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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1914)
SPORT IN ALBANIA f‘ 1:1, <c: • *r -r.t that race Vll.iam of W'i«-d oc cnpMm the thr-ne of Albania ■fill r *e birth to some hope of su&cieet tranquility be ing restored to allow of shooting there scam; at any rai* in that part of the -country which to opt - ( «rf» For two years this capital hunting ground has been closed to * portsaiei while human warfare 'aged aB around it. out no fighting has tag.* place over the » or 3* mite* ° ******* which oTer the beet and taw*t *~t a! aMe shooting, ao th. gan>e ba> .gd a good r*wt. and. * hat is more. ' ** I-rohahly been or ret, down from in. < stwtoi WgHiM into this quieter ha»*n It to easy to pas* two or even three Booth* in shooting the reverts rtmad the harbors which are opposite «'"*rfu. and four of these are such snug <utura|.> that even an open -'•** *‘-d is perfectly secure Cut tefv small but well found, can be hired at * orfu. and are a every wav ade q —ate ' e this trip The sea journey f»osa < <rfu to the farthest harbor is *** more than U mite# and to the t=oares’ about eight so. as the little cttiers saJ wet and the salher Is ►month, great pleasure to added to the trip from a sailing point of view. The •*•***? rather resemble* Scotland. deep water and .good bolding are found te along, and- ut fact, the little Inlets are ao snug and wen masked by the •nBowwta iw ;bat a i .•.ton yacht can la; lust ns.de and hr quite hidden AUMit this time of the year the snow come* down on the mountain top* and drive* the woodcock to the warmer «er -r-» on the roast and very miner c*s they are it fart I abound think h would punte anyone to find bettor w ao0-'<ark shooting. go where they would' Tie- mare be* also tee* with stoke and some thousand duck teal and the like Sigh: In from the see be tort stormy weather Even the best however r*- but small bags at *r. •> gam* fa*r. Baling as It is. for th* Hfir ia«t only So to 4* minutes, and the surrounding land to so high that st a itugouKhte to see the birds against ft at dusk, while by waiting tJl they are right overhead, the chance* are they s~e the rportsmar. first and soar up owt of shot Flock* of pelicans pay occasional visits to - MinriMO mar*!., bat 5 have never seen fiawiTvtgo iwwtd** ' —ft ikmirlud there to good sport for the r-.Se The country teems with v .i« bat aad :t a lesser de gree i» r tome ou' at one covert. The ‘«a »pberde form up as heaters; fro* til to eight are enough to drive *b» •-evert* property but the more the »err: * and two francs a day is all 'bey ask. the head beater, who places th. guns a: d knows the run of the game, a ants of course, a tittle more. The; at- a *<*.dcrfu ,v pleasant race ta deal with, and it ail the years i i - * eh ti. .i.'.ry I have never ■fcemrd of '.heir giving any trouble to Engl -4 ms* They habt freely among imsj* iv. no doc Of and still more -— ■■ J Ay TMPAyr 7Z&AXO -rr; -• rp pr- cxAlP > 3ACCHO - T3FJ&.7ZZ Y A 'jlA/l ZZtPjrOtfA SfOAHEO agxn>:. « rr^r' n.-s> y-ze "dogs Ire- . iiCi’.nst the Turks, who ride rough shod over them and take their' beep and mules v. ithout so much as 1 b> your leave " liut the sylvan shep- j '-‘-rd as f'-und in this particular re- j r • n. Is in every way a good fellow and entirely reliable if w ell treated The | :. > danger lies in getting mixed up ! some local affray, as we did once, when t»i* bullets -ew freely over our heads, the Turks loosing off merrily, as is the'r li’tle way! Obviously, alas! our sporting rifles must be a sore! temptation to them. 1 have had one of these ragged individuals come and ' sit down Close to me while waiting for the beaters, and beg to be allowed to handle niv rifle Needless to say. I have never b«en quite so confiding! Flint locks were used by the Turkish soldiers who patrolled this coast until three v.