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OMAHA DAILY BEE NEW BOOKS AND MAGAZINES deduces some conclusions, and asks and answers some questions suggested by what . Be taw. Judge Dickinson Decides She Has No > Wflmm% Sonml.lnndamn Writes a Btory Entitled | Clay Emery in a Iittle book entitied | Oiarter Bovision Committee Meets, but i ool o g “The Twin Seven Shooters.” “Cap'n Titus" ehronicles many anecdotes Takes No Definite Action. Estate, 4 ’ and amusing storles of New England coun- o v i " " try folk which center around the personal- iRy At noon vesterday Judge Dickinson gave n | N \ BARBARA LADD,” A COLONIAL ROMANCE | ity of a grizsled old mariner, whone yarns PROJECT TO TAKE UP FLOATING DEBT |dccision which in effect transfers the own- | —_— have the salty flavor of the seacosst towns ership of about $40,000 worth of real es- | resolves on New | W. A P * Returns t Where he lives. Some: of the stities -are . tate left by Seth Winch from Miranda J. | Year's Day ' i o e "'n His Ol and | (oibiain Titue' Ride,” “A Remarkable | P1an is to Get Authority from Legis- Steen, sald to be the widow of Wineh, to ‘That he'll not change last year's e Turf and Sho “The Cap'n Sells Somie Apples,” Iatare (o Issue Honds to Cover Elvire M, Aldrich, a daughter; Mre. Bmma way, 4 Flel in Hix New Work, 'F‘mlr Silas on Baked Beans,” “A S';ml“h Counell Overlap and Save 8. Oatman of Providence, R. I, another | B“.‘o:::': dine on Strength's sure “The Thoroushbreds. ump Story,” “An Eel Story,” “A Whaling daughter, and Miss Irens Sweet of | A A Yarn,” “A Deep Sea Yarn<" “A Horse b B Worcester, Mass., a granddaughter of the | The _brain-and-brawa-produciog Trade,” “Cap'n Titus' Bread, Foot." Pub- PR, | Gacsansd . Omakas, The oourt set . asid Force. In “The Twin Seven Shooters,” written by our fellow townsman, General Charles F. Manderson, and issued from the press of F. Tennyson Neeley, we have a pret- tlly told story growing out of the late lished by Doubleday, Page & Co. ‘“The Mishaps of an Automobile,” by De Witt C. Falls, comprises twelve colored plates showing the comical accidents that A meeting of the charter revision com- | chamber | Mayor Koutsky presided and mittee was held at the council Iast night Secretary Tanner kept the minutes of th an old deed, on the ground practically insane when he algo annulled the divorce made it, hat Winch was | and | granted the first | Mrs. Winch, which ruling has the effect of | A brand new lease of life and limb All can foresee for * Sunny Jim." { | king invalid his marriage to she who is { | meeting. During the first portion of the | ™8 “ I | civil war, whose truth is vouched f | might happen to the automobilist and now Mre. Steen, but who was at that time | Mo~ R OF_BY | Joughable incidents connected with them. | €YeNIDE school matters were discussed. It i its every particular. The | old adage about truth being stranger than fiction {8 again exemplified here by a series | of coincidents that brought about the re- covery by General Manderson of the pair of revolvers presented to him by the mem- bers of his Ohio regiment, captured by the confederates and returned each by itself a Mrs. Miranda Mitchell The case has been hard fought and has occupied considerably more than a iweek in its trial. The plainiiffs sought to have set aside a deed that Winch made in 1592 by the terms of which he transferred several lots in Omaha, two in Chicago and some other realty to Mrs. Mitchell. A year was suggested that the number of members on the board be decreased from nine to seven, or even five, and that each member be allowed a certain amount for attending each meeting. This matter will be more fully discussed at a meeting to be held later in the week. They are accompanied by explanatory and humorous verses by M. J. Moses. There are also twelve smaller plctures, sequels to the large ones, representing the amusing results of the accidents. Published by F. 0. Stokes & Co. “ Sweet, crisp flakles of wheat will make e v A partial report of the subcommittee in and malt. ‘ | third of a century later. The stor: Bob, the Photographer,” by Arthur M. . previously he had gone to Plattsmouth and I we understand 1t, was written by Gegera] | WIBAe1d, relates the experiences of a poor |T®¥ard to general charter reviston wan | FORTGRN, 0 BRE SONR I8 FCSTRER B ALL the year happy. | Manderson several yoars .:0 ’“d“‘:fy boy who falls in with a “camera flend” and | made. There was some little discussion on | Lo 0" \iiine then in Rhode Island and had Siven to the publisher at the earnest en- | NU8 develops a liking for photography. #0me of the amendments suggeated, but 10 | 1ot peon with him in thirty years. She L] treaty of a fow close