The Influence Of Good Digestion is tar reaching. It means Better Appetite— Proper Assimilation_ Liver and Bowel Regularity— Improved Health— To gig Digestian—TRY HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters It Heips nature In Every Way .... v// ^ For “Backward” Cows \JLJ A JkJ W!* TX **•>** r*iwi*» to W f\>r* 1 ML U *rl- ummzmm of arr * *• °r’®* « ? l» ~Zc+m+ «4> iu; •* car iul. •«? !*** ~ a io.B>* !i«t» Will I«r Ba d *■" t ►* 1» •*-*■*. la A* bw*f» «*» u*-y dra« -Utoa: !"•-•* «mc tart* a* mar. ta* ta ■' • fiuar srfin naasar* Mtr fc.aH*- f AU ^ ‘-r rt:j (vMMiPd'a- add r*s* S&.A . J b«TITI TL SI IWtiiliMi € oaorii ** « g. »» • .--r. ■ J. a. Mai Mmatw. Co.'ectea ~W .iit was the import of his a"j «#■*•«* tiT He made OF iHTEREST TO MOTHERS The oust of field today is a serious tt •». - i*. a if yMa. To ^ down y»«r food Ml it tad ar the same time inipr..T. the ijei.it}, of you*- family. •" • 'fo r Steiner's Mata-om and Scagriett <*r three flm.- femxteet. r '• t- « '*- ami thrive on it. It "•• best t. -.-.hi.- food tor adults, the St;inner Mfr Co., Omaha for beautiful tie* hoot telling h 't. stw it in a hundred ways. '■ » free to every toother.—Adv. Unde*- War. ~Z a t.r ft* pnr >L r I wi'*» to O a* U*lU*u+: Amtmm. Me Maj S 1*H. The jef - t Who Rands ’.Si - give is to ItalpL E. L«> r.e 1 will all uty estate to him. to pa* Ji'tu to wU other heirs, and set a •• * for Re- In the yard, ‘liaries f*uriaMa. to.menses. J. I*. Hutchin wib Ash well. L V. Mc-Kenney." A of - t». w.: nesses to the will are 3 sad the wui was proved by jrot :t-g The lnaa*twTrT!ag off the witnesses. tie*. Mr f*u*iiii,,,o died he was ^np ;* so te j .Tactically a pauper, but •'■■■’ tea- i ltitot*siiis showing de I iii'Ha off amts than fSRJWO were foand ‘ m the litt - t. tease at Mars! on'* ' srret in which he bad lived for 30 'ears as a harmlt. v tk bardly the ■ee« iwttoe* off life. Mr. Locke. to m. to left ti* estate, t* a nephew. Mr Lurie ttM. long ago Wen' to the - at kiHua'n Owner and found an «4d wallet hidden among the mat --■ -~ if the bed. In the wallet be i foam -te will, and tied ap with it a , w.-rt. ba'tered copy of the New Teitaaxat. Friends” Who Are Worst Foes By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. ' ii{ *** I might have known " •*: ‘*f *« soon. alas' I learned— T- - bear* ran bind itself alone. A- J fa.: may oft be tinret..rned. sentiment in this world n • *re eagerly sought and longed for __than friendship " men is supi founded on a rock was built upou th* quicksands. She is forever iu her {•oner. The meanest advantage such a jHT-i t can take of her is to make th- guardianship of her secret the l*is-is of borrowing money from her. The vi tim fears to refuse. If there were no obligations between them ‘The frien ;■ would ask the favor hesitat ingly. If the whip handle has been j : vd in her hands, she forever holds the weapon over the other woman's head. The favor she asks, or rather demands, grows in proportion to the other woman's fear. In a burst of confidence, a woman **n*-- told an intimate friend that her husband laid been accused of a crime, «■ l»4 »*H *i-»*H"H-i-i *M*+*f»» I +4 i Mothers’ Cook Book | ♦ t 4-o-s-eo-a-i-m-i. -t-i--i. i-o-i a-t-e-n--sa-t-n Love of home and of whal home stands .or converts the drudgery of daily routine Into a h gher order of social service. Veal Omelet. Put three cupfuls of cooked veal through the meat chopper with a good slice of salt pork and three small crackers rolled toe, then add one beat en egsr *vv.. ta bit-spoonfuls of softened I ’jC'T one teaspoonful of salt, a little jtepj^r and nutmeg. Mold in the form of an oblong loaf, put in a pan with softened butter and fine cracker crumbs. Paste several times, adding more crumbs so th*t at the last it may have a brown crust. Bake one hour; serve tlnnly sliced with tomato sauce. Caper Stuffing for Fish. Take three slices of dry bread and a small slice of salt pork finely hopjied. Pnur laiiling water over the bread, squeeze dry, add the pork, a tabiespoonfnl of melted butter and one teaspoon! ul of cajiers chopiied. a half tea spoonful of marjoram, mix well and stuff the fish. French Roast Goose. Clean and truss a young fat goose, removing ah the fat possible from the vent. Stuff with bread, four iiarboiled onions, a tnblespoonful of chopped parsley, a half cupful of cooked chest nuts. a little grated nutmeg, and salt and pepper. Put the goose in a sauce j«un. breast down, on a bed of sliced carry-'- ■ --iery and one onion chopped tine, a little marjoram, dove and pars ley sprinkled over the vegetables. Cook in a very hot oven for b*U minutes, then lo* .