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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1914)
7 KANT*#113 of Lhr ijt**p— Hmt&e chapr* that com* •8 th* dartae** on mi* ' •<■ *!-• -if terror aiw! deatl • ■ 47* kJBOtlg Um * • "* that mum; .b* t-ri..; of aid aaiioi tow if :«■ »h**r lb** i«-» r*-2ji*^iii|r sailing :*>rt fruc; The • *tg *■- age** that Tht-iM e* * —Ami e.uk Tb* X it- d of N**» * ork ti »*-i ip bring *s a safe oi V# fcrtife* l an b> tb^ minr*^ •uk-iaiS* abea the i*ha< k> *■4 the <ard* crashed dt*mn " *** * »: *'.>ic fh»- #ton -*•* l|> it fc* * tod ud si.-c i' * a* U that me meet tbs* kur *c *■&<• 'Be »*- ttNfX it »*r*» IkV 014 rtf ■ •btS* •na* tslb s»*r» sad ►trial.*:** trade* at »** a ••tidcr j.*n#b t -laid* "ff »h#cfc ■gnated for t* ;ji. for <#*••* »c coming Tfec strange *tcaur »*• took he* to t*c— ffear. as eight t. of a ►be made bo reply k *_i*t right ob be* e-nark* If *h»-r» had been as*body « •*>• tras,; tie •Tfiuet'i *ottid *-• -** a* *b»r» »a» Bo fog to otsrf■ -■*> Then an* oth t»o tli;cc* * ■ * ’ti*■* *t*n sew! on board • a- uesac c* »c hud seer one of tboar P***.io« a* p» they fell about. It saaitdft hate bore a warning of <H. f; t ter f* r II* eta* out of it all nft* ” ' ’i *ha' sails k< t- tkr moeB ' dbt anc «n» so- answer when tpo* **. *®r rto» an.- light ur tics of life «• board i» an e«. • anmn appan A- der; f *-*• mac* lAacti* tmri, which h»t» Iwd*^ cik». *h» sight of sailor ism* from out tli- ' r v dsrfcnew* The rrr* of "hr out of L terpool Captain Th<»“* >* of Liter-pool in roEBalUi •’■sc*' a» an*h a specter < apt J C Vurta*' »t »a Cr»* c-Xter of th U-ts *t wh-n in pfcaatcm sh:r> paa*-d her by lefis the story of th* vetr.' urujc “It »a* it th*- Indian ocean 'bat »* «a» her—tfce strange ship that I fcii. r-»*— fora**ftr*.~ said Captain % — ’ We w-r*- out of < 'aimtia. bound f \* w York and althourh ’ he*- f-ai* the moon shone and th*- tsar- was *i Mrht that we could —* *f•* * * H *rrtv» lit vatu' Th- .. - - oj- mat -no.*t to make a r i" :•**** *!|-»try \.-1! that made ■ w* t:, ii* look aort of atyatetious *«: • • n* without eloe*r.r a* In a-* an TW*» s—- *s-i> I'rtf* on 'he teasel v* co.-‘ct-t we a sou! .»c toard —*>1- o fetr «be dldaT ac »*-r pa.- ~d right tinder our w**”** :ih*- t a buwurt’* toss away and »* *: ■.*• t *h- til going to foul tin. •She *a* sc. pear that ** could feel •he » *d of he* (tails as she passed he* m* a #.»*» dad she 9 ah- to all - * - n. -d m ln*o the hast meum light Neat da* we f*»-* s’ — t. • tal* us of the vor*f *tat ! retars-ber while I was at sea. and • ••- ■•-trh' th' Phantom -t:p had c*.t&r ■: t-ve wanting Way »* *b» Id • *»• Seen farored I don't •»>t • • <■* rusns rfeer*- tr always *ea » : th - •*» ships are seen by «w*e see*- vt.d not by of her* Rom' • r -a: 'ift for -Tervbody or h . and sometime# thev com" ► ir~P • e-te a '-lend!? earnlnr Tti--*e at man on board who •* • -* ®c* phaatem ship came ’ - *• >f ft * irah- lee-ans* her euf : • ■ tee- a *r *-nd of our «v*i • ■a;;- . and t hen his ship went down with t of hoard he continued to .-awn* th- e» Naiu**Ily a* he *eh fro: would >-tiow trmseif or • . • ; p. •*!-. a font 1 '-ant aay It*'- v-d all tha: trrself All that 1 • » * j* ’hat th- phantom ship did •was as r*e describee tt“ r. e mat thnlfite- *ale« of : p**aranee of phantom *f *' b« a retired first mate. »h • - m. «d unde* Capt Jot'ti r * f-i-.i • on U*e y«t! tramp Ma r - :.d 'tie M*d-:ra ir Hraxi! ~f a j*... - hr. tthiti* was a bluff di ree* ft* *• ' • ' - • perw>»t.said th tr .t- a - tie tusc 'tti* *o4—an-- for - •. • d** tared was mer-lv super s'!* !te crew were pot apt to #P-a* - * loud of thetr . • .-ua'uril *«»* * -nee* That the* had them bow.*** »a> were enoarh and as I f t more approarhab)* than a ?* • * trs ooMtMm. they were wee. st* • to tell their stories to tn “Th-r* *»* cue fellow aaonr them carnet Could wh-m l could not help wtsJlrt be-an*. of the strained and ainr-.** hunted look on his face I tmci - **Ter,d» with him on purpose to rr* at th- reaaor for his queer look and is* day wher. 1 cauunt him white and shudd-rinr on the forward de« k I eo* t* out of him “It seetred that a eon pie Of rear? be'rt** h* bad beer, on the brtdice of a iu.-*'-r rer re*— ro’.r.:ns between Elcrstou and v**« Tort when they azar orcjr mg jPKJurrc^rr 'Szznp :i*a run down a ship in a fog The tael gone down with all on board t>*-for» anything could lx* done to save itietL and this man had seen the last of h*-- ctv* leaning over the side and cursing at htm horribly, just before he was sucked into the water. He promised to find me out and to do for me wherever 1 should go,’ said ’b* shuddering wretch, ‘and he'll do it toe 1 look for him every night and 1 know he'll get me before lone 1 warned him to keep quiet about hi.