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1909 MARCH SUN MON TUE WED THU 1909 PRI SAT 123456 7891011213 14151617 18 19 20 21 22 23242526 27 28293031 THE BEE OFFICE The Counting Boom And Business Offics of The Bes is temporarily lo- oated on Beventeenth strest, in ihe room formerly oocoupied by Hastings Meyden. Advertisements and sub- soription matters will be attended to there untll the new quarters are rondy. Save Moot Prist Th “ZLindsay” for city counell—Adv Solid Silver Wares—Edholm, Jeweler Vote Pischer, councl, 9tn ward. Dewey for eity clerk. adv Vollmers, expert clothes, fitters, 107 8. 16 Vote for D. A. W, Chase—all wards. Adv. Rudolph ¥, Swobods, Public Accountant. Frank B. Stome, 5th ward council.—Adv. Rinehart, photographer, 18th & Farnam. Geo. D. Mios, counciiman #th ward.—Adv J. P. Jackson is the pest man ror coun- cll from Becond ward.—Adv. Note Marrison & Morton's extended property list in today's issue. Tquitehle Zdfe—Policies, sight draftsat maturity. H. D. ‘Neely, manager, Omaha. Vote for Goodley ¥. Brucker for re-elec- tion for councllman from 6th ward. Adv Vote Tuesday for T. B. Norris, the Shoeman, for councilman for the Ninth ward.—Adv. If Lindsay of the Twelfth is sent to the city council he will not be an experiment. He has the qualifications now. Adv. M. Thomas, 503 First Nationa: Bank lends money on Omaha real estate in sums of $600 to §250,00. Prompt servica “The Oall of the Tdeal"—The subject of the lecturs by Rabbi Cohn tonight at 8§ oclock at the reguldr services at Temple Israel will be “The Call of the 1d Savings Acoounts In the Nebraska Sav- ings and Loan Association earn six per cent, credited seml-annually. One dollar starts an account. 1603 Farnam. Benson & Thorne, 1515-1517 Douglas St., offer a superb line of infants' $7.50 long coats at $5 Saturday. Closed-out line from & noted manufacturer, See them on dis- play in window. Willlam Wightingale Buried—William Nightingale, who committed sulcide, was burfed in Forest Lawn cemetery Friday afternoon. at the Heafey undertaking rooms, 318 South Fourteenth street. Puneral of Mrs. Henrietta Boesner— The funeral of Mrs. Henrfette Roesner, Wwho died Tuesday, was in Laurel Hill cem- ctery Friday afternoon. The service wi held at the home of her daughter, Mr Wegner, 1401 Bancroft street, a2 o'clock. Wig Oall on Children and Parents—A score of summonses for children and parents to appear in juvenile court Satur- day were filed Friday morning. One sum- mons {s for Joo Dergance, of whom it is alleged that he “beats and fights small children and s very abusive. adv Charged with Quitting FPamily—On the] charge of wife and child abandonment K. 8. Coates of Fifteenth and Burdette streets, has been arrested. It is understood that a complaint on that charge is to be filed inst him by the county attorney in police court Saturday.” Little One is Buried—Willlam Beman, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. James Be- man of 336 North Twentieth street, who died Thursday morning, was buried In Holy Sepulcher cemetéry Friday morning. The service was held at the Hoffmap un- dertaking rooms, 701 South Sixteenth street. Complaint Against Dairyman—J. M Jensen, a milkman, who ddiry is at Forty- second and Martha streets, has been com- plained against in police court on the charge of selling impure milk and cream Two complaints were filed by City Prose- cutor Danfel, but Jensen has not yet been tried on them. \ Irene MoXnight is Wow at Home—Miss Irene McKnight, who was hurt by a ru away horse some time ago, is now at her home, 108 North Fortieth street, where CURE FOLLOWED YEAR OF AGONY Intense ltching Eczorm Drove Him Nur|ytoDupur——CMofSur eon of a London Hospital cullod It Worst Case He Had Ever Seen— Got Little or-No'Relief Until e CUTICURA STOPPED HIS UNBEARABLE TORTURE * About four years ago, ln London, I ‘was troubled by & -v-. n‘ :kn‘: ry, i R e Y vuthau-wth my arms and Ioould and soren u-ndn of small ndAgnpl‘:onlum.nd thot i, On becoming dry. unu used lntenu itohing. 