The tap City Northwestern J W. iit'Kl.Ki6.117.490.000. or >277. #«*.«•• under the total far 1910 • • • The Supreme court of th? I'nited State* refused to grant a stay of the beef packer* trial in Chicago until tbe court should be able to pass on the constitutional question raised by tbe packet* m habea* corpus proceed ings • • • Attorney General WUkershatn be • ame ill while gtttnding he cabinet session true tor lie luiney. President Taft* physicist, wa* summoned from 'be war department lioc-tor De i-aney ordered the attorney general is be moved to his home It was said that Mr Wirkersfcam wa* suffering from a slight attack of indiges'ion The per capita < treillation of money in tbe I'nited States is accord ing to a statement issued by the treas ury department Foreign Kight foreigner-, half of them Americans, were killed in Shensi, several mission houses were de stroyed and k.Ooti Main bus were stain by Chinese, according to the first di rect and ur- ensured news received ai Peking from Sianfu since tbe recent • -u'break there That lb* American slat* depart ment will sustain Shuster In ali bis roaistttiitionai rtgbsa la bow a matter ■f tact, lor wltb 5.U0U Kussian Cos a*k» advancing to occupy Teheran, proclaim martial law arid our! him at lb* bayoe«-( ai Persia* llnanriai agent, be baa bt-eo advised by tb* govern asent U» aland bla ground and defy the :*ar. Nearly fieo.004i.txw* worth of comes lie men teadtee trom the L otted Mate* »a» transported acroaa lb# Isthmus of Panama id tbe fiscal year of 1*11. via tb* two railway lines. Print* Chun, tbe regent of China baa abdicated, and thus la removed, revolutionary leader* declare, tbe thief stumbling block in tbe road to ward a eoastitutloaal government of Chian. • • • Tbe moat torgmScent spectacle In ladla'a long biatory of brilliant event* was wtlnceaed by more than ZuO.OOO people when George V, king of Kng laad and emperor of India, and tbe bwawa rmpreaa made tbeir state entry mto tbe city of Delhi. After a severe battle, lb wbirh both aide* lost heavily, tbe Italian forces. tWN strong, occupied tbe Turkish military camp on tbe oasis of Aln Zara. near Tripoli Tbe victory is re garded as decisive see Domestic As • result of pleading guilty to rbarges of roitoia* todies in a ceme tery at Grand Corks N D.. J \V. Kaaf p began serving a rr-otens Angeles, was defeat , ed In the municipal election. Mayor Alexander, good government” c-andi ; date, being reelected by a large ma i jorlty. • • • Attorney General Major of Missouri will file in the Supreme court of the | United States a motion to dismiss the appeal of the International Harvester ! company from the ouster decree of i the supreme court of Missouri. Personal i Frank A Vanderlip. president of the National City bank of New York, in an interview published in the Out look. declared that "the hesitant and disturbed state of utind now so uni versal among business men and cap italists Is due to the chaotic situation resulting from the attempt to adjust I business to a law"—the Sherman anti trust law. • • • It was announced at Washington that Attorney General Wickershatn has been suffering from ptomaine poi soning. He is now out of danger, however. • • • Charles W. Penrose, a member of the council of the twelve apostles of the Mormon church at Salt Lake City, was appointed to succeed the late John Henry Smith as the second counselor to Joseph F. Smith, preal i d*a. of the church. HENRY STEHR GETS INDETER MINATE SENTENCE. NEWS FROM OVER THE STATE What is Going on Here and There That is of Interest to the Read ers Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Madison—After motion for a new trial was denied and notice of appeal tiled. Judge Welch sentenced llenry Stehr, who was found guilty of man slaughter in connection with the death of his three-year-old stepson, to an in determinate sentence of from one to ten years. Flege Gets New Trial. *\Yilliatn Fiege. sentenced to life im prisonment for the murder of his sis ter. is to be given a new trial. The supreme court has ordered the suit re versed and remanded. The defendant has been at liberty for several months on a $25,000 bail bond. It was signed by his brothers, *ho are wealthy farmers, and is the largest bail bond ever given in the supreme court of Nebraska. Result of Disappointment. Lincoln—Despondent over the fu tility of his wish to make a trip to f'alifornia. Arvid A. Erickson. the twenty-year-old son of A. Erickson, a farmer living six miles east of Davey, in I^ancaster county, went into a field near the residence of his father Wed nesday morning and fired a charge of shot from a 12-gauge pump gun into his breast, instant death resulting. Weekly Lived at Fremont. Fremont—Ernest