The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, April 13, 1910, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    '
,u
m
h!l
1
I'
J.
k
ii
I1'
COLUMBUS JOURNAL
TCBOTHER & STOCKWELL, Pubs.
COLUMBUS
NEBRASKA
ftRtauuuwr.KKtyjrjK.y.r.rAy.wj
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
i
x
X
3
s
NEWS
AND NOTES
AND THERE.
HERE
i PERSONAL AND POLITICAL
J Other Matters of Interest Con
M densed From the More
J Important Telegrams.
&
iMrvrarvMa;r;r'tovi
Foreign.
Tre two Japanese who were arrest -
ed for purchasing photographs of for
tificaUoDB at Manilla and who were
released by order of Secretary of
War Dickinson, were deported on the
Yedo Maru for Japan. The deporta
tion was arranged by the Japanese
consul, acting, he said officially.
Mr. Roosevelt will meet GIfford
Pint-hot at Genoa on April 11. "Af
ter our interview I shall have nothing
to say," said Mr. Pinchot, "and I shall
be surprised if Pinchot has." Roose
velt said he had not heard from Mr.
I'inchot since ne had been in Africa,
when he recehx-d a telegram from
Mr. Pinchot at Copenhagen announc
ing his coming visit to Genoa.
The French government gets com
fort out of the Roosevelt incident at
the Vatican.
A special dispatch from Vienna
Ktates that the Austrian petroleum re
fineries and firms selling petroleum
In tank cars will be obliged hence
forth to procure government licenses.
It is understood this is a step in the
direction or establishing a monopoly
of the oil trade as the Austrian petro
leum industry is unable to compete
with the Standard Oil company.
The suggestion made by Cardinal
Moran that SL Patrick's day be cele
brated through the world as Ireland's
empire day has met with a hearty
response in Dublin, and already steps
have been taken to make next year's
clebratlon partake of this character
not only in Dublin but wherever Irish
men may be found.
General.
The late fire loss in Omaha will fig
ure nearly a million dollars.
The New York state Methodist con-
..... ,.
fcreuee sent Mr. Roosevelt u congrat
ulatory telegram.
Dates for terms of federal court in
Nebraska have been changed by con
gressional enactment.
The supreme court at Washington
declared the Nebraska elevator swith
law to be unconstitutional.
Nebraska towns, by the late elec
tion, are "wet" or "dry" to about the
same extent as heretofore.
nil. .. vi.. r. . 1 ........... ...Ml
iiic i .uiaiiiii -an.u i milium v win
have to pay the xpen.se of its own
fortification. This appears to be the
opinion of the vanguard of the army
experts.
More than ."00 paloons were voted
out of business by the people of nine
teen Michigan counties.
In an effort to bring about more uni
form action, and support of his con
servation bills in congress, the presi
dent gave a "conservation dinner" at
the white house.
Judge GeorM" H. Wi liams. the last
surviving member of President
Grant's cabinet, died at Portland,
Oregon.
Mrs. Cornelia Wool man of Helena.
Mont., was lined $ir0 in tne United
States court at Trenton, N. J., for
failure to declare certain clothing
which she had brought with her from
a trip abroad.
Two hundred drivers of taxicabs
suddenly went on strike in Chicago.
The strike was called just before
theater time and as a result mam
of the vehicle companies were in a
qunndry.
The French chamber of deputies
voted to lay down two battleships iu
the present year, designed to equal
the latest type added to the navies J
of Great Britain and Germany.
Richard Barah. editor of the social
ist organ Vorwaerts, at Berlin, was
sentenced to a month's imprisonment (
for having organized the demonstra
tive "stro'l" of March G when thou
sands paraded in the interest of suf
frage reform.
With ninety-four years behind him
nnu weary oi wailing lur ueaiii ut;-
cause of the infirmities of old
age, t
j. a. uiirice. mrmeriy u. uur...
juiiiiiiiiiuii Muiini; 111 o.iii r i.iinisuu
by shoting himself in the head.
iiic oouy oi justice nrewer was ,
taken to Leavenworth. Kas., for bu
rial. Nine hundred coal mines in Illinois
closed down until the wage question
is settled.
Mr. Roosevelt announced that on
account of conditions imposed he will .
iioi visit i ne j)iipe.