1 was advised .k': to tl pfll.l for diseases of the . I di #0 and was an nub—pctknt for & mont! , the -nrpon :yin ‘T ;'w- saw such a bad R M l tried many came so-called nmadun. but 1 be- #0 bad that I almost On coming to BRIEF CITY NEWS | The funeral service was held | | for that matter, she has been for several days. Her improve- ment after the accldent was rapid and she Is now almost over the effects of the brulses and spraine she sustained Ask Guardian for Mrs. Mary Allen— A suit to have a guardian appointed for Mrs. Mary Allen of Benson is on in county court. The suit is brought by Mrs. Allen's son-in-law, Henry Sloy. Relatives of Mrs. Allen are*divided Into two camps over the sult which Involves the control and ultl- mately the ownership of a 160 acre farm. Hern's Millinery Store on Douglias street was the Interesting place for women on Thursday. That day was opening day The store was beautifully arranged and the decorations of flowers and palms cer- tainly gave a mosy pleasing effect. Fully & couple thousand persons attended the event and each recelved a very nice hat- pin as a souvenir. Elke Wamo Board for Building—Stock- holders fn the new Eik's bullding company met Friday morning and elected directors to handle the affairs of company. new directors are.Thomas B. McPherson, Gould Dietz, B. J. cannell, Charles Saun- ders, Herman Metz, D. E. Welpton and Frank Rogers. the Refusing to Prepare Meals, Popular Ground ‘That ‘Mrs. Anna Johnson was “‘eontentious,” refused to prepare plain- | ff's meals and on March 5, last, handed | plate, | him, with great vigor, an empty is charged by Charles M. Johnson, In a petition for divorce from Anna Johnson, Refusing to prepare a husband's meals has recently become a frequént complaint and the shuddering thought arises that perchance wives at out with thelr hus- bands have been reading of this and are thus learning to adopt this inhuman form of cruelty. Mayor Jim Takes Shot at Governor On Colonels Dahlman Roasts Three Jack Mem- bers of Staff and Shallenberger for Naming Them, Mayor Jim is now venting his wrath on the democratic governor. “I feel it my duty to warn you that I have winged three of your colonels and that it would be inadvisable for you to call out your nrm) at this time with this de- pleted, force." This telegram was sent to Governor Shal- lenberger at Lincom by Mayor Dahlman, who chuckles to himself at the thought of what he calls the poor selection of staff officers made by the governor who de- feated him for the democratic nomination last vear. The mayor says he offered to act as recrulting=sergeant in Omaha and had he done so would have picked for the governor's ‘staff men who could stand fire and come Jut unscathed The governor, however, chose his colonels — the three who have been “winged,” the mayor says, and are now unfit for service. They are Colonel E. P. Berryman, Colonel B. ¥. Marshall and Col- onel P. C. Heatey, all Jacks, and there- fore not on the mayor's calling list, or, on the cailing list of any own of his Jims. “I don't wish to rub it in, 1d the mayor, “but I can’t be blamed for calling the governors attention to the fact that Just/ because he happened to get the nom- inafon last summer that I anf all in, down and out.” The mayor is scheduled for addresses at meetings to be held at Bixteonth and Wil- Mam streets and at 2706 Cuming street to- night, but he declines to say whether he will or will not score the governor for his support of tho Jack candidate for the mayoralty Judge Praises Man Who Beats Thug Stranger is Arrested with One of His Vietims, Then Commended in the Court. After “beating up” two toughs whom he says were trying to hold him up near Tenth | and Davenport streets at 5 o'clock Friday morni John Knapp, an out-of-town vis- itor to Omaha, was himself placed in Jail with one of his assailants and charged with disturbing the peace by fighting. When the story was told to the police judge Knapp was readily released and told he ought to get a sedal, while Hope Fox, one of the men with whom the trouble occurred, was sent to jall for thirty days. WORK ON FLORENCE DRAINAGE DITCH WILL BEGIN AT ONCE | Ed Turner Secures the Contraet, Whose Total Calls for Three Thousand Dollars, Work on the Florence drainage ditch will begin at once under a contract calling for completion May 