The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 14, 1915, Image 2

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    FOR THE BUSY IN
NEWS EPITOME THAT CAN SOON
BE COMPASSED.
MANY EVENTS ARE MENTIONED
Home and Foreign Intelligence Con*
dented Into Two and Four
Line Paragraphs.
WAR NEWS.
Berlin reports that ten Russian air
craft have been shot down and their
crews taken or killed in the Lodz
Lowicz district Russian aviators, be
cause of their boldness, fell easy vic
tims to German aerial guns.
e • •
The German military government in
Belgium gives denial to the report
that Cai^inal Mercier, primate of Bel
gium, has been arrested or detained
by the German authorities. Neither
have any priests been arfested, it is
asserted.
• • •
While Great Britain is favorable to
the plan of the United States to cer
tify cargoes destined for European
ports, it is said she cannot consider
such certification an absolute guaran
tee, and that the right of search can
not be waived.
• • •
The British admiralty is of the opin
ton that the sinking of the battleship
Formidable in the English channel
was due to the two torpedoes fired by
a German submarine. The marquis of
Crewe has so announced to the Brit
ish house of lords.
Petrograd reports that the entire
Turkish army in the Caucasus is in
disgraceful retreat, abandoning equip
ment, guns, and ammunition and even
their regimental colors, it is declared
that the prisoners number more than
50,000, and that a number of divisions,
are surrounded and must surrender
or be exterminated.
• * •
The bitter suffering which follows
(n the wake of war has been demon
strated by the finding of 10,000 French
peasants in the valley of the Meuse,
absolutely without food The Amer
ican commission for relief in Belgium
Is now caring for these famine-strick
en people, but reports are that many
deaths from starvation have already
occurred.
• • •
Newspaper dispatches forecast pos
sible grave happenings in the Bal
kens. The revolutionary situation in
Albania is said to have grown much
worse, and it is declared that the ef
forts of the Christian Balkan states
to secure the neutrality of Bulgaria
apparently have not met complete
success and that Greece, Servia and
Rumania are preparing for eventuali
ties.
* * *
“Great has been the generosity of
the American people,” says the report
of chairman Hoover of the American
jelief committee, referring to condi
tions in Belgium. ' “We have provi
sions to last only until February 15,
Md if we fall after that date the
ravld will be faced by the greatest
tragedy which it has yet witnessed in
the possible extinction of an entire na
tion.”
GENERAL.
Mme. Gerville-Reache, former con
tralto at the Manhattan opera house,
died at Roosevelt hospital, New York.
• • •
Novelties in shoe styles were con
demned at the closing session of the
Notional Association of traveling shoe
salesmen at Rochester, N. Y
* * •
1 Two boys were drowned and a third
was injured so he may die when their
sled broke through the ice in a la
goon in Washington park, Chicago.
• • •
Governor Blease of South Carolina
pardoned two state convicts, paroled
five, including a negro serving a life
term for assault, and commuted the
sentence of two. In four years the
Governor has extended clemency to
more than 1,650 prisoners.
* * •
The National Association Opposed
to W'oman Suffrage, at a conference
at New York decided to wage active
campaigns in Massachussetts, Penn
aylvania, New Jersey and New York,
four states in which constitutional
amendments providing for equal suf
frage may be submitted to the voters
during 1915.
Governor Oswald West of Oregon
has appointed Miss Kathryn Clark of
Glendale, to be state senator to fill a
vacancy. If seated Miss Clark will
be the first woman to serve in the
Oregon senate.
• * •
In the midst of the downtown Sat
urday afternoon crowd a young man
hurled a brick through a show window
of a Dallas jewelry store, snatched a
tray of diamonds valued at $10,000
and fled. The police later arrested a
suspect, but did not recover the Jew
elry.
• • •
Walter Taylor Summer, dean of the
Cathedral of S. S. Peter and Paul, at
Chicago, was consecrated bishop of
the Episcopal diocese of Oregon.
