The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 02, 1913, Image 8

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    PREPARING FOR
NEW 5E11LEIS
EXTENDING THE AGRICULTURAL
AREA IN WESTERN CANADA.
For sometime past the Canadian
government has had surveyors at
work platting new areas for the ac
commodation of the largely increas
ing number of Bettlers coming in to
occupy the agricultural districts of
the three prairie provinces. There
were those connected with the work
of securing settlers for western Can
ada who last spring prophesied that
there would be as many as 175,000
new settlers from the United States
to Canada during the present year,
and there were those who doubted
that the previous year’s figures of
132,OpO could be increased. Recent
computation made by the officials of
the immigration branch at Ottawa
show that the largest estimates made
by officials will be beaten and that
' the 200,000 mark from the United
States will be reached. As great an
Increase will be shown in the figures
of those who will reach Canada from
other countries this year. The re
sults of the year’s work in Canadian
immigration will give upward of a
total of 400,000 souls.
But this is not to be wondered at
when it is realized what is offering in
the three prairie provinces and also
in the coast province of British Co
lumbia, which is also bidding strong
ly and successfully, too, for a certain
Cass of settler, the settler who
wishes to go into mixed farming or
fruit raising. When the central por
tion of this province is opened up by
the railway now being constructed
there will be large areas of splendid
land available for the settler.
Reference has frequently been made
of late by those interested in develop
ing the American west to the large
numbers who are going to Canada,
high officials in some of the railways
being amongst the number to give
voice to the fact. The more these
facts become known the more will
people seek the reasons and these
are best given when one reads what
prominent people say of it. What the
farmer thinks of it and what his
friends say of it. James A. Flaherty,
supreme knight of the Knights of Co
lumbus, was in western Canada a
short time ago. He says:
“If I were a young man I would
sell out my interests in less than two
months and come right to the Cana
dian Northwest, where so many op
portunities abound.”—Advertisement.
SEEING IS BELIEVING.
Stella Lite—Do you believe in the
supernatural?
Irvington Boothlette—No; I never
saw a super natural.
THE BEST TREATMENT FOR
ITCHING SCALPS, DANDRUFF
AND FALLING HAIR
To allay itching and irritation of the
scalp, prevent dry, thin and falling
hair, remove crusts, scales and dan
druff, and promote the growth and
beauty of the hair, the following spe
cial treatment is most effective, agree
able and economical. On retiring,
comb the hair out straight all around,
then begin at the side and make a
parting, gently rubbing Cuticura oint
ment into the parting with a bit of
soft flannel held over the end of the
finger. Anoint additional partings
about half an inch apart until the
whole scalp has been treated, the pur
pose being to get the Cuticura Oint
ment on the scalp skin rather than on
the hair. It is well to place a light
covering over the hair to protect the
pillow from possible stain. The next
morning, shampoo with Cuticura Soap
and hot water. Shampoos alone may
be used as often as agreeable, but
once or twice a month is generally
sufficient for this special treatment
Tor women’s hair.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
Tree, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
post-card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”
Adv.
Shoots First.
"That guide shoots nearly every
bunter he takes out.’’
"Accidentally?”
"No, he alwas claims he does it
in self-defense.”
Be thrifty on little things like bluing. Don't
accept water for bluing. Ask for lied Cross
Ball Blue, the extra good value blue. Ady.
Engaged people are seldom as in
sane as the neighbors think they are.
TIRED BLOOD
TORTURES THE SKIN
(Copyright 1913 by the Tonitives Co )
Tired Blood often manifests itself
by Dry Skin, Itching Parts, Skin Erup
tions, Eczema, Pimples, Rashes, Boils,
Ulcers, Carbuncles, Scrofula, etc., cau3
ing intense suffering and annoyance.
TONITIVES 2^" “
^TIREDB&OO r “
“bad blood” or tired blood. Our view
of the matter is that in every case
where the blood is sufficiently strong,
it destroys the germs and makes skiu
diseases impossible, and a treatment
of Tonitives will put the blood in that
condition. 75c. per box of dealere or by
piaii. The Tonitives OoVBuffalo, N. Y.
