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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1915)
ENDS DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, GAS “Pape’s Diapepsin” cures sick, sour stomachs in five minutes —Time It! “Really does" put bad stomachs in order—“really does" overcome indiges tion. dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes—that—just that—makes Pape’s Diapepsin the lar gest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, re member the moment "Pape’s Diapep sin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It’s truly astonishing—almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia pepsin will give you a hundred dollars’ worth of satisfaction. It’s worth its weight in gold to men and women who can’t get their stom achs regulated. It belongs in your home—should always be kept handy in case of sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It’s the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world.—Adv. Antinoise Movement. “What I want," said the nervous man, “is a place in the country. I want to escape the noise of the city." “All right,” answered the man who is nervous, too; “I'll sell you my place in the country. I want to come to town where they have laws to prevent the roosters from waking you up at daybreak.” girlsiTirTsTtry it, BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur iant and Remove Dandruff—Real Surprise for You. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus trous and beautiful as a young girl's after a “Danderine hair cleanse.” Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping itch ing and falling hair. But what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use when you will actually see new- hair—fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair—growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it, surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store and Just try it. Adv. Skeptical. "What have we here?’’ “A series of sketches from the front headed, 'The Humane Side of War.' ” "Stuff and nonsense! There’s no more a humane side to war than there is a fifth side to a parallelo gram." IF BACK HURTS CLEAN KIDNEYS WITH SALTS Drink Lots of Water and Stop Eating Meat for a While If the Bladder Bothers You. Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must re lieve them like you relieve your bow els ; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kid neys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts, is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithla, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which millions of men and women take now and then, thus avoid ing serious kidney and bladder dis eases.—Adv. Business Proposals. “1 hinted to Miss Gladys that 1 was in the matrimonial market.” “Did she take the hint?” “In a w’ay. She said I would have to go to par before she would take any stock in my declaration.” Hare Healthy, Strong, Beautiful Eyes Oculists and Physicians used Murine Eye Remedy many years before it was offered as a Domestic Eye Medicine. Murine is Stilt Com, ponnded by Our Physicians and guaranteed by them as a Reliable Relief for EyeB that Need Care. Try i. In your Eyes and in Baby’s Eyes — No Smarting—Just Eye Comfort. Buy Muriue of your Druggist—accept no Substitute, and if interested write for Book of the Eve Free. Ml'KINK EYE KEMKDY CO., CUICAUO Even the people who stand up for their own rights might prefer to sit in the lap of luxury. For genuine comfort and lasting pleas ure use Red Cross Ball Blue on wash day. All good grocers. Adv. EPITOMEiOF EVENTS PARAGRAPHS THAT PERTAIN TO MANY SUBJECTS. ARE SHGRT BUT INTERESTING Brief Mention of What Is Transpiring In Various Sections of Our Own and Foreign Countries. WAR INE3WS. Germany and France have agreed j to exchange seriously wounded pris- j oners, incapable of further service. • * * The Turkish fleet, assigned to give j battle to the Anglo-French warships j inside the Dardanelles, has fled, ac cording to Athens dispatches. * * * Swiss advices says work is going on day and night at Friedrichshafen in the construction of Zeppelin air ships to replace the four recently lost. • * * The British parliament has voted the total sum of $1,810,000,000 asked by Premier Asquith for the prosecu tion of the war, covering the expenses of the current year up to the end of the present month. That an agreement that will give i Russia free passage of the Darda nelles has been reached between Great Britain, France and Russia is the assertion made by a Paris news papr. * * * Germany asserts that during the re- ( cent battle in the Mazurian lake dis trict of East Prussia the commanding general of the Russian Twentieth ar my corps and ten other commanding officers were made prisoners. * * * Berlin reports the capture of Przas nysz, an important town to the north of Warsaw. There the Germans took 10,000 Russian prisoners and it is be lieved that the intention