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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1910)
Loup City Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY - • - NEBRA8KA Winter overhead and spring under foot. Shooting Americans is very danger ous sport for any nation. Now for a gun that will put the airship destroyer out of business. European rulers are cutting merry capers. Capers often jar thrones. Castro to Zelaya: “I’d rather be out side looking in than inside looking out.” Maybe the bread trust kneads the dough. A Philadelphia pastor is using girls *s ushers. A clever scheme to get the men to church. That order to the ice man to begin his daily calls again may now be countermanded. "Noted Painting in Suit” says a headline. We have seen a lot of paint ings that weren’t. The natural presumption is that the man who married his landlady is ex ceptionally fond of prunes. Auto racing, deer hunting and foot ball come in for similar censure. But the harvest goes merrily on. Storms on sea and land prove that the wintry winds still laugh at man’s puny efforts to withstand them. A college president wants to put a ban on spooning. Suppose he would use Lovers’ lane for a cattle drive. The "deer season” is ended and deer may browse In peace, not being called to witness hunters shoot down each other. The young king of Portugal, who did a-wooing go, failed to win an English bride. But he had plenty of fun by way of compensation. The ultimate consumer may be par doned for the opinion that the exclu sion r.ct ought to be extended to cover those eggs from China. Now that the football and hunting seasons are over, there won't be so much work for the undertaker, but a better outlook for the census taker. Although those Chicago girls have been refused permission to sell kisses for charity, there is no law that can prevent them from giving them away. Berlin has Just heard a “Zeppelin” symphony with an auto horn as an instrument. As the airship is de stroyed it is presumed the wind sec tion dominated. The United States manufactures $350,000,000 worth of shoes every year, and this doesn’t take into con sideration the fact that many people still wear boots. Art should be not only welcomed, but also invited. Art wandering about seeking for a home is not a creditable spectacle for any up-to-date commu nity to be proud of. We learn from one of the trade jour nals that noiseless street car wheels will soon be in use. The world would go crazy with joy if anything like that were to happen. • Thieves in Amsterdam, N. Y., have a sense of humor peculiar to the Amer ican temperament. They lately looted the offices of the district attorney, sit uated in the police department. The authorities of Washington have ordered the banishment of roosters from the city. In view of the expe rience of ancient Rome the goose will be permitted to remain in the swim at the capital. The man who as engineer ran the John Bull, the first railroad locomo tive brought to this country, before American engine builders had “caught on,” has just died. Those were the days of small things in railroads. But what a transformation had been wrought within the span of this one man’s life! The government has not raised the price of dolls, which will rejoice the hearts of the little ones. It has of ficially been decided dolls are not toys. Evidently, they are to be treated as necessaries of life, for what is life to the little future mothers of the country without their dolls to nourish the maternal instinct? Ida Lewis, the well-known life-sav ing lightkeeper on Lime rock, off New port, has been made an honorary life member of the Newport Yacht club and is the first and only women mem ber of that organization. The latter fact is remarkable, as yacht skippers in eastern waters include many wo men who are experts at the helms of sloops and schooners. There are also women owners of yachts and the New port Yacht club must be an exception al organization with its almost exclu sively male membership. Perhaps women got the habit of reading the last page of a novel first from receiving love letters and having a natural desire to find out whom they could be from. The most tangible evidence of bad luck in connection with that Hope dia mond comes from a man in Paris who, after the jewel was reported to have rivaled McGinty. comes forward to remark mournfully that he has it, having been deceived into paying hard cash for it, and being unable to work it off on anyone else. Belgium is to protest to the newspa pers of the world against attacks on the administration of the Congo. It would be a better and easier way in the end to show the press of the world that these attacks are unfounded. The American farmer, speaking col lectively and with that $8,000,000,000 worth of products in mind, is the real captain of industry in this country. Every other form of enterprise, no matter how large and impressive singly, looms small alongside that stu pendous agricultural total. NEBRASKA JN BRIEF NEWS NOTES OF INTERE8T FROM VARIOUS SECTIONS. ALL SUBJECTS TOUGHED UPON Religious, Social, Agricultural, Polit ical and Other Matters