Weekly, the young Nebraskan who lost his life at a sub urban station near Chicago while sav ing a girl from death under the wheels of a train, formerly resided with his parents in Fremont. Weekly was born here. Cetebrated Fiftieth Anniversary. Wilber—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cha loupka celebrated the fiftieth anni versary of their wedding at the opera bouse Saturday night. Ten of their twelve living children were present, besides a large number of guests. NEWS FROM THE STATE HOUSE. The fees of the office of the secre tary of state for the month of Novem ber aggregated $2.918.9.r>, of which $1,110 was derived from the annual occupation tax upon corporations and $f>00 penalties. W. H. Thompson of Grand Island has filed for the democratic nomina tion for Fnited States senator at the primaries which are to be held April 19 next year. His is the first filing for the place, but. according to state ments made some time ago. ex-Gov ernor Shallenberger and Willis E. Reed of Madison are to get into the race within the near future. Edwin Jearv has filed as a candi date for the republican nomination for the legislature in I.ancaster county. He has already had considerable law making experience. He served in the house from Cass county and was a member during the memorable cam paign of 1886-1887. when Senator Pad dock defeated Senator Van Wyck in his race for a second term. W. J. Furse, w ho lias served as rail wav commissioner since the death of William Cowgill. has severed his con nections with that body. ThomaB L. Hal!, chosen at the late election, tak ing his place. Hall had intended to defer the action until January 1, but, acting upon the advice of attorneys, he assumed his official role immedi ately upon receipt of his certificate of election. According to .Manager Eager of state university athletics, the total receipts of the Michigan game were about $10, 300, of which the Wolverines received a total of $5,092. The original ot tract with that team called for 50 per cent of the total receipts at the gate, with the guarantee of $4,000. The past season at the university has been very profitable and although no figures are yet obtainable, it is thought that the net profits will be well up with those of the best former year. Many departments of state have paid fees to the state treasurer under the Gerdes law, a law which requires nearly all departments to pay fees in and which appropriates such fees for the use of the departments. The ef fect of the law is to compel all de partments to make a full accounting of all fees taken in and expended. Some departments formerly received large fees and expended them without having their accounts audited by any of the state auditing officers. The attorney general is preparing 1 to resist the efforts of G. K De Lacy. ! administrator of the Theodore Stani ‘ sics, deceased, to revive the appeal of Stanisics in a criminal case. The ad ministrator alleges that if the sen tence of seven years against Stanisics is affirmed, the estate will have to pay the costs. The attorney general will contend that the administrator can not serve the sentence if the judg ment is affirmed. The court dismissed the case when notice of the death of the plaintiff in error was brought to Its attention. Charles E. Sert has been appointed by the governor a delegate to the na tional irrigation congress to be held in Chicago. There is a well-defined rumor abroad to the effect that Congressman Norris has decided not to file, but there are none of his supporters who have been here in the past week who have \olced a guess as to whether or not that is correct. Norris has not been in the city for some time past and has not had an opportunity to confer with any of those who are locally close to the plan of bis cam paign BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA. The Christian church at Beatrice will install a $3,000 pipe organ. Fremont sports are making efforts to hold a dog show there after the holidays. The month of November, just closed, is said to have been the coldest on record in Nebraska. The Platte County Corn Growers* association will hold its meeting at Columbus. December 15 and 16. Naponee will have a newspaper, J. A. Barker having moved the Wood ruff. Kas., Sentinel to that place. Mrs. Fannie Freeman, an old resi dent of Fremont, who located at that place in 1874. is dead from heart ; failure. An association of the alumni of the state university is to be organized in Otoe county. There will be about forty members to join. Miss Grace Moore, a York news 1 paper woman, has bought the Teller i from Frank & Son and will take up I its management at once. A fire at Decatur almost wiped out ! the business