Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Custer County Republican. (Broken Bow, Neb.) 1882-1921 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1908)
( USTER ( OUHTT REPUBLICAN By D. M. AMBDERRY BROKEN DOW , Subway for MovlrtQ Sidewalks. Strap-hanging In Htrect cnifl and the general congestion of intoriirlmu trn- vcl will bo at an end if tlio tnvontlon of n Now York mnn , wlio la nnckcd by prominent capltallstH of Hint city , , JTOVC.I ns HiicccBBful JIB IB anticipated. Attrnctod to the condltlonn of the Ilrooklyn bridge , wliero during the rush hours the traction companion on- denver to trmiHpoit GO.OOO ptiBHonKorB nn hour , with faollltlen which 45,000 tax to the utmost , ho evolved a Hcliomo baaed lo an extent on the moving sidewalk which was a feature of the j > lor nt the world's fair nt Chicago cage In 1803. UtB iilcn , explain ! ! the Technical World , IB to equip the Urooklyn bridge with ti Bcrlos of five moving plat forma , one within another. The outer one would travel nt the rale f three mllcH an hour , the second at nix miles an hour , the third at nine and the fourth at twelve. The Inner one , which ho would operate at fifteen miles an hour , he would have equipped with scats , each holding half a dozen persons. To step from one platform to another while both were In motion would ho both safe and easy. With this system of platforms , moving in one direction on one sldo of the bridge and back on the other , the In ventor cluIniB ho can transport 171,000 persons an hour. As an economical method of transportation , the promot ers declare that there would bo no motormcn , conductors nor brakcmon to pay and that the expense for power , repairs and operating force would bo less than for any other system that Is in use to-day. There Is always something fascinat ingly mysterious about the govern ment secret service. The men engaged under the chief are not known to the public at largo even by name , and one's next-door neighbor may bo a secret service agent without one hav ing any suspicion of his occupation. The secret service bureau Is attached to the treasury department and Is maintained for the detection of coun terfeiters and for the protection of the person of the president. The men are employed , however , by other depart ments on a confidential requisition from the head of the department. If the attorney general or the secretary of commerce and labor needs detec tives each ban needed them In recent Investigations the secretary of the treasury has supplied the men. This practice of diverting the detectives of the treasury department from their proper work was objected to in con gress not long ugo , and an attempt was made to prevent It. If the secret sorvlco men become mere detectors of counterfeiters , much of the popular Interest In them will disappear. The report from Mombasa , Hritlsh East Africa , that 40,000 deaths have re- suited from famine In the province of Osoga In Uganda furnishes an illustra tion of the perils which sUll confront the dwellers on the dark continent , notwithstanding the progress made In opening up that region to civilization. The news alao recalls the frequent ex periences from famine in India In both localities the causes are practi cally the same failureof usual sources ot food supply and inability ; owing to lack of transportation facili ties , to roach and relieve those In dire need. . One of the great functions of advancing civilization is to equalize the opportunities for securing the nec essaries of life. The famous label , "Mado in Ger many , " may soon with propriety bo put on a largo part of the reforested Ad irondack mountain area. The state of Now' York bought 050,000 seedling trees from Oorman nurseries this year , and 'is planting those which are three years old In the treeless districts. ' Those which are only two years old about half of the number will bo planted In nurseries , 'to remain a year before they are set out permanently. The Germans sell the three-year-old trees at about the rate of four for a cent , and that Is ono reason why the btato sent the order across the ocean The language manufacturers now have the Job of inventing a term to describe the man who runs an aero plane. "Sky-pilot" would not bo had If it-were original ; but It will hardly bo fitting to take a second-hand term for a vocation so novel and daring. Anyhow , It is to be hoped that the re sult will not bo to borrow a word from a foreign language that really means something else. Out In Iowa there is an editor who wishes to know whether a widower who dyes his whiskers really fools anybody. Ho perhaps fools the same people who are fooled by the bald- headed