since
then, with t^ie added value which the
success of the experiment in cotton
growing has given to it. has been in
creased to 62 cents an acre.
Carborundum Used in Building.
Paris.—A flight of stairs has been j
erected in this city over which 14,000,- j
000. persons have shuffled without so I
much as scratching the surface. The^c
steps are almost as imperishable ns j
if they had been built of huge dia- I
moods, for in the concrete of which
they are constructed a generous por
tion of carborundum has been intro- j
duced. and since carborundum is al
most as hard as the diamond it has
given the concrete a wearing quality j
which no marble or granite could pos !
sihly approach.
_
Keeping Boys on the Farm
Future of Agricultural Industry De
pends on Better Methods in Rural
Schools.
Chicago.—The future of the farm
iug Industry in the United States ue
ptnds on renovation, improvement
ar.d better methods in the rural
schools of the country, according to
Prof. O. H. Benson, former county su
perintendent of schools in Iowa, and
recently appointed head of the bureau
of plant industry of the department
of agriculture.
Professor Benson in a strong ad
dress showing the vital relationship
of the rural school to the question of
agriculture, home economics and the
keeping of the boy "on the farm," sus
tained the interest of 200 grain men
present at the opening session of the
Council of Xorth America Grain Ex
changes. held here the other day.
Questions anent the grain situation,
the betterment of crops and the scien
tific elements of farming were taken
up by tbe association. In speaking
of the relation of school to farming.
Professor Benson said:
"Unless the rural schools are Im
proved and new methods touching
farm life taught, instead of cube root
methods, the growing boy will be dis
contented with his life. He will look
upon the farmer as a type of peasant.
The method of education will measure
the amount of cereal progress In this
country.
"The girls also are discontented.
The tendency Is to seek city life.
That Is the danger and menace to our
[arming industry. Place In your rural
school teachers who will teach farm
ing. make it attractive and valuable,
interest the pupils, and the crops will
be Increased threefold in an amazing
ly short time.
"Three years ago I made some sta- ;
tislics among schools In my district i
in Iowa. Out of 164 boys I found that |
1T.7 of them, all sons of farmers, had ;
decided not to follow farming, but to
go to the city and take up a profes
sion. Later, after educational inno
vations, and instructing the teachers
in methods of teaching agriculture. I
took another vote 1 found that out of
1*4 boys. 162 had decided to he farm
ers. That shows how education will ;
save your grain and your farm life.”
Professor Renson also deplored the .
lack of entertaining and instructive
literature dealing with farm problems
and farm life. He stated that the fact
that the most of present-day litera
ture dealt with urban life was re
sponsible for the departure of many
farm children to the congested cit
ies.
Biggest Liner Is Begun.
Brown & Co. of Clydebank have laid
the keel for the immense steamer
planned for the Cunard Steamship com- !
pany. The steamer will be called the
Aquitanla. and will be of 50.000 tons.
1.000 feet long and her engines will de
1 velop 90,000-horse power.
Birds Followed In Flights
Aluminum Rings Are Placed on Their
Legs to Aid Naturalists in Study
of Their Habits.
London.—Some striking facts have
, resulted from the ingenious plan adopt
ed by some English and continental
naturalists to find out the lines of
night and fondness for home of wild
birds.
In England the bird-marking scheme
was taken up on a large scale by Mr.
Witberbv fn !S*"9. and since then sev
eral thousand birds, many of them nest
lings. have been decorated with a light
aluminum ring. The example was eag
erly followed by naturalists.
The divergent lots of two starlings
from one nest were traced by Mr. Tice
burst. the Erst author of the scheme
as preached in "British Birds.”
One of the youngsters, ringed during
infancy in its nest in an English cher
ry tree, has been picked up wounded
close to Boulogne, in France, rather
more tbyn a year later. The other, a
home-keeping bird. war. found in a nest ;
box within 103 yards of its paternal
cher-y tree.
The black-headed gulls, the species
that especially haunt London, have pro
vided some very interesting evidence.
One killed by flying into some tele- j
graph wires near Lowestoft had been 1
ringed at Rossitteu. Germany, a rpot
SOO miles nearly due east. 17 months
before; and curiously enough, another
bird ringed at the same place on the
same date was shot at I^owestoft on
the same day. Another black-headed
guli ringed in Cumberland is reported j
to have been found at Cape Finistere.
Swallows have proved the love of
• home with which they are always cred
| ited by returning, to the eaves of their
English home after a journey of sev
! eral thousand miles to and from Africa.
An interesting record is given in 1
| "British Birds" of the ringing of Eng
; lish tits. Some of these courageous
; little birds have been caught four
j times at varying dates within the same
neighborhood, and one particularly un
suspecting bird was caught "almost
every day.” One begins to think that
he did it on purpose and entered into
the game.
It is hoped that naturalists all over
the country will share in this game of
ringing and catching birds. The rings
do no manner of harm and the news
1 hey may convey is of the greatest In
terest.
Vacations Will Cost More.