-r the heat and cook three and a half hours slowly for a six-pound goose. Use ii»e giblets for a sauce. Brown four tablespoonfuls of flour with tlie same amount of fat. add a I half cupful of water and. when smooth, add milk to thin the sauce to the right consistency. A half cupful of ripe olive*, chopped, added to the sauce im proves it. Cream Cucumber Sauce for Fish. Beet a cupful of cream until stiff and add a table-spoonful of vinegar. If 'he cream Is sour less vinegar is need ed. Add a half cupful of finely-cut cu cumber to the cream, season with salt and i*epper. I but. as it could not be proved against him. he was set free. They had sold , all their effects and journeyed over a thousand miles Fist to begin life anew. This burst of confidence cost the wife every cent she could rake for years, until by accident the real culprit was arrested in the far West and all tarnish wa removed from the name of the man who was suffering i long from false accusations. There should be a limit between the | closest of friendships indulged in by ; women. Borrowing should Dot be en ! couraged unless It is unavoidable. A proud, spirited woman will go without before she will ask for any article she wishes to obtain. Certainly she should be chary about borrowing money. No housewife should borrow food from neigh Ivors to entertaiu diu i uer guests. One might just as well consider borrowing table, chairs. | dishes and best table nappery. Never I borrow even from your closest friend. (Copyright. 1916.) __ 1SS * :«•: World's Election Laws ♦ m :« :• Election laws throughout the world vary enormously. We take it as a matter of course that a man or woman must be twenty-one years old to vote, Girard observes in the Philadelphia Ledger. In Hungary men vote at twenty, but in Austria, which the Irish bulhnaker would designate the “major hair’ of i Emperor Charles Joseph s empire, men I must be twenty-four. We hear a great deal about ITus sianism these days. A Prussian can not vote under twenty-five. Nor can the conquered Belgian cast a ballot at a more tender age. Up in Denmark folks grow up slow ly. and thirty years is the minimum limit for a voter. Japauese arc sup posed to know enough at twenty-five to use the ballot wisely. The czar fixes things nicely in the matter of elections. As you know, he has a great army even in times of peace. But no Bussian soldier can vote. Nor can a Russian student or poliee man. The theory is that these classes of men can easily congregate so as to act in unison, which might at certain times cause formidable combinations. In Portugal domestic servants were formerly not allowed to vote. French and Italian soldiers when un der arms cannot enjoy the franchise. England disqualifies anybody who ac cepts charitable relief, but she also puts a premium upon the highbrow. The United Kingdom's eight univer sities send nine members to parlia ment. _ CARELESS SNEEZING AND ITS DANGERS By DR. SAMUEL C. DIXON. Commissioner of Health of Pennsyl vania. Let the innocent bystander neware of the careless or ignorant individual who takes no pre caution to cover the nose and mouth to catch the spray when sneezing. Such careles-. ness shotted tie resent ed as yon would resent the danger ous habit of spit | ting. When you sneeze, a spray of i the secret! ons trom the mucous membrane of the respiratory tract and ! the throat is thrown into the air for ! quite some distance around you. This » spray often