Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1912)
THE PEEVISH CHILD NEEDS TREATMENT 1 Child drsvsiiy. or Is fret? ul it is usually dot to acme alight dlaerdtr of the «t*u. and a * *d Usarlw U i»rr ones *!• that is «*r»nar to r atartr che--: allies* ted baoyaney of spirits. is case* where the iim> of a gentle. *•***!« hixa've stimu.ant is iadi t—any of the best t fcy* tolas* are tso» prt-t ribtas Dr Ca.<iseirs Syrup Hepnf ■ hi* pr paration is admitted* if ?h<- :*•'« Ittaiitt. h ag mild, yet positive .a ns art oe oe the hovels. »»d far preferable to vIotaM cathart ic* aad pwp**:re eater*. It U trr piea>ast to the taste tad is an ideal ' to «-Sr'ate . sd *t.eng*hen the ! •MhmmIl later aod bowels Its easy, cat r_i j, •, males it esjeciaily de- j sir: -j.it- l -he <-aae of children, a dose at bed-•to** being sure to haw ti,« de dod nmrit ter mnrelci -a :-h so at- j ■ t u»! ‘eassntt^-** is d: - oomfort. I . Cal <r :?•* #jptu: fVywte ia sold • " • - U .>-ry where is f.'e and f i • l> «*• es If tuj hare never tried tXh Vsdid -envdy write to Dr W. ■ dwell. 1*1 Washing-uO St . Mon • !i r a ran.- ie He will be »• lad t t- .si* a trial borle with er any «tra.- to you whatever. Di-TCM VIEW. -■ —-. ~WMf l • ' .!. N« r: MtJ ••as 4* *■ marker of eoarcsuoa. ■ !*.• -h CuK-siaa—Yaw—uad, : ' ‘ *• 3 d*e emeereat flattery. R-.H ALL OVE? BACT'S DGDY —■.- . % Itc ipc lo Hp Co'j d ftct Sleep - * K* a- *i »’<1 ! : 'and, tai.mg !■■=•» * h . * .•» b«-t: g in Ireland * - oat - r:< 4> .-»:*!.♦ c:t all oit-r iy. V. • :u k l.:*n t. a doc tor -he* rare a# i i4» ;«« f.,r him. i *a: . :n t • ‘ :m of a *»*d **d was all ©rer baby's body, hca i »fed face. at di."fereat times. It * 1 he would «* rati o it with ail his 8.:ri*t. The coasefoenc* was deare! *f» 1 tot-* wares, and we were t-f.’- l ;* *o' !d l-avc a:is'f arsis on Jit*. fjbdC trh*d r«|i«»<t w, * *1 ’» ec «ther d . for, who said Ms rnadl •«* was due to «liatig* c.f food cad «i.»»ate. and giwe mere n:»-dh ine. ■ •* ■ * i* : '.-r. end It • d to 'id that the ct:ld ..''[id not s*.« •• lie was ■"■oan t t'- it ■ -n ut •! tiiTrr that lay tc ' »r ad. el ca io try Cutiotira > f> »ad Ointment After u-'ng Cuth tor at >ut nine lao:.'*. s the places disap t - ~ *4 Tf era a: nut .-ny sears, or ■ ' L-r tied uf diaSsareu.eat. and baby U rti; * Iv .rod b> the OMcnra S . • a d 11 • -r. a- W« have no far ther ?r< .bie *!-h baby's skin. Noth eg ‘ led the .*«. : ig. and allowed •_!-r t sleep hut < virura Soap and Cu'r- r* <ilB*n»e*t“ (Slgaedl Mrs. Vi tv ■ Gc-n Ti Burrell St . Ilos barf. Maas, March 1!. IS1I -o«Sh CHtfcHf Soap and < • t nsent are sold •rorwwhere. a Bam; !e Of ecr h. » th 3: page Sordt, will u* at --d fr«e on a1 ion to Cctl cara.“ Oral L Boston. L> got-weight. “He hasn't MB' B head ** .Cat* a hit, it bo Mere standing t r • <«■ < ovild mj that he bad no vlMbie irraaa of t-^ppoft” Y0UN8 WIFE SAVED FROM HOSPITAL Te!!s How Sick She Was Aud What Saved Her From An Operation. I’Fpw Saaiaaky. Ohio. -“Thrw* wears ■go 1 was married and went to bcua* keepusg. I was net irma? wen a..J could haruly draft myself alcn£. 1 had such tired feelings, my bark ached, my sides ached. 1 had bladder trouble aw fully bad. and 1 could j not eat or sleep. IhiyJ I headaches, too. and became almost a ner vous wreck. iiydoc tor w >0 tor vj go to t Hospital. l aid mat that ides very well. so. when I mw your advertiser-ent in a paper, I wrote to you far advice, and have done aa yoe told me. I have taken Lydia E. fWkam’s Vegetable Com pou nd and Liver Pills, and now I Lava my health. " If aiefc and tiling women would only know enough to take your mediciae.thej would get relief. If na Bexj. H.Stans inr, Route 6, Box U, Upper Sandusky, If you have myvterwaa pains. irregu ulceration or displace t wait too long, but try Lydia i*a Vegetable Compound now. thirty years Lydia EL link ham's Ccanpoond. made from roots has been the standard remedy proves the value and should give MADE MORE POPULAR BY THEIR ENEMIES ATTEMPTS ot