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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1911)
NO MAN S " LAND a MMftKKffi JSkLOUIS JOSEPH VANCE ^ILLUST RATIONS BY TtyyMAzx* 00*r*tc#r SMf or tou/3 jox/yr r/t/rrs / *+ ■ 1 * <**a, • fr#ni|M nkii »»f X^w 'tjr‘ **‘4 • l» I*--e*.** BUf *|«S'«k. wbt* •• *»■*•« t *t touch mtw ist ..».c vl.i Ki.tb ****** TK&hlrr O—It (kin* tc* <«n .w^e b^r tl «f !♦'*. b ut.»<d1hy uf brr #* - dhKLi * At tth# |aart« ( ««M **'•49 ivu * ■ M *> 1 * **A*» atA Vai. tttit T»*r:» to • d»«Mi-rr^ at**! fit*' kabwii vh4M«» Van T«. | * ■waa* urifai— f* u r*-at tba* ' -*«f**«i from tAm. iha« tftwr p>4k-r 4to * **** • '•** 4’*aal ta ama(<A f«r m»r4»t. * 4. tout mm lm tooccJmi M* mm~ • * au-Mw© ft!*'-*?' ■ ■■> k mm tta* i -*4vA Alibi • utat br «10M0 f *•— CMAPTE* IIL-fCkWissM > HU jfc.rt»jr Uptown tn the subway •fc-cfc he <rru«yl‘tM without tnisad -t»' e rbw-tdtng b.Tuseif twhiod a :es»|iipf. was fcU IrK UK# Ot tin r~» rie-ied feedoroand by that token a o# trht without xllo. il » f rt and ier«s|>i#tK>ui hole! the f ■ -rile*. some distance from -adwat he registered boldly as tralnerd West. Philadelphia” and ■dd (or I ts room in advance, explain 1 r tkr his iugg. v- would come In ..ter The open stare of the room . '■eft irritated him hut little, whose ’nought* were preoccupied with a huu - eg nah :ormed and less thnn hall • -i~* *.4eTed plans la Is looms, forgetful of bis prom »*• •■ iepbowe Warburton. be threw > wue-ff upon the bed to ponder the ■ ■ext iw >» and exhaustion. aupenti dared :■ excitement, overcame him ..moat :n.tur«i —te-ty. For the better *a*t of -a hour he slept without stir ag and awnhemd in the end only ta the shrilling, prolonged and not to V der.led ring of the telephone by the head Of his hed * ls a litrSe Map! ! a its tln-p. be re it re* a 'auoet! or two lo grasp tfee ta*a>rt <,f tfee switchboard oj« raior » . otter, to the effe«! that a Mr t'rosv rftwrw.tt the Ktecing World. • ould tii* to see Ur. Hr* user <1 West The tte-saage mas repeated la accents **e»eB ptorj before he r .tnprebcaded •hat fee had bee* tur lo earth. Ask 'be gentleman to come up at •ft he said. and. seizing his bat. •eft 'be room as soon as he had fin tubed spejtkteg. Vs. - tiding a single fight ol the stairway that wound round the ele vator shaft, fee waited until the car began to rise then rang As be ha<i ! re.eet. It paused at the Suor be low to discharge the new spa per iuan before coming up for him As he • epped into the cage he pressed a tetter Into tfee operator s palm Down." be demanded; ‘ground Soar And don’t stop lor anybody. A single minute la'er be was in the • Haste being "he prime essen ■-al of the situation, fee dodged round •fee corner Into Strife avenue, walked s 1 k*rfc uptown and turned thiough to teondway. There sudd- nly. as he paused at the per end of tzangarre square, doubt d which way to turn, a hat to do. be tsickened to sensibility of his soli ■ jde. and knew himself more utterly s. -nr ta -tat hour than ever be had been throughout his days A passing handsets palled in to his vgnai He entered, giving the address ml Katherine Thaater a hunt. There was a crimson glare of gun --■t down the street when he alighted and paid his far* m last a time.- said Coast. "I was .s cans to tea today—I begged the privilege only yesterday . . “ Me pained, alien-ed by a present! est bred of the aspect of the house At every window the shades were -awn ieiH with (be sills. The flight jt bruwnsudw atepa. littered with windswept dust and debris, ran up to .easy oaken doors, tight-closed The **l of a burglar-protective concern -fared at hitn from a corner of one »! the drawingroom windows. Only a tfee aid fa*b.oaed basement were uere signs of life; the area-gateway ■•’-and open. a gas Jet glimmered Armagh sack curtains jr » out tum**a into tne area, •ad rang the basement bell Afer same time the door was ■pened ta l:a and be entered, to hare a*» hand caught and lawned upon by 'hr aged butler »bo had smuggled him »»eei* When Const in the pride and pomp oj, his first knickerbockers had come to stay with Katherine in see burse-» “Oh. llr Garrett. Mr Garrett!" the Old lok» <4natertd “Gud bless tbe day. wtr* I re seen the papers and I said that you d be here. sir. as soon as ever you got Lack borne I knew taonld turn out so. sir. from the first. I ts sever failed to stand up for yon and say you never done It. . tins a black shame it is Justice was so kong in coming—' Soames rambled on. garrulous in •eml senile joj Coast leaned wearily against the nail of the gloomy base meat hallsay. with no hoart to Jeter