carries germs of disease. : From some forms of leprosy and tuher ' culosis. thousands of germs that will produce those diseases, are breathed , in by those who are standing within the zone of the spray. Many of the influenzas or so-called colds are comm uni rated from one per son to another in the same way. Some healthy people have disease-producing organisms that are sneezed out and if taken into the respiratory tract of oth ers who have less resistance, they will lead to serious results. Mirrors at Curves. To make me world-famed scenic i drive Through Denver’s municipal mountain park system all the more I safe and enjoyable, tw large mirrors ! have been placed at the sharpest curves ou the Bear creek canyon sec tion of the road. These provide a practical guard against accidents by enabling people to see whether any motor cars or other vehicles are ap proaching from the opposite side of the curve. The mirrors are three feet higli by live feet wide and are mount ed on iron pij*c securely cemented in solid rock on the outer edge of the road. They are carefully set in heavy wood frames which are covered by the substantial and attractive copper covering used in connection -..-1th plate glass in store fronts. The frames are so constructed as to prevent injury from moisture. The cost of the mir rors and the work of installing amounts to about $50 each. Hard to Please. “That manicure made a poor job of my nails." “But the smile she gave yon!" “Shucks! 1 dofl*t deny that it made my heart heat faster for a moment, but I fail to see how her smile improved my personal appea ranee." Even Faces of Immigrants Changed by Air of Freedom In America. Says Londoner “There Is something in America that seems to change even the physiognomy of the jieople who come here and they become American in looks as well as in thought." said a London doctor while visiting here. “They are beginning to recognize this American type abroad. Even those who were not born in ! America develop into the American type after ten or twenty years in this country. Perhaps it is the freedom of thought and action that brings about the change. You know the poor man of Europe—the peasant—has no free dom of action and thought, and when he comes to America and learns what it is to act as he likes and think as he likes it changes his whole countenance. This is wlmt makes the American type, even of the immigrants, after they have had a few years of this new spir itual atmosphere. “One must occasionally go to Europe to appreciate America. Here you all have opportunity. You '-an tune your little home and can work if you wilL No one need go hungry nor ask char ity here. “Europe will not recover her posi tion of two years ago in generations. How long it will take no man can tell. But today the best blood is be ing i«oured out on the field of battle, the best of her children are dyiug by thousands of diseases back of the lines of battle. Science will be calling for men to push on her work and the men who would have answered the call will be found to have died on the bat tlefield. The ablest physicians of the future are dying in the trenches, the l>est artisans, the greatest teachers anti the most ferule-minded invent ors." Kept at Home. “Is your outlook on life changed, now that yon are a married man?" “I suspect so." replied the benedict who was formerly a gay bachelor. “At least I am denied the opportunities for studying jug..? I used to have." Things That Are New. A new stock for shotguns is so formed that it he held in the usual way against a man's right shoulder, hut aimed with his left eye. A British inventor has perfected a single davit that launches a boat from a ves**.