The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 01, 1908, Image 3

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THE STATE CAPITAL
MATTERS OF INTEREST TO ALL
CITIZENS.
IMMIGRANT GOOD FOB WEST
The State Railway Commission Has
Authorized a Reduction on the
Same.
Reduced Rates.
The state railway commission has
authorized the reduction in rates on
immigrant goods of 1 to 6 cents a
hundred, the cut to take effect on the
Northwestern from Omaha west. Prac
tically the same rate is estahlished
from Omaha west on the Burlington.
This affords practically a blanket rate
to the Black Hills and is a cut of from
4 to 20 per cent. The following minor
orders were ground out:
The rate on cooperage from Omaha
to Sioux Falls has been reduced from
9.5 cent per hundred to 6.17.
The Burlington was allowed to put
In a rate of 3 cents on brick from
Hastings to Fairfield to meet compe
tition on the St. J. & G. I. This ap
plies as a maximum to Intermediate
stations.
The Union Pacific and Burlington
will he allowed to absorb a $2 switch
ing chafge on meat peddler cars out
or Omaha. This has long been the
rule of the road, but has not been en
forced. The Union Pacific will extend its
territory on coal distribution by the
absorption of a 13.50 switching charge
Instead of the old charge of $3 per
car.
The Northwestern will he permitted
to charge F cents per ton for the stor
age of goods held beyond the 24-hour
limit, less than 2,000 pounds to be re
garded as a ton and a fraction of 24
hours as a dav. The following excep
tions are made for consignees living
Eome distance from the point of desti
nation: Within ten miles, five days;
within twontv miles and over ten, sev
en days; within forty miles and over j
' r -. : tit
twenty, ten ciays; over iorij iui.-, u
leen days. The railroad may, after
the time limit, also order the removal
of goods to private storage houses.
The Burlington was authorized to
make a reduction of i. cent per hun
dred on brick from Humboldt to Fre
mont and other points.
Great Fair in Prospect.
Secretary Mellor's face assumes a
broad smile whenever the coming
state fair, August 31 to September 4.
is mentioned. He says the exhibitors
nre coming in all departments in such
numbers that he can now assert posi
tively that the IMS fair will eclipse
all former great fairs held in Nebras
ka. Applications in the horse and
swine departments are now up to the
present accommodations. The large
new cattle barn just completed will
hold 030 head of the finest show cattle
in the United States. Application for
space for county exhibits in Agricul
tuial hall is being received. The edu
cational departmert will occupy a
new building and will bo the best edu
cational exhibit shown in any state in
tne union during the year 100S. The
great machinery exhibit of last ye-ir
promises to be surpassed. The State
Board of Horticulture, in charge nf
the horticultural exhibit, is predicting
a bejter show than ever.
Wants Fisher to Pay Cost.
In his brief in the disbarment pro
ceedings against Allen G. Fisher,
brought by the request of the legis
lature by the legal department of
state. At'orney General Thompson in
sists that the costs of the case should
he taxed "asainst the defendant. He
contends that because he filed a claim
with the legislature in the matter of
the Goedde .estate, out of which grew
the disbarment proceedings. Captain
Fisher forced the state to make three
different investigations of the matter,
the last at great cot; that a commis
sion was appointed and the state
forced to spend a large sum of money
to take evidence in the disbarment
proceedings, which Captain Fisher
should pay. The brief winds up by
stating that from a pecuniary stand
point the stale would have been just
ns well off had Captain Fisher suc
ceeded in getting the $S.000 for which
he filed a claim, but failed to press
the collection.
Campaign Stimulates Business.
The comin of the campaign has
proved a stimulant to the business of
telegraph companies in Lincoln. Mr.
Bryan's criticisms of the republican
platform have added a great many
thousand words every night for sev
eral days to the business carried from
Lincoln. Several eastern papers have
correspondents here, and special
stories concerning the democratic can
didate have added considerably to the
number of words carried by wire each
day.
State Cattle Have Tuberculosis.
