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e THE OMAHA DAILY o . s b L MG bk AP N 7 BEE: TUESDAY OCTOBER 6 1903 il e i, A 5 W s CTOBER TERM OF COURT 0N achinery of Justice Se: in Motion on the Distriot Berches GLISH FILES TWENTY INFORMATIONS Assmult Case Against Framk Mullek and Two Bribery Charges Re- Are he sultant on Criminal Docket, 1he opening day of the Uctober term of | the district court witnessed the filing of informations against twenty persons by unty Attorney James P. English. Five parties agalpst whom Informations had been filed during the previous term of ecourt, but who were not up for arralgnment, ap- peared befora Judge Estelle in the criminal division and pleaded not guilty to the charges preferred against them. The arraigoiments before Judge Estelle included these: John Fitzgerald and Peter O'Brien, charged with robbery. It was alleged that the defendants assaulted one Shaw Enlow in Bouth Omeba on August 2 and robbed him of $13. Minnie Brown, charged with larceny from the person. The information alleges that the defendant relieved H. D, Jones of the sum of $12 on the night of uly 2. Falconler Gifford, charged with setting fire to fifteen stacks of fodder and [seventy-five bushels of grain, belonging to Jesse C. Root, and valued at $35. The alleged crime 18 mald to have been perpetrated on April 6. The charge of mbeazlement was filed against Carl [Ellegaard. It was alleged that while acting as a clerk and servant he stole $%2.08 from James G. Baum on June 19. The informations returned by County At- orney English include these: Informations by Englinh. Edward Leeder, forgery of $i2 check on Infon National bank of Omaha on August 6, and a similar charge Is preferred in re- ation to a check for $10.50 on August 10. William Kiatt Is charged with having as- snulted Willlam Relsing on August 16 with ntent to commit great bodily injury. John Daniels 1s alleged to have shot Silas E. Fiek with intent to wound on August 22. Leo and Peter Dargaczewski are charged with the larceny of % cents from Jamos Bvojtek on August 22. The charge of bur- glary is preferred against John Meahan. Jt is alleged that he entered a Northwest- car “August 3 and took therefrom merchandise valued at $3. Charles A. Castle ia'charged with burglary. It is claimed that he entered the dwelling of Frank A. Swanson on the night of Sep- tember 2 The crime of burglary Is also charged 6 Barney Kimmerling. It Is al- leged that he entered the residence of Mamie Cgrrigan August 29 and purloined &oods valued at $12. A second charge pre- ferred against John Meahan Is that of as sault with intent 10 rob ‘A J. Cosgrove, August 30, of the sum of $30. Frank Mott is charged with the crime of adultery. The eomplainant Is his wite, Hattle Mott. ‘The‘ulleged co-respondent is Annie Schultz. The ‘alleged crime is sald to have been committed August 21. John Johnson, alias Johh Haley, is charged with cattle steal- ing, the specific charge being that he stole & cow valued at $45 from B. 8. Noland. John Roundtree is charged with daylight bredking and entering. It is allegged that he entered the home of Willlam Peterson on August 9, and took therefrom goods valued fat $10. Jessle Calhoun is charged with lageeny from the person of Willlam Emith on August 8, of the sum of $20. The charge of grand larceny Is preferred against Nora Adams. The Information alleges that she stole $10 y from Beneditto Bruno on August 18- Taylor. & youth, is charged with Incore rigibility. Frank Mulick is charged with the crime of criminal assault on the person of Alice Gard on July %. In connection with the ‘case of the state against Frank Mulick, two charges of bribety are filed. Michael Cavanaugh is charged with having offered J. P. King, a justice of the peace, a bribe in the sum of $10. ' Cavanugh fs alleged to have offered a similar sum as & bribe to Alice Gard, one of the witnesses 11 the above case. Deordes of divorce were entered by Judge Baxter In the following cases Lena M. Singes against Thomas Singes. Julia C. Johnston agalnst Willlam E. Johnston. The jury for the new term of court ap- peared before Judge Estelle Monday and was instructed to' report for duty on Wednesday morning at 9:30. —_— To Unvell Sherman Shaft. General Grenville M. Dodge, formerly of Councll Blufts and head of the Sociaty of of the T . has issued a Grand Army posis urgin; the old soldiers the im ce of the mecting in Washi ngton Octa RS when the statue of eral Sherman is P be un ‘This is to be a national oc- Fasion armies of the Potomac, Cumberland and Ohio have arranged to hold ml"n“:lh‘:- at |nn -,n' time and partict exercises. president, ‘l:lu-nb:‘n m '::n dli-kr:nllx! fl"’h-u tng ,l'iu wj present. A number of Ne- braskans contemplate making the journey. Headach relleve all the troubles S mLin sttt would be aimost pricciess to those t; but forta- eta doea not end Dere, and those valu- (e bowelar Bvea if they only whe distressing complain New York Cite GOVERNMENT NOTICES. CHIEF QUARTERMASTERS OFFICE le SR CE. ... cent Ocl. 3 196 Sea’ed "‘"7!.1".