| with a sling and automatically releases it as soon as it touches the water. A new light automobile is driven by the friction of drums at the ends of its crank shaft against the tires of its rear wheels and is steered through piv oted axles. Australian engineers have invented three-rail switches for use by rail-; roads where three rails are laid in J mcb track to accommodate rolling Mini of different gauges. To save time in unloading hulk cargoes from vessels there has heeu j invented a gasoline propelled moto*-' scoop that can l>e driven about their j decks and holds. To prevent ihe formation of wrin- ; kies around the eyes a German has in- I vented a resilient hand tc be worn ■ around a person's head, terminating in j adhesive ends that draw the flesh track, j ’Two California bakers have patent- ' ed a self-oiling machine that clips the tops of loaves of bread before they are baked, producing an ornamental and ! much l>ettcr browned crust. Valuable Booca. Some of the most valuable prehis- j toric tames in the world have been • unearthed ia and about Los Angeles j county. CaL Recently some workmen I who were cutting a new road, came across the retrains of a monster whale. With little respect for the relic they had discovered, the work men went right on cutting their street through a section of the whale. These fossils are thought to be thou sands of years old. The backbone measures three feet across, and its vertebrae are large enough to be used as seats. Famous Dive. A Greek sponge-iishennnn's dive to a depth of 26l’ feet in the sea is be lieved to be the world's record for a man unprotected by any sort of diving apparatus. +*+-Ml 1 I 1 1 1 1 II 1 I 1 I I I I 1 1 1 | | •L + t Poultry Pointers | Tim minim fk i m i The direct rays of the sun will kill disease germs if they come in contact with them, and this shows how neces sary it is to have clean, large windows in the henhouse to permit the son's rays free access. If it has uot been done, be sure that the henhouse roof is water-tight and the sides windproof so that the house can be kept dry and the fowls protect ed from drafts, especially when on the roosts at night. Plenty of good yellow com. fed twice or three times a day. all they will eat each time, will make the geese nice and fat for the market. If there is a pile of old house piaster anywhere on the premises, dump some of it in the corner of the poultry house. Whatever you do or leave undone, do not allow the drinking dishes to re main unfilled for any leugth of time «ienernlly speaking, an average hen will eousume three ounces of grain per day. or over a bushel in the course of a year. Keep the henhouses away from the ham unless you do not mind the ani mals becoming infested with lice. Fowls and animal- should not be quartered under the same roof. Turkeys eat iess and sell for more per ixrnad than anything raised on the farm. K“ep an egg record and do not fail to make entries daily. Hens like to lay whi -e they see an egg. Wise and Otherwise. The man who is always right is al ways a uuisaure. One taste of success is better than a meal of defeat. There an- niatsv touching incidents in the life t., a enronic borrower. Many a man's wife dresses stylishly because ois creditors can afford it. Never judge a mail by his stylish ciothes—perhaps his wife bought them. When a woman pounds the piano she does it because she wants to, or !»ecause her neighbors don't want h >rifr. a harsh, crumbly hread results. The least amount of flour iKiss:!.le to avoid a sticky dough, gives the liest bread. The quick even stroke in kneading counts for more than the strength put into it. A thorough kneading dis tributes the yeast plants evenly throughout the dough and results in : bread of the best texture as the gas bubbles rise evenly. I lough should be ; kneaded until it lias a smooth velvety I surfaee. If kneaded longer than 30 minutes. the elastic quality is com pletely destroyed. Yeast plants thrive at a temperature of from TP to 95 degrees Fahrenheit. When dough is set to rise, it should . Ik* placed in a dean bowl. If the bowl I is covered tightly and an even temiK'r ature maintained, it is not necessary J either to oil or moisten the surface to prevent a crust from forming. If the temperature is t(H> high, the bread will he dark, coarse and sour. If the dough is chilled while rising, the volume will Ik* smaller, the