Si -T ' " -c SP?1 'fcr r Vv i r t 3 i' ij i) s -- - A- - Oolomtas. Nabr. C:ssCiiasiiTith. the Ccissfczs xiss Arii 1, l3D-r-ith the Platte Ccnuty Arena jstuury l.littf.. i I. i caealbttbePeat6aW.&Mon.ba.Nt.fr ,-objj rliH lull tutter. TUM 0VS0BSCBITI01V: lj year, fey mail, potta. prepaid SLtO jtemoatis..... .tB WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 18. 1911. 8TB0THKB & COMPANY. Proprietors. KBMKWAU-Tte date opposite you aame cm roartaaer. or wrapper shows to what time roar la paid. Taae JaaSB ehows that haa keen raaaitwi ap to Jan. 1,1888. faatofak.l,lMaadaooaL Whew paymaat aw nmwSBBs amwaV flHaf wTawmOBe HaHvaarXV Bar SB) gBBSSnfinave) ill ha aaiaaat annoriHasly. DiAOOSmiUAMCBJ-KanwaaibJa aabacrib etawffl BoaMaai to receive tale joaaal aatU the aotiaed by letter to disocmtiaae. lallamataaaa auatbepald.Ii yoadoaet wiefeta. JassaaleoBtiaaedfora&othar yaar af tar taa time paid tor baa expired, yoa ehoald prtTlaaalyaatUyaatodkooatiaaatt. CHANGE III ADDUEBB-Whaa ontociac a Tl...rl-A..ll v. . J.M w. Usl'S their eld ae well as taetr A NEWRECORD." Some time ago a sub-committee of the senate committee on judiciary re commended the submission of an amendment providing for the popular election of senators. On Monday the unexpected happened. The full com mittee accepted the report and the measure will come before the senate, backed by a favorable report from the full committee. That the senate will agree with the report is too much to ex pect But the action of the committee is progress enough for the present to satisfy reasonable minds. The report of itself sets a high mark for the direct election movement The senate has only once before shown this leaning to the submission of the question. It is now eighty-five years since the opening gun was fired of the campaign now clearly approaching a successful issue. It was in 1 82C that Representa tive Stony of New York introduced the first resolution favoring an amend ment to the constitution providing po pular election of senators. Nine years later an Indiana member returned to the attack. In 1851 Andrew Johnson later to be president, introduced one of several such resolutions from his scat in the house of representatives. Up to 1872 nine such resolutions had been introduced in house or senate, always to be defeated. Since that time the sentiment in favor of popular election has grown till there is no keeping track of the resolutions to the effect intro duced in congress. In one session of the Fifty-second congress twenty-five such resolutions were introduced. At last, on January 16,1893, the house of representatives passed such a resolu tion by the required two-thirds vote. No fewer than four times since has the house passsed such a resolution, but al ways the senate administered defeat Despairing of ever securing favora ble action by a senate well supplied with members who could not hope for re-election by popular vote, the advo ' cates of the change resorted to the second method of amending the con stitution. When the legislatures of two-thirds of the states so request, congress most call a convention to pro pose amendments to the constitution. The effort to secure the necessary ac tion by legislatures then began. Thirty states in all, only one less than the required two-thirds, have thus far acted. Senators opposed to the change claim that not all the thirty have acted in proper form, and insist that the full two-thirds must act within the life of a single congress. But the action of the thirty, whatever its time and form, gives the movement a pres tige that is rapidly breaking down all opposition. The senate does not want a constitutional congestion, for that would open the way to wholesale amendment The favorable report of the judiciary committee presagesfavor able action by the senate at no great distance, possibly in the next congress. Eighty-five years of agitation seem fin ally about to break over once more the all but impassable barriers set by "the fathers" against the amendment of their handiwork. State Journal. "PERSONALITIES AND POLITI CAL FORCES." A brief survey