-urs ago. four foot barrels rich ly caparisoned with brass, firing huge iieri'-al bullet- implements better •tiled to adorn a museum than to pro tect life ir. an uncivilized country. The treatment these guns received, how- j ever was not conducive to their shoot ing -in. cat. as 1 nc" saw one of these Turk bang his gun down on the rock and jump n it. as a punishment for mis irg a hare' The "bashes" on the Parrel bor-- witness to this being no unusual transaction. These represent TO LOCATE NEW ALASKAN RAILROADS £*S2 1 ' are L * at Pr* vnci Monts and William C. Edes. These - • •: a».pt*d b> President Wilson as members of the Stawkss et|Wn«rlin commtaston. which is to have charge of the location of * - . ra * m> :l Alaska Lieutenant Moars was the chief ra.Sr ad and was suggested for this new work by 1 • . - r Ed*-- was formerly the chief engineer for the North • a . ac : • ~tna. He i- the man who located and built -? ■: - - . :• • ■ - of mountain railroad for the Santa Fe and ' : Par • T! • • a. .: ytmrs are shown its the photograph poring - *-* * : aj *r .. *> a it '*-ricr department at Washington They are .ordered u prc*.-*- it once to Alaska to begin their task. stives of law and order have by now been requisitioned on active service, and a good job, too. as they merely ex- j torted the wherewithal to support I their useless lives out of the Albanian j shepherds, until the latter got out of all patience, and within my personal experience three of these wretched T urks were murdered. The shepherds look to their dogs for protection as much as anything. ft;d train them ac cordingly, so it is well to keep a good look-out for these brutes. Considering that they are as big as wolves—in fact, practically indistinguishable from j them—it is no laughing matter when i they set upon you three or four strong, j But for sport such as there is in Al- , bania, you must expect to take a few risks, and as it is obtainable from the 1 fastness of your own yacht, with all the conveniences of civilization close a't hand, this country mnst be reckoned as offering very exceptional facilities for sportsmen.—B. S. Hughes. Improved Method of Farming. Great interest is taken in Prance just now in a new method by which the yield of crops per acre is enor mously increased. In one test case the increase of wheat has been three times above that grown in similar soil In the same neighborhood. The remarkable value of the meth od is indicated by the statement that it has made twenty grains of wheat produce 700.000 in one year. The method consists in preparing seed beds in widely spaced lines on very mellow land: then at the end of two months dividing the tufts springing from each grain, replanting each of these rooted shoots thus de tached. and finally in hoeing and earthing up these new plants many time in such manner as to provoke at all the points brought into inti mate contact with the earth the growth of numerous adventitious shoots, each of which bear an ear. Dangerous Jewelry. All bracelets and rings have been barred from West Virginia factories by the state labor commissioner, I. V Barton. He declares that jewelrv worn on the hands of working girl's has caused more accidents in the factories of West Virginia than al most any other thing. ‘‘Bracelets, especially of the chain variety, not tight fitting, invariably drag a hand or arm into some fast whirling machine, and rings are also apt to catch,” he says. Many Industrial companies have co operated with the state labor depar' ment, and some manufacturers have already taken the precaution to bar jewelry from their factories. Relative Values. Dunbar—Did the woman who sued Pollard Doubleday get anything? Sprague—No: but she got more than Mrs. Double-day did.—Judge. slender or plump women Lwac« Authorities 6c cn Reccrd as D sag'ae<ng as to the Best Female Type. Ope of Use lxmdoB papers has put tfce fnotite to it* readers. ‘Is the slender eomaa or the plump woman tha idoai type*" It aroae from a di» lxt'—eo. i amuse the physiologic*! *a4 artistse authorities. Kate l pact l Jerk writes is Leslies The American doctors hare declared .hat the plump woman is the standard; while the Eng lish artists say that the thin woman approaches more nearly to the nor mal type. “There is no question,” writes one. “that the new Sgure,' long and willowy the result of the modern ut'.letic movement, is superior in vi tality and natural grace to the old khon and stumpy figure. The tail, thin women is freer and more healthy, a better comrade for her husband " Another