The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, April 29, 1921, Image 6

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    NORTTT PLATTE SE1UI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE.
BULL- DOG
ft
DRUMMOND
Who
"COME ON, B0Y8I"
Syiiopatii. In December, 1918, four
men gatlier In a hotel In Home and
hear one of tho quartet outllno a
plan to paralyze Oreat Ilrltaln nnd
at the name time boIzo world power.
The other three, Hocking, Amcrl
can, and Stelncrnan and Von Qratz,
Germans, all millionaire, agree to
the (scheme, providing Another man,
HI nun Potts, an American, Is taken
In. The Instigator of tho plot gives
hie name as Comto de Ouy, but
when he leaves for England with
bin daughter he dorldes to use the
name Carl I'etorson. Capt Hugh
(Dull-Dog) Drummond, a retired
officer, advertise for work that
will give him excitement, signing
"X10." As a result ho meets I'hyl
Ils Denton, a young woman who
answered his ad. She tells him of
strange murders nnd robberies of
which she suspects a band headed
by Peterson and Henry Ijaklngton.
Drummond decides to go to The
Lurched, Miss Denton's home. Pe
terson and Laklngton stop his car
and look him over.
CHAPTER II Continued.
"Ho's ho iiiotlonloRs," answered
Hugh. "Tho bully fellow hasn't
moved n muscle since I've been here,
1 bcllovo he'd sit on n hornet's nest,
nnd leave the Inmates picsslnK. Great
Klft, Mr. Laklngton. Shows a strenftth
of will hut rarely met with a mind
which rlseB nbovo mere vulgar cu
riosity." "It Is undoubtedly n great gift to
tmvo such a mind, Contain Drum
mond," said Lulclngton. "And If It
Isn't born In n man, ho should most
certainly try to cultlvato It. Shall
we bo seeing you this evening?"
Drummond shrugged his shoulders.
"I'm tho vaguest, man that ever lived,"
ho Raid lightly. "I might bo listen
ing to nlghtlngnlcs In the country;
or I might be consuming steak and
onions preparatory to going to.n night
club. So long. . . . Hope you don't
break down , again so suddenly."
He watched the Kolls-ltoyco start,
hut seemed In no hurry to follow suit.
And tils many friends, who wcra Wont
to regard Hugh Drmninond as a mass
of brawn not too plentifully supplied
with brains, would havo been puz
zled had they seen tho look of keen
concentration on his face, as ho stared
nlong the white dusty road. Ho could
not say why, hut suddenly and very
certainly the conviction had come to
hi in that this was no hoax and no
leg-pull but grim ann sober reality.
In his Imagination ho heard tho sud
den sharp order to stop the tnstnnt
they were over the hill, so that I'eter
son might havo n chance of Inspect
ing him; In a Hash of Intuition ho
knew thnt theso two men wtero no
ordinary people, nnd that ho was sus
pect, Two thoughts were, dominant
In his mind. Tho first wns thnt there
wns some mystery about tho motion
less, unnntural man who had sat bo
nlde tho driver j the second was a dis
tinct feeling of relief that his auto
matic was fully loaded,
THREE.
At half-past flvo he stopped In front
of Oodulmlng postolllce. To his sur
prise tho girl handed hlin u wlro, and
Hugh toro tho yellow envolopo open
quickly. It was from Denny, and It
was brief and to tho point:
"Ihono messngo received. AAA.
Must see you Carlton tea day after
tomorrow. Going Godalmlng now.
AAA, Messngo ends."
With n slight smile ho noticed tho
military phraseology Denny nt ono
time In his career hud been n signaler
and then ho frowned. "Must seo
you." Sho should nt once.
Ho turned to the girl and Inquired
tho way to Tho lurches. It was
about two miles, ho gathered, on tho
Guildford road, and Impossible to
miss. A biggish houso Htandlng well
back In Its own grounds.
"Is It anywhere nar a house called
The Elms?" he asked.
"Next door, sir," Bald the girl. "Tho
gardenH adjoin."
He thanked her, and having torn
tip tho telegrnm Into small plows, ho
got Into his car. There i was nothing
for It. ho had dechlwl.ttut to drive
boldly up to tho housp.and wiy that
ho had como to call on Miss Henton.
