The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 09, 1912, Image 3

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    a.————ifrimnniT
Spun Glass Hair Ornaments
Popular With the Debutante
** • K+y riitm -I -W —A 4 * 4. f
' r\- * ... » *ar for tf,e debutante Is
r,' i. tt •i- irie liftlit ornament for the coif
• • ei*. >ti ae id is very pretty and fash
■ * " ‘ ‘ • • ■•i.r r moves to and fro under the elec
trv- I ::h»
FCR THE YOUTHFUL FIGURE
e Espeiisiiy Dts-jrca to Please
t';g Girls 3! From Fourteen
to iutttn Years.
"• »* firs' has a la.'.- .okr < u: with j
»r«:i»s a a-'k. f-’.n' -rsd or. at. auMtm 1
s with a band of b!a k satin;
d * : ‘ J •* r tr.T;i tb«
. .. » rb- n a' nal it ft'*: and
bark is tnrfcod :n «-t» of rlirmts
Mmunrtatm irr^iwiirrid Two jrani» 23
• B'.h*« • id**, txirluarb jrJ satin on
-n -"Ow#. •o«* yard la»v !> iat l'as ;
• •* **"*'a*4 : dust ration shows a
0W r* way if siskin* up rrept i>
- • ir* is inched in set* of thr*«
L_I
uireti 'or a bk»-p5..:r u tjlua
dkrs* --liter, to front, ■« which a row
r’f email fcwt'oa* »« team Rain mate
rial -a U"-4 for f!e -iiljr and ruffs
stait v:th m l-U ..lid a fold
»if mlored satin
Haemi* r«'i|i..'.d Two tank
r»f» de tarn- i«: »B be* wide. one
Cute, t-iitt •&>
Mteirmr.g Veit*.
V*-:> is! ».■•-- »»-- ,.ard» :• length
hatched *• three aode* *'th a doable
ten of r--~- ar- worn stoat 'be bat
'tr - .sta»ai I be Bret >esr i be-se vei.r i
a;, aaadkwd about the cron a tumst
lwe f:r: ■«*■' and an canned to the
rboaldera rV c*rt# Tts** tie* litre cruon
and w :-,- ■ rim ate w-.r ; u* *- larjte
ta.< «re mated • 'be- ajib feese
Sal '-brj-.■i.-.tarii u.: ■■.ti rt*j*. al;b
■'■■■■*■- - • r ■ .. • ii-i baae
»ie 'or taffeta boots - Harper'a Ha
rar
F.t»* Nectars'.
» ■=. f ■■£•' : - kw.tr are
not mJtJi* Mbs of doe t;--t and
Idas* *d '» a atorfe and atalatatati « a
f-t ?. .. - b-- ai-s.: - .'4 broad ... e
tar*-’;—, u-. t-k 1 is*'*'.*■• the front
port • f tl*e bib wit* tie hark.
IMPROVES THE FLOWER POT
Z1 r* st z Caver. Easily Made. Which
H.des the 3areresg of the Plain
Receptacle.
Altlt'i :<jb thcr.- is nothin? really ob
in .1 plain earthenware
"•* *r ;ot. there are many girls who
K ' ' have j» n's i:i their rooms.
to tb _ tl •#
• I- itiii ■: ot afford an
ornamental one
it- *! . as,, they can make quite an
ar-.i-- . . ilet from paper, which can
t e tig-d as - -on as it is discolor
1 b> the dampness of -he earth. To
facilitate changing narrow ribbons
"he h r of the paper should be cut
- *: e top and bottom of the pot
and fitted with iomc fasteners or
hooks and eyes.
Ti.-.-~ <tird.es can be quickly taken
if and tbe> 1- >k much neater and
. „ r- , - r ;n a ribbon tied round
a- *ta' a--red paper
The Turrc Fashionatie.
1'.r ' is m vogue the will re
-a: hrcuiho :t the season.
