The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 30, 1916, Image 9

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:: DRINK HOT WATER AND RID I
:: JOINTS OF RHEUMATIC RUST I
.> Why rheumatism and lumbago sufferers should drink phosphated I
o hot water each morning before breakfast f
i RUST
i °P
| IRON/
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RUST OF |
RHEUMATISM I
I 1
2
Just as coal, when it burns, leaves
behind a certain amount of incombus
tible material in the form of ashes, so
the food and drink taken day after day
leaves in the alimentary canal a cer
tain amount of indigestible material,
which if not completely eliminated
•each day, becomes food for the mil
lions of bacteria which infest the bow
els. From this mass of left-over waste
material, toxins and ptomaine-like poi
sons, called uric acid, is formed and
then sucked into the blood where it
continues to circulate, collecting grain
by grain in the joints of the body
much like rust collects on the hinge
as shown above.
Men and women who suffer from
lumbago, rheumatism or sore, stiff,
aching joints should begin drinking
phosphated hot water, not as a means
to magic relief from pain, but to pre
vent more uric acid forming in the
system. Before eating breakfast each
morning, drink a glass of real hot
water with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate in it. This will first neu
tralize and then wash out of the' stom
ach, liver, kidneys and bowels the pre
vious day's accumulation of toxins and
poisons; thus, cleansing, sweetening,
and freshening the entire alimentary
canal, each morning, before putting
more food into the stomach.
A quarter pound of limestone phos
phate costs very little at the drug
store but is sufficient to make any
rheumatic or lumbago sufferer an en
thusiast on the morning inside bath.
Millions of people keep their joints
free from these rheumatic acids by
practicing this daily internal sanita
tion. A glass of hot water with a tea
spoonful of limestone phosphate, drank
before breakfast, is wonderfully invig
orating; besides, it is an excellent
health measure because it cleanses the
alimentary organs of all the waste,
gases and sour fermentations, making
one look and feel clean, sweet and
fresh all day.
Those who try this for one week
may find themselves free from sick
j headaches, constipation, bilious at
; tacks, sallowness, nasty breath and
i stomach aciditv.
COLT DISTEMPER
You can prevent this loathsome disease from running
through your stable and cure all the colts suffering with
it when you begin the treatment. No matter how young.
SPOHVS is safe to use on any colt. It is wonderful how
it prevents all distempers, no matter how colts or horses
at any age are “exposed.” All good druggists and turf
goods houses and manufacturers sell SPOHX'S at 50 dents
and $1 a bottle; $5 and 510 a dozen. SPOHX MEDICAL
CO„ Chemist* and Bacteriologists. (iosben. lnd., t. S. A.
It and **but are among tne little
things that count.
PROVEN SWAMP-ROOT
AIDS WEAK KIDNEYS
The symptoms of kidney and bladder
trouble* are often very distressing and
leave the system in a run-down condition.
The kidneys seem to suffer most, as al
most every victim complains of lame back
and urinary troubles which should not be
neglected, as these danger signals often
lead to dangerous kidney troubles.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root which soon
heals and strengthens the kidneys is a
splendid kidney, liver and bladder remedy, j
and. being an herbal compound, has a gen
tle healing effect on the kidneys, which is
almost immediately noticed in most cases
by those who use it.
A trial will convince anyone who may
be in need of it. Better get a bottle from
your nearest drug store, and start treat
ment at once.
However, if you wish first to test thi*
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y„ for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
It takes some men a lifetime to dis
cover how unimportant they are.
HOW WONDERFULLY RESINOL
SOOTHES ITCHING SKINS!
If you have eczema, ringworm or
other itching, burning, sleep-destroy
ing skin-eruption, try Resinol Oint
ment and Resinol Soap and see how
quickly the itching stops and the trou
ble disappears. Resinol Ointment is
also an excellent household remedy
for dandruff, sores, burns, wounds,
chafings and for a score oi other uses
where a soothing, healing application
is needed.
Resinol contains nothing of a harsh
or injurious nature and can be used
freely even on the most irritated sur
face. Every druggist sells Resinol
Ointment and Resinol Soap.—Adv.
All potatoes nave eyes, and some
have specs.
Unkind.
*'I>o?s your wife wear spats?”
“Wear ’em? She starts ’em."
