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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1914)
The cook is happy, the other members of the family •r*- happj-upjietjtes sharpen, things brighten up generally. And Calumet Ihii. :.’ Powder is responsible for it ulL For Calumet never fails. Its wonderful i rare meg qualities insure perfectly shortened, faultlessly raised bakings. Cannot be compart'd with other baking powders, which promise without performing. Even a l*.-ginner in cooking gets delightful results with this nt-ver fa.li:ig Calumet Baking Powder. Your grocer knows. Ask him. received highest awards V«U. Pn Food 1 .r~..— Quc*«o. It Fans Upmm, fnau. Marca. 1912. PP0C.-E3 SHIRT FROM TREE >** of S» i'wui Ha* Little T wci.ibu S*c*>»»**9 Garment Sart *e-« for n.» Heeda it i* <■»— • mi Wat to kno* «ii*« ••.- ikcr «f 'L«- Siir. dor* t't*' a**. » tv a. port# of ibe aorid It tto* ? ■■.*»**» or OwBii »itiiot*-d oe. tbr *l'nj»r of Sr* Ceaeatfa. uaturv ta. I*'’’’ <j>y * feat »**n* a» • r*a4j-mad* An “or tb» uiifM h i* obtained 'rom tbe Btriu '»** t *p»-rv*» of t*"*t —. »*. let ha» a this... tibnot* 're bark Wbe* a native •abta a at.rr fen ■uut'ii rat* a "? u**» * *br** tt*r» about ;k liirfee tut -l-t *i,a ia*-> off tb*- bark Eitit.t. o a* amt to cor it it ail • a* *ae 'is* a boliow cy Ha ber cf S»"t t»«r bark Mara bat re awablii** a natch nark vitbout mat buaota 1 t&re r:.*e#-* a ttmal! al t tart lor bi» trit to to tr.-uort awl pot* it ot It ta oalr t'.'.f'i ti - ra..' aru-'O*. boaever tbai i.i'Mt >rc. tv rfc*- rv-qttiremea** of i tv;oat t *t.ffr *'Otl> to *«a> gmr ertib ot aii am' ptioc WETS' FOR A BILIOUS LIVER fo- ut* n*2dacne. bad breath. So." Stomach and constipation. G#f m 1 (..<■#■*! bo* Ml u»c; :t . irr atr ;-»efc 'f B®*-- ivu sack your b«a4 * ta.avrabie and udrucnlort »L*» - a as- rrwns eooat.goUoa :ndicea !HOL t jfKM* a* abd aluCKiah base!* > um i *. ■ ®rt tbe Awr«d insults o'tfc ' **~* r*- * i*« <*t .’■■■■Jr atoMci. lifer and 1» it*.*.* you ausevobto. Take ' «<*■»•* :xr «*fc« p«t MS **nd lo Us* bm-wA*. It* IHLUMHML Oitta«0> B**r» feidL •our. £*»*;. Dtosiarh. bur **- fc- Mid alt other dtatfeM; eiaott ear sat Ml organa of *:: th# tu,' .,x»c asatur »"fc*eti 1* j»* *di*ria( iBr atiaerj A I Brel* bo* e.- »l* Iwtllh happi a»-»a and a ttear h *d for motr.ha Va. mo:- fiai of *,oo» aid dirtreas »<*. « take a 1 aacaret now and •*'•1 .111 »" rot a*n ClMMtU Loo t (Mfil tin* efc.ldret—:B*-:r little :o *. l-r* be»-d * ti**a* tj too Adv *>'*CI*C*! E">«ct t uti t *.tat him «et atone a hi* t*_a ai'Mi a® mmm damn**' *' "1 at afraid but H* a a mill bot'Aer " E '•gaycraer' Haaga. 1% utsat * tfc* atuie a*®"*' It email j arp nd* tr. bo* af'ac lit* 'tie fill J*“ law art water far tduioc laoiud •I water ifaif Bed Cioat law* '.halt fa at Ad*. tuT. Mat... Isa* *»<> bad a teodear* to C» «* tu tfc, a.r I Fight Stomaohs On Th*lp Nspokor k> uic. A min Witb a weak »tr>mach u b* a poor tfina. It ift Cjfiealt— or ar rooc. mao or woman. *• jaw, to aoecwad in baaoaaa or taw.wjlile. In tablet or liquid farm Dr. Golden Medical Discovery 9 to (trace, hot: thy ecUon— the food that nekee the | the enure ' fwnedjr, to i greet extent, pate fever irto activity—aid tee machinery of Jill I ■“ isaae wno spend t beir working boors at the desk, ’ » *** bocie are rejuvenated into vigorous health. Activities of Women. •overaur Johnston of t'alifornia re cent:> appointed a board of women to awmix- d;r*- t control of one of the most important reformatory institu t ion* Mi** Florence Sanviile and Fanny ''acfarat.e two Philadelphia wometi. are 'nix* a t-ours*- in agricultural ecoaom c* at the Innersitv of Wis consin The <<-unless d«- la <iuenviere, who a a* th~ hr*--* e -man cab driver in Pans has g *m into a new venture, that of a nurse n a Paris hospital for dors, cats and birds Thm arv only . married . -aieL in the United States who could t*e divorced, and du'ing the past year -ouples have found that they wet* a. smated A * a!, forma woman has erected a '* inarkntiie res'd-nce for herself at the ag- of »*-vent>-thre* With the • viej.t.on of the roof, frame and rot-* 'he bouse was b:,lt entirely b) her Public Opinion. Pvbti opinion is what we think other people are thinking: or it is .'bat w* think other people think we think. When we think we are think ing tijo* other people, then we think "he> ar* thinking as »f think That .' what we think .s public opinion. Whet: we meet someone who does not think as »* think, then we think that is not public opinion When we meet, or hear of. a number who do bint, as we think. then we think ’ rat »!.