The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 16, 1913, Image 2

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    FOB THE JSI m
NEWS EPITOME THAT CAN SOON
BE COMPASSED.
MM EVERTS ARE MENTIONED
Mom* and Foreign Intelligence Con*
dented Into Two and Four
Line Paragraphs.
WASHINGTON.
J. A. Herirng of Madisonville, Tex.,
has been chosen by President Wilson
for United States marshal for the
southern district of Texas.
* * •
Majority Leader Underwood has de
clared his opposition to the repeal of
the 5 per cent tariff bill provision on
Imports in American ships.
• • •
Three new battleships and a pro
portionate number of submarines
and torpedo boat destroyers is the
aim of the Wilson administration in
shaping its naval policy for the De
cember session of congress.
• • •
The government has begun its fight
In the supreme court for the principle
that corporations in the hands of a
receiver, with authority to carry on
business, are liable to the federal
corporation tax.
* * •
In an effort to compel the attend- j
ance of congressmen, the house order
ed the arrest of every member absent
without permission and those out of
the city were notified by telegraph
that warrants were outstanding
against them.
• • •
Aigrettes or other bird plumage,
whose importation is forbidden by the
new tariff law, must be removed from
the hats of incoming travelers and
turned over to customs authorities
before the travelers leave the wharf,
according to a ruling by Secretary
McAdoo.
Reports that President Wilson, was
attempting to prod democratic sena
tors into quick action on the currency
bill and a pulbished statement that he
•would class as a “rebel” any demo
crat who did not support him, brought
out an emphatic denial from the
White House.
• • •
An improvement in the condition of
the corn crop in the last month, to
the extent of 22,000,000 bushels in the
estimated final production, was the
feature of the department of agricul
ture's October report. The indicated
final production is placed at 2,373,
000,000 bushels, or 752,000,000 bush
els below last year's record crop.
• * *
Pressing a button at 2 p. m., East
ern time, last Friday, at the White
House. President Wilson released an
electric current that traveled over
land and under sea to the Panama ca
nal and exploded a charge of dyna
mite and destroyed Gamboa dyke.
This dyke is the last great physical
obstruction to the opening of water
communication between the two
oceans, although the wreckage of the
dyke and two earth slides, one at
Cucaracha and another at Gold Hill,
must be cut through before the canal
actually can be opened.
DOMESTIC.
An explosion at Rochester wrecked
the coating and emulsion plant of the
Eastman Kodak company, seriously
Injuring tw ©employes.
* » *
Hearing of arguments on the appeal
of the structural iron men who were
convicted In the dynamite cases at
Indianapolis have been set for Octo
ber 28, 29 and 30, in Chicago.
* • •
Reports have reached Nome that
Solomon, a mining camp, forty miles
east of there, was destroyed by the
•torm which damaged that city. De
tails were not available as all wires
are down.
• * *
The salt production of the United
States has doubled in fifteen years,
last year's output of about 33,330,000
barrels being 7 per cent more- than
the year before.
• • »
The destruction of flocks and herds
in the mountains of Styria. . Austria,
by a pack of wolves, hyennas and
Hons, which escaped from a menag
erie last month, bis been so enor
mous that the Austrian government
has ordered the organization of au
expedition to Mil the wild beasts.
• • *
Fifteen passengers were hurt when
four cars #f New Orleans & North
western train No. 503 rolled down an
embankment near Winnesboro, La.
• None ore believed to be mortally in
jured.
* * •
“Why shouldn’t T vote.” I’m old
enough, am I not?” said ^Grandma”
Sarah Todd, aged 103 years, who reg
istered at Eugene, Ore., as a voter for
the first time in her life. She is a
sister-in-law of Mrs. Abraham Lin
coln. her second husband having been
a brother of the war president’s wife.
* • *
The San Pedro, Los Angeles &
Balt Lake Railroad company was
found guilty and fined in the United
States district court in Lcs Angeles
on a charge of working Its employes
over time.