‘3.;.“.:‘" -uhhci 10 the luvl'lrl - 15, for and res WOMAN IN CLUB AND CHARITY The Omaha Woman's club has com- menced its work for the winter, and if the size and enthusiasm of the attendance gt yesterday afternoon’s meeting may be a copted as indicative of the year, there will be things doing before spring. Long be- fore the hour appointed for openlag the pariors adjoining the auditorium at the First Congregational church were abuzz with greetings, reminiscences of the sum- mer and inquiry for the coming season. With Mrs. F. H. Cols, president, In the chair, the meeting opened with treports of the various committees, the memoership committee announcing fourteen applicas tions for membership and two women hav- ing qualified. The chairman of the educational commit- tee read a communication to be issued to the effect that owing to the nonpariisan attitude of the club the candidates for the school board election would be investigated and would receive support according to their fitness, regardless of political faith. A proposed amendment to the constituiion to provide for earlier dlsmisgal of the club occasioned a long argument. Thers has long been a feeling among some members that too much time Is given to business and too little for the program. ons hour being given to each. On the other hand the women who carry of the organization realize that one hour at each session is none 100 mueh for the dgni- fled, Intelligent transaction of the business of the club, and when it was proposed that the meeting open at 2:45 54 close at 4:3, it belng the understanding that the time be take from the business hour, thers was objection and It was finally decided that the club should in future open at 2:30 and close at 4:%, leaving the distribution of time as it has been. The annual address of the president fol- lowed. In a few words Mrs. Colo summed up the aims and objects of the club and its accomplishments of the past, and urged that the same upirit of unity be preserved In the future. Shc emphasized the impor- tance of the departments, but coutionad the women against assuming too much. The threo distinguished guests of the afternoon, Mrs. Dore Lyon, president of the New York City Federalion of Clubs and editor of the Clubwoman; Miss May Hay, secretary and treasurer of the Clubwoman company and for years a prominent figure In suffrage movements, and Miss Lucy Laney, principal of Haines Industrial School for Colored People at Augusta, Ga., con- tributed to the program of the afternoon, which opened with a vocal solo by Mrs. A L. Bheetz, accompanied by Miss Corinne Paulsen. Mrs. Lyon was the first speaker and opened by announcing that this was her first trip west, and it had been a humilia- ting blow to her egotism as an eastern chuib- woman. “You western clubwomen have gone so far ahead of the east in practical achievement that you have only left the dust behind you," she sald. “It is the dust that I have been looking at and I feel as though I had run into a cyclone.” And then she told of the Clubwoman, the officlal organ of the General Federation, recently purchased by a stock company of club- women and to be issued for clubwomen. Miss Hay was the next speaker. “I had the pleasure of addressing this club three years ago," she sald. “I was not speaking in the interest of clubs then, but was rather, and I am not ashamed to say it, en- route to the meeting of the Nebraska ‘Woman Suffrage assoclation.” A few words followed regarding the value of the broad- ening that comes to women through club life, and then Miss Laney was introduced. Wholly unassuming or prepossessing, this wor who' {s known as the “woman ‘Washington,” soon had the atten- lon of all and held it while she told with the eloquence of rare sincerity, not of the “black side of the black question, but of the bright side," as she expressed it. With the intelligence of one who has devoted a life- time to it, she told of what had been ac- complished among the negroes of the south, through the women. “Judge us not,” she sald In conclusion, “by the helghths we have attained, but rather by the depths from which we have come. and give us a little more time before judging us unworthy of your