texture rubbery, and ! an undesirable crust will form. Best results are obtained when dough is kept at a gentle, warm, even tempera i tnre until it is twice its hulk, and then i worked. Baking requires as much care as ! mixing, kneading and rising. The tem perature of the oven should be 360 degrees Fahrenheit when the bread is | placed in it. It should lie allowed to rise after fifteen minutes and lowered after thirty minutes. The bread should begin to brown in patches during the i first fifteen minutes and should have j an even, brown surface after thirty minutes. If the dough is not twice its original hulk or as light as desired, it may be allowed to finish rising in the oven. Fancy Cream Cheese Service. I'ream cheese nowadays is being sea soned in all sorts of ways after lieing softened a little with cream and but ter. Pimentos are dried, stuffed with a rather highly seasoned cheese, so prepared and dulled, then cut in slices to serve as a highly ornamental gar nish for a salad, increasing its food value. A pretty thing for the fiuish to a simple luncheon or for a substantial mouthful for an afternoon tea is the following: Spit Boston crackers and toast them. Soften cream cheese with cream or even with milk, put through a pastry tube onto each half of the cracker, completely filling it with a rosette. Ton may sprinkle a bit of paprika in the middle of a tiny bit of pimento. Riced Oyster Soup. Drain four dozen oysters in a colan der: pour the juice into a soup kettle: add one-fourth teas]>ooiifnl of black pepper: let come to a boil: skim when near boiling point. In a saucepan boll one quart of milk. When the milk be gins to boil pour it into the oyster juice: drop into the combination a tabiespoonful of butter in which fw© tahlespnonfuls of boiled rice have been rubbed. Stir the soap constantly to prevent burning. As sen as it comes to a boil the second time throw in the oysters and let scald until the edges cnrl and separate. Drop salt. |>epper. a tablespoonful of butter and a sprig I of i«rsley into the soup tureen: i>onr the soup into it and servo immediately. Delicate Indian Pudding. Boi! one quart of milk, sprinkle into It two heaping teaspoonfuls Indian meal, stirring all the time to keep from scorching. Cook 12 minutes, add one teaspoonfn! barter. Beat all to gether Three eggs, one teaspoonful salt, four tablespoonfuls sugar, one-half teaspoonful ginger. Add gradually to the milk. Bake slowly one hour. Serve with whipj«ed cream, sweetened with powdered sugar and one tea spoonful vanilla. This is very deH \ cions. __ English Tea Cake. Take one cupfnl sugar, one-half cup ful hurter (melted), one Teaspoonful each of nutmeg, dove and cinnamon, one cupfnl sour milk, two cupfuls flour, one teaspoonful soda (well-rounded), one cupful raisins. Mix the sugar and spices together, add the butter and cream well. Put soda in the sour milk and add to the mixture, stir in the flour, and last the raisins, well floured. No eggs.' Pond Lily Salad. Boil six eggs thirty minutes. When cokl remove sbeils and cut eggs in halves crosswise. Cut whites in strips to resemble petals and lay on small lerruce leaf, with one-half yolk In center. Sared the largest lettuce leaves, arrange in bottom of platter, pour dressing over, then lay the let tuce leaves and egg and garnish with radishes. Wire Rods. Often in a country bungalow or up in the attic loft we desire to put up curtains, but do not care to spend any extra money for curtain rods. Strings will sag after a time, hut an excellent substitute for a rod is a ! wire stretched tight. THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY TROUBLE ANOJJUNT KNOW IT Weak and unhealthy kidneys cause so much sickness and suffering and when through neglect or other causes, kidney trouble ia permitted to continue, serious results may be expected Your other organs may need attention — but your kidneys should have attention first because their work is most important If you feel that s our kidneys are the cause of your sickness or run down con