Under supervision of the state vet
erinarian. Dr. McKimm, three cows
were killed at the Insane hospital
here because they were afflicted with
tuberculosis. Out of fifty-eight head
inspected twenty two head were dis
covered to be infected, but only the
three were so far gone as to require
killing. The meat of two of the ani
mals killed passed" the test required
by the government and will be used
for meat, while the third was de
stroyed. The state will investigate
the cattle of the other institutions.
Argument on Pass Question.
Attorney General Thompson in his
brief in the case of the state against
David T. Martyn of Columbus, a
physician charged with using a Union
Pacific pass, contends that the Ne
braska anti-pass law prohibits the use
of passes by all persons except rail
road employes who devote a major
portion of their time to the work of
the railrad. For that reason he con
tends the law has been violated by the
railroad and also Dr. Martyn. who is
employed as a local surgeon, and who
used a pass issued by that road.
Honesdy iss ids own revart, but
dere iss nod many Maimers.
Der laborer iss vorty of hiss higher
ages, ef he can get dem.
Some fadders sharpen deir child
ren's Tits mit a razor strop.
No debating sossissity can seddle
der mutty vater kivestlon.
Ven der bill collegtor comes in ad
der door der deadbeat flies ouid ad der
Tindow.
THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY.
A good prejudice is better than a
weak conviction..
There are Just as good fish in the
sea, but the sea is large.
A virtue that no one tries to cul
tivate is s'aying at home.
Many men are convinced that they
are geniuses, but can not show it be
cause they are too busy earning a liv
ing. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
TOMMY AS GOOD AS A CHART.
Nurse Had No Trouble Remembering
Time for His Medicine.
A Boston physician tells-a story of a
youngster of his own that an over
strenuous vacation had put on the sick
list The father had an appropriate
prescription filled, and left the bottle
with the child's mother. As she, how
ever, is very forgetful, he gave her a
chart, and suggested that she set down
the hours when the medicine should
be given, checking off each dose as
taken. Upon returning from his even
ing calls, however, he found the chart
blank.
"Good gracious, Mary," he exclaimed;
"surely you haven't failed to give Tom
his medicine?"
"Oh. no. I did not miss a single
time," his wife assured him.
"How in the world did you remem
ber it without the chart?" he asked.
She smiled. t
"That was easy. I Just told Tom this
morning at what hours he was to have
It, and half an hour before each time
he would begin hallooing that be
wouldn't take it"
HERE'S REAL SAFETY ENVELOPE.
Ingenious Device for Double Locking a
Letter.
A new envelope made in Paris is
proof against the thief or the meddler
who opens a letter to extract or to
read Its contents and then reseals it
so cleverly as to hide any sign of It
having been tampered with.
The new envelope Is really two en
velopes. Each is of thin paper, one a
pronounced blue, the other lighter in
color and different in texture. Each
has a gummed flap.
The letter Is first placed in the blu
envelope, which is slightly smaller
than the other. Instead of sealing thl-
It Is placed in the outer envelope and
the inner flap brought outside and
gummed down on to the larger en
velope. The outer flap is still unsealed. It
Is much larger than the Inner flap and
reaches down to a good-sized star
shaped opening which shows through
to the inner envelope, so that when
the outer flap is sealed it sticks not
only to the outer envelope but also
through this opening to the inner one.
The letter is thus practically locked
and double locked.
WANTED COMPANY IN MISERY.
Stranger Asked for Directions at Un
fortunate Moment.
"I beg your pardon," said the stran
ger on the bicycle, riding slowly up to
the sidewalk and steadying himself
by putting his foot on the curb, "but
I am looking for a restaurant where I
can get a good meal. Can you direct
me to one?"
The man whom he addressed was
standing in front of a store, trying to
rub a grain of sand out of his eye with
one hand and holding his hat on with
the other, for it was a windy day, and
at first he made no response. But
presently he spoke.
"Go to the next block," he said, "and
turn to the right. Four doors down
you will find a restaurant"
The stranger thanked him and rode
on. About an hour later they acci
dentally met again. The stranger was
on his way out of town. He stopped
and spoke.
"My friend." he said, "I followed
your directions. I went to the restau
rant you directed me to, and I got the
worst meal I ever had In my life."
