r,vJ . -t ) t- .'"V. :.aa.-vvt j-'.c , . V - ,tH; 1 r :iC?' i' GALLANTRY. i r'v"- , . . WAIT TILL. HE SEES) THE B5IUU. " - . ' -- i HOME-, Prizes for CARD PARTIES w i Loomis i BE r f -'Vr.. gfe v tg-"y J Sa kJsakslam sBsHsssmBssUy MADE g) gHF 9 I J v Weary .William Excuse-, me, miss, but 1 see that you have had a tiff with your lover, and he has left yon. Allow me to escort ycu home insteadV NO' SKIN LEFT ON BODY. For'Six Months Baby Was Expected to Die with Eczema Now Well Doctor Said to Use Cuticura. "Six months after birth my little girl broke out with eczema and I had two doctors in attendance. There was not a particle of skin left on her body, the blood cozedjout just anywhere, and we had to wrap, her in silk and carry her on a, pillow for ten .weeks. She was the most terrible sight I ever saw, and for, six months I looked for her to die. I used every known remedy to allevi r.te her suffering, for it was terrible to witness. Dr. C gave her up. Dr. B recommended the Cuticura Remedies. She will soon be three years eld and has never had a sign of the dread trouble since. We used about eight cakes of Cuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment. James J. Smith, Durmid, Va., Oct. 14 and 22. 1906." State Pride. There recently entered the offices of .he civil service commission at Wash ington a dashing young darky of per haps 20 years of age, who announced to the official who received him that he desired, to "get papers for an exam ination." "From what state are you?" was the question put The negro drew himself up proudly. "I am from the first state of tLe union; sir," he replied. "New York?" "No, sir; Alabama." "But," protested the official, with a smile', "Alabama is not the first state in the union." "Alphabetically speaking; sir; alpha betically speaking," said the negro. Saved From Being a Cripple for Life. "Almost six or seven weeks ago I became paralyzed 'all at once with rheumatism," writes Mrs. Louis Mc Key, 913 Seventh street,' Oakland, Cal. "It struck me in the back and extend ed from the hip of my right leg down to my foot The attack was so severe that I could not. move in bed and was afraid that I should be a cripple for life. "About .12 years ago I received a sample bottle of your Liniment but never- had occasion to use it, as I have always been well, but some thing fold me that Sloan's Liniment would help me, so I tried it. After tha, second application I could get tip out cf bed, and in .three days could walk, and now feel well and entirely free from pain.- . "My friends were, very much sur prised at: my rapid recovery and I was only too glad to tell them that Sloan's Liniment was the only med icine I used." So Polite. "She hasn't any cause to be snip py with. me. The last time J saw, her tl'.nu sure I did the politest thing X could." "What did you do?" "We were on a car and when a inan offered me a scat I said to her: fYoa take it, dear; you're the older.' " In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. A powder. It cures painful, smart ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails. It's the greatest comfort discovery Of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet Sold by all Draggists, 25c. Accept no sub fctitute. Trial package, FREE. Ad dress A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. ,A good life is the readiest way to procure a. good name. Whichcot. . Ior proof that Lydia E. Piafe ham's VegetableCoapoimcl saves woman from awgtcal operations, . lbs. S." A. Williams, of Gardiner, Haine, "writes: ,, ' I was a great sufferer from female troubles, and, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound restored me to health, in. three months, after my physician dcclarcd-thmt-an.operation was abso lutely neeesskry.'' '. ' MraAlvinaS"perlinofl54CIey. bourpe-Ave Qucago, jQL, writes : " 'I, suffered from female, troubles, a tumor and, much inflammation.. jTwo cf the best doctors in Chicago decided -that an operation was necessary to save my life. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound entirely aareA;me without cooperation. ? FACTS .FOR SICK WOMEN. , .For thirty years Lydia E. Pink. Ihsfa Vegetable Compound, mciJe IromrwJts and herbs, has beeatfeT' rtzndard remedy for female SlisL :ndhaap(itiTClycured thousands of TTpnieh who hafe been troabled with ilsplacements, inflammation, uloerai taos, fibroid tumors, irregularities, Ijeriodic pains; backache, that bear ingdo wn feeling, flatulency, indlgjes tbn,d'iz23neornervouspixi6tration. "SVhy florft yon try it? Jlrs. Pinknasa invites all sick -wometVto write Iter for asfrietv She nas rakiedi thansands. ts MasaaFJBmMsBscMCsT; mf jkay.jaacgSs3iHy RS.