Ho had never been a man who heat
Rbout tho" bush, and slmplo methods
nppealed to him it trait In. his char
neter which ninny n boxer, addicted
to tortuous cunning In the ring, had
good causo to remember. What moro
natural, ho reflected, 4han to drive
over nnd seo such nn old friend?
He had no dlfllculty lnv finding tho
house, nnd n few, mlnuteH later ho
was ringing tho front-door boll. It
was answered by a maidservant.
"Is Miss Denton In?" Hugh asked
with n smile which' nt onco won tho
girl's heart.
"Sho has only Just come back from
Ixmdon, sir,' sho answered doubtfully.
"I don't know whether . . ."
"Would you tell her that Captain
Drummond called?" mild Hugh as tho
The Adventures of A
Demobilized Officer
Found Peace Dull
CYRIL MC-NE1LE
Illustrations by
IRWIN MYERS
ooyriqht by Geo H Do ran Co
maid hesitated. "That I happened to
fine myself near here, and camo on
chanco of seeing her?"
Once again the smile wns called
.Into play, and the girl hcsltntcd no
longer. "Will you come Inside, sir?"
she wild. "I will go and tell Miss
Phyllis."
She ushered hi in Into the draw-Ing-rootii
nnd closed the door. It
was n charantng room, Just such us he
would have expected with Phyllis. Big
windows, opening down to the ground,
led out on to n lawn, which was al
ready a blnzo of color. A few great
oak trees threw a pleasant shade nt
the end of the garden, and partially
showing through them, he could see
another house which he rightly as
sumed wns The Kims. In fact, oven
n s he henrd the door open and shut
behind him, he saw Peterson come out
of a small summer-house nnd com
mence strolling up nnd down, smok
ing n cigar. Then he turned round
nnd faced the girl.
Charming as sho had looked In Lon
don, she was doubly so now, In a sim
ple linen frock which showed oft her
llgure to perfection. Dut If ho thought
he was going to have any leisure to
enjoy the picture undisturbed, he was
soon disillusioned.
"Why have you come here, Cap
tain Drummond?" sho sold, u llttlo
breathlessly. "I said the Carlton
the day after tomorrow."
"Unfortunately," snld Hugh, "I'd
left London before that message came.
My servant wired It on to the post
olllce here. Not that It would have
made any difference. I should have
como. anyway."
An Involuntary smile hovered round
her Hps for a moment; then sho grow
serious again. "It's very dangerous for
you to come Jiere," eho remarked
quietly. "If once those men suspect
anything, God knows what will hap
pen."
It was on the tip of his tongue to
tell her that It was too late to Worry
about thnt; then lie changed his mind.
"And what Is there suspicious," ho
asked, "in nn old friend who happens
to be In tho neighborhood dropping in
to call? Wherefore your telephone
message? What's tho worry?"
Sho bit her lip and drummed with
her lingers on the arm of tho chnlr.
"If I tell you." she said at length,
"will you promise me, o'n your word
of honor, that you won't go blunder
ing Into The Kims, or do anything
foolish llko thnt?"
"At tho present moment I'm very
comfortnble where I nm, thanks," re
marked Hugh.
"1 know," sho said; "but I'm so
drendfully afrnld that you're tho typo
of person who . , . who . . ."
Sho paused, nt n loss for n. word. ,
"Who hollows llko n bull, and
charges head down," Interrupted
Hugh with a grin. Sho laughed with
him, and Just for a moment their eyes
"'' -yooj'
"It's Very Dangerous for You to Coma
Here," 8he Remarked Quietly,
mot, and sho read In his something
quite foreign to tho point at Issue,
In fact, It Is to bo feared that the'
question of Laklngton nnd his com
pntflons wns not engrossing prum
mond's mind, ns it doubtless should
have been, to tho exclusion of till
else.
"They're so utterly unscrupulous,"
she continued hurriedly, "so fiendishly
clover, thnt even you would bo a child
In their hands."
Hugh endeavored to dissemble his
pleasure nt that llttlo word "oven"
nnd only succeeded In frowning hor
ribly.
"I will be discretion Itself," he as
sured her firmly. '
"I suppose I shall hnve to trust
you," she snld. "Hnvo you seen the
evening papers today?"
"I looked at the ones thnt como out
In tho morning labeled six p. m.; be
fore I lind lunch," he nnswered. "Is
there anything of Interest?"