"I thought you would," answered the
other. "If you had waited till I got
that grain of sand out of my eye I
should have sent you to a good restau
rant, but you didn't I just had to
divide my misery with somebody, and
you happened to be bandy." Youth's I
companion.
COLORADO
No trip can surpass in plea- ,
sure and health a vacation
spent in the Rockies. Low
rates in effect every day to
September 30, 19C8.
$1712
For the round-trip from Omaha to
Denver --Colorado Sprligs--v
Pueblo
VIA
UNION PACIFIC
New and Scenic Route to
Yellowstone Park
Inquire of
E. L. LOMAX, C. P. A.,
Omaha, Nebr.
BrMim&Zt
In
The rapid milker is not apt to strip
clean.
Little deeds of kindness, like chick
ens, come home to roost
Butter to be of a prime quality must
not be subject to too rapid or too slow
churning.
Get that set of ow wheels for the
wagon this year. They will save you
much heavy lifting.
Elbow grease and a good stiff broom
used dally in the dairy barn will help
a long ways toward sanitary milk.
The best breed of cows for the dairy
is that breed which will most nearly
meet the special purposes and needs
of the owner.
Three trees which are peculiarly
adapted for fence posts are the catal
pa speciosa, the osage orange and
the Russian mulberry.
Keep your plans ahead of your work.
It is the farmer who thinks out his
work in advance who raises the big
gest crops and has the easiest time.
Sunlight Is essential to success In
chicken raising. See that the hen
house is constructed with a view to
admitting as much air and sunshine
as possible.
Vermin on the hens will keep them
from laying. With the coming of
warm weather, clean and whitewash
the henhouse, and provide a good dust
bath, if hens are kept confined in a
yard.
The lime to wash out the butter
milk from butter is when it has
reached that granular state. Dairying
has this advantage over other
branches of farming in that the farmer
has a continuous income.
When fresh whole milk is not avail
able the little pigs you have to raise
by hand will thrive on boiled milk
which has been thickened with a cup
of flaxseed to each gallon. Add half
a pound of brown sugar and a little
salt.
A farmer in central Michigan faces
the problem of making four-cent pork
and three-cent beef out of 60-cent
corn, with common farm labor $30
a month with board; hay $16, and
$20 a ton and corn stalks five cents
a bundle. Can you figure out his
profit?
It may be very interesting specu
lation as to why weeds came to be.
but the practical question for the
farmer is how quickest and most ef
fectually to be rid of them. The
farmer is not interested in any scien
tific discussions which will not serve
any practical purpose.
The producing capacity of the
farm is measured by the humus and
nitrogen content of the surface soil,
and if these cannot be fully supplied
by the manure made on the farm, then
legumes should be grown to supple
ment the manure, and for this purpose
and a profitable seed crop mammoth
clover, over a large part of our coun
try, heads the list.
A good way to char cobs for the
hogs is to dig a round hole, say three
feet across, build a good fire with
wood in the bottom of this, fill in with
corncobs, and when they are properly
charred through but not burned to
ashes, put on a lid of some kind to
exclude the air. Then add any wood
ashes that may be convenient, and
salt. When the mass is cool put it in
a box with a self-feed, where the
hogs can reach it and let them eat
what they want.
It is so easy to neglect the groom
ing of the horse 'during these rush
days, but it is not good for the horse.
Too bad to let the dirt and dust, dried
with sweat, remain upon the horse's
coat, clogging the pores and spoiling
his appearance. Look after his feet
when evening comes, and see, that
there is no gravel or sand to torment
him. You know bow trying it is to
wear a shoe that hurts your foot You
lose no time in hunting up something
more comfortable in footwear. But
the poor horse can't tell you when the
harness chafes or the collar bruises
his shoulder. It is your place to see
that the harness is well fitted. Think
of the horse as of yourself.
