DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. u 3 W-"" THE MAYOR SAYS: In His Homo No Other Kemcdy So Effective for Colds as Pa rana. MAYOR B. 8. IRVIN. Washington, Georgia. "I herewith reiterate my commen dation of Peruna. It certainly haa fcencfltcd our daughter In every In stance when eho was Buffering from cold. I have frequently used Peruna In my family and havo found It an excellent remedy for colds and also on a tonic. I often recommend it to my friends. Peruna seems to be lndls pensablo In my family, as no other remedy has been so effective la cases of cold." EVERT FAMILY wishing to be protected from cold should have Pe runa In tho house constantly. Also a opy of tho latest edition of the Ills of JLlfe," sent free by the Peruna, Co., Columbus, Ohio. Those who prefer tablets to liquid medicines can now procure Peruna In tablot fornjj Ask Your Druggist tor Free Peruna Lucky Day Almanac tor 1914. EACH IN A DEPENDENT MOOD Much Truth In Season's Greetings Ex changed Between Mr. BJinks and His Employer. Our friend, Mr. B jinks, works as an underling jn a real estate office. Hla Teturns haven't been very promising of lato, but then neither have tho re turns of anybody else in the office. And the boss has been worried. Wednesday morning BJinks met his 3)oeb ns ho was starting out to work. "I wish you a merry Christmas!" said BJinks. "That depends on you, sir!" answer ed the boss, without smiling. Next morning BJinks met bis boss again, but the latter was In a better mood. "I wish you a happy New Year!" said the boss. "That depends on you, sir!" faltered BJinks, respectfully. A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY. Tho Rev. Edmund Heslop of "Wig ton, Pa., Buffered from Dropsy for a year. His limbs and feet were swol len and puffed. Ho had heart flutter- I rffen lng, was dizzy and exhausted at tho least exer tion. Hands and feet were cold and he had such a dragging sensa tion across the loins that It was difficult to move. Aftoi- llolnor K Rev. E. Heslop. box0fJ of odd, Kidney Fills the swelling disappear ed and he felt himself again. He says lie has been benefited and blessed by the use of Dodds Kidney Pills. Sev eral monthB later he wrote: I have not changed my faith in your remedy since tho above statement was author ized. Correspond with Rev. E. Hes lop about this wonderful remedy. Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and re cipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free. Adv. Domestic Amenities. Hub Mary, my love, this apple dumpling Isn't bait done. , 4 Wife Well, then, finish it, my dear. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easy to take as candy, regulate anil invig orate ftomach, liver and Dowels. Do not snpe. Adv. It's tho unexpected that often hap pens, even when wo bring it on our selves. ilgfe-OTpi rsSyw.rllVV.v?5 -" IUHMM1 WESTERN CANADA NOW The opportunity of securing free' homesteads of 160 acres each, and tho low nriced lands of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta, will soon have passed. 5 Canada offers a hearty wolcomo to tho Settler, to tho man with a family lookinc for a home; to tho g farmer's son, to tho renter, to all who gi wish to live under better conditions, g Canada'o grain yield in 1913 is ' the talk of tho vorld. Luxuriant g Grasses ffive cheap fodder for large a herds; cost of raising and fattoning g for market is a triflo. 3 Tho sum realized for Boef. Butter. H Milk and Cheeso will pay fifty pt-r cent on the investment. write for literature and paruc- gi& utars as to reduced railwav ..-S? rates to superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to 1. I. MuUtklu, Pr..r ils, IT.Un.ir, S. D K. 1, Limit, II 1 JuM BL, II. ful, BUa. Cinidlan Government Agt. Everyone ShtuM HivsTftis Preftctitn Xtylass PaJIcek ? tfcttfliM and fattaWl WfM UUftM rl!HlSlLk, W1 fc)tk Op4KS ! Lakw4 t te-ll lfe W Ckiri AtMHft "IUMW TWH" m. W hm M. -el M- a. i fa . AM . , n H OUR AOIHT aWtll willMMl trill. . Hpi.HU. " rP"lwMr lot run WOT- ICW COMPANY, 4$n Tm ItA 4t, rrokltr4,Poa Q Wn!nnf2.rolrmnnlW,vt. K" w"XBBmaaBaBaBH Benem?' -.. $ v-.; 3SBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB f;; W? ' &IBaBaBaBBBai saaav&&&3&?