friends wha men bems | After a number of unususl and stirring | Action of any importance was taken. SIOUDOE /B0 e - SaSWSE, WAOTIRpUR privileged to read it. Its battle. descrip. | *dVentures Bob becomes photographer for | One thing was brought forcibly to the | winch moved to dismiss, but the court tions are both reallstic and inst m‘: a rallroad, and while taking pictures along | MInd of the committee and that was the | .14 jurigdiction and granted her the di- Atter reading it through the only r::;fl {5 | the line thwarts the plan of ‘hose who |necessity for some action in regard to the | (ree” instead, allowing her also $15,000 that & bit of romance should not have been | ¥0Uld injure the rallroad corporation and | Overlap of $70,000. 1t is understood that an | 4yinony which Winch paid effort will be made to induce the legisla- ture to so change the charter that the | council may be authorized to issue general indebtedness bonds to wipe out the over'ap and thus put a stop to the payment of a high rate of interest on outstanding war- rants. Clty Attorney Murdock, as chairman of the subcommittee, s in charge of the incidentally clears a mystery surrounding his parentage. Many of the characters are drawn from lite. The book is fully illus- trated. A. Wessels company, Publisher. interwoven into it, with a hero and a beroine, separated by the fortunes of war and reunited again like the seceding states of the unfon. To do this, however, would hi required a draft on the imagination | and destroyeC the character of the book history rather than fiction. Perhaps at some future time General Manderson may | expand his story into a more pretentious Judge Dickinson held that as Winch was resicent in this district and his wife in Rhode Island Judge Chapman of the district court of Cass county had no jurisdiction to grant the decree, and therefore Mrs. Winch had remained Winch's wife until her death in 1898, or for five years after Winch had married Mrs. Mitchell, now Mrs. Steen, the defendant in this suit. Thus the latter, “Tower or Thron a romance of the girthood of Elizabeth, by Harriet T. Com- stock. In thie fascinating book the story of the youthful years of Elizabeth is told novel. with unusual grace, and the writer has |amendments to the charter. He Is prepar- | by Tuesday morning's decision, Is deprived St given a portrait of the great queen’s girl- | ing the amendments as rapidly as the sub- | of cven dowsr rights {PREPARE ‘O LECT (N BILL o hood which is picturesque and enchanting, | committee makes suggestions and when| \winch was adjudged insane in October, PR 4 ]:4 t L EC l A m,:;lz:";‘ "“: ® charming romance of | yivia and brilliant, and full of dramatic | completed the charter as revised will be | a0 and dled in St. Bernard's hospital wiitel b"'('m '::‘:’}dvr:‘ l;"";_ ':!‘"l‘h OOk | strength. The story begins with the court | submitted to the committee of the Whole | council Blufte. fn 1809, but the defendant in | —_ Yy oDerts, (e 8U% | )ife of Henry VIIL and Anne Boleyn, and [for consideration. This work will take | (his caso soug! " | : | » 3 2 vase sought to prove him to have been | Repre tives of Meroh and Labor e‘;’;:‘h “‘; ""“"""'d"" Anclent Wood," | ;ngg with the death of Mary and the ac- | some little time, but the chances are that|sane when he made the dect May ‘Wwite | ¥ 'I;“f" B ants i ab olasslo of twentletn contuor®reritics % | cession of Elizabeth to the throne. The | typewritten copies will be ready by the | pegses, including business men and his old | nions Favor Qourt for Debtors. The o6eky of.“Bardars Ladd" :r-uln- e, | chapters relating to Bdward VI and Lady | time the legislature meets. [1awyers, were called, but the judge was | | Jane Grey have a special charm. lished by Little, Brown & Co. Pub- peacetul town of Second Westings, which b lles amid forests, and 1s carrfed to New York at the period which sees the opening of hostilities with King George of England. Hamilton and other leaders of the whig cause are characters fn the book, although the novel could not in any strict sense of the word be termed historical in its char- Looking for Settlement. | unconvinced and so the deed was set aside, leaving Mrs. Steen nothing. | The decree s not yet drawn because the judge wishes to give a further hearing to some who have purchased property of Mrs. | Winch-Steen since Winch's death and whom the judge believes to have rights as inno- cent purchasers which must be protected. WOULD TAKE PERCENTAGE OF SALARIES It was reported on the streets yesterday that the members of the Board of Educ: tion were willing to make some sort of a settlement with the Oliver Typewriter com- pany. Since the trouble with the Oliver people the