is to march against the Polish capital from the north. • • • French cruisers have arrested the American steamer Dacia in the chan nel and taken her to Brest. The steamship Dacia left Galveston for Rotterdam January 3T with 11,000 bales of cotton to be trans-shipped to Bremen. • • * Having silenced the forts at the en trance of the Dardenellies. the allied fleet is now covering the work of mine sweepers in the channel preparatory to attempting further progress along the narrow waterway leading to the sea of Marmora. • * • Preceded by mine sweepers, the allied fleet under Vice Admiral Car den has movtd past tht destroyed Turkish forts at the entrance to the Dardenelles and has begun shelling land fortifications on both sides of the strait, according to Athens dis patches. * * * Enver Pasha, the Turkish chief of staff, expresses himself as confident that the allies will not succeed in making ;heir way through the Darda nelles. He declares that only the outer fortifications have been dam aged and that these were old de fenses, the speedy subjugation of which had been expected. * 6 * The plan of Great Britain and her allies, whereby they will attempt to cut off supplies from Germany and at the same time prevent commodities from leaving German ports, has been announced and communicated to the United States. This action is in re taliation for the declaration of Ger many of a naval war zone. GENERAL. A bill has been introduced in the Cuban legislature to legalize bull lighting. • • • The buildings of Texas and Sweden were dedicated at the world's fair at San Francisco. A Chinese boycott on all Japanese industries and business houses as a form of retaliation, it is said, against the demands made on the Chinese government by Japan has been start ed in San Francisco and word of this action has been sent broadcast throughout the region under the jur isdiction of the Chinese Six com panies, which includes all the states west of the Rocky mountains and as far south as the Mexican border. Woman suffrage and state-wide pro hibition wil come before the voters of South Dakota at the general elec tion in November, 1916. The state legislature at Pierre has adopted re solutions to that effect. * * • Two of the four bills designed to increase the authority of the Colo rado state government in strike dis orders finally passed the house. One imposes a penalty for refusing to obey an order issued by the National Guard and the other imposes a penalty for resisting the militia. * * • As preliminary to a general cam paign for a national prohibition In 1916, the national committee of the prohibiton party has decided to con centrate its activities upon Massa chusetts tu>s year. * * • Twenty-one uncharted dangerous pinnacle rocks have been discovered by the coast survey in forty-two miles of the inside passage used by all steamers going up and down the Alas, ka coasr. One is 600 feet high and comes within seventeen feet of the surface. * * • Patrick Quinlan, an orator of the Industrial Workers of the World, w'ho was convicted at Paterson, N. J„ must pay a fine of ?300 and serve a term of from two to seven years at hard la Sarah Bernhardt, whose right leg recently was amputated at Bordeaux, France, Is suffering from indigestion. * • * The buildings of Illinois, Norway and the Philippine islands were dedi cated at the San Francisco exposition. • * * The Minnesota senate defeated the bill providing the submission to the voters of a constitutional amendment granting full suffrage to women. * o * Horse racing in Nevada became an assured fact when Governor Boyle at Carson City affixed his signature to the race track bill recently passed by the Nevada legislature. • • * The veto of Mayor Ross of Bos An geles of the ordinance to regulate jit ney bhses was overridden by the city council, which repassed the measure by a unanimous vole. * * * With the probability that the death list will reach nearly 180, rescue crews continued the search of the workings of the Layland mines at Hinton, W. Va., wrecked by an explo sion. * * * The seven former striking miners on trial for the murder of Luke Ter ry, chauffeur, near La Veta, Novem ber 8, 1913, were declared not guilty in the verdict of the jury returned in the district court at Pueblo, Colo. The jury was out one hour. * 6 • A bill appropriating $1,500,000 for the reimbursement of farmers and stock raisers who suffered financial losses through the killing of their stock in an effort to check the spread of the foot and mouth disease was passed by the Illinois senate. • * • Ralph W. Feeney, superintendent of the Horticultural Fire Relief com pany, and the Oregon Merchants Mu tual company of Portland, Oregon, both of which were placed in the hands of a receiver recently, commit ted suicide by taking poison. The American legion, to be com posed of between 250,000 and 300,000 former army and navy militiamen, to act as first reserves in event of war. will soon be organized. Captain Gor don