Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1910)
-,, ! ..,'. if 5 ,!,?ijf3J r ; THE CIRCULAR 5X4IRCASC MNEHART ILWSTMTiOm BY WW!? SYNOPSIS. Mlxii limes. HpliiHtcr mid Kunnllnn or (Iprirmlo anil llitli'py, i-mIiiIiIIhIipiI summer lir:uliiinrlirH id 8iuitiynlili Tlio BcrviintH .lovri. (ii'ttnidi' mill MiilHi-y tirrlvti Willi Jack ll.illey. Tim liiiii."!- wuh awnUotiLMl ly ii ii'vohir iiliot inn! AiiiiiIiI AiiiiBtronjc wan fdliml nhnl lo ilrulli III tilts hull. .Mini Inner fnnml HiiIhcj-'h rnviilwr on tlio Inwn. Hi- mill .liuk llnllcy liiul illmin iiiMicil, (iMtriiiln nsvciiiod t Kit sliu wart iTiKfiKuil to JncU llullcy. with whom hIio Inllicd In IIih Iillllmtl room Hhortly before Ihn munlur. Detective Jiimli'Hon uucusrd MImh Inni-H of ImlillnK liii('l uvldonro. Ho ItniirlfKini'O mi IntrtidtT In mi empty room, rim inlr.iiiirrj!m'ii)id. llurtnulii wits mm. fiOi'li'd hpcmifo of nn Injured foot. I nl hey retiiiprnifl ami nayii lui and Unlloy wito culled away by it teleRrnm. Cashier Hmlry of l'anl Armntroim h lmiiK, de fnnct. wiw nrri'Htftl fin embezzlement, l'anl AriiintrtniK'H death wn nnnouneeil. llalHpy'a llnncee. Limine Armstrong, told Hillary Hint whllo alio iitlll loved lilm, hIio won to mfirry another. It developed that Dr. Wa liter wiih tlio man. IiiIho wa round at Hie Imttiim of thu circular utalr kihp. tleeovrrlm; roiwIoiiHiii'iM. hIip nald noinclliliiK hail brindied hy her on tho ttnlrwuy and nho fainted. Hallpy Is huh peeled of AiiTintronn'H murder. After 'mppIiib a KlioHt." ThoiiiiiH. tho iiidKeUoop r, wna fiinnd dead with a allp In h In pnrltPt ln-orillK tin' mime of "I.iipIpii al liifp." Mr. Wnllicr miked Miss limes to vacate In favor of Mrx. ArniHtiomr. HIio ri'fitHPil. A nolo from Itiilley to ilurlrudo nrninulMK a nipntlnt! at nlKlit vn.s found. A laildcr out of placo decpent thu mya (pry. CHAPTER XXIII Continued. Apparently only n low minutes ulupscid, during which my oyos wcro lit'cnmliiK ncctiHtomcd to tho (Iiu'Iuicrh. Thou I notlcod that tho windows were rolloctliiR n fnlnt plnklwh light; Llddy noticed It at tho mtum tlmo, and I hoard hor Jump tip. At that moment Hain'ii deep volco boomed from nome wlicro Jimt below. "I-'iro!" he yelled. "The Rtablo'u cm nro!" I could see him In the ularo dnuclni; tip and down on the drive, and a mo ment Inter Unltsoy joined him. Alex waft uwnlto and running down the Htulnt. and In five minutes from tho tlmo the lire wan discovered three of the maids were Blttlni; on their trunks In the drive, although, excepting a few Hiarl(n, there was no flro nearer than 100 yards Gertrude seldom loses Iter presence ofmtuil, and tdioran to tho tolophone. Hut by tho time thu Casanova volun teer flro department came, tolling up tho hill the Btablo was a furnace, with tho Dragon Kly safo but blistered, In tho road. Some gnsollno exploded just as tho volunteer department got to work, which shook their nerves as well as tho burning building. Tho fitnble, being on a hill, was a torch to attract tho population from every di rection Tho stnblo was off the west wing. I hardly know how I came to think of the circular staircase and tho tin guarded door at its foot. Llddy was putting my clothes Into sheets, pre paratory to to.tslng them out tho win dow, when I found her, and I could , hardly persuade her lo atop. "I want you to cotno with me, I ilddy." I said. "Itrlng a candle and a couple of blankets." Sho lagged behind considerably when hIio saw me making for the east wing, and at tho top of tho staircase alio bulked. "I am not going down there," she nald firmly. "Thero Is no one guarding tho door down there," I explained. "Who knows? this may bo a scheme to draw everybody away from this end ot tho house, and let soma one In horo." Tho inBtant I had said It I was con vinced I had hit on tho explanation, anil that perhaps It was already too late. It seemed to me as I listened that I heard stealthy footsteps on tho east porch, but thero was so much shouting outside thnt It was lmpt)s slblo to toll. Llddy was on tlio. point of retreat. "Very well," I said, "then I shall go down nlono. Itun buck to Mr. llalsoy's room aud got his revolver. Don't Hhoot down thu stairs It you hear a uolso; remember I shall bo down there. And hurry." 