The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 11, 1915, Image 7

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    WHAT $10 DIO
FOB THIS WOMAN
The Pricte She Paid for Lydia
ELPinkham’sV egetable Com
pound Which Brought
Good Health.
Danville, Va. — “I have only spent ten
dollars on your medicine and I feel so
much better than l
did when the doctor
was treating me. I
don’t suffer any
bearing down pains
at all now and I sleep
welL I cannot say
enough for Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound and
Liver Pills as they
have done so much
for me. I am enjoy
ing good health now and owe it an to
your remedies. I take pleasure in tell
ing my friends and neighbors about
them.”—Mrs. Mattie Haley, 501 Col
quhone Street, Danville, Va.
No woman suffering from any form
of female troubles should lose hope un
til she has given Lydia E. Pink ham's
Vegetable Compound a fair trial.
This famous remedy, the medicinal
ingredients of which are derived
from native roots and herbs, has for
forty years proved to be a most valua
ble tonic and invigorator of the fe
male organism. Women everywhere
bear willing testimony to the wonderful
virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound.
If you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound will help you, write
to Lydia E. Pink ham MedicineCo.
(confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad
vice. Yonr letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman
and held in strict confidence.
To Herd Sheep With Aero.
Stanley Smith arrived here today,
bound for New York, where he ex
pects to buy an airship to round up
the sheep on his 75,000-acre ranch at
the foot of Crazy mountains in Mon
tana.
Smith lives at Martinsdale, which
has 40 inhabitants, each of whom has
an automobile. He said he had ased
autos to round up his stock, but ex
pects the airship to reduce the cost
and expedite the speed about 25 per
cent
He has decided on a dirigible—Chi
cago Dispatch to New York Herald.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
In the Wrong Place.
“They made me pay ten cents for
bread and butter at that hotel and
then I had to tip the waiter 50 cents.”
“What did you have to eat?”
“Bread and butter. I only had 60
cents.”
Attention, Mothers-!
Write Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co., 1304
Keener Bldg.. Chicago, 111., for 28 page
beautifully colored “Mother Goose
Jingle Book." Sent free to all read
ers of this paper.—Adv.
Its Class.
“This cotton shipping business—”
“Hush! It’s a baleful subject.”—
Baltimore American.
One Acid in Your Food
Even dogs can eat too much meat.
Certainly, many people "dig their graves
with their teeth.” Few get enough
exercise to justify a meat diet, for
meat brings uric acid. The kidneys
trv hard to get rid of that poison, bnt
often a backache, or some other slight
symptom will show that the kidneys
need help. The time-tried remedy,
then, is Doan's Kidney Pills.
A Nebraska Case
Pietvr*
Ttlli a
Bum"
C. T Evans. Third
’ St. and Third Corso.
Nebraska City, Neb..
;says: “I was in bod
five months from
f kidney complaint,
-unable to move hand
or foot. My limbs
land body swelled
terribly and my
health was badly
: wrecked. Three doc
tors failed to help
’me. Finally I took
Doan's Kidney Pills
and they put me on
my feet. The swell
ing; and pain went
away and my kid
neys were fix**d up
in good shape.”
Get Dobbi at Any Store. SOe • Box
DOAN’S VASV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.
The Army of
Constipation
Is Growing Smaller Every Day
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS are
responsible — they
not only give relief A ‘
— they perma
nently cure Coa^
stipation. Mi!j
lions useJ
them for
Bilioameu,
Indigestion, Sick Hesdscke, Sallow Skin.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
BLACK
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTEL
by Cutter’s Clack leg Pills. Low
ywy uuiUH o uiowiii • ••••»
priced, fresh, re Liable; preferred bj
Western stockmen. because they
protect where other vocal net fell.
Write for booklet and testimonials.