Go slow in double cropping the or
chard land. A good crop of apples or
other fruit removes about as much
plant food as a crop of wheat. It is
poor policy 'to try to get both. The
orchard should be cultivated if pos
sible up to bearing age. If the site
is so hiljy that cultivation is liable to
cause serious washing of the soil, the
young trees should be mulched. A
good mulch of straw or grass serves
much the same purpose as clean culti
vation, in keeping the ground moist
There is danger from mice, which are
liable to shelter in such a mulch, how
ever, unless measures are taken to
protect the trees. For this purpose,
wire netting is very satisfactory or
tree protectors of -veneer. If the or
chard is on comparatively level
ground, the raising of some low-growing
hoed crops is often of advantage.
Hay or grain, however, are out of
place In the orchard, and 'young trees
especially suffer from their presence.
Too much salt in the butter destroys
the flavor.
- Regularity in feed and milking ass
much to. do -with the milk yield.
Some men are like cows, they think
the best grass is on the other side of
the fence.
It is the fresh manure that has the
highest value. Get it out on the land
as soon as possible.
Raw wheat flour mixed with milk
and the yolk of one egg will often
checkv scours in the lambs.
In fattening fowls feed corn princi
pally, but provide other grain for vari
ety and to keep up the appetite.
In dealing with a man who has a
cow to sell keep in mind the fact that
it is generally the poor cow that is
offered for sale.
Most of the states report large grad
uating classes from the agricultural
colleges this year It means more
and better agriculture.
The farmer who thinks out the
day's work and slan's how it can best
be done is the farmer who is not
pegging around with chores after dark.
It is the wise farmer who plants
only what he .can properly care for.
He will reap more dollars than the
farmer who spreads himself thin over
too many acres.
Plant a few mulberry trees In your
cherry orchard, then cock robin and
his mistress will let the cherries alone
as long as the mulberry lasts. A
cheap and easy way of buying off
the birds.
Some farmers still cling to the old
idea that they must have slop of somo
sort if they are to grow good pigs, but
it has been repeatedly shown by ex
periment that usually there is no ad
vantage in foods that are sloppy.
Forestry has done great things for
Switzerland, preventing floods and
making available all lands fit for
crops. What are you doing to fur
ther the efforts of the government ag
ricultural department toward more
tree growing?
Be sure that you have a good corn
stand. As soon as the corn is an inch
high replant every hill that contains
no plants. This may be a little later
than the first planting and some of it
may not get out of the way of frost
but it will make good cattle feed if
nothing more.
Coburn the Kansas farm expert
gives this quintet of don'ts for the
alfalfa raiser: Don't sow any nurse
crop. Don't sow on freshly plowed
land, no matter how carefully pre
pared. Don't let weeds or grass grow
over six inches high without clipping.
Don't clip or mow when wet with rain
or dew. Don't let alfalfa stand; if turn
ing yellow, cut it.
Few farmers realize the damage
which weeds do to 'the corn. They
not only take the fertility which the
corn needs, but worse still the moist
ure. By cultivation you kill the
weeds, conserve the moisture, make
the fertility of the soil more available,
and loosen the soil so that air may
get at the roots, an essential condi
tion in corn growing.
Linseed meal is valuable in horse
feeding for its laxative properties and
for putting a nice gloss on the hair.
At that, very little of it should be fed
and if carrots or other sound roots can
be obtained they are better for the
horse than any oilmeal. A usual
amount is a handful a day with other
feed, or a double handful may be
given with good results.
A very good method of capturing
the chicken hawk is to set steel traps
about the carcass of the chicken last
caught and partly devoured, or to
erect a tall pole in an open field near
the chicken yard, placing a trap at
the top. He will be most sure to
alight on the pole, awaiting an oppor
tunity to pounce down upon the un
suspecting fowls, and consequently
gets into the trap.
To tan a sheep's skin stretch and
nail on smooth board surface, wool
side down. Scrape carefully, getting
off all bits of flesh. Now mix one
pound of pulverized alum and one
pound common salt, sprinkle the mix
ture evenly over the skin and rub In
with a corn cob all it will absorb;
then sprinkle it over with a little
more and leave it for a few days. A
second application will render it thor
oughly cured. Leave it until dry. Pinch
the surface, and by the feeling and
sound you can tell if all parts are
evenly tanned. The next process is
the hardest for a woman washing.