Eighteen bishops of the church took
part in the ceremonies.
• * •
Agents said to represent the Brit
ish government have signed contracts
■with two chemical manufacturing
companies at Cadillac, Miclv, and one
at Jennings, Mich., for the purchase
of their entire output of certain prod
ucts used in making smokeless pow
der.
• * *
Exports from the Hamburg consu
lar district to the United States and
Insular possessions show a heavy de
crease for the last year having been
$19,320,713. as compared with $29,
159,313 in 1913 and $37,357,663 In 1912.
Investigations by Mayor Mitchell’s
committee on unemployed indicate
that there are 200,000 more -unem
ployed persons in New York City now
than there were a year ago.
• • •
Charles Watson, a California pio
neer, who drove a plow until he was
96 ywirs old, died at Berkeley, aged
100 years. His health failed him only
a few days before his death.
• * •
Fifty thousand Chicago men and
women, boys and girls, have entered
a whirlwind fight against liquor in
that city. One hundred societies of
young people have been organized to
make a house-to-house canvass.
• • •
A chain of 15-cent hotels through:
out the United States is to be estab
lished by the Rufus F. Dawes Hotel
association. Money for the first of
these hotels, at Minneapolis, Seattle
and New York, has been subscribed.
• • •
Nestor Wilmart, a former banker,
railroad man, newspaper proprietor
and sportsman, who was serving a
sentence in the St. Giles prison at
Brussels, in connection with finacia!
irregularities has succeeded in escap
ing.
• * •
The officials of the Auburn (N. Y.)
plant of the International Harvester
company began engaging again the
employes who have been idle for sev
eral months. The company employs
about 2,500 persons under normal
conditions.
• * •
Men prominent in art from all parts
of the country were present at Min
neapolis at the dedication of the Min
neapolis Institute of Arts. The insti
tute is the result of a four years’ cam
paign. Congratulatory messages in
cluded one from President Wilson.
Two and a quarter billions of dollars
in excess of the sum needed has been
sunk in costly railway stations, ter
minals and other betterments since
1306, it was testified in Chicago before
the Federal Arbitration Board, hear
ing the wage demand of western rail
road engineers
• * •
Nearly half a million dollars was
spent by candidates of all parties last
November in the first popular election
of United States senators in the his
tory of the government. To be exact
$460,777.25 represents the total of
sworn statements filed with the sec
retary of senatorial honors from thir
ty-one states.
• • •
The Arizona mothers’ pension law.
approved before the people in the elec
tion last November, was attacked in a
suit filed in Prescott on behalf of the
Prescott Chamber of Commerce. Un
der the law' all state charitable insti
tutions are to be sold to provide a
fund, out of which to pension widowed
mothers and aged dependents.
• * *
Until the northern states have
cleaned up their barrooms, vice dens
and Sunday theaters they have no
right to complain that children under
13 years are permitted to work in the
cotton mills of the south. This viewr
was set forth by David Clark, a Char
lotte, N. C.. editor, before the eleventh
annual conference on child labor.
* * *
A special police guard was called
in St. Louis to protect Albert Von
Hoffmann, financial backer of the St.
Louis Free Soup kitchen from forty
members of the Industrial Workers
of the World, who menaced him after
he had testified in court against two
members of the Industrial Workers
who created a disturbance at tne soup
kitchen.
WASHINGTON.
The house passed the Moss bill to
standarize grain grades and provide
for inspection of grain in interstate
commerce.
* * •
The interior department will place
on the Niobrara game preserve a tab
let stating that the herd of buffalo,
elk and deer there is the gift of John
Gilbert of Friend, Neb.
* • »
A bill has been introduced in the
house by Representative Buckner of
New York to authorize commissioner
of immigration to collect passports
from citizens returning from abroad.
• • •
Opening the republican fight against
the government ship purchase bill.
Senator Burton of Ohio assailed the
measure as a dangerous experiment in
government ownership, and asserted
that it would open the way to the
building up of privileged interests.