The refusal of employers to grant
im increase in pay from $4.0i) to $1.50
a day caused a strike of :ou journey- j
men carpenters at Yonkers. N. Y. j
Taft, it is declared, is soon to as- j
sume tho aggressive and turn on tiie ,
men who criticize him. J
The Un'ted States and Canada are
moving for a reciprocity treaty.
President Lewis of mine workers
says a uniform advance will be grant
ed the miners.
Marie Corclli. novelist, is seriously
ill of pneumonia at her home. Mason
Croft. Stratford-upon-Avon. .
Havelook. Lincoln's "wet" suburb,
wont "dry" at tne late election.
More than T..00O white and negro
women and children employed in the
American Tobacco company's stem
nieries at Ijouisville went on a strike.
Members of the supreme court did
rot make the trip to Ieavcnworth to
jit tend the funeral of Justice Brewer.
Sixteen thousand union coal miners
in Iowa will be idle for an indefinite
period as a result of a suspension of
work.
Partisan feeling ran high and bad
temper was shown in the course of
the Ballinger-Pinchot inquiry.
I
CO ENS T
Governor Marshall of Indiana will
Investigate charges against the
United States Steel company.
Three reports were submitted In
the house on the administration rail
road bill.
Reports of rain in Chicago grain
pits Saturday were followed by a
tumble in prices.
Representative Nicholls has asked
information regarding charges of slav
ery in Mexico.
The New York Central has given
all of Its employes a raise in wages.
John C. Mabray and members of
his gang were convicted at Council
Bluffs of swindling.
The Nye-Schneider-Fowler elevator
and adjoining property In Omaha
burned, entailing a loss of half a mil
lion dollars. Much grain In cars was
burned.
Justice Moody Is reported Improv
ing and will probably return to work
on the bench by next fall.
Owing to the death of Justice Brew-
1 er. the Standard Oil case and others
may have to be re-argued.
The Mississippi legislature com
pleted the groundwork for its probe
into the alleged bribery case.
Steps were taken to expunge from
record a rebuke by the house to
Roosevelt while president.
Philadelphia street car men, who
have been on strike six weeks, voted
J 1o remain out.
Washington.
President Taft recently sustained
his reputation a.s a dancer. He was
a guest at the charity ball of the
navy relief society given at the navy
yard. Secretary of the Navy Meyer
received the president upon his ar
rival. A feature of the occasion was
an exhibition drill by sailors of the
Mayflower, of the Dolphin an dthe
navy yard. President Taft danced
but once and then but for a few mo
ments, his sister-in-law, I Irs. Louis
Moore, being his partner.
After three days of sharp contro
versy, the senate passed the house
bill so amending the employer's lia
bility law as to give the state courts
concurrent jurisdiction with the fed
eral courts in dealing with suits for
damages growing out of accidents.
The measure was reported from the
committed on the judiciary and was
in charge of Senator Borah who finan
ly steered it to a successful termina
tion notwithstanding many sharp
assaults from both sides of the cham
ber. The trustees and alumni of the
Stevenns institute and alumni of the
institute of Technology, Hoboken, N.
J., have undertaken active measures
to recover a sum of money $4o,000
and interest which was paid to the
initrfl Cfitni2 rrnt-ftpnmntit fie fin try.
i . .. " . ,0" Tl
' hentance tax in ISiO. Promptness in
payment is now declared to have
been the real cause of the institute's
! loss for other charitable and edu'ea-
j tional institutions which delayed.
were exampled by special laws. I
President Taft will attend the !
launching of the big battleship Flor
ida, at the New York navy yard on
May 12. The Florida is one of the
super-dreadnaughts of the navy and
j will have a displacement of 21.000
tons. She is the first big ship buil'
at the New York yard since the in.000
ton Connecticut was turned out there.
Secretary of the Navy Meyer person
ally ronveye.l an invitation to the
president today to attend the launch
ing and Mr. Taft accepted.
Personal.
Twice the guest of the King. Theo
dore Roosevelt. w:is for a time the
prominent figure of Rome.
State Senator Conger of New York
tendered his resignation.
J. J. Hill, the railroad magnate, had
an audience with President TafL
Tee expedition endeavoring to
climb Mt McKinley, are said to be
making good headway.
Mrs. W. J. Bryan has hurried back
from foreign lands to be present
when the stork descends upon the
home or her son. V. J., Jr.
People from all over the world will
see the Johnson-Jeffries light.
President Lewis of the mine work
eers is optimistic, declaring the sus
pension will not last long.