portion of the town, eaus J ing a loss of $75,000. Only two busi 1 ness houses escaped destruction. A year old baby escaped unhurt. ! but its mother was seriously injured j when she leaped with it in her arms : from a burning building at Omaha. Congressman Maguire of Lincoln j looks forward to the coming session of congress as one of the busiest and most important of recent congresses. Charles Clems has been acquitted of the murder of Frank Smith at Franklin on the night of September 11. The jury was out eighteen hours. Miss May Wyatt, a teacher in dis trict No. 32. near Tekamah. had a record-breaking basket social recent ly, forty-three baskets having sold for $161. Henry Albin. living near Shubert. has lost neatly seventy-five hogs, val ued at $500. from cholera. Others are reporting minor losses from the same disease. i N. C. Prince of Surprise was struck ; in the eye by a small piece of wire ■ and may lose liis sight. He was help i ing unpack goods in a store when the ! accident occurred. The nine-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Reedy of Blue Springs was seriously injured by being tram pled by a cow which he attempted to lead into the lot. Rev. W. T. Gatley of the First Meth odist Episcopal church of Cambridge will go to Steamboat Springs. C'olo.. as pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church of that city. The unusually large sum of $142. 000 will be distributed this month by the Modern Woodmen and the Ancient Order of United Workmen to the heirs : of deceased members, j Mrs. Angela Roach, who sued T-ong ■ Pine saloonkeepers for $25,000 for be ! ing instrumental in the death of her husband, who was rim over by a train, was awarded $5,000 damages. Andrew S. Gardner has brought suit against the city of Blue Springs for $15,000 damages alleged to have been sustained by hint by reason of a de fective sidewalk in that place. Rodney McQuary, a student at Cot ner university, has received a unani mous call to the pastorate of the Te ctimseh Christian church, and will be gin bis new duties the first of the year. Rev. C. Sparks of Canon City. Coio., and president of the Rocky Mountain synod of the English Lutheran church, has accepted the call extended to him by the church of his denomination at Auburn. An automobile in which were rid ing I^ee Derry, Charles Chaney and Misses Edna and Edith Krohier of Havelock was wrecked Sunday night near Louisville when the machine crashed into a bridge. None of the party was hurt. The retail merchants of Hastings nro contemplating the organization of a credit-rating bureau in the near fu ture. The plan is to establish a secret service and employ a central manager who will have a record of all residents j of the city and the telephone will be called into use for ascertaining the : standing of prospective customers when credit is asked. Lincoln—The I^ancaster County Bar association has indorsed Roscoe B. Pound, formerly dean of the univer sity law school, for a place on the su preme bench of the United States. H. H. Wilson, F. M. Hail and J. B. Strode were appointed a committee to submit Dean Vound's name to Presi dent Taft. I he husking of corn in Hamilton j county is proving an agreeable sur | prise to farmers. A large pari of the j acreage is averaging from twenty-five ; to thirty bushels to the acre. The ; September estimate was ten bushels ! per acre. A seventy-five yard run made by j Howard Spurrier in the last half min I ute of the game netted the only score ' made in the Cotner academy vs. Wes ! levan academy Thanksgiving day con : test at Wesleyan. Cotner won by a I score of f> to 0. The river at Nebraska City Is j blocked with ice and dealers in that j article are already staking out their ! fields. Grandma Riley, who is probably the oldest woman Mn the state, celebrated her 111th birthday recently. She is a colored woman and resides in Hast ings. She enjoys good health for one of her age and can see well. The Presbyterian churches of Au rora have united under the leadership of the Aurora Sunday School associa tion to take a religious census of the city and country district lying within two miles of the city limits. The city of Teeumseh is advertising for bids for proposed public improve ments amounting to $29,500. ihe bonds hating been recently voted. The im provements will consist of an im lroved water service with a new con crete reservoir and sewer mains. : Jefferson county claims the distinc | non of naving one of the largest sorghum factories in the United States. This factory is located at the little town of Kndicott and is owned and managed by Fairchild Brothers. It has been running for a number of ; years and the business of 1911 «x i ceeds that of any