the life of King Victor Emmanuel of Italy only serve to accentuate the popularity of that ruler •uJ of his family. as has been sho .. n by the latest attack made on him. Antonio D'Alba. who fired the : i. ■' i:.; i-.ts that be alette was concerned in the attempt to kill the king. but several other arrests have been made. ORPHAN SENT HOME Girl V :mber of Royal Family Re turns tc Denmark. Lc"3 Search for Child Left Alone In U. S. ty Death of Parents is Con cludec—Dogas Uncle Who Asked Ransom Traced by Sleuths. X" York To La returned to !ov • g and devoted relatives, members of the royal family of Denmark, at Co ,enb..„<.q. after a search for ker nuts that ha - --as: hundreds of liars arul fcn revered three coun tr.is and a | er.od of nearly six years. ike r i )J for* :ue of llella Jorgen <;o. Wa.le on the passenger list ol tbe Ham \er ... Miss," the young i y ba: 12 . ear^ of age. and in ■;e I.i=t sewn }•• ars she has experi • d hardships that seldom befall the Uldrea. and still i are;- chil Jr- n of ;he ro.. a! blood. T: » restoration of iiell i to her peo ple .n i> n:na;h is i merer ling to a de gree. and is only made possible •...r,.ugh the excellent work in the h id's bt-hali carried on by Proba 'ota Officer \V. G. Leeruan of Dallas ■*nd members of the Presbyterian mis oa board of that city. Mr. l^eeman ' rought the girl to Galveston one Sat* : lay. delivered her to Vice-Consul Harts GuMn.an. representative at •h.= port of tht government of Den mark. anJ then saw her safely aboard : :.e Hannover in charge of Mrs. Busch feld. In 1900 August Jorgensen was ap iolrtted by the government of Den ts rk as royal D.u.isb consul to Rome, Ita y. and. accompanied by his wife, A i< hire H. Jorgensen. took up his post Immediately. While they were in Home the child. Hella Charlotte, »a born. In 1201 fhe father and mother, accompanied by the child, went to M*.tcico City, Mexico, pre sumably on official business. A few months later, in the year 1905, Mr. ! Jorgensen died very suddenly. Mrs. Jorgensen died a few days later. Hel ! la. left an orphan, was taken into the iamily of Mr. and Mrs. Munch Lessen, ! fellow countrymen. | So far as could be ascertained, Mr. at ;i Mrs. Lesson knew nothing of the family connection, except that the Jorgensens were of Royal blood. Sbort , ly after they had taken the child a i man appeared upon the scene who ; claimed to be a brother of Mr. Jorgen ; sen and uncle of the child. - He de , rnanded that Hella be given into his | custody, to return to her people at | Copenhagen, and they could do noth ; ing but comply. It would appear, from the informa tion possessed by those since inter ested in the case, that the man claim ing to be the girl's uncle was an im postor. He is said to have demanded a certain amount of money from the Jorgensen iamily in Denmark for the return of the child. L iter the amount was increased. Detectives were put on the case and the chase, covering more than five years and carried on in Mexico, Italy and the United States, was never successfully ended by the officers. She will be met at Bremen by her mother's sister, and the years of her life that have been filled with suffer ing wili henceforth be transformed to happy ones . RED GIVES A SNAKE DELIGHT Bronx Director Also Tells How Other Colors Affect Reptiles of Zoo. Xew York.—A report of a series of "snake studies" made at the Bronx zoological gardens here shows that snakes can be appealed to by colors, which are found to have a marked in fluence on the moods of the reptiles. The emotions inspired are thus cata logued: Red, delight; baby blue, pleasure; yellow, contentment; navy blue, ecstasy; brown, irritation; green, an ger; black, indifference; purple, van ity. The report by Curator Ditmars ex plains further: “Color Influences upon animals are not rare. The red Bag, of course, ex cites the bull to anger. With the snake there is just the opposite ef fect, and it is red that gives delight* while green excites to anger." As to the effect of music on snakes, Mr. Ditmars explains that, contrary to the general belief, snakes do no; actually hear music, and have nc sense of melody. They receive the sensation of the vibrations through the tip of the tongue, and. like wire less instruments, become “tuned up" and often swing their heads in sym pathy, which leads to the supposition they are beating time. COVERED WITH STOCK PAPERS Walls of Former Home of Levi C Weir of New York Have Odd Decoration. New York.