( WORTHING, Mrs. Gregory Worthing, said to me the other day: "I cannot un derstand why it js that so many mothers think their ducks are swans. Now, there's Mrs. Brown, always boasting abo,ut the rapid progress m sf I I f I I kF I m f a a that her Dorothy has made in music, and 'my Ethel, who did not begin until a term later, plays a great deal bet ter. "Different moth ers boast of different things," she went on, "hut almost all but myself boast about something in their children, and for my part I think the children in this place are very ordinary. Greg ory carries himself very much better than most children, because I insist ed upon his gohig in to New York to take dancing lessons when he was not eight, but the average boy of to-day is awfully slouchy. And yet I heard Mrs. Harrison talking about her son Arthur being as straight as an In dian, and that he got it from his fa ther. Fancy, that under-sized little John Harrison! "And Mrs. AVinslow say's that Bar bara sews remarkably well for a girl of ten, and she is always showing me the last thing she has done. Why, Ethel sewed well naturally. I never taught her a stitch, but she does all my towel hemming now. But I never would think of boasting of it "And the other day I happened to say that Gregory has quite a correct, ear, and that now that his voice has changed he sang better than any of the boys in the choir, and that was enough for Mrs. Demock. She began, and she. talked and talked about the beauty of Clement's voice, .and said that he took, after her. Absolute con ceit, and yet she never imagined for a moment that I noticed it Now, with Gregory, his singing comes perfectly natural, because I have always sung, and in fact, when I was a girl I used to be always asked to sing in com pany, but when ' I married I -gave' it up." .When i remembered, that to my un prejudiced eyes Gregory was va good natured hobbledehoy, and Ethel a kind hearted but hopelessly commonplace BBa- .BBBBBSfek. f 7 l JMMMMMMVMMMMMMWMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMWMVMMMMWMMMM The neighborhood sale, held at an old homestead, brings out the impor tance and the force of the man who has been thrifty and who has ready money at command. It is a sad pic ture the passing of the farm, the dis integration of a family, the blighting of a thousand memories that cluster about a hearthstone. At such a time the squeaky voice of ready" money be comes thunderous in tone, awing the modest aspiration of a neighbor who looks toward the purchase cf a yoke of cattle, a wagon, a colt; and when ready money seems determined the promissory notes of the modest fall back into tameness and silence. But ready money does not care to acquire everything at a neighborhood sale. Being material it looks to material things, and its estimate of the spir itual is but shallow, so. when at the Groggin sale Lim Jucklin outbid Stoveall, and become possessed of a pile of old books heaped on the floor,, some of. his friends marveled that he should have run 'the risk of exciting the opposition of the wealthiest man in the community. "Oh, I knew that he didn't , want 'em," said Lim as he climbed to a seat upon the -rail fence," a low but esti mative throne .of observation. "In his house they -Would be 'just so much rubbish. They don't talk to him, and whena Jtook. dont.speak to a man it is the dumbest thing in the world. It canvinake? as much w noise as a. pig, for a pig squeals; quieter than a duck, fof a diiquacksMt simply, takes its place 'alone. -with the. brickbat or the old shoeBole thaVqurls'up in' the sun. But when a book even whispers jto a man'it1 ten's-his the -sweetest of se crets. It tells him that he ain't a blamed fool, and 'this Is a mighty im portant piece of news. "Whenever. I see an old book I think of Abe Lincoln. He gathered corn for'two" days, keep in' up the down row, 'for a life of Washington, and you .men that have humped, yourselves all day behind a wagon know what that means. He was lendin' his body to" the work of openin' up his soul. It .came hard, that hook did; it meant backache -for it took Lincoln along time.to reach down to the ground, but! it meant more than if he had been wbrkin' for a hundred dollars a day. Don't under stand me to say that every f man that thinks so much of a book will- be great; he may neverbe able. to "go to a sale such as. this ,and: buy a.