& -HBH PBJ9HHHBaBBBBBBBBBBBmBBBBBBBBm! bbbbbbbTC:;::';:'' 3$IbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI mT Lv V 5lm4 m DOCTORING A PROFITLESS FARM Preparing the Ground by F you were a countryman whose farm was not pay ing very well and an ag ricultural expert camo along and said: "Let mo show you how you can double and triple your present Income;" if the man looked sano add In telligent, you would doubt- leBB jump at the chnce. Furthermore, if he mado good on his assertion he would win your ever lasting gratitude and perhaps you would recompense him with a little cash bonus. Now this is just tho op portunity that the farm management department of the Missouri Agricul tural college Is offering to tho farm ers of the "show me" state. The department sayB: "Ask for our nid and we will show you how to tonic your eickly bank accounts and how to Increase the profits of every branch of your farm." Even tho most skeptical who, to begin with, made fun of tho proposition have been silenced because tho Missouri farm management depart ment has mado good on all Its asser tions. Today some 500 local farmers are annually recording greater profits on tho credit side of tholr ledgers as a result of following the advice and plans mapped out for them by the de partment. 'An &4 ?sZ:y ki p &: ?st ..? V .'T v .v?, V .. 1 YT . 33 ? V' i' 2 ?. Rl'Utffi r . An experiment in growing cow peas with corn on one of the demonstra tion farms. The peas will fatten from six to 10 western lambs at a profit of ?10 per acre. The department was organized in 190C under the direction of Prof. W. J. Spillman of the United States depart ment of agriculture, and 1 13. Mum ford, dean of tho Missouri Agricultural college. For four years Its work was confined to an- accurato study of local farm conditions a resumo of the knotty problems of tho Missouri farm er and how he could be best aided in solving them. Then when the force was thoroughly conversant with tho "star boarder" farms of tho state and had planned an efficient campaign whose object was to eradicate tho evil features of the un profitable farm, they offered to help the general farmer re-map his system of management, his crop rotations, hie methods of marketing his produce, and to adapt his lino of farming to tho region in which ho resided. Confidence In Organization Grows. It was n case of "first come, first served," and after these business man agement doctors had cured a few bo vere cases of "loafer" farms and mndo them profitable and more productivo, applications requesting aid camo in Freih Air and Catarrh. Against this cause of catarrh (warm houses and foul air) thero is only one protection, and that Is tho gods of tho field and tbo woods, the west wind and thpupshlno. Spend as much of your tlmo as posBlblo out of doors and that ought to bo always two-thirds of It In childhood and resolutely bring tbo outdoors Indoors at every hour of your working and sloeplng day, At tho satno time insist upon tho most rigorous and scrupulous cleanli ness of clothing, hands nnd person; of i By GEORGE: H. DACV Taking Out All the Old Roots. like hot cakes from countrymen in all portions of the state. As an illustration of whnt these ox pert farm managers could accomplish In rehabilitating a good farm which was run down, due to mismanagement, tako the case of "Jim" Drown, who woe considered one of tho best farmers In Removing With Dynamite his district; yet he, on tho quiet, ap pealed to tho department, for aid. A representative visited the farm and found it apparently in good condi tion, supplied with good buildings, and annually yielding bumper crops of grain nnd roughage, 30 bushels of wheat, CO bushels of corn and two tons of hay to the acre. It was a different story, however, when tho expert examined tho live stock. Tho dairy cows were scrubs of tho worst variety, with staring coatB and every rib showing, and with ud ders not larger than a man's two flBts. Tho awlno and horses were also In ferior specimens of twentieth century llvo stock, while tho supply of farm machinery was In no sense modern and efficient. Hero was a case of a coun tryman who was exerting all his ener gies toward tho production of profit able crops, only to feed them to un profitable llvo stock. From 12 c6ws ho obtained only enough milk to supply tho need of his family Of six pereons. Tho department showed him where tho leak was, and explained to him how ho could har monize all his operations and render his farm more fertile. and profitable by maintaining better llvo stock. Ho Re ceded to their ndvico and today is gaining a profitable livelihood and yearly fattonlng his bank account un der a standardized syBtem of manage ment. Farmers Take Kindly to the Plan. Tho popularity of this movement to rejuvenate sick farms increased to such an extent thnt a year ago the de partment organized tho Missouri Farm Management association, tho