t»Pt At length, however, he found his voter "Thank you. Soames." be said, gent ly Hut— Miss Katherine?" The anener he had foreseen, hope iacely "Gone, sir—gone this many a Any Ton know what bap "1 caa guess Hot tell me" He ateeisd hfmaelf against the disclosure ef what hr already knew with intui tive crrtaiavy "Mrs. Grreham died—you knew that. •»r*" Soames named Katherine's east, with wheat she had lived alter her parents death "During my trial—yea. I knew." "She never believed you guilty, sir. Perhaps yon d like to know . . ." "Bet Miss Katherine*" Tbe old mna shook his head mourn fully “Mad. sir. mad . . " be mum Const caught bis wrist fiercely. “Whet's that yon aay?" "I aay she waa mad. sir. to do what she done, aafi thaf HI any though It cost me my place. . . . It nasa't a decent three months after lira Gres asm pawed away, sir— 'ouu in'!; —sent away barely a month—when she married him—" - - «.• . . She didn’t know ■ hat she »as doing, sir. I’ve thought t was »hat I’ve heard called infatua tion She didn't know her own mind when be was talking to her. He car ried her clean off her feet, so to speak. ... So they were married and went away." "To Germany. 1 understood, sir.” "You’re heard—" "Never a word—not a line. I some times wonder at It. sir. She left me a bit of money to run things on till she returned, but that's gone long ago. sir. and I’ve had to draw upon my savings. . . . She must kuow. Blindly Coast turned and reeled into the servants’ dining-room, where he fell into a chair by the table, pillow ing bis bead u)»on his arms. A passion of blind, dumb ruge shook him hr the throat: blackness of de spair succeeded that; he sat rnotion ; lews, witless, overwhelmed. An hour or two passed before the butler aroused him with an offer of biscuits and a decanter of rare old port; all the house had. he protested, fit to offer to his Mr Garreit. Coast ate and drank mechanically. “He Carried Her Clean Off Her Feet. So to Speak.** without sense of taste or refresh ment. Even the generous wine lay told within him. Still later be asked for writing ina -erial* and scrawled a few tines to Wat burton, briefly requesting him to look after Soanies and advance him money from time to time, according to his needs, pending the return of bis mistress Then, rising, he stumbled forth into the night, at once unconscious and heedless of whither his feet were lead ing him. walking far and blindly un der the sway of a physical instinct dumbly demanding of him action and esertion Midnight'found him on a hilltop far beyond the city limits, insensibly com forted by the great calm of the tran quil countryside, blanketed with kind ly darkness, lighted only by the arch ing stars. There was a wind of free dom in his face, sweet with the keen tang of the sea. Before him there was only the mystery of chance, the grateful oblivion of the open spaces; behind him a lurid sky. overhanging the city of his renunciation. Sa. plodding, the night enfolded him to her great bosom, warm with peace. Lure of Lost Inheritances - Many Centuries Old Fortunes Await ing the Claim of the Law ful Heirs. ~ In Rhenish Bavaria two associations have recently been organised to obtain a $400,000 Inheritance left In 1676 by the Dutch Field Marshal Baron von Ornbolm. In Bavaria there Is a new effort under way to secure five ror tunes now estimated at about $17,600. 000. the amounts left by five Dutch men to their German relatives, be j tween 1636 and 1706. plus the Interest : that has accumulated since that time. Every one of these five fortunes, the largest of which was $1,120,000. baa completely disappeared. There la a record that the money i left by Johann Joss, an Amsterdam ship's captain, who died in 1707. reached the representative of his heirs In Augsburg in 1786. In tbe nest year the heirs were Informed that $700,000 bad1 been deposited for them In an Augsburg bank. The heirs of a leath er dealer. Vaa Grata, received small payments on account, and even ob 1 taining $40,000 about 1791. In 1866 ' an Augsburg banker by the name of I dice a more expliei": declaration. "A boat,” Coast added, "preferably of the center-board cat type, with a hard-working motor auxiliary.*' The Huxtable mind, which you are I ,a believe typical of its caste, like a 1 ship wisely navigated, moved cautious | ly in well-buoyed channels. It clung | to tradition, whether in the business j of boat building, which it pursued to i admiration, or in the lighter diversion o humor, to which its attitude re sembled that of the ancestor worship ing heathen Chinese. Premonitory symptoms of a reversion to type in the matter of wit were betrayed by i the corrugation of the Huxtable • wrinkles. | "To go sailin' in?” After this utterance, tradition ; flapped Its wings and screamed; Hux table himself condescended to chuckle; Coast, to a tolerant smile. "Possibly," he conceded. "Hava you such a boat?