The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, June 10, 1908, Image 2

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Columbus Journal
STROTHER & STOfcKWELL, Pubs.
COLUMBUS, -
NEBRASKA
PERSONAL.
Mayor Busse of Chicago admitted
that he and Miss Josephine Lee had
been married more than a month.
The conviction of Dr. Walter R. Gil
lette, formerly vice-preeident of the
Mutual Life Insurance company, on
the charge of perjury, and his sen
tence to six months in the peniten
tiary were set aside and the indict
ment against him quashed by a deci
sion of the appellate division of the
supreme court of New York, on tech
nical grounds.
It was announced at the White
House that President Roosevelt would
go to Africa in April, 1909, to hunt
big game.
Charles Henry Brent, bishop cf the
Philippines, has declined to accept the
post of bishop of Washington.
S. K. Strother of Taylorville was
elected president of the Illinois Press
association.
Maj. Alfred Dreyfus was shot and
slightly wounded by Louis Gregori, a
military writer, in the Pantheon just
after the canonization of Eniile Zoja.
Dr. William C. Gorgas of the isth
mian canal commission was elected
president of the American Medical as
sociation at Chicago.
The funeral of former Senator James
K. Jones of Arkansas was held at the
family residence in Washington.
C. J. L. Meyer, former millionaire
and once president of the Northwest
ern railroad, asked to be admitted to
the Milwaukee county poorhouse.
Congressman J. P. Lanning, former
ly vice-president and director of the
defunct Ohio Trust company, was in
dicted at Norwalk, O., on seven counts
charging embezzlement.
William Jeffries was hanged at St.
Charles, Mo., for the murder of Wil
liam Wussler.
President Roosevelt narrowly es
caped serious injury when a horse
he was riding reared and fell with him
into a creek.
John Hays Hammond, the noted
mining expert, entered the contest for
the nomination for vice-president on
the Republican ticket.
Gaston P. Philip, civil engineer , and
clubman of New York and Washing
ton, was acquitted of the murder of
Frank Macaboy, a cab driver, by a
jury in Washington.
Robert A. Smith, retiring mayor of
St. Paul, Minn., was presented with
111,000 by business men.
C. C. Hanson was appointed receiver
for the Gulf Compress company by
Judge McCall of the United States
court at Memphis, Tenn. The concern
has a capital stock of $1,000,000.
King Gustav of Sweden reviewed
30,000 soldiers of the German amy at
Berlin.
GENERAL NEWS.
Four men were killed and ten in
jured by the bursting of a steam pipe
on the armored cruiser Tennessee
while she was on a speed trial near
San Pedro. Cal. Rear Admiral Sebrec
and other officers had narrow escapes
from death or severe injury.
Eight persons were killed and a
score injured in a head-on collision on
the Washington, Baltimore & Annapo
lis electric railway between Annapolis
and Camp Parole.
Three packing companies and one
railroad company, convicted in 1S0G
of rebating and sentenced to pay fines
aggregating $61,000, handed to the
clerk of the United States court in
Kansas City a check for the total
amount of their fines, plus costs.
Contests for 24 seats in the Repub
lican national convention were de
cided by the national committee in
favor of the Taft delegates. These
contests came from Alabama and
Arkansas.
King Edward, Queen Alexandra and
Princess Victoria started for Reval.
Russia, for a visit to the emperor of
Russia.
Sheriff George W. Garrison of Okla
homa City, Okla., was shot and killed
by negroes while trying to arrest a
murderer.
Gregory Grey of Laporte City. la.,
made a will leaving his $50,000 estate
to a poor man who had befriended
him, and ten minutes later he died.
Sebastian Guyla, a clerk in a whole
sale liquor house in Wilkesbarre, Pa.,
and Mrs. Anna Kares a married wom
an whose husband had deserted her,
carried out a death pact, Guyla killing
the woman and himself.
Safe blowers robbed the post office
at Maryville, Tenn., of about $1,000.
George FInne, who shot his neigh
bor, George Priebe, at Laporte, Ind.,
was found guilty of manslaughter.