of the political con ditions seems to show that just now the American people are much more af fected By personalities than by plat forms: Mr. Cannon is an example; he personifies to many voters a bad and despotic system of party management in congress. To be sure, the responsi ble speakership has in it elements of coherence and party efficiency which make it together likely that the pow . ers of the speaker will eventually be restored by the democrats; but Can--ob's dogmatism and arbitrary method -fif Jtfoiag a right thing as well as a ' dooairal thing are understandable by -pleaty of people who do not at all coaprehead the parliameatary law of the hoase of representatives. Throu gkrttaweoutry, to a large degree, ftht igkt ui 1910 has bees one of per- L Follette did not carry as a progressive, but as Kobert La Fcllette, a. hammer sad a man hated of the bosses. -Ike sane thing is very clearly seen in the gubernatorial com paign in six belt line states Massachu setts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio. In every one of those states pereolity, positive, or negative, was the point of attack, if not of decision. Apparently any respectable democrat could nave been elected in Massachusetts, but in Connecticut Judge Baldwin was chosen on his merits as a man and a campaig ner. In New Jersey, by all accounts, Woodrow Wilson electrified the state with his conception of the governor as the spokesman of the public interests and the leader of his party. In Penn sylvania, Senator Penrose, who was the vitual candidate for chief of the state through his two dummies, Tener and Grim, triumphantly established his own unpopularity in the state which he controls. In Ohio the personal quality of Harmon, greatly swelled, if it did not contribute, his remarkable majority of 100,000. Throughout the country it has shown over and over again that it is necessary to "pander to the moral sense of the community" by nominating candidates who stand for something in themselves. The aston ishing success of the insurgents in the west is a proof that the American peo ple like positive men and will vote for Ihem if they have the opportunity. AlbertB. Hart, in the North American Review. GALT'S GAG. Under the bill introduced by Rep resentative Gait from Clay county, the newspapers would be deprived of the privilege of criticizing a candidate for president, except under certain limita tions, or the candidates or officials in other states. Few wilFhesitate to say that the proposed enactment would be silly if it were not so serious in its possible result". In thus specifying as ridiculous this proposed public act of Representative Gait of Clay, there need be no hesi tancy in disclosing upon what infor mation and authority the assertions are made. They are based upon his bill in the house, H. R. No. .'51, a portion of which is as follows: Section 1. It shall le unlawful and ifl -hereby declared a misde meanor for any person or persons or any association or combination or pereooB to publish or circulate, eith er orally or in writing or printing, any statement or statements in ref- ' erencc to the private or public aote or conduct of any persona holding any public oflice or of any person who is a candidate for pnblio office, unless the said statement or state ments shall contain as an integral part thereof in the same language the authority npon whioh such state ment or statements is based. If this law were intended only for the protection of Nebraska crooks and grafters, one would hardly be sur prised at an attempt to secure its enactment It would provide occasion for a grand barbecue of political fine workers. But any attempt of those who fear criticism in one state to protect those similarly situated in another will occasion resentful opposition. Lin coln Star. THE KENTUCKY MULE. A Washington dispatch says the consular reports from South Africa indicate that Kentucky mules are in demand in that region. Recently one hundred mules were imported from the United States, and the lot was so sat isfactory that the denizens of South Africa are crying for