Given Due Consideration. The Schiller hotel, one of the oldest in the state, located in Central City, has changed hands. Seth Johnson, a member of the firm of Johnson, Hackney & West, barbers, at Beatrice, dropped dead from heart malady. The railway commission has ghen permission to the Northern Antelope Telephone company to issue stoea to the amount of $2,000. August Hermann, a farmer living two miles east of Gretna, was run down and killed by eastbound Burling ton passenger No. 270S. The Fulton bloodhounds at Beatrice were taken to Irving, Kan., to aid the authorities in running down the men who entered the bank at that place-. Robert Douglas of Clarks has re ceived news of his reappointment to the position of postmaster at that place for a period of four more years. The executive committee of the Eastern Nebraska Teachers’ associa tion held a meeting in Fremont to make arrangements for the program for their next annual meeting, which will be held there on April 7, 8 and 9. The various charity organizations of York made a most thorough search to find families that could be assisted and report that it was a hard matter to find any who were really in need of necessities. The population of Superior is now about 3,200, a gain of about 1,000 peo ple in a little over two years. Over 200 new houses have been built in the last year and contractors say next year will be still better. A leading real estate dealer of York makes the estimate that on March 1 next, which is settlement day for nearly every sale of farm property, it will take nearly $1,000,000 to fin ance the transactions. Quarter sec tions sell for $110 to $150 per acre. Plans are being laid for the estab lishment at the Dodge county i>oor farm of a tuberculosis department or sanitarium for those subject to that disease. The money derived from the sale of Red Cross stamps will be de voted to this purpose. John A. Luther of Harlan county, wno was fined $500 for a violation of j the Slocumb law and who was com mitted to the county jail pending the payment of the fine, must remain in jail until the fine is paid or satisfied, so the supreme court holds. J. J. Carter, owner of the Wood River flour mills, went to the office in the morning, started a fire in the ! office stove, went to the engine room and returned fifteen minutes later to the office to find it one mass of flames, i The loss is $10,000 to $15,000. Mrs. Augusta Dresher was found dead at her home about three miles east of Barada. She had been living alone on her farm for some time in : an old house, with but few comforts in her surroundings, with her ciick ! ens and dogs for companions. | A. C. Howard, a resident of Hold , rege, has spent much of his time dur ing the last three years making prac tical improvements in the modern tele phone. He now announces tha: he j has secured a patent on a device which will prevent “rubbering in” by telephone patrons on party lines. Judge Pemberton of Beatrice, who has been holding court in Nebraska City for Judge Travis, has handed down a decision denying the injunc tion against the mayor and city coun cil asked for by James D. Houston to prevent the city from granting a new franchise and make a contract with the water and light company. The excellent poultry and 3toclc show of last year at West Pojnt was almost doubled last week by the ex hibition of more than 200 head of poultry, ducks, geese, pigeons, and pet stock of various kinds. The scorings ranked very high, show'ing the benefit of last year’s show' in better breeding. Holdrege will have a bigger and bet ter chautauqua next summer, accord ing to present plans. The contract was signed last week with the Mid land company, which concern fur nished the same affair last summer. The Commercial club has taken the matter in hand and will push it with considerable vigor. Rev. F. E. Toms, merchant, min ister and occulist, who formerly lived in Johnson county, has been paroled from the Kansas penitentiary by Gov ernor Stubbs. Toms was once in the mercantile line in Graf, Johnson coun ty, and later he did some preaching in this state, finally traveling over the state as an occulist. He married a Tecumseh woman, but was divorced from her. He remarried in Kansas before it was legal for him to do so, hence his imprisonment. The state railway commission has ordered the Missouri Pacific railroad to install telephones in its stations at Burr, Louisville and Cook by January 9 or appear before the commission January 12 and show cause wuy it failed to do so. Thomas P. Ryan, a painter and an old resident in Wood River, died under . suspicious circumstances. He was found in a dying condition in the waiting room of the Union Pacific de pot by Agent Gard at 7 o’clock ,in the morning and died a few' minutes later. He had a small wound an the back of his head. C. E. Zink has received his official appointment as postmaster at Sterling. Mr. Zink was the deputy postmaster for several years under his father, the late Valentine Zink. Fred T. Robinson of Lincoln, charged with murdering his wife, El len Robinson, in Beatrice November 28, was given his preliminary hearing and bound