1 put tho candle on tho floor at the top ot tho atalrcaso and took off my bedroom sllppera. Then I ervpt down tho Btalw, going very slowly, and llBtonlng with all my cars, .lust at the foot of tho stairs l stubbed my too against Halsey's big chair, and had to atand on one foot in u boundless agony until tho pain subsided to a dull ache. And then I knew I was right. Somo ono had put a koy Into tho lock, and was turning It. For somo reason It refused to work, and tho koy was withdrawn. Thero was n tnuttorlng of voices outside; I had only a second. Anothor trial, and tho door woukl open. The candlo abovo mndo a faint gleam down tho well-llko staircase, and at that moment, with a second, no moro, to spare, I thought of a plan. Tho heavy oak chair almost filled tho space botweon tho nowel post nnd tho door. With a crash I had turned tt on Us sldo, wedging it against the door, Its legs against tho stairs. I could hear a fnlm scream from Llddy at tho crash and thon she camo down tho stairs on a run, with tho rovolver hold straight out in front ot her. "Thank God," sho said, In a shaking volco. "t thought it was you." I pointed to tho door, and sho un derstood. "Call out of tho windows at tho other end of tho liouso," I whlaporod. "Uun. Tell them not to wait for anything" SB I, - M MOll'LL- jrr-rrrr rrfeaLi It Went Off, Right Sho went up tho stairs at that, two at a time. Kvldently sho collided with the candle, for it went out, and I wan loft In darkness. I wns really astonishingly cool. 1 remember stepping over tho chair and gluing my oar to the door, and I shall never forget feeling it give an inch or two there in the darkness, under a steady pressuro from without. Hut tho chair held, although I could hear au ominous cracking of ono of the legs. And then, without tho slightest wnrning, tho cardroom window broko with a crash. I had my finger on tho trigger of tho rovolver, mid as I jumped It went off, right through tho door. Somo ono outside swore round ly, and for tho first tlmo I could hear what was said. "Only a scratch. . . . Men are at tho other end of tho house. . . . Have tho whole rat's nest on us." And a lot of profanity which I won't write down. Tho voices were at the broken window now, and although l was trembling violently, I was de termined thnt 1 would hold them until help came. I moved up the stairs un til 1 could see Into the cardroom, or rather through It, to tlio window. As I looked a small man put his leg over the sill and stepped Into the room. The curtain confused him for a mo ment; then he turned, not toward me, but toward tho billiard room door. I fired again, and something that was glass or china crashed to tho ground. Then I rnn up the Btalrs and along the oorrldor to tho main staircase. Oor trudo wns standing there, trying to locate tho shots, and I must havo been a peculiar figure, with my hair in crimps, my dressing-gown flying, no slippers, and a revolver clutched in my hnnd. I had no tlmo to talk. Thero was tho sound or footstops In the lower hall, and some ono bounded up tho stairs. I had gone Hersork, I think. I leaned over tho stalr-rall and fired again. Ilalscy, below, yelled at me. "What avo you doing up there?" ho yelled. "You missed me by an Inch." And then I collapsed and fainted. When 1 camo around Llddy was rub bing my temples with enu do quinine, nnd tho nenrch was In full blast Well, tho man was gone. The Btablo burned to the ground, while the crowd cheered at every falling ratfer, and the volunteer flro department sprayed it with a garden hose. And lu tho houso Alex and llalsey searched every corner of the lower floor, finding no one. The truth of my story wns shown by the broken window and the over turned chair. That tho unknown had got upstairs was almost Impossible. He had not used tho main staircase, thero was no way to the upper floor In the east wing, and Llddy had boon at tho window, In the west wing, where tho servants' stair went up. Hut wo did not go to bed at all. Sam Ho hannon and Warner helped In tho search, and not a closet escaped scrutiny. Kven tho ccllnrs wero given a thorough overhauling, without re sult. Tho door in tho cast entry had n holo through It where my bullet had gone. The holo Blunted downward, and tho bullet wns embedded In tho porch. Somo reddish stains showed Itf had dono execution. "Somebody will walk lame," Ilalsey said, when ho had marked tho coarse of tho bullot. "It's too low to havo hit