Johnston, aid-de-camp to Major General Leonard Wood, has an nounced. » • • Folowing hard upon the hells of Representative Fitzgerald's protest against the nomination of certain persons to till positions in New York comes the protest of Iowa solons that they were not even consulted as to the post masterships at Sioux City cr Des Moines. WASHINGTON. It is said in official circles that President Wilson at the proper time proposes to lodge a protest against bottling up German ports. The treasury department has re ceived a check from Postmaster Gen eral Burleson for $3,500,000 represent ing the surplus in the revenues of his department for the fiscal year v hiet ended June 30, 1914. • * • Nineteen applications to organize national banks were approved during February, according to an announce n.ent by the comptroller of the cur rency. The total number of national banks doing business February 27 was 7,610. President Wilson told callers the European situation was demanding so much of his attention that he was doubtful if he would be able to leave Washington this spring even, possible, to make his proposed visit to the San Francisco evposition. * * • Representatives of the Chinese Young Men’s Christian asociation oi the national capital appealed to President Wilson to use his influence in "moulding the public opinion of the Christian world’’ to support their native land in its opposition to the demands recently made upon her by Japan. • * • The Sixty-third congress, first un der complete domination of the demo cratic party since 1895, has ended. It had b^en in almost continuous ses sion since President Wilson’s inaugu ration two years ago. Beginning with an extra session called by the presi dent April 7, 1913, the congress has worked actually 637 days. * * * A few laws enacted by the sixty third congress: New tariff and in come tax, new currency system, creat | ing a federal trade commission. amending the ant-trust and repeal of ■ the Panama canal “free toll” provi sion. authorizing a government rail road in Alaska, empowering use of armed forces in Mexico, the war tax, creating a war risk insurance bureau, ratification of twenty-one treaties, passage of seamen's labor bill. • * * Brigadier General Scott, chief of staff of the army, will attempt a peaceful settlement with the re calcitrant Piute Indians. General Scott has a long record not only as an Indian fighter, but also as a mediator among the Indians, whose dialects he speaks. * * * Secretary Daniels, in a statement, analyzed the constructive features in the naval appropriation bill and char acterized it as the “most liberal measure for the increase and sup port of the navy” ever enacted. * * • The act of congress prohibiting al!^ persons from selling or giving away habit-forming drugs without a phy sician’s prescription or under direct, instruction, went in effect March 1. Violators of the law are subjected to a fine of not more than $2,000 or imprisonment for five years, or troth. • * * Miss Helen Neel of New York christened the United States torpedo boat dstroyer tender Melville, which was launched at the yard of the New Vnt.v CMn PniMincr y»nTWTvonv rat Pam. ROAD BILL PASSED HOUSE PUTS THROUGH HIGH WAY MEASURE WITH EASE. PROVIDES $150,000 ANNUALLY Motor Trucks Taxed $5, Autcs $3, Mo torcycles $2.—And Creates State Board. Lincoln.—An annual good road fund )f at least $150,000 is provided for in nouse roll No. 261, which passed the house last week withou. a dissenting vote. The bill provides a yearly license fee of $5 on motor trucks, $3 on auto mobiles and $2 on motorcycles. Fifty cents ol each fee of the last two goes to the state and $1 of the motortruck license money. The remainder is retained in the ccunty treasuries to be used in im proving the highways in those coun ties. The second bill provides for an ad visory state highway commission of three persons and appropriates $500 a year for their traveling expenses yearly. Militia Fund Cut. Lincoln. Neb.—LTncle Sam’s voice, calling for increase of the Nebraska National Guard to 4,000 men, or 2,400 more than are now upon its rolls, has apparently not been heard by the state legislature. For instead of pro viding as well for the guard as in the past the finance committee of the house has reported the maintenance bill out with a decrease of $30,000 in the sum laid aside for that de-part n ent. The reduction has caused much talk among guardsmen of the state. Officers of many of the companies and officers on the staff of General P. L. Hall, jr., say that the retrenchment is not justified and that if carried to a conclusion would force them to sever their connection with the de partment. Most of the men who are objecting have given years of their time to the guard without compensation. Patriot ism and their desire to provide young men of the state with training in mentality, morals and care of their bodies. General Hall in a statement says: “Nebraska, at this time, is in a very fortunate