«• they are th.nkmg is some ■ ■•nr contrary t< what public opinion ought to be. and indeed, will be. as soon as tb*•> all begin to think as we think they ought to think. Public opinion is of two kinds— w hat :t is not. and w hat we think it (in the other hand, what we think * public opinion may not be what we think it is Titled Bounders. Et* Tanruay was congratulated iij*on ti-r mrnt marriage 'It s a love match too, said Miss Taagtiay "It's not th- sort of match that our young be>resses make with •.tiled bounders. The average t iled bounder, if he the tr ith . ould when he pro j« M-d to a toting heiress, make a like this Vi-.- Gold* - Laitut—I lote you for your pelf alone.' ” Lttle Paradise Set m the Sea. ' he Island of Trtnadad is 55 miles lone and 4" miles wide, and has an ar*-a n: approx mately l> *o square mi *» A chain o: mountains extends throughout its ienelii the highest of act h is alio 4 3.0o0 feet above the sea let el The population of the is land is estimated at 240.000. ______ Wale- r sin nr •* adulters'inn. Glass and v ter make- hqt, t blue en-'ly Buy Red I rr»» Hi’ Hiu» make* clothes whiter than ■Sow Adv. Sum*- je-ople who pa'ronize the opera bet on a lot of style and very little else Most anything is doubtful that poses as a sure thing ■ dAT night Nancy returned from the1 office to find her | brother s home, ■which she shared, full of St. Valen tine sentiment Al lan had brought Maude a bracelet and theater tickets —his wife liked . such attentions. . Helen, her sister of eighteen, was blushing and bliss ful over Jack Har lan's extravagance in violets; even Bub May had come from the kinder garten with her fat hands full of lace paper hearts And it was the maid's afternoon off. so Maude asked Nancy if she would mind washing the din ner things And would she be lonely if they all went out and left her with May. alreadv asleep? Nancy did not mind the dishes or being alone—she saw too many people downtown to want them at night She thought of her unfinished book and a quiet place by the sitting room fire. However as she buttoned Maude's theater waist up the back, and later helped Helen pin her mass of violets to her white part} dress, and saw them all off she felt alone—the odd one She had caught a glimpse of her rather worn face in the glass o’ er Maude's shoulder, and missing its fine strength saw only the record of twen ty-nine years in it What had been . ailing her lately? With her characteristic refusal to procrastinate, she sat down in the dusk to think it out She was not go ng to permit herself to grow into a state of discontent or unhappiness Certainly every one was kind to her a? home—and in the office. Suddenly she frowned Perhaps she w as ietting Flossie, the new stenog -arher. get on her nerves. The girl. fio&sie. \ //re -'v«4/ «5/e -ofr-o*- e " dimpled. curly-headed. silly, was too obvious)} trying to attract her em ployer's attention Nancy reflected that i' was none of her business, but no woman likes a sister woman to make a fool of herself—and no wo man can he a man's private secretary for six >ears- without having an inter est in his welfare. John Steele de served a better mate than that—and ye’ Nancy knew that strong men, past • heir firs' youth, w ere prone to make just such a mistake. She shook herself free of the thought ami returned to herself. The riain fact was that her business gave her little time to cultivate her old friends mostly married now and en gaged in their own affairs Her broth er w as w rapped up in his business and family She. Nancy, was too much alone growing too introspective. She was losing her Individuality and inde pendence and needed to take more 'are of herself, mentally and phvsic ally. Still in her black office dress, with Its white collar and cuffs, she stretch ed out a little in the big chair by the fireplace where the fire was low, anu. not wanting the lights, sat thinking She put up her hands in a fashion of her childhood and rumpled her heavy brown hair, usually so trim: her sweet steady gray eyes filled with tears, which she promptly suppressed. Self-pity, she thought, was the last straw of humiliation! Why should .