At a special election held in Kansas
City, Kan., the proposition to substi
tute the commission form of govern
ment for the present one was de
feated. C. A. Coey's balloon Chicago traveled
Irom Quincy, 111., to Clear Lake, S. D..
over S00 miles, in 11 hours, setting a
new speed record.
The Mexican government stated that
reports that peace with the Yaqui In
dians had been declared or was as
sured were premature.
Five hundred infuriated Italians
stormed the closed doors of the pri
vate banking bouse of Gaetano Liotta
in Cleveland, O.
The cotton planted this spring is
estimated at 32.0S1.000 acres and its
condition on May 25 last is given as
79.7 pe: cent
NEWSNOTES;
1 FOR THE 8
BUSY MAN
Q Most Important Happen- jj
ijj ings of the World X
5 Told in Brief. 8
A tornado -which passed, near Ge
neva, Neb., caused two 'deaths, fatally
injured two other persons and de
stroyed several 'thousands of dollars'
worth of property.
Stacy Matlock chief of the Pawnee
tribe of Indians, and Miss Blanche
Bill, a Pawnee girl, will be married at
Carlisle. Pa., where the young woman
is attending the government school.
In the case of the Minneapolis, St.
Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway com
pany against the Wisconsin railway
commission, the supreme court of
Wisconsin upheld the commission and
favorably established the constitution
ality of'the law that created it
It was declared in London that
210,000 pounds of American meat that
has been stored in London, Glasgow
and Liverpool was reshipped by fast
steamer to New York to meet the con
tinued shortage of meat in America.
The full Republican national com
mittee met in Chicago and began the
hearings on which will be determined
the contests involving 229 seats in the
convention.
The City of Cleveland, largest pas
senger steamer on the lakes, started
from Detroit on her maiden trip.
About 20 persons were killed and
$20,000 damage done to property by a
cloudburst at Guanajuato, Mexico.
Mae O'Reilly, who, Julius G. Truel
son, Jr., declared in a "confession" to
the Texas authorities, was murdered
on the Gunness farm at Laporte, Ind.,
is in Saratoga, N. Y., alive and well.
Three persons were killed instant
ly and more than a dozen injured in a
collision between an Elgin, Joliet &
Eastern freight train and an Aurora
car of the Joliet & Southern Electric
Traction company.
Joseph M. Brown defeated Hoke
Smith for the gubernatorial nomina
tion in the Georgia Democratic pri
mary. T
Forty ships were wrecked and 270
pearl fishers met death in a terrible
typhoon off the west coast of Austra
lia. The Wise levee, constructed along
the Missouri shore of the Mississippi
river, across from Alton, broke and
about 1,000 acres of farm land were
submerged.
Mrs. Minnie Grunert was found
strangled to death at Appleton, Wis.,
and the police believed she was mur
dered. The jury at Allegan, Mich., disa
greed in the case of Mrs. Neelly,
charged with manslaughter because
her child died while under treatment
by mental healers.
Reports of principals of schools in
the East side, New York, have re
vealed the shocking fact that hundreds
of the pupils are starving. A commit
tee of East side school board members
has organized for the relief of these
poor children and emergency meas
ures have been adopted.
In a desperate fight with a large
wildcat near Cannonsburg, Pa., John
Brady, a farmer, was fatally injured.
Robbers cracked the safe of the
Bank of Fairland, Okla., and obtained
$10,000.
Idaho Democrats were split by the
Mormon question and held two con
ventions. Democrats of Maryland and
Louisiana elected uninstructed dele
gations. Preparations for the placing of
Emile Zola's body in the Pantheon
aroused the anti-semites of Paris to
violent rage and some rioting oc
curred. Charles T. Muir, paying teller of a
New York bank, committed suicide be
cause a shortage in his accounts was
discovered.
Senator Allison defeated Gov. Cunf
mins in the Iowa primaries by about
12,000 majority.
The Burlington road was fined at
Springfield. 111., for violating the 28-
hour live stock shipment law.
A. P. Camden, a Chicago traveling
man, was murdered in Minneapolis
by a youth supposed to be insane.
The federal grand jury at St. Paul
returned three indictments against
James L. Lovering, publisher of the
Mail Order Monthly and of Successful
Agriculture, charging him with using
the mails for the purpose of promoting
a lottery and a scheme to defraud.