- '• ..re and not mention his story to t’aptitic Stebbins nor to any of the ■ "• » 'or a.- lick w c uld have it. with such a captain we had on board about as superstitious a lot as 1 have ever seen Italians mos- of them, and so bound to tell ‘heir -tones of appari tions that the captain had already caught one of them at it and had him hogged as an example to the others. My mac didn't look any more con tented as the days passed and I caught him more than once whisper tic with some of the Italians 1 asked him wha' they were talking about and at first he mumbled that it was noth ing hut at last he admitted that the saiior* had several of them seen strange sights during the night watch They all decided that again and again They had seen a figure with wildly * sting arms appear from the dark tiesw The man was always cursing horribly but be was gone in a second and they could not lell exactly what h<- said "I tried to comfort Gould with the >a tr.a- stnoe tne man had not ap peared to him there wag no reason that ho should regard the apparition *hat of th> man he had run down, but he would not let this ease his mind :n th* slightest It was just •he th" after our conversation when be was on watch that the climax of the thing cam" "I heard a terrific scream from the br.dge, aLd •*<■ did everybody else on board I was the first up there, but th‘- poo- fellow who was whiter than any human being I have ever seen, could not tell me what bad happened before •'aptaln Stebbins had run up ot: the bridge and was shaking him declaring that he had a relapse of the ft ver. which we all knew he had suf :• t«l after coming off the voyage when he had run down a vessel. The fellow had been too much startled, however, this time to be managed even 1»- Captain Stebbins * I did see him.’ he declared, ‘and he was curi ng and waving his arm at me just as he did when he went di w-n. The ship came up just like tt did before out of the fog There >t was all of a sudden a great gray thing and there was he waving hi arms and screaming curses at me. »nd then we kept right on running stra ght through the ship. That was all of It, and so far as I know he never saw the apparition again and he had no more hard times that fall to the lot of most sailors. Hu- here was the remarkable part of •he 'hmg if he had been the only cne to know that anything strange had happened, then you might think It just the figment of a brain over WTOught with fever But it wasn’t only h»s scream that brought captain and crew running to his side Just at the time when he saw the phantom ship and as our own vessel went through it. every man on board fe't a peculiar sensation It was some thing hke an earthquake and some thing like 'he Fhock that might come * from running a vessel down." ft was on board the Marlenne N’ot . tcbohm. a freighter sailing between ! New York and Live rpooi, that a spec ter appeared with such f>ersistency i that tor a long time until the vision tant.'hed forever no member of the crew ever consented to make a second voyage The Nottebohm was one of the old Liverpool packet ships, which carried steerage passengers as well as freight During one of her pre vious voyages the captain and several of her crew had had a terrific strug gle. in the course of which the cap tain had beec so injured that he had died as a result of his wounds. No matter what the skeptical might say, crew after crew which shipped on the Marianne Nottebohm after this trag edy left the vessel at the end of the voyage swearing that every night a sper-pai figure appeared from the pilot house and wandered over the vessel, seeking everywhere apparent ly for something or somebody. There was a terrific storm one night and the apparition was for once in a way pretty well forgotten in the more pressing perils of the moment The night was very black and no one felt any too secure as they slipped on through the darkness. Suddenly they felt the ship come about so svtftly that they knew something strange must have happened. '*rnusuaJ as it was." stud Capt F. C Norton, who tells the story-, "we ! could not stop to find out about it i that night, for every man was too ' ho; on his own part of the work to pay much attention to any other's. After everything was all over and we could take time to talk about it :he nest day the helmsman told us that a spectra! figure he had at first thought to be the captain had stood beside him, showing