I §4 I L "ildraVto. BiMkini fill* ji'.'oo
I . PA. 1 50-COK pkge. taUni Pill. 4.00
Xjto any injoctur. but Cuttor*. boot
Tho enpertority of Cutttrwoduct. todu. to om 1
sears of imcUliiinc Id vaeelnet Ufl e^ueit oily.
Insist onCutter’a. If unobtainable. ordertfrecL
The CatUr Latooratonr. Bortotw. Cat, ar Chios «o, III
•9
WHY WOT TRY POPHAM’Sj
ASTHMA MEDICINE
. niwui Dwcim nt ;irwl Pnai t iTe Rpltef ill ETCTT Y
I Gives Prompt and Positive Belief In Every l
Case. Sold by Druggists. Price SIaIO. S
Trial Package By Mail 10c.
| mLLIAMS HF6.Ctt,Propa,CMnL&J
CONDENSED NEWS
OF INTEREST TO ALL.
Mrs. Joseph Blair, 99, died at Su
perior,
A car of baled cotton burned at
Ravenna.
Norfolk will have six miles o£ pav
ing this year.
Kimball has voted $20,000 for a new
high school building.
Fremont and vicinity has contribut
ed 600 horses to the war.
Lincoln is to have a ten-story sky
scraper which will cost from $150,000
to $175,000.
Fire destroyed Yingling's general
merchandise store and meat market,
at Holbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Tiffany of Ben
net celebrated their golden wedding
anniversary.
George De Wolfe of Elm ('reek has
been elected superintendent of the
North Bend schools.
It is said Omaha could furnish
front 1,000 to 1,500 men for the pro
posed American Legion.
President Miles at Hastings has re.
ceived the forfeit money from five
clubs in the State Base Ball league.
Thomas Czarnick, 26, was found
dead four miles northwest of Monro0.
He had been shot in the temple by a
shotgun.
M. C. Nelson, fifteen years ago a
bank errand boy. has just been made
president of the Niobrara Valley
bank.
Twenty varieties of oats tested at
the Nebraska Experiment Station
show that early varieties outyield the
late varieties 14 bushels an acre.
The Farmers' State bank of Louis
ville has been granted a charter by
the State Banking board. It is organ
ized with a capita! of $20,000.
Blair will soon have a cavalry
troop. Citizens of Blair are building
an armory and interest in the guard (
waxes high in the Washington county
town.
Ninetv-fiw per cent of the Lincoln
physicians have complied with the
federal dope law and registered, ac
cording to Internal Revenue Collector
Robert Dorgan.
Fees received by Food Commission
er Harman during the month 'of Feb
ruuary. amounted to a total of $6,460.
25, of which $5.564.S5 was for oil and
gasoline inspections.
Only three inches of snow is need
ed to break all snow records in Ne
braska. according to George Loveland
of the weather bureau at the state
university. Lincoln.
While returning from the state
house at Lincoln. Byron Clark, solic
itor for the Burlington railroad, fell
on the sidewalk and broke his right
arm at the wrist.
In less than two hours the direc
tors of the Beatrice Base Ball asso
ciation raised approximately $3,500 to
be expended for the national sport in
that city this year.
The State league base ball fran
chise proposition was turned down ar
a meeting of fans held in North
Platte, all present being in favor of
independent base bail.
State Treasurer Hall has purchas
ed $19,662.89 worth of the bonds of
drainage district No. 1. of Johnson
county: also $5,500 worth of the water
bonds of the village of Spingview.
Miss Edith Lathrop. assistant state
superintendent of education, has been
tendered a place on the faculty of
Johns Hopkins university during the
summer session. She is to teach
rural education.
Movies for convicts at state peni
tentiary are assured by arrival of new
moving picture machine, which War
den Fenton purchased from funds
taken in by the “shut-in” minstrel
shows.
Henry Fredrickson, consul-at-large
for the Lincoln highway, declared to
Fremonters that 25.000 automobiles
headed for the California expositions
will pass through Fremont between
May 1 and November 1.
