The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, April 09, 1908, Image 2

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    Loup City Northwestern
J. W. BURLEIGH. Publisher.
LOUP CITY, - - NEBRASKA.
Shut In.
A maiden aunt who had lost he,
money was provided with a home in a
well-to-do family. At once she identi
fied herself with its interests, and be
ing a housekeeper born, was able to
serve them in many ways. As occa
sion arose, she played the parts of
cook, maid, nurse, seamstress, laun
dress. gardener, social secretary and
night watchman. So faithful was she
to such duties that she never left
town, when others took vacations, and
for weeks at a time did not stir be
yond the gate. The family "gave her
a home,” as they ami she said. Actu
ally she earned her living three times
over. In return for board, lodging
and clothing, she accomplished tasks
and bore responsibilities that few do
mestics would have been willing ta
undertake at any price. Unlike the
domestics, she had no Thursday and
Sunday afternoons, and her social life
was limited to the ev, vy-dav associa
tion with self-absorbed and indifferent
relatives. The "shut-ins"' who are
confined by illness have a society
through which they are ministered to
by many gracious influences, says the
Youth’s Companion. The shut-ins who
are too poor to maintain homes, and
whose kiusfolk are too proud to let
them seek the shelti-: of an institu
tion. are unorganized and attract, no
notice: but in many cases they are
equally deserving of sympathy. True,
there is seldom intentional unkindness
behind the process by which a de
pendent is turned into a drudge. If
the relatives had been unfeeling they
would have sent the old aunt or uncle
to the poor house. When we "give a
home" we do a fine thing. But before
we plume ourselves unduly, it is weii
to glance at the other side of the ac
count. and see how much money is
saved and how many wearisome little
tasks are spared us by the old woman
who is "able to help round," or the old
man who "just does the chores."
It has been discovered by a maga
zine writer that an ambitious child
may secure a university education and
board at Valparaiso. Ind.. for about 23
cents a day. The northern Indiana
university has placed education on the
bargain counter. The poor boy can go
there and learn from the same books
used in the institutions where 23 cent -
a day wouldn't be a start on spending
money. Of course, says the Chicago
Daily News, it should he understood
by the ambitious that oniy plain table
hoard and unadorned knowledge go
for that sum. No young man need ex
pect to be able to break a rib as a
baseball hero for any amount like ihai
and neither can a young woman bios
soni out as a society queen with a ferv
studies as incidentals. As there it
nothing doing but education it wil
never be popular with the frivoloir
rich.
The treasurer of the Associa.tior
for Improving the Condition of thf
Poor of New York recently receiver
two dollars from two small girls, wit!
a note saying that the authors ha<
saved the money from slang words.’
Every time they used a bit of slang
they fined themselves, and every tim*
they heard others use any they re
quested a forfeit or a contribution
This plan would make some young
people realize that silence is indee*
golden.
Several Yassar college girls are acf
ing as probation officers for the cit;
court of Poughkeepsie. They an
studying the truancy problem in thi
practical way, and hope to learn wli;
boys are naughty. A special course ii
this subject might profitably be Intrc
duced in all the women's colleges. I
the young women pursued it thorough
ly thero might b<- :> wer truants in th
next generation of boys.
That the preservation of the vain
of railroad Investments is a matter o
» widespread interest is illustrated b,
the recent report of the Pennsylvani
I Lai i road company, showing that ther
are more than . ■ < jij shareholders i
the parent company and those cor
trolled by it, and that there has bee:
an increase of more than 10,000 stocl
holders in the past year.
Enlistment in the peaceful army o
postal clerks has heretofore been dr
roed to applicants under fiVe feet fou
and weighing less than 125 pounds
! he authorities have recently droppe
the rule from the list of regulations. ,
physical giant Is not needed to sor
mail with spe^d and accuracy.
A new species of hazing has starter
A college student in St. Louis wa
taken to a train by a party of fellow
^tduents and sent hcvne, with a wari
ing not to come back. His offens
v.as being a mollycoddle, which show
how the young idea has been in
pressed by the strenuous life.