board has been renting type- writers from another concern. The plan “The Hurdy-Gurdy,” inspired nonsense for children, by Laura E. Richards, is one of the latest publications of Dana, Estes & Co. Mrs. Richards' fingles are hardly less captivating than the child lyries of Lear of Minneapolis | The Rescue and Redemption of a City that was Sold Out Country Member of Legislature Wants W to Collect from Tenant Farmers Rather Than From Wage Earners. acter. The value of the book lies In its |01 Lewls Carroll. The 100 pictures by | TTICTR IO WIRILEE eonoerm. “The plan LAl By LiN r. Mora, wh {llustrations for the people put bacl y LINCOLN STEFFENS T R TRl iy P Aosop,” “Toynard and Fox- | the machines it sold the board, the proviso MISS LYON GIVES TESTIMONY| 1. ooute of the conterence between the y \ m‘“ \be nm"v.: {h"lzl page. Darbara | And “Andersen’s Fairy Tales” have won being that it pay the rental of the m: Repents Former Story of Paying Five | State Association of Retall Merchants and STARTLING story, even to Americans who are used to pecultar meth- is a8 compact a creature of charm as a|Nim & secure place among younger artists, | Chines now In use. Dellass 6 seel B the labor union committee Monday night ods in municipal business. The very citizens of Minnenpolis will be humming bird. She seems to bo made up | 87e Irresistibly amusing and deserve a place | S8t BOw the Cliver people have possca: At was the preparation of a bill which con- astonished at the material In thisarticle. Much of it has never been pub- of wonderful colors, swift motion, honey |!D the compauy of these droll and fascina- :V:. priies ‘;‘::l"d'.'y":h“ A “:_'.:“‘m recter er. :i‘!‘l:!hl;lmnl)‘ldnn\'e(:nl(;nla'm(r(c-n n]ml "\‘l):m:,\. npu lished in the papers, and might almost be called secret history. There are ing verses. ! o made constitutional, will be ap- % A o 8 g h”""'n“:’ ::':"'"."m“‘;oi'::_‘]“’:r:'h‘:: sre concerned the incident fs closed. It| yyo ohjections of the defense were the | Proved by all parties to the conterence In | ;"I‘ :““"l‘ n{lism r;lf the Blg Mitt Ledger, an account hook of ..nlnln;nm; mm_"'“b et 35 L. Pace & G0 “The Lieutenant Governor,” by Guy Wet- | ¥ill be remembered that the Board of Edu- [ 1€ ZHEC TS 08 (A8 COCREE W a1 | its general plan. Briefly, the bill provides: |§ JoInts, showing the sums paid by swindlers to Mayor Ames, the chiet of cation agreed to pay the Oliver company more Carryl, the novelette with which the | cop g o ZTUF (0 Y (/0 o mew mar of Alonzo V. Miller of the South Omaha| After judgment has been secured in the || Dolice and the detectives. The story of the city officials fnviting and emplo In ‘““Thoroughbreds,” published by Mc- Clure, Phillips & Co., W. A. Fraser, the author, returns to his old and famous field of the turf and tle racing horse. The book s a novel, full of rich and stirring plctures. On a glowing moving background of strife and victory and defeat there plays a love story, charmingly simple and inno- cent, seemingly the more so for the roar- ing, fighting life amid which it develops January number, of the Smart Set opens, Is full of power and fascination. The plot Is absojutely new, and the strikingly dram- atic situations are handled by the author with a mastery of art that holds the reader absorbed from opening to climax. This is the strongest novelette that has appeared in the Smart Set. It s a splendidd piece of fiction. There are fifty items in the table of contents, and the sum total of chines, the company taking the old ma- board failed to make the payment when due, the company replevined its machines. Up to the present time the board has not made The chances are that no set- tlement will be reached while the present chines in part payment. As the the payment. Board of Education is in power. Nea pletion, school board yesterday on a charge of accepting a bribe of §5 from Cecile Lyon, a teacher, for assisting in securing for her a ralse in ealary. The first witness was A. L. Lott, secretary of the board, who dentified the minutes of the board meetings at which salaries wero consldered and raised: Next was Denna Al- printed for the board’at his shop. City bery, who Identified the rules which he had | usual way the judgment creditor may call into court the judgment debtor and cause | him to reveal the names of persons who owe him money, the amount of his stated | salary and the times of payment. The court | may then order pald into the court or to the judgment creditor a certain per cent | of the stated salary at such times as it is payable, the money thus paid to be applied upon the satisfaction of the debt. In case reader spell-bound. ing criminals to commit crime in order that they might share