anything but a leg or foot." From thnt tlmo on I wntchod ovcry porson I met for n limp, and to this day tho man who halts In his walk is nn object of suspicion to mo. Hut Casanova had no lamo men; tho near est approach to it was an old fellow who tended tho snfoty gates at tho railroad, and ho, I lourned on inquiry, had two artificial legs. Our man had Throuoh the Door. gone, and the large aud expensive stable at Sunnysldo was a heap of smoking rafters and charred boards. Warner swore the flro was incendiary, and in view of tho attempt to enter the house, there teemed to bo no doubt of it. CHAPTER XXIV. Flinders. If Ilalsoy had only taken mo fully Into his confidence through the whole affair It would havo been much sim pler. If ho had been altogether frank about Jack llalley, and if tho day aftor the lire ho had told mo what ho sus pected, thero would havo been no har rowing period for all of us, with the boy In dnngor. Hut young people re fuso to profit by tho experience of their elders, and sometimes tho elders are the ones to suffer. I was much used up tho day after tho fire, and Gertrude Insisted on my going out. The machine was tempo rarily out of commission, and tho car riage horses had been sent to a farm for the summer. Gertrudo finally got a trap from tho Casanova llverymnn, and wo went out. .fust as wo turned from tho drive into the road wo passed a woman. She had put down a small valise, and stood Inspecting tho houso and grounds minutely. I should hard ly have noticed hor had It not boon for the fact that she had been horribly disfigured by smallpox. "Ugh!" Gertrudo said, when we nnd pnssed, "what a face! I shall dream of It tonight. Get up, Flinders." "Flinders?" I asked. "Is that the horse's name?" "It Is." Sho flicked the horse's stubby mane with tho whip. "He didn't look like a livery horse, and tho liveryman said ho had bought him from tho Armstrongs when they purchased a couple of motors and cut down the stable. Nice Flinders good old boy!" Flinders was certainly noi a com mon nnmo for n horse, and yet tho youngster at Richfield had named his prancing, curly-halrod little horse Flinders! It sot me to thinking. . At my request Ilalsey had already sent word of tho fire to tho agent fjrom whom mo had secured the house. Also, liu had called Mr. .lamleson by telephone, and somewhat gunrdedly had told him of tho previous night's events. Mr. .lamleson promised to come out thnt night, and to bring an other man with him. I did not con sider It necessary to notify Mrs Arm- strong, In tho village. No doubt sho knew of the flro, and lu view of my refusal to give up the house an Inter view would probably have been un pleasant enough, nut as wo passed Dr. Walker's white and green houso I thought of something. "Stop here, Gertrude," I said. "I am going to got out." "To. seo Louise?" sho asked. "No, I want to ask this young Wulkor something," Sho was curious, I knew, but I did not wnlt to explain. I went up tho walk to tho houso, whero a brass sign at tho sldo announced tho office, and Wont In. Tho reception room ' was empty, but from tho consultation room beyond came tho sound of two voices, not vory nmlcablo. "It is an outrageous flguro," somo ono wns storming. Thon tho doctor's quiet tono, evidently not nrgulng, moroly Btntlng something, nut I had not tlmo to listen to somo person probably disputing his bill, bo I coughed. Tho voices censed at once; a door closed somewhere, und the doc tor cnterod from tho hull of tho houso. Ho looked sufficiently surprised at seo lug mo. "Good afternoon, doctor," I ea'ld formally. "I shall not keep you from your patient. I wish merely to ask a question." "Won't you sit down?" "It will not be necessary. Doctor, lias any ono como to you, either early this morning or today, to have you treat a bullet wound?" ' Nothing so stnrlllng has happened to mo," ho said. "A bullet wound! Things must bo lively nt Sunnyslde." "1 didn't say It was at Sunnysldo. Hut as It happens, it was. If any such case conies to you, will It bo too much troublo for you to let me know?" "I shall bo only too happy," he said. "I under.stnud you havo had a fire up there, too. A lire and shooting In one night is rather lively for a quiet place like that." "It Is as quiet as a holler-shop," I replied, as I turned to go. ' "And you are still going to