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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1912)
“Moth Miller” Hat t d4>‘f’wtwwi * I •wSr** «*•.! V 1". The trtwht of the hat ia the pbotcgnph is a replica of a moth miller. *<- ft b V * Vo: k now are trimming summer hats with ^ « : • » . j-.rt; ... Tbe hat is most effective when worn with a tailored goa-a or shirtwaist suit. OUTFIT FOR READING IN BED Reman Biouse Ccwn and Cap Co With Thi* Somewhat Rtxe heostble Habit. T*» read ah'ir ta bed is most repre fcevsibie. bat tt yam persist in the (*»'"*'* be rut* la bare the proper ««Bt—* Russia* blouse reading so** and a carl paper rcice-tng rap T'e sawn. vhbh teaches almost to •be kaeea. ts a front rktsiag blouse with rites length rw-m-oa* sleeres and rounded out nerfc which is fin ished urtth a broad collareti*- of side piaffed white maline You mar make 'he b.'oua* of pale umed wool. satin or mesaaline and embroider or applique it *wb birds and butterflies or of a Bovejed thin silk lined aith light weight flame! Just above the nor mal salat list draw us the fulness »-*h a rope of silk cordage. The rap of silk mat- fa ng the grounding of the c um is merely a circular piece fulled oa to a harrow ribbon, over which Is placed a vide frill of plaitel maline. and at oae side, usually above the left •nr tip. may be placed a big bow of Mack velvet ribbon MODISH MILLINERY .-.dP -.rf s*. TC THs Picture Hat ** Its 3eptumeU Psr»oct*cn Packet Inside Pocket I&ssde the T«rket of the housekeep er'* sprues make a tiny pocket with Sap to ksttm over the top. la this ■4a cm keep her dimes and nickels. They a Cl as! 1ml! out If the apron is thrown dears rareW-ssiy mad a trip is cries sated to another part of the *i in sat shea change m s anted Boots tar Trae-pieg. S«ch boo t as are to he dedicated to trampler *£•■.. id H* scrubbed sell a tb English hararrn soap and then treated to two coats of a good water - pt'isds* all This win keep theta soft, a* matter bus oetefl they are roaked These little Mirations bestowed on well twill shnes will go Brack tes ard ieejdac their Bearers well shod aad win save mas* dollar a Abea It r canes tc buying it must be reiueaahered that stErtuer means loose shoes or dee discomfort A ready made shoe sBosld be bought either s trifle wider than the sise usually worn or else a half si.se longer. This will be toned a great saving oa the stock lags, too Mod>s*< Finis* for Collar. A row of black fringe as inch and a ndepth makes a very modish run around the extreme white lace or net collar. If of deeper fringe Is at » the bottom edge of tbe coi aa tbs throat. It is liked CARE OF CHILDREN'S CLOTHES (..Hie Tn.n3s Most Mothers Know and That All Should Have Full Knowledge Of. Mothers should learn how to distin srui-h materials which fade, shrink, spot or go to pieces. Get sain pi s and test the goods be fore boying. Try the threads with the match test; wool may be recognized by the had odor there being none from cot ton. * "-oil ?h-- .-ample in a five per cent, ’-'ion of caustic potash for 15 min ute*. The caustic potash destroys the wool and leaves the cotton. All wool goods disappear entirely under this test. Samples put in sunlight show the value of the different colors. urown in a woolen material will lade but will hold its color better in cotton. Green, unless in fine goods, is risky. Beware of lavender or light blue. Black in cotton shows the starch and often fades. Park blue changes little in woolen materials or ginghams. Red is good in wool. Peep p nk is he best color, as it fades evenly. EMBELLISH THE FIRST MEAL Exceedingly Dainty Are the Break fast Sets Offered in the Stores Just Now. Exceedingly dainty breakfast sets • itide a cloth and small napkins of • it .jh ijuu.-k bordered with an Eng 'i-t ch at* flower design in green and r«- i green ar.d pink or green and yel low and are hemstitched bordered At tber is ol linen crash embroidered in rrowtitch and a third of pineap ple patterned linen is edged with hard rrjchetting. New designs for table cloths inc'ude Helgian double tamask with borders for square and r - ;t d tables which begin at the cen se- ;.;ul widen to the edge; Irish linen with pin dots with scroll ! orders, clover leaves, shamrocks and ■ - and hemstitched plain linens wt'h file; lace monograms in one cor ner. Show towels are of pure heavy Irish linen d--eply embroidered in fioral pat tern along one end of damask with i-e;i bottlers in filet medallions and of 1 kaback with hemstitched damask ends and side borders. Guest towels «>l la by -i inch dimensions match the materials and decorations of the show towels and art- always laid out is company with them. Summer Bedspreads. Tie.