Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 22, 1903, Page 3

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SAMPLE BALLOTS ARE READY Printers Farnish Seoretary of State Marsh with the Printed Forme. NO ADVICE FOR COMMISSIONER FLEMING Red Letter Day for Nebraska Odd Fel- , lows Who Are Ofcially Wel comed te the Caplt and Have a Big Parade. 4 (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Oct. 2l.—(Special.)—Secretary of Btate Marsh has received from the printers sample ballots to be used in the coming election. This is the ticket as it will be presented to the voters: FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPREME COURT. JOHN B. BARNES .. JOHN J. BULLIVAN GEORGE I WRIGHT C. CHRISTIANSON FOR REGENTS STA CHARLES 8, ALLEN WILLIAM G WHITMORE WILLIAM A. JONES.... At the top of thé tickets are the names of the parties with the circle opposite each, & croes in which will méan a straight ticket vote. No Advice for File The State Board of Equalization and As- sessment met this morning with Tax Com- missioner Fleming, City Attorney Wright and T. J, Mahoney of Omaha at the re- quest of the latter, who desired an ex- pression from the board as te the taxation of credits and debits. The matter was discussed for some time, the decision fromn the board being that it was none of its affuir to get in the game at this time. The members further advised Mr. Fleming that it was in all probabiljty his duty to 'Ak.t the advice of the city attorney of Omaha in the matter. Mr, Wright's opinion was that the law In the case meant for the assessors to tax the net credits. The board will not be a board oMelally until the 1ith day of December, when It is supposed to meet and organize, conse- quently the talk today was merely infor- mal. It §8 the opinion of the board, how- ever, that the matter discussed was a Jocal affair and it had nothing to do with It anyhow. If the jobbers of Omaha don't ko the clause in the law it is the board's idea that they go_ into the courts, and as this is to come sooner or later, the mem- bers belleve that Omaha might just as well_gtart the ball. Hed Letter Day for 044 Fellows. This wes certainly red letter day for the 04d Fellows and Rebekahs, for today they were formally welcomed to the city in their grand lodge conventions by the gov- ernor and the mayor and, besides, partici- pated In thelr grand parade, which was ‘witnessed by a crowd of people all along the line of march. ‘The two lodges met In a body this morn- ing In representative hall, where Governor Mickey, on the part of the state, and Mayor Adams, on behalf of the city, welcomed them. Past Grand Patriarch Davis re- sponded on behalf 'of the lodges and Gov- ernor Furnas added a few words. After this both lodges went into executive ses- sion. The parade occurred this afternoon, and it was headed by Hagenow's band, and included lodge members in uniform, floats and a mounted staff of Patriarchs Mill- tant. Later a arill was held at the F. and M. park. Tonight the Patriarchs Militant met at ‘‘the Windsor hotel, the past grand masters and patriarchs gave & banquet at the Lin- dell and at the representative hall the second and third degrees were conferred by Elmwood lodge No. 160 and State lodge No. 10 of Omalia, N Court Reduces Semtemce. ‘The supreme court tdday, for the first time in years, reduced the sentence of a man convicted in the lower court, and in- mmll‘y ook @ good whack at the big eriminals who escaped and expressed sym- pathy for the little fellows who get caught. The case was that of Willlam H. Palmer, Wwho was sent to the penitentiary for seven years because he was convicted of stealing & steer of ,the value of §20. The supreme court reduced the sentence to two years. Judge Sullivan wrote the opinfon and in his reference to the genteel criminal and the small criminal he sald: Sentence—seven years for of & stray staer worth 20-1n exvensive almost. nlan. Tt - duced and made to fit th-'hzllll:-.b.'l‘r;- e s ——— FOGYOSOPHY. Some old fossils Drissled out To senile Nothingness Urge on the world R e are False and Toothless, ‘These aver ‘That scleatifio Foods That are improvements On the diet Of their fathers Mean man's Ultimate Extinction. ‘Were this true Man would die happy ‘With & stomach ‘Well distended ‘With & food it for Archangels. But somehow The plow of Progress Rolls these Fossils rudely under, And the modern Way of living 1s the glory Of the moderns, If & train “Will save me walking Weary miles 0t bour-long Distance, Shall T walk , Or buy & ticket? JIf & food mill Cooking, grinding, Lifts the burden of digesting, trial court, in adjusting the penaity, acted within the limit prescribed By the statutes; it was not bound to exercise clemency; it was under no obligation to extend to the rude frontiersman the tender consideration it s customary to accord to those genteel raons criminal operations are con- ducted with more refinement and on a larger scale. It was. however, to Inflict punishment in some degree pro- te to the crime. This was not There is a lack of logical relation between the wrong and the punishmen and under section 50% of the erimina it becomes the duty of this court to readjust the sentence. We know that the validity of this statute was denled in Bar- ney against State, 4 Neb, 5%, and in Fanton inst State, 50 Neb., 354, but after much reflection we are fully con- vinced that these decisions are unsound. The sentence will be reduced from seven years to two yéars. School Prineipals’ Tommorrw night will begin the annual meeting of the Superintendents and Prin- assoclation and It Is expected a number of members will be in at- tendance. It ir expected that Omaha will send nearly every principal in the eity, together with a large crowd who are in- terested in school work. Attorney Overlooked Record. The prominent attorney who was down here yesterday from the north part of the state looking up the record in tHe normal school bill and sald he found sufficient grounds upon which to establish an & Junction sult, evidently read the records wrong. He clalmed that the committee of the whole of the house recommended that aside from the twenty acres of land to be donated by the town getting the school, it be required to put up a bonus of $10,000, and that in the enrolling room this amendment was lost and the bill did not come before the house as the com- mittee recommended it should. That $10,000 bonus matter was stricken out of the bill upon a motion by Repre- sentative Warner of Lancaster and the journal of that day's proceedings so records. Plumbers Must Pay. At last the plumber has met deféat. The supreme court did it today in the case wherein the Pomerene company of Lin- coln appealed from the decision of the lower court that granted Mrs. Mary L. White $1,00 damages for injuries received by falling through a trap door In her home, that the plumbers had left open. The case of George 8. Pritchett and Har- riet 8. Pritchett against Johanna Johnson for maliclous prosecution from Douglas county was remanded for a new trial for these reasons: Ruling of the trial court rejecting_evidence examined and held to be Prejudicially erroneous. Perkina County Wins Out. Arthur B, Wilcox, formerly county elerk of Perkins county, who lost out in the case brought against him by the county for appropriating certain fees received in his office lost his case in the supreme court today. Perkins county prosecuted an ac- tion In the district court against Wilcox and his bondsmen because of Wilcox's al- leged failure to pay over to the county certain fees claimed to have been collected by him county clerk. Wilcox claimed to have made a final settlement to the county board covering the matters men- tioned In the petition and for that reason the county was estopped from recoverin; The plaintift claimed that this settlement was of no effect because Wilcox had made certaln false and f:audulent statements in his reports upon which the settlement was based. Convention. New Corperations. The Farmers' Co-operative Grain Ship- ping assoclation of Kansas, with headquar- ters at Topeka, this morning filed with the secretary of state articles of Incorporation to do business in Nebraska. The capital stock ‘is $200,000 divided into 20,000 shares, which s owned by a sufficient number of people for {heir names to fill five typewrit- ten pages. James Butler is president and H. R. Signor is yice president, a number of the stockholders being residents ‘of Ne- braska and Oklahoma. The intention of the association s to build elevators to handle the grain of its members and to fight the elevator combine. The articles have been in the office of the secretary for some time, but untll this morning the bond had not been filed. The Omaha Grain Terminals is a new company just ofganized at Omaha which today filed articles of incorporation with the secretary of state. The company in- tends to run & railroad from some point in Omaha to a point in South Omaha for the purpose of carrying on a general shipping business