-ypke -of "steers, but in, theJong .run,it will be worth.:more jto him than. all the steers that Old-Elisha, was ji plowin 'when .the call, came for him to go up." i ' 'But the prophet was a handlin of steers instead of books," remarked Stovealirwho- had .mePwalkiaasWw iy.to join Lim;s audience." V- "Yes, that a fact." List replied. I .child, I couldn't help .wondering with Mrs. Worthing why it is that so manyx mothers think their ducks are swans. F THERE Is a boy that I admire, in the s u b u r b . in which I live, which suburb is in Connecticut, by the way, it is Tom Bingham. He is tan and 'sturdy and " good 'tem pered and a favor ite' with boys and girls; he has a well developed sense of humor, and I never meet him but I find that we two' have a good deal in com mon in spite of our 50 years' dis parity. The other even ing I went into town in the same car with his mother and father, and I had quite a chat with Mrs. Bingham, who is very different from Mrs. Worthing. Our subject was children, and I con fessed to her that I was clean dis couraged about my boy Harry; that it did seem as if all my talking and advice and splendid example since he' was born had been thrown away on him, and that he seemed more thought less and hopeless everjr day. "Why, I'm perfectly astonished to hear you say so," she said. "I waa telling Mr. Bingham only last night that if there was a manly, well-brought-up boy in the place it was your Harry, and he agreed with. me. Dear me! if you had such a chap as Tom to bring up you might well despair. I sometimes wonder wheth-. er we'll ever get any credit for hav ing tried to bring him up in the way he should go." , "Why, Mrs. Bingham, surely you are joking." said I. "You son Tom Is the one boy in town that I think, is a credit to his parents. He always lifts his cap when he meets me; the other day I saw him helping the washerwom an over a bad place on the icy pave ment, and. I know that he is a great fa vorite with the other boys and girls, too. I don't believe you know your boy Tom at all." And then it came over me like a thunder clap: "Do I know my boy Harry? Does be show off his best points at home?" And it struck me that perhaps Mrs. "He was a plowin' ten or fifteen yoke of 'cattle if I recollect right, but he didn't go to Heaven till he took his mind off the cattle. Didn't take none of his cxen with him, but he took wis dom with him, and a good book is the mouthpiece of wisdom. How old are you. Brother Stoveall?" "I'm eighty odd." "Gettin along putty well. And now, lookin' back over your life, what have you enjoyed the most?" "Well, it don't seem to me now that I've ever enjoyed anything since I was a boy. It has been a scuffle for me to live and to take care of what little I had raked together. I have had- to watch man all the time to keep him from robbin me." "But he could only rob you of mate rial things. If you'd been wiser you would have laid up somethin' he couldn't rob you of, and you could have set down by your fire at night and dreamed over it without any fear. You have known all along that they were goin to blow the horn for you some day. It has always been cer tain that you had to go, and then who is gcin' to take care of the things you have raked together? Come to think about it, I dont believe I ever heard you laugh right good." "I haven't had anything to laugh about." the old man replied. "And nobody else that was always afraid that he might be robbed while he laughed. But you have been robbed out of a mighty few pennies; ever since I can Temember you have been able to go to a sale and buy what you wanted, and yet of all the men I know, Stoveall, your life has been the biggest failure." "Jucklin, I could buy and sell you three times in a day, with the price doubled every time I bought you back." "Oh, 3?bu mean my land and my bouse. Yes, I reckon 'you could, but you-never saw money enough to buy me. In lookin' through advertisements for bargains did you ever find happi ness for sale? .No sir, for there ain't no bankrupt stocks of happiness. Oh, I used, to think along your line. I didn't think that I'd ever .be happy till I owned all the land adjoinin' my farm, and I was miserable because I saw no chance of gettin' it. Every day or so I'd see a hearse goin', down the road, haulin' some old fellow to the graveyard, and one day it came on me all of a sudden, that I had to go along there, too. Then I 'lowed that. I ought to get as much happiness out of the world as possible, and I was thinkin' about it one day while I was in .town, and I says to the county jedge, says I, 'Jedge, Is there, any way for a man turned forty-five to be bap-, py?' He asked me if I could read, and I told him I could make out my name Bingham and I were better off in our sons than either of us imagined. hildren aren't as respectful as they were when I was a child." How can you say that and keep a straight face? Don't you re member hearing your Uncle John say that, very thing when you were about eight? Hes had come down from Maine to visit you, and while you liked him, you felt a lit tle free with him and said some thing that brought forth his remark. And if the truth might be got at, Uncle John had a similar experience when he was a boy. His uncle went up to Maine from Boston to visit and your Uncle John made some flippant