State Treasurer Hall has puchased
additional bonds, including a $6,000
water extension bonds of the city of
Bridgeport, $12,000 sewer bonds of
the same city, $25,000 school district
bonds in School district 35 in Sheri
dan county.
One of the principal reasons for the
loss of spring pigs at this time, as
well as any other, according to the
Nebraska Experiment Station, arises
from the fact that the brood sow has
been scuffed and fattened with a
heavy corn ration.
The Boxbutte County Farmers' as
sociation has employed F. M. Seidell,
a rancher near Chadron, to be its
agricultural agent or farm demonstra
tor. Mr. Seidell gives up the manage
ment of a ranch consisting of 2,200
ares on the White River, to take up
the work.
A baby girl, nicely wrapped, was
left on the steps of the home of Mr.
and Mrs. A. Norman at Republican
City. A note attached stated the
baby was born December 19 in Ne
braska and left as a birthday present
for Miss Ada Norman, who was 12
years old March 1.
George Cummings of Howe is cele
brating the completion of fifty years’
continued residence in this county.
Arthur county, the states infant,
has carried its fight against Garden
for the possession of a three-mile
strip of territory, to the supreme
court
A Commercial club building has
been the talk of Wahoo merchants
for some time. Senator E. E. Placek.
vice president of the club and chair
man of the building committee, is
busy working out the details and
plans of the new building.
After Guy Martin of Hastings was
operated on for appendicitis it was
discovered he had smallpox instead.
Nebraska is twenty-fifth in point
of school efficiency, according to
figures in superintendent’s office.
The jitney bus is a common carrier
and as such comes within the provi
sion of the stocks and bonds act, ac
cording to an opinion furnished the
state railway commission by Deputy
Attorney General Barrett. Hence any
jitney bus company issuing stocks
and bonds must do so upon the
authority of the railway commission,
i
To Decorate Dancing Coiffures
SIN'CE dancing has come to be in
dulged in by everyone from grand
mamma down to the baby, any num
ber of hair ornaments and dancing
caps have come to the light of day, or
more probably, to the twinkling lights
of night. Here are two of them, one
for the carefully coifed lady and one
for the curly-haired little girl.
In those made for young women,
caps to hold the hair in place have
outnumbered all others, but. with the
introduction of less strenuous danc
ing bands of all kinds encircling the
head and holding the hair about the
face in place have come to the fore.
Nearly all these bands are more or
less elaborately set. Rhinestones
with silver filagree form the back
ground to their alluring brilliance.
The band shown in the picture em
ploys both rhinestones and tiny vel
vet flowers in its composition. Small
sprays of velvet forget-me-nots re
minding one of branches of coral be
cause they are coral-colored and set
in short, straight spikes of the blos
soms. are mounted on a strand of
rhinestones. This ornament encircles
the head, the ends fastening in with
short hairpins. A more secure fas
tening is managed by a small hook at
one end of the band which grasps a
loop at the other end, the fastening
concealed under a strand of hair. A
fine hair net helped out with a close
fitting band of this kind will keep the
coiffure unspoiled for many a gay hour.
Purely for ornament and by way of
being unusual, the fragile butterfly
made of threads worked into a lace
stitch, is mounted on a plain narrow
band of ribbon, for the head of a lit
tle girl. Her dancing curls will take
care of themselves: the band of rib
bon will restrain them from falling
over her face. The lacy butterfly is
outlined with the very finest of silk
covered wire which supports the more
than gauzy wings.
The gay and buoyant bows of rib
bon, which are set at pert angles on
the heads of little girls, are like but
terflies in shape and seem to lie poised
ready to fly. Just a little more airy,
the butterfly of needlework in the
very simplest of stitches is pretty for
the little girl who is herself like a
dancing butterfly.