JS’ii ir ' ■ . v‘. '• V •' >>' r‘ . - ■-■&>
I j’aggsaagyy/c 77xx?j'rGir~' ^3!
g^1 C&7ZTS jf, Si477fjZ)P jr&VZF&Iir
7
ETHl I. son of Ra
meses I of Egypt,
father of Rameses
the Great, and
founder of the
nineteenth dynasty,
has come to life
again and is living
in a dilapidated old
houseboat on the Thames, near
Staines, England. He comes to Ix>n
don every week and expounds the
mysteries of Hindoo occultism to a
large audience. At his feet, drinking
in every word of his somewhat unin
telligible lectures, sit titled women,
and a small sprinkling of titled men.
representative of that intellectual so
ciety of England which is ever ready
to lend an attentive ear to the new,
the weird, or the mysterious.
Sethi I. in his reincarnated state,
is thoroughly modern. He calls him
self plain Frederick Thurston. For
ten years he has lived alone in the
Thames houseboat, delving deep into
the secrets of the -Hindoos. And all
the while he had looked forward to
the time when he can return to
Egypt, not in the guise of his for
mer incarceration, but as the founder
of a psychic city on the Alexandrian
coast. “To this city.” he said to the
writer, “people could come from all
parts of the world for mental and
physical invigoration. People would
live the simple life—simple food,
early to bed and early to rise, simple
speech, dancing and singing. There
would be daily lessons, lectures in
mystical and occult subjects, and ev
erything would tend to develop the
psychic qualities In the inhabitants
and the visitors.”
Rut if Thurston cannot found this
city at the moment he is losing no
i time in carrying on the work which
it would do. He 'believes that the
afternoons are wasted by the English
intellectuals. The mornings are given
over to sleep, the evenings to enter
tainment and pleasure; it is only In
the afternoons that kindred souls can
be gathered from the far ends of the
great city and the higher planes of
intellectualism be developed, believes
Thurston. And he has entered upon
that work of development. In a lit
tle room in Regent street, not 50
paces trom riccaaniy t ireus, 1 Hurs
ton sits one afternoon a week and an
swers the eager questions of the men
and women who thirst for the knowl
edge of the Hindoo philosophers.
The new Sethi 1 is a remarkable
looking man. Just above the aver
age height, he has an enormous head
crowned with an immense dome of a
forehead. Across bis temples and
the shining expanse of his ha!f-bald
head run great protruding veins. But
the strangest thing about this most
extraordinary man is his uncanny
facial resemblance to the Egyptian
ruler of whom he claims to be a re
incarnation. Compare his profile with
that of the mummy of Sethi I and it
is difficult to put your finger on a
point of difference. There is the same
sweep of the full forehead, the same
long nose, the same repressive lips
and. allowing for the sinking of the
chin with age. the same formation of
the lower jaw The resemblance of
the ears and the back of the head is
even more exact.
The process of reincarnation, while
reproducing the outward form of the
original, has played an odd trick in
other respects. It has put the soul of
this famous Egyptian ruler in the
bodv of a Thames-side recluse, who
/
far from believing and practicing the
religion of the original, is deep in
the mysticism of the Hindoos; who is
steeped in, practices and preaches the
beliefs of a secret cult of Indians—
the adepts of the Goathan temple hid
den away in the soaring Himalayas,
16,000 feet above the level of the sea.
where no white man has even pene
trated.
j This religion is neither Buddhism,
j Theosophy, nor New Thought, but a
strange mixture of all three. Its
greatest vogue was reached forty cen
turies ago when the shrine of the
Gosainlhan, nestling in the snow of
the Himalayas, the highest temple in
the world. was known and revered
throughout the length and breadth of
India. The adepts of this religion,
almost unknown to the scientists of
the present day. have developed to
an extraordinary extent the study of
the mind in the spirit realm, which is
just beginning to take a firm hold
upon the imaginations of thinking
people all over the world. In the sys
tem of these Hindoo scholars there
is a marked distinction between
| what is known as metempsychosis, or
i a mere passing of the soul, and rein
I carnation, meaning the passing of the
i soul through flesh, as in the case of
Thurston and the soul of Sethi I.