more. According to the specifications of the consular reports a mule fourteen and a half hands high, of deep girth, good bone and short legs and anywhere between four and seven years old, is good for something like 3250 in South African currency. Kentucky produ ces a large numlier of mules that answer that description. For many years she has been sending these long eared animals to the south and to other parts of the country where the mule is regarded highly as a beast of burden. It is to le questioned, how ever, if Sonth Africa will get many Kentucky mules at $250 per. It might have been possible some years ago, but in the vernacular of the alfalfa "mules has riz." It is not uncommon nowadays for a Kentucky farmer to pay $250Tor a good speci men of muleflesh or $500 for a good span of mules. In Danville a few days ago twenty four head of yearling mules were sold for $170 a head. South Africa is not likely to get any of these eligibles when they advance from yearlinghood to the four to seven year class. Least wise, South Africa will not buy them for $250 the animal. The Kentucky mule is always in demand and Ken tucky can scarcely raise enough of them to supply the plantations of the south. If South Africa wants the best that is going in muledom she will have to raise her bid or pay the freight, which amounts to the sasae thing. Louisville Courier-Journal. THE NEBRASKA CITIES. ' The census report oa Nebraska cities of mere than 5,000 people shows that aa interesting 'race is still en among a group of communities that have been sharply contesting for third and fourth place for more than twenty years. Counting Omaha and Soath Omaha as one Grand Island is now showing a clean pair of heels as the "third city." It will be observed, however, that it is less than one thous and ahead of tw6 competitors and that several other bright and ambitious communities are still within hailing distance. The padding of 1890 and the failure to deflate the figures en tirely in 1900 makes it a difficult matter to compare the growth of the last ten years with previous decades. Nebraska City, which now shows a decrease, and Lincoln, which makes a poor showing of growth as compared with its real advancement, are appar ently the chief sufferers from this old condition. The figures for the two census periods are as follows: 1910. 1801. Omaha !.... 124.086 10255 Lincoln 4S.WS 40,109 Booth Omaha 38,259 38.001 Grmad Island 10,333 7,544 Beatrice 9.S56 W"5 Hasting, T.S" t83 Fremont.... ........ .. 7,15 York. 6j8Xi 5,182 Kearney. 002 5,4 NorfollC.... .................. .... G.IE5 Sio Nebraska City 5,488 7.380 Feirbery......... ..... &.. 54 a,iiu Colambae.. ......... .......... ... 5,014 3,522 The most rapid growth recorded here is in the case of Fairbury, which makes a gain of 68 per cent Next comes Norfolk, which is at last begin ning to show the advantage of its position as "the Lincoln of the North Platte." Kearney, it will be remem bered, received its solar plexus from the boom later than any other city in the state, consequently has fewer years of returning prosperity to show in these figures. The railroad situation has been to the advantage of Grand Island in the triangular contest for first place in the central part of the stale. Hastings and Kearney, espe cially Kearney, are now hopeful that this advantage will soon he equalized by the proposed Platte river main line of the Burlington. Each of these three cities is confident of gaining and holding first place. Beatrice is in this content also, although competing in a different way and in a territory more nearly it own. That it will make steady advances along with Fremont, as Nebraska develops into a manufac turing state goes without saying. York presents one of the most interesting series of figures on the list Twenty years ago it had only 3,405 people when the "third cities" were claiming more than ten thousand. Ten years ago it quietly moved up to 5,132, and now, without saying a word, it shows G,235 people and wins a seat well up in the city class. York can account for its prosperity easily enough, but is