Sho handed him n copy of the
Plnnet. "Head that llttlo paragraph
In the second column." She pointed
to It, ns he took the paper, nnd Hugh
rend It aloud,
"Mr. Illram C. Potts the celebrat
ed American millionaire Is progress
ing favorably. He has gone into the
country for n fow days, but Is suf
ficiently recovered to conduct business
us usuul." He laid down the paper
and looked at the girl sitting opposite.
"One Is pleased," he remarked In n
puzzled tone, "for the snke of Mr.
Potts. To ho ill and hnvo a name
like thnt is more tlinn most men
could stand. . . . Dut I don't quite
see . . ."
"Thnt mnn wns stopping nt the
Carlton, where he met Laklngton,"
said the girl. "Ho Is a multi-mil-Ilonnlrc,
over here In connection with
some big steel trust; nnd when multi
mllllonnires get friendly with Laklng
ton, their health frequently does suf
fer." "Hut this paper says he's getting
better," objected Drummond. "'Suf
ficiently recovered to conduct business
ns U8unl.' "
"If he Is sufllclently recovered to
conduct business ns usual, why did he
send his confidential secretary nway
yesterday morning on nn urgent mis
sion to Delfnst?" ,
"Senrch me," snld Hugh. "Inci
dentally, how do you know he did?"
"I nsked at the Cnlton this morn
ing," she nnswered. "I snld I'd come
after n Job ns typist for Mr. Potts.
They told me.nt the Inquiry ofllce that
lie wns III In bed and unable to see
anybody. So I asked for his secre
tary, and they told me whht I'vo Just
told you that he had left for Delfnst
that morning nnd would be nwny sev
eral dnys. It may be that there's
nothing In It; on the other hnnd. It
may he that there's n lot. And lt'u
only by following up every possible
clue," she continued fiercely, "that I
can hope to beat those fiends and get
daddy out of their clinches."
Drummond nodded grnvely, nnd did
not speak. For Into his mind hnd
flashed suddenly tho reihembrnnce of
thnt sinister, motionless figure sented
by the chauffeur. The wildest guess
work certainly no vestige of proof
and yet, bavins once come the
thought stuck. And as he turned It
over In his mind, almost prepared to
laugh nt himself for his credulity
millionaires nre not removed ngnlHst
their will, In hrond daylight, from One
of the biggest hotels In London, to sit
In Immovable silence In nn open car
tlie door opened nnd ,nn elderly mnn
enme In.
Hugh rose, nnd tho girl Introduced
the two men. "An old friend, dnddy,"
she snld. "You must hnvo heard me
speak of Captain Drummond."
"I don't recall the name at tho mo
ment, my dear," ho answered courte
ously n tfact which was hardly sur
prising "but I fear I'm garttlng a llttlo
forgetful. You'll stop and have $ome
dinner, of course."
Hugh, bowed. "I should like to, Mr.
Denton. Thank you very much. I'm
afraid tho hour of my call wns a little
Informal, but being rbund In theso
parts, I felt I must como und look
Miss Denton up." ,
Ills host smiled nbscntmlndediy,
nnd walking to the window, stnrcd
through the gathering dusk nt tho
houso opposite, half hidden In tho
trees. And Hugh, who was watching
him from under lowered lids, saw hltn
suddenly clench both hands In a ges
ture of despair.
It cannot bo said that dinner was
a meal of sparkling gaiety. Mr. Hen-
ton wns palpably 111 at ease, and be
yond n fow desultory remnrks spoke
hardly at all; while tho girl, who sat
opposite Hugh, though sho made ono
or two valiant attempts to break tho
long silences, spent most of the meal
In covertly watching her father. If
anything moro iiad been required to
convince Drummond of the genuine
ness of his interview with iter at tho
Carlton tho preceding day, tho atmos
phere at this strained and silent party
supplied it
As if unconscious of anything pecu
liar he rambled on In his usual In
consistent method, heedless of wheth
er ho was answered or not; but nil
tho tlmo his mind wns busily working.
Ho hnd already decided that a Holls
Hoyco was not tho only, enr on the
market which could break down mys
teriously, and with tho town so far
nwny, his host could hnrdly fall to
ask hi m to stop tho night. And then
he hnd not yet qulto settled how
he proposed to have n closer look at
Tho Kims.
At length tho menl wns over, and
tho maid, placing tho decanter in
front of Mr. Denton, withdrew from
tho room.