stay?" ' Until I am burned out." I respond ed. And then, on my way down the Btrps, I turned around suddenly. "Doctor," 1 usked at a venture, "have you ever heard of a child named Lucien Wallace?" Clever as ho was, his face changed and stiffened. Ho was on his guard again in a moment. "Lucien Wallace?" he repeated. "No, I think not. There are plenty of Wallaces around, but I don't know any Lucien." I was as certain as possible that ho did. People do not He :endlly to me, and this man lied beyond a doubt. Hut there was nothing to bo gained now; his defenses were up, und I left, half irritated and wholly baffled. Our reception wan entirely different at Dr. Stewart's. Taken Into the bosom of the family nt once, Flinders tied outside and nibbling tho grass at the roadside. Gertrude and I drank some hotne-mndo elderberry wlno and told briefly of tho fire. Of tho more serious part of the nlghfs experience, of course, wo said nothing. Hut when at last we had left the family on the porch nnd tho good doctor was unty ing our steed, I asked him the same question I had put to Dr. Walker. 'Shot!" ho said. "Bless my soul, no. Why, what have you been doing up at the big houso, Miss Innes?" "Somo ono tried to enter the house during the tire, and was shot and slightly injured," I said hastily. "Please don't mention it; we wish to mako us little of It as possible." There was ono other possibility, and wo tried that. At Casanova Btatlon I saw the station master, and asked him If nny trains left Casanova between one o'clock and daylight. There was nono until C a. m. Tho next question required more diplomacy. "Did you notice on tho six o'clock train any person any man who limped a little?" I asked. "Please try to remember; wo are trying to trace a man who was seen loitering around Sunnyslde last night before the fire." lie was all attention In a moment. "I wns up there myself at tho tire," ho said volubly. "I'm a member of tho volunteer company. First big flro we've hail since the summer house burned over to the club golf links. My wife was saylu' the other day, 'Dave, you might as well 'a' saved the money In that there helmet and shirt.' And here last night they camo In Imhdy. Rang that bell so hard I hadn't tlmo scarcoly to got 'em on." "And did you see a man who limped?" Gertrude put ill, aB he stopped for breath. "Not at the train, ma'm," he said. "No such perBon got on hero today. Hut I'll tell you where I did seo a man thut limped. I didn't wnlt till the company left; thero's a fast freight goes through at 4:45, and I had to got down to thu Btatlon. I seen thero wasu't much moro to do anyhow at the fire wo'd got tho flames under con trol" Gertrude looked at me aud smiled "so 1 started down the bill. There was folk here and there goln' home, and along by tho path to the Country club I seen two men. One was a short follow. Ho was sitting on a big lock, his back to mo, and he had something white lu his hand, as if he was tying up his foot. After I'd gone on a piece I looked back, and he was hobbling on nnd excuse mo, miss ho was swearing something sicken lug" (TO nn CONTINUKU.) Marvels of Modern 8urgery. Knife operations on tho stomach havo given a death rato of from one to 20 per cont., against 20 to 40 por cent, ton years ago. Cutting opon tho upper abdoinon, splitting tho stoinueh opon and turning It wrong sldo out, searching for cancers nnd ulcers, has becomo n not uncommon operation, often followed by great cures and benoflta, and Is largoly an Amorlcan specialty. Now York Pross. Phllatetism His Hobby. State Senator I2rnost R. Ackorman, of Now Jersey, who Is now enjoying his nnnual trip abrond, Is ono of the best known nnd most enthusiastic col lectors of postngo stamps In this coun try. So largo Is his collection that ho baa aot apart ono room In his homo In Plalnflold na u stamp room, in which nro somo of tho rnroBt of stamps, so dear to tho heart of the philatelist. THE KING'S MARRIAGE FEAST Snmhty Sctool Ltisoa for StpL 11, 1910 Specially Arranged for This Paper LESSON THXT.-Mallhcw 22:l-. Mem ory verses 8. 9. GOLDEN TEX.T.-"Mnny nro called, but few nro chospn." Matthew 22:14. TIMB.