• * *
Reports to. Commissioner of Indian
Affairs Sells stated that 10,542 acres
of oil lauds offered for lease in the
©sage Indian reservation in Okla
homa bro ght a bonus of $505,315, be
ing an average of $48 per acre. This
ftonus fc in addition to a royalty of
one-sixth of the oil production
• • •
Ernest - A. Muret, dentist without
• license and friend of Hans 8chmtdt,
the slayer of Anna Aumuller, pleaded
not guilty to a /*arge of conterfeit
Ing He was lowed up in the Tombs
•gain in default of $10,000 ball.
Philadelphia is talking of investing
$1,000,000 in a garbage disposal plant.
• • •
Boston 1b completing in Franklin
park an aviary costing $100,000 to
house the city’s collection of birds.
• * •
The new Equitable building in New
York City when finished will be not
only the largest building in the world,
but wil have a rent roll approximat
ing $3,000,000 a year. Thirty-six
acres of rentable floor will be divided
into 2,500 offices.
• • •
James A. Barwick, United States
weather bureau observer, retired, cel
ebrated his seventieth birthday anni
versary at his home at Milton, Pa
Mr. Barwick spent thirty-five years,
half of his life, in the service of the
United States government.
* * *
The much talked of $90,000,000 Un
ion Pacific “melon” is not to be cut
just now. Robert S. Lovett, chair
man of the Union Pacific board has
issued a statement sating that cir
cumstances make it inexpedient to
deal with this subject at present.
* * •
A mob of several hundred angry
citizens stormed the office of Mayor
Wilkinson of St. Marys, Ohio, a so
cialist, in the city hall, and the mayor
barely escaped rough treatment.
Later he himself said that some one
in the crowd had brought a rope.
• * *
Claiming that she was married to
Charlemagne Tower, jr„ on June 7,
1911, in New Haven, Conn., Mrs.
Georgianna Tower, formerly Miss
Burdick, has brought suit at Philadel
phia against Charlemagne Tower,
former ambassador to Germany for al
leged alieniation of he.r husband’s af
fections.
• • •
Commissioner of Mediation Ethel
bert Stewart of the federal depart
ment of labor will recommend forth
with a congressional investigation of
Colorado coal miners as the result of
a conference hed here between the
mediators, Governor E M. Amons and
representatives of the argest coal
operating companies.
• • •
Without firing a shot federal sol
diers have taken possession of Pied
ras Negras, erstwhile provisional capi
tal of the constitutionalists, and end
ed the victorious march of the gov
ernment army, under General Maas,
through the state of Coahuila, the
home of Veneustiano Carranza, revo
lutionary commander-in-chief.
* • •
An old tin can, rusted through in
places, was unearthed in the Wieback
cellar at Winthrop. Iowa, by a work
man who was excavating. He was
about to throw it in the rubbish heap,
when a gleam of gold caught his eye.
Thecan contained $2,000 in gold, sil
ver and currency. The owner of the
premises died a week a ago. The
money was turned over to the heirs.
* * *
Judge John H. Humphries of Seat
tle has issued an order remitting the
penalties imposed on Glenn Hoover,
former assistant attorney general oi
Washington, who was fined $100- and
G. N. Hodgdon, an aged pioneer , and
former member of the legislature,
who was sentenced to six months’ at
hard labor and to pay a fine of $400,
both defendants having been adjudged
guilty of contempt of court for violat
ing anti-street speaking injunctions
directed against socialists.
FORFIGN.
Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the mil
itant suffraget leader, has made all
her preparations for departing fOT
New York. She says she feels physi
cally equal to her American cam
paign, having benefited much from
her sojourn with her daughter, Chris
tabel, who will go with her as far as
Havre.
* * *
The British government has decid
ed to establish an opium monopoly in
Hong Kong at the expiration of the
present agreement and it is thought
that with the control of the traffic in
the hands of the government its grad
ual suppression will be easier. The
staff and appliances of the farmers
are to be taken over in entirety.
• * •
The American (Red Cross orphan
age, erected from funds collected in
the United States at the time of the
great Messina earthquake, has been
formally opened at Palmi. Lieutenant
Colonel George M. Dunn, the Amer
ican military attache at Rome, repre
sented Ambassador Thomas Nelson
Page.
• • • __
President Raymond Poincare ol
Prance, who is visiting King Alfonso
at Madrid, declined to attend a gala
bull fight which had been arranged in
celebration of the. Franco-Spanish fes
tivities.