man who slicks a wisp from- the side across his dome. President Honjunilu" ido Wli color of the University of California has been nominated as Theodore Roosevelt pro fessor in Horlln for' 1909 by the trim tees ofColnnibla and appointed by the ' Prub'Blanftuilnldtry of education ' ' 01 V. ! > J ; - . HUGE DOWLDERS SCATTERED OVER NORTHERN STATES BY WIDE'SWEEP OF GLACIER. ICE DECLARED MILES DEEP Congealed Liquid In Vast Quantities Flowed Far Down Mississippi Val ley Underlying Strata Highly - ly Polished by Motion , BY G. FREDERICK WRIGHT , A. M. , LL. D. ( Author of "Tho Ice ABO In North Amer ica , " "Mnn nnd tlio Olaclul Pe riod. " Kii'.y ( CopyrlKlit , Joseph 11. Bowlen. ) The story of the glacial period has not been half told. Hit wonders are Increasing every day. It Is the last of ho gieat geological epochs , and has not yet passed away. Greenland Is till shivering under the rigors of claclal conditions. With the cxcop- lon of a narrow belt of mountain ! ) round the southern end , the whole ontlncnt , some 500,000 square mllca n extent , is still burled beneath ice rom ono mlle to two miles deep , while the antarctic continent , with a till greater area , Is so completely en veloped in Ice that explorers have yet been able to penetrate only the merest fringe at two or throe points. But during the glacial period prop er the ice to a depth of more than n mlle covered 4,000,000 square miles Allcghenlcs in northeastern Pennsyl vania. In southern Ohio there are long belts of Canadian bowlders which can bo traced to ledges of reek north of Lake Huron. Even in Boone county , Kentucky , n few miles Bouth of Cincinnati , a number of rod jasper conglomerate bowlders , some of them two or three foot In diameter , have been found , which came from well- known ledges In Canada north of Lnkb Huron. Bowlders of largo fllzo from these same ledges have also been found as far southwest as Keokuk , la. Bowlders from Wisconsin and Minnesota seta and Dakota abound In northern Missouri down to the Missouri river , some having1 recently been uncovered. Armed with these facts concerning the former extent of the Swiss glaciers , Agassi ? went to Great Brit ain , and came to America , and initi aled thotv ) Investigations which have shown the spread of glacial Ice over the areas already mentioned. Scandi navian bowlders cover northern Ger many , and mo found 700 miles south east at Klof in RiiHHla , found at TUB- cumbla , 00 mlloB up the Osage river , which comes down from the Ozark uplift to the south. They are also , found on the south sldo of the Kansas river as far west as Lawrence and Topeka - peka , while windrows of them arc found In central Dakota which have been derived from ledges In the vi cinity of Lake Superior. The size of these Ice-transported bowlders Is certainly surprising. Sev eral In Switzerland which have been moved more than 100 miles would weigh more than a thousand tons apiece. The colebratcd Plerro-a-Bot , a bowlder above Noufchatol. Swltzor- View of an Antarctic Ice Sheet. of North America and 2,000,000 square miles in Europe. In North America the southern border of this Ice Held extended Into the ocean off the Now England coast , rising like a great ice wall out of the water , and westward to a line running through Long Island , across New Jersey and Pennsylvania , Lo Salamanca , N. Y. , where it turned south-westward nnd , with many minor variations , reached the Ohio river 50 or CO miles above Cincinnati , crossed Kentucky and southern Indiana , reachIng - Ing Its farthest extent at Carbondalp , ill. ; thence northwest , It crossed tlio Mississippi rlvor at St. Louis , and fol lowed the Missouri and Kansas rivers to Toneka. where it swung northward Across the eastern parts of Kansas and Nebraska , and through central Dakota to near the Canada line ; thence proceeding ( with a long loop whore it crossed the Rocky mountains and the Sierras ) to Puget sound and the Pacific ocean. If ono had approached preached this line during the glacial period , anywhere from the south , ho would have Immediately struck the conditions of Greenland , and found them continuous for thousands ot miles. Alaska ntyi retains the stumps of this great glacier , several hundred square miles being covered by the Mulr glacier alone , and a still larger area by the Malnsplna glacier , which comes down from Mount St. Ellas. In Europe the Ice Holds radiated from the Scandinavian peninsula , extending across the North sea to southern Eng land , and across the Baltic to central Germany and southeastern Russia. In thinking of the glacial period It should bo kept clearly in mind that glacial Ice is simply compressed snow. Glaciers