him how to lay his course. It was not until the helmsman had handled a charm his daughter had given him that he dis covered his visitor was a spirit. The power of the wraith was broken at that and the helmsman put about Just in time to avoid an uncharted reef the spectre had evidently been guid ing him onto. "Hut the Swede and his Italian mate must have seen something of the vision that night, also, for in thr mornmg they looked like dying men and they could not be persuaded to ship again for the next voyage. Aft erward we heard that they had been members of the crew which attacked the former captain of the Marianne. No doubt the murdered captain came back looking for some of his old as sailants and when he found them sought to drive the vessel on the reef Cecil Rhodes's Engs. Cecil Rhodes used to take a coop of hens on board to provide fresh eggs on his numerous voyages between England and South Africa. But those were three weeks' journeys, and not a mere flve-dav crossing of the Atlan tic. Hence another prominent South African personage was asked why he did not follow Rhodes's example and provide himself with the luxury of newlaid eggs at sea “Oh. I don't bother to take a coop of fowls on board." he replied, "but I tip the bos un who looks after Rhodes's hens, and I get Rhodes's eggs." Had Right to Select Place. Bobby, mv son,” exclaimed the dls mayed mother as she saw all her boy's belongings stacked in a corner of the closet, "haven't I tried over and over to teach you that you should have a place for everything"" "Yes. mother.” said the boy cheerfully, "and this is the place ” GLOW WORMS ANESTHETICS Hsfw* *>. MctBf t® (wr rb* *(o» sufwta -:«t* ar ar«**thetk »" • - r r'ab**- lc tb*- C®r»»;rv -niorct* bis victim rivaling • !! • the wonder* of modern •**r**n »tort render tbs isunt In ara* the wiyoc opcntN «e b;tt TV uaoa: not- lc a «nm!1 «aa* -i"< '-b* eti» of a cherr*. wfelrti Hi taot u.-a*ber roTlect* ic oa the stubble and other Ions dry stalks by the roadside, re maining there motionless in profound nw-ditation. tb-oughout the scorching summer days. It is in some such rest ing place as this that I have often ***** rrit ileged to light upon the iatcjyris banqueting on the prey »h:ih he had just paralyzed on Its shak> support by his surgical arti fices But he is familiar with other pr» serves. He frequents the edges of the irrigating ditches, with their cool soli, their varied vegetation a favorite haunt of the mollusk. Here he treats the game on the ground and. under these conditions, it is easy for tne to rear him at home and to follow the operators performance down to ths smallest detail Or You May Go Hungry. Oon t trust the fellow who wants to borrow money for br--,,;kfast with the promise of taking you tut to dinner. ~M«a<-er~ Act suae Te'■oug* Feet Maa? la as asaen.blaite re *rtiU. addressed by Mow Helen Keller m*re»-wd that tfess dwtlnnuebed dea aid b. t id ernnac baited to her re otarfce aid arfccoaWae applause a' the proper moment jaat as if she hat keeS l« fai! poaaeasioa of her hear tBC. says it’ fioaum Post Miss V*r> the devoted ..nstmetor of Him Keller was approached by several a/ter th« had adjourned and she «ai iras'^ to espiaso the "irrsterT * “Very « :up*e.“ she iaufbrd Notict j of the applause was carried to Miss Krller by the vibrations that she felt through her soft-soled shoes while standing on the platform." Ancient Monkish Burial Ground. Fkelefons in cowls were unearthed during the recent excavations m the 'Tiurch of Ola.refontaine, near Ram t* millet. Prance The workmen dis covered a sepulchre dating from the eleventh century containing the skele tons of 20 monks still enveloped in their cowls and cassocks. Bird Killed by Aeroplane. A bird was behead.'! by an aero plane at Hendon. England. A dozen aviators, including several of the com petitors in the Brighton Hendon race, were out. and at one time no fewer than eight aeroplanes w*re in the air When the HandlevPage machine re turned from a flight decapitated partridge was found rv one of the planes. The bird had apparently been caught by the propeller and whirled <m to the plane without the abator Mr. Whitehouse, noticing !t. REVIEW OF FOQTBALI One Upset After Another Startler FnlJowers of Game. Victory of Army Over Navy Climax c Season of Gridiron Surprises— How Teams Will Shape Up for Games This Fall. With the Army beating the Navy a the Polo grounds, another surprise ?o the football season, when the gam* ended, was registered. The midship men. with their brilliant record in th* ^arly season games, were the favorites but they were