• « *
The American minister to the Dorn
lean Republic, James M. Sullivan, has
induced the warring factions in that
country to sign a peace pact and the
revolution headed by Gen. Horatio
Vasquez against the government of
the provisional president, Jose Bor
das Valdez, is at an end. \
' • * •
Charges of dynamite have been
placed in over 1,000 holes which had
been drilled in the Gamboa dike pre
paratory to its destruction. Each
hole contains eighty to 100 pounds of
dynamite.
* * *
General Li Yuen Hecg, provisional
vice president of the Chineso repub
lic, was elected vice president for a
term of five years by the united
houses of the Chinese parliament. He
received 610 votes out of 719 cast by
the representatives and senators pres
ent.
• * *
Victoria Mary Sackville West,
daughter of Lord and Lady Sackville,
was married in London to Harold
Stanley Nicholson, son of Sir Arthur
Nicholson, undersecretary of state for
foreign affairs.
• • •
Eight ringleaders of the cannibals
who recently murdered John Henry
Wernea, a German-American mineral
ogist, while he was at the head of an
expedition searching for radium in an
unexplored region of New Guinea,
have been arrested by a patrol, ac
cording to a dispatch from Papua.
ARRESTS DEPUTIES
HUERTA IMPRISONS ONE HUN*
DRED AND TEN LEGISLATORS.
S16N RESOLUTION 0FWARNIN6
Cordon of Federal Troops Thrown
About Building and Soldiers
Invade Chambers.
Mexico City.—One hundred and ten
members of the Chamber of Deputies,
who had signed resolutions of warn
ing to President Huerta as the result
of the disappearance of Dr. Belisaro
Domingues and Senator Forchipias,
have been arrested and lodged in the
penitentiary. Five other deputies
who signed the resolution were ab
sent when a cordon of troops was
thrown about the legislative building
and several hundred soldiers invaded
the chamber.
The arrests followed a demand by
President Huerta that the chamber
withdraw the resolution, which car
ried the threat that the deputies
would abandon the capital, owing to
an alleged lack of guarantee for their
personal safety.
Senator Dominguez Eagle made a
speech in the senate violently attack
ing Huerta, saying that not only had
nothing been done during Huerta’s
regime toward the pacification of the
country, but that the present situa
tion was infinitely worse than before.
He said the currency of Mexico had
depreciated, fields had been neglected
and towns razed and that famine
threatened. He added that the situa
tion was due first and foremost to
the fact that the Mexican people
could not resign themselves to be
governed Dy miena.
Before the hour of the regular open
ing of the session of the chamber at
4 o'clock the basement and roof of
the building had been packed with
troops. Scores of police were scat
tered through the gallery.
When the deputies were in their
places. Minister of the Interior
Manuel Garza entered the chamber.
Simultaneously several hundred fed
eral troops lined up in front of the
chamber.
Senor Aldape ascended the plat
form and read the reply of President
Huerta to the resolution warning him
of the deputies’ intention to dissolve
the parliament and hold their ses
sions elsewhere and demanding an
investigation of the disappearance of
Senator Dominguez.
Final Chapter in Case.
Sacramento, Cal.—The final chap
ter in the Diggs-Caminetti elopement
case, in so far as it affects Marsha
Warrington and Lola Norris, the Sac
ramento girls with whom Diggs and
Caminetti eloped to Reno, Nev., was
written when petitions to declare the
girls dependent children were dis
missed on the recommendation of the
county probation committee. The or
der of dismissal clears the records in
Sacramento county of all charges
against the girls or Diggs or Cami
netti.
Dr. Shaw Not to Speak.
New York.—Dr. Anna Howard
Shaw, president of the National Wom
an Suffrage association, canceled her
engagement to speak at the meeting
arranged to welcome Mrs. Emmeline
Pankhurst, the militant English lead
er, here. Dr. Shaw said her unwil
lingness to speak was due to the fact
that while Mrs. Pankhurst had been
guaranteed $1,500 and part of the
gate receipts she (Dr. Shaw) had
been unable to procure a guarantee
of $1,000 for her cause.
Importation Will Decrease Price.