MOTHER! LOOK AT
If cross, feverish, constipated,
give “California Syrup
of Figs ”
A laxative today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Children simply will not
take the time from play to empty their
bowels, which become clogged up with
waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach
sour.
I.ook at the tongue, mother! If coat
ed,.or your child is listless, cross, fev
erish. breath bad, restless, doesn't eat
heartily, full of cold or has sore throat
or any other children's ailment, give a
teaspoonful of “California Syrup of
F'gs,” then don’t worry, because it is
perfectly harmless, and in a few hours
all this constipation poison, sour bile
aid fermenting waste will gently
move out of the bowels, and you have
a well, playful child again. A thor
ough “inside cleansing” is ofttimes all
that is necessary. It should be the
first treatment given in any sickness.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.
Avk at the store for a 50-cent bottle of
“California Syrup of Figs.” which has
full directions for babies, children of
all ages and for grown-ups plainly
printed on the bottle. Adv.
Habit is a cable. We weave a
thread of it every day, and at last we
cannot break it.—Horace Mann.
---
Throw Off Cold* *nd Prevent Grip.
^ben von feel a cold coming on. take LAXA
T(VB feROMO QUININE It removes cause ol
Qolds and Grip Only On© “ BROMO QUININE*■
E W GROV K's signature on Dox. 8c.
There's nothing like an ■"'bstacle for
getting in a man’s way.
To Build Up
After Grippe, Colds
Bad Blood;
i
Take a blood cleanser and alterative j
that starts the liver and stomach into f
vigorous action, called Dr. Pierce’s,
Golden Medical Discovery because of ,
one of itB principal ingredients—the J
Golden Seal plant. It assists the body
to manufacture rich red blood which
feeds the heart—nerves—brain and
organs of the body. The organs work
smoothly like machinery running in |
oil. You feel clean, strong and stren- j
nous. Buy “Medical Discovery” to
day and in a few days you will know
that the bad blood is passing out, and
new, rich, pure blood is filling your
veins and arteries. '
BACfuACHfc, LUMBAVjU
Uric acid causes backache, oains
here and there, rheumatism, gout,
gravel, neuralgia and sciatica. It was
Dr. Pierce who discovered a new
agent, called “Anuric,” which will
throw out and completely eradicate
this uric acid from the system. “An
uric” is 37 times more potent than
lithia, and consequently you need no
longer fear muscular or articular rheu
matism or gout, or many other dis
eases which are dependent on uric
acid within the body.
If you feel that tired, worn-out
feeling, backache, neuralgia, or if your
sleep is disturbed by too frequent uri
nation, go to your best drug store and
ask for Doctor Pierce’s Anuric Tab
lets, full treatment 50c, or send JO
cents for a trial package of “Anuric”
Tablets to Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel,
Buffalo, N. T.
FARMERS ATTENTION!
Insure your crops and farm property against HAIL,
FIRE, LIGHTNING, TORNADO and WIND
STORMS in the Old and Tried UNION FIRE IN
SURANCE COMPANY of Lincoln.
Our new rates and plan of payment will make it
worth your while to see our local representative first
28,000 satisfied Nebraska farmers testify to our
honorable dealings of more than a quarter century.
Send for booklet containing a list of 2,000 individual
losses paid in the year 1915
AGENTS WANTED IN OPEN TERRITORY
j NEBRASKAl
♦ STATE NEWS;
t — :
DATES FOR COMING EVENTS.
April G-7-8—Convention East Central
Teachers’ association at Fremont.
April 3-6—State Bowling Tournament
at Lincoln.
April 3 to $—Nebraska “Pure Food
Week."
April 28-29— State T. P. A. Convention
at Alliance.
April 18—Nebraska Primary Election
Day.
April 24-25—Savannah to Seattle High
way Convention at Omaha.
May 36 to 38—State G. A. ft. Encamp
ment at Lexington.
May 24-25—State Association of Com
mercial Clubs' Convention at Omaha.
June 13 to 16—State P. E. O. Conven
tion at Alliance.
June 13-14-15—Great Western Handi
cap Tournament at Omaha.
June 5-6—Spanish War Veterans’
State Convention at North Platte.