over to the district court. Table Rock is lighted with electric lignts. The company sprang a sur prise on the people generally, very few being in the secret, so when tue current was turned on it came as a general suprprise. SHEEP CAR WEIGHTS. The Case Against Northwestern It Dismissed. The complaint of Oscar Thompsoi against the Northwestern regardinj tne minimum weight to which a sheet car should be loaded was formally dis missed by the railway commission. It discussing the case Commissions Winnett said in his order: “By making comparison with othei states of minima on sheep, wre find that Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Wyo ming, Kansas, Arkansas, Colorado and Oklahoma have the same minimum as is used in Nebraska, while Illinois has a much lower minimum and a highei rate. The rate for 100 miles in Illin ois is 14.4 cents, making the amount received by the carriers per car $24.48, while in Nebraska, if the shipper fails to load to the minimum and only loads 18,000 pounds, while he pays foi 22,000 pounds, his car costs him foi the same distance that the Illinois shipment was carried, $25.23, or 7E cents per car more. Should each ship ment in Illinois and Nebraska be loaded to 22,000 pounds the Illinois shipper would pay $28.80 per car, while the Nebraska shipper would pay $25.23, or $3.57 per car less. Applying the above calculation to a 200-mile shipment, the rate in Illinois is 18.S cents and in Nebraska 14.02 cents. For the minimum a car in Illinois would pay $31.11 and in Nebraska $30.82, but should the Illinois shippei load to the Nebraska minimum the 200-mile shipment would cost him $40.26, against $30.82 to the Nebraska shipper. The rates In the states named, where the minimum is the same as Nebraska, are practically the same or more than the Nebraska rates, -with the exception of Iowa, which is less. “While to the commission it seems an unfair proposition for a minimum to be so high as to make full loading impossible, we believe the increased marketing of lambs has brought aboui this condition and that it is not being practicable to fix a different minimum for lambs than for sheep, and lambs being a more valuable commodity than sheep, the increasing rate resulting from the minimum so fixed is not ex cessive.” Plans for Science Work. State Superintendent Bishop has se cured the services of Miss Anna L. Barbie, superintendent of the schools of Christian county, Illinois; to help him work out a more definite plan for the domestic science work in the rural schools of Nebraska. Miss Bar bie was chosen by State Superinten dent Blair of Illinois to take charge of the Illinois state industrial exhibit at the national corn show at Omaha. It was here that her work attracted the attention of Mr. Bishop. At his re quest she consented to come to Lin coln to work with him for a few days. Mayoralty Contest. The ballots cast in the election of city officials last spring, at which Don L. Love was declared elected mayor over Robert Malone, will be counted in county court. The election was contested by Mr. Malone, but before :he county court had an opportunity o count the ballots the case was tak en to the supreme court by the attor neys for Mayor Love. Charges Dismissed The board of public lands and build ngs dismissed by unanimous vote the charges preferred by Lelix Newton, a discharged bookkeeper, against Dr. D. 3. Woodard, superintendent of the Lincoln asylum for the insane. The board decided that it did not have jurisdiction over complaints against officers of state institutions. Selected as Toastmaster. President George Croker of the as sociation of principals and superin tendents of Nebraska has selected Fred. M. Hunter of Norfolk as toast master at the banquet to be held on Thursday evening, January 14, at the Lincoln hotel, and L. E. Mumford of Lincoln master of ceremonies. Judge Dean Retires. Shortly after the first of the year Judge J. R. Dean will leave the su preme court, where as a member he has so well and successfully presided, to be replaced by S. H. Sedgwick, one of the successful candidates at the last election. The judge will retire to his home at Broken Bow. _I_ The Warden’s Showing. Notwithstanding the largely in creased cost of living for everybody, In state institutions or out of them, Warden Smith of the Nebraska peni tentiary calls attention to the fact that during the past seven years the allowance per capita for maintaining the penitentiary has been higher than the percapita amount for this year. No Clue to Parentage. Painstaking investigation still fails to reveal any facts tending to throw light on the parentage of the found ling left at St. Elizabeth’s hospital. The child, a baby boy, was left on the doorstep when but a few hours old. Copy of Tariff Law. Secretary of State Junkin has re ceived a full copy of the new tariff taw, the old tariff law and the bill, as it was originally introduced, together with a comparison of the old and the new law. He is well satisfied with it. He believes the new law has car ried out the pledges of the republican party and he fs ready to defend the law. “The law is a reduction,” said