Chicago, 111.—Chicago packers say
that big importation of beef from Ar
gentina on .Cedric from Liverpool un
der reduced tariff means a decrease
in price throughout the west. Big sur
plus in Argentina will supply the east
and failure of that market will lessen
prices further west.
Robbers Kill a Policeman.
Salisbury, Mass.—Police Officer W.
W. Heath was shot and killed by one
of five men whom he had discovered
in the act of robbing the postofflce.
The men escaped.
Umbrella Makers Strike.
New York.—Taking advantage of a
rainy spell, the United Umbrella Han
dle and Stick Makers' union has
started a strike which it declares will
bring out. 600 silversmiths and 6,000
umbrella makers in sympathy. They
demand recognition of the union.
Sentenced In Italy for Murder.
Messina. Sicily.—Francisco Imbesi,
who attacked and robbed Patrick
Campbell at Portage, Pa., in 1904, was
sentenced to thirty years’ imprison
ment for tl\e crime.
Killed With Butcher Knife.
Kansas City, Mo.—Revenge was the
motive to which the police ascribed
the murder of Charles Sing a wealthy
naturalized Chinese merchant, whose
body, with the head nearly severed
from the trunk, was found in Sing’s
third floor room on the north side.
Condemn Building.
Seattle, Wash.—A two-story frame
structure on the water front is to be
demolished because a rat found to be
infected with bubonic plagtie germs
was caught in the building.
Soon to Be Released.
Washington. — Julian Hawthorne,
the author, and Dr. Morton, sentenced
with him to Atlanta penitentiary
after conviction of complicity in
using the mails to defraud, will be
free men again Wednesday, October
15, when their terms expire.
Bonds Reach a Low Level.
New York.—United States 2 per
cent registered bonds reached a new
low level when a $5,000 block was
sold on the floor of the New York
Mock exchange at 94 W.
BRIEF NEW8 OF NEBRASKA.
Stromsburg is to have a new city
park.
Diller boasts of having the best
roads in the state.
The Missouri synod of the Lutheran
church is in session at WaCo.
Polk is to have a water and electric
lighting system costing $16,000.
Wymore is making efforts to secure
a sewer system for that place.
The Commercial hotel at Greenwood
was destroyed by fire Saturday morn
ing.
The Nebraska-Minnesota football
game will take place at Lincoln Oc
tober 18.
The fortieth annual convention of
the state W. C. T. U. will be held in
Omaha next year.
Mrs. R. J. Woodworth of Wahoo suf
fered a broken wrist when she fell off
the porch at her home.
A charter has been received for the
organization of a lodge of the Knights
of Columbus at York.
Miss Alice Cleaver of Falls City is
soon to start for Paris to spend the
year studying painting.
J. L. Slocum has sold the apples in
his twenty-acre orchard near Shubert
to St. Joseph buyers for $1,700.
Mrs. Mary Flynn, 81 years old, was
found dead in bed at Seward by rela
tives whp had called to visit her.
The Iowa-Nebraska Public Service
corporation at Norfolk has been ad
judged a bankrupt in federal court.
Frank Worthington, a Beatrice boy,
was killed at a fire at Billings, Mont.,
by being run over by a hose truck.
Chicken fanciers of Fremont are
planning on holding the biggest county
show ever held in Nebraska in Decern
ber.
The vestry of the Episcopal church
at Central City has extended t cp.ll to
the Rev. F. \V. Henry of Pittsburg.
Kan.
Attorney Henry Nunn of St. Paul,
who accidentally shot himself in the
foot while hunting, died from blood
poisoning.
The commercial lighting ordinance
was passed by the Lincoln city com
mission without a dissenting vote ar.'i
without comment.
Nineteen to nothing was the result
of the Nebraska-Washburn game on
the Lincoln field Saturday. fhe visit
ors being outclassed.
Mrs. Florence Seidel, the avatrix.
who fell with her hydroaeroplane into
the bay at San Diego. Cal., recently,
formerly lived at Humboldt.
John McCauley, one of the early
settlers of Saunders county, died at
his home near Ithaca from the effects
of a kick by a horse received several
weeks ago.
The Nebraska Federation of Wo
men's clubs held their eighteenth an
nual session at York last week, over
200 delegates being in attendance.