It t» - ■ beroming .-.nd youthful in ef
*• =■ ii: apt ears on many of
the ne».-s: pass It may. however.
very
■rt cue. fj'iina just to the knee*
Se;rg tlie latest style
I' is node -ha- must be adjudged
• ' :.vk. ,il wearers, though as
It has a very varying effect upon the
c .r- A -harming house dress re
sect a- r" of broad striple
s ir.d taffe’a, with a tu
■i *: n h ;»nwia colored cloth
« - ; writ dull .-.her fringe
For Soi'rd Coat Collars.
i ' ■ an out ollars try -he follow
' ■ - let- id of a cloth, which
•* k - t ;t in -.on for a long
* ai.i.'i leaving a ring in place
us*- an old tooth brush. Dip
• :m-» the naphtha tit-*il thoroughly
s-ttnmted. the:, a few brisk rubs and
••■e ■:«•! -r grime . is left for parts
cts »n The i ust del’caH velvet
•e in- i •: - way. though it
w - id not he advi-able to use a brush
on any faLri. like satin
Crere Underclothes.
c ct m ar.l silk crepe are ip. favor
: » t .r all .if lingerie. Rhh
v. --h r i. ly < me of the finest
r-. < wor :.-fully attractive
: 1 admits of hand work to excellent
advantage
k'age Pretty Frock.
>'ieer w'..t- luien. elaborately etn
’ i-1« an I trimmed with
hla. a velvet ribbon, tn.cde one of the
. o frocks seen at a recent
French fashion show.
GIVES A FLEASING FRAGRANCE
Lavendwr Jjrt *4 to Co*rr Sheets and
F :» Case-. When They Are Put
Away 1*1 Linen Ctoset.
This t* to lay over 'be and
pillow cane* ID the l:.tes closet or
<*r»t It ran be made any size, be
i>e*e tts u-dui is not exactly to
noo<si, t*at to sweeten. says VVoai
U I Hoi»e (V SLJiiMoi: <iet enough
pale lar-wler. Japanese crepe to rover
-wo aide* at a Ion* sheet ot write
■nton wadding Spot open the wad
dsn* and sprinble la a great many
•Jrsed '.avender bkwoc-cis: told the
wadding together again, cover it wrtth
the t-Twpe. Wtrteb should be basted to
gether with the edges careful!)
turned la If you »U1 lold is a tuu
jorb everywhere there will be no
necessity for slip stlt blng them to
gether. because you ran arrange &
l ring ai narrow lavender rib ton
round the tour sid •» This w ill ap
pear to be laced, but will be criss
r-fpseud over the edge and sewed in
, lace, because the combination ot
repe and wadding will scarcely ad
: ' ’ actual lacing through, ex
• :-t by the punching ot awkward
holes. |
D'-ectc re ana Oriental Irffiuences.
-r the Uirectoi’ra
; r d to go on Influencing the
‘ ■■■•■' - for the next few months, and :
fashionable women in Paris are seek
. - *o adapt many minor modes ol I
a period to today's needs. They
wear gloves with colored stitchings.
:’.o;.py revers and bind their lock3
a.*.1 lti-ectoire ribbons. Their muffs
ir LHre.-toire. so are the beautiful un
dergarment* they wear, and not an oc- j
■ asiou is lost to seek out and revive
me Directoire fashion or custom
m--! h add to the picturesque side
of their lives.
New Veils.
Veils of white meshes with fine
widely distributed over designs in
black thread stand perhaps next in
popularity to the Shetland*. And flesh
colored grounds with black overde
s:nns in the most elaborate patterns
grace the showcases and windows of
the local shops.
NOTED ROFM CITY
St. Augustine Was Once an In
dian Village.
First Colony Established by French
Huguenots in 1564 Was Razed by
the Spaniards and Its Inhab
itants Killed.
St. Augustine. Fla.—Four centuries
.■.go an Indian town known as Seioy
■rood on the site of what is now St
Augustine On Faster Sunday. 1512
Ponce de I.eon. Spanish explorer,
landed there in search of the ■•Foun
tain of Youth. ’ After he and his men
had floundered through the sandy
swamps of the vicinity aud tramped
among the scrub palmetto, bathed in
every stream, pool and mudhole they
me across, without success, they re
embarked and the Indian village re
mained unmolested by white men foi
more than fifty years.
A colony of French Huguenots land
e<] at I he same point in 1-564, but
soon moved on to the St. John's river
The news of their arrival reached
Phillip II of Spain, and upon realiz
ii:g the full itrmort of the message—
t ’.it a colony of Protestants was set
HittS In his new world domain—he dis
patched Pedro Menendez to oxterml
nate them.