"You'll have n glnss of port, Captnln
Drummond?" remarked his host, re
moving tho stopper, nnd pushing tko
bottle toward him. "An old pre-war
wine which I can vouch for."
Hugh smiled, nnd even ns ho lifted
tho heavy old cut glnss, ho stiffened
suddenly In his chnlr. A cry half
shout, half scream, nnd stifled nt
onco had como echoing through tho
open windows. With n crash tho
stopper fell from Mr. Denton's nerve
less fingers, breaking tho finger-bowl
In front of him, while every vestlgo
of color loft his face.
"It's something theso days to bo
nblo to sny that," remarked Hugh,
pouring out himself u glass. "Wine.
Miss Denton?" He looked nt the girl,
who was starlug. fearfully put of the
window, nnd forced her to meet his
eye. "It will do you good."
His tone was compelling, nnd nftcr
a moment's hesitation, she pushed
the gluss over to him. "Will yoil pntfr
It out?" she said, nnd he saw that she
was trembling all over.
"Did you did you henr nnjthlng?"
With n vnln endeavor to speak calmly,
his host looked nt Hugh.
"Thnt 'nlght-blrd?" he nnswered
enslly. "Eerie noises they mnke, don't
they? Sometimes in Frnnce, when
everything was still, nnd only the
ghostly green flares went hissing up.
ono used to hear 'cm. Sturtlcd nerv
ous sentries out of their lives." He
talked on, nnd gradually the color
came back to the other man's face.
Dut Hugh noticed thnt he drained his
port nt a gulp, and Immediately re
filled his glass. . . .
Outsldo everything was still; no
repetition of that short, strangled cry
again disturbed tho silence. WvIth
tho training bred of many hours In
No Mnn's Lnnd, Drummond was lis
tening, even while he was speaking,
for the faintest suspicious sound but
he heard nothing. The soft whisper-
With a Crash the Stopper Fell From
Mr. Benton's Nerveless Fingers,
Breaking the Flnger-Qowl In Front
of Him, While Every Vestige of Color
Left His Face.
Ing night-noises enmo gently through
the window; but the man who hnd
screumed once did not even whimper
again. Ho remembered hearing n
similar cry near the .brick-stacks nt
Gulnchy, and two nights Inter he hnd
found tho giver of It, at the edge
of a tnlne-crnter, with glazed eyes that
still held In them the horror of the
final secoh'd. And more persistently
than ever, his thoughts centered on
tho fifth occupant of tjie Rolls
Royce. .
It was with almost a look of relief
that Mr. Denton listened to his tale of
woe about his car.
"Of course you must stop here for
tho night," he cried. "Phyllis, my
dear, will you tell them to get a
room ready?"
With an Inscrutable look at Hugh,
In which thankfulness nnd apprehen
sion seemed mingled, the girl left the
room. There wns nn unnntural glit
ter In her father's eyes a flush on his
cheeks hardly to bo accounted for by
the warmth of the evening; nnd
it struck Drummond that during the
time ho had been pretending to look
nt his car, Mr. Denton hnd been forti
fying himself. It wus obvious, even
to tho soldier's unprofessional eye,
that the man's nerves hud gone to
pieces, his daughter's worst forebod
ings wero likely to be fulfilled. Ho
talked dlsjointedly and fust; his
hands were not steady, and ho seemed
to bo always waiting for something
to happen.
Hugh hod not been in the room ten
minutes before his host produced tho
whisky, nnd during the time that he,
took to drink a mild nightcap, Mr.
Denton succeeded In lowering three
extremoly strong glnsses of spirit.
And what made it tho moro sad was
that the man was obviously not n
heavy drinker by preference.
At eleven o'clock Hugh rose nnd
snld good night.
"You'll ring If you want anything,
won't you?" said ills host. ."We don't
have very many visitors here, but I
hope you'll find everything you re
quire. Drenkfast nt nine."
Drummond closed tho door behind
him, nnd stood for n moment in
silence, looking round tho hall. It
was deserted, but he wanted to get
tho geography of tho house firmly Im
printed on his mind. He stepped
across toward tite drawing-room. In-
sldo, us ho hoped, ho found the girl.
Sho roso tho Instant he came In,
and stood by tho mantelpiece with her
hands locked. '
"Wlmt wns It?" she hnlf whispered
"that awful noise at dinner?"