toppled ever as Dart mouth was at the Brush stadium whet a favorite over the Indians. These tuo surprises were as start ling to many football followers as thi show mg earlier :n the season by Col gate, and the showing the Tigers mad* against Harvard, which many though would have an easy time disposing o the Orange and Black. Then came the Contell-Pennsylvanii i game, in which the Ithacans gave th< average follower of the sport a job when they triumphed over the Quak ers. gaining their second victory ovei the Red and Blue in the long series. The Indians paraded through the sea son with a good record, and there ar* some who claim they are ent:t’ed T( footbai! honors in the east, but this is the honor Harvard men are claimins ; for the Crimson. Dartmouth, too ; would have been out with a claim tc ; that intangible astern title had the Green beaten the Indians. This was ; the only Dartmouth defeat of the sea ; son Gridiron dopesters. now that the? can get no more surprises for a year it football, are figuring how the bit teams will shape up next fall Prince ton and Harvard will be better off. sc far as veteran material is concerned Captain Storer of Harvard. 1 than Yale. They will lose only three men by graduation in .Tune. Yale, on j the other hand, will lose six men in ! June. Captain Storer. O'Krlen and Hitch j cock will leave Harvard on graduation ; day. As these men played on the line, the star Crimson back field of Brick ley, Mahan. Bradlee and Logan will be left intact. The graduation of Captain Storer and Hitchcock will leave the two tackle positions vacant, and there are no substitutes who have wen thefr letters in this position. Only three substitutes who have won their "1C will be graduated. Captain 11 obey Baker, Phillips and Emmons will be the men lost to Princeton by graduation, and while their loss will be greatly felt by the 1 Tigers the coaches have some good material in the substitutes and from I the freshman eleven to fill their places. | Harvard may have to shift its line to fill the holes due to the graduation of Storer a_ad Hitchcock, unless this year's freshman tackles show up well. Y'ale will lose Captain Ketcham. Pendleton. Martins. Warren, Avery and Ainsworth, played on the line. MacLeish. Hubbard. Arnold. Brann and Way won their letter this year as [ substitutes in the line, and the coaeh ; es believe that they can be made into a strong set of forwards. Talbot and Carter will be the only regulars left in Blue's line. The back field will have plenty of material. Ainsworth will be the only man to be graduated, leaving Knowles. Wilson and Guernsey In their old posi tions. This trio will be reinforced by several strong men from last year's team who were unable to play this i fall, including Pumpelly and Markle. ; Wheeler, last year's quarter back, will : be the only substitute back field plav : er to be graduated. Offers $10,000 for Player. Del Howard, former manager of the Louisville team, and now manager of the San Francisco team, announces that he stands ready to give the Chi cago National league team $10,000 for the immediate return of Outfielder Johnny Johnson, drafted by the Cubs last September. Howard is, of course, safe in his offer, inasmuch as it would be practically impossible to get John son. who now holds the world's rec ord for stolen bases in a single sea son. out of the major leagues. Will Teach Chinese to Run. James A. Hunter, the University ol Illinois quarter-mile dash star, who was a member of the relay team which won the mile championship at the University of Pennsylvania relay races ; In Philadelphia last April, will go tc Peking. China, to become director oi Intercollegiate athletics for the Young Men’s Christian association. Powelson to Captain Knox. Abram Powelson. left half back, has been elected captain of the Knox col lege football team for 1914. INTERCOLLEGIATE HOCKEY CHAMPIONS Vale's Star Hockey Players. From all accounts Tale is going to play an important part again in Intercollegiate hockey this coming season. A $1W.<V' ice rir.k has been constructed at New Haven. The opening of the hockey season finds the tale team, the crack players of the winter sport, who by defeating Harvard las: year, -won the championship honors in fine shape Front row. left to right: Dickey. McDonald. Odeway. Captain Heron. Gore. Middie row. left to right: S. Coe. H. Sproul. M Herron. \V. H. Swee ney. Schiller Back row. left to ffght: Coach Howard. Mudge. P. Swift, F. H. Kangs. M. W. Cans. .!r. SKATERS TO DECIDE HONORS World's Championship Will Be Settled in Meet at Milwaukee in March —Many to Compete. The first amateur and professional roller skating speed championship races ever held in the history of roller skating will be run off in the River } view skating palace. Milwaukee, dur ing the latter part of March. 