says; “Surely there is a golden mean between the plump and the meager. Let a woman aim at keeping her mind active and her body fit. and she will find that she can iftve a good figure"—which seems to me highly illogical. Who has not known women with the most active of minds and of bodies wbose figures, ac cording to the received standard, are absolutely "dowdy?" “A Woman of Forty" writes sensibly, "Why not recognize the fact that there may be several equally good physical types? The girl of twenty may properly be slim, while the woman in the thirties looks quite as normal if Bhe Is plump.” Fewer Accidents. A statement issued by the state detnanaorst at mines shows that the fatal accidents la aad about the bi tominous coat aian lor the three month* endiac March 31. 1914. num bered 1 * as acainst izt for the same l<mu4 ta 19IX The inside accidents numbered »' as acainst 112 and the accidents on the surface 10 as •Plt»t It. CM tbe W> hilled inside d&rfnc 1914 id were killed by falls, 24 by mine cam. 5 by seSocauoe from gas. 1 by i= i S - . f* f . Ai explo^.ves. 2 by premature blasts. 2 by falling into shafts and slopes and 8 by miscellaneous causes. It 1913 Te were killed by falls, 24 by cars. 3 by explosives, 1 by blast and 9 by miscellaneous causes. During 1914 the inside fatal acci dents were 14 less than in 1913. The accidents on the surface were 4 less in number. English as She Is Spoke. Knicker—I'm out for prison reform. Docker—I'm going in for it too. Not a Tempting Offer. He was an idle Irish boy, but he had the Irishman's ready wit. He had shipped on board a man-of-war, where he annoyed the boatswain by his lazi ness. Seeing him on the maintop one morning gazing idly out to sea, the boatswain called out to him: "Come down out of that, ye rascal! Come down out of that, an Oi’ll give yez a dozen whacks wid me rope!” “Faith, sorr,” replied the boy, “Oi wouldn’t come if ye offered me two dozen!" PIONEER DAY SECOND SUNDAY IN JUNE. GOSSIP FROM STATE CAPITAL items of Interest Gathered from R* liable Sources and Presented In Condensed Form to Our Readers. i Western Newspaper Union News Berries. Hog Cholera Day. In an effort to familiarize hog rais ers of Nebraska with the various phases of hog cholera and vacination, one day in each month has been set aside at the Nebraska university farm for the instruction of anyone inter ested. The first day has been set for Wednesday. June 10. Instruction will i he offered the second Wednesday in | each month thereafter as long as the demand warrants. The visitors will inspect the scrum plant, see the dif I ferent processes of making serum and j virus, and witness the vaccination of I hogs. They will also examine the cholera infected hogs and the car casses afier the post mortem is made, i From the post-mortem the stockmen I are expected to become familiar with cholera diagnosis. Lectures on choi I era prevention, as well as other topics ! of interest to hog raisers, will be ' given. Instruction will begin at 9 ! ocloek and last thruout the day. No ! charges will be made. WHI Observe Pioneer Day. The initial observance of Pioneers’ 1 Memorial day. created by the legisla ture of 1913 and set for the second Sunday in June, will be observed in many places in the state by appropri ate programs and exercises of interest to old settlers. The act to establish Pioneers' Me morial day was suggested by I)r. Sam uel W. McGrew of Auburn, introduced i by Senator Walter Kiechel, and reads as follows: "Be it enacted by the people of the state of Nebraska, that the second Sunday in June in each year shall be known as Pioneers' Memorial day. and i the same shall be set apart for hold ; ing suitable exercises in the schools and churches of the state, and when possible in the cemeteries and over the graves of departed pioneers, in 1 recognition of the men and women who served and sacrificed as pioneers in the settlement of this great state, and that the present inhabitants and future generations may not forget the spirit and the achievements of the men and women who settled these plains and prairies and established the institutions which we now enjoy.” Alfalfa Pays. Win. H. Smith of the Seward Inde pendent Democrat