With appropriate exercises, the peo
ple of the south celebrated the one
hundredth anniversary of the birth of
Jefferson Davis.
Mrs. William Dorner and her four
young daughters were asphyxiated by
gas in their heme in Chicago.
Postmaster General Meyer an
nounced that an agreement had been
reached with the British government
for a letter postage of two cents an
ounce between the United States and
Great Britain and Ireland, to become
effective October 1.
The president appointed Roy H.
Chamberlain, an attorney at law, of
Iowa, as general appraiser of mer
chandise at New York.
The Kosciusko county bank at War
saw, Ind., was closed by the state au
ditor because of bad loans.
C. F. Wilber, a butcher of Beatrice,
Xeb., built a gallows and hanged him
self. Theodore P. Shonts denied the
stories that his son-in-law, the Duke
de Chaulnes, was a drug fiend; he said
the nobleman was stricken with heart
disease while praying by his wife's
side.
For perhaps the first time in history
there will be a fair election in Central
America the first week in July, when
Panama chooses its new president
The campaign has become so threaten
ing that it has been decided to guard
the polls with United States marines.
The supreme court of the United
States affirmed the decision of the
United States circuit court for the
eastern district of Missouri in the ex
tradition case of H. Clay Pierce of the
Waters-Pierce Oil company of St
Louis, holding him subject to extradi
tion to Texas, where he is under in
dictment on a charge of perjury.
OBITUARY.
Dr. Williamson F. Boyakin died at
Marysville, Ky., in his one hundred
and second year. He was reared in
Tennessee and Gen. Andrew Jackson
gave him a college education.
Mrs. W. Van Werden, wife of Dr
W. Van Werden. a prominent physi
cian wof Des Moines, la., died from
blood poisoning, caused by her step
ping on a tack.
William H. Welch, founder of the
Western Newspaper Union and first
publisher of the Des Moines Leader
died at his home in Chicago
ALLIES BACKDOWN
ANTI-TAFT FORCES DECIDE NOT.
TO BOLT.
FORMAL STATEMENT ISSUED
Presentation of Evidence in Contests
Will Continue in Regular Way
Until the Close.
Chicago. Representatives of the
"allies have recalled their statement
that they will bolt the republican na
tional committee so far as the presen
tation of evidence to support the
claims of anti-Taft delegations from
southern states is concerned. There
is evidence that the announcement
made Saturday night upon the author
ity of Representative Francis J.
Burke, manager of Senator Knox, af
ter he had been in conference with
Senator Hemenway of Indiana, J. B.
Kealing of Indiana and others identi
fied with the campaign being made by
the "allies" created dissension. Some
of the other spokesmen for the "al
lies" declared the announcement to be
ill advised and they busied them
selves Sunday to counteract its ef
fect. After numerous conferences the fol
lowing, which was headed. "Statement
from the allies," was issued:
"Upon the authority of the repres
entatives of all presidential candidates
other than Secretary of War Taft it
was announced today that they would
continue to present their side of the
contested delegate cases to the nation
al committee. The decision of the na
tional committee will not be taken as
final by the candidates known as the
'allies,' but an appeal will be taken in
cases where it is believed injustice
has been done, first to the committee
on credentials and later to the conven
tion itself.
"The determination of the repres
entatives of the 'allies' to continue the
presentation of the contests to the na
tional committee is not to be taken as
an indication that they approve of the
manner in which these contests have
been decided. But in order to be in
the position to present all of the cases
in proper form to the committee, on
credentials it is deemed advisable to
comply with the form of procedure
laid down by the national committee.
"It is the firm determination of the
representatives of the 'allies' to first
give the national committee an op
portunity to consider all the contests
on their merits."
STORM VICTIM DEAD.
Mrs. E. Arganbright of Shickley Dies
of Injuries.
Davenport, Neb. The results of the
tornado Friday night east cf here,
at Carleton, are just being realized.
The wire of E. Arganbright, who was
killed at his home two miles east of
Shickley, died, and the loss to prop
erty east of Shickley Is conservative
ly estimated at $50,000. The loss at
Carleton. where two were killed, will
reach $60,000. Following is a partial
list: New school building, $6,000;
G. W. Bailey, residence and out buid
ings, $5,000; Lutheran church and
parsonage, $2,500; United Brethren
church, $2,500; W. C. Bates, $700; D.