are formed wherever there Is a snowfall which exceeds tlio melting power of the warm season. Everyone Is familiar with the fact that a snowball - ball may bo made as hard as Ice by sufllclent pressure In the hands. That ice in grout masses could How like cold tar or molasses or any other Ecmi-lluld scorned , until a short tlmo ago , impossible , and did not enter Into the thought of mankind. But about 70 years ago It was demonstrated in Switzerland that the Ice was actually moving down the valleys , proceeding , not llko an avalanche , but creeping with a true flow , and carrying on Its back and frozen into its mass frag ments of rock of varying sizes , some of them being as largo as a small house. Under the leo of ono of thcso rock masses on top of the Aar glacier Agasslz built him a hut , and conducted many of hlu Important observations. The great extent of this glacial movement in former times was shown by the dlstanco which some of thcso bowlders had been carried. In North America the transportation of bowlders by glacial ice has been even more remarkable. The backbone - [ bone of Cape Cod nnd Long Island , a line of hllla from ono hundred to two i hundred feet high , and two or three miles broad , is simply a pile of bowl. dors and small fragments transported from Now England to Canada. Ply- 1 mouth Rock Is a glacial bowlder j which Journeyed from its northern I homo i thousands of yean , lioforo vhe j Pilgrims act out from Holland. Bowl- dcra from the ; Adirondack mountains | wo found upon the summits of tlio land , measured 50by 20 by 40 feet , containing about 40,000 cubic feet ; while another near Monthoy contained more Uian 60,000 cubic foot. Ship rock , near Peabody , Mass. , is a glacially transported bowlder' esti mated to weigh 1,100 tons ; while Mo- hegan rock In Montvlllo , Conn. , near Norwich , would weigh 10,000 tons. At Madison , N. II. , there is a bowlder measuring 30 by 40 by 75 foot , which can bo traced to ledges of Conway granite , about two miles away. The so-called Judge's cave , or West Rock , near New \Iavcn , Conn. , is formed by a transported bowlder weighing 1,000 tons , which can bo traced to well- known dykes of trap 1G miles to the north. A granite bowlder near Lebanon , O. , which was brought by the Ice from Canada , measures 17 by 13 feet , with eight feet out of ground , and evidently a much larger mass under tlio ground. But Prof. Orton has described a mags of Clinton limestone in Frecport , War ren county , Ohio , which is threo- fourths of an acre in area and 10 feet in thickness , which has boon brought several miles. The central part ol northern Iowa contains a great num ber of bowlders of exceptional size , brought from several hundred miles away. Ono of them furnished build ing stone enough to construct an entire - tire church. Although these transported bowlders arc such striking witnesses to the slow but majestic movement of glacial lea during the glacial period , they are by no means the only ones. As the ice ilowly crept over the surface frag ments of rock became frozen Into Ha lower strata , and bowlders , gravel , sand and clay were dragged along be neath It , furrowing and scratching and polishing the surface of the rock to nn astonishing degree. Almosl anywhere over this glaciated area the removal of the soil will reveal scratched and polished rocks under nouth. The direction of the scratches and the grooves shows the direction in which the ice was moving at the tlmo they were made. This r-as , In the main , outward , toward the mar gin of the glaciated area which we have described , but there were manj curious variations. In central Ohio the direction of the glacial scratches Is southeast , whereas on the Islands in the western part of Lnka Erie i Is very nearly west. At Logansport Ind. , extensive grooves and scratches have been found whore the movomon is toward the north. This variatloi In the direction of the grooves am scratches indicates that there were eddies in the ice , such as are found In the current of a deep , slow-moving stream of water. The grooves on the Islands in the western end of Lake Erie , are among tbo most remarkable in the world. Ono groove , in hard cornlforous limestone , wns about 20 feet broad and eight feet deep , extend ing for a long dlstanco across Kelley Island. The surface of tills groove lamest most thinly ipollshod. corals and othei fossils being cut off as sharply as could be done by any graver's tool The direction uf those grooves In the bed of Luke Erie Is evidently duo to the fact that the depression of the laUe diverted the Ice movement In Its closing stages in tlio direction of Us longer diameter toward the