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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1917)
\ r*HEN«M \ \ .NEED OF M l \ ft TONIC OR 1 1 ^ \ \ VoU 1 \ should l \ TrY \ \ [waowl \ \ 1 STOWWiH 1 \ 1 bitters A \ ..I fpum *0TkB'ols t un -<our cor*5 , \ OR CRUUSES OFF "7»i» "* 4,<"“ * • -r.. .... .rt«TCd M i» called freerone, and can now be obtained in tiny bottle* aa here shown at very little «wt from any drug store. Just ask for freezone. Apply a drop or two directly upon a tender corn or <-allus and instant ly the soreness disappears. Shortly you will find the corn or callus so loose that you can lift it off. root and all. with the fingers. Not a twinge of pain, soreness or irritation; not even the slightest smart ing. either when applying freezone or afterwards. This drug doesn't eat up the corn or callus, but shrivels them so they loos en and ronie right out. It is no humbug! It works like a charm. For a few cents you can get rid of ev ery nara corn, sou corn or core l*et«<-ct» the toe*, a* well as pain ful <xlluses (Mi Uittom of your feet. It never disappoints and never barns, bites or Inflame* If your druggist b-.-n't any freezone yet. tell tlra to get a uttle bottle for you from bis wb«.:e*aie bouse.—adv. GIVES A MONOLITH TO POPE E»-d««ce of Early Christianity in Ch ra Presented to Benedict by New York Woman. Aft- -.ng to pope Ih-uedirt a • iwk: h. the gift of Mrs. -•-_e of New York city. Itev. i : r Ji.org.- Iff. Waring, chaplain of • K - iitli raulrr. U. S. A„ statlon •-! at Ji- ..-m-.r's island, has returned. 1*..- f .-no, he said, “is a repro • -'i *»f a monument .-retted at *' ■ 1.1 China, in the seventh century. *•> N- -i«ru»n heretics of the Christian ■1 The inscription* on the big -••'tie in Chinese and Assyrian, prove v.-lv that Christianity had ob • .• d a foot bold In China at that •-ir • [eriid. Tlie monolith was . t to re by Iw. Fritz Holtu. and .fit years it was exliiMted at the Am. ncaa Uiastan of Art. Then it - pur. based by Mrs. I^eary. in ■ 1* behalf I took It to IbMne to pr.-*. : it to the pope. who had it set op in the Vatican museum." ■ ell |tle:.sed was the pope with the »••• -iith that he conferred upon •i<er Warit.g the cross Pro Kcclesla I** j-.t. e and gave to him an auto i-..t tied photograph. *Twouldn't Help Him Any. ~! e noticed one thing while jour •".ung through this vale of tears." “Pray enlighten me." “Tow never heard a henpecked mar ••eil man excusing himself on the hat he |a too proud to fight." Old Fashioned Ideas are being supplanted daily by newer and better things. This is particularly true where health and efficiency are concerned. In hundreds of thous- ! ands of homes where cof fee was formerly the table drink, you will now find POSTUM It promotes health and efficiency, and the old time nerve-frazzled coffee drink er soon gives place o the t alert, clear-thinker who drinks delicious Postum and knows “There's a Reason" /to chan/ft in price, quality or cite of package. EPITOME OF EVENTS _ \ PARAGRAPHS THAT PERTAIN TO MANY SUBJECTS. ARE SHORT BUT INTERESTING Brief Mention of What is Transpiring In Various Sections of Our Own and Foreign Countries WASHINGTON. An extra session of congress not later than June, now is generally con ceded among administration officials to he assured. • • e Both Secretary Lansing and Attor ney < icneral tiregnry have advised President Wilson that he inis full au thority to arm merchant ships against illegal attacks by Herman submarines. • • * The senate by a vote of 7t> to 3 put power in the hands of two-thirds of It' members in the future to limit dis cussion anti to say when a vote shall be taken on a pending measure. The organized filibuster. it' recognized in the senate, is tlead. • • « Secretary Baker said tliat he was planning visits to the Mexican border, the Philippines, the canal zone. Alas ka the Ihtnisli West Indies. Hawaii and all important war department posts, as soon as eonditions matte it possible for hint t<> leave Washington. • * • The federal tratle commission ac cepted a propositi by news print [taper manufacturers that it fix it price for their produets and named $2.50 a hun dred |siunds its a reasonable charge. Higher priees were set for paper In less than carload lots and for sheet pn|ier. • • • The supreme court has decreed res toration tn her Knglish owners of the liner Appam and cargo