and transportation of passengers, The tincorporal are A. B. Stickney, Nathan Merriam, W. D. McHugh, A. G. Chariton and John L. McCague. The capi- tal stock is $100,000 The Nebraska-Moline Plow company of Moline, IIl., today filed articles of incorpo- ration with the secretary of state. The capital stock is $100,000. Governor Mickey and Captain Chase of the State university will leave tomorrow for Fort Riley to take a look at the army maneuvers now In progress there. They will be gone until Friday night. Mandamus teo Procure Oars. Late this evening the supreme ocdurt granted a writ of mandamus, returnable November 4, to C. W. McComb of Wilson- ville against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad to compel it to supply him with cars in which to ship out grain. the prayer for the writ McComb stated that at Wilsonville was an elevator and his own grain bin, and that the railroad had discriminated against him in the mat- ter of shipping facilities. He had asked the company to give him two cars when it gave the elevator three, but that during & recent week he was allowed one car and the elevator was givn twenty three. He was then gifen to understand, he sald, that the company would furnish him one car a week. His prayer stated that such dis- crimination, kept up, would ruin his busi- ness. Judge Sullivan signed the writ just before leaving town. Smyth & Smith are the attorneys fo rthe plaintift The court appointed Frederick Shepperd, R R North, G. C. Martin, H. M. Sinclair and Jesso L. Root members of the Bar commisston. No commissioner to take the place Judge Pound was named. QUARREL ENDS IN SHOOTING Discussion of Family tween Twe Peland comes Bitter. Matters Be- Be- NELIGH, Neb, Oct. I.—(Special Tele- gram.)—As & result of a heated controversy Walter - Prokoski shot and wounded Mike Weiss shortly after 7 o'clock this eyening. Both are Polanders and in company with several of their countrymen had been drinking considerably during the afternoon and all were pretty thoroughly intox- icated. During the course of thelr con- versation reference was made by Prokoski (o some recent trouble in the Welss fam- fly. Mr. Welss resented his attack and hot words ensued. Finally one of Mr. Welss' triends prevalled upon him to start home and he did so. Weiss had just crossed the street when Prokoski follewed, drew his revolver and fired four shots in rapld succession. The first grased the back of Mr. Welss' neck. the second and third shots missed and the fourth found lodgment in his thigh. Nelther of the shots which took effect produced dangerous wounds. Immediately after the shooting Prokoski started for his & few minutes later THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1903. sides on a ranch five miles north of this this city. Workman Lowes His Wages. PLATTSMOUTH, Neb, Oct. 2.—(Spe- clal)—A man named Lincoln! who is em- ployed on the Platte river bridge, reports to the police the loss of the greater por- tion of his last month's salary a few days ago. He and the men working with him ke their headquarters in a couple of cars made for that purpose and set on the side track. It appears that Mr. Lin- coln had placed a roll of bills, amount- Ing to §%5, in a pocket of his coat, which was left lying on the bed when he went to work in the morning. When he re- turned in the eevning the money was gone, and is still missing. The theft is thought to have been the work of tramps. Death Due to Carelessne: ALBION, Neb., Oct. 21.—(Special)—Ed- ward Long, the boy who was shot Sunday evening by Joseph Wall, a neighbor boy, was buried in the Catholic cemetery ye terday. A large concourse of friends ai neighbors followed the remains to their last resting place. The coroner's jury re- turned a verdict that the shooting was done carelessly, but without malice. It also protested against the practice of young boys carrying and using firearms with consent of parents Big Prices for Hogn. PAWNEE CITY, Neb., Oct. 21.—(Special Telegram.)—Today In this city occurred the fine hog sale of John Blain, one of Ne. braska's foremost breeders. The sale con- sisted of fifty head of hogs, grade and thoroughbred Poland-China pigs which averaged $44.90 each, or a total of $2,245. This breaks all prévious state records for high sales. Many buyers from abroad at- tended the sale. Boy Dragged to Death. CREIGHTON, Neb, Oct. 21.—(Special.)