President Taft and his cabinet are
pleased over financial conditions.
Robert K. Peary, who arrived in
Chicaco. declared lie was positively
through with polar explorations for
all time.
Joseph Sears. Dodliam. Mass., is the
father of thirty-four children.
Justice David J. Brewer of the
United States supreme court died
suddenly at Washington.
The members of Vice Admiral
Fournier. commander of the Med
lterranoan suadron of the French
i:aw. have been issued.
.,. .i ..,;,... ,.f-:i.
The
luui jw.., nun
so
pcnerai, it is thought will soon be ad
justed.
Weston, the walkist. is eleven days
. .,. nf ,lis. oH.,.,1,,1,.
' ' V" ----- -.--- .-
! King Frederick of Denmark de
1 clared that thG United States was the
, model for all nations
Jame J. Hill believes the railroads
will experience next fall and winder
the greatest traffic congestion in their
j,jstorv
Results in Nebraska.
Omaha. Un to this time 70 out of
nu towns are "wet." twenty-four
Pianj.e, iMing made. Fourteen dry
trnvil uo W,.L an,i tPn Wet towns go
tlry Haveleok. Lincoln's suburb, is
ajmi: the latter class.
Clayton Re-Elected.
St. Joseph. Mo Ahah P. Clayton,
democrat, was re-elected mayor of SL
Jneph by 2 o04 votes. His opponent
was Frank B. Fulkerson. republican
police commissioner, who was running
on a strict law enforcement plat-
! form.
I Bevendce Is Endorsed.
Indianapolis The republicans of
Indiana in their convention on Tues
dav inaugurated the political campaign
i of 1910 by the selection of a state
ticket with the exception of governor
and lieutenant governor and adopted
a platform that indorses among other
things a protective tariff, a tariff com
mission, conservation of natural re
sources, the Roosevelt policies and
the administration of President TafL
Senator Beveridge's record in con
gress was also enthusiastically indorsed.
ASENATORIAL UPSET
DISCUSSION OF THE SALE OF
SURPLUS WATER.
HEYBURN'S GIVES HIS OPINION
Idaho Senator Again Arrayed Against
Amendments and Voices Opposi
tion Vigorously.
Washington Senator Warren's bill
authorizing the disposal of the sur
plus waters of government irrigation
projects to private corporations was
the subject of prolonged debate in the
senate Wednesday.
When Senator Warren moved to
take up the bill no vote was cast In
the negative and it was believed that
in view of the subsequent adoption of
an amendment guaranteeing the
rights of states in the matter of the
control of streams within their bor
ders, a compromise had been reached
which would insure early action on
the bill. Such did not prove to be
the case.
The states' rights amendment was
presented to Mr. Warren, who said it
had been revised by Mr. Heyburn.
who had successfully conducted two
or three filibusters against the bill.
Apparently at first mollified by the
amendment, Mr. Heyburn ultimately
took the position that it would be of
no service and vigorously denounced
it as a subterfuge and delusion. He
announced, however, that, having
practically exhausted himself, he
would not continue his opposition to
the bill. The Idaho senator's sub
mission to what apparently he had
conceived to be the inevitable was
not of long duration. Two or three
other senators having given him en
couragement to believe he had sup
port on the floor, he renewed his op
position and denounced the measure
in as vigorous terms as on any pre
vious day.
When later in the discussion Mr.
Heyburn stated that the bill had been
dictated by the corporations, Mr.
Warren denied that such was the
fact. With some degree of warmth
he said:
"I deny that imputation. I drew
the bill as the result of a suggestion
from a government official and not in
the interest of any corporation."
Much of the criticism of the bill by
Senator Heyburn was directed to the
omission of individuals from the list
of those to whom the government
may deliver water as provided by tho
bill. He contended that the effect
would be to prevent the use of water
for domestic or mining purposes. De
nouncing the Dill as 'legislative
crime," he asserted that he could ex
plain the apparent willingness of sen
ators to permit the measure to pass
only on the ground that they either
failed to comprehend tho terms of the
bill or to appreciate their duty as sen
ators. At this juncture Senator Carter at
tempted to pour oil on the troubled
waters by proposing an amendment
including individual consumers, but
while tho amendment was accepted
by all. this action did not have the
effect of putting a stop to the discus
sion in which Messrs. Carter Hey
burn, Borah. Warren. Burkett, Flint
and Jones participated.