- eej ir.g apartments during the e arner should be made to appear dainty and cool. Thr- is in easy matter and little et.pe! -e is atta< ' ■ d to it After all toe draperies used during the winter have been -tored away ; nd the vr. c«h e-tary articles of furniture dis pensed with, clothe your room in its miser garb. i rchase plain, barred or figured d.tnity. any color your tas e may dic tate. From this fashion a cover for your bed. bureau, dressing table and the window draperies. Measure the length of the bed and allow three or four widths of mate rial. according to the size of the bed. This may be finished by a ruffled flounce, pleating or by a deep hem. Fourteen Inches from the hem, or bor dering the ruffle, stitch bands of fig ured dimity. Cut these bands from a wide-striped design, which may be had in a great number of varieties. These spreads are easily laundered and may be kept fresh and clean through the hot. dusty summer. GREAT M AHEAD Newspaper Men Preparing For Two Conventions. -- TO MOVE ON CHICAGO SOON Then They Must Make Quick Jump to Baltimore—How Tickets Are Assigned and Quarters Provid ed for the Correspon dents. By GEORGE CLINTON. W ashington.—Moving day is immi nent in \\ ashington. Very soon scores of members of congress, the cam paign managers of three Republican candidates and hundreds of persons who are to be merely onlookers will take trains, regular and special, to move on Chicago for the great Re I publican national convention. W hile the Republican convention is at its height other scores of congress men and campaign managers of at least four Democratic candidates and more onlookers than are numbered among the hosts of Chicago specta tors, wil lmove on Baltimore. The conventions this year are regarded by everybody in Washington as certain to be of unusual interest. The de mand for tickets to both great affairs has been greater than ever before and I the committeemen are being put to it not simply to meet the demand, but to discover ways and means of de clining demands so diplomatically as not to give offense. It is a case of being asked to put at least a hundred pegs in one hole and this is the thing which not even the sagacious and re sourceful national committemen of the two parties are able to do. Army of Correspondents. Congressmen, political managers and onlookers will not be the only ones to leave Washington for the Chi cago event. At least 150 newspaper correspondents will desert the gal leries of congress some days in ad vance of the Republican convention to go to the I-ake city, to report not only the convention itself, but the bound-to-be-interesting preliminaries. There will be 500 newspaper men in attendance at both conventions. Prior to the conventions, the na tional committeemen of both parties are extremely busy men. but there are others who h2ve to work also. The correspondents in Washington have what is called a standing committee whose duties it is to regulate the press galleries, to decide on who is entitled to admission and who is not, to in vestigate in the rare cases where some correspondent is charged with unpro fessional conduct, and to do cany oth “r things in the way of "regulation and good government.” Mr. Albert’s L«rge Task. The chairman of the standing com mittee of correspondents is Charles S. Albert. To Mr. Albert have come the applications from all the managing editors of the daily papers of the coun try asking for assignments of seats on the press platforms of the two con ventions. It is also the duty of the | chairman to confer with the other members of the standing committee and to determine whether or not the demands of the different newspapers have been out of keeping with the real news necessities in the case. It is rather a difficult and delicate job ' to determine just how many seats the newspapers are entitled to. When all the applications are in. the requests for newspaper seats are turned over by the standing committee to the . chairman of the national committees on the management of the two conven tions, and the seats are assigned. Department Press Agents Accused. Members of the house rules commit tee recently have been investigating "the use of press agents by the de partments of govfernment.” In many ; of the departments men are employed to put out information concerning the work which the government intends to do along certain lines. Much of this ; material is sent to Washington corre ! spondeuts and a good deal of it is use ; ful. for it contains facts which are of service in writing articles concerning i the activities of the government. The charge has been made that some of the publicity agents of the departments have gone beyond the , bounds of propriety and have put out ; matter intended not only to defend officials from attack, but to bring dis I credit upon people who have criti I cised the workings of the depart ments. The direct charge made con cerning '"the pernicious publicity activity" considered by the house rules committee had to do with mate rial furnished by the department of agriculture which, it is said, was sent cut in franked envelopes and which was intended, so it is asserted, to hamper the investigation which was being made into meat inspection af ' fairs. Publicity That Has Value. The government has benefited vast