help or unequal to profiting by It.” A piano solo by Miss Paulsen closed the program. Tt belng decided before adjourn- ment to invite Mre. W. E. Page, president of the Nebraska Federation, to be the guest of the club during the time that Mrs. Dimies T. 8. Denison, president of the Gen- eral Federation, is to be here. ‘The Omaha branch of the Need'swork Guild of America will hold its annual dis- tribution of garments November 4 and 5. The contribution of two new garments admits anyone to membership In the guild, these garments being &Mtributed among | the various charitable institutions of the elty. The following announcement of depart- ment meetings has been made: Household the real responsibility | economics, October 22, 10 a. m.; current toples, October 13, 2 p. m.; parllamentary Pptactice, October 2, 3 p. m.; French con- versation, October 6, 10 a. m.; English Mlt- erature, October 2, 10 a. m.; English his- tory, October 13, 2 p. m.; ethies and philos- ophy, Oectober 13, 4 p. m.; art, October 15, 03 a m It is expected that fully a score of women from the loca! club will attend the meeting of the Nebraska Federation which opens in Fremont today. Credentials have been issued to the following women as dele- gates: Mmes. F. H. Cole, Charles Rose- water, W. H, Wilbur, R. E. McKelvey, C. H. Townsend, H. H. Heller, McDonald, Misses Paulsen and McCartne; Miss Vanderzee, the young colored woman from Lincoln that was educated by the b women of Nebraska in the Washing- ton Training school to teach In the kin. dergartens of tlie south, recently recelved an appointment at Tuskegee, A'a MERCHANTS ARE GATHERING The first meeting of the state convention of the Retall Grocers' and General Mer- chants’ assoclation will be called to order in Patterson hall today at 2:0 p. It is probable that the formal opening ses- slon and the business of the meeting will be deferred untll Wednesday morning, be- cause of the republican primaries. The out-of-town merchants, however, will hold an informal meeting even if the regular sessidn be adjourned, aud listen to off-hand remarks on business questions. A large number of merchants from out in the state have arrived in the city, but some of them may be enticed by the Midway and other attractions Into an absence from the assoclation meetings. » —_—_— Veterinarians Twe States. Assoclation of ] hold its annual mee and Thurs- e seasion {58 with s clinie: at he bare of D, L a a o ‘ -:.mlfl A number of nen veterinaries fi tes this city to attend the co.:: . cl meet! Al “ successful ‘sest) mhmhmmtn. —_— ts of Pythias mest st Fifteenth march to the cel “their nigh CORSETS FOR MEN DECREED Ridiculed for Years, at Last Heralded as Practical and Essential. HEALTH AND EASE MUCH AIDED BY THEM American Lady Corset Com Undertakes Task of Co verting Men. After years of ridicule, Parisian and other forelgn makers of fachiors have at last de- creed that corsets for men shall become a reality. They are being made .nd are be.ng worn, and while the adoption will no doubt be made with some trepiuation on the part of men, they are, neverthelcss, being called & blessing by those who are daring to be- come the pioneers in making corsets & reg- ular part of their attire. These men's corsets are the product of an American Lady Corset company located at New York. This concern, whose name is | known wherever corsets are worn by either sex, has set about the task of popuiarizing men's corsets, knowing full well the exist- ence of the falte prejudice and of the r.di- cule they are courting and must overcome. The promoters of this Innovation do not expect the immediate arrival of a masculine corset cragze. Realizing they are offering an article that for generations has been held | up to scorn, there is something more than sentiment in their intention. They believe | that corsets for men are absolutely practi- | cal and essentlal. They know that a cam- palgn In favor of men's corsets must be a campaign of education, and that is what they are inaugurating. If the average man were asked the ques- tion: “Would you wear a corset?’ he would throw up his hands and quickly answer “No." But that would probably be | because he knows nothing of the article, of its uses or its value. Many men who sald six months ago they would not wear cor- sets are wearing them today and swearing by them, and declaring the one great mil take the arbiters of fachion have made ha been In not decreeing long, long ago that men should be corset clad. Not Merely a Fashion. But it is not merely for fashion that this new article of wear has been devised. The health and comfort of the wearers formed the first consideration. The same rule ap- plies to men's corsets that applies to women's corsets. Women accept corsets as ordinary articles of attire. Though they sometimes misappropriate them by tight lacing, yet any woman who wears a well- fitting corset will say it never bothers her, but that it does, on the contrary, produce agility of movement in walking and is really an exhilirating brace. For the, new men’s corsets no more than that is claimed, but just that much is claimed. Now these men's corsets are not aimed to give to men any ridiculous shape or to make them appear efteminite. Yot It is possible to glve shape to the figure, but whether or not the form s given a curve at the sides and back remains wholly at the will of the wearer. The other day the writer met a well-built man who is a wearer of the new corset. He unblushingly confessed to wearing It. ““If there is any ridicule to be pointed at any one it is at the man who does not wear & corset,”” he sald. I feel more comfort- ably dressed than ever I did in the days when I was a scoffer like others. Now I unconsciously stand erect, my chest, you will see, is thrown out and I feel perfectly at rest. Were there nothing else to recom- mend these corsets this alone would insure their permanent acceptance.’ This man s & corset enthusiast, 'and yet he is & sane, sensible fellow, who does not run to fads or to ridiculous things. He wants, and gets, what gives him comfort and that is why he is wearing a man's corset. He says it Is restful to the spine, that it makes him stand erect, step more lightly and breathe deeper. Corsets for men are not altogethér a new thing. In Europe, and especially in Ger- many and France, the men in the armies wear them. The striking, erect figure of the European soldier can, in a great meas- ure, be attributed to the wearing of a cor- set. Following the lead of the soldiers, many of the best dressed and most highly cultured gentlemen of Europe have found them comfortable and essential. They have learned what American men will in time learn, that they are a great ald to correct poise and splendid appearance. Slouchiness Will Disappear. A man's physique can be trained into its proper lines by the use of a proper corset. This would at first be a virtual disguise for the figure, but what at first will be a dis- | guise will become a natural form, and in- stead of being round-shouldered, flat- chested and with prominently protruding stomach the corset wearer will posses the form of a real man, more like the Romans or Greeks of old than like our slovenly ap- pearing, stooping men of today. Corset-wearing men have always been ridiculed because a few fops have at times affected the article and have taken pains to make the fact known. In the time of Queen Elizabeth there was a fop at court who wore a gorset, the purpose of which was to compress the walst and give the man an effeminate appearance. The corset was more like & coat of armor than any- thing else. The new American gentleman corset in no way resembles that old atrocity. Corset Has Come to Stay. Of course, the corset custom would fur- nish the masses with new food for ridicule, and especia’ly would this be true if the corset impaired the health of the wearer. But it does not do this, nor will it ever. The Introduction of men's corsets will be attended with many dificulties. That much is to be expected. There 1is prejudice agalnst it, deep-rooted, long-lived prejudice, but its champlons are certain this preju- dice will pass away. TOURNEY WILL TELL THE TALE Competition for Loeal Golf Cham- p Begins This Week, The golf champlonship of the Omaha Field club will be determined by a tourney which is scheduled to begin today. The committee having the matter in charge an- nounces that the entries must be handed in before Wednesday ‘The winner of the club championship will be awarded a handsome silver trophy. The tourney will be at match play throughout This will dispense with the qualifylng round, which is usually a feature of such events, and the players will be paired for their first matches by a drawing which will be made by the tourney committee. The announcement is made that the play- ers, as paired, may play their first matches, beginning today, the same to be concluded by the afternogn of October 12. One week will be allowed in which to play each succeeding round, so that the second round must be played before October 19, and the third round on or before October 3. This method will be pursued up to the figals, which will be at thirty-six holes. Navy and Army Foot Ball. who will select a third arbitrator and abide by his decisions on the matters at issue between the two assoclations. It is ex- pected the executive committee of the naval cadets will appoint their man morrow night EVENTS ON RUNNING TRACKS 0ld Stone Won the Lemp St. Lo akes at Over Pelbam, Major 8T. LOUIS, Oc William J. Lemp for two-year-old rn)’yn falr grounds card. Resuits irst race, five furlongs—Phillida, second; Thank Heaven, 5.