London suffragettes are flying kite
with banners attached bearing th
motto. "Votes for Women!” Is th
glorious cause of woman suffrage 1
London up in the air?
A woman in Detroit wants a divore
from her husband on the ground thi
he prays so much that he has no tim
left In which to work for the suppoi
of his family. This plea of being "to
. good" will make men sigh again wTit
resigned despair at ever being able t
solve the puzzle of the feminine eg<
"There is no pleasing ’em.”
The British navy estimates lea
one to think that Britannia will co;
tinue to rule the waves at the san
.tj . .
ALIEN FELONS ARE
MENACE TO LAND
Commissioner of Immigration
Urges Drastic Changes in
the Present Law
I z -
Would Have Foreign Nations Certify
to the Character of Their Citizens
Who Seek New Homes in
United States
— E\V YORK.—Crimes of tlie
Black Hand, the murders
of the Mafia and the Ca
morra, the assassination at
the altar of a priest by an
anarchist are events of a
few"Tlays which point to the neeil of
more drastic methods in keeping away
from these shores the horde of alien
felons, says the New York Herald.
Robert Watchorn, commissioner of
immmigration at the port of New
York, proposes a novel plan by which
wherever it is feasible—and it could
he so iu the case of Italy—foreign gov
ernments would be required to vouch
for the good character of every immi
grant leaving rtieir dominions.
Police Commissioner Bingham, in
dignant over the present conditions
with regard to the admission of for
eign criminals to this country, in
veighs against the immigration au
thorities, who, in his opinion, did not
deport the wrongdoers ns frequently
tors will be able to establish by the
testimony of men susp etei! of being
felons the facts which would result
in their own exclusidn.
Practically no effort was made ten
years ago to find out whether a ntan
had a criminal record, and it has only
been within the last two cr three years
that the authorities have seriously ad
dressed themselves to the task of ex
cluding the criminal classes that
come to this countrv.
Observations made at Ellis island
show that tiie immigration laws, such
as they are, with regard to criminals
from other lands seems to he enforced
with painstaking fidelity. The inspec
tors arc laboriously conscientious, as
a whole, in their duties and seem to
do all they can within the narrow
limitation of the statute to detect
criminals. For practical purposes,
however, the whole attitude of the
present law is against them, to say
nothing of the specific provisions
consuls on the other side or the for
eign consuls at this port send infor
mation which is of the greatest value.
Au .alleged embezzler, Schouawe, was
apprehended on the complaint of the
Russian consul general, whose de
scription and that which (he man gave
of himself tallied so exactly that he
admitted his identity to the immigra
tion authorities. Owing to the repre
sentations of Commissioner Watchorn
a year ago not only immigrants who
have been convicted of a crime and
have served terms in prison may tie
deported, but those who admit having
committed a felony or other crime or
misdemeanor involving moral turpi
tude.
i ins is especially eiiecuve wncic
immigrants are fugitives from justice.
Without friendly suggestions the in
spector must depend upon his knowl
edge of human nature, his study of
physiognomy and other qualities of a
Sherlock Holmes, and even then he
may go sadly astray.
By dint of prolonged cross-examina
tion, if the intuition be keen, he may
ho able to establish a criminal record
for the suspected alien out of his own
admissions; hut frequently the candi
date has been so well coached that he
j is able to baffle the inspector at every
turn. If lie is tripped up he can re
I lurn to the land whence he came and
: 11 y again for admission through sonic
i port w hich is less closely guarded.
Dread Foes Here.
The tiling which the habitual crint
! inal from outre mer dreads most.
' especially if he be a Sicilian or of a
i ace which long nourishes feuds, is
I that some favorite enemy has warned
] the authorities about him in order to
I even tip old scores. It is nothing un
! usual for the enemy to take It is re
venge in this way.
| ' Can it possibly be,” an inspector
will ask suavely, "that you have an
enemy in this country who would say
that you have been in prison six
times?”