brought into Hampton Roads, more than a year ago by a prize crew from the German raider Moewe. Ship and cargo are trained at l>e:ween three anti four mil lion dollars. • • • Postmaster General Burleson an nounced that after April 1 the ap pointments of all postmasters of the first, second and third class W’ould be subject to competitive examinations. In tanking -elections the president would he guided by the results of ex eminations. • • • To encourage small towns and vil lages to maintain national guard units, the war department has author ized the establishment of detached platoons. Two or more of these pla toons coming from nearby towns would form a company in a regiment organized In that part of the state. • * • Inventory of tin- quantity of cereals of the 1910 crops remaining on farms March 1 made In the Bepartment of Agriculture and announced in its March crop rejwirt. disclosed a mate rial • sluetion of -locks as compared with othet years. As the result the department has issued it warning to farmers not to part with their val uable soil ami thereby endanger the coming season's crops. DOMESTIC. Woodrow Wilson is the tenth pres ident of the I'nited States to lie elect ed for a second term. The other nine were Wa-hlngtoii-Jefferson. Madison. Monroe. Jack-on. Lincoln, Grant, Cleveland ami McKinley. • • * Automobile exports reached a total In 19!« of SI.'P-.lisp.olt. an increase of neurit SlS.nno.tioti over 191.'. accord ing to figures compiled by the Nation al Automobile chamber of commerce of New York. • * • A man who gave his name as Fritz Kolk. arrested at Hoboken. N. J., op posite the piers where German steam ship- are tied up. is alleged by the po lice to have eonfessed that he con spired in a "plot to blow up President Wilson.” * m * From the 21.071.076 men fn the United ''fates between the ages of 18 an* 1 I.', an army of 4,778.050 physi cally tit. immarried males, would he avuiluhle for war. according to the re port of the executive committee of the committee on national defense ap pointed by Mayor Mitchell of New Yorlc. • • * After listening to an address by Theodore Roosevelt, the citizens of Oyster Ray at a mass meeting, decid ed to “adopt" a Belgian village of 2.4**o children. Tlie plan will call for a contribution of $2,400 a month. • « • only two physicians, one a woman, Dow remain in Jerusalem to minister to the so.oon inhabitants who are threatened hy the epidemic of typhus which has prevailed since October, according to a report received in New York. • • • The Iowa State department of jus tice. at T>«*s Moines, ruled that news pnjMTs printing the American flag at the head of their editorials or at any other plaee in the paper are violating the federal law. • • • Orders were received by army offic ials at San Antonio. Tex., to “speed up" the return movement of state troops from the border so that all or ganizations will he home for muster out by April 1. State troops on the border approximate 30,000 men. • * * Reports submitted to the Chicago bureau of food Inspection of tlie heulth department showed that there are more than 50,000,000 pounds of beef In the various cold storage ware houses In the city. Four inmates of the Boone county l>oor house nt Boone, In., were burned to death in a fire which completely de stroyed the building. * • * A gift of $250,000 to the perma nent fund of the relief department of the combined boards of ministerial re lief and sustenation fund of the Pres byterian church. F. S. A., was an nounced at Philadelphia h.v the offi i cers of the board. I to disclose the source of its informa tion 'concerning articles it publishes and that no one can be forced to tell who wrote the article, was llie ruling made by Judge Baldwin of the Chi cago circuit court. • * » Gold imports into 1 lie United States since January, 1915. reached a total of $1.901.500.000 with the arrival at New York a few days ago from Can ada of $5,000,000 consigned to J. P. Morgan A Co. Imports for this year j amount to $164,000,000. • • • President Alfred E. Craig of Moru ingside college. Sioux City. la., in ad | dressing the students attacked the ! two Iowa senators. A. B. Cummins and i \V. S. Kenyon, for taking jtart in the | filibuster against the armed neutral ity bill, and called their actions shameful and next to treason. FOREIGN. George IV. Guthrie. American am ■ Imssador to Japan since 