M. Smith, $1,000; E. E. Lichty,
$1,000; Philip Mall. $400; Mrs. Bris
tow, $500; Lester Carter, $500; Wil
liam G. Chen, $500; Frank Kochrow,
$600; John Edwards, $300; W. F.
Bradley. $300; Mrs. Yearnshaw, $300;
Thad Easterbrook, $300; Frank Fitz
siramons, $500; Dr. Westerhoff, $200;
Frank Sissell, $500; J. G. Bader, $500:
President Names Commission.
Washington Carrying out his dec
larations to the conference of gover
nors that should congress fail to pro
vide for the continuanse of the Inland
Waterway's commission, he should
continue it by executive act, and con
gress having failed to take action on
the subject. President Roosevelt has
re-appointed the members cf that com
mission. Great Crowd of Teachers.
Cleveland. O. Thirty-one thousand
members of the National Educational
association have signified their inten
tion of being present at the conven
tion of that organization to be held in
this city June 29 to July 3, inclusive.
The attendance may swell to 60,000 or
more.
NAVAL BILL BEATEN.
Russian Duma Defeats Appropriation
for Four Battleships.
St. Petersburg The Duma by a
vote of 194 to 78 rejected the item
in the naval budget appropriating $5,
500,000 to lay the keels of four battle
ships during the current year. This
vote is tantamount to a vote of lack
of confidence in the present officials
-f the ministry of marine and whole
sale resignations from the ministry
are expected to follow.
Calls Uncle Sam Bad Names.
Caracas El Constitutional, the offi
cial organ of President Castro, pub
lishes a New York letter stating that
it is rumored that the United States
will secretly support Colombia in case
of war with Venezuela. In an editorial
article that paper discredits the re
port, but says President Castro will
fulfil his duty, whatever that may be.
The paper also publishes a partisan
speech In which the United States is
called "the Cain of America, which
stimulates fraternal cordiality in order
to disguise brutal instincts."
Honors for Nebraska Girls.
Wellesley, Mass.-yAmong the suc-
" cessful candidates for the bachelor
of arts degree at Wellesley college
are Miss Gertrude B. White, Omaha,
and Miss Etta M. Schneider, Fre
mont, Neb.
New Wheat Differential.
Minneapolis, Minn. By a vote ot
256 to 109, the Minneapolis chamber
of commerce adopted a rule making
No. 2 northern wheat deliverable on
I all future contracts at a differential of
3 cents a bushel
NEBRASKA NEWS AND NOTES.
Items of Greater or Lesser Impor
tance Over the State.
The Catholics will put up a fine
school building at Elgin
Adams voted 15 to .28 in favor of
an issue of $15,000 in bonds for the
erection of a school house.
The saloon fight at Leshara has
been won by the liquor element, the
town board having granted a license
for one saloon.
County Judge G. C. Marshall of
Washington county has announced his
intention of resigning his office, to
take effect July J. He has bought an
interest in the Arlington State bank
at Arlington.
John Smith, a Burlington detec
tive, has been at Wymore investigat
ing the disappearance of grain from
the cars while in the yards, and as a
consequence warrants will be issued
for the arrest of several persons.
A number of farmers in Cass coun
ty have recently been swindled by a
well dressed and good talking insur
ance agent, who claimed to be repre
senting the Bankers' Accident Insur
ance company, and would collect and
receipt for the premium on the policy.
The fees collected by Secretary o:
State Junkin during May aggregate
$4,205.69. This is about double the
usual amount and far exceeds the
$60,000 estimate for two years made
by the secretary of state when the
fees of his office were increased by
legislative enactment The $1 fee for
motor vehicles during the month
amounted to $354.20.
The general opinion seems to be
that Nebraska has a chance to make
an excellent showing at the Grand
American handicap, to be held at Co
lumbus, O., June 23 to 26. At the
state shoot a series of records were
made that cannot be duplicated in any
other state, fifty-four of the men en
tering making a score on 600 birds, or
better than 91 per cent
Mr. Croker, a well-to-do farmer liv
ing about ten miles southwest of Mc
Cook, threw himself head foremost
down an abandoned well, one hundred
and fifteen feet deep, en his farm and
was instantly killed. He leaves a wife
and seven children. He had a hallu
cination that the world was about to
come to an end, and sought to defeat
the foreclosure by suicide route.