remark that caused him to say that.the disrespect of modern children (remember that it is always modern times to the man who is speaking even when you get back to the days "of Rehoboam) he said that the disrespect of modern children was something awful. Why, when he was a boy, children were brought up to be silent utterly for getting, that his father flogged him for disrespect, 'way back before Warren fell at Bunker Hill, and while he was flogging him he deplored the evil days on which they had fallen. It had been so different when he was a boy. Children then were always re spectful. In fact, this remark translated into different languages goes back to the time of Adam and he, for manifest reasons, could not make it. But he" is the only one who could n't and didn't. (Copyright, by James Pott & Co.)- Disconcerting. It is disconcerting, when you have paid out $500 for a violin and $40 for a bow to find that you can't make a squeak on the blamed thing without a ten-cent piece of rosin! Judge. At the Intelligence Office. Manager Do you wish' a. plain cook, madam? Mrs. Honeymoon Yes, please; just as plain as possible. Judge. If it was printed in a sheriff's sale. Then he said: 'Well, read good books and think about 'em. Don't read the things that will stimulate you to ar gufy, but the things that will feed your mind without raisin' its bristles. Some books are full of the sweet un selGshness of the human heart. Read them. Some make the fancy play like you have seen the lightnin of an evenin' on a low-hangin' cloud far over in the west. Read them. Don't read the vicious ones any more than you'd keep close company with a vicious man. Do this and you'll find the world openin' up toward the past and a brightenin' toward the future. One man is really stronger than another for what he knows and not for what he's got. We know he can't take his material things with him, but no man knows that he can't take the spir itual things. Solomon was the wisest man. it is said, but I believe he would have been a little wiser if he hadn't been quite so rich. He wouldn't have been mixed up with so many women, and right there Is where he proved he wan't any wiser than some of the rest of us. "Well, I thought over what the coun ty jedge said, and I began to read, slow at first, for I hadn't been well schooled, and the more I read the bigger my farm seemed to grow, and now I've got more than ten million acres under, cultivation. Laws a massy, what a chance you youngsters have. Instead' of bein' happy only in the latter end of your life you 'can be gin now. I don't mean that you should neglect any work that you may have to do, or that you shouldn't want to make, money, but I do mean that you ought to lay up an estate that can't become bankrupt I am a givin' you old talk, it is true, but it is the old principles that touch man the most. 'for they have always had a bearin' on his life. Don't understand me to mean, boys, that you should become bookish, but jest to mix your readin' in along with your life. It will keep you from breakin' yourself down try in' to keep up with some man that can make, money easier than you can, and he will always be there, jest a little ill front of you. Love your feller-man, for he's all right in the long run. He's got more sympathy than hate. Some body may tell you that human nature is all selfish, but don't you believe it Well," he added, getting down off the fence,' "I must box up :my gold now and cart it home. Gbin my way,' Brother Stoveall?" "Yes, Jucklin, but you are no com-' psnyforme.". t t s - T reckon that's right," LImuel re plied. "I know it must be right, for I haven't got anything you want." (Copyright, by Opie Read.). f f PERHAPS it is the desire of every hostess that her prize shall be kept and made use of by lis winner, and not passed on from winner to winner, that has brought about a return to the simpler gifts that will be put into use ". once before there is time to think f the momentary sacrifice of giving away the prize just won. A pretty veil case, for example, will be placed in the drawer of the dressing table at once, if only to get it out of the way, and will perhaps fill a long-felt need; or a dainty sofa cushion will be placed on the lounge9 among its fel lows immediately on return home, never to be removed until worn out or faded. . Even a handsome brocade workbag is almost sure to be pressed into im mediate service in place of the old one, which has grown shabby and never was the correct color for the room. A bodice case, a parasol case, or an attractive bag for the toilet ar ticles necessary in traveling are sure to be put away for the coming sum mer. For any one fond of sewing and em broidery, to make one's own prizes is more a pleasure than a task, and while there may be