is responsible for the following item: "L. E. Ost. who acts as agent for the Burlington railroad in Seward, and raises a patch of alfalfa on the side, is convinced that no crop grown in Nebraska is more profitable than alfalfa, and that gool alfalfa land is <tirt cheap at $150 per acre. "Mr. Ost has five acres sown to al falfa, from which four cuttings were made last year, the yield amounting to 21 tons and 680 pounds, and for the crop he has received $238.20. He hired all the work done in caring for the crop, and this cost him $51.55. which made the net receipts from the five acres $186.65, or an income of $37.33 per acre net. which is equiva lent to almost 25 per cent on $150 land.” Cost of Road Improvement. More than one and three-quarters millions of dollars raised by taxation was spent in Nebraska last year for the improvement of roads, according to figures collected by Secretary Sey mour of the state board of equaliza tion from the treasurers of the respec tive counties. A slightly less amount was levied as taxes for the special purpose of building and repairing bridges. Secretary Seymour's returns show an aggregate of $1,759,044 ex pended on roads during 1913. This does not include any_outlay for paving in cities. The total amount of taxes levied for all purposes in Nebraska was $22,487,791, so that about 8 per cent of all taxation revenues went to improve, highways. Many Horses Named. Two hundred and nineteen horses have been named for the early closing races of the 1914 Nebraska State Fair, as compared with 174 made last ypar. AH the speed events were filled except the two-year-old pace. Forty-two horses wore named for the two-year old trot, twenty-five for the three-year old trot, forty-eight for the 2:30 trot and thirty three for the 2:20 trot, twelve for the three-year-old pace, twenty-eight for the 2:25 pace and thirty for the 2:14 pace. Bridge Fund Levy. Bridge funds levied bv the counties of the state totaled $1,005,222 for the rear 1913. and road funds expended during the same year aggregated $1. 739.044 according to reports gathered by the state assesment board. The bridge fund levies run from nothing in Grant. Perkins and Phelps counties to 7 mills in Nance county. Burt. Col fax. Cuming. Dakota. Holt. Howar Knox, Madison, Nemaha, and Stantc t counties report levies of 5 mills each. AH other counties of the state range from mill to 4.8S mills. Paul Stowell of University Place. Michael D. Nolan of Alliance, and Emerson Winter of Wymore were awarded first, second and third places in the seventh annual contest of the Nebraska High School Debating league. The contest which took place in Memorial hall of the state univer sity, was the culmination of the state wide elimination contest involving twelve district* containing sixty-five high schools hi all sections of the state, that has been in progress since the opening of the school year. • BRiEF NEW. S OF NEBRASKA The German Lutheran church at Auburn was dedicated Sunday. A stockmen's convention will be held at Alliance, June 18, 19 and 20. Work will be commenced at once on the new Carnegie library at Burwell. The postoffice at Lanham. Nebraska, has been changed to Lanham, Kansas. A state officers camp will be held at the state farm at Lincoln. June 1 to 10. The Y. M. C. A. state convention was in session at Grand Island last week. The state postmasters’ association will be in session at Lincoln next week. The annual state convention of in surance agents will meet in Lincoln, June 9 and 10. Fire of unknown origin destroyed several buildings in Plattsmouth. caus ing a small loss. The Sunday schools of Nemaha county held their annual convention at Johnson last week. The German Lutheran church near Wausa was struck by lightning and j burned to the ground. Veraon lias erected a band stand i with a foundation of beer kegs in the center of its main street. Miss Ada Taikington of Surprise was badly bruised when she fell down a flight of stairs at her home. Thomas Thompson, a farmer near Wahoo. was found dead in a barn on his place, a victim of heart failure. Sixty-three coyote scaips were i brought in to the court house at North Platte for the collection of the bounty, i Transfusion