A petition liberally signed by citi
zens of Knoxville, Tenn., has been
filed with Governor Sheldon, asking
for the release of Alber Crigger, sen
tenced to the penitentiary for two and
a half years from Red Willovr county
for horse stealing.. The petition says
Crigger is the sole support of an aged
father and mother, is only 23 years old
and owes his predicament to bad com
pany. Opinion seems to differ among the
farmers of this section, says a Fair
bury dispatch, in regard to the condi
tion of the wheat crop since the re
cent heavy rains. Some contend that
wheat has been damaged, while others
hold to the belief that no damage has
been done unless the sun comes out
too bright and hot and causes rust lo
follow the soaking can&ed by 'ie
rains.
Mrs. John Knox of Palmyra is at the
Pasteur institute in Chicago under
treatment for rabies communicated
by a pet cat. The cat was a house
hold pet and was kept in the house
all of the time. While Mrs. Knox had
it on her lap stroking its back the
cat suddenly sank its teeth deep into
her right hand: Her hand began to
sweH and she was advised to at once
go to the Pasteur institute.
The season for destructive storms
is at hand. WIND and LIGHTNING
will destroy and damage buildings and
kill and maim stock in barns and
pastures. Protect yourself by insur
ing them in the Nebraska Mutual Ins.
Co., home office, 141 South Twelfth
street, Lincoln, Neb. Write us for
particulars.
One of the oldest farmers in New
York county, who has watched the
great improvement made in recent
years in the preparation and plant
ing of corn by York county farmers,
stated that never before has he seen
farmers pay so much attention to the
preparation of corn ground and that
the seed this year is the best. Owing
to the great work done in preparing
the corn ground and the fine rains of
which every ounce of water was
soaked in and is still held in the sub
soil, the prospects have never been
better.
Nebraska crop bulletin says: The
week was cool and cloudy, with an
excess of rain in most parts of the
state. The daily mean temperature
was between 60 degrees and 64 de
grees in the eastern and southern
counties, which is two to three de
grees below the normal. But in the
northwestern counties it was about
56 degrees, which is six degrees below
the normal. Tuesday was the warm
est day, with a maximum temperature
quite generally above S5 degrees. Fri
day and Saturday mornings were the
coldest, with minimum temperatures
about 50 degrees in the eastern sec
tions and five to ten degrees colder
in the western.
Eli A. Barnes, the newly elected
commander of the G. A. R., depart
ment of Nebraska, has reappointed A.
M- Trimble assistant adjutant general
and quartermaster general and has
sent his first official orders to the
posts in the state.
According to the report of the coun
ty recorder of Otoe county there were
eleven farm mortgages filed during the
month of May, amounting to $31,750,
and five released, of the value of $9,
550. On tdwn and village property
thirteen mortgages filed, whose value
was $7,810.46. and seven released, to
the amount of $8,156.
Dr. H. B. Morris, alias Dr. A. Bar
tell, a palmist who has been operating
in Beatrice, was arrested and lodged
in jail by Chief of Police Moore on
receipt of a message from the chief
of police at Dallas. Tex., ordering him
to arrest and hold Morris.
Frank G. Fox pleaded guilty in the
district court at Fremont to the charge
of forgery and was sentenced to three
years in the penitentiary. Fox at
first pleaded not guilty, but after con
sulting with his attorney changed his
j mind. He was released from the pen
I itentiary on May 19 and within a week
attempted to pass a Gorged check.
THE STATE CAPITAL
MATTERS OF INTEREST TO ALL
CITIZENS.
THE CONVICT UBQR CONTRACT
Broom Company to Continue as Now
Until June Seventeen, at Fifty
Cents Per Convict
Labor Contract With Convicts.