Gosainthan is the chapel royal of
the fabulously rich Maharajah of
Xapal. a semi-independeat Indian rul
er who is in treaty alliance, w'tta
England. He. however, pays no
tribute to the British, hut every five
years sent offerings of fruit and flow
ers to the emperor of China up to
j the time of that ruler's abdication
j Although Thurston has never pene
j trated the sacred precincts of this
Himalayan temple, he probably knows
! more about it than any other white
| man. For some years he acted as
1 tutor and coach to a number of In
i dian princes at Eton and from them
he gathered many of the secrets of
the strange cult. But. quite aside
front that, he has traveled in the
east, studying the wisdom which was
of so much earlier perfection than
our own. He climbed many of the
Himalayan peaks, talked with Hin
doos of all degrees, many of whom
had never seen a white man before,
and made his way in disguise into the
wilds of Thibet.
Thurston is really a poet of rare
power and at Cambridge he captured
the chancellors gold medal, following
in the footsteps of Tennyson and
Byron. “At that time,” he said to
me, "1 intended to devote my life to
poetry. But later I decided that it
was more important to live poetry
than to write it. I have been’ living
it ever since. 1 live the year around
on my houseboat on the Thames. I
am up every morning at six o'clock
and take a plunge in the river no
matter what the temperature. Then
I am ready for a couple of hours' ex
ercise. This takes the form chiefly of
dancing. Breakfast out of the way,
I am ready for a morning of study
and meditation, for the knowledge pf
the mystics is inexhaustible and can
never be w-liolly mastered."
Meanwhile the peculiar form of
mysticism which Thurston ladles out
to thirsty souls once a week in the
room in Regent street is spreading
rapidly among the upper class of
English society. A full list of the
700 men and women who have already
fallen under his spell would include
most of the intelectual aristocracy.
Rut while Thurston takes an ex
traordinary interest in the progress
of all these disciples, his star pupil
lives at Staines, not far from his
houseboat. She is none other than
Cora Urquhart Potter, the famous
American actress. Mrs. Brown Potter
has become so saturated with the
Hindoo lore that she is now recog
nizer as an expert, and recently gave
a lecture on the subject at the Ritz
hotel. She first became interested in
the subject during a tour in India and
searched long but vainly there for a
guide to the secrets which are so
jealously guarded by the natives. It
was not until she returned to Eng
land and accidentally met Thurston
that her greatest wish was satisfied.
In the Staines recluse she found the
mentor she had so long sought.
ALBANIA FOR THE ALBANIANS
Much of Country fas Been as Inde
pendent as Montenegro—People
of Native Stock.
“Albania for Albanians" may be one
outcome of the Balkan war. The Ital
ian duke of the Abruzzl, the intrepid
Polar explorer, has been suggested as
reigning prince of this brave people.
Austria may have other plans.
Bike the Welsh in Rritain and the
Basques in Spain, the Albanians are a
native stock. They speak the only
original Balkan language. The Turks
have not permitted the Albanian
tongue to be taught in schools. There
is no literature, no agreement even as
to how it shall be written. Of the few
w'ho can write, some use Greek letters
some the Roman. The Albanians
themselves are nearly all Moslems,
but. 400,000 Greeks, Serbs, Vlachs and
Bulgarians in their land belong to
the Greek church. The famous seven
highland clans of the north known
as the Maiissori are Roman Catholic.
Blood feuds, lack of roads and Turk
ish misgovernment make the interior
the only part of Europe where ordi
nary travel is unsafe. One-quarter
of all the deaths In the country are
violent, either in clan warfare or in ;
! clashes with Turks. Much of the
country has been as independent as
Montenegro. The Turk never cowed
or taxed its rugged hills. The Balkan
allies may be willing not to under
take it.
Of all fallow and backward races
the Albanians have perhaps the great
est possibilities. Haeckel said that
they have the best shaped heads in
Europe. Their natural ability is
great. Emigrant Albanians in Greece
and Italy have carried with them their
love of liberty and their valor. If
an independent government could in
troduce schools and check feuds, there
would soon be another wonderful, pro
gressive little nation in the south
east, quite capable of existing for its
own sake, and not as a mere catspaw
for Italy and Austria. •
Culinary Demand.
Sure, miin," said the new cook. j
suddenly appearing in the doorway,
“could I be afther borryin' th' boss's
safety razor for a little whoile?"
"Safety razor?” echoed Mrs. Noo.
"What for, N'orah?”
