The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, June 24, 1915, Image 3

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    ITALIANS PRESSING ON TO TRIESTE
'*•'* a-'"-- ' •' ••• A dr*** v .. „ « -fl* mJ)*$ «ttte1aniMN»
" ■ • *r-v «!***- i>...id»n«T » ♦ fclit>»Tx. mjd. ■Misf-T’-fd. *s zb* railway suriiic.
UNCLE SAM S NEWEST GREAT BATTLESHIP
i A' •• • t* launched on .tune 1» at the New York navy vard She is a
: d •* •• arc or and armament, will cost *7.425,#00. She will car-v twelve
* Te ? fy!.>
BATTLESHIP FLORIDA BEING OVERHAULED
• ' . • < t *e Ini" - Ror:aa at the New York navy
• ; ‘--l* 4 ;» aft- r ber mum Iron. ife* maneuvers.
TURKISH GUN SMASHED BY ALLIES
-■ * • <; 1 rk f la in cne of the forts on the Dardanelles that was
c- »tr '-«rl by ttm flr»- from the allied fleet
PREDICTS HEIGHT OF TIDES
I
One of the many duties undertaken
by the I’aued States coast and gee
dene survey, which thrushes official
safortnation about our sea coast and
harbors tor the use ot mariners ply ms
these waters, is that ot predicting the
tides at any given station at any time
in the future To gam this tnforma
tion a new machine of a very oomph
rated nature has us; twc« ooiistmcted
by the bureau and placed in operation
m the headquarters at Washington
The tide levels tor a year can tie ob
tained in front tots m fifteen hours tor
any station To the lay man the nut
chine appears to !>* a mass of little
wheels, knobs, crank > chains and
glittering brass indicators, but the
new superintendent of the bureau, l>r.
K la»ster Jones explains the functions
of each part and finally arrives at the
mil of paper on one end on w hich tw ■>
fountain pens are drawing lines. One
of tiiese draws a line about the middle
of the roll which represents the mean
sea level while the the other draws a
varying line which represents the
tide From this graphic record,
which is 370 feet long and about six
inches wide, representing the tides for
a year, the tide level at any time in
that period can be readily ascertained
Shcotipg Civilians.
According to the laws of war, any
civilian who is found with arms in
his possession is liable to be shot
without mercy. Although this seems
a very severe rule, it is absolutely nec
essary for the safeguarding of the
whole civil population.
The rules of war say that no men
will be recognized as combatants un
less they wear a distinguishing badge,
which can be easily recognized. If it
were not for this, any number of men
could at any time band themselves
together, and say they were belliger
ents. If this were allowed, therefore,
invading troops would safeguard them
selves against surprises by killing
every man in villages through which
they marched.
This particular rule is so stringent
that even a noncombatant who took
up arms to defend his wife against
some drunken soldier would be liable
to be shot.
«
MAY ADOPT EUROPEAN WAY
C-1ted Stales Electricians Consider
rg the Merits of Concentric
Wring. Used The«a.
Electridbnc to the United States
are disettaaing the question of adopt- ,
t 'he European system of wiring
he i*e*. » fetch uses coadurtors con
r sating of an inner core surrounded
.nwclating material and covered
»:'j at- -.iter conductor that Is bare
»--• is ta-jroughl} grounded, thus tak- ,
ii.g the place of the return wire.
The practice." says the Scientific
American, "of rlacing the two con- i
ductors of circuits within a metallic
tube or conduit was necessarily fol
lowed by a rule of the National Elec
tric Code requiring that this conduit
be continuous from outlet to outlet,
and permanently grounded, lest the
insulation become abraded and there
be a leakage from the conductors to
the conduit. But in central stations
with a grounded neutral wire, there is
practically no difference of potential
between that wire and the grounded
conduit. Hence the insulation about
this neutral wire may be dispensed
with or put on the potential wire to
increase the margin of safety. Hav
ing arrived at this point, there is no
reason why the bare grounded wire
within the conduit should not be dis
pensed with and the conduit itself be
used in its place. Thus we arrive at
the concentric wiring.”
Japan sells large quantities of coal
to China.
BIC WRESTLERS !
MEET IN OMAHA
3oec«.es-C jto'- Sc_t Sc'ec^.ea *ar
-<• j 5—»arn*r* Gkmqpmdtoip
*: Scans.
ST£C*E* SC -AO SCe.-'EJtTEa.