natural outlet on the west. STATE NEWS AND NOTES IN CONDENSED - DENSED FORM. THEPBESSPOLPITANDPyBLie What la Going on Here and There That Is of Interest to the Read ers Throughout Nebraska. Arrangements have been completed for the Fairmont Chautauqua , which will bo held in Fairmont beginning August 7. Wo publish a list of Omaha business houses In another column , In writing or calling on them please mention this paper. As a result of a favorable decision rendered at an adjourned session of the district court the saloon at Chap man has opened for business. Nebrnslta'H oldest Old Line Company two and a half million assets , wants nn agent in thin locality. Good big pay. Address , 13ox 1195 , Lincoln , Nob. Lincoln was unanimously chosen as the next meeting place of the Nebras ka Postmasters' association , which closed its sixth annual convention last week. The large barn of Herman Lubeck living about five miles southeast from Alma was blown to the ground by a Htorm which passed over that section. Part of the barn on the C. T. Newman farm was also blown in during the Htorin. William Aldridge , who was arrest ed In Omaha , charged with stealing horses , has worked on farm at Inter vals near Fremont. There have been a good many horses stolen from that vicinity this year , ono theft being of 11 $500 team from Hooper. . At a special election Ponder voted ? 7.000 bonds for an electric lighting plant. This amount , with funds on hand , will give the board ? 10,000 to expend. The question , "Electricity or gas ? " was also voted upon , the former ) winning nearly unanimously. ' Albert 13. StatUcr , a leading farmer and representative of Hlchardson county in the last legislature , commit- ed suicide by drinking carbolic acid nt his home. Ill health and loss from tlooded farm land arc supposed to be the primary causes of the deed. Adjutant General Charles P. Schwartz is negotiating for a five-year lease with the option of buying a trn ft of 120 acres lying along the Platte river two miles north of Ashland , to be used as a permanent rifle range for for the National Guard of Nebraska. Ben Pearson , an aged bachelor , who has been living alouo In Nebraska City for many years , appealed to sheriff Fischer for protection , and was locked up in jail. He claims that sev eral women arc trying to force him to marry them. It Is thought ho is mentally unballanced. Quo of the Nebraska Wesleyan graduates who received his degree Jast week , Mr. 11. A. Whilehorn , left lor San Francisco , to sail for the Phil ippines , where ho has a position with , the government in the public school system. Mr. Whi'ohorn was a clas sical student having his majors . Latin and Greek. In conformity with an order by Judge W. 12. Stewart , permitting the receiver to levy an assessment against the policylioldcrs to the amount of. the unpaid portion of the premium on each policy , a suit was brought in the district court at Lincoln by J. A. Ran dall , receiver of the refund Nebras ka Mercantile Insurance company , against about 800 pollcyholders. Postmasters , In convention at Lin coln , elected ofllcers as follows : B. R. SIzer of Lincoln , president ; J. Cook of Blair , secretary and 13. L. Howe of .South Omaha , vice president , ami the following vice presidents for the differ ent classes : First class , K. L. Howe ot of South Omaha ; second class , E. M. Wells of Crete ; third class , J. 11. Tower of Sutton ; fourth class , Miss Olive P. Tracey of Florence. Tim Midwest Llfo is an old line life Insurance company a Nebraska com pany with Its home oHlce at Lincoln. An ordinary life policy at ago 30 costs in this comapny the first year $23.71 and thereafter $18.GO. The premiums after the first year may bo paid quart erly at the rate of $1.93 a quarter. Write the home ofllce for sample poli cies or for agency contract. Agents wanted. Write for particulars. A sevcie tornado swept over part of CuBtcr county doing a great amount of damage. The residence of Fred Arthur , four miles southwest of Brok en Bow , was completely demolished. The family took refuge in a leanto and escaped serious injury. V. J. Stcdry , in the same neighborhood , lost a big barn and outhouses. On the farm of George Pelkoy , ten miles southwest , a new cement block res idence and flno barn were swept away the damage nt this place amounting probably to $0,000 of $8,000. In the case of the remonstrators against the saloon petitions in Stella Judge Pemberton in district court , de cided in favor of the saloon petitions and as the result F. M. Hlnklo and D. C. Allen are preparing to open up In the near future. This portion of Uio state , says a Callaway dispatch , has boon receiv ing