small time at the height of the season to give to such employment, there will surely be some spare evenings from now on that can be turned to good account The sum mer is, of course, the great time for this sort of work, and many girls and women commence now to gather to gether such remnants of silk, brocades and lace as appeal to their artistic sense, so that by the time the hot weather arrives, enforcing inertia from active sports and exercise, they will have on hand sufficient materials to make up enough attractive bridge prizes for the entire winter that is to follow. A parasol case or roll is an attrac tive, as well as a most useful, novelty. Not only. will it prove of -service An traveling, but at all other times as well a silk or satin case to keep the delicate material of the parasol .from becoming soiled or faded and' the costly gold or shell handle from being marred will be. found an excellent service. , A strip of material a yard and a half by a half yard In width and length will be. ample for a single case, but many of the' parasol rolls are made sufficiently large to contain three, or more parasols. The piece ot brocade, flowered silk or satin is lined with one ' thickness of cotton wadding and faced with a light silk the color of the outside material, and the. whole is then bordered with a flat band of narrow satin ribbon, with lace, with a , silk niching, .pr simply with a row of embroidery 6r feather., stitching. Inside, about 12 inches from each end, are stitched bands, of RIBBON EMBROIDERY grur jK?l Omaha Directory JWsSLt fc ?MS9 2 nflaaatoa Here is a handsome design suitable to be worked on Dorothy bags, sides of teapot cosys, on sash ends, handkerchief sachets, etc. It is in ribbon of three widths, the colors of which would, of course, be chosen to suit the purpose for which it is used. A good effect would be gained by using three or more shades for the flowers, the darkest-shade for the bottom of the chap let, gradually shading to the lightest The stalks, which are in cording stitch, are worked with green silk, the ribbon for the bow being in some contrasting color to the flowers. ' THE APRON IN SOCIETY. Dainty Trifle That Is Worn by Guests at Afternoon Teas. A report from London says that the apron, once the badge of household work, has been honorably received in to society circles. The guest at after noon tea is now furnished by her hostess with a dainty little lace bro cade apron, embroidered or hand- painted and, tied with ribbons. There was a time when afternoon tea con sisted only of innocent trifles that could hardly do damage to the most delicate dress fabric, but the function has now become somewhat more seri ous with the advent of scones, muffins and cakes filled with cream of custard. The tiny serviette was nearly useless as a defense, while the pretty tea apron solves the problem and saves many an awkward stain on dress 'ma terial. It can be made in a variety .of materials, muslins lined with soft washing silks being the most popu lar. These tea aprons are made very short and without bibs, and they are fitted with tiny pockets holding a Japanese serviette in cream paper ribbon - about three Inches apart, through which are put the handle and end of the parasol, keeping each parasol firmly In place. When the parasols are all laid in their respectiye slits, with handle and sticks alternating, the piece remain ing at each end of the case is folded down over the sticks of the parasols, and the case then rolled up. and tied together with ribbon strings. This same case may be made up in chintz or even in linen, so that it may be washed readily. A small amount of orris and heliotrope powder sprinkled through the cotton wadding will give a delicious perfume to the case. A novel kind of workbag is one made to represent the costumes of the early 50s, when hooped skirts reigned supreme. An ordinary bag is first made of silk or bright gingham, a round piece of cardboard making a firm foundation for the bag. About the end of the bag are placed two fluted ruffles of taffeta silk about two inches in width. The bag is closed in the ordinary way with a ribbon draw ing string. A china or wooden head, and shoulders of a small doll are then purchased, and the head orna mented with a poke bonnet with rib bon trimmings of the same period as athe hoop skirts. A long shoulder cape of taffeta is then made, and the head .of the doll is placed on the top of the bag, while the drawing strings are run up through the doll's head, a slit be ing made in the wig and in the top of the poke bonnet The ends of the ribbon or string are then tied In a gay rosette 'and the little lady hung up against the bag. When the bag is to be opened the head, with its silk cape attached, is pushed up to the top of the