And Now the Military Shoe
ANEW aspirant for favor, with all
the signs pointing toward its suc
cess, is just launched. Smart shoes,
full of snap and style, usher in the
military mode in footwear, with colors
and braidings and new features in cut
and finish distinguishing them from
;ime-honored styles from which they
bare departed.
The vogue for cloth-topped boots,
having gray or tan or white uppers,
will help to make the military shoe a
success. The transition from these to
colors less unobtrusive promises to
be easy. Footwear has for the past
three seasons been growing more
showy and no one can deny the at
tractiveness of boots made to match
costumes, and the elegant black and
white footwear which has distinguish
ed the season just passing.
But the new military styles are not
confining the manufacturers to neu
tral or quiet colors. Their uppers are
made in cloth, in regimental or other
blue shades, in maroon, green and
brown. Just the smartest develop
ments of all for spring is the shoe
having cloth like the gown embodied
in its make-up. The strong materials
used in tailored skirts answer the pur
pose very well. A more practical idea
is evident in spats, made of the ma
terial of the gown, to be worn over
either high or low shoes having patent
leather vamps.
The military shoes are ornamented
with soutache braid and brightened
with patent leather tips. They are
one of the straws which show which
way the wind blows in new footwear.
The trend of fashion is toward more
fanciful models.
The picture given here includes a
pair of shoes such as are made for
children. There is nothing unusual
about them, but they are to be com
mended for the shape, which accom
modates itself perfectly to the foot—
this is the requisite of first importance
in considering footwear for the young
| people,
JULIA BOTTOM LEY.
Indestructible Vo'-le.
A fabric called indestructible voile
promises to be much used for spring
and summer. \ summery frock was
j embroidered iD black and yellow
daisies. The long sleeved bodice was
shirred over the shoulders with a por
tion of the bodice edged with net
hanging loose over a girdle of black
velvet, which was extended in sash
i ends. The skirt was shirred at the top
; with two tucks at the center laid close
I ly together. A curving band of the
i voile was embroidered with daisies
and frilled with a narrow edging of
net, as was the hem of the skirt.
---
Ornaments Necessary.
The small furnishings of a room are
the things that really furnish it. The
| wall covering may be in the most ap
proved of neutral tones, the floors maj|
be faultlessly finished, the rugs may
be exquisite and in impeccable taste
and the furniture may be the product
of careful workmanship and careful
choosing. Even the pictures on the
wall and the lights may be faultless
and yet the room in question will lack
a certain air of completeness unless a
few objects, vaguely termed “orna
ments,” be included in its furnishings.
As Petticoats Return.
Petticoats made of pique, button
holed in big scallops about the hem,
are durable and serviceable. They are
not transparent, and that is one of
the things that commend them for
practical wear.
Quite the opposite of the pique pet
ticoat is that of net. It is often hand
embroidered with a scalloped edge,
and some conventional design made
up of dots and sprays of leaves above
the scallop.
The dancing petticoat is usually
made with a slash in each side. This
arrangement insures freedom, without
which it is impossible nowadays to
dance. The lower edge of the front
and back of the petticoats are usually
rounded so that the petticoat is really
formed of two sections rounded to
gether along their long edges and
fitted or gathered into the waist along
the narrow edges.
And it's surprising how many bar
gains we see in the shop windows
ROADS IN BETTER CONDITION
Split-Log Drag of Great Service in
Keeping Thoroughfares in Shape
—How It Is Built.
The use of the split-log drag is im
portant in putting the roads in shape.
There are over 2,000,000 miles of earth
roads in the country, and the split-log
drag is of great service in keeping
them in economical repair. The drag
is used in many states and in foreign
countries. It is used with two, three,
or four horses, and is easily con
structed.
It is a mistake to construct a heavy
drag. A dry red cedar log is the best
material for a drag. Red elm and wal
nut when thoroughly dried are excel
lent, and box elder, soft maple, or even
willow are preferable to oak, hickory
or ash.