position. The government in order to minimize the enormous expense of transporting troops to the eastern rifle ranges for training and competitions, has thrown open to Nebraska the opportunity to buy and build a rifle range, at Ashland. Neb., composed of 830 acres of land—this to be from federal funds, with an an nual allotment of about $7,0 '0 for the upkeep., Factory Inspection. The house bill giving the labor com missioner's office further factory in spection duties and providing for a sufficient corps of inspectors to make the law operative, has been favorably reported ou. of the retail and com merce committee. Railroad Officials Before Solons. Three railway presidents and a number of other railroad officials ap peared before the railroad committee of the house and many house mem bers to urge passage of the 2%-cent passenger fare bill, introduced by Representative Bert C Miner of Oma ha. President Mohler of the Union Pacific, President Gardner of the Northwestern and President Holden of the Burlington spoke at sonp length on the need of the railroads for greater revenues. Recall Bill Favored. The house is unanimously in favor of the recall bill, including recall of judg.s. introduced by Representative J. N. Norton. The bill provides that 25 per cent of the voters of any elec toral district may ask the recall of any public official. He is given an op portunity to resign, and if he does not an election must he called at which the only question to be submitted shall he whether or not such official will be recalled. If the recall is ap proved by a majority of the voters, the vacancy is to be filled according to the law governing vacancies in that particular office. Senate Favors Hog Cholera Bill. The committee of the whole has re commended for passage senate file No. 197 the hog cholera serum bill. The measure, introduced by Weesner ol Webster, puts the use and sale of aM scrum and virus for hog cholera under the supervision of the State Live Stock Sanitary board. Will Try to Amend Merger Bill. The Omaha consolidation bill will be amended in the house committee cf die whole this week if its op ponents can manage it. They propose to add the amend ment proposed by Representative Broome, which would postpone the matter two years and then submit the question to a vote of the people living in all the municipalities affect ed by the bill as a whole, and not to the voters of each community. Selling School La^ds Bill Killed. No school lands wil be sold in Ne braska under authority of the presept legislature. The house has killed the bill providing that school lands should be sold. The house bill provides that before a competing telephone system is es tab'ished a certificate of “public necessity and convenience’ must be secured from the state railway com mission, was kilted in the house after the standing committee had reported it favorably. NEWSPAPER MEN PROTEST Publishers of State Appear Before Committee and Oppose Bill Prohibiting Free Speech. A warm discussion occurred Iasi week before the judiciary committee of the house over H. A. 734, by Mey senburg, which prohibits a newspaper from publishing criticism, ridicule or censure of parties running for office, or anyone else, and compels the news paper to give «uch party space to get back. Colonel John O. Yeiser is sponsor for the bill.. Among the speakers were H. M. Davis of Ord, J. W. Gutriglit, editor of the Lincoln Star; N. J. Ludi of Wahoo, state printer; Fred Cary of the Omaha News and P. A. Barrows, Lincoln, rep resentative of the Omaha Bee. The bill practically denies free speech to the newspaper men and places the paper in the hands of the public in stead of the owner. Mr. Outright said that if he should criticise as a demo crat the republican party that party’s committee had the right to come back and fill his editorial page with the other side of the argument. Mr. Ludi said that it would practically put a newspaper man who took pride in his editorial column out of business, for no editor would dare pass an opinion knowing that he would be compelled to give space to the other side, no matter whether the opposition was right or wrong. With most of the centralizing and compulsory features cut out, the coun ty unit school bill has been recom mended for passage by the senate. The bill, known as S. F. 22, was in troduced by Bushee, but it met with so much opposition that a compara tively new bill was prepared cutting out the objectionable features, and it now goes to the general file with a provision that the weaker counties can he'p the poorer districts by dis tributing the railroad taxes among the districts of the county instead of going to the districts through which the roads run. The unit system is optional and can be put in force by a vote of the people on the petition of 2 per cent of the voters. It makes the county superin tendent's office non-partisan and elec tion at the annual school meeting. Interest charges at the rate of 4t> per cent