TRIUMPH FOR ROOSEVELT.
Leaves .Rome After Being Most
Cordially Received.
Rome. Before leaving Rome Wed
nesday Colonel Rooevelt had reason
to believe that a great triumph was
his. because both the attitude of the
Vatican towards him ami the state
ment of the Methodists which he had
condemned were repudiated by the
leading adherents of those two insti
tutions. Abbot Iiwrence Jannsena. one of
the most learned benedictines and
secretary of the affairs of religions,
called on Mr. Roosevelt and not find
ing him, left his card, on which he
wrote in French that he desired to
congratulate him for the constant
support given to his order and tho
Catholic church in general in Amer
ica during Mr. Roosevelt's "glorious
career" as president, which he hoped
would soon be resumed.
Contemporaneously Mr. Roosevelt
received letters from relatives of his
prelates and cardinals, condemning
what they styled "the presonal atti
tude of Cardinal Merry Del Val, for
which neither the pope nor the
Catholic church was responsible."
Must Watch Their Clocks.
Washington. Members of congress
do not intend to miss their engage
ments because of faulty clocks ex
posed in public places in the District
of Columbia. Mr. Coudrey of Mis
souri introduced in the house a bill
Imposing a fine of 2"i upon any per
son owning such a clock that is not
kept running or is found to be two
minutes off the right time.
Pass Second Entry Bill.
Washington. Tho house passed
the Mondell bill granting the right
to make a second homestead entrv to
entrymen who forfeited their rights
prior to the approval of this meas
ure. Drop in Hog Product.
Chicago. Possibility of a drop in
the price of at least one item which
enters into the cost of livinc cured
hog product? is seen in a sharp de
cline, averaging $1 per barrel in pork,
on the Hoard of Trade Wednesday.
Jews Cheer Taft.
Washinston. Representative Jews
of America, delegates to the conven
tion of the IVnai B'rith. cheered Presi
dent Taft to the echo when he con
cluded an address before them at
rneir annual banquet, with the words:
"There is no people so much entitled
to become the aristocrats of the world
and yet who make the best republi
cans." The president welcomed the
lelegates to Washington and outlined
o them plans for the making of the
"apital city great and more beautiful.
NEBRASKA IN BRIEF.
News Notes of Interest From Various
Sections.
The Midwest Life.
Why not join the agency force of
The Midwest Life? It is just closing
Its fourth year and has J2.150.000 of
insurance in force with satisfied
policyholders. It treats its agents and
policyholders on the square and has
never had a law suit of any kind or
description. Claims are paid prompt
ly as soon as proofs ot death are sub
mitted. The policies of The Midwest
Life are fair and liberal and premium
rates are low. There is an increasing
determination on tire part of Nebraska,
people to patronize safe and conserva
tively manager Nebraska companies.
They are realizing more and mora
that money paid company like Tho
Midwest Life remains in Nebraska;
that it is loaned here; stays here in
panics and financial depressions, and
is not sent away when most needed.
There are good openings for three or
four more General Agents and any
number of local or part time men.
Write N. Z. Snell. President, at Lin
coln. The Union Pacific storehouse at Co
lumbus was destroyed by fire.
At the farm of Alex Schiermann in
Clay county a fire broke out, destroy
ing a threshing machine outfit and
two large stacks of wheat.
A prairie fire in Brown county de
stroyed much property. At least fifty
miles of range was burned over and
everything in the path of the llames
was swept away.
J. D. Rohmer hung himself in his
brother's barn on his farm three
miles northwest of Calhoun. He was
84 years of age, a single man and had
been ill for some time.
William Jerauld, a farmer northeast
of Auburn, is erecting a large and
commodious hay barn and stock sheds
and for timbers is using native lum
ber that has grown on the place dur
ing the past forty years.
Mrs. Manspeaker, wife of the jailer
at Cass county jail, is receiving con
gratulations of her friends over her
heroic act recently when, at the
point of a revolver, she prevented
three prisoners from making their
escape from jail.
The team of horses that was stolen
from Peter Sibbcrs, six miles south
of Bloomfield, March 20, was found
last week five miles northwest of
Pierce. The team had been turned
loose and the buggy and harness wa3
run under a bridge.
Charles Bowers, a young man sup
posed to have been living since his
birth in the neighborhood of Columbus,
Platte county, was arrested In Silver
Creek by Marshal Lucas on advice
from Sheriff Her of Merrick county.