*’ “I might have.” Huxtable admitted cautiously. “Come along.” He rose and led the way through a hack door into the boat yard. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Von Halde confessed on bis death bed that the inheritances had been de posited in hia bank, and that by means of them he bad made his own fortune. Since then every effort has been made to trace the bequests through the municipality of Augsburg, the Ba varian minister of the interior, and the courts. There are endless docu ments in the case, but the money has never appeared. Recently the Dres den bank absorbed the Von Halde bank business, and the heirs are now of the opinion that it must account to them for $17,500,000 and they have en gaged a distinguished Munich lawyer to devote his time to a search for the money. Good Advice. Rub elbows with the least of the world’s people, if you would quicken your brain and soften your heart.— Exchange. He Needed One. She—"Jack has a strong face." He —“It has to be. You should see his wife.”—Port Worth Record. CHAPTER IV. To tbe boatyard and ship-chandler tng establishment of a certain Mr. Huxtable in the town of Fairhaven. on the eastern bank of the Acusbnet river, there came—or, rather, drirted with the tide of a casual fancy—to ward the close of a day in June. Gar feu Coast. A declining sun threw bis shadow athwart the floor of the chandlery. Huxtable glanced up from the muddle of papers on his desk. Coast lounged easily in the doorway, with one shoul der against the frame; a man notably tall and slender and graced, besides, with a simple dignity of manner that assorted oddly, in the Huxtable un derstanding, with clothing well-worn and travel-stained Out of a face moderately browned, his dark eyes glimmered with a humor whimsical, regarding Huxtable. The object of their regard pushed up His spectacles for a better view. “Well?” he inquired, not without a suspicion of grim resentment, who was not weathered to laughter at his own expense. It happened, however, that Coast's amusement sprang front another cause; his own utter irresponsibility, w hich alone had led him to the chand lery. he considered hugely diverting. “1 was just thinking," he said, smil ing. "that now would be a useful time to buy a boat.” Huxtable. possessed of an inherent predilection for taciturnity, liable, ever and anon, to be sore beset if not wholly put to rout by the demon Cu riosity *a familiar likewise legitimate ly handed down to him by several gen erations of New England forebears), with a mute nod to signify that he had i heard and now awaited without preju OOLS discover that frailty is not compatible with great men: they •wonder and despise: but the discerning And that greatness is not incompatible with frailty, and they admire and In dulge. —Edward Bulwer Lytton. WAYS OF SERVING POTATOES. There are several hundred ways of serving the pom me de terre so that we need not fear monotony in serving this common vegetable. Have ready a quart of cold, cooked potatoes chopped to the size of small beans, a half a cup of tomato sifted and reduced to a thick pulp, one large green pepper freed from seeds and minced fine, one small onion minced, three tablespoonfuls of fat In which the onion and pepper is cooked until soft: then add the potato and tomato with salt and pepper to taste. Cook until dry and serve with fish i or cold meat. Hashed Brown Potatoes.—Chop cold cooked potatoes rather fine, dust with salt and pepper. For each pint of potatoes have two tablespoonfuls of butter melted in a hot frying pan; spread the potatoes evenly and shake them over the fire until brown. Add a half cup of thin cream and let stand without stirring until the cream is absorbed. Roll like omelet and ! serve on a hot platter, garnish with sprigs of parsley. A soup that is very delicious and nourishing is made from potatoes. Cream of Potato Soup.—Pare and cook until tender four medium-sized potatoes, mash and add to the fol lowing ingredients: To a quart of milk add a slice of onion, a stalk of ; celery and a sprig of parsley, or only the onion may be used as a flavor, i When scalding hot remove the onion and add two tablespoonfuls of but , ter and two of flour that have bee! | cooked together: strain and add the potato. Serve very hot. For extra oc casions a beaten egg added just be fore serving adds much to the quality ! pf the soup. Potatoes Baked With Cheese.