pioneer society of its character In Amorica, the members being recruited from among the ranks of the owners of unprofitable farms who desired to nurse all the op erations on their ncroages back to a wage-earning condition. The object of tills association was to organize and combino the farmers of Missouri who wero interested in practical system of farm management It aided tho department In so much ns tho countrymen who nreded and want ed help wero ccntralizoJ in tho organi zation, while It aided the farmers In so far as tho department experts prom ised to visit nnd replun each placo in turn. Two hundred earnestly interested farmers Joined tho society tho first year, while at presont tho enrollment is double that number. Each country man pays fl.25 membership fee Mm floors, carpets, walls and hangings onywhoro, in fact, whero dust or dirt can lodge and germs can and dolodgo. Tho moro spotlessly clean and flood ed with sunlight any houso and its oc cupants can bo kept, tbo moro nearly germ freo will they bo, Dr. Woods Hutchinson In Common Diseases. Peculiar Welh 8upertltlon. Women, 'llko rabbits, nro of 111 omen to tho miner. In many placos, particularly in Wales, If a pitman meetB or sees a woman on his wny to funds being usod to aid tho depart ment In its work. Farmers Co-Operate With Department. After hie farm has been inspected by the departmont, in caso a member of tho society follows out tho suggoBtlons of tho exports (although ho is not In any way bound to carry out theso sug gested changes) he becomes a co-operator. Tho majority of tho co-operators ndhero strictly to tho advice of tho department. Each year tho dopartmont selects tho best co-opcrntlvo farm in each county and mokes It n demonstration farm which conducts local experiment al work undor tho direction of tho ex perts. In tho caso of tho demonstra tion farm, tho department nssumes tho initiative nud devotes 'ne much atten tion to tho placo as is necessary to mnko It pre-emtuently successful, and spares no pains In assisting the opera tors of theso farms to bring them to tho highest possible stato of fertility and to tho maximum point of profit ableness. On the othor hand, co-operator must tako tho initiativo in nil phases of his work, although ho receives aid and as sistance from tho departmont experts when ho stumbles onto a knotty prob lem. At present thero aro 75 co-opera-tlvo and flvo demonstration farms In tho state, and each summer, public meetings are held on tho placos of tho demonstrators, whero typical and II lustratlvo rcsultB havo been obtained. Farmers from all parts of tho coun try aro Invited to attend these meet ings at which prominent agricultural experts and authorities on farm man agement discuss the various lines of farming practiced In Missouri. At noon, a basket lunch Is served by tho ladies of tho county la which the gath ering 1b held, and in tho afternoon the men visit each Individual field, study tho crop, and Informally discuss tho efficiency of the methods of seed bed preparation, planting and cultivation which havo been practiced In the de velopment of this crop. Some of- the Largest Roots. Theso meetings havo boon fittingly termed "Show Mo Institutes on Legs," and are really regular motion picture shows minus tho nickel. Woman's Work Included In "Doctor ing." While tho men aro busy with their Held Btudy, tholr wives under the di rection of an expert in homo eco nomics occupy themselves with tho problems of tho farmhouse. Efficient methods of roplanning tho home, homo decoration, modern methods of cook ery, the elimination of wastes and tho utilization of byproducts, bandy aids In the kitchen, and tho bcautiflcatlon of the farm yard aro explained and dis cussed In detail. Tho woman expert In chnrge of this work occupies herself throughout tho year In visiting and remapping the systems of home-management prac ticed by tho housowlves who request her aid. Sho is a Bort of a traveling homo economics department which Getting Things Ready. works according to tho theory that If you cunnot bring tho farmer's wlfo to tho college tiien tako tho college and science to tho kitchen of tho house wife Sho plans out tho management of each homo as practically and systemat ically ub tho homo pockotbook will per mit, Tho Missouri farm management de partment also maintains a farm ac counting branch which teachos tho work ho will turn back, for such an encounter is hold to forebodo evil not only to tho man himself, but all bis associates. At Oswestry somo years ago a woman was employod as mes senger