Mr. Junkin. “The increase is on pro ducts of the farm and on liquor. Wool en goods and leather have both been reduced.” Nebraska Tobacco State. F. C. Wood, a traveling man who has been experimenting in the grow ing of tobacco in Nebraska, called at the office of the governor recently and showed him samples of the weed which he had grown near Hastings. Colonel Woods said there is no reason why good tobacco, both for the pipe and for cigars, cannot be grown in this state. He experimented with several different kinds and has demon strated that Nebraska soil and cli mate will grow as good tobacco as can be grown in Virginia or Kentucky. Of American Design By JULIA BOTTOMLEY. Nearly all the millinery worn In this country is designed within our own boundaries. Even the fiction of its French origin is growing out of favor. This does not mean that we owe nothing to the French, but that we could be quite independent of them if we chose and that we have designers in our midst who under stand our needs and also how to de sign beautiful millinery, and we have come to understand this. These very simple, very pretty and "very American” (if one may be al lowed the expression) designs are pic tured here. They are selected because they belong to that class of hats which the home milliner may trim for herself. A big, rather flat felt hat in the color called “taupe”—an elephant gray—is shown in Fig. 1. A messaline ribbon in the same color is plaited about the crown and finished with a folded band. The cluster of skeleton plumes at the side is in a brilliant flame red and mounted with a cabo chon in gun metal, harmonizing with the color of the hat. There are various color combina tions which can be worked out suc cessfully in this hat and although its trimming is so simple, it is a clever and chic looking affair which one may wear with perfect satisfaction. A velvet covered turban in dark blue figures in the second picture. BEST MADE UP IN VELVETEEN -’retty Dress of Smart Design Adapted for Party Wear or for Sunday. Nothing is prettier for a girl’s smart iress than velveteen. Here we have a really smart little dress that would an swer quite well for party wear, espe cially if made in some dainty color. The bodice is cut with a low square ceck and short open over-sleeves, and p* yt s made up on a fitting lining to which ilso the skirt is joined. The neck and ?uge of sleeves are outlined with fancy silk galloon. An underslip cf crepe de mine, with lace yoke, is worn with it; WEAR CORDED SILK BLOUSES Many Different Styles Are in Vogue, Yet Those Are to Be the Ones Given Preference. Surely the weather vane of fashion whirls fast there days. No sooner had it pointed long enough to chif fon cloth blouses to make every one think the wind held in that direction than it whirled about and pointed to corded silk blouses. Chiffon cloth is widely used in building up a bodice which is partly made of the gown material, and it equals coarse fancy net in popularity. Yet the all-over blouse, boned and lined, worn with a smart coat suit, is of corded silk with a high luster in two definite colorings. These fasten down the front, and are trimmed with the usual cascade of net. One of the new tricks is to insert pieces of dotted cream net into the color of the blouse, and edge all with watered silk ribbon. The stocks of these blouses are of the ecru net or the self-colored net. The best design ers approve of both. Wings of palest gray, with dark blue and iridescent markings, and having small splotches or dots of black, form its trimming. The pair is mounted in the simplest manner on the crown at the left front. A jet ornament and a band of grey velvet finish the mounting. Hats of this character are bought already covered and are to be found in a great variety of shapes. The tendency toward simplicity of trim ming, so apparent for three seasons, is not only a move in the direction of good taste but an advantage to those who undertake to trim their own mil linery. A more elaborate hat is shown in Fig. 3. The elaboration appears, how ever, in the making of the fancy feather, not in placing it on the hat. The shape may be had ready covered in a variety of materials. It is shown in chamois skin faced with black vel vet. The trimming is a handsome semi band made of feather breasts, a sort of bow effect, with a wing mounted at the center. These are made by the manufacturers ready to mount on the hat, which requires no other trimming. The amateur milliner should be careful in mounting them to not place them too flat against the shape. Very strong thread should be used—long, loose stitches and the thread finally tied inside the crown. and a wide ribbon sash is tied round th; waist. Materials required: Seven yards 21 inches wide, two yards trimming, three-quarters yard sateen for lining, half-yard crepe de chine and three eighths yard piece lace for underslip, and half-yard nainsook for foundation of slip. TO PROTECT THE EMBROIDERY Lavender Flowered Bags of Chiffon Make Pretty Gifts and Have Distinct Use. Quite wonderful and most beautiful are the lavender flowered bags made as gifts and to hold the most