Chicago.—Summer vacations prob
ably will cost more this year. An
advance in summer tourist rates, both
east and west, is being considered by
the railroads and probably will be
adopted. Heretofore the summer rate
has been a fare and a third, plus $1.50.
The new rate for the round trip prob
ably will be a fare and a half.
Man Proves Real Magnet.
Bayfield, Wls.—A lumberjack of Bay
field county is a human magnet and is
to be used next spring for locating iron
deitosits. He can convert a steel knife
blade Into a powerful magnet by rub
bing his fingers over it.
|
SHORTHORNS POSSESS MANY
EXCELLENT DAIRY QUALITIES
English Breeder Developed Milk Producing Strain and
His Cows Were Well Known All Over
England for Their Superiority.
From the very origin of the breed
Shorthorns have had two qualities to
commend them to favorable considera
tion. and it is this dual capacity oi
beef and milk production that has
made them so popular with farmers
and stockmen. As beef producers
Shorthorns are “known of all men;”
but their dairy qualities, though ex
cellent when properly developed, are
hot so generally understood. The ear
ly history of the breed furnishes
many instances of cows that were
grant milk producers, says the North
western Agriculturist.
One of the earliest breeders to de
velop milk production in his herd
was Jonas Whittaker, and. as a re- >
suit, his cows were known all over i
England for their excellent dairy
r "
descendants proved excellent milkers
many generations after Mr. Bates'
herd was dispersed. Hence the pre
vailing opinion that Shorthorn cows
of exceptional dairy qualities should
be sought among those carrying an in
fusion of Bates blood has a founda
tion in fact; yet there are exceptions
and some uotable ones.
Amos Cruickshank, who drew the
attention of the beef producing world
to the excellence of the Scotch Short
horns. by the wonderful fleshing quali
ties he had bred into his herd, was
not unmindful of the dairy qualities of
his cows, and in that mavelous herd
of beef cattle were many matrons
quite good at the pail.
The large dairies that supply milk
for London are composed quite large
A Prize Winning Youngster.
qualities. Even in the herds of the
Booths, where beef form and fleshing
quality was the first consideration,
cows of heavy milk production were
developed. Sir Charles Knightiey
had a tribe known as the Fawsley
Fillpails that did much to establish
the fame of Shrothom cows as exee'
lent at the pail. The herd of Thomas
Bates was established about the yea.
1S00 and soon became the most
noted in England.
This herd was carefully bred for
beef form and scon became the foun
tain head from which other breeders
drew their herd bulls; yet Mr. Bates
w^s careful to cultivate the milking
qualities of his herd, and in conse
quence. had cows that give from
24 to 34 quarts of milk per day. So
persistently did he impress this in
this herd of cows that many of their
j ly. and in some cases exclusively, ot
Shorthorn c-ows. This is also true in
part of dairies in Xew York and Xew
England.
Cost of Brick Silo.
A good brick silo. 1-1x38 feet in
ize. holding about 120 tons, can be
'••lilt for about J250. where one does
ot count the hauling and the labor of
excavating.
__
Salt for Stock.
A lump of rock salt should be
placed in the paddock at different
spots, sheltered so as to prevent its
frittering away. The stock will find
it, and he aii the better for the find.
Care of Hens.
Better a dozen hens well cared for
j than a hundred neglected.
CARE FOR FARROWING SOWS
To produce strong, healthy pigs,
they must be looked after before they
art> born. The sow must be cared for
and fed properly if she is to give birth
to a good litter of pigs. As a rule, the
sow is neglected during this period,
the owner seeming to think that the
application of care and feed after she
has farrowed is all that is required.
We should know that a poorly nour
ished mother means a weak, sickly
litter of pigs.
The question of shelter is an impor
tant one. whether in the northern or
southern states, although in the south
—the far south especially—very little
shelter except at farrowing time is
needed. At farrowing time the mother
should always be supplied with a build
ing that will afford shelter from the
rain and the wind for both the mother
and the pigs until the pigs become
dry. If the wind strikes the young
pigs when they are first born they I
will often chill to death. Each farm- i
er can make his own shelter, to be !n 1
keeping with his surroundings, but
probably the best and most econom
ical building that can be made is a
portable hoghouse.
Separate the Pullets.
Separate the pullets from the cock
erels. as you would the heifers from
the steers, and feed a less fattening
ration, but one that will give vigor
and constitution.
___
Hatching Turkeys.
Turkey hens produce such a limited
number of eggs that it is scarcely
necoesary for their hatching, as the
hens themselves can take care of all
they lay.
WATER FOR
DAIRY COWS
Important That the Three or More
Gallons Given to Animals Daily
tie 'Warmed to A boot 60
Decrees T.