by ono of tho collieries, and In tho courso of her duties met many of tho colliers on tholr way to work. Tho men Immediately told tho man ager that they could not run tho risk of 111 luck entailed In meeting a wo man on tho way to tho pit, and threat ened to utrlko If sho woro not dismissed. Btato farmers how to maintain n prac tical and bUBlneBS-lIko nyBtem of rec ords nnd accounts. , Ono Missouri farmer last winter lost $300 on work stock nlono, duo to tho fact that ho had moro animals than ho could keep busy. It is really a ques tion of each farmer studying out how many head of animals ho can profit ably maintain, and then not oxcoodlng thin number. Tho samo thing Is true of tho scrub cows which eat up the profits of tho other farm dopartmentB. Tho work of tho Missouri farm man agement department is Btnto-wido in scopo nnd Is efficient In solving tho problems of tho flvo-acro fnrm, the 600-acre farm, or tho farm whose own er merely desires to koep tho wolf from tho door, or to savo his place from bolng burdened with a mortgage. In a word, tho department Is davot lng just ns much attontlon and study to replanting an unprofitable ton-ncro truck or fruit farm ns it la to remodel ing an 8,000-acro stock farm. The Concrete Examples. Among tho practical results which tho department has obtalnod In Its first aid work to tho farmors Is tho caso of a 140-ncro farm which, tho first yoar It was worked, yielded ton bushels of corn, 15 bushels of potatoes, and one-fourth of a ton of hay to the acre. Tho managerial exports recommend od tho uso of better snod, tho fall dis tribution of 15 tons of manure to the acre, nnd modern methods of culturo; this farmer followed theso directions and tho Becond year afterwards ho harvested 40 bushels of corn, one and three-quarter, tons of hay, and 100 bush els of potatoes to tho acre on tho fields on which those crops wero grown. Ho was a man of very limited capital and tho aeoBon ho roquested depart mental assistance his assets amounted to $2,000, whilo his liabilities totaled $1,800. At the end of tho second year following, he was out of all danger of debt and had a tiny sum Btored away in tho bank. Another notable illustration of man agerial efficiency resulted whero a hog raiser on a rough, 100-acro farm shift ed his troubles to the shoulders of tho expert managers who set him right on his feeding system and got him to study market conditions nnd require ments, so that ho last year realized $-1.-200 from tho sale of his swine, where as previously hla high mark for hogs for a Blnglo year was $500. Although ordinary work Btock are not supposed to yield much of an an nual profit another farmer cleared $300 in ono year fro hi his work animals sub sequent to consulting with the depart mental experts who advised him to decrease tho number of work animals which ho kept and to work tho horses and mules more during tho winter. A city man, inexperienced in farm ing, struggled along for flv6 yearB just about making ends meet and then ho employed the assistance of tho farm experts who dtngnosod bis troubles as a poor rotation, tho ubo of scrub seed, nnd tho undor-fecding of his market animals. He followed their directions, improv ing his methods, and now 1b gaining a profitable return from his madc-to-or-der farm. The farm has materially gainod In 'fertility, it has Increased in annual crop production, and this year it paid off its back indebtedness and begins a new season with a clean slate. Indian Legend of Interest. When tlio Creek or Muskogee In dians adopted into their tribe tho rem nants of other tribes which wero nearly extinct many superstitions wero found among them. Ono of theso tribes was the Tuckabatches. Tho legends of tho Creeks state that tho Tuckabatches brought with them sev en plates, tho origin and object of which havo puzzlod scientific men for centuries. Tho Tuckabatchos claim that these platos wero given them by their ancostors. They were not to be handled by all persons, only by particular men, and those chosen by tho chief or mlcco of tho tribe. Flvo of tho plates wero of copper and two of bruss. Tho copper plateB wero about 18 inches long and seyon inch es wide; tho brads ones bolng round and 18 inches in dlumotor, having two characters on them simllur to tho lotters A and B connected. Tho prates wero kept burled under tho houso of tho chief and aro believed to bo still in existence. Tallaquah (Okla.) Democrat. Fairy Tale Continued. Ited Itldlnghood grow up and' mar ried a rich man. The other day she camo back from Europe, Instead