other year. WESTERN CANADA FARMER SECURES WORLD’S PRIZE FOR WHEAT | A ROSTHERN, SASK., FARMER THE LUCKY WINNER. j Sir Thomas Shaughncssy of the Ca nadian Pacific Railway offered $1,000 In gold as a prize for the best 100 ibs. Df wheat, grown on the American con . ticent, to be competed for at the re : cent Land Show in New York. In making the competition open, the donor of this handsome prize showed | his belief in the superiority of Ca nadian wheat lands, by throwing the '-•cntest open to farmers of all Amer ica. both United States and Canada. I The United States railways were by no means anxious to have the Ca ! nadian railways represented at the : show and a New York paper comment ing on the results of the competitions : says that they were not to be blamed, as the Canadians captured the most important prize cf the show. The winner of this big wheat prize was Mr. Seager Wheeler of Rosthern. ! Saskatchewan, and its winning has brought a great deal of credit on the district. The winning wheat was the Marquis variety, and received no more attention from Mr. Wheeler than his other grain, but he is a very particu lar farmer. His farm is one of the cleanest and best kept in the Ros thern district, and this year he won first prize in a good farm competition whicli included every feature of farm ing and every part of the farm. Last winter Wheeler was a prize winner at the provincial seed fair in Regina. Wheeler is a firm believer in sow ing clean seed of the best quality pro curable. consequently his grain is much sought after by the best far mers for seed purposes. wneeier is an Englishman. He is a pioneer of Rosthern. coming here fif teen years ago. In the last six years he has done much experimenting, par ticularly in wheat varieties. His farm resembles an experimental farm. A long driveway, lined on both sides with trees, leads to a modest house, the home of Wheeler, a modest, unas suming man with the appearance of a student rather than a man engaged in commercial pursuits. There are now no free homesteads I to be had in this district, and farm lands are worth from $20 to $40 per j acre, which a few years ago were se | cured by their present owners, either ns a free gift or purchased at from $3 to $8 per acre. It is not many miles from Rosthern. I where the farmer lives, who secured the first prize for wheat last year at 1 the National Corn Exposition at Co i lumbus and West of Rosthern, about i 150 miles, lives Messrs. Hill and Son. , who won the Colorado Silver Trophy, | valued at $1,500. for the best peck of ! oats, also awarded at the National i Corn Show at Columbus in 1910. Not contented with the high honors : obtained in its wheat. Canada again ! stepped forward into the show ring. ' and carried off the Stillwell trophy and $1,000 for the best potatoes on ; the continent. This time the winner was a British Columbia man, Mr. J Asahel Smith, the “Potato King," of that province. The exhibit consisted of ot:e hundred and one varieties diawn from all parts of the province aggregating in weight one and a half tons. At the recent Dry Farming Con ' gress. held at Colorado Springs, and ' at which time it was decided to hold { the next Congress at Ijethbridge. in | 1912, the Province of Alberta made a wonderful showing of grains, grasses 1 and vegetables. “At the Congress. Alberta got more prizes and trophies, ten to one, than any state of the T’nion." said Mr. 1 Hotchkiss to the Edmonton Bulletin. “We brought back all but the build ing with us, and they offered us that, saying we might as well take all that was going. We would have brought it along, too, if we had had a fiat car to put it on. Alberta captured nearly I 50 first prizes, 20 seconds. 3 thirds, 9 cups, -1C medals, 50 ribbons and 2 sweepstakes. The grand sweepstake prize, for the best exhibit by state or province, a magnificent silver cup. was presented to us with much cere mony at a reception to the Canadians in the Empress hotel. The presenta . tion was made by Prof. Olin. chair man of the judging committee, and the cup was received on behalf of the province by the Hon. Duncan Mar shall. Particular Wcman. i “She insisted on having a woman lawjer secure her divorce.” j "Why was she so particular?" "She did not want to go contrary to that portion of the marriage ceremony that reads. ‘Let no man. put asun der.’ ”—.ludge. ! ! Important to Mothers Examine caretuiiy every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Children C’rv for Fletchers Castoria An Acrobat He Was. Hobby—This sailor must have been a bit of an acrobat. Mamina—Why. dear? Bobby—Because the book says: 1 "Having lit bis pipe, he sat down on his chest.” Florida Land for sale or will trade | for improved farm or income property. Give complete description. J. Si. Wi - liams, SOI City National Bank Bld g. Omaha. Neb. When yon bear two men talking so loudly that they can be heard in the next block, they are talking about something they know nothing about. Many people have receding gums. Rub Hamlins Wizard Oil on gums and stop the decay; chase tbe disease germs with a mouth wash of a few drops to a spoonful •f water. Our idea of nothing to beat Is tha fellow who brags that he begins where we leave off! Too many "eye opepers" will close I a man's eyes. SAFELY IN QUENTIN McNamara dynamiters reach CALIFORNIA PRISON. trip is without incident The Brothers. Pale and Cheerless, Are Whisked Out cf Los Angeles in an Automobile. San Quentin. Cal. Tr.c McNamara brothers on Sunday entered Sfau Quentin penitentiary, where Janies B. is condemned to spend the remainder of his life for his confessed crime or murder and where John .1.. secretary of the International Association of Bridge and Structural l.ron Workers, is sentenced to fifteen years' impris onment tor dynamiting. It was James B. who blew up the I .os Angeles Times building October 1, 1910, with the loss of twenty-one lives, and John J. who abetted in wrecking part of the Llewellyn Iren Works in Los Angeles the fallowing Christmas day. i ne men entered vne prison, u it fairly authenticated, believing that they had achieved much for the cause of union labor and had been cruelly misunderstood in their effort and the results they obtained. John J. Mc Namara, those who have talked with him many hours say. donned bis con vict garb a devoted admirer of life's little simple kindly deeds and a firm believer in t he pyscfcological efficiency of dynamite. James B. habitually be lieves a good deal as his brother be lieves. For themselves, the men would say nothing at all. Whirled from Los Angeles on a fast night train, the men were taken from it at Port Costa at sunrise Sun day, put on a little river steamer and landed two hours ar.d a half later at San Quentin prison wharf on the shores of San Pablo bay. The shac kles which bound them together on the boat trip were slipped off and they toiled up the prison hill beside Sheriff William A. Hammill of Los Angeles county. As the prison clock struck 10. John J. McNamara, preceded by Warden John Hoyle, stepped over the thres hold of The jail door, with his brother directly behind him. In five minutes James B. McNamara had become convict 25,314 and John J. McNamara was number 25,313. They were measured for jail clothing, photographed in two positions, given a carbolic tinctured bath, put into stripes, shaved and cropped and re photographed within a:i hour and turned over to John Murray, lieuten ant of the ; ard. who took them to cell No. IS in a stone tier looking out over the prisoners "upper yard," a great flower garden. Cell No. IS adjoins the tier of cells where condemned murderers are kept and the balcony outside is cut off by a little gate. Further down the row, toward the other end, is the cell of Abraham Ruef, who is serving a fourteen-year sentence far bribery in connection with the so-called San Francisco graft cases. Reef is in cell No. 3. Cell No. 11 of the tier is Henry Dalton, for seventeen years assessor of Alameda county and recently convicted of ac cepting a bribe offered, according to the evidence, by a public service cor poration at Dalton's solicitation. Republicans Will Protect. Washington.—A conference of about twenty-five members of the republican national committee will be held here Monday to pretest against the old threat to reduce soutnern representa tion in republican national conven tions. Wipe Out Government Forces. Merida, Yucatan, Mex.—Of a force of about 150 state guards, mostly Ya qais Indians, which engaged a band of Rcyistas, estimated at between 400 , and Sunday less than a dozen escaped, according to meager information. Irrigation Congress. Chicago.—Salt Lake City named as next year’s place of meeting of the National Irrigation congress, and Unit ed States Senator Newlands of Neva da wa3 elected president. Throws Self From Skyscraper. New York.—The man who somer saulted from the dome of the World buildins to death on the sidewaik Wed nesday was identified Sunday as Price Lewis, said to be the first feder al spy of the civil war. Alton Train is Derailed. Higgins burg. Mo.—Chicago & Alton i railway passenger No. 21, known as ; the “red flyer,'' was derailed near Alma, ten miles from here. Several passengers were injured. Conscience Contribution. Washington.—For the first time in months the treasury department re ceived a ‘'conscience'' contribution when a one-dollar note, enclosed in an envelope postmarked Springfield Mo., was returned to the national fund without explanation. Semi-Annual Tobacco Census. Washington.