-he be sorry for herself? If the office irked her. why not take a rest? Her grandmother had. with the year past, left her a little money. She would resign Why had she not thought of it before* Flossie could take her p'ace, and she would travel and find broader interests Then it came upon her how much John Steele had been in her mind, and she fought it out with herself on the s|K>t She would not. simply be cause she was lonely, let herself fall in love with the only attractive man near her own age whom she saw much of—and her employer, at that. That ; was too banal! What would he say when—she resigned? Would he care? He was not so foolish! No; he had showed her every courtesy in the of fice—the same courtesy he showed to all women, but never the little light a'tentions he showed even to Flossie, to whom, that very morning, he had. on entering, tossed n smile and a rose as on» would a ball to a kitten. The girl was so soft and pretty— he could not be blamed. But she. Nancy, would straightway resign be fore she made a fool of herself. It was high time. It had grown dark in the room, and she was stii! lost in planning for the coming year when the doorbell roused her. Flushed and startled, not stop ping even to smooth her hair, she went into the hall, where the light burned low She opened the door. She did not realize that it was John Steele till he asked, with an attempt at lightness, if he might see Miss Stanton, Miss Nancy Stanton. "She welcomes you," she answered, lightly enough, deciding he had called to talk business—he often asked her advice, and she knew he had some im I>ortant matters under consideration. She bade him enter, and he followed her into the sitting room, where she turned on the lights, half blinding her self by the sudden glow. She pointed to the big chair where she had been sitting, and then began to resuscitate the fire: but in his mastering way he put her aside and went at it himself. Then he turned and faced her. noting her flush, her lovely disordered hair, her bright, steady eyes But she re turned his gaze, making herself rise to the situation, as he questioned her. "What were you doing in the dark? Where is your family?" "it's St Valentine's day, and they're out junketing As to what I was do ing, Mr. Steele, if you must know, 1 was resigning my secretaryship with you Just as you rang 1 was wording it—wondering whether to be business like and polite, or to say simply. ‘I'm tired of working for you I want to tooukt m Resign g.o abroad this spring, and I intend to do it—let Flossie have my place!”' She held up her head and smiled at him Why couldn't the man say some thing instead of staring at her? “You anticipate me," he replied gravely. "I came to discharge you. I don’t think I can—keep you in the office any longer. In fact. Nancy," he stammered like a boy, “I can’t bear the sight of you in that office a mo ment longer^ Oh. can’t you see what a sentimental fool you have made of me? What are you going to do with me? See what 1 did today—wait a moment!" He went into the hall while she stood half dazed. What was he trying to say. and bungling it. too. this clear headed man of business? Was he jesting? He returned with a purple box. which he handed her. "See—violets' The thought of you made me buy them and wonder all day if I dared bring them to you! And here!" He drew something from his pocket. "Here is a lace-paper heart surrounded with doves and roses’ Would you mind taking that, too. as part of m> genera! silliness? What do you think of me?" She was very pale now but waited in silence. "I've done even a madder thing— brought you my heart; all I have, all I am and ever shall be! Could you manage to work with me instead of for me* Couldn't you love me a lit tle?—no. I mean with ail your heart, for you're no halfway woman. Nancv! Will you?" She nodded, hoping she was not go ing to be foolish enough to cry be cause she was so happy. "I think I—could." she murmured "I think I should like that—even bet ter than—my—present position!” He caught her hands in his and looked at her with delight. The vio lets fell unheeded to the floor and the lace paper heart fluttered and fell just out of reach of the fire ready to lick out a lean tongue for it. Then John Steele suddenly clasped her close in his arms as if he never would fct her go. They stood a long time before the fire, then they sat They iSmcxf aLon$ Time ■■ ■ ■ ih ■ ■ ■ down to talk about it—so many things had to be talked over. "Something was in the air today,” he finished presently, "that gave me