string. thus leaving sufficient space for the bag to be opened. The cardboard in . the bottom ot the bag makes the skirt flare out all around, so that when the cape .comes down over the top of the .bag there is no possible evidence of 'anything -but a charming. .little cos tume doll,, representative of a period when gowns were more picturesque than either, convenient or sensible to wean Green Is much favored, not for whole costumes, but for a single coat or skirt Toques are' the great favorites for demi-toilettes, as are also taffeta and tsllevturbans. .. Nothing more gross than a cobweb is permitted on milady's foot in the way of a stocking. s.ww patterned with red roses. The inno vation seems to be on common sense lines, and that is more than can be said for society changes in general. Rubber Teething Rings. Ivory teething rings are not to be recommended because they tend to harden the gum and make it more dif ficult for the teeth to push through. If the baby seems to want something to bite on, a soft rubber ring which will yield to the pressure made on it is the best thing to give it. When the gums seem hot and fever-' ish a piece of ice held in a soft, clean cloth and gently rubbed on the gums often gives relief. T . J !--, .. -. , f i I ....fc ncncai jduuia oic ui wmu: iiei i edged with colored val. Stripes will be much used in the quarter-inch and in the hair line. Claret-colored cloth suits have been much seen with' hats which repeat the same shade. Taffeta parasols, trimmed with dainty bands of straw, will be seen at the seaside resorts. MM) "My husband has promised to allow me to choose what I wast for my birthday." "Oh, then there'll be no surprise this year." "Won't there! Ill-bet you there is. only he'll get it instead ot me." Laundry work at home would be much 'more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness. It is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great er strength than other makes. Millionaire Whlncrs. Senator La Follette at a recent din ner in Washington said of the mil lionaires who complain about the harm that they and their affairs have suffered from attacks: "These whiners, with only them selves to blame, remind me of a bad little Priiprose boy. "He ran howling to his mother: "'Ob, ma. Johnny has hurt me!' '"And how did bad Johnny hurt mother's little darling?' '"Why, I was a-goin' to punch him in the face, and he ducked his head and I hit my knuckles against the walL" Preparation for Knowledge. No. man can learn what he has not preparation for learning, however near to his eyes is the subject A chemist may tell his most precious secrets to a carpenter, and he shall be never the wiser the secrets he would not utter to a chemist for an estate. God screens us evermore from premature ideas. Our eyes are holden that we can not see things that stare us in the face until the hour arrives when the mind Is ripened; then we behold them, and the time when we saw them not is like a dream. Emerson. Sheer white goods, In fact, any fins wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beau ty. Home laundering would be equal ly satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without, thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the improved appearance of your work. Gleam of Hope. Orville Ardup Ah. here comes that infernal bill collector! Caller (producing folded document with alacrity) I am glad to hear you say so, Mr. Ardup. I've been here nine times without having been a collector, you know. E. W. ANSPACH LARGEST COMMISSION SALESMAN OF Horses and Mules at r. S. YARDS. South Omaha. Xehraaka. AurtionserefrTbtiRidartbroBcbotu the year. Spec ial Range Horse Sales second and fourth Tnursdajs each month thrnugnoot tbe season. I. C. GAIXUF, - - - - Auctioneer. THE PAXTON fl Rooms from 11.00 up single. 75 cents np doable. CAFE. PRICKS RSASONAILi; OMAHA TENT &AWIIN8 CO. Tents, Awnings, etc. Largest west of Chicago. Write for prices and estimates before baying. Cor. Ilth and Harney Sts. Do You Drink Coffee Way pat the dicap, rank. blttar.ft-ocd eoa is yonritn rb when pure aCRMAN-AMKHlCais COFFEE cost. no moret lmtoZSfil y grocer Mil It or eaa art ifc RUBBER GOODS by mall at cut prices. Send for free eatalosrne MYERS-DtLLdS DRUQ CO.. OT-AHaTheS: AUTOMOBILES The best High Wheel Aato Rnnabont in the Co., 1115-17.Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. CREAM WANTED We are la a position to par faacr srfrZ VT separator ereamat ocr staUonbaVJTSi0 B5 direct to tts at Omaha! rm if jSUunamfoi VEUE Tr8Sht VEHICLES AK YOUR DEALS OB JOHN DEERE PLOW CO- i3 Pi"; A X 'PS J i J 3&L . r I If-.!. .--- JSSsSk aJfvrtTM?; -t . immMm -S. t&Sti. $. , ja.A3frr4-. '.tgAt yC-St&W .::Sg?Wg: - .-aiiak. tuhj&&&?'s. & ?i it r.Hrrws, ijr 3-csi'ita J3S- i&ff!iSi&&War3ia -ST- -