It will take several washings and
good rinsings In clean, cold water.
Squeeze the water from it and hang it
fleece down to drip. It will dry beau
tifully in the sun on a stout clothes
line or wire fence, shaking it occa
sionally. For caked udder no better advice
can be given than that offered by
Valancey R. Fuller, who says that
first of all, all heating grain feed
iriust be cut off. At the beginning of
the trouble give a drench consisting of
one pound of Epsom salts, two heaping
tablespoons of common Jamaica gin
ger, and one quart of molasses, all dis
solved in two quaits of boiling water,
making three quarts in all. Give this
as a drench through the mouth, using
an old champagne or ether strong
bottle for that purpose. Bathe the af
fected quarter three times a day first
with water as hot as the hand can
bear it. Dissolve a pint of lard, add
to it three tablespoons of spirits of
turpentine, and apply that hot to the
udder three times a day. rubbing it
in thoroughly. The turpentine is very
penetrating and will help to break
up the caked bag, and the lard pre
vents it hurning. If the udder does
not respond to this treatment, give,
three times a day, 15 grains of iodide,
of potassium, dissolved in hot. water,
and add to it 30 grains of pokeroot
Cut this out and keep it for future
reference.
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TREATING PIJNT fOR fZNCZ
"Timber thoroughly treated with
proper preservatives will last almost
indefinitely," says a government ex
pert who is an authority on wood
preservation. "Engineers have known
for years that this is true," he con
tinues, "but up to the present time, at
least in America, complicated and ex
pensive plants have been necessary
for the work and wood preservation
has often been too expensive an opera
tion to allow treated timber to come
into general use."
Methods In wood preservation have
undergone a marked change in the
last few years, however, and the work
which a few years ago was limited to
a few experiments carried on in scat
tered parts of the United States has
grown with such rapidity that wood
preservation has become a business
which figures most prominently in the
industrial life of this country.
Each year railroads are treating an
increasing portion of their cross ties,
miners their mine props, farmers their
fence posts and the men of many
other industries are bringing preserva
tives into play to close the pores and
prepare the timber they use to resist
the fungi which cause decay. The
work points the way to one of the
chief means of the conservation of the
nation's .forest resources, for as the
length of the life of timber Is In
creased the drain upon the forests is
lessened, and more wood made avail
able for use.
In nearly all localities in the Rocky
mountain and Pacific states is found
an abundant supply of certain kinds
of timber which have only a slight
commercial importance. Engelmann
spruce, lodgepole and other kinds of
pine, aspen, and cottonwood are only
a partial list of the kinds of wood
which are strong enough and abundant
enough to win high value for construc
tion purposes, were it not for one
single defect which has prevented
their general adoption. When exposed
to the soil and weather they decay so
rapidly that they have to be renewed
too often to justify their use.
Dead timber of lodgepole pine and
other species also is found in large
tracts, but is sharply discriminated
against by all constructing engineers
and contractors. As a matter of fact,
the dead timber, provided it is sound.
Is just as good as green timber of the
same species; and indeed, in some
ways. Is even more valuable. For it
is well known that thoroughly sea
soned timber is both stronger and
more" durable than the same timber
when green. Timber which was killed
by fire or insects, and which is still
in a sound condition, differs from
green timber chiefly in being thor
oughly seasoned that is to say, it is
stronger, more durable and lighter.
And so not only are the freight rates
considerably reduced, but a better
grade of timber Is secured.
Even In a thoroughly seasoned con
dition, lodgepole pine, Engelmann
spruce, and the other species men
tioned above, are by no means dura
ble woods when compared with Doug
las fir, Oregon cedar, and the other
kinds of wood which are used so ex
tensively in construction work. And
before they can successfully compete
with such timbers, in spite of their
lower price, they must be made to
SHE KNEW THOSE FRIENDS.
Mistress You must get dressed
early to-day, Jane, for I have friends
coming to see me.
Jane Yus, mum.. An' shall I re
move the humbrellas?