—The Cantrii! bill, au-j tborizing the taking of a semi-annual ; tobacco census under the direction of the census bureau passed the house on the Sth. Plunged Into Volga River. St. Petersburg.—Between 150 and 200 workmen were plunged into the Volga river through the collapse of a railroad bridge near Kazan. The bridge, which was in course or con struction, was carried away by the pressure of ice. Fourteen of Crew Drowned. London.—Fourteen members of the crew of the Belgian steamer Vandyke were drowned when she was wrecked off the British coast on the Sth oi December. SOME CRUEL i\Ud UNUSUAL Double Penalty Threatened for Those Who Dared to Interfere With the Wires. Rotorua has been laughing over the wording of a notice that has been placed by the public works department on some of the electric v.irc posts on the road to Okere. in New Zealand. Some time ago a Maori youth, win: seemed to have n misguided taste for experimenting, threw a long piece of cable over the electric wires that run to Rotorua from the power station at the Okere falls. The town was at once plunged in darkness for two or three hours until the mischief had been located The- dusky and youthful experiment er was carpeted in the court and fined for his scientific enthusiasm, and the department put up this notice: "Any persons climbing the electric light poles or damaging the insulators are liable to a fatal shock and a penal ty of i: 10."—Tit-Bits. Not for Earthly Ears. Doctor Reed, a minister, was open ing the Sunday morning service at his church with the usual prayer. While he was in the midst of it a stranger entered the church and took a seat far back. Doctor Reed was praying in a -low note, and the man in the rear, after straining his ears for a while, called out: "Pray louder. Doctor Reed. I can't hear you.” Doctor Reed paused, opened his eyes and turned them around until they rested on the man in the rear. Then he said: "I was not addressing you, sir; i was speaking to God.”— I-oiidon Watchdog. New View of It. “I envy the man who believes that superstition about Friday,” said Mr. Groweher. “I consider it depressing." "Xot at all. A man ought to be mighty comfortable who can feel sure there's only one unlucky day in the week.” Decidedly Novel. Ella—It was a novel proposal. Stella—What did he say? Ella—That he begged the proud privilege of getting up mornings to build the tire for me. A Sticker. “Say, pa?” “What is it?” "Does it take sixty minute men to make one man of the hour?” Judging from her passion for hats, how can a woman expect to be happy in heaven and make one halo last her through eternity? After a woman living in a smalt towyn has visited in the city for a cou ple of weeks she calls her hired girl a maid. "It isn't until a man reaches the age of discretion that he discovers be can have a good time without suffering for it the next morning. A man arrested for vagrancy nat urally has a pinched look. Nebraska Directory FREE JEWELRY BOOK From the largest retail jewelry establishment in the west. Write RYAN JEWELRY CO., Dept. W, 158 Douglas, Omaha, Neb. Better Things to Eat. Order Table Delicacies by mail. Asfc for New Catalogue. 17th A Douglas Sts., Omsk a, Neb. U.S. $100 MONTH AUTOiKG AUTO SCHOOL, 1824 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA. NEBRASKA GUARANTEES MORE ACTUAL REPAIRING than any thr"** other schools. COME SEE. AfiGODFARM INS.DAKOTA Half section, fenced, 50 acres in cultivation, 300 acres rich, tillable soil; near railroad, two (rood towns, school adjoining, teleplione.lt.F.JJ. service, tine farming community., good neigh bors, good new buildings, splendid water. An extra tine farm at a bargain. Two-thirds cash, balance time Write owner. A. M. LONGWEI.L. 1308 LEAVENWORTH ST.. OMAHA. NEBRASKA , PAINLESS DENTISTRY GOLD CROWN, $4.00 to $5.00 Plate or bridge mad-> in 1 day. Ex aomuiion tree. 2U /rs. guarantee. BAILEY the DENTIST Sew OflrM: 4 ITT NATION 4LR«\k B1.IM,. kaiaSIUhetl 16ik * HarnV, <>«•*« ('ut this ad. out to lint( ns. Corrected SKI We Know How. Satisfaction Guaranteed. HUTESOM OPTICAL COMPANY SIS South 16th Stroot, Omaha, Sob. Buy Your Oysters in Cans It is your only guarantee against adulteration, inferior grades and unclean handling. ‘ They reach the kitchen the way they leave the seaside”—all the goodness sealed in —all the dirt sealed out—the Pure Food way, and they are more econom ically because you get all real oyster value. A whole can full of Oysters—and nothing more. At all the “Better Sort” of dealers. Insist on Booth’s in hermetically sealed cans, today. Our booklet,“ Oysters in 100 Ways,” free for the asking. fisheries CO. OMAHA BOOTH