This second group of invading
Spaniards landed at the same Indian
village on August 25. 1565. ar.d be
cause that was St. Augustine's day tip
on the church calendar they gave the
place its present name. St. Augustine
Is consequently the oldest permanent
settlement of Europeans within the
territory of the I'nited States. The
Huguenot settlement was not perma
nent for the reason that Menendez and
Uh tuen destroyed their fort and mas
-sacred the inhabitants.
The first fort was built in octagonal
form and was constructed of the
trunks of pine trees. It was named
San Juan de Pinos (St. John of the
'-' - — e V
City Gates. St. Augustine.
Pine i \n engraving of the fort shows
it was in this shape when Sir Fran
cis Drake attacked St. Augustine in
le*6. The fort was again attackAa
in by John Davis, ireebooter and I
buccaneer The people tied to the
woods while Davis pilaged the town.
I-ater the fort was rebuilt and named
Fort Marion, now the property ot the
federal government and maintained
chiefly as an interesting antique.
Th. ,-ands of p* -sons visii it annually.
In !:s early life St. Augustine was
the most cosmopolitan city in the
land r 1 all because of a inived col
ony »,f Minorcans. Italians. Greeks and
natives of southern European conn
tries brought to the state in ITkt* as
laborers for an indigo plantation
owner! by English capitalists. They
settled in New Smyrna, but soon re
belled . gainst their Engli-h employ
ers That probably was the tirst o:
ginized labor strike in North Amcr
lea.
Moving to Sv Augustine where
they were ailotied land and given pro.
’ ctioi.. the indigo plantation workers
intermarried with the Spanish and
English residents and their descend
ants form a large proportion ot the
population of the present city
*n 1S-J1 the Fnited States paid
Spain S5.00ti.tniu for the territory ot
Florida and General Andrew .lack.-on
became its first governor.
Indian, pirate. Spaniard, nrttisfc in
vader—-each in turn has scourged the
town, but after the pas-ing ot each it
has arisen better than before, changed,
but each time improved in character.
From the Indian village of Seloy.
through four cent -.tries of hattle and
change to the quaint old town with
its foreign airs, St Augustine has be
come a fashionable winter resort.
-ARGE JADE BRINGS S4 000
Curious Chinese Relic Is Bought at
Auction by St. Paul (Minn.)
Man.
New York —T. B. Springer of St.
Paul had the distinction of carrying
off the most coveted and curious ex
ample of Chinese sculpture at the
Squiers sale. It is a iade mountain,
weighing 010 pounds. It measures 2:5 i
nches in heicht and is "8*2 by 1S1
inches wide.
This is said to be the largest mass I
>f sculptured jade ir existence. It
once occupied a prominent place in
:he Chinese emperor's summer palace
west of Pekin. Mr. Springer obtained
the specimen for *4.000 after keen
competition. the principal underbidder j
being Frank Partridge.
Pulpit Bar to Legacy.
Boulder. Colo.—The $50,000 will of
the late John L. Church, wealthy cat
tleman. has been filed for probate in
the county court. This will include a
$10,000 cash bequest to his wife and
$.*.000 to Mrs. A. J. W hiting. a niece.
The remainder is to be divided among
grand-nieces and grand-nephews after
Mrs. Church's death. A peculiar pro
vision of the will is that the nephews
forfeit their shares If they become
ministers of the gospel. Mr. Church
had no deep-rooted feeling against the
clergy, but wanted the boys to follow
business careers.
BRIGHT OUTLOOK FOR BOSTON NATIONALS
—
Cy Young, the Dean of Major League Pitchers.
me weakness ot t: itoston .Nation
al league club las' year was In the
pitcher's box for the South Knd outfit
did enough hard hitting and scored
enough runs to assure itself a much
better pcvsi'ion in the championship
race than that in which it finally land
ed. No great change has been made
in tbe pitching staff this year, but
Manager Kling has three or four real
ly good men. and the new owners are
only waiting to see what is really
needed before opening their purse
strings and going out to get it.
With "Cy” Young promising to re
gain some of his former strength this
season, and with Tyler. McTigue. Per
due. Mattern ar.d newcomers named
Ikmnedy anu Brady, all promising
Boston will be in fairly good shape re
garding boxmen. Behind the bat Kling
will have Rariden. whose arm is so
good, and Gowdy. who came to the ;
team late last season, and whose back
stopping has been one of the features
of his team's work in the south
Except for various pitchers and |
catchers. Manager Kling started the
season with only two regular players
who began the campaign with Fred !