a year by persons and com panies loaning money on salaries, household furniture and similar se curity, will be legalized if house roil No 44, approved by the house judici ary committee, becomes a law. The measure limits the rate of interest to be charged to ten per cent a year, but permits a brokerage charge of one tenth the amount loaned when the loan is made for four months. The new rate, however, will be only a little more than oneAhird of the rate generally charged under the present law, as on most loans the rate of in terest is 10 per cent a month, or 120 per cent a year. Regardless of what the present legislature does, baseball will be played next Memorial Sunday. The bill as passed by the house provides that no baseball games shall be played on the Sunday before Mem orial day but will not go into effect until July 1, or after this year The senate according to a “gentlemen’s agreement” in the house, will amend the bill so as to permit baseball games after 3 p. m. on Memorial Sunday. Approximately one-third of bills in. troduced in the legislature have been passed or otherwise permanently dis posed of by either house or senate, but only ten measures have passed both houses. The senate has passed eighty-two senate bills and three house measures, while the house has passed 113 measures originating there and seven senate files. Seventeen thousand names were on a petition presented the house re cen.ly asking “fair and favorable treatment" for the railroads. More than 5,000 signers were classed as wage earners, 6.900 as business men, 2,900 as farmers and the remainder unclassified. Provision for payment to those de pendent upon them of earnings of persons sentenced, is one of the main provisions of the county workhouse bill introduced by Representative John Larsen and recommended for passage by the house judiciary com mittee . The house committee on railroads reported out for passage the Oster man bill. H. R. 442, requiring a uni form width of right-of-way through any county in the state. The bill af fects the Union Pacific and the princi pal kick comes from Merrick county. — By the narrow margin of two votes, the Larson-Druesdow bill, prohibiting barber work on Sunday, lost out in the house. The vote on Chaanber’s motion to indefinitely postpone was 36 to 34. County treasurers from now on will have to make remittances to the state treasurer every month, accord ing to an opinion handed down by At torney General Reed and a ruling by State Treasurer Hall. An appropriation of $7,000 to pur chase 160 acres of iand adjoining the Hastings hospital for the insane was increased to $20,000 for 640 acres by the senate committee of the whole. The general sentiment prevading the house this session against the jxassage of any liquor legislation was reflected in the house judiciary com mittee when a bill to prevent the suing of liquor dealers for damages outside the counties in which they re side was killed. TERROR III DO SITUATION IS DESCRIBED AS WORSE THAN EVER. CAPITAL FACES STARVATION Talk of Allied Expedition Similar to One Going to Help of Legation in Peking Heard. Washington, D. C.—The administra tion is at present confronted with one of the most serious and perplex ing developments that lias ever arisen in the Mexican situation. Mex ieo City is on the verge of starvation General Obregou, the Carranza com mander, refuses to permit an interna tional relief committee composed ol wealthy members of the foreign col ony to succor the needy. “Mexico needs no foreign aid,” the general is reported to have said. All merchants who closed their stores have been ordered to reopen under threat of punishment. Three hundred of them, all Mexicans, have been imprisoned. The people of the city are living in terror of anothei evacuation since Obregon has an nouneed that he will not prevent loot ing or pillaging for food or money. Secretary Bryan announced that he had sent an urgent telegram to Amer ican Consul Silliman with instruc tions to lay the situation earnestly before General Carranza, so that Gen eral Obregon might be directed to ac cept the proffered aid of the foreign residents. Freight service is sus pended between Mexico City and Vera Cruz. Transportation, facilities for relief purposes are being withheld by General Obregon on the ground ol military necessity. The situation is described as more intolerable than it ever has been since the revolutionary troubles began in the southern republic. Talk of an allied expedition similar to the one that went to the relief of foreign legations at Peking during the Boxer uprising was again heard in official quarters, where it was generally ad mitted that a grave condition of af fairs had arisen. All sorts of wild rumors are afloat in Mexico City, due to the incendiary utterances of General Obregon, who. in newspaper interviews, has practi cally sanctioned plunder for food. General Carranza has been asked by the American government to in struct General Obregon to take some measures to protect lives and prop erty of foreigners, in the event of an evacuation. The people fear the wa ter supply may -be shut off and the electric light cables may be cut, thus leaving the city in darkness at night and permitting the irresponsible ele ment to commit wanton depredations. Just why the 300 merchants were imprisoned has not been revealed They were reported to have appealed to Obregon for relief from a heavy tax. which he imposed on them. Sec retarv Bryan said that so far as the State department had been advised, all the Mexican priests arrested for failure to contribute funds demanded by Obregon. were still in prison. Dutch Steamer Torpedoed. London.