'« S*A aast Cam *£
yntM ABSTJ32.
juio. mu'i iw iumc jo -aw -*Aes£a<f
jt aOiw S ac. 9uvcs*» j«rv ■csaiia. Vi
9: 9m ernes a»®2> w -smw ais
naci. m *:teac-a iaa Mmi aw
■’•■ ■>»■ asnitrjC l:SD—» jo. a*MJg as:i. -~sa
n n ar-nsnut :a&. f*w. m
T •- .a.- •- , . . ...• a
mn — if im a. as acmtaas.
-*7fc-u. aJan aa* sroa* aim: «. a»w a«ec
WiPawr ta a iwtmr- 39* as a ctaas:
*xe. am*:: Sscmw- hty. a \rautt ansa.
«iu tat i.s- v .:>iw»r:a. ailwsunw
■ iiTfvup: -nttShag: mic titan
b.llit -St* laii- TTins a alta
li'vmnirt'ite i-AiUi —n. jbf rturrrT
ap wi iv |«srbi aantt. nau. rtut
mw hits iw*t*T. a am. sctwi lies tawcL
j *3*ta ia |RR h:> s.ntiijtars at. tlw am
• 'Ms Col tar • :j.r*-*«*r,: VSK-nmi:
iaanrnto! an; » to- .!(•• a*to<ifc*r*s
fipfim-T. has a v. • , « i(Tf ts^oia: inn.
Jot Stecker.
Cutler has wrestled all the big men
of the wrestling game, and has han
dled them all in the same manner that
Joe Stecker has handled his oppo
nents. Chas. Cutler, besides being
one of the greatest living athletes, is
a refined, high-class, well educated,
well-read gentleman.
Mr. Cutler's manager. \Ym. Ro
chelle. a very prominent and wealthy
business man of Chicago, takes pr de
in the fact that lie is handling Mr.
Culler s affairs, and it is said that h<“ j
takes no remuneration for his serv
| ices. Mr Rochelle thinks that there
is no living at: lete capable of taking
Chas Cutler's laurels away from him.
The sentiment in Nebraska for Joe
Stecker is so well known and so
strong that it will be hard to impress
Charley Cutler.
i anyone that there is a man living
| who can heat Joe Stocker, and the
| same sentiment prevails in Chicago
] regarding t'has. Culler. It is plainly
j seen that each of the contestants have
numerous admirers and followers, and
i the attendance at this match wil with
j out doubt be the largest of any cham- ;
i pionshlp bout in this country.
The purse of $15,060 offered is the '
| largest purse ever offered in the west-1
i ern country for an athletic contest,
and considering this large purse and
the well-known ability of the contest
ants. the good, clean reputations of
the referee and the promoter, will
without doubt make it the most pop
ular championship contest ever staged
in the west.
Brave Boy of Thirteen.
Petrograd. — Among the latest
wounded sent back from the front is
Vaddili Pravdin, a boy of 13. who has
already won ail four grades of the St.
George's cross.
Learning New Trade*.
Paris.—About 100 mutilated soldiers
have begun learning new trades at
the special school organized fur them
at Charenton. They include former
coal miners, masons, dyers, cooks,
plumbers, farmers, painters, plaster
ers. butchers and carmen.
Bavarian Best Soldier.
St Quentin. France.—For genera
tions the Bavarian soldier has sus
tained the reputation of being one of
the best fighting units in the world.
He has always been, in the eyes of
his opponents, a very terrible' man to
be pitted against. His name has been
synonymous with military efficiency,
and. especially during the present war.
his enemies have whispered more than
that about him. Many do not know
or will not believe that the Bavarian
has any other side than to w in at any
price.
“xiSpw
Roofing
means
~ Cut Price
Quality." Trying to
^ i» penny
Certain-teed
BrWing
**• X-Tocag—Caracas-—g—> j-scaa
*=a tv 3* jc- £j> •oaer^.Iwt ? yw
lag i* ua anagaae
A sw>* Biaiw no.: oxer m ax ox
T^wstwr a" ww v ut
5^11* Stm»rrr*
Afcwp® ?urr* -tot ttf .;."-inus.
The . o..B£ twn « !« s '- nm fur
some: r, mt to Tun. uj: tn^a «o nurrj.
a ^rrr] with a nup uos
Alrec lit."' >f-ijJr:' r i—tar n-e- T.’a t >fg»
fia! Blue % uteri, wt: fnfj lie sirs : JI
Ai all 4:<>»d ^mcer* Ad*.
Dubious.