—The sale at auction here of the house formerly owned by the late Levi C. Weir, president of the Adams Express company, has brought to public notice what is per haps the most uniquely decorated room in New York city. It was the bath and dressing room used by Mr. Weir, and its strangeness lies in the fact that its walls are papered with stock certificates, representing a total par value of more than a million dol lars. Mr. Weir, it is said, found he had a large collection of such papers, the only value of which wns their decora tive appearance. They were fine ex amples of the engravers’ art, and were printed in many colors. The gaudiest ones, the red and green and pink and blue certificates, went to make the border. The Contrary. “Did the evidence in the case hang the prisoner?” “No; it hung the jury." MAN HAS 14 SOMS ON TOUR Kar.san, Who Doesn't “Double Up" Boys in Hotel Rooms, Startles Denver Clerk. I), over, Colo —Two by two, fourteen youths, ranging in age front 6 to 16 years, filed into the lobby of a local hotel. A stout man following them approached the desk. "Ail mine,” he said to the clerk, "and there are thirteen more back in Ooodland, Kan.” He wrote "Nathan Alexander” on the register. “Single rooms and fifteen of them,” said Alexander. “I never doubled them up yet and 1 dcn't prepose to do it now.” "That ill be $20." replied the clerk. Suffers From "Glrlitis.” Springfield. Mass.—"Girlitis” Is the si“cific complaint suffered by the Rev. John Ellis, according to his wife, who Is suing for a divorce. "He would spend two hours every day on dolling up.” she testified. Shakespeare Is Censored. Flu.-hir.g. E I.— Such words as “Oh. belli" and Tama" which appear in Shake: peare’s "Merchant of Venice." n« d net be read by girls in the eighth grade, according to school officials' decision Tribute to Abraham Lincoln Tablet Was Sent From Rome in 1865 —If Stone Cannot Be Found He Suggests Another Be Shipped for One Lost In Wreck. Rome, Italy.—Engineer Ferdinando Girardi has revived an interesting epi sode in conection with the project of gathering at Hardin county, Kentucky, a museum of memories and mementos to Abraham Lincoln. Engineer Gir ardi, who is a passionate student of the Rome which is passing, has re called that the news of the death of Abraham Lincoln produced such an impression in Rome that it was de cided to express the sympathy of the Eternal city in the most solemn way possible. At that time, near the railway sta tion. the Agger, or permanent fortifi cations, built by Servius Tullius, was coming to light. The Agger is a huge embankment about 120 feet wide and 25 high, the lower courses of the struc ture being gigantic blocks of pepper colored stone, held together by strong clamps of iron, and the upper courses of smaller blocks of volcanic pumice stone. The Roman thought that nothing cculd express their feelings in a more eloquent manner than sending one of these blocks, with a marble slab and inscription to Abraham Lincoln. The appropriateness of the idea was added to by the similarity of the deaths of the two great men, Servius Tullius and Abraham Lincoln; the former al so having been murdered. The in scription bore the date of June 20 18C5. The block was sent to Mr. Stiel mann, then American consul at Leg horn. who forwarded it on the British steamer Uhla, which through a strange coincidence was commanded by Capt. Lincoln, and which sailed for the T’nited States Aug. 4. 