The State Board of Public Lands
and Buildings decided to permit the
Lee Broom and Duster company to use
convict labor until June 17 at 50 cents
a convict per day. After that date the
labor is to.be paid for at a rate of 75
cents a day for each convict This
notice was served on C. R. Lee, man
ager of the company, so that he wou;d
know he is expected to vacate the
penitentiary by June 17 unless he
agrees to accept the convicts at the
higher rate of pay. The action of the
board was reported to Governor Shel
don, who approved' it.
The Lee company objected strenu
ously to paying a higher rate for the
convicts and Mr. Lee said he would re
commend to -the next legislature that
the state install some kind of manufac
turing plant and use the convicts it
self. "This," he said, "will show the
people that little money is made out
of convict labor. The state will never
be satisfied, however, until it has tried
the experiment of using the convicts
and the quicker this is tried, the bet
ter I will be satisfied."
While he said he had several offers
from other prisons to use their con
victs, Mr. Lee said if he finally con
clued to quit the penitentiary here he
hoped to quit prison labor entirely.
Report on Nebraska Banks.
Te annual report of Secretary Rcyse
of the State Banking board, now in
the hands of the printers, will shortly
be issued to the public. Notwithstand
ing the recent panic the report shows
the state banks to be in good sound
condition and only one failure during
the entire year, the Citizen's bank of
Firth. This failure was due to heavy
speculation on the board of trade by
the cashier. During the year there
were examined 689 banks, and building
and loan associations for which fees
were collected to the amount of $12,
440; forty-seven banks were chartered,
for which fees were collected to the
amount of $1,175. Mr. Royse condemns j
the ownership of a chain of banks as
follows:
"There is one practice that exists
to some ,extent in this state which, in
my opinion, sooner or later will have
to be remedied or serious trouble will
follow I refer to a chain of small
banks owned, operated and controlled
by the same management, or used as
feeders for some larger bank. This is
a practice that will require more than
ordinary skill to avoid disaster sooner
or later. I am firm in the conviction
that some legislation is necessary to
enable the State Banking Board to
meet this practice, when in their
opinion the interest of the depositors
demands it."
River Too Quick for Courts.
The supreme court has admi.ted its
jurisdiction cannot keep up with the
changes in the Big Muddy and there
fore John Rober, who sought to have
title to land on its banks quieted in
him. will have to go to the Iowa
courts, for the last reports were to
the effect that the farm was now ;
camping on that side of the river. The
land was settled back in 1S55. when
the pioner thought he was getting lo
cated in Washington county, Nebras
ka, and patent was sued for it in
1860. During the civil war the river
got to flopping about and finally set
tled down on top of the farm. Ac
cretions attached to the astern bank
and the farmer waked up cue morning
over in Iowa. In 1873 the river took
a sudden notion to go over into Iowa
itself, and it cut a new channel. leav
ing the farm in question high and
dry, between the river on the east and
the old channel on the west. The
court holds that in cases of that kind,
where the changes in the river are
sudden and not gradual, the boundary
of the state remains in the old chan
nel and does not follow the new river
as in the case of a gradual change.
Street Railway Sale Void.
The United States court of appeals
at St. Paul, Minn., has set aside the
sale of the old Home Street Railway
company to the new Citizens' com
pany of Lincoln. The effect of the de
cision is to deprive the Citizens' com
pany of the franchises permitting use
of the streets of the city. A defect in
the confirmation of the sale of the old
company is the basis for the ruling.
The Citizens' company claims that this
merely sets aside the sale, but that
under a decision of the supreme court
of Nebraska it cannot be driven from
the streets.
Bequest Goes to Widows.
By reason of a decision of the su
preme court handed down the widows
and servants of fishermen in the king
dom of Norway will be permitted to
participate in the division of a trust
fund left to them by Nils O. Nilson of
Boone county, who died some time
ago. Nilson's only relatives were
brothers and sisters. He left to two
churches in Norway $6,000 and $5,000
and two-thirds of the remainder of his
estate to be kept in trust for the ben
efit of the widows of fishermen and
servant girls of his old home town.
Boys Escape from School.