The log should be seven or eight
feet long, and from ten to twelve
inches in diameter, and carefully split
down the middle. The heaviest and
best slabs should be selected for the
front. At a point on the front slab
four inches from the end that is to be
at the middle of the road locate the
center of the hole to receive a cross
stake, and 22 inches from the other
end of the front slab locate the center
for another cross stake. The hole
for the middle stake will lie on a line
connecting and halfway between the
other two.
Th€> back slab should then be placed
in a position behind the other. From
the end at the middle of the road
measure 20 inches for the center of
the cross stake, and six inches from
the other end locate the center of the
vgger
The Split-Log Drag.
outside stake. Find the center of the
middle hole as before. Wheu these
holes a re brought opposite each other,
one end of the back slab will lie 16
inches nearer the center of the road
way than the front one. The holes
should be two inches in diameter. Care
must be taken to hold the auger plumb
in boring these holes in order that
the stakes shall fit properly.
The two slabs should be held 30
inches apart by the stakes. The
stakes should taper gradually toward
the ends There should be no shoul
der at the point where the stakes en
ter the slab. The stakes should be
fastened in place by wedges only.
When the stakes have been placed in
position and tightly wedged a brace
two inches thick and four inches wide
should be placed diagonally to them
at the ditch end. The brace should be
dropped on the front slab, so that its
lower edge shall lie within an inch of
the ground, while the other end
should rest in the angle, between the
slab and the end stake. A strip of
iron about three and one-half feet long,
three or four inches wide, and one-half
of an inch thick may be used for the
blade.
An ordinary trace chain is strong
enough to draw the implement, pro
vided the clevis is not fastened
through a link. The chain should be
wrapped around the rear stake, then
passed over the front slab. Raising the
chain at this end of the slab allows
the earth to drift past the face of the
drag. The other end of the chain
should be passed through the hole in
the end of the slab.
Make-Up of Dairy Cow.
A wide, deep and full barrel or side
is very important in a dairy cow. She
must have plenty of room in which to
manufacture milk from food and a
large barrel indicates large digestive
organs. A wide mouth and long, strong
jaws also indicate that Bossy is, like
Bill Nye, “fond of food.” She ought
also to have a large belly and moder
ately high flank.
Beautify Home Grounds.
Set out fruit trees where they will
add to the beauty of the grounds.
Applying Manure.
When we apply manure to the grass
land we get the lever under th6 very
center of gravity of the whole farm.
When the grass crop comes up the
whole farm comes up with it.
Spread of Cholera Germs.
Keep a loaded gun for pigeons, rata
and English sparrows that carry hog
cholera germs.
Scarce Hen.
The 200-egg per year hen Is almost
as scarce! as the hen with teeth
MADE A LIGHTNING CHANGE
Occasion When Lord Salisbury Wast
ed Little Time in Getting Into
Dinner Costume.
The late Lord Salisbury, says Count
Paul Vassill in his book, “Behind the
Veil at the Russian Court,” shared
with the rest of his family the defect
of being rather careless in his dress
and general appearance. Lord Odo
Russell, who long represented Eng
land at Berlin, told Count Vassili this
amusing little anecdote in illustration
of that characteristic:
"One evening," says the count,
“Lord Odo and I were chatting about
Lord Salisbury’s attitude toward his
personal appearance—not ill-natured
ly, for it is doubtful which of us had
the greater admiration for the remark
able statesman in question—and Lord
Odo laughingly mentioned to me his
surprise when one day, after the din
ner bell of the embassy had been rung,
he found Lord Salisbury, who was liv
ing there, still busy at work in his
study.
“ ‘He rushed out,’ said the ambassa
dor, ‘and before I had time to put
aside the papers on the table, literally
in three minutes, was back again
ready for dinner. Now in that time
he could not even have washed his
hands, yet there he was in evening
clothes! I could not help asking him
how he managed to dress so quickly.
