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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1911)
LABOR GIVES ITS APPROVAL -fui American FoOeratmn Cordl •"/ Jorna mi Figtrt Against Sttae ef Tubereu.c*** ^ - cjprorai of '.be campaign for •he MM u Jtae Cross seats ha* been ®*« *»> he Amerjroti Federal toe of Imbue aroedtog to as asitouarement ,J|« '*' <»al Assoc:*; Man lor the *ta*. -bC Prever too of Toberculo ala At *be lost annua! < cteution of Ameritnn Federation of laker ■ <"« »a* adoptee catling for all ’he members of the Federation to ' 'fleer tbe sale as murk as possible The resofottoa reeds ss loilcms: ’ vt ••<», The American Federa ’*** of labor ha* it ever* possible *»? a» e*j .bs mot eatent for the ***#» and pretest ion of tuberruioefa UuimgPoo* the l etted States and ‘ **her, Tbe American National j Red • r* has bees in tbe peat add is nea makstg as especial effort, •hrwtigl 'be sale of lied Cross Christ ■»* **■*-» U secure l .itds to carry on 'b. aof again*' tuueecutaei*. and t » Jr «t-s ■ f tbe fundi- raised ia this manitr - to* born able to do much ef , fertn* aork it *ti« d.rr-' .ut there tore nr r "Breuitsd. That the Ani»-ricar. Fed er*-;-m of Lobar ptr Its endorse n»r* re be movenMdit of the Amer ire* N* . s*i Red Crane and encour at* i i tcukvri to farther is every rmaimabie aay tbe sale of these seals to tVf -«pect'se communities HRS. SELBY AND PRIZE BABY I have «!« ii» used Cuticurp Soap and no other for my baby and he has never had a sure at any kind. He Oaes no? eves chafe as most babies do 1 feel care that it is all owing to CuJieura Soap, lor be is fine and hea”b- and when tee months old. •or a prise to a baby content It make* my heart ache to go into so many homes and see a sweet-laced tub a ith tbe whole u>p o: its bead a aotsd taaae of scurf, caused b; poor soap I always r- on-mend Cuticura, and tat times out of ten the next ttmo 1 see the mother she says Oh' 1 am at glad yon told me of Cuticura.' " • Signed • Mrs G A Helby. Redondo Roach. California. Jan la. 1911 Although Cuticura Soap and Oint ment are acid ev-rye here a sample . «: each with 22-page book. will be mailed Tree tm anpRcutioa to ''Cutl cnra." Itopc 2* L. Boston Seats Bes Jeet Among what may be called death bed -eat- that at the Rev. James of Hurting one of tbe Coven scier martyr*, deserves a bigfc place i-ord Guthries recall# the story in ••From a hart berm Window “ Mr uthrves was eavcutad at the Crow m the Htgl street. Kdtcburgh Tbe eight before he asked for rheesr for ■apprr His fr—r.ds wondered. for tbe K-vai' tans bad to'bidden bin: to eat leeae Rot h» said, with a smile, "1 am bos beyond the hazard of all earthly dtseasea "—I'm la Remus’ M far as B>nce Teacne' D<a Mot Know. it wa* to the primary class of a graded »-boo; to a eestem city and the day etas tbe 22d ot February “Now. whc ear tell me ehose birth day this is*1 a»veC the teacher. A tittle girt arose timidly. “Beil Margaret, you may teli us. said the teacher "Mihr wma tne unexpected reply —Everybody's Magazine Mad About It. -fftoks la jas: crazy about being up to-date ~ “How does be show gr “He is trying to get his parrot a • 'eve** rage* hpacvai Taiont "Caa yoor hoy read The ISllad to the original?* "Not very well. Bet be can make tea yards art und tbe ieft end almost every time * « The Braana Age man chortled "If 1 was steel. I suppose you would dtoaorse me.' be cried iie-ewtth he rejosead he didet Uva too late imm *rk*<am bbcLcmIt m> arosur T*«e*4r Tbn ait twulir *t:»- * mb ' id old or .n^r «aa t« «c*rUt rro-^n! f*T Hamlins V saM Oii. To, **uw of IV. IWsflln Vm you klicppicf today? ftrlla—'tea. I *«? tacit tbia** to ex etmmgm Maay a au vts claim* to be aa ftsMaz as t*e day 1* uia* wouldn't ■an*, tbe *e*r;:...£bt turned os tia t-igf record Bo»der the {anw4» straight *v c^r aMtaa. «e it -.—.—— * penm-ii Joke la never want tra cracked up »o he __ | j Do You Feel Bilious ? Your Liver Meeds Assistance TRY HOSTETTERS STOMACH BITTERS it has a toniag and invigorating effect | TURKS MAKING A STUBBORN FISHT ZuGxrJrr CAVAtGr Ar£> McvHrn/n BArrcnr Co/.ro t/vro Acr/o/y IN FORMATION from ’be seat of the Turco-ltalian war. when uncensored by the Italians, indicates that the Turks are still tar from being beaten Though they lost the city of Tripoli, they have had the better or sev eral bloody encounters outside that city and in the vicinity of Bengazl. Their army has been drilled by Euro peans and Is considered highly efficient. TWO MINDS CLEARED - i. t Wealthy Lumberman of Van couver Had Forgotten Wife. Woman One Had Married Agrees to Wait While He Returns to Scot land to See if Mrs. Scctt No. 1 Was Alive. Seattle. U ash.