From the accounts filed with the
state it is evident boys sent to the In
dustrial school at Kearney don't like
the place. For the last four months
the expense of returning escaped boys
has been unusually large. For Febru
ary it cost the state $32.67, by reason
of the escape of inmates of the school:
S81.51 for March: $6.94 for April, and
j $43.05 for May. Whether the large
number of escapes is due to a microbe
at work, or carelessness on the part
of officers of the school or just hap
pened, the account does not state.
aafl'-'-Laaw' aaatti'-IaBm
K-'-RBajk av avP'raaB
H.Mv X Iv.i -.M . f A v-HrHjr-SB
This woman says Lydia K
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
saved her life. Bead her letter.
Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning
Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
" I can truly say that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound saved my
life, and 1 cannot express my gratitude
to you in words. For years I suffered
with the worst forms of female com
plaints, continually doctorin? and
spending lots of money for medicine
without help. I wrote you for advice,
followed it as directed, and took Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and
it has restored me to perfect health.
Had it not been for you I should have
been in my grave to-day. I wish every
suffering woman would try it"
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
andhaspositivelycnredthousandsoi
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
r. , . . o . j -9rr
tion,aizzmess,or nervous prosirauon.
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, liynn. Mass.
Food i
Products
Peerless
Dried Beef
Unlike the ordinary dried
beef that sold in bulk
Lihbys Peerless Dried Beef
comes in a sealed glass jar
in which it is packed the
moment it is sliced into those
delicious thin wafers.
None of the rich natural
flavor or goodness escapes
or dries ouL It reaches you
fresh and with all the nutr
ment retained.
Libfcy's Peerless Dried
Beef is only one of a Great
naaaber of high-grade, ready
to serve, pure food products
that are prepared in LibbyS
Great While Kitchen.
Just try a package of any
of these, such as Ox Tongue,
Vienna Sausage, Pickles,
I Olives, eta, and see how
delightfully dif
ferent they are
from others
youhaveeaten. Libby,McNeiII&
Libby, Coiciga
Typical Farm Scene, Showinc Stock
uiccTCDy my inii
Someof thechoieent lands for prain prowintr,
BtoekralsinjraiHltniiPdlarminpiiitlienewdis.
Iricts of Saskatchewan and Alberta have re
lently been Opened lor Settlement under the
Revised Hesiesfea. RegulatiMs
Entry may now be made by proxy (on certain
conditions), by the father, mother, mjm. daugh
ter, brother or sister of an intending home
steader. Thouands.of horaesteaditof 160 acres
each are thus now easily available In these j
(Treat ifraiu-prowinc stock-raising and mixed j
.arming sections. ,
There yon will fin4 healthful climate, rood
neighbor, rhurehe-, for family worship, schools
for your children, good lawn, splendid crops,
and railroads convenient to market.
Entry fee in.each case is 10.00. For pamph
let. "Last Best West," particulars an to rate,
roiites, best time to go and where to locate,
apply to
W.V.UHKETT.
Ml Hew Tnl til Iwltiac. Osaka. KtarMtt.
PARKER'S
UAIB BALSAM
Cittaurt tsA tcastiuai th baft.
Proncu a hnunact crowfc.
Never Taila to Beator Gray
Hair to its Touthfal Color.
Cora acatp dxrctca as bair tilling.
WtlBUjiWII abjw
PILES
aMaataTStazlTe!ni
rMf. MAeiMfLECCKK.
U at druniatx or ry mall.
Sample FkEE. Addrtat.
"ANAKE8I8"
Trltaaa Bid.. Ksw Yoaz.
MITARIES and JUSTICES handling
BaBj0aaj vouchrrsghouIdnrUetorcasn
rCNOlUll offer u Takeu A Whitman
Co.. Washington. 1. C lOrer 27 years' experience.)
PENSIONS WaaiUnctoa. D. C.
"yl'lThoBipsw's EyeWater
nrnsatrr rrsaru ? iaaa
V 0I IfUvWBa tPBvWW
atarcaa clothes ulcasi.
I W. N. U.f OMAHA, NO. 2, 19C8.
W..Mr11ir
iLVV"7
ViBF ' MW
"ShJv3tW' jB-S"1
Raiaiaek
Is she a bad housekeeper? By the
vaky she dresses. If she isn't spick
and span, she isn't. If she is, then
sho is.
j AGAIN DECLINED WITH THANKS.
Weuld-Be Contributor "Up Against"
the Misanthropic Editor.