Tenney a year ago These are Sween
ey at shortstop ar.d Miller in right
field. All of the other seven players
came to the club in 1?11. and the pur
chases and trades that were made
generally were for the better.
MACK’S INFIELD COST $10.85
Clever Manager Secured Shortstop
Barry. Eddie Collins and Frank
Baker for Car Fare.
Hid any one ever tell what Connie
Mack jiaid for that magnificent infield
of the Athletics—the one that did so
much toward winning the world's
championship for that club? Of t curse
not? Well. St actually cost tbe clever
manager of the Philadelphia team ,
Just $!>.' v>. This is surprising, par-'
ticularly when it is recollected that
sa h a fabulous sum as was
paid for O'Toole by Pittsburg ar.d the
Giants willingly gave SU.t'hV fo; Mar
quart.
Connie is recognised as one of the
shrewdest traders in the whole base
Jack Barry.
ball business, and if he ever went in j
for swapping horses he'd have David
Harum yelling for help. He is an
economist whenever it is possible, and
!t was possible when he secured Short- ;
stop Barry. Second Baseman Collins
and Third Baseman Baker. Eddie Col
lins was in New York. Barry was at
Holy Cross and Baker was fooling
around in Reading. Pa.
Mack captured this trio of baseball
stars for the price of their railroad
fares, and the three tickets totalled
exactly $10.85. He had Davis for first
when he made the deal. It was a feat
that will never be duplicated.
Good Bunch of Players.
George Browne, the old major
leaguer, has gotten together a good
bunch of ball players for his Wash- j
ington club in the United States
league. ]
sTomp
DKmwd
>---J
None of the big league teams for
191- are unfamiliar.
Games in Cincinnati will begin at 2
o'clock sh's season.
Now idols always appeal to the
baseball enthusiasts.
Connie Mack's 1911 luck deserted
hint to start the season.
The Iktdgers have sect lnfielder Jim
my Breen back to Milwau. ee.
No one wishes to see the recruits
make good more than the tuns.
Hnghie Duffy's sfsrt with Milwau
kee was not particularly auspicious.
-' •
man l.< waters back'to Washicgtor.
Baltimore has released t cher Dave
Roth te Troy, and Catcher Frugal to
\ ork.
The Giants have released Intieiders
Bees and St®** acd Ditcher Munsell j
to Buffalo.
Turn Tucker once the king of first
asenrec. is f 'reman In a Holyoke.
Mass., factory.
Now th.at Sallee has promised to
"bo good” Roger Bresnahan ;ecls con
siderably tetter.
Arlie la:t;;im would accept a posi
tion as umpire in some good league
He says so himself.
Harry Davis has a charce to show
what the Mack school of managerial
coaching accomplishes.
Selling a veteran to get waivers on ,
a reorui- is a new kink of baseball
politics disclosed by McGraw.
Manager Irby of the Helena team
released Murray, Ann is acd Cole.
Murray has signed w ith Ogden.
M. A. Phelon. the well-known sport
ing writer, says; ' Without Cobb the
Tigers shrink to mere tomcats.”
Detroit is trying to sign John J. Me- j
Cormick. the Holyoke boy w'ho former- j
ly caught for Cornell university.
Claude Elliott, the pitcher of other
days, is to be an umpire on the Wis
consin-IIlir.ois league staff this season.
Ncah Henline. sold by Baltimore to i
Troy, but who could not agree to j
terms, has joined the Troy training
squad. $
Dan Murphy, the Athletics' new field
captain, is bubbling over with aggres
siveness acd Connie Mack is all
smiles.
George Mullin says he has set his !
heart on this being his best year. To
make It that he will have to go some,
ah will admit.
"I appointed Wagner captain of the
Pirates because he understands my
system and has had the necessary ex
perience.” says Fred Clarke.
The White Sox have sent Roland
Barrows to Jersey City. He was out
under option to the Lowell club of the
New England league last year.
Gov. Judson Harmon of Ohio is a
thirty-third degree fan. and knows the
players of the big leagues about as
well as his office boy knows them.
POSITION OF BATTERS
No Two Players Handle Them
selves Aliks at Plate.