"It is a gn at lie," the response may
be. "1 swear, crossing tny heart, that
it has been but twice.”
That is enough to bar the candidate.
Francisco sis months ago. and in the
course of his trial a prison record in
Italy had been discovered. He landed
originally at this port. Many a man
who by hook nr by crook has entered
the country and has taken up his
abode in the Italian quarter, there to
prey on the respectable members of
his own race by threats of violence, is
returned by Ellis island to his native
land. The finding of so many crim
inals of this class indicates there are
many w(jo get through the meshes of
the immigration service net.
Always Source of Danger.
“Criminals such as these are like
Ihe foxes with the brands tied to their
tails which caused the burning of the
corn. X'o matter where they are at
large they are the cause of damage
and trouble, and i never found any
foundation for the stories that other
governments turned them loose upon
the United States.
“It is unfair that the 20,000,000 of
immigrants who have come to This
country should suffer on account of
the ill-doing of a few hundred thou
sands. The crimes which have recent
ly been laid at the doors of the
Italians are committed by only a hand
ful of that race, perhaps not more
than 500 in all."
Mr. Watchorn declared in favor of
the utmost vigilance iti watching fur
alien felons, no matter whether they
wt re supposed to be in the steerage
or the fitst cabins of the liners. He
declared giited swindlers and embez
zlers and persons of immoral char
acter were as likel> to be found in the
saloon as in the steerage.
During the administration of Com
missioner Watchorn the number of
foreign felons returned in a year lias
increased from '.'A a year to nearly ten
times that number and extraordinary
vigilance has been exercised, yet
there are many who are aide to run
the blockade with success for all that.
Suggests Ch2nge in Law.
The commissioner of immigration
lias suggested that the law he so modi
fied as to make it possible to deport
aliens who commit crimes within
three years after their landing in this
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i as they should when attention was
- called to them.
r Mr. Watchorn makes an equally
emphatic denial that the charge of
, Gen. Bingham had any substantial
basis, so far as the administration of
affairs at Ellis Island is concerned.
It is a fact, aside from the contro
versy that the depredations of desper
f ate criminals from abroad, the major
' ity of whom are Italians, has become
i a menace to the state. Even admitting
, that the present immigration laws
! were enforced at every port with the
utmost efficiency the whole system of
dealing with the foreign criminal
seems weak and ineffective.
it is a habit of first-class passengers
to inveigh against the "offensive
idiocy” of the questions propounded lo
* them by the immigration inspectors,
- such as "Have you ever been in
r prison?" “Have you ever been an in
mate of an almshouse?" and the like.
j The objection on their part, is based
on personal grounds because they
L consider the questions unnecessary.
*■ Such questions propounded to the
steerage passenger bent on evading
the law border on the futile. The only
■ punishment that can be meted out to
3 the person who perjures himself is ex
- elusion from the country. He rarely
- returns to his own land to make an
» other attempt to gain the coveted do
3 main. He knows that, the inspector is
. charged with finding out the very
thing which he wishes to conceal and
exerts all the ingenuity within his
3 power to checkmate the attempt tc
a delve into the past.
On Their Own Testimony.
8 Yet the main dependence of the au
1 thorities is the hope that the inspec
which are greatly in favor of the im
migrant.
All Supposed Innocent.
“All immigrants in coming to this
country,” said Mr. Watchhorn, "are
supposed to be innocent, and it is
something opposed to the genius of
American institutions to suppose that
every man is guilty and that he must
prove that he is innocent. So the im
migrant is welcomed here and the op
portunity of citizenship is offered to
him. lie is supposed to lit* a man of
good character until something devel
ops which proves the contrary.”
Altruistic us is this attitude toward
the immigrant, as interpreted by the
commissioner, the inspectors within
the little latitude which is given to
them seek to lind out as much as they
can. On each sheet of the manifest
of the steamship are 30 names, ami
their owners have answered every in
quiry propounded to them. Age, sex,
calling and the like are duly set forth
and the immigrant is required to state
whether or not lie is a polygamist, an
anarchist, a contract laborer and
whether or not he lias ever been in
prison or been an inmate of an alms
house.