1919. died i suddenly of apoplexy at Tokio.' * * • A new Zeppelin, oil speed trials at | Ghent, caught fire and was com | pictely destroyed, and the entire crew i perished. * * • The milk supply of the German cap ital bus been further reduced and now amounts to about 99 per cent of tlie quantity used in peace time. * * • Couut Zeppelin, builder of the world's first. dirigible balloon, died March 8 at Charlottenburg. near Ber lin. from inflammation of the lungs. * m m As a consequence of the sinking of Dutch vessels by German submarines, orders have been issued that bread shall be baked in Holland from po- ! tato flour. * • * Sale of ail spirits and other alco holic liquors has been prohibited in Denmark. The order is temporary and culls for returns to be made on all stocks of spirits in the country. • • • Herr Fokker. the builder of one of the most successful military flying machines used in the German and Austrian armies, predicts an era of aerial passenger traffic after the war. • • • Foreign Secretary Zimmermana’s instructions to the German minister to Mexico, as published in the United Slates are admitted in Berlin to have 1 been correctly quoted. According to a 1 dispatch from Berlin. • • • Ex-President Jose Miguel Gomez, head of the liberal revolutionary movement in Cuba, is a prisoner in Havana, together with several mem- j tiers of his staff, among them Colonel | Quinones, his chief lieutenant in the ; field. WAR NEWS. The destroyer Cassini, one of the allied Mediterranean patrol boats, has been sunk by a submarine with the ; loss of 107 men. Berlin reports that I the Russian armored cruiser Ryurik ; lias been badly damaged by striking a mine in the Gulf of Finland. • • • The report current in I>ondon that Holland is determined to lay up her ships rather than expose them to the dangers of the German submarine war allies should adopt retaliatory meas zone is causing so much irritation . that it would not he surprising if the ures against Holland. • • * Austria’s reply to the American re quest for a clearer definition of her attitude in the submarine situation leaves a way open for further negotia tions. delaying temporarily at least the break which has been regarded as inevitable since the break between the United Slates and Germany. • * * Food Controller Dr. George Mich aelis, in addressing the Prussian diet recently, declared the distress was such that a more severe state of things, especially in the large indus trial centers, could hardly be imag ined. He said that very radical meas ures were needed to enable the people to bold out until next year. • * * British cavalry has advanced to a point within nine miles of Olesiplion. on the Tigris front, it was announced officially at London. The British are now less than thirty miles from Bag dad. • • • Twenty-three American ships have been attacked, twelve have been de stroyed by mines or submarines, four Americans have been killed and six have been wounded in Germany's nav al oprations against American ship ping since the start of the war. • • • A British destroyer was sunk with all hands in the North sea on March 1. the admiralty announced. It is be lieved it struck a mine, the announce ment states. • • • Shipping destroyed since the war began, exclusive of war vessels, rep resents 10 per cent of the world’s I merchant marine as it existed Au gust 1, 1914. A total of 2,573 vessels of 4,811.100 gross tons, of which more than half was owned by Great Brit ain. has been destroyed. • • * y Two submarines thnt recently re turned to their base sank fifteen steamers and seven sailing vessels ag gregating 64,500 tons gross, the Ger man admiralty announced. CONDENSED NEWS OF INTEREST TO ALL. \ DATES FOR COMING EVENTS. March 20-21—Royal Neighbors of Ne braska Stale Meeting.at Fremont. March 21-22-23— State Chapter I'. E. O. Annual Meeting at Fivmont. March 21-22-23—1). A. R. Annual State Convention at Fremont. March 29—North Nebraska High School Declamatory Contest at lVayne. April 9-1-4—Annual State Bowling Tournament at Fremont. April 21-22—Missouri Valley Chiro practors’ Association Meeting at Omaha. May 4—Group No. 2 Nebraska Bank ers' Association Convention at Co lumbus. May 8-9— Knights of Columbus State Meeting at Alliance. Frank Knapp, who brought T.ooo bushels of potatoes to Fremont, from his ranch in Kimball county last fall, lias disposed of the Iqst