Hal Chase Assumes Seeming Attitude
of Indifference and Carelessness—
Swings Bat With Good Deal
of Snap, but Not Hard.
Similar results in batting—good re
sults that is. are obtained from many
different styles. Good- form, poor
form and no form at all get there with
the bat. and each contributes its
quota to the "00 division. This tiling
of ••form" at the bat is largely a shib
boleth based on nothing. In other
sports “form" may be more or less of
a necessity, at any rate certain
branches of si>ort lay much stress on
"form." possibly laying more on the
ntce'ies of physical poise than there is
occasion for. Maybe there is “form"
in baseball, but If many different ex
ponents of hard hitting go about get
ting good results in quite different
ways 33 to ad jus ment of body. feet,
arm# and so forth it is not clear just
where any regulation form comes in
No two batters handle themselves
exactly alike at the plate, of course,
but methods differ so widely as to
make each man's "form” his own.
Stylos can be corrected to advantage;
that is. faults overcome and changes
made suitable to the individual, but
even then there is no approach to a
standard. A few cases will serve to
show how different batters maintain
a sway among the batting elect, the
.200 class with a wide dissimilarity of
method.
Take Hal Chase, for instance. Many
is the spectator who says he doesn't
see how Chase hits the ball. Yet he
does hit it. keeps on hitting it and
always has been a first-class batter.
The batter who steps away from the
plate is notoriously a noor hitter, but
while Chase doesn't step or pall away
he is fidgety with his feet and sug
gests that he is about to star away.
Seemingly careless and indifferent,
he really is watching the pitcher’s
every movement as well as the whole
layout, and no man can hit better
with a base runner. His attitude is
anything but menacing, indeed con
tains a hint of timidity, which really
doesn't exist, but with leose wrist and
arm action he can adapt himself to
any sort of a pitched ball hittable. He
Hal Cbasa.
used to be weak on a lew curve out
side the plate, but got over that and
now is a free hitter. If he wants to
h:t he'll hit at anyhing. like Lajote
and Wagner, and he's liable to hit
anything. He doesn't swing hard In
the sense of having a long sw ;ng. but
swings with a good deal of snap. His
eye and arm do the work without
much use of the body in adding force
to the drive.
FLAG WON BY EIGHT LEADERS
Strogg'e for Pennant in American As
sedation Already Landed by
Various Managers.
The struggle in the American asso
ciation for the championship pennant
is already over according to the claims
of the various managers, as given be
low:
Hugh Duffy: It's a cinch.
Joe Cantillon: The flag is already
pinned to my piano.
Jack Tigfce: ileally. it s a shame tc
take it.
Jimmy Burke After deep thought
and careful consideration I can treeiy
predict that the A. A. championship
banner will float in Indianapolis next
fall.
Charles Carr: There's nothing to it
but the Blues. The flag has already
been ordered from my sporting goods
house.
Topsy Harts?!: My Mack style o’
battle will cop for sure
Mike Kelley: Ditto, only more cm
phatlc.
Bill Frie!: The same.
Rival in Points.
Certain cities overshadow all rivals
in certain departments of play. Great
er New York, as a starter, is wel
fixed for Erst basemen, with Chase
Daubert and Merkle Boston car
boast of two stanch outfields in Speak
er. Hooper and Lewis of the Ked Sox
with Miller, Campbell and Jackson ol
the Braves. Chicago has always stood
high with catchers in Sullivan and
Archer. And Philadelphia has the
Athletics.
Stanage After Record.
Oscar Stanagt. king of American
league backstops, has set his heart
on the achievement of a high ambi
tion this season. The big Californian
expects to catch every inning of every
game that the Tigers play from April !
11 to October 5, and thus to establish
a record never equaled nor even ap
proached by a big ieague backstop.
Hohnhorst Doing Well.
Hornhorst. the Newport first base
man, is playing elegant ball for Cleve
land, and seems to have the position
cinched.
FEARED FOR HIS CHARACTER
Disciple of Bacchus Evidently Real
ized That Circumstances Looked
Sad for Him.
Harry was a faithful servant of a
large cotton planter whom he called,
after the manner of slavery days.