courage. And on the street this morn ing a fool girl I know tossed me a rose. When I entered the office I met Flossie's unendurable, dimpled simper and I threw the rose at her Then I looked at you and seemed to see something new in your face—1 believe it was the first time in the months since I have known that I loved you that I saw a sign of personal regard for me, a something that gave me leave to speak my heart out! I don't know what the look meant, but it brought you nearer—it somehow made you human—it—" Nancy finished for him. "It was ‘human’—very human and like a woman! It was plain, vulgar jealousy! I could have crushed Flos sie. curls, dimples, smile and all. foi that rose! How hateful my face must have been!” Then they both laughed and forgot all about Flossie. ICoDvncht. by Associated Literary Presa.) Our Way. We all of us come home to bed quite cheerfully as long as we know we're at liberty to stay out all night.— Exchange HOG CHOLERA PREVENTION BY ALL OWNERS Cement Trough for Pigs. No matter how healthy and vigor ous your hogs may be. it pays to watch for news of a possible out break of the cholera anywhere in your neighborhood. The sturdiest hogs will curl up and die when the germs of this hog pest are introduced into their system. Clean quarters, pure water, dry quar ters and good breeding are worth while for themselves, but they will not keep cholera out of a herd. The only preventive of cholera is the serum treatment. Most states are preparing a serum for their farm ers, says an Illinois writer in the Farm Progress. All should do bo The state veterinarian is the man you should* appeal to as soon as the cholera appears in your neighborhood. It makes no difference whether the disease is among your hogs or not. It may be. and that very soon, unless It is checked. When cholera gets among hogs on my place I separate the healthy from those that are ailing just as quickly as I can. The next move is to notify the state agricultural college, or its nearest experiment station. While waiting for expert relief, either at th$ hands of the state ex perts or some local veterinarian, the hogs should he watched and any new cases that develop should cause the well part of the herd to be moved once more. Of course, all animais that die of cholera should be burned as quickly as is convenient. Leaving them lying i in the open will cause the cholera germs to be spread by buzzards, dogs and other carrion eaters. Burial of the bodies is satisfactory i only -when the are sprinkled with quicklime and buried at a depth of three to four feet. Many herds have j been wiped out by disease carried Into their ranges by prowling dogs carrying bones and pieces of carrion ! through the fields There are no breeds of hogs that are immune from the cholera. There | are certain individuals among a herd that show great resistance to the dis ease, but they are few in number So far the efforts of breeders to pro duce such a strain have been failures As to rearing, feeding and caring for a herd so farefully that cholera germs cannot hurt them, it is impossible. Anything moved from an infected farm to a place that is not infected may carry the seeds of the disease. Of course hogs are most apt to carry it. but the utmost precautions should be taken that no animals, implements or foodstuffs should be brought from an infected place and left where the hogs might be exposed to contact with them. Sick hogs are the most common of disease carriers. State veterinarians are always , anxious to be informed of the out- J breaks of cholera. The sooner they j know of It the better chance they have of keeping it isolated in one com munity. It is a duty that every hog raiser owes to himself and neignoors, to get word to the proper authorities as soon as possible that the necessary steps may be taken FEW PRINCIPLES OF BEE-KEEPING Essence of Ail Profitable Work Is to Keep the Colonies Strong and Vigorous. The importance of scientific apicul ture is being slowly but surely reoog nized. With a wider knowledge of the part bees play in the pollination of fruit blossoms and the spread of rural education generally, bee-keeping can not any longer be regarded as merely a hobby, but as one of the most im portant of the minor branches of the science of agriculture. Although conditions differ, the prin ciples of bee-keeping are the same the world over. The following axioms should be noted: 1. Bees gorged with honey never volunteer an attack. 