of a quart of blood from ‘ her husband's arteries may saTe the life of Mrs. Joseph Bent of Rosemont | George Morris, Richardson county clerk, paid out a bounty of $231 for wolf scalps during the month of April. Wolves are getting to be a menace in tfce neighborhood south of Beatrice, and hunting parties are a favorite pas time. P. J. Corcoran, an Omaha letter car rier for the past twenty-six years, died Tuesday of tuberculosis, aged 57 years. The commencement class at Weer- \ ing W2ter was the largest ever gradu ated there, there being twenty-one in the class. The Duff Grain company has shipped more than a quarter million bushels of wheat from Nebraska City this season. More than half of the $700 play ■ ground fund desired to carry on the work at North Platte this summer has been raised. Dean Coon, a fourteen-year-old Beat rice boy. fell from a tree from which he was witnessing a ball game and ! fractured his skull. The Albion concert orchestra assist ed by high school singers, presented a concert at the Albion opera house be fore a large audience. Plans are being perfected at Bea 1 trice for the erection of a $27,000 the ater which will seat about 1,500 and be thoroughly modern. oeei growers at .Norm Platte are relieved by recent rains which have softened the ground so that the beets will now have no difficulty in growing 1 Roy Patterson, a well known and prosperous fanner of Scotts Blufl county, was killed by lightning Frida? night, as he drove into bis yard or his return from town. Franklin J Crowell, confessed big-1 ami st. hanged himself in his cell at David City after he had been sen tenced to serve from one to four years in the stafe penitentiary. Rains at Verdigre swelled the creek into a torrent which inundated the town and caused a $25,000 propert? j loss. Many people were barely awal: ; ened in time to flee to safety. After a canvass of the city. Fre mont is convinced that the business men want a festival during the sum raer and a committee is already lay ing plans for a combined industrial and agricultural show to be held dur ing August. Four counties will be in vited to participate in the fair. The city council of North Platte has been petitioned by over a hundred residents of that town to raise saloor. license from $1,000 to $3,000 per year j H. T. Sexson. a Burlington car re pairer at Lincoln, was caught undei a car in the yards there, suffering a dislocation of the spine, causing paralysis, from which he may not re cover. Dy a vote of 7 to 5 the Omaha board of education has decided tc I abandon the summer school, where j nearl?' one thousand bo?s and girls were permitted to make up back work iast year. ine city council of Humboldt has offered a reward of $10 for the arrest and conviction of any gambler and $-5 for the conviction of any boot-1 legger. Twerty-nine automobiles carrying one hundred men made a tour in the vicinity of Beatrice inspecting the various kinds of silos erected by the farmers. John Clark of Nebraska City made a wager with some friends that he could ride a fractious mule. The mule threw and kicked him in the bead, fracturing the skull. He died Sunday. Under the auspices cf the university | T. TV. r. a., a special program for women is being prepared for the rural betterment ir*t!*ute to be he’d at the university farm. .Tune 11 to 17. Eugene Norbeck was electrocuted I at the Cudahy plant at Omaha when he accidently came in contact with a high power electric wire carrying 5.000 volts. He died instantly. Eldon Carr, a five-year-old Lincoln j boy. miraculously escaped death when he was thrown from his tricycle in I front of a moving street car. He was ! bruised considerably about the head and face. Nebraska's prospects for a bumper wheat harvest are already attracting attention in the east. Secretary W, R. Mellor. secretary of the state board of agriculture, has received applications from a number of college men who wish to work as harvest hands. The congregation of the First Bap tist church at Beatrice has extended 1 a call to Rev. F. B. McAllister of Rochester. N. T. The church has been without a pastor for some time. The call to the beet fields ot west ern Nebraska is not being listened to by