He was charged with having in his ,
possession a team of bay horses that
did not belong to him.
John Douglas, a horse thief sus
pect, was shot twice and probably
mortally wounded at a ranch nino
miles east of Niobrara by Sheriff
Vlasnik of Knox county, while com
ing to a ranch with three horses to
spend the night there. Farmers held
liim by strategy until the sheriff ar
rived. When Douglas was ordered
to stand and deliver his gun, he ran
and attempted to draw a revolver,
when the sheriff shot him twice, af
ter firing several times wide of the
mark Intentionally.
The bloody coat and hat of Otto
Witthuhn of Gothenburg was found
one block from home in a hole near
the sidewalk, also two empty and
bloody pocketsbooks and one shoo ,
badly cut. On the bank of the lake
was the other shoe, cut and bloody,
and his vest. lie drew $1,000 In cash
from the bank the day before. Blood
hounds followed a trail to the rail
road track, where were found feath
ers in blood. Some think he disap
peared and left the bloody clothes as
a blind.
The large barn m the M. J. Clarke
place, three miles west of Auburn,
burned. Two horses burned to death
and the third was so badly hurt that
it will have to be killed. Besides
this a large amount of hay, several
hundred bushels of corn and oata
were destroyed.
A new effort to catch John Cline,
the man who forged a Fremonter out
of $3,000 while masquerading under
the name of Fisher, has been started
by organizing his thirty or forty vic
tims scattered over the United States.
The move has been started by tho
Dodge county authoru.es.
Kearney is about to start work on
the soldiers monument to be erected
at that place.
At his home near Humboldt, Gil
bert Ervin, a young farmer, attempt
ed to murder his wife with an axe,
and later committed suicide by hang
ing himself In the barn. He and hi3
wife had had a disagreement.
Gilbert Irwin, a prominent fanner
who lived ten miles south of Dawson,
committed suicide by hanging. He
had been acting queerly for some
time past, and his wife had com
menced proceedings for divorce,
, .7. , V, r t, ,. w
Willard Preston, a Uroken Bow boy I
of twelve years, was thrown from a
horse and dragged considerable dis- j
tance, being badly hurt.
Attorney E. C. Calkins has submit- '
ted an opinion to the city council of I
Kearney in which he declares that j
the city cannot legally raise the sa- '
loon license to $1,500 rer year as the 1
people voted for and against licensing !
the saloons under the provisions or I
nn nristln ordinance. However, an
occupation tax of $1,000 can be placed '
J ...Jfl, tlin nrncnnl llronCA fpo nf .
$500 will make the cost to the saloon
keeper $1,500.
Andrew McGuIre. foreman of a
Union Pacific switching crew, was
run over by three cars and Instantly
killed at Grand Island. He was on
some cars, making un a train in the
lower yards. Two engines were em
ployed. He gave a signal to his en
gine and the other engine took It up.
Ho was knocked off the car and tho
body was cut in two.
In the past three weeks sixty auto
mobiles have been sold in Holdrege
Not all of them have been sales In
Phein rmintv. but have been in
counUes adjoining for which Holdrtge I
BIG FIRE
III OH
A. MILLION DOLLARS WORTH OF
PROPERTY DESTROYED.
GRAIN NO CARS ARE BURNED
Hig Wind Carries Sparks and Lack
of Water Pressure Makes Fight
ers' Efforts Useless.
Omaha. More than $200,000 of
property was devoured Sunday night
by a fire which totally destroyed the
big 750,000-bushel elevator of the
Nye-Schneider-Fowler company, the
Maney Flouring mill and elevator and
upwards 100 box cars,. some of them
loaded with grain, on the Great West
ern terminal tracks. The property,
destroyed is situated along the Great
Western terminals between Oak and
Gold streets, a few blocks north of
the South Omaha line.
The conflagration was not only the
most disastrous, but the most specta
cular which has visited Omaha in
years. The high wind which swept
along the great, wide valley in which
the structures stood carried flaming
torches high into the sky and swept
them for miles directly north, and
the city for blocks away was Illumi
nated as by day.
The damage is a different thing to
estimate owing to lack of reliable In
formation in the confusion, caused
by the fire. Opinion among those
best able to estimate, however, places
the loss at a figure in the neighbor
hood of 12.000,000, possibly less and
possibly more. .