1865. A year passed without anything be ing heard of it. It was only much later that it was possible to learn that the L’hla encountered stormy weather and went ashore near Ber muda, where ship and cargo were sold at auction and the precious stone was abandoned on the shore. Engineer Girardi now raises his voice eo that that stone, rendered more precious through these vicissi tudes, should be sought, and if impos sible to find, another should be taken from the Agger, given the same in scription and sent to Hardin county, so that the tribute of Rome to the mar tyred president should not be lacking. Man Starves In Lighthouse Lonely Vigil for Sixteen Days In Qreen's Reef Beacon, In the Sound, Caused Intense Suffering. South Norwalk, Conn.—Left alone by Gec-ge E I,oughborougb. his as sistant. William Locke, keeper of Green's Ileel lighthouse, succeeded in setting word to the government au thorities that he has been keeping the light alone for the last sixteen days. Locke has suffered terribly since the departure of bis assistant, being able to get only a few winks of sleep in the alternoons. Dally he saw his rood supply diminish. Fearing starvation be reduced his rations to a minimum. When relieved he was very weak. Loughborough left the light and went to South Norwalk, where, ou i bearing of the illness of an aunt, ne went to Wakefield, R. I. Two years ago Loughborough's brother, Leroy Loughborough, was as sistant keeper at the light. The keep er. Joseph Carlton, went ashore and tailed to return. Loughborough wait cd day after day, keeping the light burning each night and getting little sleep. His food supply was diminished until all that remained were a few potatoes and some dog biscuit. After finishing the potatoes he ate the dog biscuit. He finished these and at the end of two weeks he was so exhaust ed that he could no longer retain his vigil and collapsed. The fact that the light was out was noticed and the matter was reported, with the result that assistance was sent. Loughborough contracted tuber, culosis from the exposure and died. LIFTS 660 POUNDS 910 FEET Aviator Walsh Said to Have Made a New Record at Dixie Army Camp. Augusta, Ga.—What army officers declare is a new record for aeroplanes was made by Aviator Walsh here the other day at the army camp with a Curtis machine, built to meet special speciiications by the war department, in an unfavorable wind Walsh carried fuel ample for four hours’ flying, weighing ISO pounds, and 4S0 pounds added weight, an aggregate load of 660 pounds, on the biplane and climbed to an altitude of 910 feet in seven min utes. The final test, an attempt to reach the required altitude of 2.000 feet with this weight and quantity of fuel in ten minutes, will be made later at Col lege Park, Md. Condemns Gotham Beans. New York—Philip Walsh. 14, of Boston, wbo came here to make his fortune, became homesick in two days He told City Hall Park Policeman Campbell that New York beans were not tit to eat Chambermaid Finds Jewels. Kalamazoo. Mich.—A Burdick hotel chamber maid who found $40,000 worth of jewels belonging to a New York salesman, which had been lost for fourteen hours, received $1 re ward. \ WHY PEOPLE HO TO CANADA Those who are wondering why the number of Americana going to Canada year by year increases in the rates that it does, would not be so surprised were they to accompany one of the numerous excursions that are being run under the auspices of the Govern ment from several of the states, and remain with the settler until he gets onto the free homesteads, which, as stated by Speaker Champ Clark, in the U. S. senate the other day, comprises 160 acres of the most fertile soil and with remarkably easy settlement con ditions. Then watch the results, whether it be on this free homestead of 160 acres or on land which he may purchase at from $15. to $20. per acre, fully as good as the $100. and $150. per acre land of his native state, and which his means will not permit his purchasing. On the part of the mem bers of the