the usual number of German-Rue i Sian laborers in the cities this season. Where Safety Is First Consideration Haynes Is First Choice The foremost 'feature on the Haynes car is the Yulcan Electric Gear Shift, without doubt, the greatest safety device ever applied to the automobile.' It has so many advantages that you will never go back to the old-fashioned, hand-lever method of changing gears, once you have driven the electrically controlled America's First Car The electric gear shift permits you to retain your hands on the steering wheel while changing gears. You can keep your eyes on the road ahead, at all times. You can change speeds silently and simply, without phys ical effort and without danger of stripping a gear. You can shift gears with the speed of lightning, and worm your way through congested city traffic with perfect safety. You can anticipate your speed changes, so that shifting pears on the Haynes merely resolves itself into touching a button on the steering wheel for the desired speed, then, when you want the gears actually shifted mere pressure on the clutch pedal does it. If you are looking for safety in an automobile, as well as comfort, convenience and service—you will find it in the Haynes, America’s First Car. The Havnes “Four,”48 dynamometer horsepower— 118 inch wheelbase.$1785 and $1985 The Havnes “Six,” 65 dynamometer horsepower— 130 inch wheelbase.$2500 and $2700 The Havnes “Six,” 65 dvnamometer horsepower 136 inch wheeibase.$2585 and $2785 “The Complete Motorist" by El wood Haynes, Father of the American Automobile Industry, fully describing the Vulcan Electric Gear Shift, will be mailed upon receipt of ten cents in stamps. Write to THE HAYNES AUTOMOBILE COMPANY 36 Main Street, Kokomo, Indiana Builders of America’s First Car ,ar is handled by the Haynes Motor Sales Co.. I a roam »t., Omaha. Neb.. The Mu§ouri Haynes Motor Car Co Grand Ava, Kansas City. Mo., and by dealers throughout Ne braska. Missouri. Kansas and Iowa. Th* Hames sells readily because of Its mechanical 7* features. You mar be in open territory—send for cat alog and four pages of detaiied ipecifications, giving over 500 items which comprise the Haynes. Write us right now I THE HAYNES AUTOMOBILE CO.. 36 Mali St.. Kokomo, Jr.d. Enclosed find 10 cents in stamps. Piease send me Eiwood Haynes* Book, “The Complete Motorist.'* Name. Address.:... I expect to bey a car about....... This Tag Insures Ask your dealer for hardware bearing this Tag It insures your purchase. If the article proves unsatisfactory, take it back and the dealer will replace it without argument. The Wright & Wilheimy Co. Double Guarantee Tag means the best It is placed only on time tested brands from reli able factories, bearing the maker’s name. Wright & Wilhelmy Co. Double Guarantee Quality Tag & I I 1 The Rixford Scythe The Rixford Axe These tools are of highest quality, being made by the Rixford Mfg. Co., East Highgate, Vermont, who have been in business more than 100 years. They are made of best steel by the special Rixford process and are hand hammered. They hold a sharp edge. Once ^ used, always used. 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U., OMAHA, NO. 22-1914. i fl ATPAITO WateonE. Coleman, Wash Em I tBB 3 ^ ington. DC. Hook* f re*. High B ■ mlV ■ \w on references. Heat remuiuw f'rnw Oranges, (mpefrnlt, vegetable. land V»I vyrr near Ft. Myers. Fla., sn.table Jor t • t crops, llo per acre. A. C LOSli, Box 3u,Tope*a. K at Nebraska Directory BUSS & WELLMAN Live Stock Commission Merchants 864*856 Exchange Huildinp, South Omaha All stock consigned to ns is sold by members of tba Arm. and all employees have been selected and trained for the work which they do. Wr*t»*9hoM •**!»« California Ostrich Plume Go. 1209 N. Street, Lincoln, and 206 Neville Stock, 16th and Harney Streets, Omaha, jffpftrruia mada over, cfaanad, dyad and curiad. WORMS KILL PIGS 1,1 Ofe your feed. Diamond W. Worm Bxpeller and Diamond W. Hog Tonic will positively remove the worms and pot your hogs in tine condition. Tell ua bow many bogs yon have and average weight and we Good Road Tools All Kindi—Repain for All Machines FARM WAGONS fiAA COMPLETE «J>OU STROUD A CO, 20th and Ames An, Ornate, Nek.