The Nye-Schneider-Fowler elevator
alone was worth $400,000, the Maney
mill and elevator were constructed
and equipped at a cost of between
$200,000 and $2.'0,000. The mill ele
vator was filled with wheat which
just now is worth more than $1 a
bushel and the Nye elevator is said
to have been nearly filled with corn.
How many of the box cars were load
ed is unknown, but the heaps of
charred grain along the tracks where
the cars stood indicates that many
of them bore valuable cargoes.
Rough estimates place the damage
to the Nye-Schneider-Fowler company
en elevator and contents at about
$1,000,000, on the Maney mill and
contents at about $500,000 and on the
box cars and contents at another
an almost herculean task, and ren
company carried heavy insurance on
both the building and grain stored in
it and the Maney mill property Is said
to have been well insured.
Two things made fighting the firo
I an almost reculean task, and ren
dered the efforts of the fire Apart
ment practically useless except In
preventing the spread of the confla
gration into the residence district hd
joining. One was the heavy wind
which blew with the fury of a gale
and the other was the utterly inade
quate water supply.
It is supposed that a defective
electric motor was the cause. This '
has been in the habit of running hot
for sometime past and the explana-
tion given is that it became overheat- ,
ed and set fire to the adjoining wood
work before it was discovered.
General Rains Prsdicted.
Washington Ilains will be general
throughout the United States during
the present week. During the first
half of the week, according to predic
tions of the weather bureau, an ex
tensive barometric depression will
cross the central valleys, the lake re
gion and the Atlantic seaboard, at
tended by rains. The rain area will
be followed by a sharp fall In tem
perature, which will carry the frost
line to or somewhat below the 40th
parallel. Another disturbance will
appear on the Pacific coast about
Tuesday.
Ijccirc Cutoff Damage
Ogden, Utah So great was the
damage to the I.ucin cutoff by n
fierce windstorm that the Southern '
Pacific was compelled to abandon
the great trestle and trains to and
from this city are routed over the
old Central Pacific tracks around tho '
northern end of the Great Salt Lake.
While definite figures as to the ex
tent of the damagee have not been
received. It is said, they will be much
in excess of the trouble experienced
a week ago when trains were de
toured for one day.
Postal Revenues Show Increase.
Washington Postal revenues ap
parently are keeping pace with that
set by the customs internal revenue.
which show a considerable Increase
this year, according to statements J
made to Postmaster General Hitch-1
cock and Secretary MaeVeagh by J
Merritt O. Chance, auditor for the I
postoffie department. During Oc- .
tober, November and December, 1909. j
the postal receipts exceeded those of
the same period of VjuS by $3,593.33::. '
there being a surplus in the revenues
,p ,
v '" (
SKILLED WORKERS TO AMERICA..
t
Large Numbers Arc Leaving Great
Britain for the United States. ,
Tendon. Emisrants are at present
making an unprecedented rush from
Southampton to the Tnfted Spates,
and both British and German liners
to the utmost capacity have had their
steerage quarters filled. Workers in
leAllIU UIJirn.l&
of Lancashire and
Midland manufacturing districts are
apparently moving in large numbers
to America.
THREEDASHED TO DEATH.
Fatality Comes to Men in a German i
Baloon.
Stettin. Germany. The German
baloon Pommern, which made an as
cension here Sunday afternoon met
with a series of accidents which end
ed in disaster under most tragic cir
cumstances in the Iialtic sea. Three
men lost their lives, including the
radical member of the rcichstag.
Werner Hugo Del Bruccgk. Herr Del
Snieck and another member of the
jjartjr wer drowned.
Farmers sheufd eat more oatmeal.
Although tne farmer of today Is able
to buy almost anything he wants to
wear or eat he Isn't paying enough
attention to food values when it comes
to his own table.
He feeds his stock carefully, avoids
over-feeding and selects the stock food
that he believes will give the best re
turns in strength and general efficiency.
If he has bea watching the exten
sive researches and experiments on
the question ot the best human food
for muscle and brain he will heed the
advice from all aides to "eat mora
Quaker Oats."
Quaker Oats Is mentioned because
it Is recognized in this country and
Europe as the best of all oatmeals.
Feeding farm hands on Quaker Oats
means getting more work out of them
than if you feed them on anything
else. fl
Alas.
A little five-year-old who had been
watching her mother dress for an
evening entertainment surprised her
mother with the following question:
"Mother, didn't you say you were al
most 40 years old?"