May Make Few Mistakes.
If within three years to come immi
grants who have been admitted are
found to have been criminals before
they came to this country there is a
long black mark made against the
record of the inspector concerned, and
if his errors accumulate he is likely to
he dismissed front ttie service.
Under the present law the inspectors
who chance their positions on their
judgment proceed to a large extent by
dead reckoning. Sometimes American
It is not unusual for the noted crim
inals to cross the ocean ferry two or
three times before their identity is
noted. The law provides that any alien
felon may be returned to tho place
whence he came if complaint is made
within three years of his landing in
the United States. After three years
he is beyond the power of the law.
and no matter if his record outruns
Herod he cannot be disturbed.
Italians predominate among the
criminal occupants of the detention
pen, and most of these are from the
south of Italy or from Sicily. Swarthy,
dark browed, with faces furrowed by
the records of evil lives, they are
closely watched on the island, al
though no special prison is provided
for them. They are carefully searched
for knives and stilettos. The turning
ok'er of many of them to the immigra
tion authorities comes through their
arrest by the police for some deed of
violence.
Hard to Make Case.
In order to make a case against
them it is necessary to have accurate
information as to when they came to
this country and on what ship. Fre
quently for lack of definite informa
tion and evidence of previous guilt it
is impossible to deport criminals
against whom the police believe there
is a si l ong case. The differences be
tween the local and the federal views
of the matter led recently to the criti
cisms made by Col. Bingham against
the immigration authorities.
Among the occupants of the deten
tion pen recently were several immi
grants with long records of crime.
There was Benedetto Tordini, for in
stance, who had stabbed a man in San
country irrespective of any prison sen
tence they may have served in their
native land. This would rid the United
States of many who are unfit for citi
zenship. He thinks also that the co
operation of the foreign governments
might be obtained.
"There are some nations which is
sue what are called penal passports,"
said he. "Italy has two kinds of pass
ports—one which states that the per
son bearing it is a subject of the king
and yet another which states if the
bearer has ever been in prison, and if
so the offenses of which he was con
victed and the terms are specified.
“Since certain nations, among which
are Italy, Russia, Germany and
France, issue such passports it would
be feasible to pass a law requiring
that immigrants from those countries
bring penal passports with them.
These would have to be well authenti
cated and they would serve as com
plete records. Any person who had
a prison record would thus be barred
from coming to the United States and
none with such a passport would come
here.
"It would be just as well to make
the law far reaching and to permit no
one to land here who had ever been
in prison. There are a few' cases. I ad
mit, where a man by years of correct
living may have completely reformed,
but it would be just as well for him
to remain in his own country. I be
lieve that the various governments
would willingly; co-operate in this, for
criminals are the foes of all humanity.
The foreign nations are not anxious
that criminals should flee from justice
in order to come here to ply their
calling.
t American Woman’s Good Work.
I.ad> Suffolk, who, as Daisy Leiter,
was nothing if not frivolous, is begin
1 ning to take life seriously. She is go
0 ing in for practical philanthropy,
h Malmesbury, where her husband's an
o cestral home, Charlton Towers, is
), situated, was once’ the center of a
flourishing lace industry, l.ady Suf
folk Is trying to revive it. At her own
,1 expense she has equipped classes,
t provided premises for their accom
modation. and engaged expert teach
0 ers to gl,r<» lessons to the girls of the
district. She also has lent for copy
ing some fine examples of the
Malmesbury point lace, which were
part of the Dowager Lady Suffolk's
gifts to her on her marriage. It is a
scheme that deserves to succeed.
American peeresses spend money
lavishly, but beyond that few of them
do anything to Identify themselves
with the humbler sort of folk, among
whom they reign as "My Lady.” Lady
Suffolk is setting an example which
some of her titled countrywomen
would do well to follow.
No Satisfaction.