• * *
Postmaster General Burleson direc
ted postmasters to give the widest
publicity possible to the fact that the
2-cent letter postage rate does not ap
ply to Australia and New Zealand.
The failure to affix a. 5-cent stamp re
quires collection of double the defic
ient postage upon the delivery of
short-paid letters.
No action has been taken by the
foreign relations commit'%;e on the
pending treaty to pay Colombia $25.
000,000 for the Panama canal zone and
some members declared the conven
tion probably would not be considered
at this session of Congress.
• * •
In a conference with republican lead
ers of congress President Wilson ask
ed for an appropriation of $250,000 to
defray expenses of the celebration
planned for the opening of the Pan
ama canal next March.
• • *
Delegates attending the eleventh
annual conference on child labor were
urged by Senator Kenyon of Iowa to
reverse their policy of pleading with
the captains of industry and invoke
a rigid investigation of law to keep
little children out of “sweat shops.”
» * •
The postofflce department has
denied the request of a number of
Omaha merchants that return cards
for registered letters be made to
show the address of the receiver at
the time of the delivery of the letter.
MAY BE ASKED BY CHICAGO
RETAIL MEN.
FEAR RAISE IN WHEAT RREAD
No Occasion for Increase Yet Say
Experts—Attorney General
Gregory Interested.
Chicago, 111.—It has been announc
ed here that resolutions calling on
congress to place an embargo on the
export of wheat and flour as well as
on arms and ammunition would be
introduced at the next meeting of the
Chicago Retail Grocers’ and Butch
ers’ association S. Westerfleld,
chairman of the trades relations com
mittee of the National Association
of the retailers, planned to begin in
this manner a determined fight
against the high cost of flour and in
cidentally of home-baked bread.
Leaders on exchange predict in
some instances that if the price of
wheat went much higher there would
be a general turning to corn in place
of wheat bread, both in this country
and in Europe. Other dealers were
of a contrary opinion and asserted
that bakers’ complaints were unwar
ranted—that a barrel of flour costing
$7 would make 275 loaves of bread,
for which the retailer collected $13.75
at .5 cents a loaf. Who got the dif
ference. was asked, and the conclu
sion was drawn that wheat was still
relatively cheap.
Gregory Interested.
Washington, D. C.—Department of
ficials expressed interest in reports
that the price of a loaf of bread was
about to jump from 5 to 6 cents in
New York. Chicago and possibly other
large cities. No complaints have
reached the department, however,
and no action is in immediate pros
pect.
Attorney General Gregory has kept
a close watch upon any efforts to
raise the cost of living through com
bination of producers in any line, and
it is considered certain that a rise In
bread would be looked into at once.
It is realized at the department that
with wheat far above normal figures
bakers undoubtedly have been forced
to face the prospect of higher flour.
Officials are interested, however, in
learning whether there is any conspi
racy among bakers over the country
to effect a raise in price of their
commodities.
Italy Calling in Reservists.
Geneva.—£11 Italians liable to mili
tary sen-ice in Geneva, numbering
several thousand, have received noti
fication from the consulate to present
themselves for medical examination.
It is stated that similar measures will
shortly be taken in other towns of
Switzerland. Of the 200,000 Italian
residents of Switzerland, it is estimat
ed that 50,000 are liable for military
service.
At Chiasso, Como and other points
on the frontier, no Italians between
the ages of 18 and 40 have been per
mitted to cross for the past week,
while the exports of foodstuffs is lim
ited strictly to Switzerland.
Range Horses for War.
Kemmerer, Wyo.—A trainload of
thirty-six cars of the finest range
horses ever seen in the west passed
through here recently en route to
Canada, and thence to England and
France, where the animals will be
used at the front. The horses, num
bering oevr 1,000 head, perfect in
size, color and w-eight and uniformity,
and every one broken to the saddle,
were gathered in Oregon and Wash
ington by agents of the British and
French governments.
Regrets Killing of Hunter.