—Curious instances of lapses of memory covering long periods have come to light simultane ously here in the stories of two men wbo*e minds have .been cleared by illness George Scott, a rich lumberman ol Vancouver supposed bimsell a bache lor until Its)'.i when he married. .Now fce suddenly remcm tiers that, twenty six years age. 1 ? left a wile and chil dren in Edinburgh. Scotland. The other cast- is that of S Chand ler Rogers, who was beaten so badly in New York fourteen years ago that he forgot his name lie drifted here and has lieen known as George Kelly. An nitration has recalled him to him self In sll the years that Scott was pil ing up a fortune he seemed heart proo! until a musical comedy company visited Vancouver two years ago. tie •hen api.utated to Jane Patterson or Allegheny. Pa., one o'. Its members Although their ages were tar apart, the- lived happUy ireott finally met with an accident which Iractured his skull and brought on. in addition, a serious illness, through which bis wife nursed him Memory of his youthful domestic life came w lth his recovery. In telling bis wife of it he said his name al ways was George Scott and that he never had a physical n)l*hap or ill ness to explain a loss of memory. Nevertheless his mind had been ut terly blank as to the wife and babies iii Scotland Mrs Scott did not question ills good faith. but said hi- story dictated a plain course for ber, through the di vorce court- They talked it out thor oughly and it »a= finally arranged that she should bring action for di vorce and Scott return to Scotland and iearn what had become of his family Should he find the first wile he mus! make proper amends to ber. If she is dead he will come back to Vancouver and the second "Mrs. Scott" will mSrry him again Rogers, or Kelly, was brought to the Providence hospital here on Octo ber 10. suffering Iron: an attack of acute insanity, with which he had been taken in his home in Port Berke ley The doctors found that a por tion of the skull was pressing on the brain. Surgery soon relieved him and he became peneetly norma! He called for )>en and paper and wrote: "1 am in hospital and all O. K..'* addressing the envelope to Miss Flor ence Doueis. 418 \Ve3t Thirty-second street. New York. A postscript to the letter asked that Father Doherty ot the Paulist society be sent to him Picking up a newspaper after ne Had finished bis note and seeing Ibe date line. “Seattle. October 20, 1911." be turned wondenngly to Dr. Milton G Sturgis and bis nurse and said: “Am I really in Seattle*" Then be broke down with a fit of sobbing He told bis story when he had composed himself today. The hos pital staff tntnk it one of the most remarkable on record. For fourteen years, be said, be did not know where be bad been or what he bad been do ing He was born in New York in 1880 and lived with bis grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Doueis. at 418 West Thirty-second street. New York. His name was S. Chandler Rogers. On May 1. 1897. with a boy trlend , and two girls, he went to the theater, j Having seen his girl to her home, he 1 started to walk to his own. At Six j teenth street and Eighth avenue three ! men stopped him and asked for a match. He said he was no match tac ! tory, and the men pounced on him. : One struck him with a blackjack. The ! next he knew he was in the river He said he remembered clutching at : something in the river and being dragged out, but that was the last he knew of himself as Rogers until be awoke in the hospital after the skull pressure had been lifted from his brain STRAYED from usual haunts Cormorant. Salt Water Fishing Eird. Killed Recently Near Sault Ste. Marie. Michigan. Sault Ste Marie. Mich.—An excep j tionally rare water fowl was recently shot on Hay lake, near here. It was 1 a cormorant, a bird of which little is known in this section of the coun try. it resembles a goose in a way and has many peculiar characteristics. ; It inhabits cliffs and rocky places along both the Atlantic and Pacific | oceans, and it is an expert salt water fisher. One peculiarity about it is that while ' ft bas web feet, it alights in trees to rest after long flights It is closely al lied to the pelican in conformation and habits. It is an exjiert diver and swims with such swiftness under wa ter that few fish can evade it. The cormorant swims very low in water and is not often seen by the unobserving When on land his rigid tail feathers support him and he makes an awkward appearance. In : the breeding season it is said that vast numbers of the birds congregate on | cliffs and rocky places. The female deposits three or four eggs in a loosely constructed nest of dry seaweed. The Chiuese and Japanese have long trained the cormorant to fish for them. A number of the birds are taken to sea on boats and be gin the day's business for their master. When it is being taught, a ring is placed about the neck of the young bird so it is unable to swallow the prey it captures in the water. llow the bird shot here happened to be so far inland is not known. He often leaves the seas for rivers In land. and it is thought that it might have been driven farther inland than usual by the high winds and storms that have prevailed on the Atlantic coast. NOSEBAG FOR NOISY EATERS Wilkesbarre Alderman Is Aroused Because a Man Made Noise Like a Concrete Mixer in Eating. Wilkesbarre. Pa.