— The 9-year-old boy of Lesle Letty, Fred Letty, of this place was killed while herd. ing cattle on the .farm of Charles Iauch, seven miles northeast of here. It is pre- sumed the little fellow was thrown from his horse and either kicked or dragged to death, as no one was near enough at the time to render assistance. Secure Jury in Murder Cane. M'COOK, Neb,, Oct. 2l.—~(Special Tele- gram.)—The trial of Charles McMilian, for the %illing of Lee Jones of Bartley in In- dianola, Neb., May 30, 1%3, is now fairly weM under way in this city. After spend- ing two days and one night in examining over 100 jurors, a jury was finally secured late last night and the trial was taken up’ this morning. HERPICIDE NOT A FAKE. Unsolfeited Test s Tell of Its s ority. Alf. R. Kelley, residing at 219 Devisadero San Francisco, Cal., writes the follow vhen T first purchased Herpicide T thought, like the majority of halr prepara- tlone, it would prove a fake. I am happy to state that, on the contrary, it is all and even more than you claim for it. Quite a number of barbers throughout the section in which I travel have called attention to the new hair sprouting out on my scalp, and Inquired of me what I have been using. 1 tell them ‘Herpicide;' also give them your name and address.” Sold by leading drug- gists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. Sherman & McConnell Drug Co., agents. A. 0. U. W. Funeral Notice. The members of North Omaha lodge No. 159 are requested to attend the funeral services of Brother Jamea Cusick at Sacred Heart church, Twenty-third and Binney stréets, at 8 o'clock a. m. Friday, October 23. Interment at Holy Sepulchre cemetery. D. C. CALLAHAN, M. W, F. M. M'CULLOUGH, Recorder. FORECAST OF THE WEATHER Fair Days Promised for Thursday and Friday, with Cooler Tempera- ture Thursday. WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—The weather forecast: For Nebraska; lIowa and Missouri—Falr Thursday and Friday; cooler Thursday. For Nlinols, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana and North Dakota—Fair Thursday and Friday. For Kansas—Fair Thursday and Friday; cooler in eastern portion Thursday. For South Dakota—Fair Thursday and Friday; cooler in central ‘and east portion Thursday, Loeal Record. OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU, OMAHA, Oct. 2L—Official record of tem- perature and precipitation compared with e corresponding day of the last three years: Maximum temperature... Minimum temperature. Mean temperatur Preci] % 57 .60 68 & & pitation ... L.00 .00 .00 1.18 Record of temperature and precipitation &Omh for this éay and since March 1, Normal tem) Excess for the Total Normal precipitation Deficiency for the day . Precipitation since Marc Bxcess since March 1, 1908, Deficiency for cor. period 1t Deficiency for cor. period 1901 Reports from Stations at 7 F. M, “wm 4L 3% eunjesedway, S T ) wnwpxen “uonwIdPIIL CONDITION OF THB WEATHER. 283838 | cpsdums. Omaha, clear .. Valentine, part cloudy. North Platte, clear Cheyenne, clear Salt Lake City, Rapid City, clear Huron, clear . s Daveuport, clear Kansas City, clear. 3s¥8308IRATLTRRR 8333838338233388 #32323838 Galveston, clear . » L. A. WELSH, Local Forecaster. Don’t have a fall- ing out with your hair. Use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. teare: ¥ BRYAN MEETS OPPOSITION Widow of Late Phile 8 Bennett May Oon- test Husband's Will SAYS NEBRASKAN MAY NOT GET CASH Upon Recelving Fand Left lor Effort Will B wimn NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 21.—As a cli- max of today's hearing on application for the probating of the will of Philo 8. Ben- nett, accompanying which was a sealed letter which Willlam J. Bryan today testi- fled was a request that he accept $50,000, Judge Btoddard, who represented Mrs. Ben- nett, declared that if Mr. Bryan insisted upon receiving the fund she would contest the will. Mr. Bryan In reply sald that not 1 cent of the money would he allow either his wife or his children to receive unless Mrs. Bennett were willing. He, however, did intend to ask the court to decide the validity of the bequest so that In case it was declared legal he could distribute the money among educatfonal and charitable Institutions, During the hearing Mr. Bryan introduced A mass of correspondence between himself and Mr. Bennett from the year 1896 to 1900, He read a number of the letters aloud in order to show that Mr. Bennett repeatedly made offers of financtal assistance to him. Gave Bryan Monmey. On four occasions, according to the wit- ness, Mr. Bennett sent him money to ald him, the amount in all aggregating $3,500. He related that In May, 