"Sure, mini. I want to shave that
rabbit before 1 sthew him.”—Harper’s
Weekly.
WORLD’S OLDEST MUSEUM
Dr. Otto Kummel, head of the East
Astatic department of the Herlin mu
seum of ethnology, tells of the oldest
museum in the world in the bulletin or
the Societe Franco-.laponaise. This
museum may be found in the city of
Nara, the former capital of Japan.
Since its foundation, in 756, it lias
gone through all the changes’ of the
Japanese empire without one single
addition to its collection. Dr. Otto
Kummel is one of the few Europeans
who were permitted to visit this mu
seum. It opens its doors but once a
year on a day in spring, when a spe
cial committee inspects the' collec
tion and a new list is made out. The
museum contains about 3,000 articles,
which are said to be the most beauti
ful specimens of decorative work
which have ever been produced by hu
man band, such as lacquer ware, dec
orative furniture, enamel ware, cam
bric-like fabric, etc. The origin of
the majority of the articles is uncer
tain; some came from China and
others from Corea, but most of them
appear io be of a more exotic origin.
All, however, came of a time prior to
the year 7f>G.
Perhaps.
“His neighbors say he will never get I
to heaven."
“Maybe that's an indication that he
stands a very good chance."
Dog His Alarm Clock.
Samuel Forsythe of North Fairmont,
a suburb of Cincinnati, believes he
has the best dog on earth, as he does
not need an alarm clock to wake him
in the morning to be In time for
work. His dog, which is only a mon
grel. does it for him.
Forsythe says that he spent much
time in learning that the dog could
arouse him. By watching, he found
that his dog invariably awakened at
about the same time as its master, eo
,m retiring r-.ch night he tied a bell
#
to one of the dog’s legs. The dog
on awakening rang the bell until re
leased.
Forsythe sajs the plan has failed
only once in two months.
Criticism All Right.
Young men are sensitive to criti
cism; they like to have their own
way; they chafe under restraint. But
as they grow older and more experi
enced, they realize that a little whole
some criticism }s a mighty good tonic
for better results.
Willed His Ashes to a Home.
J. Walter Ganz, of Vineland, N. J„
formerly of New York, in his will re
quested his remains to be cremated
and the ashes be given to the Brook
lyn Home for Consumptives, to which
institution he bequeathed $10,000. For
years he lived the life of a recluse
to save money for his cherished ob
ject. He was eighty-three years old.
Frame your mind to mirth and mer
riment which bar a thousand harms
and lengthen life.—Shakespeare.
_ t
Backache Makes Anyone Feel Old
Nothing ages anyone more quickly than
weak kidneys.
It is not alone the aching back, the stiff,
painful joints, but the evil effect of bad,
poisoned blood on the nerves, the vital
organs and the digestion.
The condition of the kidneys makes good
health or ill-health.
The kidneys are the filters of the blood.
Active kidneys filter from the blood ev
ery day over one ounce of poisonous waste
and pass it off dissolved in the urine.
If the kidneys are weak or diseased, only
part of this filtering is done and the blood
is heavy with uric acid and other poison
ous or waste matter.
Instead of being nourished by the
blood, the nerves and vital organs are ir
ritated. and the circulation, digestion, etc.,
are disturbed.
If your back aches constantly, if your
joints are stiff, lame and painful, suspect
the kidneys.
Kidney sufferers are likely to feel dull,
heavy, restless at night, rheumatic, dizzy
at times, subject to headaches and an
noyed with sharp, piercing pains that
make work an agony and rest impossible.
Doan's Kidney Pills are the best-recom
mended and most widely used remedy for
weak or diseased kidneys. They aet quick
ly: contain no poisonous nor habit-form
ing drugs and leave no bad after-affects
of any kind—just make you feel better all
over.
“Every Picture Tells a Story ”
The following case is typical of the cures
effected by Doan's Kidney Pills. Grattiu]
testimony is the best evidence.
SAVED HIS LIFE.
Made Well After Doctors Gave Up
Hope.
F. D. Wert, Port Aransas. Texas, says:
“' The secretions from my kidneys were too
frequent in passage, burned terribly and
contained a thick, red brick-dust sediment.
My back ached all the time and there
were pains through my kidneys and sides.