—After making such a noise while eating in a res taurant that he had started a quarrel. Walter Gordon of Duryea was lec tured severely by Aid. John F. Dono hue of this city and told to return home and learn better table manners “There are a great many fellows like you." said the alderman, “who come to this city and make them selves offensive to others by their lack of table manners in public places. They drink their coffee as if they were donkey pumps and eat their food with a noise like a concrete mixer at an asphalt plant Von ought to be sent to the county jail, where you could eat your beans with a fork. Next time you come here bring a handoti: \rith you. put it in a horse's nosebag and eat It on the river Dank." ! TIRES OF HIS LONESOME JOB French Caretaker of Costly, but Unoc cupied. Palace Loses Patience— Building Unfinished. Paris.—The French government j erected a building at a cost of $1,000.- j 000 nine years ago and after install ing a caretaker took no further steps to utilize it on the ground that it "not quite finished." In the year 1902 the government de- j cided to create a special audit depart rnent and a list of nominations to the | various posts was drawn up. An aged, Reservist, whose services to the coun-j try entitled him to fitting rewards, was appointed caretaker of a new buiid r ing which was being erected for the, ! department of the Rue Cambon. The concierge was told to take charge at, once. The building was not quite fin-, isbed, but within a month or two everything would be in order, and the members of the ministry would take, up their duties there. Proudly the Reservist took up his quarters in the vast but unfinished pal ace. For days he walked through the immense building without seeing an ■ other human being, but at last the dis-' pirited man began to beguile his time by learning a new variation of his favorite game of patience. Fortunately for the concierge be had taken the precaution to bring with! him in the empty building a kitten and^ a canary. For two years he saw no, one and heard nothing, although he re ceived his monthly salary with mili-. tary punctuality. In 1905 the arch!-: tect rushed in and breathlessly re marked that a little furniture would be brought into the building and it would then immediately become a busy hive. The little kitten had outgrown Us mischievous nonage and became a gray haired and tired looking cat when, in 1905. the concierge, wearied by the strain of waiting, complained to. the department heads. He was sooth ed by a promise that everything would ^pon be right. Finally even the patience of the long-suffering concierge came to an: end. for he recently resigned his po sition. The empty palace in the Rue' Cambon, which was erected at a cost: of $1,000,000. is still awaiting one or; two slight alterations. STICKS TO INVALID MOTHER _ Daughter Never Leaves House During) Long and Trying Vigil of Twelve Years—Finally Ended. Chicago.—A twelve years’ vigil of! Miss Marguerite Tuebner has finally' some to an end with the death of her; mother. When Mrs. Anton Teubner died the. daughter was released from an un-‘ ceasing watch that began in 1S99 At that time her mother was seised with a complication of maladies that i treatened death. "Your mother mustn't be lert alone a minute." advised the doctors “She is liable to pass away at any time, i Some one should be with her all the time." “1 will stay." said Marguerite. During the entire twelve years the daughter never reached the sidewalk below the family's third story rooms until she went out to buy mourning clothing Miss Teubner's devotion to her mother extended beyond the constant nursing. During the twelve years she ; has supported her aged father, her, : self and her mother by needlework Thieves Steal a Cat. Chicago.—Thieves broke into the millinery shop of Mrs Mary Osborn, and not caring for ribbons or frames j they stole Fluffy Ruffes—« $5u An gora cat. NATION TRYING TO SAVE COD Steam Trawler Has Made Fearful In roads on Supply of Fish—Govern ment Take* Steps. Gloucester. Mass.