Ho looked nt her gravely for a
while, and then ho shook his head.
"Shall wo leave It as a night-bird for
tho present?" ho snld quietly. Then
lie lenned townrd her, and took her
hands In his own. "Go to bed, little
girl," ho ordered; "this Is my show.
And, may I say, I think you're Just
wonderful. Thank God you saw my
advertisement I"
Gently ho released her hands, nnd
walking to the door, held It open for
her. "If by uuy chanco you should
henr things In tho night turn orex
nnd go to sleep again."
"Dut wlmt nro you nolng to do?"
sho cried.
Hugh grinned. "I haven't tho' re
motest Iden," fie nnswered. "Doubt
less tho Lord wfll provide."
The Instant the girl had left the
room Hugh switched off tho lights, and
stepped across to tho curtains which
covered tho long windows. He pulled
them (aside, letting ithem como to
gether behind him; then, cautiously,
lie unbolted one sldo of tho big cen
ter Window. Silently ho dodged across
the lawn townrd the big trec9 nt
the end, nnd leaning up against one
of them, he proceeded to make a more
detailed survey of his objective, The
Elms. It wus the same typo of house
as the one he hnd Just left, nnd the
grounds seemed nbout the sarao sizo.
A wire fence separated the two places,
and In the darkness Hugh could Just
mnke out a small wlcket-gate, clos
ing a path which connected both
houses. Ho tried it, and found to his
sntlsfnctlon .that It opened silently.
.Save for ono room on the ground
floor the houso wns In dnrkness, and
Hugh determined to have a look at
thnt room. There wns d chink In the
curtains, through which the light was
streaming out. which struck him ns
having possibilities. .
Keeping under cover, he edged
townrd It. and, at length, he got Into
n position from which he could seo
Inside. And wlint ho saw made him
decide to chance It. nnd go even closer.
Sented nt the tnblo wus a mnn ho
did not. recognize; while on either
sido of him sat Laklngton nnd Peter
son. Lying on n sofn smoking n
cignrette nnd rending n novel was a
tnll dark girl, who seemed completely
uninterested In the proceedings of
the other three. Hugh plnced her
nt once ns the doubtful daughter Irraa,
nnd resumed his watch on tho group
at tho table.
A paper was In front of the man,
nnd Peterson, who wns smoking a
large cigar, was apparently suggest
ing that he should make use of tho
pen which Laklngton wns obligingly
holding In readiness. In nil respects
n harmless tableau, save for one small
thing the expression on the man'a
face. Hugh had seen It before often
only then it had been called shell
shock. The man was dazed, seml
uncon8clous. Every now atad then h
stared round the room, ns If be
wildered ; then ho would shake his
head nnd pass his bund wearily over
his forehead. For -u quarter of an
hour the scone continued; then Lak
lngton produced nn instrument from
his pocket. Hugh saw the man
shrink back In terror, nnd reach for J
the pen. Dut what Impressed him
most In thnt momentary finsh of
nction wns Peterson. There wus
something inhuman In his complete
passivity. Even ns he watched the
mnn signing his name, no trace of
emotion showed oh his. fnce-r-whereas
on Lnklngton's. there shone a flqndish
satisfaction.
ine document was" still lying on
the table, when Hugh produced his
revolver. He knew there wns foul
piny nbout, and the madness of what
he had suddenly made up his mind
to do never struck him; being thnt
manner of fool, he wns mudo thnt
wny. Dut he breathed a pious prayer
that he would shoot straight and
then he held his breath. The crnck
of the shot and the bursting of the
only electric light bulb in the room
were almost simultaneous, und the
next second, with a roar of "Come
on, hoy's," he burst through the win
dow. At nn Immense ndvnntugo
over the others, who could see noth
ing for the moment, he blundered
round the room. He timed the blow
nt Laklngton to n nicety; ho hit him
straight on the point of the Jnw and
lie felt the mnn go down llko a log.
Then he grabbed at the paper on the
table, which tore in Ills hnnd, nnd
picking the dnzed signer up bodily,
he rushed through the window onto
tho lawn. There wus not an lnstnnt
to bo lost; only the Impossibility of
seeing when suddenly plunged Into
dnrkness, had enabled him to pull tho
thing off so far. And before that ad
vantage disappeared he had to be back
at The Larches with his burden, no
light weight for even n man of his
strength to enrry.