1 simply couldn't straighten after stoop
ing. When in bed, 1 couldn’t even turn
on my side. 1 had awful dizzy and nerv
ous spells and my eyes got so bad that I
couldn't use them much. I was confined
to my bed for months. Finally, inv own
doctor called in a specialist for consulta
tion. They told me I had but a short
time to live. 1 happened to read of a.
similar case that had been cured bv Doan's
Kidney Pills. 1 sent for this remedy at
once and from the time I began using it.
i felt better and stronger. In two mouths
I was able to work every day, and in an
other month I was as well as ever. For
twelve years 1 have had no sign of kidney
trouble.”
“When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name”
(DAN’S KIDNEY PILLS
Sold by all Dealers.. Price 50 cer.ti Foster-Milburn Co„ Buffalo, N. Y„ Proprietors
Rather Hot ’Shot for Doctor.
This incident is related of a Scotch
doctor, now to the gun, who adven
tured upon a day's rabbit-shooting.
Chased by the ferrets, bunny was a
rather quick-moving target, and the
medico was not meeting with the suc
sess he anticipated.
"Hang it all. man!" he exclaimed
impatiently, to the keeper who accom
panied him, "these beasts are too
quick for me."
"Aye, doctor." the pawky keeper re
plied; “but ye surely didna expect
them tae lie still like yer patients till
ye kill them.”
inherited.
"Was there ever an informer In
your family?”
"What do you mean by such a ques
tion as that, sir’”
"I noticed that your baby is in
clined to be a squealer."
WIIBN Kl BEERS BECOME NECESSARY
And your shoes pinch. Alien a Foot-Ease, the
Antiseptic powder to be shaken into the
shoes is just the thing to use. Try it tor
Breaking in New Shoes sold Everywhere.
25c Sample FpEE. Address. A. S. Olmsted,
z 1-eRcy, K.y. Eton t accept any substitute. Adv.
Fewer flowers for the dead and
more for the living would heip some.
Red Cross Rail Blue gives double value
for your money, goes iwiee as far as any
other. Ask your grocer. Adv.
The flirt is always practicing a
game she never intends to play.
Saskatchewan
Ycur i
Opportunity
is NOW
in tlie Provinoo of
Saskatchewan,
Western Canada
Do you desire to cet a
Free Homestead of 160
Af RES of that well
nuvai i .a ini'
I no area is becoming more Hunted
but no less valuable.
w NEW I>1STRICTS
have r*M.*ently been open--d up for
settlement, and into these rail
roads are now being built. The
clay will soon come when there
will be no
, . FreoHomesteadine
land left. *
A Swift Current. Saskatchewan,
farmer writes: ’*1 earn** on mv
“onaestead. March l«*i. with about
fl.OUU worth of horses and machin
ery. and just 136 in cash. Todav I
have 1M) acres of wheat. 30U a. res
of oats, and 50 acres of flax.” Not
bad for six years, but only an in
stance of what may be d..no in
Western Canada in Manitoba,
{Saskatchewan or Alberta.
Send at. once for Literature,
Mapii, Kaliway Kates, etc., to
W. V. BENNETT,
Bee Building, Omaha, Neb.
Canadian OoTfmwrt Ajient, or
address Superintendent of
immigration, Ot tawa, (ut-a.
I*
AUen'sl lcerineSalvecr.n*>< hronieFleers. Hone
(.:lcers,Seroftilous Ulcers. Varicose Fleers. In
dolent Uleers.Mercurial Flcers.Whlte Swell
ing, Milk Leg.FererNores. ■n«id*or#«. Rjaiiijor.
Booklet free. J. Jt*. ALLEN. I*cut. Ay, St. Paul, Minn.
Mamma Says
"Its Safe for
CONTAINS
NO
OPIATES
J. OCIC ALS WORTH
SECRETARY AND HEAD HOC SALESMAN
.-1—-a_
Great Western Commission Co.
One of the largest and best equipped live stock
commission firms at ANY market
EACH department HIGHLY specialized. FOUR
cattle salesmen in two splendidly located divisions. ;
Special care and attention given to buying of
STOCKERS and FEEDERS. TWO hog sales
men and a fully equipped sheep department
If you wish to buy or sell any kind of live stock
write or wire them.