—At last the cod fish the most Important lood product In the history of Massachusetts, has , begun to succumb to the onslaught of j steam trawlers until now the United ‘ Stares has stepped in to conserve the I fish Millions of cod fry have been set ; free under direction of Superintendent ' Corliss at tbe hatchery of the United ' States bureau of fisheries here. Working since last December, tbe hatchery has In this way taken charge of some 132,000.00V cod eggs and has hatched successfully and distributed more than 90.000,000 fry all along the coast la Ipswich Bay and Massachu setts Bay. If only half of these manage to es cape their natural enemies lor three years and reach the market alse of ram two to three pounds, they win e present something like a hundred -llllon pounds of cod. "Cod eggs In water at a tempera ture of 40 degrees will batch In sev enteen days," said Mr. Corliss, "and during the hatching season there we have them in all stages, planting them as fry and as fiugerllngs. "Running, as we do. at full capacity to handle the eggs which are collected on board the commercial fishing boats, there is no room to keep the young cod up to the stage of growth known as fingerling. or a length of three or four inches. “in distributing these fish we put them on the natural spawning grounds of the cod. Thus they go at once Into deep water, where I think they are bet ter able to take care of themselves than in shallow water near the shore. "The question has been asked as to whether these fish hatched here and planted in Massachusetts waters re main In this vicinity. That is a diffi cult question to answer, for the cod Is. of course, a migratory fish. 1 be lieve. however, that while the cod on this coast may disappear at times, they simply go away to feeding I grounds which the fishermen do not happen to know. Then whea fishing become good again I think the ‘ chances are very great that the fish are of the same stock that frequented the grounds before.” Never Kissed a Bride. New Wilmington. Pa—Rev Hugh S Boyd, a graduate of Westminster col lege in the class of 1JJ75 and now i preaching at the Harbor church, near ‘ New Castle, has married Just' 3 hki ! couples and says he Knows of only"one of tne pairs being divorced. He iar ther says that he has never kissed a bride during the entire 3.100 cere monies. Thomaston. Conn.—Authorities at Campville report an unusual case of Intoxication. The victim was a blue ribbon cow ownfi by a farmer. The cow's downfall is said to have been due to over-indulgence in sour ap ples. She was discovered staggering along the road Her owner said the spree was an annual occurrence. 1EWLEJFJEHER Remarkable Chinese Holy Shrine in Peking. For Imperial Worship Only, and Cere monies Never Witnessed by For eigners—Customs of Centu ries Observed. Peking, China—The Temple ol Heaven is the most sacred as well as the most beautiful of all Chinese re ligious edifices. It i6 used only for imperial worship, and no foreigner has yet seen the stately and elaborate ceremonies that take place here on fixed dates every year. The building* of which it consists are situated in £ large walled in park in the southeast section of the Chinese city of Peking A broad, stone paved road leads to the temple from the Chinamen, the largest gate of the Tartar city. This gate is exactly in front of the main entrance to the imperial palace. The massive doors at its central entrance are thrown open only when the em peror leaves his palace to visit the Temple of Heaven or the Temple of Agriculture. The park In which the Temple of Heaven lies is almost square In shape and is surrounded _hy a stout wall, nearly four miies long. Inside it is divided into sections by other walls »nd the visitor is bewildered by the number cf gates through which he passses when being shown round tbq sacred buildings. At each he has tq pay a small sum to the gatekeepers, who rely upon these tips as their main source of income. Some of the .nclosures contain majestic build ings; others encircle the grazing grounds of the sacred animals, reared for immolation upou the temple al tars. The striking edifice, which is gen, eraliy known as the Temple of Heav en. but is called by the Chinese the Temple of Prayer for the Year, to which the emperor repairs each spring to make offerings and pray for an aus: picious year for his people, is a land The Temple of Heaven. mark for miles round- Its triple roof of deep blue, gold flecked tiles, sur mounted by a massive gilt sphere, can be seen from the railway some time before Peking is reached. It Is comparatively a new building, having been erected since 1889. when the old temple, of which this is an exact copy, was destroyed by fire. It stands on a triple marble terrace, having a stairway at each of the four points of the compass. When the em peror comes here to worship, the tablets of his ancestors, which are usually kept in an adjoining building, are placed round the single lofty chamber of which the temple consists. A long marble paved terrace leads southward from the Temple of Heav en past a smaller building of similar design, known as the Temple of the