Seward’s new Y. M. C. A. building
will be opened to the public October
23. A series of entertainments lasting
four nights will mark the opening ex
ercises.
One of the most beautiful and in
spiring features of the German day
celebration in Lincoln is expected to
be the flower parade to occur on Wed
nesday. October 15.
Stromsburg began the establishment
of the electrolier system of street
lighting in the business district by
making an initial appropriation of
$1,000 for that purpose.
In pulling a gun through a fence
while out hunting, Jesse Oaxley. a
farmer near Tecumseh, caused the gun
to be discharged. The charge went
through Oaxley’s left hand.
October 18 will be “home coming
day” for the old “grads” and others
who have attended the University of
Nebraska. On that day Nebraska and
Minnesota will clash on the football
field.
During the year of 1913, according
to tabulations made by the state board
of agriculture, the Nebraska corn crop
amounted to $90,299,366 bushels. Val
ued at 70 cents a bushel the crop is
worth $63,209,558.
Frank Manley, a conductor on the
•Union Pacific, was held up in the resi
dence portion of Grand Island and re
lieved of a diamond ring.
Lyle Jackson, a former Beatrice boy.
died at his home at Houston. Texas,
last week of blood poisoning caused
■from a pimple on his neck.
The mid-state poultry association
will hold its annual show at Scotts
bluff in connection with the annual
corn show, December 10, 11. 12.
Accidental discharge of a shotgun
which he was carrying on his lap in
a wagon caused the instant death of
Wm. Scott, aged 35, near Valentine.
For four days Mrs. Fred Wagner of
Johnson suffered pain in her right arm
after a fall in the yard, but she did
not realize the arm was fractured until
she consulted a physician.
Valley county, according to figures
complied by the state board of agricul
ture, is perhaps the leading pop corn
growing county in the United States.
The crop has proven profitable.
Frank Bartos, an Omaha printer, is
the best cotton crochet lace maker in
Douglas county. His display of lace
was awarded the blue ribbon in the
fancy work exhibit at the Douglas
county fair.
riuuiiuir me uiuesi man in me suite
Is Thomas Morris of Custer county,
who was born at Berrew, North Wales,
in 1794, nearly 120 years ago.
Bert Marts, the Rock island brake
man who was shot and killed by a
tramp at Limon. Colo., was a Falls
City boy, the son of Sam Marts, the
chief of police in that city.
At a public sale of dairy cattle on
the Wallace Townsend farm near Bea
trice. eleven milch cows sold at an av
erage price of $77.05 a head. This is
said to be the highest price ever paid
for common milch cows in Gage
county.
Helen De Bruler, a flve-year-old
Broken Bow girl, was killed when she
slipped under the wheels while trying
to climb upon the rack of a moving
wagon.
Abraham Nichols, a peddler, was
Instantly killed Wednesday morning
when a Burlington passenger train
struck his buggy at the main crossing
of Burnham, near Lincoln.
Sylvia Kramer of Syracuse was
probably fatally burned and the fam
ily home demolished by the explosion
of a gasoline lighting plant resulting
from a visit to the cellar with a light
ed lantern.
:}.• V *
ON NEON FIELD
INSTITUTES FOR THE MONTH OF
OCTOBER.
GOSSIP FROM STATE CAPITAL
Items of Interest Gathered from R®
liable Sources and Presented in
Condensed Form to Our
Readers.
The Nebraska-.Minnesota game which
takes place on Nebraska field at bin
coin. October 18, will no doubt settle
the football championship of the coun
try lying west of The Pennsylvania
line. Minnesota is hailed as the
championship eleven of the western
CAPTAIN PURDY
Of the University Team—One of the
Greatest Backfield Men in the West.
conference, and it is expected that the
Nebraska warriors will win the Mis
souri Valley championship title. This
will be the first: time that Minnesota
has met Nebraska on her home field'
since 1902.
Farmers Institute Dates.