— Put ' a layer of cold cooked potatoes In a i buttered baking dish, sprinkle with I a generous layer of grated cheese; add more potatoes and a cupful of j white sauce made with two lable ! spoonfuls of butter and two of flour cooked until smooth, then add a cup of milk. Cook in a hot oven until i the cheese is melted. I I gentle, pure and good without the world being better for It. without somebody be ing helped and cogiforted by the very ex istence of that goodness. —Phillips Brooks. CHRISTMAS CANDIES. A most delicious fruit candy that | w ill keep for weeks is called Turkish Sweets.—Take a pound 1 each of dates, figs and walnut meats and put through the meat chopper. Mix well with powdered sugar and a little lemon juice enough to make a paste. Roll out and cut in any desired form or pack in glasses and cover with paraffin paper. This makes a delecta ble filling for sandwiches or it may be used dipped in fondant or chocolate i for choice bon-bons. I Chocolate Caramels.—Put two and a half tablespoonfuls of butter into a kettle and when melted add two cups of molasses, a cup of sugar and a third of a cup of milk. Stir until the sugar is dissolved and when the boiling point is reached add three squares of choco late. stirring constantly until the choc olate is melted. Boil until when tried in cold water a firm ball is formed. Add a teaspoonful of vanilla just as it is taken from the fire. Wintergreen and peppermint wafers : may be made by flavoring and coloring | fondant and melting it over hot water so it may be dropped in small tea spoonfuls on waxed paper. Chicago Nuggets.—Boil together un til the soft ball stage a cup of brown and a cup of white sugar and a half cup of water, stir in a half teaspoon of soda, a teaspoon of vanilla and pour over the well beaten white of an egg. Beat until it holds its shape when dropped on a buttered sheet, add a , half cup of nut meats and drop by tea- j spoonfuls on a buttered sheet. K STARVE each other for love’s caress; We take, but we do not give; It sems so easy some soul lo bless. But we lole the love grudgingly , less and less. 'Till 'tls bitter and hard 10 live. —Andrew I.ang. THE WINTER BERRY. In cooking cranberries it is well to remember that they should never :be put into a tin dish. Either agate br porcelain dishes should be used. Cranberry Conserve.—Extract the Juice from an orange, then cover the peeling with cold water and cook •slowly until tender. Scrape out the Novelist at Eighty-seven. i Mrs. Katherine S. Macquoid. the British novelist, who is eighty-seven years of age, has written a new book 'Mrs. Macquoid has been writing for fifty years, and her health remains good, save that the strain of her work has slightly affected her eyesight. She jhas traveled much in Europe off the jbeaten track. Mrs. Macquoid's first story was published in 1859, and she has written since over fifty novels, be sides children's 3nd travel stories. She has also just completed another new novel, entitled "Suzanne.” Her hus band. Thomas Robert Macquoid. who is ninety-one, has had a long and hon orable career as an artist and black and black and white draftsman. His Eccentricity. “Snaggs is a most eccentric chap’" “Yes?" "Sure! He has named his place Pine Terrace.” "Well, what cf it?" "Why, he has pine trees and a ter race!"—Judge. white, bitter part and cut the pee! into narrow strips with the scissors. Simmer one and a half cups of rais ins until tender; add the orange peel and the juice and a quart of cran berries. If needed, add more water to make a cupful of liquid. Cover and' cook for ten minutes or until the berries are done. Then add two cups of sugar and simmer until thick. Cranberry Trifle.—Cook a quart of berries with one pint of water until the berries pop open; rub through a sieve, return to the fire and add one pound of sugar. Stir until it is dis solved, ■ then let boil two minutes; cool and beat until light with a wire egg beater, then fold in the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Pile in a glass dish and serve. Cranberry; shortcake and cranberry pie are old favorites for desserts. Baked Apples With Cranberries.— Select large, perfect, sweet apples, re move the cores and fill the cavities with thick cranberry jelly. Set the apples in a pan of water in the oven, and bake until the apples are done. Put each apple in a glass sauce dish and serve with whipped cream. Cranberry Roll.