A Nebraska-Made Flour Made From Selected Nebraska Hard Wheat. The Best Product of a Modern Mill. LITTLE HATCHET FLOUR LITTLE HATCHET FLOUR 0 ett: HATCHET FL0U1R MADE BY The WILBER & DEWITT Roller Mill A Standard Brand of Flour that has no superior, and productive of the most satisfactory results. Made in a mill equipped with the most Modern Machinery, supervised by Expert Millers. No Better Flour Made than LITTLE HATCHET. Corn Meal, Rye Flour and Mill Feed are also our specialties. LITTLE HATCHET FLOUR Sold by All Leading Grocers Auto 1459 ASK FOR IT BeU 200 LITTLE HATCHET FLOUR CUTTING HIS PANTS. A Funny Man's Criticism of the Sar torial Artist's. Efforts. When a tailor puts you on the meas uring box, with a man guarding: the door so that you can't get away and another making a book on the game, he reels off something like this as he goes about you with his measuring tape: "13 2 11 16 S 1 IS 11 40 Gee, you're beginning to get a front, ain't you? 6 17 side and two hips, Jimmie 334 36 Can you come in to morrow or Friday? 19 G House or a flat, did you say? 2S Custom of the house to hare a deposit on all or-: ders 16 What was that last, Jimmie, ! did I say? Oh, make it 23 in the mid dle What did you say your name was, mister?" Now, nobody can make any combi nation of the foregoing figures which will spell anything like a decent pair of pants. But the tailor cares nothing whatever about the figures which he calls out to Jimmie and indeed makes no reference to them in his later op erations. He knows the pants won't fit, anyhow, so what's the use? If you watch him you will discover that he usually takes up some other man's measurements when he undertakes the laying out of that particular gar ment on which he puts your name. Having selected from the mass of papers on his desk a set of figures which suits him, he goes 'behind his counter, yawns, looks in the glass, smooths down his hair, hunts for the place where he left his cigar and at last picks up a thing which looks like a board rule, with a curve in the cor ner like a hockey stick. If you are not watching him he will probably cut your pants by ear and will not bother to use this implement, but if you insist upon inspection he'll make a pretense of scientific use of this in strument whose, real nature or pur pose no human being knows or ever will know. What the tailor is thinking of as he begins to make chalk marks in a piece of blue paper, using this rale as a straight edge, is the "joy ride" he is going to have with Marie in his new auto that evening. It makes no dif ference to him whether the chalk slips or not, nor is it important h5w far along this or that angle he allows the straight or curved line to run. He knows they are not going to fit, any how, so why should he bother about it overmuch? The only hope you can possibly have meantime is the one raised in your bosom when the tailor, from behind the counter, looks up and says: "Jimmie, why in the world didn't yon mark the name on this gent's pants? Oh, well, never mind.. The tailor goes on making several cute little pictures on the blue paper by aid of this curved thing, which has numbers scattered along it here and there. He draws in several isoscles triangles, converging at more or less the same point; but, not liking the looks of these, he rubs out some of the lines and tries over again. Then he forgets which ones he. rubbed out. It makes no difference anyhow. At last he stands off, critically gazes upon the pattern which he has been casting. makes a hit or miss crosswise dab with the chalk which determines, wholly by chance, how long your pants are going to be and. smiles to himself. Everybody's Magazine. a mirror that hung on the wall and, no ticing that her hair was whitened by the plaster the bomb had scattered, re marked: "What a pity powdered heads are out of fashion! White hair suits me admirably. - He Won the Trick. "Oh, George, dear," she whispered when he slipped the engagement ring on her tapering finger, "how sweet of you to remember just the sort of stone I preferred! None of the others was ever so thoughtful. George was staggered but for a mo ment Then he came back with: "Not at all, dear. Tou overrate me. This is the one I've always used." She was inconsistent enough to cry about it. Locality. "Where were you born?" asked the judge of election. "Have I got t answer that ques tion?" inquired the man who wished to vote. "Yes; that's the law." "Well, sir, I was born in th" steer age, if ye've got t know." Chicago Tribune. Fearless Queen Sophie. In 1SG0, when the combined armies of Victor Emmanuel and Garibaldi at tacked Gaeta, Queen Sophie of Naples conducted the defense, her husband, Francis LL, being utterly unnerved. Most of her time was spent upon the ramparts, where she remained during the hottest fire. She was absolutely without fear. Once when a bomb burst in the room where she was dining with her husband and his suit she walked to What the World Lost. "It was the worst calamity that ever happened to me," sighed the pale. In tellectual high browed young woman. 'I had written a modern society novel, complete to the last chapter, and a careless servant girl gathered the sheets of the manuscript from the floor, where the wind had blown them, and used them to start a fire in the grate." "What a burning shame that was!" rommented Miss Tartun. Chicago Tribune. Manners Versus Mannerism. There's a vast difference between manners and mannerism. For In stance, manners takes its soup softly and quietly, while mannerism gargles it. Manners says, "Parss the buttab. please," while mannerism bites a chunk out of a piece of bread and stutters, "Slip me the grease, will you?" Detroit Free Press. Long and Short. "What's all this trouble about the long and short haul?" demanded the secretary of the woman's club. "If s this way," explained the treas urer. "Some dressmakers say a train ought to be six feet in length- Others say three feet Is enough." Washing ton Herald. The Genius. The principal difference between a genius and a fool is that the genius is able to get people to take up his ideas and make fortunes out of them. Chi cago Record-Herald. The man who combats himself will be happier than he who contends with others. Confucius. The Contest. "All men," said the earnest citizen, "are born equal." "They are that," replied Mr. Raffer ty. "But they don't stay equal after they're big enough to get together iu the schoolyard." Washington Star. Commendable Caution. "My son, remember this marrying n a salary has been the salvation of many a young. man." "I know, dad. But suppose my wife should lose her salary?" Cleveland Leader. Dear at the Price. McOubber The footpad said "Money or your life!" so I gave him T- Mrs. McClubber Huh! You're always get ting stuck, Biily! Puck. Bravery has no place where it caa avail nothing. Johnson.