too well behaved to volunteer expla nations. Lincoln Journal. CHINA'S ROAD SYSTEM. Next to house building, food and dress, transportation is the most im portant industry of civilization. China has no roads and is only now adopting railways. Modern China may be said to date from the Boxer rising of ten years ago. At that time railway development was just begin ning. The Boxers tore up the tracks and struck a tremendous blow against railroad construction. However, to day one may travel from Hankow to Pekin, half across the empire, in a Pullman car, in one-fifth the time it took to make the trip ten years ago. China has no roads for wheeled ve hicles, except the cart tracks in the north, which are no better than the worst of American roads. Yet it may be said that China has a greater sys tem of roads than ever was developed on this continent The roads, however are only twelve inches wide. They consist of thousands and thousands of miles of square paving stones laid in single tracks, in the middle of which is worn a single rut. Along the side of the narrow strip of paving meanders a foot trail. The rut serves for wheel barrows and the trail for donkeys, palanquins and men. The fact that China never has develoed the four wheeled wagon for transport is not proof of want of inventiveness or ina bility to manufacture it, says Harper's Weekly. There are other reasons. The two-wheeled carts of the north are clumsy affairs, but the wheel of the wheelbarrow proves that the Chinese can build good wheels. The main ob jection to wagons is the impossibility of maintaining draft animals for want of grazing. Throughout the length and breadth of China, except on the remote Mongolian steppes, one never sees a grass field, and only along the ditches and along the grave sown hills is there sparse grazing for sheep, donkeys and buffaloes. All available tillable laid is required for the feeding of the dense two-legged population. This state of affairs might not have existed in the beginning. Still, the principle of economy which underlies all Chinese inventions would have told against the nr-r r mu - drawn wag-'ii, hence the wheelbarrow. The Chinese wheelbarrow, which bat been at work, it is presumed, dur ing thousands of years, represents the highest development attainable by a one-wheel vehicle, with the single ex ception of ballbearings and grease cups, ine use ot axie grease must certainly be known to the Chinese, bat strange to say, it is ignored. The screech of the wheel, like the pagoda bells, is heard far over the celestial landscape. On this wheelbarrow, with its high, razorrimmed wheel-case like a boat cabin split by the center board, loads of 300 pounds are carried for hundreds of miles at a speed of three miles an hour. In the central flat lands that is the general form of passenger transport for the poor, the hire of a barrow being about 10 cents a day. When a family moves to a new district the women and old folks are wheeled, one or two to a barrow, while the men walk, carrying their dunnage slug from two ends of a shoulder pole. Bat riding on a wheel barrow must be an excruciating ex perience for any one but a nerveless and cotton-wool padded Chinese wo man. The paving blocks have spread or dipped, and between each that is to say, at every revolution plunk goes the iron wheel in a hole, while there are no shock-absorbing springs or ru ber tires to take up the jar. No white man could wheel freight in this man ner for a mile. The secret seems to be in the shoulder strap, which is attach ed to the handles of the barrow and passes over the back of the neck of the pusher. It would almost seem as though centuries of us have developed in the race a special muscular resis tance at that particular part of the make-up of a Chinaman. Chicago Tribune. DIPPING INTO SPACE. Qne of the greatest sources of the fascination of the starry heavens is the measurelessness of their abysses. The ocean of space is so pellucid that we seem to see its spangled banner, but trigonometry is powerless to reach it Here and there only some projecting reef throws a