ly by its attempts to employ proper ■ publicity agents, and if any of the writers on benalf of the government service have overstepped the bounds of propriety they have unquestionably dealt a blow to publicity of the right kind. Take the bureau of education, for instance. It furnishes and has been furnishing for some time interesting matter concerning educational affairs all over the country, and the trend of education in other countries. In the main it is wholesome stuff and fre quently it has not only real educa tional value, but real news value. The stopping up of this source of educa tional publicity probably would not only be an injury to the government, but a distinct loss to educators all over the country who take a deep in terest in their profession and all that pertains to it. Of course the publicity matter referred to does not include the regular publications of the de partments. There has been no hint of an intention to interfere with their issue Not long ago there was ests*>lished by congress what was called a bureau of mines. The officers of this bureau are engaged in the work of showing mining corporations and their em ployes how to prevent accidents and how to save life and property. Some of the material furnished by the pub licity agent of this bureau has been read by hundreds of thousands of peo ple the country through. Frequently these articles have been accompanied by Illustrations made from photo graphs of actual accident and life-sav ing scenes. The state department also has a publicity agent, and now much mate rial is given out of a kind which be fore this was held secret simply be cause the holding of everything secret was the department's custom. Cheaper Money for Farmers. uhe American state department through five of its ambassadors has been investigating European systems by which the farmers there are en abled to borrow money at reasonable rates. The intention of the state de partment. after studying the results of the investigation, is to attempt to in troduce the European system in this country, so that the American farmer can borrow money at cheaper rates. It seems to be the administration's thought that If the European system is adopted in America the farmer can raise money on his farm by means of a bond saleable In any part of the country. in Europe, it is said, the farmer borrows on equal terms with the biggest railroad, industrial corpor ation or municipality. The state de partment in a printed communication to the public on the matter says: “The investigation is considered one of the most important undertakings yet attempted in dollar diplomacy. Myron T. Herrick, the newly appointed ambassador to France, is Secretary Knox's right-hand man in the investi gation. Mr. Herrick is himself the product of an Ohio farm, and has made the "problem of the farmer” a hobby for years. When the work in Europe is completed the state department will prepare an organization plan to fit the scheme to American conditions, and a legislative program will probably be mapped out for the president to sub mit to congress. The investigation is centered about the Credit Foncier of France and the Landschaften of Ger many. How the Credit Foncier Works. “The Credit Fancier is a limited-li ability company operated under the su pervision of the French government tor the purpose of lending money to public service corporations, communi ties, counties and landowners, and to create and negotiate bonds based on mortgages which are limited to the amount due from the lender. In other words, the Credit Foncier acts as the agent for the French farmer, so that instead of seeking to raise money directly from some local investor by mortgaging his farm, the farmer places his mortgage with the Credit Foncier. which in turn issues a bond based upon that mortgage and which can be sold anywhere throughout the country. In this way the French farmer is freed from the necessity of borrowing in the limited market of his own immediate vicinity. “It is just this restriction which is forcing the American farmer to pay ex orbitant rates of interest and to put up with none too acceptable terms. In this country the farmer is practically forced to borrow from some investor in his community. If local con ditions make money “tight" there he suffers accordingly. In one section of the country he pays six per cent, in terest. and in another ten per cent., though in both instances the security offered may be the came. Never can he compete with the bonds of the big industrial corporations, though in many instances the security which he offers is just as good as that of the corporation “ It is intended to make the venture, if adopted here, a project primarily for ’he benefit of the farmer. The pro moters of the plan are not to receive any portion of the profits, and even the earnings of the stockholders will have to be kept down to very reason able rates. There are three preparations that will kill the odor of tobacco smoke in your parlors, but