U. S. Senate and Congress there is nothing but praise for Canada. Canadian laws and Canadian lands al though the reasonable desire is shown in their remarks, that they pass legis lation, (which is very praiseworthy) that will make the land laws of the United States much easier. It is the success of the American settler in Canada that attracts others, and when experiences such as the fol lowing are related to the friend “back home" is it any wonder that increased interest is aroused and a determina tion arrived at, to participate in the new-found wav up in Canada that means wealth ana health and all that accompanies it. u imam Jonnston, who formerly lived at Alexandria, Minn., settled in the Alberg District near Battle River and in writing to one of the Canadian Government agents, located in the United States says: “We have had no failures of crops during our nine years in Canada. I threshed 120S bushels of wheat and 10S3 bushels of cats in 1911, off my 160 acres. This is a beautiful country. I keep six good work horses and milk seven cows, getting good | prices for butter and eggs. We get | our coal for $2.00 per ton at the mine, | about one mile from the farm. Am ; about one and a half miles from a fine school. As for the cold weather it is much milder here than in Minnesota, j where I lived for 21 years. Our well ! is 35 feet deep and we have fine wa ! ter. Wild land is selling for $1S. to $25. per acre. Improved farms are much higher. I am well satisfied with the country, and would not sell unless I got a big price, as we have all done well here.” Good reasons to account for the number going to Canada. Filipinos Dislike Autos. The reckless and- insolent automo bilist is hated the world over In the Philippines, where most of the auto mcbilists are foreigners, and where the natives have been used to loiter comfortably in the roads after the fashion of easy going southern coun tries, the automobiles have long been a grievance, and, failing to secure ef fective regulation, the Filipinos have adopted the practice of rolling big boulders Into the roadway as a hint not to turn corners at a breakneck speed. Saving His Money. Owens—Say, lend me a fiver, old man. Bowens—If you'd save your own money you wouldn’t have to borrow from your friends. Owens—But it's because l want to save my own money that I borrow from my friends. Denied the Allegation. "You are being trodden under foot.” howled the campaign orator. “You are surrounded by neurotics—there is a paranoiac standing at your very el bow, and—” “Stop roight there,” yelled Pat, “stop there. There's not a par—por—there's not one of thim there fellers In the whole crowd. Me and Mike don’t associate with such bloomin' furriners." The Natural Thing. Bawyer—Of what did you take cog nizance in the saloon? Witness—I took a drink. Better a strong prejudice than a weak conviction. || ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT ij ^ ting the Stomachs and BomvIs of '•$ A\egetable Preparation for As similaling the Food andReguIa Intan’ts^ Children Promotes Digestion,Cneerful nessandRest Contains neither j Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not^arc otic a-'/* isom orSAneEtmam Pump^.m S**ti - //x S—nm - AWAt/Jr 5W£r - Awst SrrA * Apprrmiml - BiCnritmc?* • Hym SreA - ftt ?*'• to'mfrrfrr*" Ffatar t^ C A perfect Remedy forConstipa $’T (ion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, S* J Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of The Centaur Company, NEW YORK. •At6 morijhs old 35D0SEi-J5CE>TS ^Guaranteed under the Food and; Exact Copy of Wrappei CASTORM ForJnfantsandChildren. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of in Use For Over Thirty Years CASTDR1A TM* CINTAUR OOMMRY. HIM YORK CITY For DISTEMPER Pink Eye, Epizootic Shipping Fever £t Catarrhal Fevei Ptit* cure and tire prereotive. no matter how homes at any »r* are Inierted or "exposed." lJquid.piven ..n the tontruo. aotaon the Blood and Glands: expels the potRoaous germs irom the body. Cures* Distemper In Dogi and Sheep ami Ch«*lera In Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy t. ..res la Grtpj*e among human be In pa and is a fire K.daey remedy. 