1900, Mr. Bennett came to Lincoin, Neb., to discuss the pro- visions of his will, and told Mr. Bryan that he wished him to aceept a bequest of $50,000, believing that he would need it later. A suggestion made by Mr. Bryan at the time was to the effect that it Mr. Bennett so desired he could embody It in a request to Mrs. Bennett in a letter to be left with the will. He further suggested that the money be left In trust to himself to distribute among educational and philanthropic insti- tutibns. After Mr. Bennett came east he executed the will, and sent to Mr. Bryan what he sald wds a copy of the letter he left with the will for Mrs. Bennett. When Mr. Bryan's statement had been concluded, Judge Stoddard said that the will would be contested by Mrs. Bennett!if Mr. Bryan sought to secure the money, belleving that Mr. Bryan had no equitable right to It. WHAT THE INDIAN NEEDS American Mis- slonary, CLEVELAND, Oct. 21.—Today's session of the American Missionary ssociation was iargely devoted to reports on the Chinese and Japanese missions in church work in the south. The chief feature of these sessions was the report on Indlan and Alaskan missions, presented oy Rev. Robert McLaughiin of Grand Rapids, Mich. He emphasized the fact that the Indlans are relatively few In unumber. Gather all the Indians, he sald, from the Guif to the Canadian line and from the Atlantic to the Pacific and you will then have a city about the size of Milwaukee. The negro question, numerically, is forty times as great as the Indian question. The Indlan reservations today, the speaker con- tinued, cover an area equal to ull the New England states, New, ¥ork, New Jersey and half of Pennsylvanin. The Indian has in vaults of the Unifsd, States government If this, money should be divided equally among them and the 50,000 it should go upon their separate as a nation, they would constitute per capita the wealthlest people upon the tace of the earth. The Indian possesses the most elaborate and extensive school system ever estab- lished by a ‘hation for its dependent chil- dren. He has more school houses than he knows what to do with. Viewed from the standpoint of governmental administration, the problem today Is really how wisely to do less for him, how to give him an appli- cation of his work, based upon his charac- ter. It is here, declared Mr. McLaughlin, that the United States government has falled. It has never found the real Indian. The Christian church can do for the Indlan that what the civil government cannot do. The financial report was presented and commended the entire financial administra- tion of the assoclation. President Charies F. Thwing, D. D, LL.D., of Western Reserve -university, Cleveland, presented a report on educa- tional work In the south, The secretary’'s paber was presented by Secretary A. F. Beard of New York. MEET AFTER HALF A CENTURY. Crete (Nebraska) Woman Sees in Ohio First Time in Fifty- Three ¥ SPRINGFIELD, O. Oct. 21.—(Speclal.)— After a separation of fifty-three years Mrs. J. P. Harrington of 7 Hennessy avenue, this city, and her sister, Mrs. Samuel Tigard, of Crete, Neb., are here together, and are for the first time in their lves getting acquainted. Mrs. Tigard was born sixty years ago at Quebec, Canada. Mrw. Harrington was born seven years later at Tunnelton, Vi When Mrs. Harrington was 8 months old her parents died within a fortnight of each other. The children’ were taken by aif- ferent families. Mrs, Tigard went to live with a Methodist minister, while an Irish priest raised Mrs. Harrington apd her brother Willlam. The minister, like all Methodist ministers do, every three or four years changed his charge. The children became widely separated and In time lost track of one another. The girls grew to womanhood-and Mrs. Tigard married soon after moving to Nebraska. Mrs. Harrington came to Springfield and her brother Willlam made his home with her for soveral years. He was of & ram- bling disposition and while out west learned that the other sister lived in Nebraska. He informed Mrs. Harrington and after la- borious correspondence Mrs. Tigard was located. As a result Mrs. Tigard was readily per- suaded to come here to visit her sister. The meeting was an affecting one. The brother, Willlam, has mysteriously disap- peared. There is mo trace whatsoever of the other two boys. Mrs. Harrington has no remembrance whatsoever of them. Mrs, Tigard herself but faintly remembers them. LAND FRAUDS ON THE COAST Clique with Headquarters Francisco Operates o Extensive Scale. in San an PURTLAND, Ore., Oct. 2L.