M'Sam i Marse Sam). At stated in
tervals Harry was wont to get glori
ously drunk: and one night in the fall,
after a day in town, the mules hitched
to his wagon drew up before the lot
of the plantation, with Harry pros
trate and snoring in the bottom of the
wagon. Here one of his numerous
progeny, a boy named Job. discovered
him, and unable to awaken his father,
or to secure any assistance from Har
ry's disgusted wife, he appealed to the
planter, w ho had the mules unhitched,
covered Harry with a blanket and with
his own hands dragged the wagon un
der a shed.
Next morning Harry woke hazily
and sat tip. rubbing his eyes. “Job!"
he cried aloud: "hurrah here. Job!”
and when Job had come under the
shed. "How come I here?"
Job sulkily explained how it had
happened.
"Did M'Sam pull me under here?"
asked Harry in dismay. “Gret Lordy.
I feared he t'nk I mils' be drunk!”—
Kansas City Star
ERUPTION COVERED BODY
“Three years ago this winter I had
a breaking out that covered my whole
body. It itched so it seemed as if I
shou'd go crazy. It first came out in
little pimples on my back and spread
till it covered my whole body and
limbs down to my knees, also my arms
down to my eiuows. Where I
scratched it made sores, and the ter
rible itching and burning kept me
from sleeping. I tried several rente
dies ail to no purpose. Then I con
cluded to try the Cuticura Remedies. I
used tiie Cuticura Soap and Cuticura
Ointment, also the Resolvent, for
about four months, and they com
pletely cured m_■ of eczema. I have
had no return of the disease since. I
never had a good tight’s rest after the
skin eruption first broke out till 1 com
menced using the Cuticura Soap and
Ointment. I had only used them a
’ew days before I could see they were
beginning to heal, and the terrible
tching was gone.
“Those that lived in the house at
he time know how I suffered, and
how the Cuticura Soap and Ointment
'tired me. I never take a bath with
out using the Cuticura Soap, and I
lo not believe there are belter rem
edies for any skin disease than the
'uticura Soap and Ointment." iSigned)
Miss Sarah Calkins. Waukegan. Ill,
Mar. 16. 19H. Although Cuticura
Soap and Ointment are sold by drug
gists and dealers everywhere, a sam
ple of each, with 32-page book, will be
nailed free on application to “Cuti
:ura." Dept. L. Boston.
An Ananias.
“G. W. Smith says he love3 to live
n the suburbs in winter.”
“Humph! And the rascal was born
>n Washington's birthday and named
after him. too."—Judge.
Perhaps the surest thing in this life
s the friend you can’t depend on
when you really need him.
Most men have yearned to fly or to
oe a little fly from the first.
A ;»u>\ ra ltd an! laxative, C-arhela
fva! Alt drag-gists.
Don’t kick till you know just where
:he shoe pinches.
' si ’ - Sing
tigxr tor its rich mellow quality.
Lots of people live and learn the
things that are of no use to them.
BACKACHE ’
NOTAJNSEASE
But a Symptom, a Danger Sig
nal Which Every Woman
Should Heed.
Backache is a symptom of organic
weakness or derangement. If you have
backache don't neglect it. To get per
manent relief you must reach the root
of the trouble. Bead about Mrs. Wood
all's experience.
Morton’s Gap,Kentucky.—“I suffered
two years with female disorders, rr.y
I*** '"igfch ij’—I health was very bad
ana 1 naa a continual
backache which was
simply awful. I could
not stand on my feet
long enough to cook
a meal's victuals
without my back
nearly killing me,
and I would have
such dragging sensa
tions I could hardly
bear it. I had sore
ness in tacn sine, could not stand tignt
clothing, and was irregular. I was com
pletely run down. On advice I took
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound and am enjoying good health. It
is now more than two years and I have
not had an ache or pain since. I do all
my own work, washing and everything,
and never have backache any more. 1
think your medicine is grand and I praise
it to all my'neighbors. If you think my
testimony will help others you may pub
lish it.”—Mrs. Olue Woodall, Mor
ton’s Gap, Kentucky..
If you have the slightest doubt
that I.ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound will help you, write
to Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co.
(confidential) I ynn, Mass., for ad
vice. Your letter will lie opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
Nebraska Directory
HOTEL
Omaha. Nebraska
EUROPEAN PLAN
Rooms from flJO up single, T5 cents up double.
CAFE PRICES REASONABLE
STACK COVERS
Scott Teat & Awning Co.,Omaha. Neb.