Secretary Wilson of the department
of agriculture told at a dinner in
Washington some of the strange and
impossible things that were expected
of his department.
•'Why,” he said, “one of my clerks
overheard the other day two farmers
talking.
“ Blamed if I think that department
of agriculture is any good at all,' said
the first farmer.
"'What’s the matter now?' said the
second.
“ Thlnkin' to take a flyer in tho
market,’ the first farmer answered, 'I
wrote and asked 'em how high wheat
was going up to. an' here they write
back this mornin' an' cun't give me
no satisfaction at ail.' ”
Shoot Fish with Arrows.
Many of the natives of the Islands
of the South Seas are experts at
shooting fish with a bow and arrow
The art is a difficult one, for the re
flection of the water has to be allowed
for.
DON’T LIKE LITTLE STRANGER. J
Did Ever Youngster Welcome Advent
of Little Brother or Sister?
The mothers were talking shop.
“When little Harold came,” said the
first mother, “bis older brother Regi
nald was very curious about him.
“ ‘Yes, Reggie, dear,’ I told him, ‘the
little baby is a Washington's birthday
present to us from the angels.’
“He frowned in thoughtful silence.
Then he said:
“ ‘Well, mamma, if we wrap him up
carefully and put him away and don’t
use him. we can give him to some
body else next Washington's birthday,
can't we?’ ”
The other mothers smiled and
sighed. The second said:
“On the—er—advent of my little
Miriam, Hannah, our five-year-old. was
taken upstairs by the cook to see the
newcomer.
“Hannah looked her little sister over
sternly. Then, turning to the cook,
she said:
“ ‘Jane, you can keep that in the
kitchen.’ ”
Again the mothers smiled and sighed
and nodded sadly.
"Yes, it is always so." they said.
SKiN TROUBLES CURED.
First Had Itching Rash—Threatened
Later With Blood-Poison in Leg—
Relied on Cuticura Remedies.
“About twelve or fifteen years ago
I had a breaking-out. and it itched,
and stung so badly that I could not
have any peace because of it. Three
doctors did not help me. Then I used
some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Oint
ment. and Cuticura Resolvent and
began to get better right away. They
eured me and I have not been bothered
with the itching since, to amount to
anything. About two years ago I
had la grippe and pneumonia which
left me with a pain in my side. Treat
ment ran it into my leg. which then
swelled and began to break out. The
doctor was afraid it would turn to
blood-poison. I used his medicine
but it did no good, then I used the
Cuticura Remedies three times and
cured the breaking-out on my leg. J. F.
Hennen, Milan, Mo., May 13, 19U7."
Watered Stock.
Edward R. Emerson, the president
of the American Wine Growers’ asso
ciation. came from Washingtonville to
New York the other day and lunched
in a Broadway cafe with an editor.
Mr. Emerson, naturally, is a con
noisseur of wines. The editor deems
himself something of a connoisseur,
too, and introduced Mr. Emerson with
some pride to a Rhine wine, pre
sumably of the famous '95 vintage.
"Well,” he said, "how do you like
this Rhine wine, Mr. Emerson? De
licious. don't you think?"
“Not bad." said Mr. Emerson, “only
1 fancy there's a trifle too much Rhine
in it."
He Saw a Difference.
Barney Malloy and Mike Cairey
were shingling a roof. "Barney,”
Mike asked, removing a bunch of
shingle nails from his mouth, and set
tling back comfortably, “what is the
difference between satisfied and con
tent?" "The difference? Sure there's
none,” answered Barney. "If you're
satisfied you're content, and if you're
content you're satisfied." "That was
my opinion, too. Barney, me boy, up to
now, but it struck me sudden like as
I put that last nail in that 1 am satis
fied all right that Molly Cairey is my
wife, but I am durned sure I am not
content.”
State of Ohio. City of Toledo,^
Litas Cocty. S
Frank .T. Cuexky make# oath that he !a senior
partner of the Arm of F- J. Cheney <& Co.. doing
business In the City of Toledo. County and State
aforesa d. and that said firm will pay the sum of
ONE Hl'SDKED DOLLARS for each and every
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
Hall's Catarrh Cube.