Fremont horse buyers who have
been acting for the European govern
ments declare that notwithstanding
the removal of thousands of horses
from Nebraska for shipment to Eng
land and France, that there remains
an apparently unlimited supply. The
price is no bigger than it was a year
ago. They declare that driving horses
of the finest quality are practically
valueless, hawing been crowded off
the market by the automobile.
Improvements aggregating $500,000
will be made in North Platte during
the building season of 1936. The
largest amount to be expended for an\
one improvement will be $100,000 for
street paving. Other improvements in
the business section of the city will
be a $50,000 hotel, $40,000 bank build
ing, $20,000 K. of C. club house, $15,
000 addition to the Elks’ home, $25,00o
parochial school and a $50,000 junior
high school.
Material for the fourth unit of the
hog division at the South Omaha
stock yards is being assembled and
the construction work will begin soon.
It is expected the work on this sec
tion will be completed by September
1. The cost will be close to $150,000.
With the completion of this unit the
yard company will be able to take
care of hog receipts up to 500 cars a
day.
A letter writing day was held at Al
liance recently and as a result over
800 school children wrote letters to
some relative or friend telling them
of Box Butte county and Alliance.
The Commercial club furnished a
pamphlet to place in each letter and
adults as well as the children took an
active interest in this novel plan to
tell strangers about the possibilities
of western Nebraska.
The National Uetail Credit Men’.;
association meets in Omaha in Augus'
for its annual convention, holding
three days. It will bring 300 to 400
members from all over the United
States; S. F. Gilfillan of Minneapolis
is chairman of the board, and E. C.
Howell of Denver, secretary.
The Mag°nau bridge, one of the
oldest crossings on the Eikhorn
river, has been reopened to traffic,
having been closed a year following
the floods of last spring. Washington
and Dodge counties joined in the ex
pense of erecting the structure
which costs $3,000.
Though scarlet fever has not been
entirely eradicated in Omaha, it has
been reduced to such an extent that
reference is rarely made to the epi
demic, which threatened to sweep
the city two months ago. The health
authorities have the situation under
thorough control.
No less than $20,000 will be the cost
of producing the historical parade for
Ak-Sar-Ben in Omaha this year, when,
with fifty floats and twenty-five groups
of soldiers, Indians, cowboys, trappers
and scouts, the history of Nebraska
for the last 300 years will be repre
sented.
.— t„r m_j t-»_i. ■*-» »
' " v/v/u i ai n, jjui
falo county, are making an effort to
secure a depot and station agent. The
population of the town is small, but it
is surrounded by a thickly settled
farming community. It is on the
Union Pacific railroad.
Twenty-two blocks of the residence
portion of Kearney, comprising one
paving district, will be paved this
spring. This makes approximately
forty blocks of paving to be contract
ed for this spring.
Manager William (Ducky) Holmes
of the Lincoln Western League club
announces the purchase of Shortstop
Stevenson from the St. Louis Ameri
cans. Stevenson was a member of the
Rochester, N. Y., club of the Interna
tional league in 1915.
Hastings democrats have united on
a plan to secure the state party head
quarters during the approaching cam
paign. The central location and un
excelled hotel and railroad facilities
are among the advantages claimed for
the city.
Alfred Fowler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Fowler, of Fremont, is a mem
ber of the winning Yale wrestling
team that has won the intercollegiate
honors this year. Fowler is a senior.
The First Methodist church of Fre
mont has received forty-eight new
members, swelling the membership to
S95. This is by far the highest point
the membership has ever reached.
At a meeting of the Allen Commer
cial club a move was started to se
cure the Burlington Railroad company
to put the electric lights and city wa
ter in the depot.
The state convention of Spanish
War Veterans will be held at North
Platte on June 5 and 6. Preparations
are already being made to entertain
several hundred delegates who are ex
pected to attend.
Enlistment officers at Omaha have
begun a vigorous campaign for army
recruits to fill up the quota asked for
by the government in increasing the
army.
Roy Howell of Rock Valley, Iowa,
has purchased the Creston Statesman
of Ray Burch and has already taken
possession of the plant.
The Hotel McCabe, recently com
pleted and furnished at a cost of $55,
000 at North Platte, is now open to
the public. The hostelry has fifty
guest rooms, twenty-eight of which
are equipped with bath, it has every
modern convenience and is consider
ed the best hotel in any town of
North Platte’s population throughout
the west.