—Old Stone won the Brewing company stakes and the feature of Mon- won; third! Second race, five and one-half furlongs— Sceptre, won: Lady Charlot, second; Surprise, third. Time: }:08. Third 'race, slx and one-half furlongs— Dolly Gray, won: Captaln Gaston, second; Silver Plush, third. Time: 122 ’ Fourth race, Willlam J. Lemp Brewing company stakes, six furlongs—Old_Stone, won: Major Pelham, second; Don O'High, third. “Tiie: 1:15%. Fifth race, one mile and one-eighth—Deer Hunter, won; Kunja, second; Goo Goo, third. Time: 135, Sixth_race, six and one-half furlbngs— King Rose, won:<Dave Sommers, second; , third, Time 1 YORK, Oct. 5.—-Results at Morris two miles—Charawind, ond; Enright, third Second rac Lindsey, won' quevalil, third Third ‘race, Euphrata, won: Tepee, Link, third. Time: 1:04 Fourth race, Withers mile—Runnels, won Oarsman, second; Sweet Alice, third. Time 4 furlongs—Irene Black Fox, second; Cin- Time five_and half furlongs 'second; Missing L, Fifth race, Westchester handicap, six and one-half furlongs—Castalfan, won; Lux- casta, second; Lady Uncas, third' Time 1:15%. Sixth race. handicap. one mile and three- sixteenthe—Tribes Hill, won; lLord Badge, second; Stolen Moments, third. Time 2:001 CHICAGO, Oct. 5.—Results at Worth First race, one mile—Dr. Stephens, Tam O'Shanter, second; Thane, Time: 1:47%. Second race, fiva furlongs—Allista, won Dick Bernard, second; Arnold K, ' third. Time: 1:04%4. Third race, one mile and one-sixteenth— Fairbury, won; Luralighter, second; Poth- een, third. Time: 1:54%. Fourth race, six _furlongs, handicap—Golden Rule, won: 8f. Tammany second; Judge Himes, third 1:18% Fifth race, one mile and one-elghth—Air- light, won; Carat, second; Litile Elkin, third. Time: 2:01% Sixth race, six #ir_Hugh, second; Barly, third. 1:19%. CHICAGO AMERICANS AHEAD Take Their Secomd Game from Na- but Required Ten won; third. Flyaway Surlongs—Olymplan, won; Time tiona Innings’ Work. CHICAGO, Oct. 5.—The American team won its second game of the series today, a ten-Inning contest, by pounding Wicker for fourteen hits and plaving a perfect game | The Nationals were unable to Altrock's left-handed Score: RHE. .0002001001—414 0 Nationals 10000010103 9 4 Batterjes: Americans, Wicker and Kling: Nationals, Altrock and Sullivan. Umpires Johnson and Sheridan Philadelphia Americans Win. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 5.—The Americans defeated the Nationals today. Bcur;‘: 083914040 010000000132 Americans, Plank and Powers; Duggleby and Roth. Umpire: in the field do much against curves with men on bases. Americans Americans Natlonals Batterie Nationals, Smith. Postponed Games. Pittsburg-Boston—No ‘game; rain. CINCINNATI, Oct. 5.—The game between Cleveland and Cincinnati for the champlon- ship of Ohio was postponed today because of wet grounds. Soldiers Beat Regents, FORT CROOK, Neb., Oct. 5.—(Spaclal.)— Chief Donahue's on has his trouoscs The chief's son was up agajnst .t vesterday when he pitched for the Rezonts against the H Company team. THé ¥oldiers touched him up for two doubles, & thrae-bagger and two home runs. The homa run hit of San- ders was the longest ever seen on the grounds at the fort. FEverything lcoked easy till the fourth inning, when the Te- gents were made a present of ¢ight runs, due to heavy hitting and errors coiqhined, but this did not discourage the soldier boys, who soon took the lead again and won the game by the score of 13 lo 9 Score A 40001923 11314 4 001800000-9126 Ausborn, Valentine, Pen- -base hits: Ausborn, Kill, terles: H Company, anders and Regents, Donahue and Cialr. w the Bowlers. The Omahas beat the Clarksons night on Clark's alleys. The results OMAHAS, 2d. 161 244 Regan; Wigman Lehman Smead ..... Huntington . Emery ... Totals .. Clarkson Christie Norton . Marble Encell COLERIDGE, Neb., Oct. 5.—(Bpecial Tele- gram.)