It Is very important that the water
drunk by the cows giving three or
mere gallons of ml'** daily be warmed
to about 60 degrees F. Otherwise the
cows will not drink as much as they
need to keep up a good milk flow. It
does not take much ice water to chill
a thin-fleshed cow through and through
on a cold winter day. especially when (
she is compelled to walk ‘some dis-'
tance through the snow or a cutting
wind to get to the tank or pond. Ex
periments made at the Missouri state
experimental station show that drink
ing water is needed in proportion to
the milk yield. That is. a cow giv
ing six gallons of milk a day needs
about twice as much water as a cow
giving three gallons a day. If the wa
ter Is too cold to be comfortable If
drunk In large quantities, the cow will
not drink enough, and as a result,
will drop considerably in her milk
yield. When Missouri Chief Josephine
was giving about 100 pounds of milk
each day last winter she drank dally
about 31 gallons of water. Imagine
how she would have suffered if that
had been ice water. It was warmed,
however, and Josephine did not chili '
after drinking.
Green Feeding Worth While.
If the best results are to be obtain
ed with poultry they must be furnish
ed plenty of green feed. Is a statement
so often heard that its repetition
seems silly; yet there are flocks on
fairly prosperous farms where one
would think the practice of regular
green feeding had never been heard
of.
Conditions for Live Stock.
if you are in doubt as to the condi
tions you should give your live stock
in the barb-yard, imagine yourself In
the animals' place.
RHEUMATISM
r
Munyon’s Rheumatism Remedy relieves
pains in the legs, arms, bach, stiff or
swollen joints. Contains no morphine,
opium, cocaine or drugs to deaden the
pain. It neutralizes the acid and drive*
out all rheumatic poisons from tile sys
tem. Write l’rof. Munyon. Kid and Jeff
erson Sts., Phlla., I‘a., for medical ad
vice, absolutely free.
STRIKING PEOPLE DIFFERENTLY.
Servant—Heavens I have knocked
the big flower pot off the window’
ledge, and it struck a man on the
head.
Mistress—What! My beautiful ma
jolica?
CHECK IT fN TIME.
Few people realize the grave dan
ger of neglecting the kidneys. The
slightest kidney trouble may be Na
ture's warning of dropsy, diabetes or
£&2v*r/a*>r dreaded Bright's dis*
^Wf7WljJSrir, eage Jj, y0u JjaYe any
^TTn / kidney symptom, be
fajcscjLigk gin using Doan's Kid
[B'iht&Sgp ney Pills at once.
JW fir * Mrs- Sara*1 A- Flack.
/SSLjd.— *' 304 S. Douty St., Han
ford, Cal., says: "Pic
ture me lying crip
pled with inflammatory rheumatism
and stricken with dropsy, not able to
move even with crutches. Such was
my condition when I began using
Doan's Kidney Pills. Folks in Han
ford know bow- bad off I was and I
must give Doan's Kidney Pills full
credit for my wonderful recovery.”
Remember the name—Doan's.
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
A Way to Keep Love In.
Mrs. Honeybird—But, Dickey, dear,
the flat is so tiny. Why, the windows
are so small a mouse couldn't crawl
through.
Mrs. Honeybird—That is all the bet
ter. dear. When poverty comfs In
love can't fly through the window.
SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CIRE will
rare any possible case of DISTEMPER.
PINK E\E, and the like among horses
of all ages, and prevents all others in the
Brae stable from having the disease. Also
cures chicken cholera, and dog distemper.
Any good druggist can supply you. or send
to nifrs. 50 cents and $1.00 abottl Agents
wanted. Free bock. Spohn Medical Co.,
Spec. Contagious Diseases. Goshen, Ind.
A Ruling Passion.
"Fncle Pinchpenny spent a great
deal of time at the home of George
Washington.”
“Yes. He couldn't be persuaded to
stop looking for that dollar George is
said to have thrown across the Poto
mac.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
L’ASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the ^
Signature of
tn Fse For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always BoughL
To render your neighbor a service
willingly shows the generosity of your
character: to preserve silence over it,
the grandeur of your soyl.—Puysieux.
All druggists sell the famous Herb rem
edy, Garlield Tea. It corrects constipation.
Modern application is likely to ex
tract the teeth of an old saw.
Lewis' e-ingle Binder straight 5c cigar.
Vou pay lUc for cigars not so good.
Each penrn saved means one less
pang of foreboding.
30 ft. Bowels—
Biggest organ of the body—the
bowels—ard the most important—
It’s got to be looked after—neglect
means suffering and years of
misery. CASCARETS help
nature keep every part of your
bowels clean and strong—then
they act right—means health to
your whole body. su
CASCARETS ioc a box for a week-* treaf
ment. All druggists. Biggest teller In
the world — Million boxea a month.
PARKER’S
„ HAIR BALSAM
CIcsbm and beantifto the hair.
Promote* a luxuriant rrowtK
N»^ar Fails to Baator* Gray
Hair to it* Youthful Color:
Cures ecalp dieeaeee A hair talii-JL
—^SiggifMjOaf DrunuSi ^
Nebraska Directory
RUPTURE CURED in ■ fewCays
. withont paw or • sur
^ritme™0011' H0 W CUIed- S*04 101
Dr.Wray.307 Bee Bldg.,Omaha, Neb.
RUBBER GOODS
cut for free catalogue.
M Y ERS-DILLON DRUG CO.. Omaha, Nab.
{Courtney & eo.
Omaha, Nebraska
Better Things to Eat for Less Money
Catalogue Mailed Free to Any Address