An extensive program has been
mapped out for the twenty-third an
nual meeting of the southeastern Ne
braska education association, which
will be held in Lincoln March 29, 30
and 31. The convention is ejected
to bring between seven and eight hun
dred teachers and superintendents to
Lincoln for the three days' session.
A new clock has been donated by
the parishoners of the Sts. Peter and
Paul church at Falls City. The clock
lias three dials five feet in diameter
placed on the south, west and north
sides of the church tower and can be
seen from most any place in the city.
It rings the Angelus three times daily
and strikes the hours.
Because the bidder was unable to
guarantee the material, the Hastings
city council surrendered a certified
check for $25,000 to a St. Joseph firm,
which was declared the low bidder
on eight paving districts for which
brick had been specified. Contracts
were awarded to another firm.
Sixteen steers, one carload, sold for
a gross price of $2,405 at the South
Omaha market a few days ago. The
cattle were sold to one of the pack
ers for beef. The shipment came
from John Rhudv of Pilger. The cat
tle sold for $9.25 per hundredweight.
April 25 has been set as the .date I
of the special election, at which time i
the citizens of Kearney will be given I
an opportunity to decide, via the bai- '
iot, if they prefer to retain the pres !
ent form of city government or to ac- i
cept the commissioner form.
Fully five hundred school teachers |
are expected to attend the annual j
convention of the East Central Ne- !
braska Teachers' association at Fre
mont. April C. 7 and 8. Arrangements
are being made for an exceedingly
strong program.
President J. N. Clark of the Has
tings Chamber of Commerce declared
before a meeting of one hundred busi
ness men of the city that twenty-nine
state conventions were scheduled for j
Hastings this summer.
Through the Commercial club an ef
fort is on to secure contracts with far
mers in Adams county for furnishing
the milk of 1,500 cows to insure the
success of a cond-nseiy soon to be es- I
tablished at Hastings.
The Kearney Canning factory is con- |
tracting for its season's crop of raw
material. An acreage of 150 of toma
toes and COO of sweet corn is wanted, j
Last year's crop proved profitable to i
growers.
In the district debate on the sub- |
ject of preparedness bet wees Mason j
and Ansley high schools the judges ■
rendered a unanimous decision for :
the affirmative, upheld by Ansley. The |
debate was held at Ansley.
All six members of the Nebraska ;
delegation in the lower house of con- |
gress voted in committee of the whole ;
against Representative Kahn's amend- ■
ment to increase the regular army to
220.000.
The Fremont Farmers' Fnion Co
operative creamery, erected during the
past winter, is now in operation. The
creamery has a membership of farm
ers from all parts of the state.
The town of Seward has a Y. M. C. |
A. with its own building and it claims j
to be the smallest town in the coun- j
try with a paid Y. M. C. A. secretary, j
A year ago the “Y” membership was i
A new Elks hall is soon to be con
structed by the Grand Island lodge |
The building will cost $40,000 and
will be completely equipped for the
use of the members.
Articles of incorporation of the I
Beatrice country club have been filed
with the county clerk. The club is in
corporated with a capital stock of
$20,000.
A prairie fire which swept a large
territory in Lincoln county destroyed
much hay, corn in cribs and farm im
plements. One farmer lost a valuable
he*d of hogs.
Plans are being made at Alliance
for entertaining the several hundred
delegates expected to attend the Ne
braska T. P. A. convention April 2S [
and 29.
Ravenna is being organized as a j
city of the second class. A mayor \
and four councilmen will be elected in
April.
Bessie Peck, the 8-year-old daushter
of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Peck, residing
near Amherst, is dead as the result of :
burns received when, with other chil
dren, she was playing about a bonfire
which had been built to destroy rub
bish.
A shorthorn cattle sale held in
Humboldt recently by Rueben and j.
L. Harslibarger, consisting of eleven
bulls and twenty-nine cows, averaged
$211 per head for the bulls and $180
tor the cows. The bull, Collynie j
Goods sold for $500.
Columbus is in the throes of a re
juvenation of its band. It is antici
pated that forty or more will be on ;
hand-for the summer season of con-!
certs. A saxaphone quartet and a
drum major are features.
A movement is on foot in Omaha, ;
backed by the .Commercial club and
other civic organizations, for the es- S
tablishment of a new Fnion depot in j
the metropolis.