—Coleridge closed the base ball sea- son here today by defeating Carroll in two games by a score of 16 to 12 in the first ame and 11 to 5 In the second game. The leatures of the game were two home runs by George Stone, who had just returned home from Milwaukee, and one by Thum. Batteries: Carroll, first game, McVey and McVey. Coleridge, Thum and Wood. Sec- ond game, Carroil, Rice and McVey; Cole- ridge, Thum, Btone and Wood. ACCUSED OF TAKING COLT Johu Jorda w Face Charge of Horse Stealing. John Jordan and Willlam ‘Bcott, two young men who came to Omaha over a week ago and sold two cowboy saddles to A. Singer, 416 North Sixteenth street, and were arrested by the police on suspicion of having stolen themi from a livery barn at Fremont, which proved to be a correct theory, have been identified as the young men who got away with a fine bay colt, the property of W. Herron, a prosperous farmer lving near Fremont. When ar- rested here the men had the colt stabled at the Barnes livery, and the police held the opinion that it had been stolen, bLut could not prove it It is probable, the police say, that the charge of stealing saddles, which from the value made is simply petit larceny, will be quashed and & charge of horse stealing be preferred agalnst the men instead. Mr Singer, who paid Scott and Jordan $24 for the two saddlees, succeeded in getting his money returned to him after the men were arrested. am Scott May FREEHOLDERS FORM UNION| Besident Property Owners of Third Ward Stall Saloon Keepers. MAKE IT HARD TO SECURE LICENSES Pledge Themselves to Sign No Pell. tion for W or Women Room Annex—Saloon Men in Skirmish. Third ward saloon keepers and those who are contemplating that sphere in life are, {in the parlance of the street, “up against the real thing,” In the existence of the Concctenated Order of Resident Free- holders.” Like a flash of lightning this strange amalgamation of property owners has shot forth to stand between the saloon keepers and the renewal of their licenses, January 1, 194 To the average individual that date seems some time off, but to the man who is running or wants to run a saloon In this quarter of the city it seems | dangerously near at hand and consequently he is the busiest person in sixteen wards at the present writing. The law requires that before a saloon can be opened in Omaha its owner shall obtain | a petition for a license signed by at least thirty freeholders residing in the ward { where the saloon is to be operated. In |the Third ward there are but forty resident freehoiders, all told. On the other hand there are about 130 saloons, half the total number in the city. All of which means that 130 petitions have forty names to draw to—not a very full hand Now In these piping times of peace and plenty when 1t seemeth good to all men to organize in some capacity or other, the resident freeholders of the Third ward have looked and beheld a very good thing looming up before them in the organization of a union and stralghtway have some of them gone and launched this unlon. Purpose of the Union. The prime object of this union—ostensi- bly at least—is to weed out of the Third ward all disreputable saloons. To ac- complish thls members of the union will pledge themselves to sign no petition for a license where a wine room or women's resort is to be conducted as an adjunct to the saloon—in fact, where anythind save merely a place to buy drinks, is to be run. Up to Sunday night fifteen of the forty freeholders had signed this union pledge, and a little after midnight the report came that at least fifty of the sag loon keepers of the Third ward had thrown “‘steen” fits aplece “Talk about Caesar crossing the Rubicon or Xerxes the Hellespont, why neither was a circumstance to what we're up against,” {explained a saloon keeper from the Third |in discussing the wonderful range of posel- bilities involved in this proposition. | “I can't concelve that Carrfe Natlon is at the bottom of this,” sald another man | in trouble, “for these are not Carrie's| tactics. She may recognize the supremacy of the pen over the sword, but not over the hatchet. I haven't heard of her quit- ting her little George Washington—not yet." The saloon keepers affected by this deal are in a consternation, but as a rule are keeping mum, hoping to be able to eir- cumvent the obétacle. But promoters of the union declare that they are determined that every saloon keeper who does busi- ness in the Third ward must answer to them first. One of these promoters has let out the remark that a petition h been circulated with twenty-seven of the necessary thirty names and that three of these names have been procured from the Fourth ward. AGREEMENT ON EXHIBITION Compact Signed and Repudia Vinsonhaler Mandelberg Show W w. Yesterday the democratic primary elec- tion campalgn came to a close and today the republican is wound up, aud as the clouds of the inert battie lower about the political horizon Judge Vinsonhaler looms up in bold relief in the fmmortal role of