“Oh, my dear Russell,” he said, “any
one can change his coat at once, and I
had black trousers on already.” ’ ’’—
Youth’s Companion.
Presence of Mind.
“What did you learn at the school?”
the -oss asked the fair young appli
cant for the stenographer’s job.
“I learned,” she replied, “that spell
ing is essential to a stenographer."
The boss chuckled.
“Good. Now let me hear you spell
essential.”
The fair girl hesitated for the frac
tion of a second.
“There are three ways,” she replied.
“Which do you prefer?”
And she got the job.
Terrifying Styles.
“The Gorgons were mythological
sisters, who had snakes for tresses in
stead of hair.”
“Gee,” muttered the high school
girl, “it must have been tough to have
to go out and gather a bunch of
snakes whenever you needed a few
extra puffs.”—Louisville Courier-Jour
nal.
Taking Wing.
“Airships are very expensive, are
thev not?”
“Well, they make the money fly.”
When a woman says she won’t, she
won’t; also very often when she says
she will.
HAD CONFIDENCE IN JANITOR
Landlady Knew to Whom to Apply
When She Wanted References
as to a Tenant.
Smith, just established in a new flat,
happened to discover that the land
lord—or landlady, rather—had not in
vestigated the references he had fur
nished, upon her very particular re
quest.
“Why didn’t you ask anybody about
me?” he asked.
“I did,” was the answer. “I asked
the janitor at your old place. I always
do that. After finding out from the
old landlord whether a tenant is good
pay, I make a personal call on the
janitor of the house he has been liv
ing in.”
“But are janitors always to be
trusted?”
"By no means. I can usually tell
whether a man is truthful. 1 use my
judgment in each case. It isn't hard
to guess whether he has been unduly
influenced by tips or the lack of them
Generally speaking, the janitor knows
the tenant better than anybody else,
and I prefer his estimate to that of the
friends and business associates whose
names are supplied as references."
saa spelling.
Children are taught to spell too
many words, says Frank W. Ballou
of the Massachusetts department of
educational investigation and measure
ment. He claims that it is foolish to
make a bluff at teaching them 15,000
words when they will never have use
for more than 2,100. He gets his
thunder against the mass of Words
from the fact that children in his
school examinations have spelled
which “wich" 115 times, substituted
there for “their” 98 times, and the re
verse 75 tinjes, separate "sepperate"
93 times, and so on through the list
of terrors. Still they may show im
provement as compared with the 500
candidates for high school teaching In
New York, more than thirty years ago,
who spelled Balaam 178 different ways.
But the Boston man is right. There
is too much "spelling'' in the abstract,
and not enough practice at spelling in
the list of words which may be of use
to the people later in life.—Worcester
Telegram.
’Twixt Scylia and Charybdis.
“What are you so worried about?"
“My rich uncle wants to see me
about his will and I’m afraid if I tell
him that I am doing well that he will
leave his money to his poor relations,
while if I say that I am not doing well
he’ll leave it to a. worthier one than
myself.”—Philadelphia Ledger.
On the Road.
“Has he reformed?”
“Not exactly. He's just flirting with
conscience”—Judge.
Why Try to Fool
Your Stomach?
Some folks have an idea that if they eat big meals,
their brains and bodies will be strong.
Strength and energy don’t come from gorging
the stomach, but depend upon eating the right kind
of food.
For nourishment of brain and body, Nature
abundantly supplies in her field grains the elements
needed.
The famous wheat and barley food
Grape-Nuts
contains in splendid proportion all the nutriment of the
grains, retaining the mineral salts—phosphate of pot
ash, etc., stored under their outer coat, and which are
especially necessary for keeping brain, nerves and
muscle in working trim.
Grape-Nuts food is in the form of crisp, nut-like
granules — delicious with cream or good milk—easy to
digest—economical—
The perfect food for sound nourishment!
I
“There's a Reason”
—sold by Grocers everywhere.