Dut there seemed to be no pursuit,
no hue nnd cry, As he reached the
llttlo gate lie paused nnd looked back,
nnd he fancied he saw outside tho
window a gleam of white, such as a
shirt front. He lingered for nn lnstnnt,
peering Into the darkness and -recovering
his brcnth, when with a vicious
phut something burlod Itself In the tree
beside him. (Drummond lingered no
more; long years of experience left
no doubt In his mind as to what that
something was.
The rescued mnn turns out to
be Potts, the American,
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
The "Week-End."
Week-end means the end of tho
week, but by extension, tho period
from Friday night to Monday morn
ing. In England the term Is also used
attributively, as tho week-end holi
days, and from this has sprung the
verbal phrase "to veek-end," meaning
to employ tho week-end as a holiday
season. A well-known authority in al
luding to tho expression, week-end.
says: "This brief holiday has got Into
serious history. No less an authority
than Dr. H. S. Gardiner notes In his
"Oliver Cromwell" that "Oliver If ho
Invented nothing else may bo regard
ed as the Inventor of that modified
form of enjoyment to which hard
worked cltlrcns have In our day giv
en tho name of tho week-end."
ALLEN'S
FOOT-EASE
Give eaJ6 and
comfort to ftet
that are tender
and sore.
If shoes pinch
or corns and bun
Ions ache this
Antiseptic, Heal
Ine rowder will
give quick relief.
Shake Itln your
Shoes, Sprinkle it
im the Foot-bath.
Sold everywhere.
Nebraska Directory
nam
'" niaisrsiitB u.s.rTcttT orrica.
THE GREAT
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100 PURE No Adulteration
Hoga
Makes
Chicks
Chickens
ReduceiWhit Diarrhoea and
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ORDER NOW Don't Wait a Day
You Are Milting Something Good
PRICES REDUCED TO
Bbls..500Ibs 3c per lb.
Half bbls., 300 lbs 4Xc per lb.
Quarter bbls., 140 lbs 4c per lb.
f. o. b. factories
BBlMi'! S 'SBBBSS.
SPECIAL NOTICE
You may deduct one-half cent per pound from
above prices, for cash with order, during April
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Consolidated Products Co.
Dept. 300 Lincoln, Nebr.
cOnant hotel, company
OMAHA HOTELS
HOTEL CONANT
HOTEL SANFORD
HOTEL HENSHAW
Our reputation of 20 years fair dealing
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at anyone of them with assurance of re
ceiving honest value and fair treatment
6
Dividends fetfe
For Information and circulars writs,
OCCIDENTAL BLDG. & LOAN ASSN.
322 S. 18th Street. Omtbt. Neb.
Drugs By Nail
At the Long-Established
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PLEATING
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410 ruio IUmk Ouks Sea,
DR. TODD
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and Associate Dentists
who have been with him for years
now located
Sixth Floor Security Building
16th and Farnam Sts., Omaha
Carter Portable
STEEL GARAGE
Bectlonal. lOxlt ft. Circle
sliding doors. I'rloe I1U,
v. vr. u. umnDB, ex
tend to any length. Htalp-
i.-i.ifw" Ping weigni, lsuu pounds.
OAUTKlt B1IKUT AUETAI4 CO., OUAIIA
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TYPEWRITERS
an(3 UreJlttRt mnnow invlnnntn..
onn.i t ... .
ever offered. AD Mikes Typewriter
Co. Isc, 205 S. 18th SL, Oniht, Nek.
EIGHT FINE FARMS
Eastern Nebraska; Western Iowa, Douglas
County) Nebraska; l'ottowattamle, Taylor,
Adams, Fremont Counties, Iowa. Hundred
sixty to six hundred forty acres; highest
rrade, best neighborhoods, highly productive,
finest Improvement, close In. On main roads.
Equipment If desired. Prices right Terms
to suit, low Interest. Possession at any time.
D. A. BAUM. Owacr. City Net'! Bids , OMAHA
EIGHT FINE FARMS
Meyer Mercantile Co.
MAMUf ACTVRIKS
Boot Beer, Ciders, Teddy Club, Apricot,
Fort and all kind ot flavored, beTer?
ages and syrups.
310-321 S. 14th St. ,v OMAHA
Telephone Tyler 2880
PjSk Make
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