FRANK J. CHENEY
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence,
tbla 6th day of December, A. D.. 1**6.
^ J A. W. GLEASON,
) 8E%Lf Notart Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cere Is taken internal iy and acts
directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Send for testimonial', free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
When It Came to Raising.
"I hope, now that you've become a
young wife,” said the enthusiastic
anti-race suicide lady, to the newlv
wodded country girl, "you'll make good
use of your blessing and raise many
children.
"Wall,” spoke up the rural husband,
who had overheard this utterance and
deemed it akin to interference, "a deal
o’ her time outside th’ kitchen'll he
put t.' raisin' vegetables!”—Illustrated
Sunday Magazine.
Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau
ty. Home laundering would be equal
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
Couldn’t Catch Her.
"I've just been done in oil by P.
Allette Dauber,” remarked Mrs. Old
stock.
"Now- isn't that too bad!” exclaimed
Mrs. Justgotit. "One of them smooth
fellows tried to sell me a bunch of
oil stock a spell back and I turned him
down hard.”
It takes a woman to sit down and
cry when sho happens to think what a
hard time her children might have had
if some other woman had been their
mother.
___ ■ ■ III II - - -
What He Pnateti For.
Little Tommy Whackcn was taken
by his mother to choose a pair of
knickerbockers, and his choice fell on
a pair to which a card was attached,
stating: “These can't be beaten. '—
Current Literature.
Nearer the Soil.
An Atchison man is all the time
complaining about his stomach. He
was seen to go into a restaurant at
3:30 o'clock this afternoon and order
a bowl of chili and a piece of lemon
pie.—-Atchison (Kan.) Globe.
VALUE OF STOCK FOODS.
Prof. F. W. Woll of the Agric u’tumT
Experiment Station of the University of
Wisconsin official bulb tin No. 11. says
of stock foods-:
“First—They are no benefit to healthy
animals when fed as directed, cither as to
increasing the digestibility of the f. < i
eaten, or rendering it more effective for
the prodtietcri of meat, milk. worn et/.
“Second—They are no benefit as euro
nil for disea.-'u of the \ .ri« • !.;*-.-• s '
live stock neither do th< ; j «-ss' S8 : r. •
particular merit in case of s; • • ific dis
eases or for animals out of vendition, e rf
feed, etc., since only a small i :• portion * •
ingredients having midi h.. value i.
found therein, the bulk of il f • *lv con
sisting of a filler which possesses n< n.edi
cinal properties whatever.
"Third—By adopting a liberal system
of feeding farm animals ai d f uni ting
a variety of feeds good r. • . its may bo
obtained without r jortlrg b s*. Jo-xU
of any kind. If a farmer believes it is
necessary to feed stock foci at times lu>
can purchase the ingredients .1 mako
his own stock foods at a fraction of tho
cost charged for them 1 * th. manufac
tures. He will th. n !.:?• •- th.« . . c nal
satisfaction of kr-wlng what lie is feed
ing and of fo.-dirg • »• re • r.t r;rni food
instead of one largely diluted .vith non
medicinal ingi •-ii. r. -
Don't spend $3.r»0 when rc rents will
do the work. Make your own st. r. foods
by using Skidoo Horse and ('at*.c T;.i lets.
To be mixed in feed. Proper dc:-* in
lets. Make your stock look li!o ti • t-*j>
price. For horse s, cattle. she<p. svvir
and fowls. They are made from the con
densed essence of the drug. They don't
contain sawdust, ashes, chop feed or bran.
Are just as good when t* n y< ars old as
when ten days rid. They com pi*, with ail
pure drug law s. Ask for and try on« o
Skidoo Condition Tablets or Skido#
Worm. Kidney, Chicken Cholera. Blister,
Cathartic. Heave, Fever. Hog Cholera,
Distemper, Pink Eye. Colic tablets or
Louse Powder. Spavin Cure or Barb Wire
Liniment. Distributed by The Blue Bell
Medicine Co.. Incorporated: capital stock,
$300,000.00; Watertown, South Dakota*
U. S. A. _
You can flatter any man by telling
him he is flattery-proof.