—According to the Daily Express it is reported that the Dutch steamer, Nooderdvk. which wa-s re turning to Rotterdam with broken machinery after having sailed for the United States, has been torpedoed in the English channel. Still another German submarine is declared to have met with disaster at the hands of an allied ship. The French Admiralty asserts that a sub marine of the U-3 class was struck in the English channel by three shells from a French cruiser and disap peared. The British Admiralty re ported the sinking of the U-8. making the fourth one destroyed since the be ginning of the war. Protest Ban on Labor Chief. Philadelphia.—More than 500 Uni. versity of Pennsylvania students have formed a free speech society and adopted resolutions denouncing the authorities cf the institution and those in charge of the Pennsylvania, n daily student publication, because of the alleged attitude of the authori ties and the Pennsylvania toward Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor. 78 Bodies Taken From Mine. Hinton. W. Va. — Seventy-eight bodies have been recovered from the working of the Lay land mine, where an explosion entombed more than 170 miners, of whom only ten escaped alive. Suffrage Loses in Minnesota. St. Paul, Minn.—The Minnesota senate has defeated the bill provid ing the submission to the voters of a constitutional amendment granting full suffrage to women. Thirty-four votes were cast against the measure and thirty-three for it. Palestine Jews Safe. Washington.—Assurance than the Jewish population of Palestine “enjoy perfect safety” was given in an of ficial communication from Constanti nople. March 2. 800 Horses for British in Fire. Kansas City. Mo.—Four tires broke out almost simultaneously in a horse and mule barn litre in which wore 800 horses belonging to the British government. The same barns wore damaged by fire two weeks ago while British horses were stabled there. Coal Heavers’ Strike Settled. Liverpool—The strike ot coal heav ers which has delayed the departure of Atlantic liners, has been settled and the men have Returned to their Better cookies, cake and biscuits, too. All as light, fluffy, tender and delicious as mother used to bake. And just as whole some. For purer Baking Pow der than Calumet cannot be bad at any price. Ask your grocer. RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS World’s Pars Food Ex polities, CUass. ZD, fxm Exposition. Fronts, March, U12 Too don’t sis* boost when Ton bay cheap or bif .«ma I bakin* powder. Don’t be Billed. Boy Calomel. It’s 1 more ecoeemicsl—more wholesome—yirse best malts. I Cslemet is fsr superior to sour milk end soda. Not Tactfully Put. Houseman—If I’d known you were going to drop in on us so unexpected ly we would have had a better din ner. Horton—Don't mention it. old man; but next time I'll be sure and let you know. All Boys and Girls should write to Wm. Wrigtey Jr. Co.. 1304 Kesner Bldg., Chicago. 111., for beautiful “Mother Goose Jingle Book" in colors sent free to all readers of this paper.—Adv. Its Class. “That rich scap manufacturer haa just bought a handsome automobile." “Ah—a soap ‘bubble.’ ” The income tax doesn't bother the man whose principal holdings consist of castles in the air. Call the afrocer and say: 4 Houten’s RonaCocoa. in the big red can.” You’ll like it better than any other. Half pound can— 25c CLOVER BEST ON EARTH Wisconsin grown seed recognized the world over as hardiest, most vigorous. Biu Skei> CAT A Lot. Ikek John A. Salior Seed Co., Boi 704. La Crtjae. Wla. PATENTS WatOOH K. Coir man, Wa>lv Ington.D.G. Hooka £r»». Hlch eet references. Bent result*. FniJy matured BRED Do*»s. Belgian*. *160. Hut us Hedsf^At. » U to.uu. W. to. TUOktiOX, A 0X04 A, CaltiS CHEYENNE COUNTY, NKHUAHRA bmi r sale and exchange. Always sure crop.*.. Wrr, ■ freo booklet- Chris Hickey & Co., Jfairbury. Nvuv Belgian Hares Uuckbll.Ji. Bed Nebraska Directory Com© direct U) this store \>.en you need gia> ULUbbuniujU. CO. Northeast corner Vith and Farnam .Sts.. Omaha. Neor Kitabllshid 17 years. Ms ’ your !)n.kvn Klass-s. „1 , ” t>uJr uud re turn eho same day DOCTORS MACH& MACH . J dentists ll«ir?.Fr0CrP*‘tC" BlOCk ■15th & Farnam Stsu.Oat rta IVsu.1 c« n in Osuths. Kauuaabl. e, re. f.r*r**t u> M •*' Mkid. * O ■7» . A U A Mr> attoiais