C. W. Pugsley. superintendent of
agricultural extension work at the
state university, has announced the
following farmers’ institutes for the
month of October and the dates there
of: Holbrook. October 6; Bartley, Oc
tober 7; l^ebanon, October 8; Waune
ta, October 9; Champion, October 10;
Wallace, October 13-14; Dickens, Oc
tober 14-15; Somerset, October 15-1G;
Stockville, October 17. Spalding. Oc
tober 20; Bartlett. October 21; Eric
son, October 22; Davis Creek church
October 23; Wiggle Creek church. Oc
tober 24; Fairbury. October 29-30-31.
Short courses: Hershey, October 6
10; Paxton, October 13-17; Utiea, Oc
tober 2-24; Farnam, October 27-31.
Alfalfa Best Ever Harvested.
Phenomenal crops of all kinds in
the North Platte river valley are re
ported by Deputy State Auditor Minor,
who has just returned from a trip tc
Morrill and ScottsblufT. Farmers on
lands under the government ditcb
have just finished their third cutting
of alfalfa, which was the best they
ever had. and stacks are waiting in
the fields until balers can get to them
The hay is selling for $8.50 to $9.50 on
board freight cars at shipping points.
There were 351 prisoners in the
penitentiary September 1, and 350 at
the close of the month. Sixteen pris
oners were received on commitments,
one was returned from parole, four
teen were discharged and one was
liberated on furlough.
The opening of the butterine season
was signalized Wednesday by the ap
plication of eiglity-one firms for the
food commissioner’s permission to sell
that product in this state. Previously
about 200 firms had been granted the
same privilege under the existing law.
Total receipts from this class of per
mits have amounted to $2,607 since
July 1. - 1
Thomas Kiley of Omaha has been
appointed by the governor as state
bank examiner, succeeding Eugene
Moore of St. Paul, who resigned some
time ago.
Must Not Overtest Cream.
If a buyer of cream desires to raise
his price and outbid a rival for busi
ness he will in the future be com
pelled to openly announce that he will
pay more than his competitors instead
of trying to get business by over-test
ing cream and in this manner pay more
than his rival and at the same time
make producers believe his rival is
making an unfair test. It Is against
the state law to overtest or to under
test cream bought for commercial pur
poses. This law is upheld by a de
cision given by the supreme court
Because grade stallions are com
pelled to be certified by affidavit of two
persons willing tcwattest that either a.
sire or a dam or the horses was of
pure breeding members of the stallion
registration board think that they
have found a “joker" in the registra
tion law passed at the late legislative
session. The crossbred stallions or
mixtures are barred out by the regis
tration law and the provision just cited
makes it almost Impossible for hun
dreds of grade stallions to be kept In
service in the state. Hence there will
be Only one class left, the pure bred
stallion.
And most men are stockholders in
the Good Intentions Paving company.
There are lots of “also rans” in the
human race.
Mrs-Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion,allays pain,cures wind colicASc a bottled*
Too Needy.
A friend in need generally needs
too much.—New Orleans Picayune.
No thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It's a
pinch of blue in a large bottle of water. Ask for
Bed Cross Ball Blue,the blue that's all blue. Adv
Mixed Metaphor.
“Hey, Jinks, where are you?”
"Can’t you see, you fool, that I’m
under the machine.”
“Well, Jinks, that’s a horse on you!”
TAKESlFF DANDRUFF
HAIR STOPS FALLING
Girls! Try This! Makes Hair Thick,
Glossy, Fluffy, Beautiful—No
More Itching Scalp.
Within ten minutes after an appli
cation of Danderine you cannot find a
Single trace of dandruff or falling hair
and your scalp will not itch, but what
will please you most will be after a
few weeks’ use, when you see new
hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but
really new hair—growing all over the
scalp.
A little Danderine immediately dou
bles the beauty of your hair. No dif
ference how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. The effect is amaz
ing—your hair will be light, fluffy and
wavy, and have an appearance of
abundance; an incomparable luster,
softness and luxuriance.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, and prove
that your hair is as pretty and soft
as any—that it has been neglected or
injured by careless treatment—that’s
all—you surely can have beautiful hair
and lots of it if you will just try a lit
tle Danderine. Adv.
An Ingrate.
“Tightwad says that he owes his
success as a money-getter to his
wife.”
“Yes; but he does not appear at all
disposed to pay her anything on ac
count.”
Wonderful Resemblance.
“The violin resembles the human
voice.”