-Tupndny. April 4, A. D. 30. Thrco days before tho Crucifixion. PLACE. Tho Tcmplo court at Jeru salem. Suggestion and Practical Thought. Tho Kingdom ot Heaven LIko a Wedding Feast. Vs. 1, 2. And Jesus answered tho unspoken needs, dcslre3, and questions of tho people. Hy para bles, tho most plcttiresquo method, compelling nltcutlon, but not antagon istic. Tho enemy could not easily at tack it, whllo lo those who wished to know it wns full ot light. Tho kingdom of heaven, tho now order which he enmo to establish on earth, In which each citizen lived ac cording to the laws of heaven. Tho king represented God. Tho son was Jesus Christ. , Tlild feast represents all tho bless ings which God has provldod In his go&pol, enjoyed In largo measure here, and perfected In heaven. Tho em phasis Is on tho marriage, tho union between Christ and his people. It la tho highest Ideal of love and friend ship. It expresses Intimate fellowship with God, the mutual love and delight In ono anothor, tho protecting carp on tho one hand and perfect trust on tho other, tho unity of purpose, of char acter, of hope, the abiding forovor In ono perfect home, all of which belong to tho union of Christ with believers. Tho Invitation. Vs. 3, 4. And sent forth his servants to call them that wero bidden. Literally, "to call tho called," to summon those who had pre viously been Invited; because they had no timepieces, nnd tho hour when tho feast could bo ready was very un certain. This custom Is not now ob served "very strictly ninong tho com mon people, nor in cities where west ern manners have greatly modified tho Oriental; but in Lebanon It still pre vails. If a shell; begs, or emeer In vites, he nlwnys sends a servant to call you at the proper time. Theso having refused to come, ho sent forth other servants, who wcro "not merely to invito to, but to command the feast, with a view to create a desire." He hold, I havo prepared my dinner: my oxen und my fatllngs, I. c., smaller animals, as lambs, calves, specially fed for tho occasion. All things nro ready; come. How tho Invitation Was Received. Vs. .1-0. They refused without giving nny reason, they would not come. They simply did not regard the Invitation as worth attending to. They treated it with indifference. They plead other Interests. Their farm duties, their business gains, weighed moro than their klng'a Bervlce nnd good will. Others displayed active opposition. Tho Icing . . . was wioth. Any ordinary earthly king would bo angry at the Insult, nnd Indlgnnnt at tho fol ly ot those that refused, ami would feel tho necessity of punishing those who openly rebelled in the net of re fusing. There wub no other way of preserving his kingdom. God's "an ger" 1b nover passion, novor deslro to harm even tho worst of bolngs, but a burning indignation against wrong. Go yet therefore into tho highways. Or, "tho partings of tho highways," the cross-road', tho placos whero great numbers meet, "tho broad, well troddon ways of tho world." Gather together all . . . both bad and good, whoover was willing to como and by that very act showed that they wanted to bo good. Tho fullness ot tho tlmo had come. Tho preparations wero complete Everything was prepared for tho re demption of man heaven, love, tho atonement, tho strongest motives, tho power of tho Holy Spirit. Tho world was in the beBt condition for tho com ing of Christ. Never beforo or slnco has thero been so fitting a time ono government, ono languuge, poace, roads, synagogues of tho Jews every where. Tho slaying of tho anlmnls is an allusion to cacrlflco. Only when tho Lamb waB slain on Calvary wero all things ready for tho mnrrlago. Tho long preparations for tho Gospel wero completed; tho forerunner had dono his work; Jesus himself had coma from Heaven, nnd hnd tnught tho Jews tho divine message. Tho leading .Tows had very much at stake their country, tholr holy city, their temple, their synngogues, their rank aud wealth, their leadership of tho people They wore so busy with theso, thoy wero so afraid thoy would loso them if thoy accopted tho humblo Nazarcno as tholr teachor, and obeyed his prcccptfl, that thoy wero unwill ing even to consider his claims. Tho kingdom of God wns trans ferred from the Jewish nation to tho Gentiles. Tho Jowb henceforth, Instead of being tho pcoplo and kingdom of God, would bo n mero Semitic nation ality. Many of them then nnd slnco belong to tho kingdom or tho Messiah. Tho Messianic kingdom Is today tho mightiest power on earth. Thero has novor been a king on earth