60c and tl a bottle. *5 and 910 a dozen. C ut this out Keepit. M:ow toyourdruflfist. who will (fet it foryou. Free Booklet “Distemper* Causes and Cures." Special Agents wan tea. SPOKH MEDICAL CO., GOSHEN, IND., 0. S. A. You will get full value for every penny you spend on Gal-va-nite Roofing. Although it is 15 pounds heavier than the ordinary roofing, every ounce of its weight serves to make 't more dur gaa. able and serviceable. It Needs No Painting or Repairing vtA First Cost—Last Cost Cal-V’a-cite is attractive in appearance, easy to lay, suitable for steep or fiat roofs, adapted to any kind of a climate. It is tv.s- \ excellent for lining silos. Pui up in roUs of 103 sq.ft, rcilh gal A vanized nails, cement and directions. " trUi Buy G«l-va-nite from your local dealer or send for Oooklets, jkl| '"Gal-va-nite Qualities0 and “The Inside ci an Outside Proposition.” I-Ts FORD M.ANUFACTURIXG COMPANY_ St. Paul Omaha Cfclcaeo Kansas Oty St. Leu'.* PROOF. Tom—Do you tiiink your father dis likes me? Tess—Well, he gave the dog's chain and muzzle away yesterday. The Sailor’s Chest. Bobby—This sailor must have been | a bit of an acrobat. Mamma—Why. dear? Bobby—Because the book says, j “Having lit his pipe, he sat down on his chest.”—Sacred Heart Review. She Knew. Miss Gusher—Oh, please tell me! Do you think poets have to be born? The Poet’s Wife—Yes. borne with. It’s difficult for a man who is broke to break into society. Misunderstood 'Gator. The winter atfernoon was like June, and, taking tea under a palm on the lawn of the Royal Poinciana at Palm Beach, a sportsman said: “This morning I photographed an alligator. My boy, to get him, strip ped and waded into the water up to his chin. The boy felt about with his feet in the mud till he found a big 'gator. Then he ducked down, grab bed the ’gator by the nose and drag ged him slowly ashore ts> the waiting lens.’’ “But," said a girl in white, "wasn't it dangerous?" “Not a bit.” “But I thought alligators ate you!” “No, no,” said the sportsman. “You are confusing the alligator with 'he crocodile. The Indian crocodile eats men and women, but the Florida alli gator is as harmless, literally as harmless, as a cow.” Logical. The car labored heavily over wet and deeply scarred roads. “Have you any idea where we are?” asked Blinks. “No," said Garraway, “though the roads suggest we are near either Wa terville or Rutland—I don't know which.”—Harper's Weekly. We always feel sorry for a stutter ing man who is trying to put in a good word for himself. The more a man expects the mors he will be surprised if he gets it Why Should a Chicken Lay a Soft-Shelled Egg? Because, Willie, the chicken don’t know how to create a hard-shelled egg unless it has some food with lime in it So chicken-raisers often provide limestone gravel, broken oyster shells or some other form of lime. Let the chicken wander free and it finds its own food and behaves sensibly. Shut it up and feed stuff lacking lime and the eggs are soft-shelled. Let’s step from chickens to human beings. Why is a child “backward and why does a man or woman have nervous pros tration or brain-fag ? There may be a variety of reasons but one thing is certain. If the food is deficient in Phosphate of Potash the gray matter m the nerve cen tres and brain cannot be rebuilt each day to make good the cells broken down by the activities of yesterday. Phosphate of Potash is the most important element Nature demands to unit* albumin and water to make gray matter. Grape-Nuts food is heavy in Phosphate of Potash in a digestible form. A chicken can’t always select its own food, but a thoughtful man can select suit able food for his children, wife and himself. "There’s a Reason” for Or ape-N uts Postum Cereal Company, Limited, Battle Creek, Michigan