I’nlverse, to the inclosure containing the altar of heaven. It may be doubted whether any structure in the world excels this for grandeur and beauty. The marble paved courtyard that surrounds It. like all the terraces in the park, is ill kept and overgrown with weeds, and even the altar terraces them selves are spattered with shrubs and grasses. But nothing can detract from the majestic simplicity j»f the altar. It is on the main altar, kneeling on the circular slab of marble that marks Its center that the emperor at each winter solstice, officiating as the high priest of his people (by whom he is known as the "son of heaven"), wor ships heaven and his ancestors at dawn. The previous night is spent ir. meditation and fasting in the Hall of Abstinence, a fitting preparation for the solemn rites that are to follow. Nearly two hours before dawn the em oeror is called and arrayed in cere monial raiment, after which he makes his way to the altar in a redan chair, and kneeling on the center stone of the topmost terrace, burns incense to heaven, and renders an account of the important events of the year Burnt offerings of animals are made on an altar of green porcelain to the south east of the main altar. In bronze braziers ranged round the court the leath sentences and offerings of silk and jade are committed to the lanes. Groves of cypress trees surround the altar inclosure, except to the north, where a series of triple gates marks the way to the Temple of the Universe, while In the distance be yond. the roofs of the Temple of Heaven can be seen. Dead Horse Kicks Man. Seymour, Conn.—Living in Quarry road when he is well, John Bagdouts. a stonecutter, rests in St. Rapheal's hospital with his jaw broken by the kick of a dead horse he was burying. He was helping his neighbor. Milkman James Ford, to drag tbe departed beast to Its grave. He pulled, but pulled in vain. A man of gentle tem per is John. but. letting the horse's tail go. he poked his foot with need less energy into its stomach, and the Hind foot or the horse shot up j0nn tnew no more. He says it was Ford, ut the doctor sees hoof prints on ni» ace John is a stonecutter, so Ford .ound another undertaker. THE REASON. Little Wallace—Pa, why does pop Jom pop? His Pa—Because, my son, like men, tt doesn't know any better. A Word of Wisdom. “So. me dear." said Mrs. Maloney to the charity worker when the topic had turned upon the question of mar ried women taking upon themselves the support of the family when the husband is out of work. “Don’t yeez ever begin annyt'ing of thot koind if so hap yeez should one day have a husband av your own. In the evint av tiiot happening an' he should come home an' fall to cryin' because he was out av a job. do yeez sit down an' cry until he foinds it ag’in. Moind thot, now.”—Woman's World. How Fido Lost Out. “My girl used to think a lot of her pug dog, but I've managed to get the edge on him since *e married.” “How did you work it?” “Fido wouldn't eat her cooking, and I did.' Some men nave a well-seated preju dice against giving up their place to a woman in a crowded car. MY DAUGHTER WASCURED By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Baltimore. Md.—“I send you here Kith the picture of my fifteen year old tutu^uvci nuu was restored to health by Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. She was pale, with chirk circles under her eyes, weak and irri table. Two different doctors treated her and called it Green Sickness, but aha grew worse all the time. Lvdia E. Pink ham’s vegetable Compound was rec mended, and after taking three bot ties she has regained her health, thanks to your medicine. I can recommend it for all female troubles.”—Mrs. L. A. Corkkax, lies Rutland Street, Balti more, Md. Hundreds of such letters from moth ers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com pound has accomplished for them have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. Young Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, head ache, dragging-down sensations, faint ing spells or indigestion, should taka immediate action be reston'd to health by Lyuia E. Idnkham’s Vege table Compound. Thousands have been restored to health by its use. Writ© to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Uasgq for advice, free. ‘BETTER TOR HEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN THAN CASTOR OH* SALTS.OR PILLS. AS JT SWEETENS AND CLEANSES TOE SYSTEM MORE EFFICIENTLY AND B FAR MORE PLEASANT TO TAKE. SybuimTigs EuxiihSlnna IS THE IDEAL FAMILY LAXATIVE, AS IT GIVES SATISFACTION TO ALL, IS ALWAYS BENEFICIAL IN ITS EFFECTS AND PERFECTLY SAFE AT ALL TIMES. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. in the Circle. on ever^ Package of the Genuine. -* ALL tniABLF. 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