MANY FATAL DISEASES
Show Tfctir flrsr symp
toms in tbe * yes Thu.
fact u.vir’c sh' :. l cyau
P iish y.iur ■ tider *e a
the* Importance of hav
Ing vnnr eves properly fxamired on ’ n rst.»ppear
anre of discomfort. \Ve have the instrument*. n« *
rosary for making ; ho f n lies’ icn.t if.. «■> • *• tau : na
tions. and nothing is left undone* that ran be dor**
to tint! the cause «>f trouble. Free con tel tat ion.
liuieson Optical !«>.. fcirhe.de Opt I Ian-. - **... Kith
hc.OaAha.hu . *ry »m premises. Wholesale and lb*»c.
Among the other trusts we have
mistrusts and distrusts.
Omaha Directory
Wa Want You to Get tha Moat Lib
cral Ppopc&flIon fvcr Waoe
on a Gasoline Engine.
It wll! save YOT’M« »NFY. The< >ld* Kngme ^th«
i lu*Pt and <*bea;>epT engine > - > ■ ^ * •*
I j-.nij :«•*» in rni: .tmeiicn. »•••• ! ' 1 'r * ’
will do you r work at the «*nu*l lent ex pet *•* »' '
' not gel to write for '
‘ catalog and llher&I proposition.
Olds Gssoiine Engine Works
1016 Farnam Street. Omaha.
PRIVATE WIRE
J. E. von Ocrn Commission Co.
Member Chieasro Board of Trade anti
Omaha Grain Exchange.
Grain, Provisions and Stocks
Bought and Sold
for immediate or future delivery.
GRAIN BOUGHT AND SOLD in Car Lots.
Track bids made on any railroad.
Consignments Solicited.
700-701-776 Brandeis Bldg.. Omaha
Tdiphoirt: Hell Dcugia* lug2 and 17*4. lulu. *2221.
PEffiTI$iNooEE” CORN GRADER
Sorts seed corn as well as
S25.00 machine. Capac
ity 10 bushels per hour.
LININGER IMPLEMENT CO.. Omaha
IVORY POLISH
For Furniture and Pianos
GOOD FOP. J\Ary WOOD
/"'LEANS and polishes, removes stain*
and restores the finish. Can not injure
the wood in any way. Guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction. Absolutely the best
furniture polish on the market. If your dealer
doesn't carry it send us his name and w e
wiil see that you arc supplied. Price 25
and 50 cents.
MANUFACTURED PY
Orchard 61 Wilhelm
OMAHA. NEBRASKA
A&iJIUA the brightest
y ITiflflM SPOT ON THE MAP
A GOOD FLACK to Invest your money where
you can gel from
6% to 10% On Improved Properties
Write Us How Much Yon Haw u< Invest
HASTINGS and HEYOEM
• 704 Farnant St. Omaha, Mohr.
OMAHA TENT & AWNiNS GO.
Tent**. Awnings, etc. Larges: west of
Chicago. Write for prices ami est ini.itcH
before buying. Cor. Ilth and Harney S\».
Do You Drink Coffee
Wi.v put the cheap. rank. hitter flavored c. d** n
""" Hcittwh when pure GERMAN -AMERICAN
COPFII w*uw«or»l Inaist on ha* ;ug * t.
grocer »ell« It Of can gvt IL
|»ra. Hwllry * ),M«|i. Th,.iaH||.a
lira DENTISTS
;. sdE»»«esa4«
»namamBM.iag«a&
... _ , . .... *ISr*»rlS|f*#i. (nsrll i
» «*. r*«erke»# Utl. Asanrunt Mock of RooBncSun- *
!I J? *f ti H? Insulation of wet fhw>r<Pa
If In Doubt, Buy A
JOHN DEERE