Ottawa, Ont. — Canadian govern
ment authorities have forwarded to
the United States government at
Washington formal expressions of
regret on the paruaf tho Dominion of
Canada, for the killing of Walter
Smitii and the wounding of Charles
Dorsch by Canadian militiamen. The
Dominion government also has offer
ed to compensate the wounded man
and the family of the dead man.
Look for Contraband With X-Ray.
Galveston, Tex.—Af.er X-ray tests
bad shown no contraband concealed
in its cargo, the American steamship
Nebrasakn sailed for Bremen, carry
ing a cargo of 10,317 bales of cotton.
Paris Without Absinthe.
Paris.—The cabinet has approved a
measure for submission to parliament,
making permanent the prohibition of
the sale of absinthe and other similar
liquors.
Tobacco Crop Destroyed.
Havana.—The recent heavy unsea
sonable rains have completely destroy
ed the tobacco crop in almost all sec
tions of the Island. The sugar cane
also has been damaged to a great ex
tent. In many locations the largest
sugar mills have suspended grinding
Woman and Children Slain.
Montreal, Que.—Mrs. Robert Van
Looy, wife of a Belgian reservist, and
her three children, were found strang
led to death at their home in this city.
No cause for the crime is known.
Labor Law Invalid.
San Francisco.—The Arizona anti
alien employment act adopted by the
oeople of the state at the November
election as an initiative measure was
declared unconstitutional, null and
void here by a special court of three
federal judges.
Auto Dealers See Prosperity.
New York.—Exhibitors at the fif
teenth annual automobile show in
Grand Central palace here predict a
rapid upward turn in all commercia’
and industrial line within sixty days
A new paper has been started at
Seward.
Preparations are being made lor
the Lyons stock show.
A $55,000 Methodist church will be
built at Hastings.
Nebraska will not be represented at
the San Francisco exposition.
The hog cholera situation near
Hastings is reported serious.
The city council of Lincoln has vot
ed down the welfare ordinance.
Ten men want to be postmaster at
Fremont. A primary is to be held.
Hastings farmers are now holding
wheat for $1.23 on the local market.
Talmage has let a contract for a
new municipal electric lighting plant
P. S. Barnes, forty years a Cass
county citizen, died at Weeping
Water.
Citizens of York contributed 236
sacks of flour toward the relief of the
Belgians.
Gage county has contributed a car
load of flour for European war suf
fers.
Nebraska paid $118,508 in war
taxes from December 1 until Jan
uary 1.
A mass meeting was held at Hast
ings last week for the purpose of vot
ing bonds for the new school build
ings.
The $1,000,000 bond of George/E.
Hall of Franklin, the new state treas
urer, has been filed with the secre
tary of state.
The American Yeoman have pur
chased a lot at North Platte and it is
expected that the lodge will erect a
$25,000 building.
Aioert M. Adams, veteran publisher
and editor of the Humboldt Independ
ent for forty years, died at his home
from abscess on a lung.
Actual problems in Nebraska road
building will be considered at the
meeting of the good roads associa
tion January 19 at Lincoln.
The fire in a Lincoln printing shop
burned up a part of Adjutant General
Hall’s biennial report, which he was
preparing for the legislature.
P. A. Goings, Hastings boy, who is
in the army and stationed on the bor
der. writes that Villa's troops are bat
tling an army just across the border.
, G. M. Pollard sustained two frac
tured ribs and a fractured collar bone
when an automobile crashed into a
buggy in which he was riding at Falls
City.
In less than thirty minutes the jury
in the case of the state vs. George
Keever, charged with forgery in Gage
county, brought in a verdict of not
guilty.
The annual convention of the Far
mers’ educational co-operative state
union of Nebraska will be held in the
Lincoln auditorium commencing Jan
uary 13.
The Second and Third battalions of
the Fourth infantry, the Fort Crook
and Omaha battalions, took part In
the centennial celebration of the bat
tle of New Orleans.