in the “loot and the account of the splendid work on the part of honest which the wrong-doers were punished and the city reclaimed, will hold a This Is not a sensational article about unusual conditions. importance and meaning to all patriotic citizens, to every one who thinks at all of public affairs, and votes perhaps with indifference. citizens by It has vital merit in these, in stories, verses and hu- mor, both explains and justifies the mag- nificent success of the Smart Set magazinc. The January Success, just received, Is brimful of inspiration for the New Year. Among the many features of ‘nterest are “The Power of Twolve Senators,” by Wal- ter Wellman, which gives an interesting in- sight ‘into the characters of some of the most consplcuous and influential members of the United States semate, and Josiah Strong, in the first of “Uncle Sam’s Talks on Our Country,” tells of Americ: place among the nations and leads us to a fuller realization of the greatness of our land. “The Red House,” by E. Nesbit, is a story of a young marrfed couple of limited méans, named Len and Chloe. The scene in their tiny cottage, “The Band- " where they have spent a protracted honeymoon. An old uncle dies and leaves to Len the Red house an old, dilapidated A turn of fortune makes It necessary that the heroine race her father's string of horses. The exciting incidents that arise from this and the tri and complications through which the love of the girl is com- pelled to pass go to make up a story of unusual, interes}. Clerk Shrigley testified to the classifica- tion of the city of South Omaha. The last witness of the morning was Cecile Lyon, who again told her story of the traneaction as twice printed previcusly, first at the time of thé arrests and then at the time of the préliminary hearing in county court. She again afirmed that Mil- ler bad approached her.on the subject at the school house one, evenlng and on Oc- tober 3 had accepted from her, at a public street corner and in the presence of a friend of hers, $5 for using. his influence to se- cure for her a raise In“salary; that subse- quently he tried to get her to take back the money and that finally she recelved by mall that amount, which she supposed came from Miller. The attorneys for the defense perfuncto- rily objected to the proceeding yesterday morning and then to nearly every individ- ual question, such objections being as promptly overruled. During the afternoon Miss Johns the debtor falls to comply with the rules of the court in the matter of payment the judga may call him into court and ascer- taln the reason for the failure. It it is found that the debtor has failed for no good reason he may be fined an amount not ex- ceeding $5 and the court may order the em- ployer of the debtor to pay into court the entire salary earned by the debtor until such time as the debt has been extin- guished, fthe court to pay to the creditor the amount previously ordered and to the debtor the remainder. Scale of Percentages. At the suggestion of the labor committee a provision was inserted in the bill pro- viding that the percentage of salary to be applied on the debt should vary with the amount of the salary recelved, the per- centages conditionally settled upon belng: On all wages not exceeding $50 per month not to exceed 10 per cent of the total wages; on wages from $50 to $80, not to The contractors have completed the pla: tering of the two-room addition to the East Albright school. This work was delayed for some time on mccount of thé cold weather, but h 8 now ben corrpleted, stoves being placed so that the plasterers could work, This addition to the Albright school when completed will help considerably in relieving the congestion at other schools. As for the condition to the Lowell school, L. A. Davis, the architect, says that the oot is ready to be put on and that with a little spell of good weather the work can be done so that the rooms will be in shape for occupancy before spring. Change of Place. The pound soclal which was to have been held at the South Omaha hospital from 3 until 5 o'clock in the afternoon of New Year's day will be held at the residence of Mrs. C. L. Talbot. This change has been made necessary by the crowded condition of the hospital and the fact that two pa- January McClure’s 10 Cents ;n All News Stands. Special {'Standard 0il” Offer. 