1914. Julian T. Fitzgerald, president of the Western Skating association, who has been promoting the event for the past 2° months, is the general manager of i the meet. Roller rinks throughout the I'nited States were after the event, including those at St. Louis. Kansas City. Charleston. W Va.. Detroit. Buffalo and Cincinnati. The meet was award ed to Manager Joseph W. Munch of the Milwaukee rink for $1,000. In April. 1912, a movement was started to raise money by popular subscrip tion for the meet and to help defray ! the expenses of the amateur cham pions from the different states. . First prize for the amateur cham oionship is a silver loving cup Sec ond. third, fourth and fifth prizes will be gold, silver and bronze medals The winner of the professional cham pionship will be awarded a diamond , medal Other prizes will be gold. sO Iver and bronze medals. In addition, the professionals w ill race for a purse of $500. The champion skaters of England : and France arrived in American a , short time ago. It is estimated that at j least 200 amateur and professional skaters will compete, making the event the first real championship meet ever held in this or any other country. Hughey Jennings announces that the Tigers will start to train at Gulfport about February 5. • • * Derrill Pratt has found the going too rough as an officer of the Players’ fra ternity and has resigned • • • Chick G&ndill. the Senators' first sacker. will start training early in February at West Baden Spring • • • Manager Red Dooin believes that the 1914 pennant race will be one of the toughest in National league history. Walter Johnson is doing farm work i in Kansas. Other great men with less | speed could take a lesson from this. Georgetown is to be on the schedule of either Harvard or the Army next ! season—at least. Georgetown thinks so. Harvard ■ varsity football players will be asked to refrain from writing signed ar icles for the newspapers next season. Frank Chance has worked together a pretty fair club that it is believed will cut quite a figure in the 191-1 pen nant race. As a result of boxing matches, the state of New Tork is richer by $110. 000, according to the report of the comptroller of the Empire state. • • • Not one of England's five classic races for three-year-olds this season went to a favorite. The Oaks, at 8 to 1. was the lowest odds against one of the winners. .. • • • Tracery is coming in for all sorts of praise from the English papers, the Field particularly pointing out the re I markable achievements of August Bel mont's horse. • a • Although outweighed by 26 pounds. ‘Battling’' Lavinsky, the much talked of heavyweight boxer, handed a clean beating to Jimmy Coffee, the Dublin giant, in ten rounds at Madison Square | garden. AFTER FRANK GOTCH’S CROWN Effort Being Made to Get Zbyszko. Po lish Wrestler, tc Take Part in Elimination Matches. Zbyszko. the Polish wrestler, who has been competing in an open tour nament in Paris, has been offrred one of the largest guarantees ever made to a wrestler other than a world's champion to return to America to Zbyszkc, Polish Wrestler. take par; in elimination matches plan ned by a Boston promoter. Foreign stars now here include Gus taf Fristonsky, the Bohemian heavy weight : Ivan Mamutoff. a member of the Czar of Russia bodyguard, and Alex Aberg. the Finland champion. So, with Zbyszko and Mahmout. the Bul garlhn. these men constitute the most prominent of the contenders for the crown held by Champion Frank Gotch, v, ho has retired. ANTIPODEAN HITS BASEBALL Australian Cricketer Severely Criti cizes American Game—Associat ed With Spirit of Bluffing. Baseball as played in America is se verely criticized by a member of the Australian cricket team which recent ly toured the I'nited States and Cana da. A Sydney paper containing an inter view w ith the cricketer on the return of the team to Australia has just been received here. ■'Candidly,” the Australian athlete is quoted, ,-I don’t like baseball as play ed in America. Baseball in Australia is a fine game, played in the spirit of our cricket. But that spirit is not known in American baseball, which is a professional game and, associated with bluffing of a character foreign to the Australian and English ideas of sport. "There is. of course, money in it, but if baseball is ever to become a big game here it wrill need to be