They Will Do It Bight
South Omaha or Denver
It Wins
its taay by service
L. C. Smith & Bros.
Typewriter
(Ball Bearing—Long Wearing)
In buying a typewriter you want a
satisfactory answer to three questions:
What Will it do for me?
How Well Will it do it?
HoW long Will it do it?
By answering these queries with the
needs of the typewriter owner and user
in mind, the L. C. Smith & Bros. Type
writer Company has attained the front
rank in the typewriter field.
Some people think that a typewriter is a type
writer and lhat is ail there is to it. Machines
may look alike bat there is a lot of difference
in efficiency.
The new Model Fire is buih not only for if
straight correspondence but for tabulating, bdi- g
i ng and in fact for every service needed m the S
average business.
Its ball bearings at all points where friction de- gj
velopes through action, permit close adjust men t ||
and insure correct and accurate typewriting.
It# would like tie opportunity to tell you g
more about it.
Write for free book of our new Model Five. II
L. C. SMITH & BROS. 1
TYPEWRITER CO.
Head Offcefor Domestic and Foreign Business S
SYRACUSE. N. Y.. U. S. A. g
Branches in all Principal Cities
Omaha Branch
1316 Farnam St., Omaha, Nebr.
Dea Moinea Branch
903 W. Locust St., Des Moines, la.
When You Are Buying Hardware
Look for
Our Double Guarantee Quality Tag
which we attach to all High Grade Goods
JStanln, Tools
STANLEY PLUMBS and LEVELS, are made of thoroughly
seasoned and selected stock, and have many valuable features
which will appeal to every lover of good tools. Made in all styles
for CARPENTERS, MASONS, PLUMBERS, MACHINISTS. MILL
WRIGHTS, ETC.
The name STANLEY appears on every tool we manufacture,
and is a guarantee that for quality of workmanship and material
they have no equal.
. Send for catalogue No. 34C.
■ LavelCo,
_New Brjtain.Conn. U.SA.
Cleveland Twist Drill Bits
NONE BETTER MADE
Have given entire satisfaction for 38 years. Made of steel especially adapted and by
experienced workmen. We have sold them successfully for 32 years.
Our Double Guarantee goes with every Bit
QUALITY HARDWARE
Your Dealer will replace any hardware bear
ing our Double Guarantee Tag that you may
buy, if it should prove unsatisfactory. Qual
ity Hardware bears the name of the manu
facturer and Wright & Wilhelmy Co.’s Dou
ble Guarantee Tag. This tag is placed on the
Best Factory Brands.
Ask Your Dealer For
DOUBLE GUARANTEED HARDWARE
Every good housekeeper should own a Die*
Plier. because its uses about the house are un
limited. For instance, you have an irritatingnail
in your shoe, or you want to hang a picture, or
straighten the prong of a table fork, a Itica Phei
will do it quickly and easily. Get a L’tica The*
to-day and if you are dissatisfied for any reason
bring it back and we will replace the tool ftefe
Ask for Plier Palmistry. It’s free.
The QUALITY Line.
FOR BEST RESULTS SHIP TOUR CATTLE, HOGS AND SHEEP TO
OMAHA LIVESTOCK COMMISSION COMPANY
80UTH OMAHA, NEBRA8KA
B. E. Rogers N. R. Bryson A. E. Rogers T. H. Bryson B. C. Rogers
" I ' --
asHoO
Cough Syrup. Taatea Good. Uk
in time. Sold by Dnnriih.
1_P j
nromoti* s luxuriant growth.
B«vw» Tails to Bestore Orta
Hsir to its Youthful Colour
Prevents hair f&llinjr.
t0& Mid tun at Pragg-l.ta.
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS
If Ton feel 'oat of sort*”—“ran down "or “got Um
bines,” suiTer.Irom kidney,bladder.nerronsdiseasea
cbranlc weaknesses, ulcers, ski n era plums, pi It*, a,
write for my FKBB book. It Is the most instrortlsw
medical bonk erer written. It tells all abouttbeaa
and yon can decide for jronrseif if it is the remedv ter
your ailment. Don't send a cent, lt’i absolute!*
frliKtt Mo "follow-up-circulars. Dr.LcSctSSSKjf
Co.. Haserstook ltd.. Hampstead,
W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 1-1S13.