as a rule they smell worse than the tobacco smoke. ROSE TO THE OPPORTUNITY ___ Young Man Foresaw Possibilities snd j Deserves the Success He Has Achieved. One man has been found who Is not : complaining of the high cost of living. He is the gating colored man. or • boy.” who cleans house each week for the ; i bachelor maid. He is the possessor of | a small hand vacuum cleaner, which ] i he bought about a year ago and with ! j which he cleans rugs, carpets, mat- j ! tresses, etc., for his patrons. “Has the machine paid for itself, Ed I ward?” the bachelor maid asked him. I taking an active interest in his wel I fare. Indeed, it had been her sug ! gestlon that he got one. “Oh, yes. miss.” he replied, with a cented smile. “If I had a thousand dollars invested so it would pay me as well accordin' as the cleaner I’d be a rich man.” He had bought at first a still smaller cleaner for eight dollars. It did not prove successful, but he had seen the possibilities of a good one. so Instead of lamenting his misfortune he rose in the scale of being, paid twenty dollars for a good, guaranteed machine, not too heavy for him to carry from place to place, and now he has worked up a list of patrons that keep him busy every day in the week, at faii^ living wages. Formerly he was an elevator “boy." He had to work nights every ether week, also every other Sunday. Xow he has that time for himself, and has no wish to return to an elevator position. His noon meal is always fur nished at the house where he Is em ployed. and eight hours is a day’s work. He has net found the electric vacuum cleaner which are installed in many of the new apartment houses a barrier to his success.—New York Press. Trouble Heiresses Have. “We heiresses have many rivals for our hands.” “Yes." replied Miss Cayenne, “you must feel as If the pathway of life were filled with pock etbook snatchers.” In fact, the unfolding leaves on many many a tree are as beautiful as blossoms PROPER MANAGEMENT OF SOWS OF THE UTMOST IMPORTANCE Animals In Good Physical Condition Will Care for Their Young and Raise Them in Excellent Manner—Best Food Just Before Farrowing Time Is Wheat Middlings and Bran. Excellent Type of Berkshire. fBv L. G. JOHNSON.) Quite often 1 have heard the com j plaint of sows eating their pigs, and only a short time ago a neighbor ot I mine had a fine brood sow to eat her ' Pigs immediately after farrowing. Now this is not natural for a sow to do so, and when they do there is a i reason lor it, it that reason t is only looked for. Sows by nature are not cannibals and ir they are in good physical con dition they will care for their young and raise them in the proper way. On the other hand if she is nervous and fretful at farrowing time she is j apt to eat her pigs, but when they have the run of good pasture and are ; properly fed and cared for they sel dom eat their offspring. If a sow Is compelled to live in the barnyard, sleep in manure piles or straw stacks, and only fed a little dry corn she is apt to be feverish, con stipated and have but very little milk, and in such cases she is likely to eat her pigs or lie on them and smother ' them before they are old enough to I suck. 1 hav£ a large basement under my barn where the frost is never seen and in case the weather is very cold I give my sows a good, warm, dry pen in this basement. 1 don t care about the pen being over large, a pen sixteen feet square is large enough ior four sows up to two weeks before farrowing, after which I place each sow in a separate pen with her pigs. I like this pen to be ten feet square with light bedding, cut straw is pref erable. The best food for a brood sow is wheat middlings, the coarser the bet ter. or wheat bran and middlings may be mixed half and half. This should be wet to a stiff mass with milk, house slops or water, where it is available skim milk is the best tor this purpose. Besides this she will eat and should have plenty of clover or alfalfa hay; it is surprising the amount of clover hay that a sow will eat, especially to those that have never fed the same to hags; in addition to this 1 always feed my brood sows about four or live pounds of sugar beets to every hun dredweight per day; 1 feed them whole for the purpose of giving the sow exercise in eating them, some advise the feeding of raw apples but I do not like to feed any great amount of them especially if they are sour. One winter I kept six sows in the same pen and fed them the following rations per day: Twenty-seven pounds of sugar beets, ten pounds coarse middlings and all the clover hay they would eat, and they came out in shape that was hard to beat and raised forty-seven nice healthy Pigs. In addition to the above ration 1 kep a box in the pen where the sows may have free access to It at all times filled with the following: Charcoal six parts, wood ashes two parts, and two [tarts salt. It is needless to say that plenty of pure clear water should be ; given to the sows as most everyone realizes this