Its share of the moisture which has been well die rlbutcd over the country. From last October until the 3d of last month no moisture fell here , but during the month of May nnd the llrat half of June of this year over cloven Inches of rain is 10 cor ( led. NEBRASKA NEWS AND NOTES. Items of Greater or Lesser Impor tance Over the State. i Lightning struck the Dodge comity court house without doing material * damage. At Saronvillo Mr. and Mrs. Henry Chnltuerg celebrated ( heir golden wedding. Danloy Freeman , Nobrnska'a first homesteader , has recovered from a very serious Illness. The wagon bridge ncro H the Blue river between Beatrice and Holmes- vlllo went out from high water. Farmers have been working over time In the Holds to make up for rainy days when no mnn could work. We publish a llfit of Omaha business houses In another column. In writing or calling on them please mention this paper. Moro than a hundred Nebraska ed ucators wont to Cleveland to attend the meetings of the National Educa tional association. , Nebraska's oldest Old Line Company two and a hall' million nssets. wnnts an agent in this locality. Good big pay. Address , Uos 11U5 , Lincoln , Nob. | i Mrs. E. M. Mungcr , proprietor of the Leader general merchandise store in Heaver City , fell down a Illght of stnlra at her residence and sustained serious Injuries. "Fits , " the police dop , who for nearly - ly twenty years has done police duty In company with the various ofllcers of McCook , has been killed for biting several children. Mrs. Marie Colby , wife of General L. W. Colby , has purchased the Pad dock hotel and opera house at Heat- rice from John Tolford and John Wat son of Chicago for ? 150,000. The state railway commission has granted the Missouri Pacific railroad a further extension of time of one week lu the settlement of the Wn- bash telegraph service complaint. The death list as a result of the Northwestern freight wreck near Chadron now reaches ten. Three trainmen nnd seven tramps wore kill ed , and two trainmen and three tramps injured. A heavy hail storm struck north of Schuyler nnd caused much damage to the corn and small grain. It cov ered a strip more than two miles wide nnd moved eastward. Mrs. Jane D. English Smith , a true daughter of the revolution , died nt ( the homo of her daughter , Mrs. C. F. Seward , In Tocuniseh. Had Mrs. Smith lived until winter she would inve be-on 92 years of ago. The greatest event in that part of : ho stnte during the summer will be the second annual incoming nnd old settlers' picnic at Alexandria on Au gust 1. Base ball will bo one of the leading features of the sports. Charles Uurrouohs , a well known farmer residing north of Hastings , lost u valuable team of matched driv ing horses from the streets in Doni- plum , and there is evidence that they were stolen by thieves who made good their escape. A stranger driving nn automobile passing through West Point fright ened the team of Louis Zeplln , n dray man , who was in the act of loading cream cans. The team ran nway , with the result that ono valuable horse was killed nnd the cream spill ed nnd lost. Newport ( R. Ij dispatch : Mrs Henry Whin of Maiden , Mass. , who was Injured by the overturning of n tnllyho coach while on a plensuio r\ curslon hero with tlclocjntps to HM convention of the General Fcdoiatlon of Women's Clubs in Boston , died of her Injuries. Mrs. Helen C. Sundfau of Lincoln , Neb. , who was Injured nt the snmo time , will recover. The Midwest Life is an old line life insurance company a Nebraska com pany with its home 'ofllce at Lincoln. An ordinary life policy nt age 30 costs in this company the first year $23.71 and t hereafter $18.GO. The premiums nfter the first year may bo paid quart erly at the rate oC $1.93 n quarter. Write the homo ofllco for sample poli cies or for agency contract. Agents wanted. Write for particulars. Insurance Bounty Piurce 1m.- just finished n tabulation of farm mort gages held by the old-lino insurance companies in NcbrasKn. The totnl value of 'farm mortgages held in the state by twenty-throe of the forty- two licensed to do business is $29- 000,100. The Union Central of Cin cinnati has loaned $0,052,232 in the state , nnd is the largest owner of Nebraska farm mortgages. Next comes the Mutual Benefit of Newark with $5,151,350 , and the Aetna com- pnny of Hartford ranks third. Willie Edgar Manning , n IG-yenr-old boy of Schuyler , was emptying the Chamber of a 22-callbcr rlflo at the slough where more than a dozen boys had gone to spend the afternoon , n shot got caught In the barrel nnd while ho was extricating the shot the trigger wont off. The gun wns point ed nt the back of Frank Schley , who wns undreslsng to go in swimming. , The bullet entered the boy's back nnd wont straight through his body , cutting the main artery. He died before a physician could arrive. A Greek laborer wns struck and al most instantly killed by freight train N'o. 110 the other sldo of Wood Lnko The mnn saw the train coming , but attempted to cross the track when the train was only a short distance from him. M. Estes of Dickens wns badly in jured while returning homo from town with a load of lumber. He was Kolng down n steep hill when some of the lumber slipped forward , ttrlk- Ing the horses n .d causing tl-oni to run away , throwing him under the wheels of the wagon. It Is feared ho Is fatally hurt. Love In a cottage suggests a sort of labor union. Faith in God without friendship with man Is like poetry without print , KIND THOUGHT OF THE BRIDE. Possibly Turned Silly Custom Into Something Really Worth While. "The most considerate girl I ercr know got married yesterday , " eald the man. "She showed her thoughtfulness - fulness in a most unusual way. The 'day before the wedding she called the attention of the rest of the family tea a row of old shoes standing in a down stairs closet. " 'I want you to throw thcao after the carriage , ' she said. 'They are all mates. I collected them to throw away. I learned some tlmo ago that certain poor souls who have hard work to get clothes of any description keep a lookout for big weddings. They hang around the house at golng-away , time and pick up the good luck shoes. Moyuo they get a nt , and maybe- they don't. Anyway , I've done all I could to accommodate them. " 'Hero aro'slx pairs of shoes to bo fired after mo. If somebody doesn't get fitted In that collection , it isn't my fault. ' " Value of Brief Rests. If overworked homemakera whoso nerves are "worn to frazzle edge" would acquire the habit of sitting or lying absolutely still , relaxed and mo tionless for five or ton minutes twice a day , they would soon see improve ment. The mind must be relaxed , wor ries dropped , thoughts wandering to pleasant things. You will probably try this several times before you got It right , but after a little p'ractlce you will find that It yields largo re turns , far surpassing the sacrifice of the time it takes to practice It. It Is a foolish habit to borrow trou ble or meet it half way. Cultivate a cheerful mind and heart , and much imaginary trouble will be avoided. Hedley. Omaha Directory f Wholei&le nod retail dttleri In everything for Gentleman's table , Including Fine Imported - < ported Table Dfllcldn. If there is any little item yon are tmable to obtain in yoc , write ui lor pricei on ame , as ve will be sure to hare it. Mnll orders carefully lilted. * iMponrrns AND OCAICRS IN - - PURE rOOD PRODUCTS ' ' * * AND TABLE DELICACIES "ft COURTNEY & CO. . Oicuha. Ncbr. PRIVATE WIRE J , E , von Dorn Commission Go , Member Chicago lioiml of Tnulo and Omnlm Grulu Exchange. Grain , Provisions and Stocks Bought and Sold for immediate or future delivery. GRAIN BOUGHT AND SOLD in Car Lots. Track bids made on any railroad. Consignments Solicited. 7OO-7OI-776 Brandcls Blclg. , Omaha TtUphoari ! Bell Doujli. 10J3 nd 17i . iulu. A ! . V. THE BRIGHTEST SPOT OH THE MAP A GOOD PLACE to Invest jour money where you cnn pet from \ 6 % to 10 % On Improved Properties Write Un How Much You Hnve to Invest HASTINGS and HEYDEU 17O4Farnam St. Omaha , ffcbr. It your denier ilon'u-ar ry them , moll un7rioluriioM ( > - MONTECMRISTO i "Better Ibin tbc IW ' o 111 ilclh or them to your door. It. .1' > ' Jt 1C 1 r..V , CO , , AliiUrr , litti flanird sirrel , Omnlm , \ < -lir. ' Do You Brink Coffee | Why put the ititap , runk , Ultter-HaTuiiit cotlou to youri > tonmcu when pure GERMAN-AMERICAN COP FEE costs no morel ItnUt onhaTlnrf It. Your grocer Eoll< or can get It. l > y mail nt cnt prices. Send for free calnloprue. MYERS-DILLON ORUQ CO. , OMAHA , NEBR. Irn. llutlny & "Mai-li , Tlio 3.1 Hour 1'ax on DENTISTS lllok cor ICth a n U lr a r n a in Dental eWe In" , ' , ? , MMdli o Hit-lilt ! iilel ) < ntistry IteasonatilDprices. OMAHA WOOL & STORAGE GO. SHIP YOUR to the Omaha mar- kct to cet better WOQL prices and quick returns. Kef. , any bank In Omaha. S TUFTS DENTAL ROOMS \ = | 1517 Douglas SI. , OMAHA , NEB. Reliable Dentistry at Moderate Prices. llvcrvtlilazforthoamateur Liti-uralwholettalovtvckIn tLuWvit. bend forcutalonuo. Mull orili-natpoclalty. THE ROBERT DEMPSTER CO. , Box ltd ? , Omaha. I Steel Culverts- Suitable ( or couiuy runda unil tu\vn streets. \ \ rite for luformiiti.m < UK ! prices. SUNDtUUAND CULVERT CO. . Omaha. Noh. ASIC YOUR DEALER ABOUT THE 1 ItfEB ae MERRY v CLB& WIDOW I JOHN DEEREPLOWCO.