of them at $2.25 a bushel. He received tin aver age price of $1.50 a bushel for liis en tire crop of 12.000 bushels. Work on the brick exterior of the new Pathfinder hotel at Fremont lias reached the fourth story. A large force of men is being employed in an effort to have the hostelry complete by .lune 1. The building 'is six stor ies high anil will cost $230,000. Announcement lias been made that the I'nion Pacific Railroad company will build a new jiassenger station at North Bend. Work on the structure will begin with the opening of spring. Nortli Platte has just dedicated a junior high school building that was erected at a cost of $58,000. The building is equipped with a "gym.” manual training and domestic science. Grand Island lias purchased a res idence for Bishop Duffey of that Gatli olic diocese, paying $11,000 for the property. Tiie bishop will move there from Kearney. The Merrick county commissioners have hired a manager and will run the county farm themselves, giving up the plan of letting the farm out to the highest bidder. The laboring men of Fremont have asked that a swimming pool and baths for the use of the public be in stalled in the new auditorium it is proposed to erect in the city. Hoskins has just voted on a water works proposition for the fourth time, this time with success to the projmsi tiott. The bonds to he issued will be for $8,500. Joe Steelier of Dodge and Earl Paddock of Anita. la., wrestlers, are to meet on the tnnt at Omaha April 8. A fast match is expected. Fred Schelstede of Richland sold a shipment of hogs at the South Omaha live stock market which netted him $14.55 per hundred pounds. Citizens of North Platte will vote on -three bond propositions totaling $34,000. at a special election to be held on April 5. A fifty-five acre farm located nine miles west of Omaha sold just recent ly for $13,750. or an average of $250 an acre. Proprietors of shoe shining parlors in Omaha have announced that here after the price of a week-day shine will lie 10 cents instead of 5. Business men of Wayne are behind a proposition to lnffld a 850.000 hotel in the city. Intersection paving bonds to tin amount of $40,000 were voted by the people of Beatrice at a special elec tion. One carload of hogs and a number of cattle were killed in a Burlington wreck in the Tecutnseh yards. Table Rock citizens got together re cently and re-organized their Com mercial cluh. Moot-field Farmers' Equity Union will build an elevator at that place in the near future. William Ernst, well-known farmer and breeder of Nebraska, and a fore most citizen of Johnson county, died at his home in Tecutnseh. He intro duced many specimens of grasses and vegetables to Nebraska, having been associated with the state board of ag riculture and the state university for years. The Saunders County Baseball league has been organized with tea*n> at Walioo. Ceresoo. Tutan. Cedar Bluffs. Morse Bluff and Memphis. Games will he played on Sundays dur ing the spring and sntnmer months. South Omaha live stock market led the world in receipts on March (i. with a total of 20.100 head of stock of all kinds. Chicago, second, had 20,000 head. Hogs sold for *14.20 a hundred pounds at Omaha and for $14.70 at Chicago on that date. Resolutions favoring a new capitol building for Nebraska and a provis ion whereby people of the state be given an opportunity to vote on a se lection of a site where It should he built, were adopted by the Kearney Commercial club. Scottsbluflf is to have a new hotel to cost in the neighborhood of $100, 000. W. H. Ostenberg. president of the Scottsbluflf National bank, and an Omaha capitalist are behind the pro ject. A shipment of hogs from Scott-s bluff county sold for $13.80 per hun dredweight on the South Omaha mar ket March 5, topping the market for that dny. A movement is on foot to build a new hospital in Aurora. The demand for such an institution is extremely urgent. One hundred head of horses and mules were shipped east from Beat rice a few days ago for service In the European war. The price paid for them averaged from $25 to $225 per head. Mrs. Sarah Mengholdt has pur chased the Marcus Stecks farm north of Nickerson, paying $140 an acre for the 222 acres. The transaction net ted $81,800. , Thirty-four Poland-Chlnn hogs were sold by Dlffey & Son at North Bend for an average of $106.47 per head. Applications for