"Poes ht- act with spirit""
"1 never saw him ac: without it ' —
Halritnore American.
Woman's Advantage
Women tndergo greater tria’s than
men " True, fair one. but no matter ;
whom they have murdered there's al
ways an acquittal or a hung jury.—
Louisville Courier-Journal
Manufacture of Ghee.
Ghee, the native butter of India,
w hich has been known to keep for cen
turies witbout becoming rancid, is
made by boiling butter until all the
watery particles and curds have been
removed by skimming.
—
Brooklyn Navy Yard.
The Br-)Oklyn navy yard was estab
lished February 23. 1801, when the
first land, twenty-three acres, was
bought from one John Jackson for J40,
000. The yard now comprises 144
acres, and has a water front of nearly
three miles, protected by a sea wall
of granite.
What Interested Him.
I'ncie Ben Bamstraw’s city nephew
took him into a fire station one night
just in time to see the fire laddies
shinning like squirrels down a pole
from their quarters overhead. “Come
on. uncle, we'll go to the fire,” the
nephew suggested. “I don't want to
go.” replied the uncle “I want to
stay here until they come back, so I
can see them scoot back up the pole
again."—Judge.
The Proudest Moment.
“Oh no! A fellow's proudest mo
ment was not the time he came out
on top in his first scrap with “the kid
next door Nor was it the first time
he “saw" Mary Jane home from the
party. Nor. again, was it when she
“named the day.”
It wasn't when he made his biggest
business deal; got his largest raise;
became a partner in the concern and
was paying an income tax
And white this, too* was a proud mo- j
meat the proudest of all was not
when the first-born came, nor was it
w hen the youngster first lisped “dada”
AH those were big moments* mo
ments most every fellow remembers
Urns and happily, but the real proud
est moment w as the first time w hen
lie were his first pair of Song pants'
IN MIGHTY CHORUS
F*e*cr Sc-be^ Sang When Ap
prsed o‘ Italy's Acted.
~ mo W c- Mo- T .r-rx-xc Out La
•tarsc. a se as trre %xws *«s
Sceeac A.eeg r-e Lwrg L ne
af Sati«
A sugar- cnuras- Sr-im a am ..u
=*«»». sax^-iag araa tax 5>W anixs
"r*m rax XarSi sea ax rax S*ia» air
•ier ta rrmmn-ivms ?evi .-C ~ Xur
niaT—1.' grxxtwi rax ax** raat lae
aatt -sncHCTnf rax »ar apams: Aoscta.
**=£•=* a i%*r?sa»ar*jfcac at rax rrrjut.
TS» snry af aw* sa*: awsaagsr »«ac
tenag rax tracerne* at ansa,
at * amlfcanr aw *
atjwnmr isr «*■** ~~mncw jwLXst auiflag
rax- A-jtra's. jMaawt jwttx TmaiL s
arrange )wail« ai susajc
_ A«g YMte SAKnuBMe. scga-et ate
Or;s arsa vvo : «s*i~ a i -utt? aa rat.
• «*.-* jLa-.-a. *•" faamrx v*.
tnmaniHiBiiji.- awe tn«t Avar aesmsise
SCi.te'scu- "hast--.- 3; 7/ ‘-xaw'ta* .‘Wte*
A' ^rftpert Jrf«w; . i®T —^
'©-'fit swerve * setvow: ng s deur
U v-Hrc Titsimg. a»- -ax --'flu urn.' war
tmsiiders no etcgts eon-maudeT's -ant
souwm)Uwb15 a,' «x rtawttgn -genera*. o'
dnasunt*. it. eroitmitTtWrs tii p-wades
branetaj^ «ur vj. : «vku from -each ne»
eetfrer turf] -every coirtne., tnajot cap
taiii xnc tembenarr along the tiring
line tT'-» That Italy ttac entered tw
its:* on ux sme or tire a.-iex- a; las;.
T he message raced on over field
telejibone a ires— wires si rang preear
tously through ifie ralm- o: devastated
villages, or. forest trees, on stakes
driven in fields of butter cues It
reached the telephone operators on
the front line observation posts.
They Hashed it on to the troops
biazing away at the Germans in the
trenches a few yards distant, to the
batteries of fie.i artillery screened be
hind the hills, to the men in the hid
den gun pits, to observers in the tow
ers and tree tops—to everybody every
where.
U was sunset. Along the line there
seemed to come a lull. Heavy guns
paused as though in reverence. Field
pieces observed silence as if for a
moment's devotion on this new day of
Pentecost.