"Yes, 1 noticed that when my son
practices. It sounds like the voice of
some poor human being who is suf
fering horribly.”
Illustrated.
“Ali things are comparative.”
“Yes; to a cat, for instance, a sau
cerful of cream is the lap of luxury.
STOMACH MISERY
GAS. INDIGESTION
“Pape’s Diapepsin” fixes sick,
sour, gassy stomachs in
five minutes.
Time it! In five minutes all stomach
distress will go. No indigestion, heart
burn. sourness or belching of gas, acid,
or eructations of undigested food, no
dizziness, bloating, or foul breath.
Pape's Diapepsin Is noted for its
speed in regulating upset stomachs.
It is the surest, quickest and most cer
tain indigestion remedy in the whole
1 world, and besides it is harmless.
Please for your sake, get a large
fifty-cent case of Pace’s Diapepsin
from any store and put- your stomach
right. Don’t keep on being miserable
—life is too short—you are not here
long, so make your stay agreeable.
Eat what you like and digest it; en
joy it, without dread of rebellion in
the stomach.
Pape’s Diapepsin belongs in your
home anyway. Should one of the fam
ily eat something which don’t agree
with them, or in case of an attack of
indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or
stomach derangement at daytime or
during the night, it is handy to give
the quickest relief known. Adv.
Natural Result.
“Biliks is broke.”
“That’s why he looks all gone to
pieces.”
Good Citizenship!
Good government is good citizen
ship in action.
£ and thus prove that your
liver is working properly.
It is always the person
with a “lazy liver” that is
downhearted, blue and
despondent. Cheer up—
help the liver and bowels
in their work by taking
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
i
and you have the secret
to health and happiness.
Take a bottle home today.
CULT DISTEMPER
fcaOan be bandied very easily. The rick are cured, and all others in
same stable, no matter how “e> loosed." kept from having the die*
■eease. by using BPOUJC3 LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE. Glv© on
iTCthe tongue, or In feed. Acte on the blood and expels germs of
Sail forms of distemper. Best remedy ever known for mere© in foaL
, One bottle guaranteed to cure one case. 60c and$1 a bottle: •& and
I HO dozen of druggists and harness dealers, or sent express paid by
i [ manufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. Our free
; l Booklet gives everything. Local agents wanted. Largest celling
V horse remedy In exiHicnoe—twelve years.
SHOWN MEDICAL CO.. u*mist*andBaeterfoiogitts, uosnen, =110., U. S. A*
i i
Black Powder Shells
The superior shooting of Winchester
“Nublack” and "New Rival” shotgun
shells is due to the Winchester method of
construction and loading, which
has been developed during over
fiWB forty years of manufacturing in a
iSSm country where shotgun shooting
,:|W is a science. Loaded, shells that
iB meet the exacting conditions of
W American sportsmen are sure to
¥ satisfy anybody. Try either of these
' shells and then you’ll understand.
LOOK FOR THE RED W ON THE BOX
For Your House-the Best
Satisfaction unlimited comes from putting only the best builder’s
hardware into your home. You really can afford only the best,
because yOU*VC ||0t to live with it every day.
When Building Specify No.19 •
Hero Trolley
Ball Bearing
House Door
Hanger
Always
. Works
Right
And
Easy
Richard Wilcox Company S are in use in the Residences ot l hose
who want The Best. Our Double Guarantee Tag attached to this
Quality Hardware. ___________
Silver Lake Solid Braided Sash Cord
Has been in general use since 1868 and is the recognized standard.
It is made bv experienced workmen from best quality selected yarn
—Will nol sirelcb. Saves labor by always coming out smoothly;
saves money because it lasts long. Made by Heniy
W. Wellington Co., Boston, Mass. “Silver Lake”
is stamped on the cord every three feet. The name
is a guarantee of the best COrd that can be made.
We attach our Double Guaraatee Quality Tag
Our Daable Guarantee Quality Tag gives you absolute hardware
insurance. It is attached only to
Best factory Brands
brands that are time-tried and tested. Be sure yon get Doable
Guaranteed Quality Hardware, for your dealer will replace it if
not satisfactory.
Wright & Wilhelmy Co., Omaha, Neb.