A good roads meeting is to be held 1
at Tecumseh April 7. At that time
prizes will be awarded for the best
roads maintained during the year.
Work has started at Alliance tear
ing down the old building to make
room for the new federal building and
the government expects to let the
contract by June 1 for the new struc
ture.
Broken Bows new ten thousand
dollar public library is finished. It
is a beautiful structure and stands
upon one of the choicest sites in the
city.
Business men in Aurora are urging
that improved methods of sanitation
be put in practice to ensure purity of
milk supply.
THE EUROPEAN WAR A
YEAR AGOJHIS WEEK
March 27, 1915.
French captured summit of Hart
mannsweilerkopf.
Violent fighting in the Carpa
thians.
Austrians made gains in Buko
wina.
U. S. battleship Alabama sent to
Norfolk to keep Prinz Eitel Fried
rich from leaving.
German aviators dropped bombs
on Calais and Dunkirk.
March 28, 1915.
Russians broke into Hungary and
attacked Lupkcw and Uszok passes.
British liner Falaba sunk by Ger
man submarine; 110 lost.
British steamer Aguila torpedoed
by Germans; 26 lost.
Russians bombarded Bosporus
forts and allies shelled Dardanelles
forts.
More air bombs dropped on
Calais.
March 29, 1915.
French pressed Germans hard in
Champagne.
Germans again shelled Reims.
Austrians made gains at several
points.
Dutch steamer Amstel blown up
by mine.
Attack on Bosporus and Darda
nelles continued.
German Baltic fleet put,
March 30, 1915.
Russians stormed mountain
orests in Carpathians.
Austrians began big drive across
oukowina.
Turkish seaplane dropped oombs
on British warship near Darda
nelles.
Turkish government promised to
protect Christians at Urumiah.
—
March 31, 1915.
Germans bombarded Libau.
Russians fought way down slope
of Carpathians into Hungary.
German army corps cut to pieces
in North Poland.
British steamers Flaminian and
Crown of Castile sunk by subma
rines.
German soldiers near Thourout,
Belgium, killed by bombs from aero
planes.
German airmen raided Ostrolen
ka, Russia.
King George gave up liquor in
royal household.
April 1, 1915.
French occupied Fey-en Haye.
Russians began lively offensive
in Central Poland, but wer re
pulsed by Austrians near Inowlodz
on the Pilica.
Germans checked Russians at
Rawka river.
British took Aus, German West
Africa.
British vessels and airmen shelled
Zeebrugge and Hoboken.
German submarines sank a Brit
ish and a French steamer; 30 lost.
April 2, 1915.
Heavy artillery fighting between
the Meuse and Moselle.
Russians took offensive along en
tire front.
Moorish rebels occupied Fez and
Mekinec.
German submarines destroyed
several vessels.
Allied aviators made numerous
raids on Germans on west front.
American sanitary experts sailed
to fight typhus in Serbia.
INTERESTING BITS
New discoveries of petroleum have
been made in Argentina.
In Sumatra the horn of the rhinoc
eros is esteemed as a cure for poison,
and for that reason is made into drink
ing cups.
London's exports to the United
States for November were more than
$14,574,000, as agatnst less than $12,
000,000 for October.
Gold-mining companies in South
Africa are experimenting with blast
ing by electricity with a view to mini
mizing the fine dust, which is regard
ed as the chief cause of miners’
phthisis.
fn Serbia every growm man can
claim five acres of land from the gov
ernment, which is exempt from all
chaims of debt.
A Philadelphia surgeon is combat
ing diseases peculiar to certain races
by transfusing to patients blood from
members of other races that seem im
mune to the maladies.
A miner lowered into a subterra
nean cavern opened by a miner's blast
at Volcano, Nev.. some time ago, was
unable to discover the ends of the
fissure. Stones dropped through the
opening coulil ie hoard bounding from
wall to wall, 'rut there was no sound
indicating thU they reached the bot
tom. Sparkling stalactites on the sides
of the cavera were revealed by lights
lowered through the opening.
The Mississippi river carries more
than 1,000,000 tons of material to the
Golf of Mexico every day.
For Oiling Shaftings.