loans aggregating j $2,424,740 arc already on tile with the ! officers of the Federal Land hank of i Omaha. These are from the forty . nine .national farm loan associations already organized in this. the Kighth district. Nebraska leads the list with twenty-six associations already form ed. applying for a grand total of $L UtiSl.llSO. South Dakota, with fifteen associations, asks for $0o4.isn. Wy oming. with six associations, wants •$5435.900. Iowa lias two associations 1 and wants $115,500. The farm loan ] act requires these associations to suh ; scribe for stock in the Omaha Land | hank to the amount of 5 per cent of i the loans granted. Upon this basis ' tlie amount of loans asked for will I tiring an accumulation of $121,235 to j the capital stock of the Federal Land ! hank as soon as the loans are made. Scarcity of hogs is given by stock men as tlie cause of the present high price of porkers. The lowest price carload hogs ever brought on tlie Omaha marker was August 5, 181H5. when Frank Crittenden. South Omaha, sold some for $2.55. tin the same day Jake l’ayne and Dick Carpenter. Sar py county, sold a wagon load of hogs for $2.35. The lowest market aver age prices were on July 29. 1890. and August 5. 1890. when the average was $2.71. A herd from Xeligh top ped the South Omaha market on March 0. selling for $14.20 a hundred pounds. Old stockmen predict that before April 1 hogs will sell for $15 and eventually $20 per hundred weight. With his automobile converted into kindling-wood, when it was struck by a Burlington passenger train near Hastings. Orant Lovelndy was thrown 100 feet front the railroad crossing with no signs of injury other than a slight scratch on the hack of his hand. LoVriady is a farmhand for Menno Lay. six miles south -of Hast ings. Wheat is still alive in southeastern Nebraska. A number of observing far mers give it as iheir opinion that there is enough wheat alive to make practically a full crop. Some wheat is dead in every field. Ground which grew good corn in 1010 is in worst shape. All wheat needs moisture soon. •Ttist recently the congregation of the Prairie I'nion Baptist church, near Stella, held a monster jubilee celebra tion in honor of the fiftieth anniver sary of the founding of the institu tion. The Sunday school of the church was established in 1803. Over 4t») people were in attendance. Tlie Logan County Fair association is to erect a large amphitheater on its grounds this year, having decided on such action at a meeting held recently in Stapleton. Tlte association has a snug sum of money in the treasury ; which is to he spent on improvements j this year. All record prices for cattle at the South Omaha market were shattered when G. I’. Orton of Unadilla sold forty-one head for an average of i S11.75 ]«-r hundredweight. The sale j was made on March 7. The highest j previous top price in all the history j of tlie market was $11.50. North Platte is to have a Coin- | munity Center in the new Franklin school. An effort is being made to convert tlie school auditorium into a i place of recreation, where men. worn- : on and children of tlie city may find amusement. Tlie Associated Commercial Clubs of Western Nebraska have gone on 1 record favoring House Boll No. 1. in troduced by Henry G. Richmond of Omaha, calling for the erection of a new capitol building at Lincoln. The I’nion Pacific lias stationed watchmen at all important bridges in Nebraska. Tlie action is taken, it is said, to prevent itossilde damage hy I cranks in view of the present crisis with Germany. Hastings business men gave a pub- | lie reception and banquet to the offi cers and privates in company G who recently returned from bonier service. Disposing of irrigation water rights in the North Platte river valley in Ne braska worth more than $2,000,000. a Nebraska supreme court decree up- ! holding validity of ihe state's water ! law of 1805, and sustaining the water claims of the Tri-State Land and Far- i liters' Mutual Canal companies, was put into effect by the i'nited States supreme court. The new $15.000 hrick block recent ly built ui Lewiston by Representa tive D. S. Dn I bey of Beatrice was ded icated with a grand hall given by res idents of that town. Postmaster N. .1. Ludi. of Wahoo. : has received instructions from Wash ington to advertise for bids for the new federal building to he built there. Tlte