—~The Oregon- lan today says: The government has unearthed stu- pendous “land graft” ring that has been carrying on business in every well tim- bered area on the Pacific slope. This ring has not only acquired “base” lands by “dummies” and other fraudulent WM INRET s YW general land office at Washington agents whose duty it was to “leak” information about proppsed reserves and other profitable matters and by use of money has Influenced placing of reserves to its own interests. The central figures of this conspiracy are said to be in San Francisco. ‘Willlam J. Burns, in the secret service of the Treaeury department, and A. B. Pugh, assistant attorney general in the Interior department, were In Portland last week gathering evidence. WASHINGTON, Oect. 21.—The officials of the Interior department admit that there are several special agents working in the Pacific coast states on an Investigation into efforts which are being made to secure control of a large’area of the public land for speculative purposes. Thers are many Indications of conspiracy through the use of forest llens scrip and through entries under the timber and stone act, but so far no test case has been made. THIEVES ROB A POSTOFFICE Stamps to ks the Amount of Fifteen Dollars Taken at Superior, Wisco SUPERIOR, Wis., Oct. 2.—When the Buperior pestoffice was opened for business today the large vault was found to have been rifled of practically the entire supply of stamps, estimated at §15,500 About 3100 in fractional silver was aise secured. The vault was forced without the use of explosives. The safe was located in the postmaster's private office and contained a large amount of currency, which was not molested. ‘The only visible clue left by the burglars was an electric pocket lamp. Two blood- hounds belonging to the police department are in poor health and it was impossible to get them on the scent. ACCUSED OF - TAKING BRIBE Deputy Tax Comimissioner of New York is Plnced Under Arrest. NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—Deputy Tax Come missioner Michael O'Sullivan has been ar- rested at the door of his home in St Luke's Place on his return from a demo- cgatic political meeting and locked up in a police station. He is accused of having taken a bribe on pretext of getting a man appointed to the police force Eric Erickson, & motorman, gave the in- formation to District Attorney Jerome upon which the arrest was made. O'Sullivan was formerly a policeman and secured his posi- tion under the administration of Mayor Van Wyck. VOTE TO MORTGAGE BRANCHES Illineis Central Stockholders Decide to Raise Twenty Million Dollars, CHICAGO, Oct. 21.—At the annual stock- holders meeting of the Liinols Central railroad today it was voted to mortgage thirteen small branch lines for not to #x- ceed $20,000,000, 314,000,000 to be raised st once for the purpose of funding the in- debtedness of the company, and paying for and improving its lines. For that pur- pose bonds are to be issued maturing in 1%1, bearing not to exceed 4 per cent in- terest. The following dircctors were re-elected: Stuyvesant Fish, E. H. Harriman, John Jacob Astor and Robert Walton Goelet. DEATH RECORD. James Cusiek. : Patrolman James Cusick, who has been Iying at his home, 1519 Grace street, seri- ously fll for nearly three ~months past, passed away vesterday afternoon. had been on the police force for three years. He leaves a wife and two children. Only two weeks ago a delicate operation was per- formed and one kidney removed. Hopes for his recovery were then entertained. Funeral arrangements will be announced later, Miss Ethel Fi FREMONT, Neb, Oct. 21.—(Special)— Miss Ethel Flelding, a student at the Nor- mal school, dfed iast eevning of heart trou- ble. Bhe became unconscious while at the supper table In the dining hall on Mon- day evening and remained In that condi- tion until her death. Her parents arrived here yesterday morning and her remains | will be taken to Lincoln for burial. She | was 2 years old. A. J. Whidden, ! A. J. Whidden, 4207 Lafayette, an olC resident of Omaha, died at Beatrice Tues- day. His remains will be shipped here for interment Friday to the H. K. Burket Un- dertaking company. Deceased was the father of J. C. Whidden of 4130 Binney street, in the'real estate business at one | time. 1 Major . P. Eustin, CENTRALIA, 1L, Oct. 2L.—Major 8. ®. | Eustin, president of the Illinols Mexican Veterans' assoclation and a veteran of the | civil war, died today. 