The editor looked up as the caller
came forward, says the" Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
"Sir," said" ther latter, "you ob
jected to the meter of the spring
poem I submitted to you the other
day. Because of this I have for the
present dropped poetry and turned
my attention to the art of the essay
1st Here, sir. is a paper on 'Woman
and Her Defects, which I trust you
will find to your liking."
The editor stared hard at the title
of the essay.
"'Woman and Her Defects." hs
repeated. "Are you a married man,
sir?"
"No," replied the caller. "I am not
married."
The editor laughed harshly.
"You should choose subjects." he
said, "with which you have had an
opportunity to become familiar."
And he handed back the essay on
"Woman and Her Defects.
Using the Telephone.
It was the first time she had ever
used a telephone and the drug clerk
detected the fact by the nervous way
in which she held the receiver.
"Dear me." she exclaimed, timidly,
"why are all those sievelike holes in
the mouthpiece?"
"They are there for a purpose," re
plied the drug clerk, solemnly.
"What purpose?"
"Why, so you can strain your voice."
And she was so embarrassed sho
forgot the number she was to call up.
A Matter of Time.
It was the day of the ball game, and
Willie, the office-boy, approached the
head of the firm, and stammered: "If
y-you p-p-pl-please, sir "
"Come, hurry up!" said his employ
er. "If you have anything to say, say
it Don't take half a day."
"But that's just what I was going
to ask you if I could take." said Wil
lie. Harper's Weekly.
The Modern Nomad.
"Did you ask that man why he paid
rent instead of owning his own home?'
asked the real estate agent.
"Yes," answered the other. "He said
he didn't. He kept moving."
Omaha Directory
Wholnal cd rttill
drslcr in .TerrtMair for
Oeatlea&a table, inclu41ng Fin. Ia-
ported Tble Delicacir. If there li hot
little it-ai 70a are naabfo to obtain in yonrBooeTowa.
writ ca for pricea en tame, aa ve will b3 tare to have it.
Stall ortlcrs carefully filled.
' IMPOWTCW aP DCttM IM 1
aiior rnnn manrttr-Tz. JS
WO TLE QgLICOCIES
ft am I MaatnaV a
JTIIIWOIIM q.oc,VJt
COURTNEY & CO.. Omaha. Nebr.
E. W. ANSPACH
LARGEST COMMISSION SALESMAN OF
Horses and Mules
at IT. S. YARDS. Snath Ontahii. Nebraska.
Auctionsevj-ry Thursday throughout the year. M-rr-lal
Uatifi- Hnr.ale st-conU and fourth Thursdays
each month throughout the season.
I. C. OALLt'I', - - - - Auctioneer.
TAFT'S DENTAL ROOMS
1517 Iwtlas St., OMAHA. NEB.
Reliable Dentistry at Moderate Prices.
CREAM WANTED
We aro in a position to nj fanry prices for hand
aepsrator cream at our station in your town or shr
direct to us at Umaba. TMK fllUMiiT IMaMUI to.
RUBBER GOODS
by mail at cut prices. Send for free catalogue.
MYER8-DILLON DRUG CO.. OMAHA. NEBR.
OMAHA WOOL & STORAGE CO.
SHIP YO
unW00L
to the Omalva mar-
ket to set better
returns. Kef., any
prices aim quick
bank in Omaha.
AUTOMOBILES
The let Htzh Wiiel Auto Runabout in the
World. Semi for catalog. Ontral Implement
Co., 1115-1" Farnam Street. Omaha, Xeb.
UHUWA If A I un t optical hutitute
NEW BRANDEI8 BLOCK. Firt-class V.'aivh
Repairing and Enpravinjr. Charge reain
able. Eyes tested free for Glasses. Student
taken In all brancbex.
Do You Drink Coffee
Why put the cheap, rank, btttor flavored coffee in
youratomaeh when pure GERMAN-AMERICA
COFFEE coats no morel Insist on having It. Year
groear sell It or can set It.
VELIE
WROUGHT
IRON
VEHICLES
ASK YOUR DEALER OR
JOHN DEERE PLOW CO.
SB 3 B 3 iBaaaaH
Tj -v -it
v wooirsu sea rtt&II M
I n a-er)