of a red rldtuguood sho woro an immense imported hat and her nlgrottes were seizod by tho custom officers, Wa not that oxciting? Cinderella's nfter life was humdrum. Hor marrlod llfo wob moro or less happy and sho had many children. Sho usos the glass slipper now to npank them with. Louisville Courier-Journal, Are Your Hands Tied? fey m chronla dUaaM eoaMMa to wmhm fclsd? Yea feel dall h'?hj'f Rack, the, pain here and there dlHlnes or petuipe bot fleehesT Thera'a nothing ram can accomplUh nothing too can eajoyl IrViAMt'e mm. auul MMak am It fc Ait uw bwaj itmua auk - 70a eaa find permaaeot relief to DRe m?UsMCEM Favorite Prescription Mr. Fannie B. Brent, of Bryant, Neleoa Co., V write: "I titter 1 M very pain and aeae a woman coald bare, agr back wae weak, and I mgere wMh nerromncM and could not Bleep at nlfat. BveTered with oreaea la my itebt bhx and every month would bare pel& and bar ke stay ia bed. I bare take elfht bottle of your 'Favorite Preeerlptlea' aad eae vtal of yoar Fleaeaat FaBetit. Caa now do ay work for lx In family, and eel like avaev wmiwu. I Uek H if the best medicine la the world for women. I reeewmaail K to all amy Haa ad many of then hate beta greatly baeflte4 by it. Dr. PIERCE'S PLEASANT PnUUCIS lteUere lArtr I1M AND WANTED IT UNDERSTOOD Newly Arrived Choir Singer Emphatic In Declaration That He Wat a 8lngle .Man. "Bruddorn and stBtahs," began n Bklmpy-slzod, nattily attired now ar rival in tho choir, "as I has but lately como amongst yo'-all, I'm glad to tako dlsadvnntago o do Pastah's kiud pun mission to set muhso't right In yo' eyes and onco and for all oqulnch do repo't dat has raised its hydrant head, to do effect dat l'so posln' as a wlddorer when In reality I'a a nefarious mar'd mnn. If yo'-all will 'vostlgato over at Tumlinvlllo, whuh I comes turn, you'll find dat muh lata lamentable he'pmoot not on'y died mighty nigh threo monthB ago, but has dono stayed dead twoll plumb ylt. And dcrn dat knows will infawm yo' dat do lady weighed cloat to fou' hund'ed pounds and wasn't nono o' dom dar clingln' vinoB dey tells about In stories, stlddor which, If sho waB alivo right now I wouldn't bo wearin' dese flno clotheB and slngin' tannor in dta choir shu'd bo 'splayln' do gaudy raimunt and do In' all do rojoicin1 in do fambly. No, bruddcrn and Blstabs, I'bo a Blnglo man at do present, and wld all do com pormunta in do world for do beauty an shivery I Bees 'round mo yuh, dag gawnod If I don't stay sol Ladles and gen'lomon, and FabBon Hagstor, I thank yo'I" KanBaB City Star. What la Coming? Whitney Warron, nt tho recent New York liorso show, nodded toward n young man In tight morning coat and rakishly tilted top hat, and said: "That young millionaire haa already had three wives. Yet ho Ib received, yet ho Is oven lionized, everywhere. What Ib tho world coming to? "What Ib tho world coming to?" Mr. Warren pursued. "As I look about me at tbo tolerant, tho too tolerant so ciety of today, I think of tho horse thief. ".'Yours In a very serious crime, my man,' a judgo said sternly to a horso thief. 'Fifty years ago it was a hang ing matter.' "'Well, your honor,' Bald tho horso thief, calmly, 'fifty yearB henco It mayn't be 11 crimo at all.' " Significant Miss Elslo Do Wolfe, commenting at a tea In New York on tho engagement to hor mother's French maid of a young man belonging to n rich old Knickerbocker family, oaid: "Marirages of that typo are seldom happy. Thoy turn out llko tho boot maker's." Miss Do Wolfe, smilingly, resumed: "A retired bootmnkor, who had mar ried hlB servant as his second apouso, was onco asked by a friend how ho was getting on. His significant reply was: " 'Soles mako stiff uppers.' " Or Hears From Her. "Ho says that when ho makes up hla mind to do a tiling ho goes and docs it" "Ho means that when his wife makes up his mind to do a thing ho goes nnd does it." Inherited Talent Mrs. Shimmerpato Count Confetti seems to bo an expert at cranking nutomobllcs. Mr. Shimmerpato No wonder. I'll bet most of his ancestors wero organ grinders. Judgo. The Needle Scare. "What's all this needle scaro among girlB?" "I don't know. Can it bo that soma girl's mother has asked her to do a little sewing?" VONDERED WHY. Found the Answer Was "Coffee." Many pale, sickly personn wonder for years why thoy have to suffor so, and oventually discover that tho drug caffeine In, coffeo Is tho main causo of tho trouble. "I was always very fond of coffeo and drank It ovcry day. I never had much flesh and often wondered why I was always so palo, thin and weak. "About