1 Big Ranch Changes Owners. BROKEN BOW, Neb., Oct. 2L—(8pecial | Telegram.)—The largest real estate deal that has been made In this county for | several years was consumated here Tues- | day. W. A. George sold his stock ranch on | the South Loup to J. W. Horn of Brock, Neb., for $32,00. The ranch property con- tains 2,620 acres of deeded land and a lease | on a section of school land. The ranch is well improved and is well located for | stock ralsing and farming. Mr. Horn's | sons, Charles and Lile, will move onto the | ranch and take personal charge. 'Baby Mine a mother should be a source of joy dan Mo r Every mother feels o great dread of the pain and danger attendant upon the most critical period of her life. Becoming to all, but the suffering and incident to the ordeal makes its anticipation one of misery. 's Friend is the only remedy which relieves women of the great pain and danger of maternity ; this hour which is dreaded as woman's severest trial is not only made painl by its use. gloomy ; nervousness, nausea and ess, but all the danger is avoided Those who use this remedy are no longer despondent or other distressing conditions are overcome, the system is made ready for the coming event, and the serious accidents so common to the Friend. critic: hour are obvistelt by the use of Mother's 9, “It is worth its weight in gold,” "' r s says many who have used it. $1.00 per ° bottle at drug stores. valuable information of interest to al be sent to any address free upon BRADFIELD REQULATOR 00., Atianta, Ga. Book containing 1l women, will application to Friend Dewey & Ston ¢ Furniture Go 1115-17 Farnam Street. LARGEST FURNITURE HOUSE IN THE WEST. Brass » Bedsteads I < [[Hn i BRASS BEDS-base posts, In single $32.00, $35.00 and $38.00. Our dlsplay of brass beds urpassed We showing everything that is irable, in all sizes. These goods are of the best make t B Tish L which ble than any other, anywhere. three-quarter and full at $28.00, BRASS BEDS-—large continuous posts, plain but very rich in their sim- plicity—at $30.00, $35.00, $42.00, $43.00, $46.00 BRASS BEDS—in fancy shapes and and $56.00. and $52.00. unique patterns, at $43.00, $46.00, $52.00, BOX SPRINGS AND MATTRESSES—our own makes, best on earth, made for comfort and durability. Dowey & Stone Furniture Company, 1115-17 Farnam Street. wi J ill burn successfully in the genuine trade marked ewel Hot Blast Stoves—soft coal, siftings, slack, hard coal,coke,cobs, etc. Why not at a last wou Keep Your House Warm small cost ! Jewel Stoves just about as long as you Id expect to keep a stove, Price—oh, we will satisfy you. Call and see Jewels. We recom- mend them. Conklin Hardware Company. 3014 Leavenwort h Street, Omaha. A well heated office for $10.00 per month Before the cold weather sets in, it might be well for you to stop to think whether you are apt winter. to freeze to death in your office this There's no use staying in a cold office all winter. . THE BEE BUILDING It you ask one of its tenants you will find it's always comfort- able, no matter how cold the before it's cold. weather. You would better move There are three pleasant small rooms at §10.00 per month—one or twe larger rooms at reasonable prices. R. C. PETERS & CO. RENTAL AGENTS Save 80 per cent in Gas Bills The KERN BURNER Sizes to sult space to be lighted. Globes to suit your fancy. No blackened mantels or wire supports. Bpecial light for the library, Outlights all other lights, Kern Incandescent Gas Light Co, Chicsgs. D, W. Dudgeon, Agt., Plumber and Gasfitter, 2910 FARNAM ST. "PHONE, 1966 BUY A FARM on Monthly Instaliments. Farm homes in Polk and Barron Counties, Wisconsin, within {rom 60 to 76 miles from 8t Paul and Minneapolis, 38 to §16 per upon payment of from b cents to $1.50 acre , balance in three, five or years, on monthly :Yme:\ll- Monthly in- stallments of from 33 to $ will proc: ?.r-. or maps full’ information ad- ress. UECKE'S LAND AGENCY. Cumberiand Wisconsin. GROUND FLOOR BEE BUILDING == Dr, Searles s Searleg SPECIALISTS Cure All Special DISEASES OF MEN' BLOOD POISON WEAK, NERVOUS Mi KIDNEY AND BLABD DISEASES Treat t and Medteln $5.00 PER MONTH Examinations and advice free st nfl}u i ). Written contracts given :r‘fi diseases or refund money treatment. Treatment by mall. in Omaha Cor. 14th and Deuglas, OMAHA, l“ ‘'or sale « ¢ ‘5(:“’ :’D las, KUNN & CO0., Tt Nedrdaia. asiu—an o M"ENM "-' i aston mall ris wad 1ost BOwer Bherman :Ifi-‘ Omaba,

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