fact. I always handle my sows and humor their whims in order to keep them gentle as a gentle, well-satisfied sow will do better and have better success with her pigs than one that is nerv ous and fretful. Brood sows should not be fed for : the purpose of fattening them but only feed enough to keep them in a thrifty, strong and healthy condition. KANSAS COWS MAKE RECORDS Carlotta Gave 15,773 Pounds of Milk In One Yea*-Fairly Good Average Yield Is 6,000 Pounds. If a cow gives 6.000 pounds of milk a year most men are satisfied. This is a fairly good average yield. But here are some two-year-old Ayrshires tht surpass that figure by a long way. ' Their work was described by Prof. O. E. Reed, head of th„ dairy depart ment. in the annual institute. Here are the records: Canary Belle, 10,118 pounds of milk and 437 pounds of butter, 3.7 per cent test. Fearnot of Oakdale. 5.21$ pounds of milk and 292 pounds of butter, 4.0S per cent test. Johanna of Juneau, 7,681 pounds of milk and 335 pounds of butter, 3.72 per cent test. Rose of Oakdale. 5.956 pounds of milk and SOS pounds of butter. 4.42 per cent test. Any one of these cows would sup port a family of five persons. Such cows probably could be bought for $175 or $200. but no! at the college. The cost of feeding the ration, and the income, may be gauged for all the group by referring to the history of Johanna of Junean. a model family cow; Johanna ate, every day, thirty pounds of silage, ten pounds of alfalfa had. and nine pounds of grain, con sisting of four parts of corn, two parts of bran, and one part of cottonseed meal. This ration cost $5 a month. It was fed as described only when the cow was giving the highest yield. One pound of the grain ration was allow ed for every three pounds of milk, so that when Johanna gave 27 pounds of milk a day she received 9 pounds of the grain. Johanna gave 893 gallons of milk which sold in Manhattan for 32 cents a gallon. 8 cents a quart, or J285.76. Not a bad kind of a cow to have around. And. by the way, a gallon of milk weighs eight pounds. Professor Reed told. too. of another fine cow. a Holstein, thirteen years old—Cariotta Abbekerk 32S26. Carlotta's year rec ord test was finished ten days ago. She gave 15.773 pounds of milk and 515 pounds of butter fat. equivalent to 606 pounds of commercial butter. Her feed cost $95.50. Most cows pass their usefulness period at 6 or 9 years This old cow of 13 years returns a profit, leaving out details, of $75.75 net. If her milk had been sold at 7 cents a quart it would have brought $513.50. Deducting the feed bill the owner would still have $418. Her milk was skimmed, though, for the calves, and the cream used for butter. BREEDING BULLS NEED EXERCISE Close Confinement Will Rain Dis position of Otherwise Kind Animal — Makes the Best Sire. (By G. M. TWITCHELL ) I saw a good bull the other day which was being spoiled by kindness. He had not been out of his little pen for more than a year, his feet were all out of shape and naturally he was crabbed and surly. Who wouldn't be under such treatment? It is simply inhuman, but it's common. A day or two later I saw another in a well fenced enclosure, with an overhead wire firmly attached to strong posts, set 40 feet part at the ends of the pen. and a chain connecting the bull’s nose to the wire. Here he traveled day after day, the fence too high for him to see other cattle, but with plenty of room for exercise. The good nature of the animal told of the success of humane treatment It is not only cruelty to keep a bull close ly chained day after day and year aft er year, but more than that, it will ruin the disposition of an otherwise kind animal. The law of environment holds here, and the bull suffering for exercise cannot be as good a breeder as his neighbor made comfortable In every way. Try it Babcock Tester. Besides keeping tab on the worth less cows, the Babcock tester is an accurate check on the creamery. STABLE MANURE QUITE VALUABLE Most Important and Abundant Material for Soil Improve ment — Much Unneces sary Waste. F'arm manure always has been and probably always will be the most Im portant and most abundant materia! for soil improvement It is a neces sary product on every farm and on stock farms a product which accumu lates in very large amounts. If not used for soil Improvement it becomes a worthless nuisance about the stables. A conservative estimate places the annual production of farm manure in the United States at two billion tons. The actual and known agricultural Talue of fresh farm manure contain ing both the liquid and solid excre ments is- (2 a ton. if the value Is meas ured in terms of plant food or by the actual increase in crop yields pro duced by the use of the manure on long cultivated soils. The unneces sary waste and loss of farm manure which occurs in the United States each year is equal in value to ten times the value of all commercial fer tilizers used in this country. Things to Be Done. These things must be decided by the