During the year 1914 Lancaster
county expended for the construction
and repair of bridges $88,856.98, this
being exclusive of the cost of con
crete culverts and small bridges.
The finishing touches are being put
on the A. O. U. W. lodge hall at Ari
selmo. All the lodges in the city will
hold meetings in the new building and
their work has heen handicapped.
Twenty-five thousand dollar bonds
for the proposed bridge over the
Platte east of North Platte have been
placed and bids for the steel and con
crete construction will soon be re
quested.
Recount of votes for supervisor in
the First and Second districts at Au
rora gave J. W. Mintun a larger ma
jority by twenty-four votes and G. C.
Eaton, a larger majority by eleven
votes.
A dam in Salt creek at Roca was
dynamited Saturday night and an
other dam was washed out by the
suddenly released wall of water No
motive for the blowing up of the dam
has been discovered.
The city of Kearney in order to give
employment to those out of work has
ordered that the entire line of sewer
which has been awaiting funds before
installation be put in at once. This
will mean a labor expenditure of ap
proximately $3,000. which will aid
much in keeping destitute families.
Judge McDuffie of the Madison
county court awarded Mary Mustrave
of Norfolk $20 per month for six
months for the support of herself and
two children, under the so-called
mothers’ pension act of the legisla
ture of 1913.
Nebraska railroads have done very
little construction work during the
past year. The Chalco-Yutan cutoff
of the Burlington was perhaps the
bigget piece of work begun within the
state, and work was called off on that
construction when the financial
squeeze following the European war
began to be felt in this country.
Lincoln railroad men look for u
heavy freight business on Nebraska
roads this month.
State Auditor Hc*vard has held the
$35,000 bond issue of the city of Blair
for a municipal electric light plant
to be valid.
Petitions are being circulated in
Beatrice asking congress to pass a
law allowing a citizen acquitted of a
criminal charge In one state to be al
lowed to go unmolested into another
state. Friends of Harry K. Thaw be
lieve that a law of this kind will al
low Thaw to go back to his home
state. *
The Omaha Commercial club has
launched a “buy it now” campaign, to
stimulate business.
The supreme court has reversed
the conviction of Fuller Shallenberg
er on a charge of murdering Julian
Behaud near Julian forty years ago.
Robert Thomas Dressier, furniture
lealer of Hastings, served formal no
tice through the newspapers that ho
will prosecute anybody calling him
“Jake.” the nickname by which he has
been popularly known during his thir
ty years’ residence in Hastings. For
such an offense, he says, he will sun
for ftom $5,000 to $25,000 damages.
NEW STATE OFFICIALS INSTALL
ED FOR DUTY.
HOLLENBECK GIVES OATH
New Chief Justice Sat for First Time
—Legislators Approve Go/
ernor’s Message.
Lincoln.—New officers of the state
were inaugurated before a joint ses
sion of the two houses of the state
legislature and Governor Morehead
delivered his inaugural address. Of
ficers for the coming two years were
sworn by the chief justice, Conrad
Hollenbeck, who was previously sworn
in and sat for the first time in the
court session. The state officers, with
Governor Morehead, who were sworn
in, are:
Governor John H. Morehead, Lieu
tenant Governor James Pearson, Sec
retary of State Charles W. Pool, Aud
itor William H. Smith, Treasurer
George E. Hall, Superintendent A. O.
Thomas, Attorney General Willis E.
Reed, Land Commissioner Fred Beck
man. Railway Commissioner Thomas
L. Hall.
The house was well filled and the
galleries crowded when Lieutenant
Governor McKelvie stepped to the
chair and called the joint session to
gether, the last act of the outgoing
lieutenant governor. It took Govern
or Morehead about an hour to read his
message, which was listened to at
tentively. Many of his recommenda
tions seemed to meet with hearty ap
proval by the legislators.
Fix Time of Sessions.