—Cream two table spoonfuls of butter, add a cup of sugar, a half cup of cold water and two cups of flour sifted with a table spoonful of baking powder and a dash of nutmeg Beat until perfectly smooth, then add another cup of flour and roll out the dough to an Inch in thickness. Spread thickly with jam or jelly, roll up closely, pressing the ends together. I*av on a plate and steam for three hours. Cut in slices and serve with cream. 5 PRAY you with all earnest ness to prove, and know wunin your hearts, that all things toveiy and righteous are possible for those who believe tn their possibility, and who de termine that for their part, they will make every day's work contribute to then. - Ruskln. SOME COMMON DISHES. The common vegetables are so often served in the same old ways until we grow tired of the monotony. Let us try: Cabbage Baked With Cheese.—Chop the cabbage and cook It in boiling salted water for half an hour or un til tender; put it in layers in a bak ing dish, alternating with a white sauce and grated cheese, and bake just long enough to melt the cheese Turnip and White .Sauce.—Wash and slice the turnips into half-inch slices, pare and cut the slices into: cubes; cook in boiling salted water until tender. Make a cup of seasoned white sauce and when the turnips are done pour off the water, turn into a vegetable dish and pour the sauce over them. Cottage Pie.—Chop cold meat to half fill a baking dish. Over the top of the meat spread mashed potato that has been warmed with a little hot milk. Mix with gravy, season to taste and put into a hot oven to thor1 oughly heat through. Sour Milk Gingerbread.—Take a half a cup of molasses, one-half cup of sugar, two teaspoonfuls of short ening. one cup of sour milk, one ta blespoonful of ginger, half a tea spoon of salt, one teaspoon of soda, and two cups of flour. Cream the shortening, add the sugar, molasses, salt and ginger. Dis solve the soda In the milk, which is now added, and lastly the flour. Beat well and bake in a flat loaf thirty to forty minutes Carrots In Lemon Butter—Cut the carrots in long, slender strips and lay in cold water to crisp. Cook In boil ing water until tender enough to pierce with a fork. Drain, and to each pint allow a tablespoonful of but ter, half a teaspoon of salt, half a teaspoon of sugar, and a dust of cay enne. Simmer until the butter is ab sorbed. then add two tablespoonftils of lemon juice and a tablespoon of minced parsley. Boil up and serve at once. The Candy Habit. Had Dr. Hope well-Smith bis wav he would absolutely prohibit the eat ing of sweets between meals. He went so far In bis address before the British Medical association as to say they should be rigidly tabooed by the young. Admitting that sweets had their use. he emphasized the need ot modera tion. The abuse of sweets, like that cf alcohol, tea. etc., was very wide spread. They should be rigidly ta booed by the young and parents should not allow their children to eat any and every kind of confectionary. Sweet factories should be under rigid state control and all confectioners' shops and their wares should be sub ject to examination by government inspectors. Only absolutely pure sweets should be sold and those un der the most hygienic conditions pos sible. The average woman isn't satisfied unless her husband quits loving her long enough to make love to her occa sionally. --V---—— - Your grocer is authorized to give you a free MOTHER’S OATS Fireless Cooker How to get the cooker free— This advertisement is good for 10 cou pons—cut it out and you have a big start. Then in every’ pack age of Mother's Oats you will find a cou pon. Save the cou pons and get the cooker free in a hurry. Only one ad vertisement will be acceptedfrom each cus tomer as 10 coupons. Let us tell you our plan of dis tributing these cookers, Mr, Grocer. You will be inter ested. Send a postal to “A1 other s Oats'* Chicago » Buy a package of Mother's Oats TODAY, and send a postal for complete premium book. Address “MOTHER’S OATS,” CHICAGO TIME TO MOVE. Mr. Eel—TV hat is your hurry, Mr. | Rock? Mr. Rock—1 just heard some one up above say “Get the hook.” BABY’S ECZEMA AND BOILS “.\Iy son was about three weeks old when I noticed a breaking-out on his cheeks, from which a watery sub stance oozed. 