I g&B VMgBmllRJgggaif JaLLVagl
FCkSTtiJ 8?
last longer under unfavorable condi
tions. After several years' study, the
United States forest service has
proved that in many cases the com
plicated and expensive plants are not
necessary for the proper treatment of
many kinds of timber; and that many
of the timbers which decay most rap
idly in the natural state, are among
the easiest and cheapest to treat.
Many of the species mentioned above
offer little resistance to the entrance
of the preservative. The principle of)
the method is to immerse the thor-.
oughly seasoned wood in a hot bath of!
the liquid, leave It In for a few hours,,
and then either plunge It into a coldj
bath of a preservative, or else run out
the hot liquid from the treating tank,,
and fill it up again with liquid of a
lower temperature. This requires only,
the simplest kind of machinery, and!
the cost of operation is so slight thatj
even cheap timbers like fence postsi
and shingles can be treated by the
average farmer of small means.
Although the forest service, by ex-!
tensive experiments in all portions of j
the country, considers that the prac-j
ticabllity of the process has been con-,
clusively proved, more or less diffi-i
culty has been encountered in induc
ing others to adopt the process on a
commercial scale. In order to demon-,
strate beyond any doubt that the
process is adapted to commercial
treatments, the service has arranged
to erect small treating plants semi
commercial in size on several of the
national forests. Tests will be made
on the local timbers, and careful
record kept of the cost of the work.
The treated timber will then be placed
in permanent position, where its fu
ture durability can be compared with
untreated timber of the same or other
kinds.
Three such plants will be erected,
and it is expected that they will be
in successful operation during the
summer. According to the present
plans one plant will be- erected at
some locality on or near the Black
Hills National forest. South Dakota,
another on the Holy Cross National
forest in Colorado; and the third on
the Henrys Lake National forest, near
St Anthony. Idaho.
The investigations in wood preserva
tion by the use of creosote, which Isl
nothing more than the dead oil of coal
tar and zinc chlorid, are considered of
such importance by the government
that one branch of a bureau in the
department of agriculture the "Of
fice of Wood Preservation" in the for
est service Is given over entirely to
the work of experiments In co-operation
with railroad companies, mining
corporations and individuals who de
sire to prolong the life of the timber
which they use. Advice and practical
assistance is furnished all who re
quest it of the forester at Washington.
Life a Tissue of Habits.
In the conduct of life, habit counts
for more than maxims, because habit
is a living maxim, becomes flesh and
instinct To reform one's maxims is
nothing; it is but to change the title
of the book. To learn new habits is
everything, for it is to reach the sub
stance of life. Life is but "a tisue of
habits. Amiel.
HEREDITARY TAINT.
Cholly I suppose you inherited your
taste for baseball?
Johnny Sure! Dad Is a high-ball
&and, and ma says she was de belle
of the ball before she was married.
Girls, beware of the man who proHK
ises that your life shall be all sum
shine. Such talk is generally mooa
shine. Exchange.
KIND THOUGHT OP THE RIOsV-
j Possibly Turned Silly Custom lns
tsmtthina Really Werth wniis.
"The moat considerate girl I ,
knew got married yesterday," sal
the man. "She showed her thought
fulness in ja most unusual way. Tne
day before the wedding she called tne
attention of the rest of. the family t
a row of old shoes standing in a dowsv
stairs closet
"I want you to throw these after
the carriage.' she said. T'hey are all
mates. I collected them to throw
away. I learned some time ago that
certain poor souls who nave hard work
to get clothes of any description kee
a lookout for big weddings. They
hang around the house at going-away
time and pick up the good luck shoes.
Meybe they get a fit, and maybe they
don't Anyway, I've done all I comM
to accommodate them.
'Here are six pairs of shoes to he
fired after me. If somebody doesnt
get fitted In that collection, it lsat
my fault.'"
Value of Brief Rests.
If overworked homemakers whose
nerves are "worn to frazzle edge"
would acquire the habit of sitting or
lying absolutely still, relaxed and ns
tionless for five or ten minutes twice
a day, they would soon see ImproTe
ment The mind must be relaxed, wot
ries dropped, thoughts wandering t
pleasant things. You will probably
try this several times before you get
It right, but after a little practice
you will find that It yields large re
turns, far surpassing the sacrifice ef
the time it takes to practice it
Suicides In Natal.