Sessions of the house will be from
9 in the morning until 12 and from
1:30 in the afternoon until 3, when
the committees will meet and work
until 6 Employes were cut down
from seventy five to thirty-one and
the mailcarriers and postmasters
eliminated. In place of these a sub
station of the postoffice will be estab
lished during the session. There will
be fewer committees and fewer mem
bers to each committee.
Automob'le Instruction Popular.
Automobile instruction in Nebraska
is a popular thing if the enrollment
at the college of agriculture is any
indication. The number of students
has more than doubled within the
last two years. Last year when such
instruction was first offered. 30 stu
dents enrolled. This year there are
75. Aside from the lectures, actual
repair work is done on cars brought
in for practice
Water Power Report Accepted.
At the suggestion of Speaker Jack
son, former Representative J. McAl
lister of Dakota county was given
time in the house to explain the re
port of the special commission to in
vestigate, water power, of which he is
Chairman.
The house vo^ed to accept the re
port and order 500 copies printed for
the members of the legislature and
general distribution.
Rural Credits Question.
Rural credits legislation has been
brought to the front in a resolution
offered in the senate by Beal of Cus
ter. He asks that congress be re
minded that the step is promised in
the platforms of all parties and that
passage of the proper bills would aid
agriculturists and stock raisers of the
west.
Short Course at State Farm.
During the regular vacation of
classes at the university farm, prep
arations are being made for the open
ing of the winter short course of six
weeks of the university school of
agriculture which begins this week.
Hog Barns at Fair Grounds.
The only permanent building which
the state board of agriculture will ask
the legislature to build on the fair
grounds during the year 1915 is a
modern hog barn. It is estimated
that the buildifig and grading will
cost $80,000.
W. F. Frisbee, State Chemist.
W. F. Frisbee of Des Moines has
been appointed state chemist in con
nection with the pure food depart
ment of the state to fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of E. L.
Redfern.
Fries, Dean of Legislature.
Soren M. Fries of Dannebrog is the
dean of the legislature in years of
service. He is now a member of the
house for the sixth time.
Tanner Loses Place.
Senator Quinby of Douglas sprung
a sensation soon after the senate was
called to order by an amendment sub
stituting the name of E. W. Miller of
Omaha in place of that of “Doc” Tan
ner of South Omaha, who had been
agreed on in caucus as clerk of the
engrossing committee, and after a
wordy battle indulged in by members
of the Douglas county deletion, in
which Dodge took a hand, Tanner was
defeated by a vote of seventeen for
Miller to fifteen for Tanner.
Hitchcock Bill Indorsed.
Exportation of arms and ammuni
tion by the United States to warring
European nations was frowned upon by
the Nebraska state senate in an in
dorsement of the Hitchcock bill now
pending before congress.
The vote was 19 to 12 in favor of
the resolution.
The document indorses the Hitch
cock bill, memoralizes congress to
pass it, and asks that copies of the
resolution be sent to the legislatures
of other states for similar action.
CHEAPER MEAT DISHES
FOR THOSE TO WHOM ECONOMY
IS OF MOMENT.
Flank Beef Cooked in Casserole Ma>
Be Made as Desirable as the More
Expensive Cuts—Good Stew
of Neck of Mutton.
To the women who are compelled
to economize in household expenses,
the following recipes will prove of in
terest:
Cut up from two to three pounds
of the thick flank or leg-of-mutton
piece of beef into neat pieces, place
it in a casserole with one quart of
cold water or bone stock, bring this
to the boil, then let it simmer gently
for an hour, when you add to it the
white part of six leeks and two or
three turnips sliced, a lump of sugar, a
small teaspoonful of salt, and half that
quantity of pepper, and let it all stew
gently together for one and a quar
ter hours to one and a half hours
longer. Serve in the dish in which it
was cooked.
Take a pound of liver, wash it to get
rid of all blood, etc., and dip it in flour.