"Yes." replied the mother.
"Well," answered the little girl, "you
don't look it to-night, but you will to
morrow morning." Judge.
Swney end rpene are not essential to
nrtiftic homes and attractive room. One
dollar and fifty cents' worth of material
will eoinnletclv transform a crude, inar
tistic room into a graceful, dainty apart
Bient. Really it is good taste and skill that
makes the home homelike. That dainty
touch is worth twice as much as money.
Wall paper is expensive it cots money
to luv it. to hang it and again to re
move it. With the use of the al.ibatincd
wall there is only the Blight cost of the
material any one can brush it on and it
ie not necessary to wash it off the wall
when a fresh coat is required.
It is very easy to mix, very simple to
apnly, but" the results are simply beauti
ful. A whole house can be done at ju
a little more than the cost of a single
room when ordinary materials are ucd.
And thw is true, that now that we have
so much better materials for use in the
decoration of our homes, that wall paper,
common kaNomine and paint are now as
much nut nf d.iti a the old time white-
wn-h. tallow candles and rough hewn.
floor-". Mere money is no longer an es
sential in good houefurnishing in artistic
home making.
The new materials and labor-saving ma
chines are most welcome to us all and
every thoughtful woman, every woman
who cares for her home, is quick to utilize
them.
The average woman can bluff al
most any man. but when it comes to
bluffing some other woman well,
that's another story.
Nebraska Directory.
JOHN DEERE PLOWS
ARE THE BEST
AK TOnil LOCAL DEALER OR
JOHN DEERE PLO CO., OMAHA. NEB.
BOILER HEN
You can cut out any
size Hue by hand with
the MIXUKK Cutter in eight seconds.
Kailroads use them. Write for sample.
Itertm-hy Motor Co.. Council lilnffs. la.
THE PAX I UN Eiropean Plai
Hooms from 11.00 up sin pie. To cents up double.
CATS PRICES REASONABLE
TYPEWRITERS &&.
It to a Jlir' nrt. i n r nnm ij
nirntn. lntnl.rvDtatillr. Wi-tilp
-tMwlitrr frtif examination. Xod
i. t K h r , rf I 1.1 ,- .v.r
tl'.it.uvxl.., 1310 tarau M., Oauha
KODAK FINISHING :'':::,::?,
attention. All oupplir's fur the Amateur hirietly
fre-li. frenil for catocn,anil hni-hin? price.
THE ROBERT DEMPSTER CO.,
Box 1197. Omaha. Neb.
RUBBER GOODS
br mill at cnt price.. Send for freo citalocnc.
MYERS-DILLON DRUG CO., Omaha, Neb.
Z PLAY BASE BALL?
1,000 UNIFORMS IH STOCK
Write us for catalog ai.il wholesale price3
on Ha-e Itall, Tennis, Golf and M'OKTINO
GOODS of all kinls.
TOWNSEND GUN CO.
1514 FARNAM ST. OMAHA
MILLARD HOTEL SSV
American 52.00 par day and upward.
Kurooaan SI.OO par day and upwarda.
flfjaya Taka Dodge Straat Car
URfftHA at Union Depot.
ROME MIL L ER
fJUITI Hi(AUTO GEN0US) By
If EbbU Ul IH VI tins process all broken
parts of machinery made ccxxl as new. Welds
east iron. ca steel, aluminum, copper, bras or
anv other metal. KxDcr: automobile ret-iirin?.
BERTSCHV MOTOR CO., Council Bluffs.
Consider tho
Time Saved
By having" a telephone that you
can depend upon. Let ns tell
j-ou how to secure the very host
of telephone service at the low
est cost. SEND TODAY for
Bulletin No. n, "How to build
Rural Telephone Lines."
IT'S FREE.
WESTERN
ELECTRIC
COMPANY
Omaha, Neb.
1
3&
timm
5JJi
W5T-M riKZ&r
QC0f1BMfr
KoIUrJ jLjB
Lifiiac p337-
Lifhtnt (LnkSSVs'
Easiest oflQl
deseit mWM I
A Terrible Risk.
Typhoid had broken out In their
neighborhood and the family resorted
to travel as the best means of precau
tion until the trouble should subside.
They arrived at Quebee by the
morning boat, intending to take It .to
Montreal in the evening, but the sight
seers got tired and returned early !&
the afternoon to find the top of the
smoke stack on a level with the deck,
the-tide having dropped 18 feet.