five years ago my health completely broke down and I was con fined to my hod. My stomach was In such condition that I could hardly tako sufficient nourishment to sustain lifo. "During this tlmo I was drinking coffee, didn't think I could do without it. "After awhllo I camo to the conclu sion that coffeo was hurting me, and decided to givo it up nnd try Postum. When It was mndo rjght dark nnd rich I soon becanio very fond of it "In ono week I began to feel hotter. I could eat moro and sleep better. My Bick headaches wero loss frequont, and within flvo months I looked and felt llko a now being, headacho spoils en tirely gone. "My health continued to Improve and today I am well and strong, weigh 148 lbs. I attribute my present health to tho life-giving qualities of Postum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "Tho Road to Well ville," In pkgs. Postum now comos in two forms: Regular Postum must bo well boilod. Instant Postum la a soluble pow der, A tenspoonful dissolves quickly In a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverago instantly. Grocers sell both kinds. "Thoro'a a Iteasou" for Postum. Corporation Footballs. Mayor MItchol of New York was praising a commuter who, by contin ual complaints, had Improved the rail way Borvlco of his district "Wo aro apt to call tho kicker crank and a nuisance," Bald Mr. Mitch el. "But It's tho kicker who get things dono for tho community." Ho smilod and ended: "Thoy who never kick are bat to apt to become footballs." 1 Important to Mothers Exasiinn carefully every bottle ef CASTORIA. a eafo and sura remedy for Infants and children, and see that kt Ttnara 41iA Signature of (jLa&Z74cZc2ute In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Cattorls Very Likely. "My tailor Ib beginning to dun me." "Suspects that you've done nlra, oh?" BoBton Evening Transcript A simple protection against daBcroB throat affections nre Dean'a Mentholated Cough Drop; 60 at Drug Store. Only the Ignorant evor try to set smart Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not state tho kettle. .Adv. The man who keeps his month skat Is seldom open to criticism. Rheumatic Twinges; yield immediately to Sloan's Lin iment It relieve ' achitur and wouen parts instantly. Redact Inflammation and andquleu thatagea- Ulna; pain, trate. Don't rub-it SLOAN'S LINIMENT Kills Pain , gives quick relief from chest sad' throat affection. Have you tried Sloan'? Here's what others ... Relief from RheaaiaUna "Mr mother haa tued one eoe. botHe of Sloan'e Liniment and. although Hie to over 83 yean, of age, ihe bna ob tained treat relief from ber rnenma-lUta.-'iif. O. . UiuUUaf, CJroy, Ui. . .Good for Cold and Cron A little boy next door had croon. I R re the mother Sloan' Liniment to , .'. She tare him three drop en acer before going to bed, and be fotnp with out the croup Inthe morning." r. w. WL Saints tin Blmumad At'OOef, aft .. . Nearaleja, Co . Sloan' Liniment I the beet ne. cine In the world. It ha relieved vm or neuralgia. Those palm hare all rone and I can trolr ear your Liniment did togthem-jr. b'KbXtT At all Dealer. Price Me.. Me. S1.M Sleaa' ImrtractlT Booklet e Horse Mat free. DfcttHS.SLMN,kM$Tll.m W. N. U., SIOUX CITY, NO. 4-1S14. Sioux City Directory "Hub of the Northwest" TUT- ninQCD:OTX1E;aK-Lcarnlarbertr4. UITY UAnutn Tools given; wagi-n nnla. ICtlS IfUOKTlI STHKKT. SIOUX C1T, IOWA VOR BEST SERVICE snip RICE BROTHERS Lire Btock Corumlmlon Merchants at 9IOUXCITY, CMmmgo om KanaasaUrj THE MARTIN HOTEL ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF 2BOROOWISJ RATES ai.OOAWO Of. For Best Eesults ship to FRANK E. SCOTT COMMISSION CO. Live Stock Balcimen and Buyers Rooa 203 Eichuia Bide. Stock Yards Slom City, ten SWANS0N & GILH0HE Live Btock Commlnslon Merchants. SIOUX CITY, IOWA and CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Oarmotto: "AKrontngl)aslDCMballtonrepmtlta Barber Suppiis TlieKleeblattBarl)crsSupplyCo.,61Plerceet., bloux Clty,Ia.,wili treat jou right, ttia J. C. Rennison Co. fl9rists Flower for All Occules. SIOUX CITY. I8WA Protect your hog-i against Cholera. We hate Increased our capacity and can now furaJsai ANTI HOG CHOLERA CPP TIM npon Immediate notice. Go Ofinum ,uit your 101 telerluarlaev SIOUX CITY SERUM COMPANY STOCK YARDS SIOUX CITY, IA. Before dectdtafl on yeur new oar InYMlljaW -' JEFFREY FOUR $1550 COMPLETE RAMBLER DISTRIBUTING CO,1 312-14 Doajla St SJoHiCily, law as) aj AX Tftr ssBL7tesssafa7 SBBBJSf- BaWLTVaBBBBBKEfe- 1 j.' 1 Y i H A. 7H XJI IT'. T ' 1 a 1 ' w c ir- PI STJP ' - b & t.l lVa-W JV;