delicate pieces of embroidery. They are chif fon, white with some rambling spray in pale lavender. The bag is shirred into a lavender-covered circular bot tom, and at the top of its 12-inch height it is folded to provide material for a casing, folded over an embroid ery hoop and sewed over it in casing shape. There are neither strings nor rib bons, but after the work is put into the opening of the bag formed by the shirred-in hoop, the bag is twisted as it is dropped from the hands. The twist incloses the work as securely as would a drawstring. A Season of Rosettes. It is a season of rosettes. They ap pear on hats, on coats, and on gowns, sometimes, it is true, in most impos sible places. Cords and tassels are also enjoying favor again. A very magnificent mantle in bronze colored panne bordered with sable has an em broidered collar in tones of bronze and gold, and from the center of this falls a long cordeliere with three 01 four tassels and many loops of the gold bronze silk cord. New Scarfs Are Long. Some of the newest scarfs are six yards long. They are as filmy as a veil and of course they must be ar ranged to give the best results. Crepe de chine is widely sought after in the right colors for blouses for morning coat suits. It is quite permissible to choose 'a tone that has a glow of another color in it. This would be only possible in this sea son of changeable fabrics. For instance: With a coat suit ot blue homespun fastened with black corded silk buttons there is crepe da chine blouse of blue which looks as though purple ink had been spilf over it. The white lingerie blouse is distinct ly on the shelf. It will come again with the springtime, so no woman need feel that money invested in these is money thrown away. Hot Egg and Milk. Egg and milk flavored with vanilla extract, well shaken, sprinkled over the top with pulverized nutmeg and piping hot is for sale at all the big shops and drug stores. Small salted wafers and squares of sponge cake are served with this drink, which is healthful and appe tizing and is just the thing for s cold day. LODGE TO SUCCEED REID Washington Again Hears Massachu setts Senator Will Be Ambassa dor to Great Britain. Washington.—The rumor has been revived in diplomatic circles that Sen ator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachu setts will succeed Whitelaw Reid as ambassador to Great Britain. It was said here that the post was offered to him as long a3 a year ago by President Roosevelt, after he had conferred with the then President elect Taft, who agreed in the event oi Senator Lodge accepting the proffered office, to retain him during the pres ent administration. It is an open secret in Washington that President Roosevelt was dis pleased with the undemocratic and lavish display by Ambassador Reid and would have liked nothing better than to recall him if an acceptable Senator Henry Cabot Lodge. successor could have been found. The plan to make Senator Lodge ambassa dor fell through at the time because the senator, while not absolutely de clining, induced Mr. Roosevelt to hold .the appointment in abeyance. Even now Senator Lodge may not be willing to accept it. His senatori al term will expire March 4, 1910, when he will have served 12 years in the senate. There is no doubt that President Taft would be glad to send the senator to London if he could be induced to accept. The belief is that Lodge can be re elected to the senate if he desires. But inasmuch as he is of the class from which ambassadors to Great Britain j have usually been drawn, being a lit j erary man, scholar and historian, there are allurements about the am | bassadorship that are hard ior a man of Senator Lodge’s type to resist. There is a growing belief that with the retirement of Ambassador Reid, James Bryce, the British ambassador at Washington, will also be recalled. The British government, it is report ed, is merely waiting to see the type of ambassador that the United States j will send to London before a new rep resentative at Washington is selected. NEW CHIMES FOR TRINITY New York’s Celebrated Church to Have Another Set of Bell3 for Steeple. New Yprk.—Trinity chimes, the old est in this city, which have rung on each New Years since they were in stalled. are being overhauled and a new ringing apparatus is being con trived. One of the old bells was A Old Trinity Church. cracked and It necessitated the cast ing of a new one. It was then de cided to renovate the whole set. Trin ity’s chimes consist of ten hells, the largest of which weighs 3,000 pounds. Burke Eats Toadstools. The trim, debonair Jimmy Burke, representative of the great state of Pennsylvania, had not been seen around the capitol for some days and his host of friends were getting wor ded as to his whereabouts. Those particularly close to the Keystone statesman had grave fears that he was suffering from nervous prostra tion, brought on by the prominent part he played in the baseball champion ship series in Pittsburg. Jimmy blew in yesterday, chipper as ever, and j when the wondering ones, with fear ■ and trepidation, asked him the cause of his absence from his post he smil ingly said: “Nothing wrong, dear friends: I simply ate some toadstools for mushrooms, a delicacy to the use of which I am very much addicted.”