"Mamma," cried the little girl, "did
God drink up all that water?"
"Yes, my child."
"Then hadn't we better tell hist It
wasn't boiled?"
Including Ham Actors.
"Going to come and see me act to
night?" "No. I have Joined the meat strike."
"What has that to do with it?"
"I have cut out hams."
IknMVrSH
"Guar5
Low One -Way
Rates
to the
Pacific
Northwest
In effect daily
March 1
to
April 15
Good on the comfortablo
tourist sleepers of the
Union Pacific
i
The Safe Road to Travel"
Dustless, perfect
track electric
block signal pro
tection dining
car meals and
service "Best in
the World"
For further in formation
call on or address
E. L. LOMAX, Gen. Pass'r. Aj
Union Pjcific R. R. Co.
Omaha. Neb.
cm
WESTERN CANADA
What GawrMT Dnit, ff IQfnels,
Says About it:
OorernorDenren.of Illionix. own arc.
ton or l.lTVl In rikat.knwan.
CanaiTa. Jin has am:tl in
an interrlew;
Aa an American I am
dcli-rlitoil to wo ths tf
irarknMo proereaft of
Wotcra Csnnla. Oir
ilio boanriiry in tbau
eitniU. anil I bare cot jet
met ono who admitted
ha ha t inn!e a mi.tak..
They nro all doing rdl.
Thoro it -arc'lT m rnm.
manlty In tho MludJn or
Western HtatM Hint. 1m.
not rnptwntfttlre In Manitoba.
HoHkutchr win or Alberta."
125 Mi2k fafcels of
WtatM 1909
Wmlrn Cnna-ln field einr for
1X9 will miilTir,M totbflurw
or l70.0QO.nOMIO In r.ntli.
I'ro llomrfifailior J r.O iu-tt.
.inil pre-vniptlnfiH r lIO:t4rn
at 3.(JO im ncrv. lUimajr ontt
.Land Coxnpamrii L.ive !fia for u!
at rfawn.itilo nrirt-n. Miuiy f.irtn
en liuru pnM for thi-ir him; out
of thA irHTili if n- 4'ri.
Hptcnilld rJImati'. pml t hiH.
excellent railway fu illtl-.lv
frclsht rrtlf. wimwI. water mill
lutnlxT -:illy ctititln-l.
lur jMimpliiot Jjit H.-t Wt."
pnrucn!ur a to Hjltiblo locution
ail' I low rPttfrn.' rnu. niily to
Sut't of Immigration. Ottawa.
Cm., or to Cuiuwtuiu liov'i An at.
W. V. BEMkETT
Fem 4 8m Viz. Oaiha, Neb.
(tv:ulln-r!rnrpstyiii i t
HltabSil
EZlki
raamm
"" VSJaa- J
mm
1 'I-Shh4
mm
THE H.TIOML CRE1M SEPARATOR
It In flatly ue In nil th le.i'linir AprlniSturol Colleen anl Ex-
fxriment statlooa throughout the United bUttei. I&cimI the fol
owlm;. . . . , . M"lfonl, .Minn., May 21. 2SW.
Tho TTaMlncs Industrial Co., Chicago, IU.
Gntlrmt-n:
I bae haa ray wparator for sir year and tarn never t-nd
tnhiiranyextra'tforlt.antt It has takrn care, of SJ cows'
mi in. r-oniooi uiym-ignDorieoitn 1) and tne U
S thov.im tlnmand Itv-Y h.ii; eotUit-m a kikvI deal
tokeeuthrui op. I haTntbnold prlcn list but did notknow
lint what th'y had. ehansctl It. I st the nrieo of the crest m
scrovr i5eentsand I will end thataml if ttutlHroteiioiKn
hvn 1 zund again I will in.i V 1 1 all riht w lib ym.
(Sistned) C1IAS. HOVKTON.
TfaeKattooal haa nothing to pet ont of order. Run light
ly, clean easily. nnl pet all the cream. Furthermore, it
will last a lifetime. Your dealer trtll demonstrate a National
free if yoa Insist. Let nn Bend yon oar ilitrstmt;l catalogue.
THK NATIONAL DAIRY MACHINE COMPANY
Qoahvn, Indians Chicago, Illinois
A
Y
is th diitributlof centtr.
s