Wash, peel and slice four pounds of
potatoes, chop up finely two onions
and two apples (the latter softens the
liver); put one ounce of dripping in a
pan and when melted and quite hot
put in the liver, sprinkle it with a lit
tl of the onion and apple and fry
till nicely colored; add a little pow
dered sage; now put the liver into
a saucepan or casserole, add the
sliced potatoes, the rest of the onions
and apples, a seasoning of salt and
pepper, and three-quarters of a pint of
water; bring just to the boil, then draw
the pan to the side of the Are and let
the contents simmer for 45 minutes.
Serve in the casserole or turn out on
to a hot dish.
Take the scrag end of a neck of mut
ton and cut it up into neat pieces,
cutting away all unnecessary fat; dis
solve two ounces of clarified dripping
in a casserole, and add to this two
ounces of flour, and when thoroughly
blended and of the consistency of
cream, but only lightly colored, lay
in the meat and cook for 20 min
utes, stirring it constantly; now add
enough stock or water to cover the
meat thoroughly and stir it all togeth
er till it comes to the boil, when you
draw the pan to one side and let the
contents simmer gently, seasoning it
with salt and a dust of pepper; it will
take from two to three hours slow
cooking. Meanwhile peel and cut up
Into dice two carrots and two turnips
and slice thinly an onion; now toss all
these vegetables in a pan over the
Are with one ounce of dripping till
nicely colored, when you add them to
the meat, etc., and let them all stew
gently till the meat is cooked. Lift out
and serve with the vegetables in the
center.
rut Into a casserole a dessert spoon
ful of dripping and let it get hot, then
fry in this two sliced onions. Take
one and a half pound of neck of mut
ton, wash it well and put it in the pot
with the water which clings to it,
cover down closely and let it cook
gently for 45 minutes. Meanwhile
trim, and slice down a cabbage into
eight pieces and put these in water;
peel six potatoes and cut them into
slices about half an inch thick and
place these also in water. When the
meat has been simmering for forty
five minutes lift out the cabbage and
potatoes dripping with water and pack
them round the meat, season with a
teaspoonful of salt and half a tea
spoonful of pepper, cover down the
pan closely again and simmer for
forty-five minutes longer. It must be
cooked very slowly or it will burn.
Beef Stew In Earthen Dish.
Take two pounds of lean beef. Put
a little vinegar in a dish and lay the
meat in it (after wiping with a damp
cloth) and turn so each side may be
in the vinegar a few minutes. Cut
the meat in small pieces and put in a
bean pot or other earthen dish with
cover, with a few small onions, a car
rot cut in thick slices, a cupful of
tomatoes, four potatoes cut in thick
slices, a teaspoonful of salt, a few
shakes of pepper, read and white.
Mix a heaping tablespoonful of flour
smoothly in cold water and pour on
with enough more water to cover the
stew. Cook covered in a slow oven
five hours and serve in the same dish.
Swiss Potato Soup.
Wash, pare and cut in halves four
6mall potatoes. Wash, pare and cut
in slices one large white turnip. Par
boil together ten minutes, dfain, add
half an onion cut in slices, and three
cupfuls of boiling water. Cook until
vegetables are soft; drain, reserving
the water to add to the vegetables af
ter rubbing them through a sieve.
Add one quart of scalded milk, reheat,
and bind with shortening and flour
cooked together, using four table
spoonfuls shortening and half a cup
ful of flour. Season with salt and
peyper.
Swiss Potato Soup.
I’are and Elice six large potatoes
and three small turnips. Put them in
five pints of water, boil five or six
hours until perfectly dissolved and of
the consistency of pea soup. If It
boils away too fast add a little boil
ing water When thick enough add
butter, pepper and salt. A small piece
of salt pork or lamb or veal and a
small onion may be added to vary the
soup if desired.
Better Griddle Cakes.
When making griddle cakes of but
termilk, they will be much lighter and
more tender if one small cupful of
very dry bread crumbs is added to
each pint of buttermilk. Less flour
will be needed, and the dry bread will
be utilized.---'‘Home Department,” Na
tional Magazine.
Cold Chicken Soup.