1f you want to keep in touch with the en- tire “story of the Standard Ol Company, now running In McCLURE'S, we will, upon Pecelpt of $1,00 and the coupon herewltn: send you McCLURE'S MAGAZINE for one ear,” beginning January 1, 1903, and the ovember and December numbers, which contain Chapters I and 1I. This 14 months' subscription is limited to the supply of back iseues on hand. No more will be printed, consequently only the promptest response will insure your getting back numbers, by Gerald CUT OFF HERE TODAY ““The Lost Art of Reading" Stanley Lee, is a series of essays char- acterized by thoughtfulness, insight, a pleasing style and a flavor of Emerson's * menner, which brings to mind “The Auto- crat of the Breakfast Table.” The title is misleading One suspects—nay, fears—to find & work upon elocution containing ad- vice about the best means of lung develop- ment, tone, quality, dramatic reading, cor- rect enunclation, etc. One finds instead a provoking, clever, original, fascinating volume which protests many things in gen- eral and modern complaisancy in particu- lar. The author's discussion of the vari- ous “Interferences with the reading habit" 8. & MeClure . 147 E. 35th St. Enclosed please find $1.00 for Sub- sciiption to McClure's for 1903, to- ther with November and T:ecember Gumbers free, containing Chapters [ d 11 of the History of the Standard Oil Company. Name .. n, an- is as delighttul as it s unique. G. P. Put- | family residence of twenty-three rooms aud | tients at the hospltal are very sick. All | other teacher, testified to having been ap- | iy o1 b°F Ceti on wages from 350 to Always Something * nam's Sons are the publishors. extensivo_ gardens. Chloe, dslighted with | those who intended sending gifts to the | proached by Miller in the same manner as | 310" 10U (0 exceed B por centi on wage New to Show You. the seclusion and the old gardens, wants | hospital are 1equested to bring or send the | Miss Lyon testified sho had been, the prop- | ““eecd!n8 ¥ 'd"‘]" Y Y S | “Religious Life In America” is a record | to move Into the house, but Len, being | same to Mrs. Talbot instead of to the hds- | osition to Miss Johnson being that she pay # proposed IEN. Saths to. abaph .the of things seen on a journey undertaken by Ernest Hamlin Abbott at the instance of the Outlook company. It is not a study in more practical, objects and trles to rent it. After months of failure to do this and frequent discussions on the subject Chloe pital. Send! Invitations. him $10 for Kubat and $10 for Murphy. Murphy then took the stand and testified that he had authorized Miller to make no existing laws for garnishment in every case, but the law on aytachments and labor liens It not to be affected. Recretary Marsh of the local Young Men's Christian association is sending out invita- tions to members and friends of the insti- tution for the annual New Year's reception. The reception will be held at the parlors of the assoclation on the evening of Janu- Book Prices that Talk for Themselves methods of church activity. Nor is it a record of sclentific investigation. All pos- sibility of any result at all sclentific w; eliminated by these two conditions of the trip: On the one hand, the fleld traversed, covering elgbteen states of the Union s wins the day and they move. The incidents that follow are most amusing. The furni- ture from the “bandbox” will only spread thinly over a few of the rooms, the roof leaks, the kitchen maids refuse to stay and difficulties come thick and But RB. W. W. Jones of Dunbar, a member of the grocers' association and a representa- tive to the legislature from Otoe county, speaking of the proposed bill, said: *‘Here in Omaha the merchants seem troubled with a different class of debtors than we of the such proposition or . suggestion. Befcre | Before Murphy went on the attorneys for the defense moved that all testimony as to other alleged transactions, such as Miss Johnson's, be kept out, but the judge over- tered through a territory bounded by Can- ada, the Atlantic ocean, the Gulf of Mexico and the Rocky mountains; on the other | " o farmers. At the present time we have no bhand, the time, scarcely more than three | and everything comes out right. Published Hanging Church Bell. d months. Mr. Abbott visits labor urions | by Harpers. The bell donated by G. F. Swift of Chi- |Becomes First Assintant Advertising | recourse effective against terant farmers. and country churches in Virginia, Colorado, | The material comprised in “Napoleon S - They may own any amount of personal prop- | /Kansas; he attends negro meetings in the ‘south; he gets down into the eastern west ‘and reports the religions condition and ifeeling of the people. His work s not all 'portrayal; in the concluding chapter he cEmEe——— both Len and Chloe have a lively sense of humor and so, loving each other devotedly, they are able to overcome the obstacles, by W. H. Ireland, it Is claimed, was selected from the portfolio of a gentlemen who resided in France pre- vious to the second return of