dition commence taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy because if it proves to be the remedy you need and your kidneys begin to improve they will help all the other organs to health Prevalency of Kidney Disease. Most people do not realize the alarm ing increase and remarkable prevalency of kidney disease. While kidney dis orders are among the most common dis ease* that prevail, they are almost the last recognized by patients, zi ho usually content themselves n-zih aoaoring 'hi effects, while the original disease con stantly undermines the system. A Trial Will Convince Anyone. Thousands of people have testined that the mild and immediate effect of ' Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy , is soon realized and that it stands the highest for its remarkable results in the most distressing cases. Symptoms of Kidney Trouble. Swamp-Root is not recommended for j everything but if you suffer from annoy ing bladder troubles, frequently pa*M.ig ; water night and day, smarting or irriga tion in passing, brick-dust r sediment, ; headache, backache, lame back, dizzi j ness, poor digestion, sleeplessness. ners ' ousness heart disturbance due to bad 1 kidnev trouble, skin eruptions from bad blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago, bloating, irritability, worn-cut feeling, lack of ambition, may be loss of tlesh or sallow complexion, kidney trouble in it* worst form may be stealing upon you. Swamp-Root Is Pleasant to Take. If you are already convinced thzt ■ Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular nfty-cent and on* , dollar size bottles at all drug stores. SPECIAL NOTE—You may obtain a sample size bottle of Swamp-Root by enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer £ Co.. Binghamion. K. Y. Tins gives you the opportunity to prove the remarkable men: of this medicine. They trill also send you a book of valuable information, containing many of the thousands of grateful letters received from men and women who say thev found Swamp-Root to be just the remedy needed in kidney, liver and bladder troubles. The value and success of Swamp-Root are so well known that our readers are advised to send for a sample size bottle. Address l)r. Kilmer £ Co-, Binghamton, X. Y. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Helpful Work. The t'nitod States department of agriculture has a large force which de votes its entire time to developing new by-products ami methods of saving material now wasted. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA. that famous old remedy i for infants and children, and see that it In Use for Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Wisdom. “An owl isn't really the bird of wis dom. He merely looks wise and does nothing.” “Well,” replied Senator Sorghum, "under the circumstances, isn't that * the wisest thing he eould do?” THICK. GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try It; Hair gets soft, fluffy and beautiful—Get a 25 cent bottle of Danderine. _ - If you care for heavy hair that glis tens with tieauty and is radiant with life; has an incomparable softness and Is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine. i Just one application doubles the j beauty of your hair, besides it imme diately dissolves every particle of dandruff. You can not have nice heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive* scurf robs ! the hair of its lustre, its strength and ; its very life, and if not overcome it I produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; tht* hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair falls out fast. Surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store and just try it.