Strangely the strange. almost weird
silence was broken. Spontaneously
the troopers began "La Marseillaise,"
at first singing softly and then break
ing into a roaring refrain as the words
ran along the battle front in the great
est chorus the world has ever heard.
"Allons enfants de la patrie," they
thundered. "Le jour de globe est ar
rive!”
The roaring song startled the be
lated field larks long since grown used
to belching cannon. They rose and
soared wildly above the trenches.
Instinctively the Germans in the op
posite trenches knew what this thun
derous choru^ meant. They did not
need to read the placards piinted by
the French in the night and posted
on top of the trenches for German
persual at dawn. They shouted back:
"Gott Strafe Italien.”
Then from the German trenches
came the strains of "Die Wacht Am
Rhein" and shortly afterward the rat
tle of bullets. The Germans were rid
dling the French placards.
Great City’s Sewago.
Every 24 hours there is poured into
the Harlem river 00.000,000 gallons of
New York city's sewage; Into the
North river 132,000,000 gallons and
into the East river 264,000.00*) gallons.
Liwad a Change.
Friend—Ever play poker evenings’
Demist- No, sir. 1 get enough of
draw ing and filling in my regular daily
work
The most difficult place to convict a
man is in the courts. The easiest
place is In a mass meeting
No bother to
get summer
meals *«• ith
these oo Raad
Yiesaa Stjie
U>±7. St N«a & Libhr |
Jtm/sjg: rbt pwandHftM AwilpimC fo~
« a vie -.fr s- <«k J'/IR: »C x* ■“ Sitk'
40«t; a IMU l*Mretag<*g OBWftfyg «nt
lOHJee JiCatTST 33» -hf*C’. 40K Jigwmj.
a.: r -tut. vfSfcd' **■ i" 3.. ss.
•Mm Oes**c.
" A mar Oja: -buys bis toeofct tes to
matrt. :be color of bis •eyes ’ s* >>.
Tnc-le Knea. may have good wi«.
bill be •ir>\ liable To have good jute
I TIM»t ’
EC2EWAS AKD RASHES
Itching and Burning Soothed by Cub
cur#. Trial Free.
The Soap to cleanse and purify, the
Ointmem to soothe and heal. Relief,
rest and sleep follow the use of these
supercrcarry emollients and indicate
speedy and complete healment in most
cases of young and old. even when the
usual remedies have utterly failed •
Sample each free by mail with Book.
Address postcard. Cuticura, Dept. XT.
Boston. Sold every where—Acv.
Skulls as Drinking Cups.
The old Scandinavian sages repre
sent as among the delights of the im
mortals the felicity of feasting and
drinking to drunkenness from the
skulls of^.he foes they had vanquished
on earth. Mandeville goes further, and
represents the Guebres as exposing
the dead bodies of their parents to the
fowls of the air until nothing but the
skeletons remained, and preserving
the skulis to be used as drinking cups.
Sought Information.
During an intermission of a Josef
Hofminn recital In a New Jersey
town, a woman glancing through the
program observed the following ad
vance notice: "Thursday Eve., March
25th. at Carnegie hall. Phil'-iarmonic
Society of New York. Soloist—Zim
balist.” Turning to her companion,
she asked: "Tell me. I'm not very fa
miliar with musical instruments, but
what's a Zimbalist?"
—
Expert In Silver Linings.
Hall—"Blythe is a pretty optimistic
| character. 1 hear." Wall—"1 should say
so. If he failed in business, he'd thank
heaven he had his health; if he failed
in health, he'd thank heaven he had
his business, and if he failed In both
he'd say there was no use having one
without the other."
Following Suggestion.
“Italy is shaped like a boot ”
“Maybe that's the reason it's been
! doing so much kicking"
And many a man finds it difficult to
: make s living because he is practical
[ ly a dead one
Vpon the whole It is better to be
| the friend of the good fellow than the
- good feMow himself
Makes a Healthy Appetite
*One for Breakfast-1
and One for Work”
m___„j
LOOK for the man
l who eats Grape
Nuts, and relishes his meals,
and is keen and fit for a
hard day's work.
Grape-Nuts
FOOD
is made from whole wheat
and malted barley with all
the essential mineral phos
ph?.tes retained.
A 10 desys° trial of Grape
Nuts may show how to
make yourself fit to do things
that bring money and fame.
“There’s a Reason” for Grape-Nuts