with a tithe of tho power nnd influence, and of tho number of sub jects which King Jesus today poa Besses. Tho world 1b still full of oxcuaos for not coming, many of them mero ox cuscfl, but wo must look much dcopor for the real roasons. And wo should bo far moro careful to understand nnd romovo tho reason's than to try to an swer their excuses. It is for this rea son that much of tho arguing with ir rollglous inon is bo useless. It is llko scraping tho furred tonguo, but leav ing tho fpvor. A MARVELOUS RECOVERY. How a Chronic Invalid Regained Per feet Health. Mm. Ray Trusnor, 30 West Third St., Now Albany, Ind., Bays: "Kidney dlsoaao had rendored mo a chronlo invalid. I lay in bed unablo to movo hand or foot. My right limb was swollen to twlco normal bIzc. I looked tho picture ot death and my caso puzzled tho doctors. Tho kidney secret Ions were highly colored and scalded terri bly. Marked Improvement followed tho tiso of Doan's Kidney Pills. In six weeks I wns a well woman. My friends and relatives marvel at my recovery." Remember tho namo Doan's. For snlo by all dealers. CO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Uuffalo, N. Y. Talking to the Child. "Mrs. X talks to Uttlo Madge just as Mr. X talks to their dog," said a little girl of a neighboring fam ily. And It was Indeed true Mrs. X Is a very well-meaning woman and would be greatly surprised It sho should hear tho foregoing statement. She has blmply unconsciously acqulrod a harsh tone of voice In dealing with hor children. This Is altogether un necessary and Is not, ns many moth, era seem to think, a mark of good dis cipline. The mother whoso manner Is quiet but firm Is generally n much moro successful disciplinarian than tho hnrsh-volced mother who Issues her cummnnds lu a dictatorial manner. Kindness never spoils children. U Is flabby Indecision, sometimes mistaken for kindness, which spoils them. HOW A DOCTOR CURED SCALP DISEASE "When I was ten or twolvo years old I had a scalp disease, something like scald head, though It wasn't that. I suffered for several months, aud mo3t of my hair camo out. Finally they hnd a doctor to seo mo and ho recommended tho Cutlcura Remedies They cured mo in n few weeks. have used tho Cutlcura Remedies, also, for a breaking out on my hands und was benefited a great deal. I haven't had any moro troublo with tho scalp disease. Miss Jessio F. Uuchanan, It. F. D. 3, Ilnmllton, Ga., Jan. 7, 1009." Kept with Barnum's Circus. P. T. Barnum, tho famous circus man, once wrote: "I have had tho Cutlcura Remedies among tho con tents of my medlclno chest with my shows for tho last threo seasons, and I can cheerfully certify that they wero vory effective in every caso which called for their use." Got Stung, All Right. Hill This paper says that bcea were unknown to the Indians. Jill Yes, I believe It was tho tra ders who used to sting them. Yonktra Statesman. Dr. I'lcrco'iI'lonNint Tellots roKulato and lnilir urate fclomarh. llvor nnd bowels. Bucar-co.itcd, tiny CMiiuk'H, i ue- U)tnkonsuuntr Tho man whose bluff Is not some times called never existed. cBusssnci IWi Take Ohanoes of having a sick spell by delay, when you notice the first sign of Stomach, Liver or Bowel weakness. Act promptly and get a bottle of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. You are then on the safe, side because it quickly restores things to a normal condition. It is for Poor Appetite, Cramps, Heartburn, Indigestion, Costiveness, Malaria, Fever and Ague. Get Nebraska Directory K2 Arc tlio UcBt. AbU your local dealer or JOHN DEEREPL0W CO, Omalra, Neb. KODAKS aiu? KO DAFfINISHING Mall nrderi clren tporlal ntlontlon. AU kinds amateur fcuppUct btrlctly trruli, bciid for caUtluc. LINCOLN PHOTO SUPPLY CO., Lincoln M. Spiesberger & Son Co. Wholesale Millinery The Beit In tha Weil OMAHA, NEB. ALL ftQIEIK MAKES Bold and rented eTorjrwliero. Yrltofor bargain Uv 11. 1 HVT ANSON COMPANY, Inc. EUblltUrd tl. 14UB. 13 tU St., Lincoln Tim bPftt Infill Pnmmnrclal r....vi.au III IOSTETTER' A) 8 U celedrated k I E STB STOMACH M J IjjmTTERI lWP&"fflmSlrffiffiSi err" cnuunKiio eipmini uu. AUUrnes no. ii i&iMa-' rtttui.,.3(.b. Beatrice Creamery Oo. Pays the hlebest rlco for CREASE J' . 4--AI. -,u M -.. .-. ...,. U .fc. j . m,-. Um JL XtJl.'dl m li imOinnii Ul fH'Tumi TH-iimt n W"r lMMMWHMi w4WWMpMWHl'rt1 t vJ