star-gemmed point with in touch of the astronomer's sounding line. Such a spire, situated at a depth hitherto unfathomed, has just caught and arrested the spectroscopic plum met flung into the abyss by the astron omer, Charles Nordmann, who has invented a new method of celestial soundings. The glittering star-crag that he has hit is chartered by astron omers under the name of Delta Librae, and the length of the mathematical line which now hangs between it and the earth makes the imagination itself esp- It is two quadrillion miles! It is only step by step that one can comprehend a number like that Two quadrillions of twenty dollar gold pieces would make one hundred thous and necklaces each long enough to embrace the earth and the moon in a doable loop. An express train travel ing one hundred mile3 per hour, and never stopping, would require more than two thousand two hundred and eighty millions of years to go two quadrillions of miles. A projectile flying 3,000 feet per second, or in round numbers 50,000 miles per day, would require about one hundred and ten millions of years to reach Delta Librae. Light, the swiftest thing known the swiftest thing that can possiblv exist if we may trust recent calculations based ?n the phe nomenon of radio activity and which can make the round of the whole earth more than seven times in a second, takes three hundred and fifty-five years to come to us from that star. Yet Delta Librae lies iu shallow water; it is a gem cast up on a shoal, and all around it the mighty deeps of the "ether descend to profundities un thinkable. At ten times, a hundred times, perbajw a thousand times, its depth glitter, the .Mar sands of the milky way. To our telescopes they appear to lie on the very bottom, wrifted into heaps and curved by mys terious currents but it cannot be the real bottom even there. Beyond yawn abysses so black with excess of depth that the stars themselves, great suns as they are, fade to invisibility. Lincoln Star. A Hot Offer. The Lincoln Daily News will be mail ed from now until April 1st for only. 25 oents, giving you all of the legislative news right straight from the capital city. A bigger offer yet is a combination of the Lincoln Daily News, Weekly Inde pendent Fanner and Monthly Poultry Topics, all three mailed to one or separ ate addressee from now until April 1. 1912, for only 12 25 not much more than half price. A splendid big family daily newspaper, clean as a whistle and bright aad eaappy; sixteen-page weekly farm and home magazine, and a monthly ponltry paper full of practical talk about objeked raising. Beading for all mem bers of the family, and you save the aaoacy by baying all three of them at once. Address The Daily News, Lia cote, Nebraska. IT GROWS HAUL Here Axe Facta. We Waatt Yow to Prore at Oar Risk. Marvelone as it auy seats, Retail -9BT Hair Tonic baa grown hair oa heeds that were oace bald. Of coarse, in noneof these oases were the hair roots dead, nor had the scalp taken on a glazed, ehiay appearance. RexaU "98" Hair Tonio acta scientul- oally, destroying- the gems which are usually, responsible for baldness. It penetrates to the roots of the hair, etimulatiag aad nourishing them. It ie a most pleasant toilet necessity, is deli cately perfumed, and will not gum or permanently stain the hair. s We want you to get a bottle of Rexall "93" Hair Toaic and use it as directed. If it does not relieve scalp irritation, remove dandruff, preveat the hair from falling out and promote an increased growth of hair, and in every way give entire satisfaction, simply come back and tell us, and without question-or for mality we will band back to you every penny you paid us for it Two sizes, 50c and $1.00. Sold only at our store tae RexaU store. Pollock & Co., corner 13th and North streets. OSCEOLA. From the Record. John Janicek haa sold bis farm in Butler county for $36,000, and bought a farm Bear Monroe in Platte county for $10,000. He will move to Columbus the lat of March. There will be preaching at Clear Greek again next Snnday afternoon, And every 1st and 3rd Sunday of each month