woman who is growing poultry: The kind to keep. There is no best kind. Any of the standard breeds are good. Neither is any one set rule as to feeding going to help you. You must first of all love your work; second, be willing to keep everlastingly at it; third, be willing to learn by experi ence rather than by any get-rich-quick scheme which you may see advertised. Clean water is essential. So are oyster shells, grit and a va riety of foods. Low Fruit Trees. The fact that most of the commer cial orchardists now run to low-headed trees is pretty good evidence that they are the best, because men who grow fruit for money seldom take any step without first having proven its value. THE SAFE LAXATIVE FOR ELDERLY PEOPLE — Most elderly people are more or less troubled with a chronic, per sistent constipation, due largely to lack of sufficient exercise. They ex perience difficulty in digesting even light food, with a consequent belching of stomach gases, drowsiness after eating, headache and a feeling of lassi tude and general discomfort Doctors advise against cathartics and violent purgatives of every kind, rec ommending a mild, gentle laxative tonic, like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, to effect relief without disturbing the entire system. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the perfect laxative, easy in action, cer tain in effect and. withal, pleasant to the taste. It possesses tonic proper ties that strengthen the stomach, liver and bowels and is a remedy that has been for years the great standby in : thousands of families, and should be | in every family medicine chest. It is equally as valuable for children as for older people. Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin in 50c and $1.00 bottles. If you have never tried it send your name and address to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 201 Washington St.. Mon ticello. 111., and he will be very glad to send a sample bottle for trial. Lamb's Tenure of Life Not Long. A party of privileged sightseers were admitted to a private view of a menagerie between performances, and among other things were shown what was called a “Happy Family,” that is to say, in one and the same, cage there was a toothless lion, a tiger, somewhat the worse for wear, and a half-famished wolf. Beside ! these wild animals, curled up in one corner, was a diminutive Iamb which shivered as it slumbered. “How long have the animals lived together?” asked one of the party. “About twelve months,” replied the showman. "Why ” exclaimed a lady, “I am sure that little lamb is not as old as that.” “Oh.” said the showman, quite un moved. “the lamb has to be renewed occasionally. Repartee Off the Stage. In the big Weber-Fields dressing room Joe Weber and George Beban sat tense over a game of checkers. "I'm working him up to his part,” murmured Mr. Weber, in a kind voice "He must go o the stage in a trantrum in a few minutes. Every night I beat him a game of Checkers in here before his entrance, it has just the right effect on him.” “Every night you don't beat me!” cried his op ponent. “I owe you $1.90 in 12 weeks. . Is that much?” "Not so much, but I'd be glad to get it.” suggested the sweet-voiced Weber. Too True. Rev. Dr. Aked, in an address on generosity in New York, said: "A woman remarked to me the oth er day: “ "Mrs. Blank is very shabby this spring. Mr. Blank adores the ground she walks on. yet he won't allow her enough to dress decently.' ” Ah, madam,’ I replied, ‘it isn't al ways the devoutest worshipper who puts the most money In the collection plate.'" H!s Pose. “Mrs. Hewligus, what is your hus band's attitude on the woman suffrage question?” “One foot in the air, of course. He’s one of the chronic kickers.” Economy in Atchison. An Atchison man is so economical he won't go to a ball game unless he gets a pass to a double-header.— Atchison Globe. Discriminating persons should know that Garfield Tea is a uniquely efficient remedy for liver troubles and costiveness. Nothing surprises some people more than the antics of an alarm clock. Smokers find LEWIS' Single Binder 5o cigar belter quality than must 10c cigars. A double wedding is one kind of a four-in-hand tie. f ; ONLY WAO PER ACRE. 200 a. In OZARKS o| Mo.- 17a. orchard. 20 a. timber. IWa. valley, balanc# grass, good dwelling, wells, pond. Near ft R. town snd county sear. Will carry one-half if desired. A. I— GALLOWAY, Cass Title. Mo.. Owner* B ■ vpilVA WstwHi E.folrratB.Wash PB ? rN I \ ington. D.C*. Books Tree. Htgb 1 H 8 8aIB I Wes references. Bee: reeulta || ■ || past 80 with horse and hugpy to sell stock Ann N condition girders. $75 per month. Address ill nil Room 2, 1106 Jbarnam Street. Omaha. Keh* Nebraska Directory FRFF Iron »ndoutfit * ... givenfrer tooneiadyinea^hcomnuini'v. W rite for part, oui.rs. H^.GmL*taU-,Uii<:«L>,Ni!s. THE PAXTONS Rooms from f 1.00 up single, 75 cents up double. CAFE PR.lCi:S REASONABLE STACK COVERS ' Scott Teat & lining Co „ Omaha, Neb. w££r ■