thrice denying his own signature. For the benefit of the judge and the voters whose suffrage he is seeking the original agree- ment which he signed and then repudiated, with his own signature affixed, will be posted in the windows of Mandelberg tore at BSixteenth and Farnam streets this morning, there to remain throughout the day while the primaries are in prog- ress. The voters then can judge for them- selves as to whether Judge Vinsonhaler ever signed such a compact and not have to rely upon the word of either side to the conlrnver.ly. —_— Contest~for Boys. and lor was three sets ov%‘“l‘:a;y'!l el IF";: 1'1'1‘""‘"' r P, [oe] 1! scores: 108, §-2, 15, 3: O TR e ———e e ——— DOHENIAN P TTLED F ALL BO | KNG0T pEppast Order *rom H. May & Company A SANTAELLA & CO., Makers, Tamps, Pla, RICHARDSON DRUG ©O. Sesiuien Save 80 per cent in Gas Bills The KERN BURNER Highest candle power gas burner in the world. All sizes for all purposes. Globes to harmonize. No wire sup- ports. No black mantels. Outlights all other lights. mwfl.ml“.“kfl.. D. W. Dudgeon, Agt., Plumber and Gasfitter, 2910 FARNAM 5T, "PHONE, 1966 “Especially the BUFFALO LITHIA WATER Virg?xfxia.”. For Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, Renal Calculi, Gout, Rheumatism and All Diseases Dependent Upon a Uric Acid Diathesis. Samuel O. L. Potter, A.M., M. D., M.R.C.P., Zonaon, Pro- JSessor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine and Clinscal Medicine in the Coliege of Physicians and Surgeons of San Frencisco, Cal., in hie * Hand« Book of Materia Medica, Pharmacy and Therapeutics,” in the citation of remedies under the head of **Chronic Bright's Disease,’’ says: ‘* Mineral waters, &mm lmm of Virginia, has mauny pecially the advocates.”” Also, under “BUEFPALO LITHIA WATER L0507y reco™ hesays: mended."” George Halsted Boyland, A. M., M. D., of Paris, Doclor of Medi- cine, of the wily of Paris, in the New York Medical Journal, August 22, IAM; luly! :fl. Th;rari'q .:m remedy as absolutely specific in all forms of minu an ight’s Disease, Spring No. 2, accompanied by a milk diet. In all cases of pregnancy, where albumin is found in the urine, as late as the last week before confinement, if this water and a milk diet are prescribed, the albumin disappears rapidly from ‘h: urine and the patient has a positive guarantee against puerperal convulsions. T. Griswold Comstock, A.M., M.D. have often mm in Gouty and Rheumatic scribed conditions and in Renal alculi, accompanied by Renal Colic, and alwavs with the most satisfactory results. In Renal Calculi, where there is an excess of Uric Acid, it is especially efficacious. Medical testimony which defies all imputation or question mailed to sny address. is for sale by druggists BUFFALO LITHIA WATER ... 5 o cencesity, PROPRIETOR BUFFALO LITHIA SPRINGS, VA. “ Albuminu« ria,’ of St. Lowis, Mo., says: "1 On October 6 the Burlington offers round trip tickets to many points in Indiana and Ohio at fare and oune-third: good to return within thirty days. I can sell you tickets via Ohi cago, Peoria or St. Louls— whichever way you want to go. I may be able to offer money- saving suggestions—better see or write me. Trains via Chicago and Peoria leave 7:00 & m, 400 p. m. and $:05 p. m.; via St Louts, 5:35 p. m. They carry everything that makes traveling comfortable ‘Burlinétun;‘ . Route | 4. B, REYNOLDS, City Passenger Agemt, (802 Farnam Street, OMAHA. THE DETROIT STOVE WORKS genuine JEWEL Stove and Range. That is for your protection, and is a guaran- tee that it is the best of its kind for the money asked. 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It allays the irritatibn of the delicate tissues surrounding the lax and unduly expanded seminal ducts, con- tracting them to their normal condition, which stops night emissions, dries up da drains, and_prevents prematureness. Tt tones up and strengthens the blood vessels that carry nourishment to the weakened parts, which regain full power, size and vigor. Meanwhile all other symptoms im- prove. and the pationt realizes a - great light has been lfted from his life. I WILL CURE YOV 1 CURE QUICKLY AND SAFELY STRICTURE, VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS, NERVO-SEXUAL DEBIL- ITY, IMPOTENCY, BLOOD POISON (SYPHILIS), RECTAL, KID- NEY AND URINARY DISEASES and all diseases and weaknesses of men due to Inherita . cesses or the result of specific diseases oL e, o co.s“LT‘T'o. F.E —— —~Write If you cannot call. Office hours, $a m. to 8 p m; Sundays, 10 to 1 only. State Electro-Medical Institute, 1308 Farnam 8t., Bet, 3th and |4th Sts., Omaha, Neb. The Bes Want Ads Produce Resulls.