thereafter, .if storms prevent them the services will be held the Sanday follow ing. Sunday school at 2 p. m., every Sunday. Monday afternoon while Ernest Scholz was returning home from town with a load of coal, he met with an accident near the Mickey fans one mile southeast of town, and at the same spot where the family of Joseph Scbolz were so badly injured in a runaway a few years ago. Mr. Scbolz was driving a colt aad the' animal got the blinds of the bridle down in such away that it could see over them and then became unmanageable. It ran the other horse off the grade and broke one of the wheels of the wagon aad otherwise fractured it np. Mr. Scbolz escaped without iBJury, but his nephew. Joe. WoJnizcek, who ia visiting here from Merna, in jumping from the wagon got a broken arm. Mr. Scholz held the team and they were not injured. FUXfcnBTON. From the Post. T. J. Cissna was shot and killed by his fourteen-year-old sob on a farm fonr miles west of Follerton last Friday. The two had gone into a draw to shoot rabbits, the boy having a rifle and the father having a hammerlees shotgun. Mr. Oissna desired to nse the rifle so ex. changed with the boy. Later he return ed the rifle and just is the boy was about to hand his father the shotgun, it went off, the shot passing through Mr. Cissna's arm and entering his left side. The frightened child ran to the nearest neighbor for help and soon the wounded man was carried to the house and medi cal assistance called but before the doctor arrived the man was dead. Mr. Cissna and the boy were the only persons on the farm at the time of the accident, as Mrs. Cissna was visiting relatives in Council Bluffs, Is., and the eldest son, was attending the Fullerton High school. Mrs. Cissna wae notified of the accident and will probably remain in Council Bluffs, as the body was taken to Iowa Monday by Sam and J. W. Cissna, bro thers of the deceased, both of whom are residents of Fulletjon. Mr. Cissna was forty years of age. He was a prosperous farmer, well known in this vicinity as well as in Walnut, his former home. Net a Bern Forger. The indorsement of checks Is a very simple thing; but. as the following story will show, it, too, has its diffi culties: A woman went Into a bank where she had several times presented checks drawn to Mrs. Lucy B. Smith. This time the check was made to the order of Mrs. M. J. Smith. M. J. were her husband's Initials. She explained this to the paying teller and asked what she should do. . "Oh, that is all right," he said. "Just Indorse it as It Is written there." She took the check and after much hesitation said, "I don't think I can make an M like that." Prepared Fer Emergency. "What makes you keep giving me flsh for dinner day after day?" he in quired. "Are yon particularly fond of X?" "No," she replied. "I was wholly unselfish. I read a lovely recipe about how to remove a fishbone when It sticks in your throat, and I wanted to try if Washington Star. IN OUR NEW HOME Zmthe Meridiam You will find us better . equipped that ever to attend to your wants in Electric Lighting and Electric Irons Let us wire your house Columbus Light, Heat tfc Power Co. f SEE THE WHOLE WEST UNDER ONE ROOF, SMsananajaBBBjBBjBBBjBBajajBjB YM SIkmjM Ntt Fall f VUlt m WnmaTtanTMl I ItrnJalaltaT CvkSktt Onudta, Janumrr 18-28. 1911. A good educational Land Show of farm and orchard products from every state ia the West. It will be an aotnal and aathentic demoaatratioa of what caa be grown, the cost of prodaetioB. the financial returns and the favorable conditions nader which crops ate prodaeed, so that interested parties caa obtain practical aad aoearate information. VrUtfteVTY OF OROP4V. Corn, Wheat, Oats. Barley. Potatoes, Sugar Beets. Alfalfa. Forage Orops, Apples, and all small Fraita. BtHILINOTON TERRITORY will Iw well represented with exhibits. Look for them. . '" liiniHiufln FKSh Distance. "Father, is It very far. across the oceanr "Yes: It's a long way." "About how many blocks? Brown lns Magazine. He that lives upon hopes will dls fasting. Franklin. 