Louis XVIIIL. They are thus to be regarded as authen‘ic and they add something to our knowledge of the great and exiraordinary man to ary 1, from § until 10 o'clock. number of guests. cago was hauled to the First Methodist church yesterday. The bell, with fixtur: weighs 2,250 pounds. Rev. number of men. Prepara- tions are belng made to entertain a large It is the intention of | Head rund the trustees of the church to have the bell placed in the belfry today. The task will entail considerable labor and will necessitate the employment of quite a ruled the motion, after an argument con- suming nearly two hours P. P. FODREA IS PHROMOTED ger for Burlington Sys- tem at Chicago. P. P. Fodrea, who for the last year h been assistant advertising agent for the B. & M. In Omaha, has been promoted to the position of first assistant advertisiog smaller towns. What we desire above all {is an amendment to the exemption law | which will permit us to collect debts from | erty and never be compelled to pay a debt. | So far as the wage earner is concerned we | have little trouble, and will be inclined to | glve the Omaha and Lincoln people what- | ever they may agree upon."” DEATH RECORD. RALPH MARLOWE, by Haylor ROLL OF CRIRIS, by urchiil SIGN OF THE PROPHET, by Haylor CAPT. RAVENSHAW, by Stephens .... THE UNCONQUERED, by Dalton JACK RAYMOND, by Voinich . have numerous other books of fiction at Big Reduction in $1.50 Fiction remarkably low prices, and In addition we have reduced the price on all the HOW TO DRINK MILK. whom they relate. Published by H. M.|[CPRE OF B T CeRe n New | ABent of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy | Inte §1.50 books of Fiction in our Immense stock to..........$1.08 : — e e Year's day. 1a. Ghiseae. And will.assume.the dutisd of | 014 Settles of Butler Cowaty. | Our Hollday Line of Gift and Juvenfle Books 1, &s usual, the Why it Disagre With Some People, his new office January 5. 4. R Grllfllh{ ‘When one needs a reviving stimulant after exhaustion nothing can rival the effects of fhot milk sipped slowly. i Some people say they cannot digest milk and these are the people who drink it down -quickly, so that the digestive acids, in play- iug around it, form large curds which give . | leaves three sons, ex-County Treasurer trouble béfore they.can be absorbed. Bew version of Shakespeare 1a & very. clever | D11l M CEEHICTRE e ey a1 | who had been Mr. Yourg's assistant for & | ' ons, 1 " e, " {F vis, C. C. Di N inent t Way 16 10 slp the milk in small | satire on the two bl Hamlet" and | pomyberg of the congregation are Invited to | Year, was then tendered the Chicago posi- | FFaRK Davis, ©. C. Davis & prominent STATIONERS. 1308 Farnam St. Open Evenings. B e | N asciat. wasvion, fulicy,| 116 this servios, hat +-., L2 1o J | Davis, who resides in lowa. The funeral TAR mairic fuid. asd when he. whole| Romeo v wedded to Ophalia sad they al Maglc City Gos o 0 Fotren, ke M. Touns. weat o the | RO O, TS LR wihssful is down the effect s that of &|live long And prosper. The makeup of poRoy, Honey la back from & trip to Wil- | Bee, of which he was a member for two gl spongy mass of ourds, in and out of which | the book is in keeping with the contents. g, Ne | Judge Willlam €, Ta “The New Hamlet” Is unmistakably a parody on the productions issued by El- bert Hubbard. The publishers, Rand, Me- Nally & Co.. announce that it “‘was com- posed by Shakespeare ard the Smith fam- fly. Then it was done into a book and bound in boards (No. 2 fenciug) by hand at the barn on the farm by farmers.”” This rise Prayer Meeting. The usual sunrise prayer meeting will be held at the First Presuyterlan church on New Year's morning. This service will be held between 7 and 8 o'clock. W. G. T. aker of the local Young Men's Christian mssoclation will be in charge. past the Presbyterians have held sunrise Mrs. J. LaRue of Creston, la., is here vis- For years | is advertising ugent for the head office In Chlcago, and the position of first assistant was given to Charles S. Young, advertis- ing agent of the B, & M., some two or three weeks a but in the meantime Mr. Young received a better offer to become general advertising agent for the Milwau- kee in Chicago and accepted. Mr. Fodrea, years. Mr. Fodrea came to Omaha from DAVID CITY, Neb., Dec. 30.—(Special.)— | Mrs. Martha Davis, one of the oldest resi- | dents of Butler county, died in this city | yesterday afternoon at the age of 89 years. Her husband died about twenty-five years ago and since that time siie has made her home with her children. Mrs. Davis came to Butler county over thirty years ago. She best in the wes ATIONERY @. n . | . £t bere. He has been for two years the busi- | Fulong and Lyman D. Baird of Aust the keen gastric juices course, speedily | 2 e alh iting relatives. Grand Tsland, where he had been variously | VALPARAISO, Ind., Dec. 30.