—Adv. Height of Boastfulness. “Isn't Blower inclined to be just a little boastful?” "Boastful? Well. 1 guess yes. After a beggar has Touched Blower for a nickel he will tell you that he has just j been giving a little dinner to an ac- 1 | quaintance of his.” SOUR. ACID STOMACHS. GASES OR INDIGESTION Each “Pape’s Diapepsin” digests 3DOC grains food, ending all stomach misery in five minutes. Time it! In five minutes all stom ach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas. acid, or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. : It is the surest, quickest stomach rem edy in the whole world and besides it is harmless. Put an end to stomach trouble forever by getting a large fifty-cent case of Papes Diapepsin i from any drag store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suf fer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world.—Adv. — No News. Teacher—Tour daughter, sir, has a line carrying voice. Father—I know that by the way it is carrying off my money. i~ i ... uj an ——^ Tm*« SeStotw 'Naart« xL tm a vtr *t« n* liw %m\+ " FW SKxSMfOfii Qmk »S Wm^f Ilfxaad m* -* «~rr D« Uk? f. P«Mf mv m> vs-i »u»V H you art exposed to rain or snow you should take two or three doses of Boschee’s German Syrup the universal rented' tor colds or bron chitis. Stands pre-eminent today after more than half a century of successful i treatment of the many disorders aris ing from exposure 25c. and 75c. sizes at all druggists hid dealersevery» here. Omaha Alfalfa Milling Co. | Members Omaha Hay Exchange Omaha Grain Exchange Stways la the market tor No. • ALFALFA-HAY WRITE rs OR TELEPHONE DOUGLAS SP1 330 GRAIN EXCHANGE. Omaha .Nehreahe BOWLES SHIPMENTS SECURED BT 5100,000.00 Capital stock best PRICES AMD FILLS. South Omaha Chicago Has. City Nebraska Directory JOS. BLISS & SON CO. LIVE STOCK COMMISSION Satisfactory sales. Prompt returns. If you want your slock sold on its merits, ami sold well, we invite you to ship to us. FEEDER ORDERS carefully filled. Get in touch WITH t'S for results. South Omaha, Nebraska IT PAYS TO SHIP CREAM DIRECT ALFALFA BUTTER GO., OMAHA Ask us to put your name on our quotation list that you may compare our prices with others ^ TAGG BROS. & MOORHEAD Inc., LIVE STOCK ' COMMISSION AGENTS ^ Umofl Sturt Tinls Onalu. net. McKenney Dentists PRICES always the same jL Vjt - . Rest 22k Gold CTowns . It (C I Ja. *■■ Bndpp Work pvr Tooth ta.eo WJ|k. kWlT. Bom hilv.r Killint.-s . . the *LL Wonder Plates KtQQ. tbJB.C2U.U0 Ciesn.n# T«-th the 13S4 FARhAM 'T.. eor. 14tf>. ftUltU HCD uver l. P. Ticket twice UmAnA, AID ELECTRICAL JOBBERS r.Mh Lights, Mazda Lamps, Electrical Sup p'd**. Lighting Fixtures. Gas Lighting Sup plies.. Vacuum cleaners. Electrical washing Machines, Electric Irons. Send for catalogue. BURGESS-GRANDEN CO. 2511 Howard St. Omaha. Neb. Hotel Loyal, Omaha Take Dodge Street Car From Stations ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF T?a+Si-00 op without bath, rvn tea ,$1.50 up with bath. The Hotel With a Reputation X. E. BRYANT—Pi up iefers O. L CARNEY 1 Swoboda FLORISTS Special attention to oot&ide oiden tor floral design, by mail or express Quick seme* 1415 FARMM ST, OMAHA. NCPRASHA Ship Turkeys, Poultry Capons. Veal. Rabbits, Butter, Egg's. Bides, etc. to PERRY a CO, OMAHA. NEB. ■We pay promptly CASH. Coops and Case*, furnished. 20 years ic Omaha. V'rite for tags. ANDIRONS E—err .king fra- the hearth. Send lor catalog. SUNDERLAND BROS 3*3 Sa. ! 7th. St. Omaha Mah. Hotel Castle 632 S. 16th Street . Omaha, Neb. j Sew, absolutely fireproof. 300 ROOKS * With prirate toilet 51.00; S with prieute bath *1^0 F FRED A. CASTLE, Proprietor 0NAH1IETUS RUBBER GO. OMAHA, NEBR. " f ate at present in the market for IOC cat'oa(is of Mixed 5rcm. Also all other grades of :-cr»p Metal asri Robber. Write n * for quotations at all times*. as it will pay you to eliminate the middleman and deal direct with the bi* dealer. IS FROZEN OR LEARS— SEND IT TO US. F. F. FINK, Auto Tinier 317 S. 20th ST. OMAHA. NEB. ALSO LAMP AND FENDER REPAIRING. DOCTORS MACH A MACH DENTISTS W 3rd Floor P»-ton Block HlStOft Forjkm Sts..Omaha WW V*mt rqospp^i Itontal Ufict* W in Otoi.i keoaunsbiF prn«* P Sp«eU2 cisoouut to al) peoi:* liTl&f MUlOC of OBltl. MID-WEST ELECTRIC CO. **• CimU». Neb. .0» Cherry feu lies Moines, I*. ELECTRICAL JOBBERS £25se h good s-ick of geaem supplies, both cities.