1KTULE No. 11 BOOHS. aoum. Ho. I .. No. .. No. 17.. No. 15.. No. 8 .. No. 5 .. Nk91 .".. M28 a 11:38 a at JR P arsa 939w Mo. 4 No. 18, No. 8 . No. 18. No. IS ...... i m 2:21 a at 2.-48pm 2:16 pm ...... 84)5 pa ...... 5:5? pm BSXPaU 03Rv p Wk aAa'Br aaa U3EP m Ban o3B P ta SdBpai No. 18... No. 2 ... No. 82... No. 80... No. 24... No. 8 ... osiupn 1:20pm 34)0 pa 7:12 a ra 8:UI p ib No. 19 No.2. No. 7 . ROBTOLE. No. 77 and. d 7:88 am No.8Spaa ..d 7:88 pm No. SO pee ..a. 1:10 pat No.78mzd..a8:Wpm SrALBUfO ALBIOK. No. 79 aud..d 8:00 am No.81paa ..d 1:90 pm No. 83 pa ..al2JSpm No.80aud..a7Kpm Dally except Saaday. xon:- Noe. l, 2, 7 aad 8 ate extra (are traiae. Noa. I5, IS aad 14 ate kwal paaaaagen Noa.5BaBdWamkealfTCiate. Noa. 9 aad IS ate mail traiaa oaly. No 14dMiaOmaaa4.-48p.rn. No. 8 deem Omaha 8:88 p.m. C. 1. 1 Q. TkmTaMt No, 22, Pass, (daily ex. Saaday ) leave .... ?stt a m No. 32, Fit. & Ae. (d'y ex. Satarday) lr.5K p m No. 21, Pee, (daily ex. Saaday) arrive. .9:20 p ra No. 8. Frt. & Ae. (d'y ax. Saaday) ar. .. :15 a m ft .rC? K.,.'yV'' cl -"- ?? -W --3T V 2. uH a. wT r-;j - 1 jjJ J. mtMitCWr re ; -Vv" m ,-... "avvspcr. V3tJ sjaaanSmamammCrv1-' -rv'-'iJ JJ$irfii&k x-' H'uammmmKi -r ' j v-uMm'' &wn'm& iis.zrEniTdTry zt. regggjaammemmmmmmmmKg 7sfjflanBannnnnnajT t-fTTn.'!. 1'X.BL aBavV9BmmmBmBaBsjsaeBeBssBBsBsms4. naaasammmaaaaaaaaaaMBaauBf y jttrji ti TsTT"ii iBmamamamaTWMT1 TiaaTniiTsaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaamsmamWTi HrAiarfcLrSSSSn V i'- &&!53EKBNKSanQNKBmtim lr"p' " r-v' csmSjBamTeCestmaWJIaVBammmmR H .i v'P4SBBSSBBESSBBBBVSSBBHwlBBBS.tfBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBf4SSBBVj rr 1 rZBBmBBBBSBBBBM.WBBBJBBvSBjBeBSSBBjSBB K).3&ll8fBBmmfi ifaf! .Mimmmmmm w ammmmeaaMiw? WX jr7J&-&&5- - Vsi- aW?gff-mf P'VtV1' VB eaVamVmmP' WBrnaaT amVTsBTaYB Baar V amRmmmammmmferamT-fl aTNaem anajF eaew4MT wjr av'sKKaWMeVV B Jf aaaVB " K K JBammaVLBmCljAM-aC? S .1 f m DM IAND PMMKB 0sjahoIafcl8-2 ExbJMts front every westers state, "" growm aau now to grow it. Kxblbits irrigation and dry fanning methods. Exhibits showing how to raise more corn wheats oats alfalfa and potatoes. Good roads ex hibit anaj lectures how to prevent hog chol era. Moving pictures and illustrated lectures good music and clean entertainment. Ad mission 25 cents. Come to the Omaha Land S Magazine Binding I Old Books I I Rebound I I In .fact, for anything in the book I I binding line bring your work to I I Ufe I Baaml Bamai I Journal Office I I Phone 184 I D. 6LEM DEAVER. GtJMral flMt Land Seekers Infer leaj Bureau 1004 Farnam Street. Omaha. Nabr. Probata, M.tie. t Cramitera. In HiCoantyCoBrt.IIattacoaatr.NBtaeBa. In the matter of theeetataof ffiaaih Davie. Notice is hereby givea that the creditors of the naitl ileroaMtl will meet the admiautrator of aid -htM before me. Cooaty Jade of Platte connty.. Nebraska, at the coaaty court roomia said coaaty oa the h day of Jaaaary. 1911, ami on tli 2Sth day of April. 1911. aad oa the SSth day of July. 1911. at IS o'clock a. m.each day. for the purpose of pKeeatias; their claime for ex. amination, adjastraeat aad allowaare. tiix months aie allowed for creditors to preeeat thfir claims, from Jaauary 28th. 1911. aad oae yer for th administrator to settle said eetatp. fromtheZiih day of December, 199. Thieaotie will be published ia the Colambaa Joaraal foar weeks sncceesiTely prior to the 28th day of Jan. nary. 1911 Witness my hand, aad seal of said coart. this 37th ilay ot December. A. D. 19W. IsxAi-l JOHN RATTEHMAN. r.;u Coaaty Jade. COLTTMBUS MEAT MARKET We inviteall who desire ehoiee steak, and the very best cuts of all other saeate to call at' our saarket oa Eleventh street. We also handle poultry aad flsh and oystera.in season. S.E.MARTY&CO. Telephone No. 1. - Colnmbua.Nsb. DO YOU WANT TO BUY The beat irrigated mad, with the best water rijthts. Which has produced ham per crops for the past 20 years. Price reasonable. Terms very easy. For par. ticalars write Isaac Conner, Omaha, Neb. j. , 'V . BSfafcJ 9- ' ;...".- M showing IT- fSmmmmmmmmaQSm Hn.v " m H I BTmflll !5r marnKtBVyflammmmmmT - -mi ItalaafgrJgfsJr.'b i f X r A r