— Washington Post. Wheat Brings Much Money, Canadian reports show that the wheat crop in western Canada this year increased the tide of trade be yond all previous reports. The Win nipeg bank clearances for the week snding October 31 were $21,365,858, an increase of $8,000,000, compared with he corresponding week la.3t year, de spite the fact that farmers generally ire holding back grain in the hope of righer prices. __________ - ■-« SILHOUETTES OF WESTERN CANADA The man from Iowa began to talk land before the train was well out of the C. N. R. depot in Winnipeg. The talk began in rather wide circles. The rush to the land, the bumper crop, the system of summer fallowing pursued in the semi-arid districts, were all discussed, and then, with a sort of apologetic smile, the Iowa man said: “I’m a bit interested in this country myself. Some of the men down home got a few sections up here along this line, and I’m going to have a look at them. Never been up in Canada be fore”— (it is curious how these mid western Americans pronounce the name of the Dominion as if it was “Can’dy”)—“but if it looks good we will be up to stay next fall.” “You see, it’s like this,” said the man from Iowa—quite manifestly con tinuing an argument that had been go ing on in his mind for some time. “Back in our State land has become dear. Anybody wanting to sell can get $70 or $80 an acre for it, and every farm that’s offered is snapped up. In Saskatchewan we have just as good land that cost us $11 and $12, so that a man can take up five or six times as much there as in Iowa on the same investment of money. “It isn’t the money, though, that brings most of us up from Iowa. I’m not sure that money would be enough. The ‘invasion’ is a family affair. We have no chance of keeping our sons around us back home. They have to leave the farm and go into the big cities of the neighboring States to get work. To keep them on the farm and in touch with us, we come up here and make little colonies with the chil dren around us, on homesteads or bought laud. This makes it easier for the farmers back there in Iowa to get land for the stay-at-homes. The fam ilies that come to Canada are kept together and the families that buy the farms they leave are kept to gether, too. There won't be any slack ening of the rush, either, for they still raise big families back in Iowa.” One could almost see the mental process of this typical American farm er in defending a step that meant a i new flag, a new allegiance, a new land, and new associates. To aban don Old Glory of the Declaration of Independence for a good thing in cheap land would hardly be playing the game, but to go out into Sas katchewan to “keep the family togeth er,” was another and a quite higher motive. Why seek too closely to analyze the reasons for the greatest land trek in the history of America? It is enough to know that the sons of the frontiers men of Iowa, and Kansas, and Minne sota—the best blood of the mid-west— are pouring into the Canadian west in an ever-increasing stream, and are learning that “God Save the King" and “My Country' 'Tis of Thee,” are sung to the same tune.—Toronto (Ontario) FI Inha Reason Enough. "His feelings are greatly hurt since he lost his job.” “No wonder he’s hurt. He fell from a high position.” Constipation causes many serious • It Is thoroughly cured by Doctor Putt-. Pi' . • Pellets. One a laxative, three for calhar When you can't tell the truah, don't tell anything. Nebraska Directory Uncle Sam Breakfast Food Co. Gentlemen: I have been using your food for several months and found it indispensable. After October ist I will be located in New York. Is your food sold there? If not I will try to get some grocer to order some—I cannot measure in dollars and cents its value to me. R. L. Collet, Sioux City, Iowa. UNCLE SAM will cure you also of CONSTIPATION. MILLARD HOTEL Douglas Sti. Am erica n--S2.O0 per day and upwards. European — SI.00 per day and upwards. flu am a Toko Dodge Street Car UmAVlA at Union Depot. ROME MILLER RUPTURE Msi few days without a surgical operation or detention from business. No pay will be accepted until the patient U completely satisfied. Write or call on FRANTZ H. WRAY, ». D. Room 306 Bee Bldg., Omaha, Neb. .. yon want the Best Corn SbeUer made? It so, insist on bavin* a MARSEILLES CORN SHELLEN Write for catalog or see yoar local deaier. JOHN DEERE PLOW CO.. OMAHA TYPEWRITERS MAKES 3* to .4 Mfr s price. Cash or tlmi pay ments. Rented, rent applies. Wenhip anywhere for free examination. No 'po.it Write for big bargain hat an t. rf-r B F.8.io<ob Co.,437 WoodwaB Hldg.OaalM. WELDING thn-!p?o?essall broken parts of machinery madejrood as new, Welds cast iron, cast steel, aluminum, copper, brass or any other metal. Expert automobile repairing BERTSCHY MOTOR CO., Council Bluffs. S3) TAFT'S DENTAL ROOMS 1517 Dcugtas SI., OMAHA, NEB. Reliable Dentistry at Moderate Pried. Birds & Animals kinds Mounted J. E. WALLACE, Taxidermist and Furrier 2020 Lake Stro.t CWIAHA. KE8