—Former | Dore: Ho hes been for two years the In. | Bam B. Bcott of Cambrota, H. . Brown ‘dalog thelr work of turning the curd into| “Love Poems” by W. 8. Blunt, is a} ke Culkins is In the east looking after | employed in the newspaper and printing | Judge William C. Talcott, the oldest news- Siass aad'ta e b | and George M. Gillette of Minneapolis and poptones that the tissues can take up. booklet of love verses of about 100 selec- | business matters. busioess. As: assistant advertising man | paper man in the state, died suddealy | &1anG wa and active In securing con- ' Dean Liggett of the State AgHcultural To make sure of complete digestion take | tions, with an Index to firet lines. The lit- | The local bartenders’ union elected the | on the B. & M. he has accomplished some | this morning in bis S1th year. For ffty | 'F! utions to.a $250.009 fund the church fs | colleze. one or two of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets | tle volume is attractively bound and orna- ‘;:'\!a;fy{ nominated at 4 meeting held yes- | /... ofoctive work and has made a good | years he owned and edited the Porter Iu;s\ enx'lor a p-nkor the endowment of afterward, as the pepsin and digtase they [ mented. Published by John Lage o L Coleman of Chicago Ia here for a | name for himself in this recently chosen (‘odum)‘ :‘m.qdu-; th‘ wes one of the nru‘my" W James Millikin university in this | LOCAL BREVITIES. coglaln Increase the quantity and efficiency e =g dn ey ay visiting friends. He will leave tonight | pursuit. No successor to Mr. Fodrea has | Judges elected in this county. b | s ot of the gastric juices and supply the natural | The above books are for sale by the | for home. Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farmam St. Knoxall council of the Royal Arcanum yet been selected. It is thought Mr. Fran- | Several years ago Judge Talcott wrote a — Sheriff Power has gone to Hastings with digestive ferments which all weak stomachs whil tnstan officers ‘on Friday” ight st Hm | eis will announce an appointment within 4 | 4,000-word sermon which was to be read | FOR SHOOTING HACK DRIVER Inghoe paLivnte s - PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. plev- et P dars. 64 Sla Bupewal, S0 he Chse K Wee w ! aivorce from Rees B becauss ot soundun: Miss Anna Folger, a professional nurse, > ':l"ldnk Jvfint!. ;nn\:"rz h:-pe\)-‘mr, h:ls been M Xoung left yesterday for Chi- |up and printed and a few coples were dis- | Henry Jackwon Has Preliminary Hear-| ment, +nd has given her the (unllolly of X . —_— called to Harvard, Neb., by the serious ili- o o gl ot x iy % | Bpen B _ onvalescence, -:;:u. “la adunt u’llll.:!:::.r:n £ OBSk nt. Tonaaby 86 Iy e L oA AL :‘:A\‘;xln(:lr‘o:‘)hul‘:xl L \()yml‘h‘:“(ym‘x:::¢ Baiaehonrilonin o | A Contiovad'mue Bend R hocias Philiips petitions for divore 3 % " C . . ¢ ot % ns fo orce llen of Lincoln is at the Millard. | City Teasurer Howe advises people to In Fixed. . titlons = for ca covering from severe (liness, and especially | 7O 4/0en of 1A0OR ¥ L UG FUNRIE | o a0ty ol “taxes mow and save (he interes: | Typographical union, which body extends | 014 Hesldent of Beatrice. from Sarah, alleging desertion. They ‘we in ohildren where milk disagrees, one or two which will accrue on all delinquents. m Tied in Armsiron L ty, Pe yl- F. Marion of Falls City, Neb., is in the Eim best wishes for continued success and | BEATRICE. Neb.,, Dec. 30.—(Special.)— o= Venia, Maron 1 T " Sounty, Bennayl i tablets overcome any difficulty and seem to | o o3 Viran fe otihl At the panitarlum In | gratitude for courtesies and friendship | joeph Davidson, an old resident ofBeatrice, | THe hearing of Henry Jackson, who 18| A watch night service at Calyary Baptist 1 strength the stomach in a remarkably | . Z Wilson of Blair, Neb., fs at the | AT WHCFR, D6 I8 CAUIDE Soeatment, (O | ghown it in his capaclty as advertising | gieq yesterday of pneumonia after an i1, | €/ on the charge of assault with intent [ cBurch, Twenty-fifth and Hamilton streets, Murray. A | short time. [ myself have used them daily for years, when my own digestion has suf- fered from the irregularities and loss of J. E. Martin, Chicago, Is a guest of the Miilard. couple of weeks. Aunual Ball, agent for the B. & M. | ness of a week, aged 65 years. He is sur- vived by & widow and six children. The to Jdo great bodily harm, having shot Al Ogle, & hackman, during an altercation last will begin at 8:3 and continue ning of the new year. It has been reported to the office of the til the . “hes Consul General