1 short time after, his arms, shoulde"' and breast broke out also, and in a few days became a solid scab. I became alarmed, and called our family physician who at once pro j nounced the disease eczema. The lit tle fellow was under treatment for ; about three months. By the end of that time, he seemed no better. I be came discouraged. I dropped the doc j tor’s treatment, and ci.nmenced the I use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, ; and in a few days noticed a marked change. The eruption on his cheeks | was almost healed, and his shoulders, ! arms and breast were decidedly bet ■ ter. When he was about seven months old, all trace of the eczema was gone. “During his teething period, his ’ head and face were broken out in boils which I cured with Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Surely he must | have been a great sufferer. During | the time of teething and from the time I dropped the doctor's treatment, I used the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, nothing else, and when two years old he was the picture of health. His complexion was soft and beauti ful. and his head a mass of silky curls I had been afraid that he would never be well, and I feel that I owe a great deal to the Cuticura Remedies." (Signed) Mrs. Mary W. Ramsey. 224 E. Jackson St., Colorado Springs. Col., Sept. 24. 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold by drug gists and dealers everywhere, a sam ple of each, with 22-page book, will be mailed free on application to “Cutl cura,” Dept. 5 L, Boston. Was in Real Trouble. A passenger who escaped uninjured from a serious railway smash, seeing a fellow-traveler searching anxiously among the wreckage with a lantern, offered to assist in the search, and, thinking the old man had lost his wife, asked In sympathetic tones: ! "What part of the train was she In?" ! Raising his lantern and glaring at the kindly disposed passenger, the old man shouted with indignant distinct j ness that triumphed over physical ln ! flrmity: "She. sir! she! I am look | lng for my teeth!" Same. i Friend—What were your sensations ; iu the wreck? Victim—Just the same as in football. Three coaches passed over me. and then the doctors came.— Puck. Splendid Crops In Saskatchewan (Western Canada) 800 Bushels from 20 acres of wheat was the thresher’s return from a Lloyd miuster farm in the season of 1910. Many fields in that as well as other districts yield ed from 25 to 35 bu shels of wheat to the acre. Other grains in proportion. LARGE PROFITS are thus derived from the FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS of Western Canada. This excellent showing causes prices to advance. Land value* should double in two years' t ime. Grain growlug,mixed farm ing, cattle raising and dairy ing are all profitable. Free Homesteads of 160 acres are to be had In the very best districts: 160 acre pre-emp tions at £3.00 per acre with in certain areas. Schools and churches in every settle ment, climate unexcelled, soil the richest; wood, water and building material plentiful. 39 For particulars as to location, low settlers’ railway rates and descriptive illustrated pamphlet. “Last Best Wes:,** and other In formation. write to Snptof Immi gration. Ottawa. Canada, or to Canadian Government Agent. W. V. BENNETT Rasa 41st Bidf. <Haba. Rib. ease write to the agent nearest you Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’* Why You’re Tired—Out of Sort* —Have No Appetite. ^ CARTER’S LITTLE I IUCD Dll I C will put you right in a few days. A They do^W their duty^HI CureCon-^^r stipation, fai Duiousness, lnaigesuon ana oick rieaaacno SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature FOR ALL - EYE DISEASES _ DRUG STORES i’llstaties. r.»jkx Nebraska Directory QjOW&W^h Better Things to Eat. Order Table Delicacies by ma3. Ask (or New Catalogue. 17tk ft Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. $100 NORTH AUTOING AUTO SCHOOL. 1824 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA, NEBRASKA GUARANTEES MORE ACTUAL REPAIRING than any three other schools. COME SEE. POULTRY I can make you money by selling your butter, eggs and poultry on commission. Writ# ms for prices. Robert Parris Ks«. ls?o 4ll».lltkHt.,Ouha P1*"””"* PAINLESS DENTISTRY GOLD CROWN. *4.00 to *5.00 Plate or bridge made in 1 dar. Ri anjinationlate. 2U yrs. guarantee. BAILEY the DENTIST tnoamiimwTHniLiuiuw. buMiMlUM ISIS S ll.ra.j, Omak> Ott (Ms ad. out to find us. We Know How. Satisfaction Guaranteed. HUTCSON OPTICAL COMPANY 218 Smith 18th Strwmt, Omaha, Hah. Milady Who Is Particular Insists on Having Nothing But Defiance Starch for dresses, skirts, petticoats, etc. Defiance produces a finish and freshness impossible with any other starch. The Best Hot or Cold Water Starch Ever Made. One Trial Will Soon Convince You. Big 16-ounce package for 10 cents; only 12 ounces for same price of any other kind. Not Best Because it Is Cheapest, But Cheapest Because it Is Best. Manafaetand by Defiance Starch Co. OMAHA, NEBRASKA —