The abnormal suicide wave which
is passing over this country has bee
made the" subject of very serious
thought, and it is well that it shouli
be so. In Natal within the past four
weeks there have been three suicides
of Europeans, which, on the basis of
population, is four times greater thaav
the suicide rate in England and Wales,
a deplorable state of affairs indeed.
In Durban a few weeks ago it wae
stated that suicides were taking place
at the rate of one a day. Natal Wi
ness.
A Simple Remedy.
"I tell you we cannot pass a law to
keep dogs from barking and disturb
ing people."
"Won't the .ordinary law agalmas
barkers apply?"
i
Omaha Directory
iMMMMM.W
WboUml mad tttai!
dtaltra la mrrtMac for
aOstlcmaa'a tabl. iaclidiag riM lav-
ported Ttbls Stllcaclts. Jluaralaaar
little ltea yo ara anablo to obtala la your Ho
writ as for prictt ea iuu, aa w win b ion to mav MV
Kail order carefully filled.
' IMPOHTIM ana DtlttM IN
PORE FOOD PRODUCTS
AND TABLE DELICACIES
.o.H-;lt
COURTNEY & CO.. Osaka. NW.
PRIVATE WIRE
J. E. von Dorn Commisswn Go.
Member Chicago Board of Trade and
Omaha Grain Exchange.
Grain, Provisions and Stock
Bought and Sold
for immediate or future delivery.
GRAIN BOUGHT AND SOLD in Car Lets.
Track bids made on any railroad.
Consignments Solicited.
700-701-776 Brandels Bldg.. Omaha
Ttblbmoi fell UMfU. lot M4I7M. ,u. ItttU
fill All A THE BRIGHTEST
UIH AI1H SPOT ON THE MAP
A GOOD PLACE to lnveat your money wher
you can get from
6 to 10 On Improved Propertiis
Write XTs Bow Much You Have to lnveat
HASTItfCS mntt HEYDEM
1704 Farnam St. Omahm, ,
TOM
deal
Joa'tcaa
rr tLr no. mag.
uaTScforaono.
BBSSfflS Chocolates
PUUEJ bOS 0
Vjc for a half.
IIB pouoil tix aad
-. D..I.OUKIKlC
we will deliver them to oar door.
CO., Makers. 1MI I
MWI
u tlril. tanhii. Arkr.
Do You Drink Coffee
Why pat U cheap, rank, blttar-fiavoftil coffaa fcBi
yoaratomaen whan pore GERMAN-AMERICAN
COFFEE eoata no moral laalMoa Baring It. Yal
ttt
iltllt
RUBBER GOODS
by mall at cut prices. Send for free catalofrok
MYERS-DILLON OrHJO CO.. OMAHA. NEM.I
Dr. Bailey A Mach. The
'.DENTISTS
on nuor. rnx
Block. Cor.
land Far n
Hts.. Om (in. Nkb. Best MnlDnaAi
Dental office In tbnMiddln Went. I-atestappilanca
Bigb trade Dentistry. lUvonable prices.
OMAHA WOOU STORAGE CO.
SHIP YOUR
ket to cet better
returns. Ref-any
WOOL
to the Omaha majw
prices and qniefet
ban in Omafca.
TAFT'S DENTAL ROOMS
1517 Ought St., OMMA, NEI.
Reliable Dentistry at IMeratt Prie
BBBaT WboUml amd nt&il fh
fT 'A
QTrrcccr1
a af
j j n i
BS - 1
H ol
lM2l
KODAKS FINISHINB
Krerr thins for tb amateur. Larmt wholesale stock ba
ffcatiraat. 9and for catalogue. Mall orders a apodal.
THE SOSERT DEMPSTER CO., Ik 1197. Saaaa.
Steel Culverts
Suitable for county roads aad town streata.
Write for Information and prices.
SUNDERLAND CULVERT CO, Oaaaka. Kafc.
ASK YOUR DEALER APOUT THE
VELIE gr?oR; BU8GY
JOHN DEERE PLOWCO.,