Cook one chicken, half bunch of cel
ery, quarter cupful of rice in two
quarts of water, cool, skim, add minced
parsley, two tablespoonfuls grated
cooked ham, juice of a lemon, two
cupfuls cream, salt, white pepper, and
dice of white bread.
I Took Cold
It Settled In
My Kidneys.
I Used
Peruna.
Am all
Right
Now.
I owe my
Health to
Peruna.
Mrs. Anna Linder, R*F. D. 5, Das
B«l, Meeker Co.. Minn., writes: "For
two years I suffered with that ter
rible disease, chronic catarrh.
"Fortunately. I saw your- adver
tisement In my paper. I got your
advice, and I took Peruna. Now 1
am well and the mother of two
children. 1 owe It all to Peruna.
‘1 would not be without that great
tonic for twice Its cost, for 1 am well
and strong now. 1 cannot speak In
too high terms of its value as a
medicine.”
• His Indorsement.
The late Lord Roberts once sent his
orderly to the bank to casa a check,
says Pearson’s Weekly, anc, the clerk
wanted it indorsed.
“What for?” demanded the soldier.
“Well, it’s the rule, and I can't pay
you the money until you do Indorse it,'' k *
he was told. 4
“Oh, all right!” grumbled the mes
senger. So he took back the check
and bit the end of a pen in deep medi
tation for a minute or two. Then he
wrote this:
"I beg to say that I have known Lord
Roberts for several years, and he has
proved himself, times without num
ber, to be as brave as a lion, but al
ways kindly considerate to those who
serve under him. And I have, there
fore, great pleasure in respectfully
indorsing his check.”
GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur
iant and Remove Dandruff—Real
Surprise for You.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf
fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus
trous and beautiful as a young girl's
after a "Danderine hair cleanse ” Just
try this—moisten a cloth with a little
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at/y\ce_
Danderine dissolves every particle ct
dandruff; cleanses, purifies aty§ invic '
orates the scalp, forever stopping |»cb
ing and falling hair.
But what will please you most will
be after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair—growing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it, surely get a 35 cent bottle of
Knowlton's Danderine from any store
and just try it. Adv.
A New Course.
In a Philadelphia family recently
the engagement of a daughter was an
nounced. A friend calling was met at
the door by the colored maid, who an
nounced:
“No'm; Miss Alice ain’t at home dls
aft’noon—she’s gone down' to de
class.”
“What class?” inquired the visitor.
“You know, Miss Alice is gw-ine to
be ma’ied in de fall,” explained the
maid, “an’ she’s takin' a cou's- in do*
mestic silence.”—Life.
Just a few more steps to go. and
fashions will change with the moon.
Backache Warns You
Backache Is one of Nature’s warning*
Of kidne? weakness. Kidney disease kills
thousand* every year.
Don’t neglect a bad back. If your hac^
is lame—if it hurts to stoop or lift-if
there is irregularity of the secretions—
suspect your kidneys. If you suffer head
aches. dizziness and are tired, nervous and
worn-out, you have further proof.
Use Doan’s Kidney Pills, a fine medicine
for bad backs and weak kidneys.
A Nebraska Case
•Every
Picture
Tells a
Story”
Mrs. May Dreasen.
317 N. 17th £t.
Omaha. Neb . says
«*I had such awful
backaches l could
hardly get around to
ido my work My
’back got so bad that
I couldn’t leave my
bed for six weeks.
When I did. I found
it impossible to
stoop. I had
symptoms of dropsy
In two or three days
after I beeran with
Doan s Kidney Pills
I was relieved. a:»d
after using: a few boxes, i
shape. My health has Improved.
Get Doan’s at Any Store. SOc a Bos
DOAN’S ■VftX.V
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
Your Liver
Is Clogged Up
That’s Why You’re Tired—Out of Sorts
—Have No Appetite.
CARTER’S LITTLE,
LIVER PILLS
will put you right ^
in a few days.^
They d(
their dutyv
Cure Con
Carters
■PITTLE
■ IVER
|^U,
Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 2--191S.