di vorced from the spirit which pervades its American atmosphere." Hoffman After Franchise. Danny Hoffman, the veteran out fielder. who was with the Indians a couple of years ago. is reported to be after the Bridgeport franchise of the Eastern association. Hoffman is one of the few players of the old guard who have saved a part of their base ball earnings, ar.d he is anxious to in vest some of it In the game that made him a living. Bridgeport is Danny’s heme, and he believes he can show a balance on the right side of the ledger if he can secure control of the club. Billy Hallman, also a former Indian, is on the Bridgeport roster. Growing Jealous of Baseball. Joseph Lally. of the Canadian ama teur Athletic union, will endeavor to have special lacrosse sticks manufac tured for the use of school children which will in the future do away with I the cry that baseball was superseding j the Canadian national summer game j because it was so much cheaper to ] buy baseball bats than lacrosse sticks. He will donate 13 medals for the J championship team of any organized 1 school district in Canada. Chesbro Seeking Job. Jack Chesbro. the man who invent ed the spit ball and the man who lost the American league championship for the Highlanders by a wild pitch. Is again knocking at the door of base ball for a berth. He wants to be come a manager. He haj applied to the Federal league for & job. Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends all Stomach misery in five minutes. Dc some foods you eat hit Lack— taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down; Pape's Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badlv your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you moot is that it strengthens and regulates your stom ach so you can e3t your favorite toods without fear. You feel different as soon as ‘ Pape s Diaiepsm" comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch ing. no eructations of undigested food. Go now. make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large fifty cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indiges tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Ad* Forlorn Objects. "'ihere is something pathetic about a deserted house that has fallen into ruins." ■ 'Yes. i:.deed. And sometimes a pair of discarded suspenders will move a sentimental person to tears.” Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CA5 TOK1A. a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of i In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castcria It s the unexpected that often hai> pens. even when we bring it on our sehes Only the ignorant ever try to act smart THE MAYOR SAYS: In His Home No Other Bemedy So Effective for Colds as Pe nma. MAYOR B. S. IRVIN. "Washington, Georgia. *1 herewith reiterate my commen dation of Peruna- It certainly has benefited our daughter In every tn Etince when she was suffering from cold. I have frequently used Peruna In my family and have found it an excellent remedy for colds and also aa a tonic. I often recommend it to my friends. Peruna seems to be indis pensable in my family, as no other remedy has been so effective in cases of cold" EVERY FAMILY wishing to be protected from cold should have Pe ruaa In the house constantly. Also a copy of the latest edition of the “Ills of Life." sent free by the Peruna Co, Cclumbus, Ohio. Those who prefer tablets to liquid medicines can now procure Peruna in tablet forms Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna Lucky Day Almanac for 1914. Rheumatic Twinges yield immediately to Sloan's Lin iment. It relieves aching and swollen parts instantly. Reduces inflammation and quiets that agon iring pain. Don’t rub—it pene SLOANS LINIMENT Kills Pain gives quick relief from chest and throat affections. Have vou tried Sloan's? Here’s what others saj: Relief from Rheumatism Tooth+r has ULcd one 60c. bottle of Sloan a Liniment, and althoorh she ia OT«r 8S years of age. she has ob tained great relief from her rheuina t»m —Mr*. E JL IJndolouf, Gilroy , Col M Good for Cold and Croup A little boy next door had eronp. I gare the mother Sloan's Liniment to She gave him three drops on sugar before going to bed, and be gotnn with out the croap in the morning.”—Mr. W. H. Strung*, 3721 Elmwood Avo.,Chiaamow UL Keuralgia Com Sloan's Liniment ia the best medi cine in the world. It has relieved me of neuralgia. Those pains have ail gone mid I can truly say yocr Liniment did stop them-”j~dgr». C. M. Dowkor ofjohtuo At .11 D„.Wrt. Pri«. 25a.. 50c i S1.00 Shan’t fotractiv. P.ookkt oa ll Ml imllmw, MSS.