There is danger in the oiling of
shaftings. Even though the machinery
Is stopped, someone is likely to start,
it before the worker is through with
hia task. This element of danger is
removed through the invention of an
oiler, which may be used while the
worker stands on the floor, thus obvi
ating the necessity of going among
running belts, pulleys and shafts, pos
sibly on a rickety ladder.
CASTQRIA
Forlnfents^and^Childrem
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
ALCOHOL- 3 PER CENT | W
.[p>, AVegctahlePreparalionforAs- R "Rnoya +TlO
»tH similatingtheFoodandRegula- | JJvdlo L1LU
ting the Strmiaclisand Bevels of g Mt
M i Signature
.. ...— '=1
jJ, Promotes Digestion,Checrful- |
•re ness and Rest.Contains neither I
Opimn,Morphine norMuicraL jj
Not Narcotic.
iJj-M X*apc ofOU Dr.SA>W£L hTOIES
: Pumpkin Seed • %
;0wA Abe Senna » \
|HJ r> Pochette Salts* 1
Vt Anise Seed * I
*<»i*C Peppermint \
• Bi-Carbonate Soda * {
JO®*" Worm Seed \
. • Clarified Sugar 1
Cu ® Wuitergrecn Flavor /
---
1 cj* A perfect Remedy for Consflpa
|S*i® tion.Sonr Stomach. Diarrhoea,
ItV•? Worms. Feverishness and iSiiaw
&S Loss OF Sleep. (-Qf UV8T
8V]Cw fae-Simile Signature of
§ J=*r. Thirty Years
(^SCflSTBitiA
Exact Copy of Wrapper the centaur company, new yorr cmr.
Efficiency built the Panama Canal, after inefficiency failed.
The efficiency of the Panama Canal doubled the effective
ness of the LT. S. Navy without adding a ship to it. It
took over 8,000 miles out of the trip from New York to
San Francisco and changed the highway between London
and Australia from Suez to Panama.
Efficiency insures against lost motion—it produces the ut
most sendee out of equipment and yields the finest product, at
the least cost.
Certain-teed
Roofing
is an efficiency product
Every advantage that men, money and machinery can offer is used
to increase the production, maintain the quality and lower the cost.
Each of the General’s enormous mills is advantageously located
to serve the ends of efficient manufacture and quick distribution.
Each is equipped with the most up-to-date machinery. Raw
materials are purchased in enormous quantities and far ahead of
the needs of manufacturing, thus guarding against increased
cost due to idle machinery. This also insures favorable buying,
and the pick of the market.
Expert chemists at each mill rxe employed to select and blend the
asphalts, and every roll of CERTAIN-TEED is made under
their watchfui rare.
CERTAIN-TEED resists the drying-out process so destructive
to ordinary’ roofing, because the felt is thoroughly saturated with a
blend of soft asphalts, prepared under the formula of the General’s
board of expert chemists. It is then coated with a blend of harder
asphalts, which keeps the inner saturation soft. This makes a
roofing more pliable, and more impervious to the elements than
the harder, drier kind.
CERTAIN-TEED is made in rolls; also in slate-surfaced shingles.
1 here is a type ot Llk I AIin
TEED for every kind of building,
with flat or pitched roofs, from the
largest sky-scraper to the smallest
residence or out-building.
CERTAIN-TEED is guaranteed for
5, 10 or 15 years, according to ply
(1,2 or 3). Experience proves that
it lasts longer.
Uener&l Kootmg Manufacturing company
World’* Largest Manufacturers of Roofing and Building Papers
New York City Chicago Philadelphia St. Louis Boston Cleveland
Pittsburgh Detroit San Francisco Cincinnati New Orleans
L«s Angeles Minneapolis Kansas City Seattle Indianapolis
Atlanta Richmond Houston Loudon Sydney
We are wholesale distributors of Certain-teed Products. Dealers should write
us for prices and information.
Carpenter Paper Company, Omaha, Neb.
Nebraska Directory
THEPflXTOHlM
Booms (ram (UK) up single, 75 cents op double.
CAFI PRICES RKASOKABLE
Good Serum Will rtL.L,,*
ssMs Gnoiera
Css U. B. Got. Licensed Be rum. Phone, wire, write
or call on OMAHA SERUM COMPARE, 96th
ft OSts.,S.Omaha, Neb., Phone South 9666
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 13-1916.