MeNally Arvives. # o Bate o v | Saturday, was continued before Judge Berka | Board of Health that there are seven cases sleep consequent upon my occupation. WTL05ge W. Tierney of Chisago s &¢ he} gug'of the largest growds ever gathered | gaN PRANCISCO, Dec. 3—J. © Me- i :::)‘N:"a"( gt B o K 1 In the police court until January 9. Jack- | f scarlet fever in the household of James “Not only children and iavalids, but pro- | H. E. Donahoe of La Platte, Neb, s at | 18, ca" 8! %Ganting “Boor. lase night v its | Nally, United Statés consil Zeneral 10 | of ‘which order doceased was o member. |00 (Brough his attorney, stated that he | b; EAEah; county attomey-elect, who lives by e g ol b i R, ons | e B, ] Gob., | gapactty and tetifed to the popularity of | TuRLETA'S, 23 ATFYEN NIV oM Ceniral s Bad not beou able to secure the witnesses | Niel Hansen Nielsen asks pormission of ' necessarily hurried or irregular will fnd| Eimer E. Lesh of University Place, Neb., | fodge i, Omaha Bartenders' union. under ca. Hels ¥s leave of ab- Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets of the greatest is in the city. whose auspices the ball was given The sence and is n | home at Pittsburg, enr Pa., te to his former | Hon. H. L. Morres he desired and was unprepared to proceed the district court to change his name to # but he hopes to with the hearing. The bond of the pris- | Niels Niclsen Vendel, affirming that there . 8. Warner of Tecumseh, Neb., is a|affair was the first anoual party of the e DUt R YTON, 0., Dec. 30.—Ho L Mored | are s> many Nielsens in Omah - i value in keeping up the tone and digestive | \/0: 8. Warn Snion, The dnce Progfam wis varieq ang | Sosigned to some othct Dost'in' the diplo- | DAYTON, 0., Dec. 30.—Hon H ke MOT- | oner was placed at $1.000, and will be fur- | faving "much. troable wich hin hai e It | vigor of the stomach." H. E. Fonda of Genoa, Neb., Is a guest | gontained twenty numbers, each having a | Prior (o his appointment as: consul gen: | 1o, [O7Der congressman from this dis- | pighed. | business aftairs They contaln the active digestive ferments | of the Millard e e O G abrofension of 1he | eral he was o federal judge in Utah trict, and a member of the board of trustees | Ogle's condition is rgported not serious| There will be a ‘watch meeting at the lack of'hich is peally the only cause| Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Archer of Beatrice, | Shtertainers I -4 [of the Daton State Hospital for Insane, | and'the attending physician states that un- | Grece, Baptist church tonight from § ¢ » ] of indigestion 4Bd sjomach troubles, and the | Neb, afe 40 Gmahs A v ¥ Stpek Sales at Chicago. | died suddenly shortly aftcr midaight at bis | loes complications set in the patient will | Geofs Sy deorge Van Winkie of Bout \} Tegular dally use of them atter meals will | G, J,‘. wiNg.: & Dbwens porenn rete, ey May Settle. CHICAGO. /Dec. .~The males of live ?7";) in Hamilton from a stroke of po- | recover from the bullet wound. tere ‘will be soclal hour with refres oma The hearing of A. J. Stanley, who was | stock at thefUnion stock yards this year | Ple i ments ut 10 o'cloc I "|w“. g Ao :l“ln‘eflslfi:cx“umm' Neb. | arrested, charged with embezsling funds | agsregated §21728.680. The total number — | Minnesota Deleg: Named. 1. Rome Miller's action against the Kitchen oxtept such o hrises f2om cancer oF Slesra-| aréd stopplag from the Helnz Pickle company of this city, [ of animals fecéived. most of them being | Do A at R L y Brothers' Hotel company and J. 1, Kiteh, tion. J. M. Holt. a prominent cattleman of | s set for this morning in the police court. | slaughtered fh this city, was 16,214,870, - The 8T. PAUL, Dec. #.—Governor Van Sant | to secure the appointment of a receiver fu Many druggists have said that they sel) | Miles City, Mont, ‘s in Omaha Stanley has been released from fail on u | total was e up of 296,130 cdtile, 22703 | DECATUR, 1L, Dee. 30.—Rev. A. W. teday wppolited the following delogatos (o | the Paxton holel hasesone over untl the Tablets thas ail | <P, Clem Deaver, recelver of the United | bond. It la the opinion of those who are in | calves, &, hoks, 45619 sheép &nd | yowiing a prominent Cumberland Presby. | the Natlonal Live Stock association meet- | February term of (M8 Alstrlet court by e "m"".‘ ""';’.'-.F“_.:“t‘ <4 lzmhnfi_m;‘ ONebl, Neb, s 1n | close touch with ihe case (hat it may be [ 18 g IV requifed Beom cars to | (B b B ied today st his howe | 156 8¢ Kansas City Jabuary 13 o 16: "John | conment of the hartiee coucerned Ard iice other st on sl set out of cowrt oL als W the yards, . 4 ter, 2 al € Cooner and N. P ¢ Clark of Bt Cloud, J. J. exhaustive arguing before Judge Estelle,