appropriation for this building is $50,000. City delivery will prob ably lie tmt in upon completion of the new building. The Christian eliurch of Aurora, which lias been meeting in its base ment. has commenced a campaign to raise funds to complete the building. When tinished the church will be one t of the best in the state. Ex-County Clerk Hudson of Adams county, convicted of forgery recently by a jury, was sentenced to the state penitentiary for a term of from one to ten years. He has already begun serving the term at Lincoln. The month of February set a new high water mark for marriage li censes in Dodge county. Forty-two were issued by County Judge Waldo Wintersteen. Calves on twenty-one farms In Gage county have been found to be afflicted with blackleg, according to a report of County Agent Rist. Fairhury’s public sale records ol twenty years ago show that chickens brought $2.50 a dozen; ten years ago $6 a dozen: just recently at Mrs Wiggins’ sale eight dozen ordinary hens brought $96 or $12 a dozen. Kearney is in line for extender building operations this year. Th« big item is the $100,000 hotel, the con tract for which is to he let at an early date. Two farms In Otoe county, compris ing 200 acres each, recently sold foi $190 per acre. Neither place had any improvements worth mentioning. |W. L. DOUGLAS! “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” S3 S3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8 A£gRw Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. For sale by over9000shoe dealers, i The Best Known Shoes in the World. W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the price paid for them. The quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more * than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America. They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by die highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money s can ouy. Ask your shoe dealer for W. T« Douglas shoes. If ho can not supply yon with the kind you want, take no other make. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to get shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price, R , c« by return mail, postage free. »>oy» ohoes ns#***® I . ■ .1 _ i fT President ** W. I*. Douglas Shoe Co. atanxpea on tne bottom. jgg spark St., Brockton, Mass. Robbing the Cradle. Reports from Maine show that 1, 750,000 young balsam firs were shipped from the state this year to be used as Christmas trees. The first shipment )f Christmas trees from Maine began about a dozen years ago and the num ber sent out was about 000. Maine is a large state and her forests are vast, out if the Christmas tree industry con tinues to grow or. indeed, keeps on at the present rate, it will not be many years before this wholesale destruc tion of the young trees and the exten sive lumbering that is going on will exhaust her forest resources. It is well to begin to have an eye to the 'uture.—Springfield Union. MOTHER! LOOK AT CHILD’S TONGUE 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. Look at the tongue, mother ! If eoat ?d, 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 Figs.” then don’t worry, because It is perfectly harmless, and in a few hours all this constipation poison, sour bile and 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. Ask 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. Four Mexican Widows. The oft-changing course of Mexican history lias few tragedies more touch ing than those that shadow the lives ;>f four women, all widows and all ex iles front the land that once paid them its bright honors. They are the mad Empress Carlotta. who lias lived in Belgium for half a century, and the widows of three presidents—Diaz. Ma rl ero and Huerta.—Youth's Companion. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of i In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Everybody wants something for nothing, yet very few people ore satis fied with things they get that way. In China and Japan men and wom en of all (‘lasses, callings and profes sions, carry fans. \ A Mother’s Burden A mother who suffers kidney trou ble, finds it hard to keep up her daily work. Lameness, backache, sharp pains when stooping and “blue”, ner vous or dizzy spells, make hoiqe life dreary. Active kidneys bring back vigor, health and a pleasure in fam ily duties. If the kidneys are weak try a box of Doan's Kidney Pills. A Nebraska Case Mrs. Bert Currier, Lincoln St., Lex ington, Neb., says: “I suffered for a long time from j pains through the small of my back. The pain inter fered with my work. especially when I was sweep (ing or dusting. My kidneys bothered me, too. I had headaches and diz zy spells. Doan's Picture Kidney Pills drove Telit a away all these all Btory” ments and since — then I haven’t been [ ' bothered." i Get Dotn’iat Any Store, 50c .Box DOAN’S FOSTER MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. TYPHOID III IIUI1# experience has demonstrate* the almost miraculous effi. cacy, andharmlessnesspof Antityphoid Vaccination. Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and your family. It Is more vital than house insurance. Au^your physician, druggist, or send for **Have joahad Typhoid?” telling of Typhoid Vaccine, Jesuits from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers. Preductay Varsine* and Serum* under U. S. License Tie Cutter Laboratory. Berkeley. Cal., Chlea»e. IIL PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. 1 For Restoring Color and Baauty to Gray or Faded Hair, too, and $LQPatI>rnggista. "IwMWBmraaafe-sai APPENDICITIS If TOO bavebe.ii threatened or have GALLBTONHS INUIGBSTION, GAS or pains in the right [DEE Bide write (or valuable Book of Information 1 IICC k k. sowing, nirr. w-s, us stixsou srrciucaeo The Game Keeper. It was the morning after the m.-ht before and lie was not in bed r. , aing for a pitcher of ice water. He was behind the bars of th prison and he gazed outside with a ful look in his eyes. “Hey. (here,” he shouted, as lie grabbed the liars. “I want to see the game keeper.” “What do you think you are?” :isk<-d the turnkey. “This is not a zoi . it s ^ the city prison, as you will find out be fore you get out.” The dangerous cold is the neglect ed cold. Get a box of— CASCARAjgOUININE The old family remedy—in tablet form—safe, sure, easy to take. No opiates—no unpleasant after effects. Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip in 3 days. Money back if it fails. Get the genuine box with Red Top and Mr. Hill’s picture on it—25 cents. At Any Drat Store Nebraska Directory THE PAXTON !S£ Rooms from $1.00 up single, "Scents up double. CAFE pricks keasonablk DOCTORS MACH ft MACH DENTISTS r3rd Floor Paiton Block 16th 4 FarnamS;*..Omaha Beet •quipped Denial Office* in Omaha. Kea*en»b • prtre* Special dieoount to all t*ople living out* id* of Omaha Hotel Castle 632 S. 16th Street 1 Omaha, Neb. New, absolutely fireproof 300 ROOMS With private toilet 11 00: jE with private bath 11.50 p FRED A. CASTLE. Proprietor MID-WEST ELECTRIC CO. 1 307 Barney St. Omaha, Neb. 709 Cherry SU Des Moines, la. ELECTRICAL JOBBERS Distributors for General Electric Co.; America* Electric Co., Telephones; C. A. Wood Preserver Go. tr A good stock of general supplies, both cities. Hotel Loyal, Omaha Take Dodge Street Car From Stations ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF Dolao I Si.oo np without bath. AVatCO j $i,5o up witb bath. The Hotel With m Reputation R. E. BRYANT—Propricier.—0. E. CARNET IT PAYS TO SHIP CREAM DIRECT ALFALFA BUTTER GO., OMAHA Ask us to put your name oa our quotation list that you may compare our prices with others .BrnMUMr NEBRASKA NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Fire, tornado and hail insurance, farm and town property, automobile and threshing ma chinery. Policyholders and agents participate in the profits of this company. Agents wanted tn °P«n territory. lMk Wi Iacwp.r«Ud Jaa. «. ltM BOWLES Commission Co. SHIPMENTS SECURED BY ,000.00 BEST PRICES AND FILLS. South Omaha Chicago Kas. City ELECTRICAL JOBBERS Flash Lights, Mazda Lamps. Electrical Sup plies, Lighting Fixtures. Gas Lighting Sup plies. Vacuum cleaners. Electrical washing Machines, Electric Irons-, fiend for catalogue. burgessgrAnden co. 1511 Howard St. Omaha. Nefc. l?LvlnR PLATING We replate anything made of metal. This is no fake plating. Established Iffffl OMAHA PLATING CO. 70S South 16th Street OMAHA. WEB Omaha Alfalfa Milling Co, Members Omaha Hay Exchange j\nd Omaha Grain Exchange Always In the market tor Na.rf ALFALFA-HAY WRITE trs OR TELEPHONE DOUGLAS mo, 130 GRAIN EXCHANGE, Omaha .Nebraska Ness A Swebeda florists Special attention to ontatds ordeis for floral, designs be w. N. U., OMAHA, NoTli-1917.