2. Bees may always be made peaceable by inducing them to accept liquid sweets. 3. Bees when frightened by smoke fill themselves with honey and lose all disposition to sting, unless they are hurt. 4. Bees dislike any quick move ments about their hive, especially any motion which jars their combs. 5. In districts where forage is abundant only for a short period, the largest yield of honey will be secured bv a very moderate increase of colo nies. 6. A moderate increase in colonies in any one season will, in the long run prove to be the easiest, safest and cheapest mode of managing bees. i 7. A queenless colony, unless sup ' plied with a queen, will inevitably dwindle away or be destroyed by the | wax moth or by robber bees. 8. The formation of new colonies should ordinarily be confined to the : season when bees are accumulating honey, and if this or any other opera tion must be performed when forage is scarce the greatest precautions : should be used to prevent robbing. The essence of all profitable bee keeping is contained in the one golden rule: "Keep the colonies strong." If j anyone cannot succeed in doing this the more money he invests in bees the heavier will be his losses, while if his colonies are strong he will prove a bee-master as well as a bee-keeper, ! and may safely calculate on a gener ous return from his industrious sub Variety for Sheep. Sheep are partial to a change of | diet, consequently the greater the variety of feed, the better the re sults. Lime for Chickens. Air-slaked lime, freely dusted every where, is cheap, and will destroy lice, gapes and roup germs. Have Good Horses. It is far better to have two good horses than four poor ones. Here is a place where numbers do not repre sent value. Desirable Apples. The most desirable apple for mar ket purposes is the average size apple. Not too large nor too small. Next Year's Garden. Begin to plan next year's garden now before this year s experience is forgotten. TREATMENT FOR GAPES IN CHICKS To Eradicate Disease. Affected Birds Should Be Isolated Burn All Dead Fowls. <-By H L KEMPSTEU Missouri Experi ment atatior.i Gapes is a disease affecting certain birds, fowls, and particularly chicks one to four weeks old. It is caused by a small worm, called the gape worm, which attaches itself to the windpipe of its victim. The symtoms are frequent gaping, sneezing, a whistling cough, with dis charge of mucus and worms, dumpish ness. weakness and dropping cf wings. Head birds will show forked worms at tached to the windpipe The adult female gape worm Is much larger than the male, her body being filled with eggs and embryos. These embroys appear in the droppiugs or are coughed up So the trouble is spread by contamination of runs, feed and drinking water Embrcycs are often found in earthworms. To eradicate the disease, isolate af fected birds, treat drinking water with potassium permanganate; bum dead birds and remove chicks to fresh ground which i6 not infected. Cultiva tion of infected ground is said to eradi cate the worms in three years. Individual cases may be treated in one of three ways: By confining the chick for a short time in a bos which has air-slaked time on the floor. The lime is said to cause the worm to release its grip anc the chick to sneeze it out. Stripping a feather, leaving a email tuft, moistening with turpentine snd : introducing into the windpipe, care be ing taken not to lacerate the wind pipe or suffocate the chick. Two horse hairs tied together, the knot trimmed, run down the chiekfn's throat and removing in a twisting man ner will also remove the worms. Gape worm extractors are also on the mar ket. Disposal of Manure. The most important part of the stable sanitation from the other fel low's standpoint is the disposal of manure. The liquid manure should be ab sorbed by the bedding and the bed ding changed every day. The solid manure should be cleaned up morn ing and evening and 'towti in a fly proof box or vault. If possible, have it hauled away daily. Rye Meal for Cows. The Pennsylvania experiment sta ■ tion has found that rye meal as a . part of properly balanced ration for ! dairy' cows is sufficient in milk and i butter production to an equal weight of corn meal. Composition of Egg. More than three-fourths of an egg is water, so you can see how neces sary it is that the fowls should be kept supplied with an abundance of water. It should be pure, and be given to them in some way they can not get it foul. Quick Milking Best. Slow milking causes a loss of cream. It has been proved that the cow milked by a rapid milker yields more butter fat than the same cow does when milked by a slow milker. ‘‘Pape's Diapepsin" settles sour, gassy stomachs in five minutes—Time It! You don't want a slow remedy when your stomach is bad—or an uncertain one—or a harmful one—your stomach is too valuable: you mustn't injure it Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmless ness; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick. sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions of cures in indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach trouble has made it famous the world over Keep this perfect stomach doctor in your home—k ep it handy—get a large fifty-cent case from any dealer and ther. if anyone should eat something which doesn't agree with them; if what they eat lays like lead ferments ant. sours and forms gas: causes head ache, dizziness and nausea: eructa tions of acid and undigested food— remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. Its prompt ness. certainty and ease in overcoming the worst stomach disorders is a reve lation to those who try it.—Adv The Morning Sermon. i As judged by experts.» "Wasn’t it grand?” “Pity he hasn't a better delivery." "What a perfectly lovely voice he has!” "Pla>s to the gallery.” "These ministers think they know it all.” "He is so much in earnest." "Why do you suppose he dragged in the Bible?" "He means well.” "1 thought it was so beautifully ex pressed." "Punk."—Life. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOR!A, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and Bee that it Bears the Signature of i In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Oh. Quit It! The tea drinking of Great Britain amounts to about 3.000 cups per indi vidual for a year, according to statis tics. which probably accounts for the tannin her athletes get whenever they enter into competition with us.— Philadelphia Inquirer. The Original Cause. "He bent every effort to, make money.” "I suppose that is how he became so crooked in his dealings.” Some people only believe half they hear, and others believe twice a3 much • THIS WOMAN’S SICKNESS Quickly Yielded To Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Baltimore. Mi — “I am more than glad to tell what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Lorn pound did for me. I suffered dreadful pains and was very irregular. I became alarmed and sent for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound. I took it reg ularly until I was without a cramp or pain and felt like another person, and it has now been six months since I took any medicine at all. I hope my little note will assist you in helping other wo men. I now feel perfectly well and in the best of health. ” — Mrs. August W. Kondner, 1632 Hollins Street, Bal timore, Md. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and thousands of voluntary .testimonials on file in the Pink ham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to prove this fact. For thirty years it has been the stand ard remedy for female ills, and has re stored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled igith such ail ments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkliam Med icine Co, (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. EMBROIDERYan<1 1a>b t von like lo do fancy wort’ A good way to spend long wirier evenings Yon can ieil w'bit voa mate. Full and complete coarse, in r lading outfit. 12 00 7S different stitches explained and 11‘cstrated. Send t«»day. IDEAL SYSTEMS, 607 SEVENTH AVENUE. PEORIA. ILL Alfalfa Seed $6 RaELP"*ana ranL , Sioux City, Nebraska Directory »w Rubber specialty for W«men-The arti cle you nerd. Price H. A in, r.b weekly plan tree to lire! castomer from eacb town. Satisfaction guardniecd. BOYD KE3CE, HAICLER, NEB. THE PAXTON HOTEL Omaha. Nebraska ___EUROPEAN PLAN Booms from Sl.00 op single, 75 cents up double. CATE PRICES REASONABLE BLISS A WELLMAN Live Stock Commission Merchants 254-35C Exchange Bnlldinp, South Omaha Ail stuck consigned to ne is solo bv memoers of the Arm. ind all employees hare been selected and trained for the work which they do. w sta- pfcoa«~*kip m SHIP TO WOOD BROS. LEADING SELLERS OF IJVE STOCK SINCE 1867. TRY US AT SOUTH OMAHA CHICAGO SIOUX CITY