1. Edward Turner secured the contract which was signed Thursday. The contract price is 16% cents a yard, the total cost of the ditch belng estimated at $3,000. The drainage ditch wil be 2,000 feet long | and through a strip of land 100 feet wide bought by the city last year as a right of way. It will be fifty feet wide and on the erage of six feet deep, a good sized canal. The canal will tap Spring Creek where it is crossed by the tracks of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Rallway company, and will take a northeasterly course to the river. The water from the creek will be deflected into the canal and all sewage now flowinginto Florence lake all sewage now flowing into Florence lake river, READING CIRCLE PICKS BOOKS Nebraska Organization Holds a Meet- ing With Representatives of Eustern Houses. The Nebraska Reacing Circle, comprising @ branch of the Nebraska Schoolmasters club, held its annual meeung at Hotel Loyal Friday morning meeting was to adept a series of books for study by the clrcle for, the coming year. There was present at the meeting a num ber of representatives of the leading book | publishing houses &f New York, Boston, Philadelphiu, Chicago and 8t. Louls The Reading Circle board consists of State Superintendent E. C. Bishop of Lin- coln, manager; County Superintendent Edith A. Lathrop of Clay county, County Superintendent C. W. McMichael of Phelps county, E. L. Rouse of the Peru Normal and J. A. Downey, formerly state Inspector of manual training and high schools. In the abdominal region is prevented by the use of Dr. King's New Lite Pills, the pain- less purifiérs. e For Drug Co AL UNITED Loeal Sol Can Never Be M mountain that our ’I'H.E OMAHA DAILY BEE: Interdenominational Conference Ad- dressed by Rev. Joseph Strong. AMERICA KEY TO SITUATION Be World-Wide Order to Be Eftective. “Sometimes we have stood so near a dwerfed by its majesty and we were awed into the realization cance and inability SATURDAY, ar MARCH 1909, FOR MISSIONS of Worl Permanent, Problems but in fmagination has been of our own to comprehend Insignifi- its The | The purpose of the | ," said Rev. D., of New Ycrk City, evening. “So It is with | ment in which we are now « thiz great move- gaged. It s significant of the greatness of our day. The present is the greatest transitional period of all the ages. The past civiliza- tion has been one of Individualitles. The future clvilization s to be socialistic. This |18 the age of Industrial revclution { gererations ago the mechanic could make | fifty things, today it takes fifty men to | make a single thing. It is the rosuit of the organization and concentration of in- dustrial energy. Today the individual is dependent upon all the world. A few gener- ations ago the individual was dependent almost wholly upon himself. The safety of our lives in travel is dependent upon the confidence we repose in & hundred men, none of whom we ever saw. Certain prob- lems spring from industrial revolutions. “With the United States rests the solu- tion of the great world problems more than with any other natlon of the world. Amer- fca is God's greatest laboratory for the world's work. We have confronting us here the great probiems of child labor, the influence of women in the labor move- ment of the world, the supreme problem of the relation of labor and capital. This has been called by some writers the eternal duel. It Is more like the ‘eternal duet.’ Labor and Capital, “Labor is helpless without capital. ‘The popular conception is that there is an eternal enmity between the twp and that ach is standing facing the other ready to give a deadly blow. The race problem is another that is 'to be settled by the new civilization. With the annihilation of space by the Invention of steam, nations are touching elbows with each other. Uniess | the relations between the nations are made right there will be friction. In America | the natigns have as it were become tied together. So has capital and labor become tied together. Industrial revolution on its way around the world is going to bring the nations into competition and unless these relations are right there will be trouble. This problem s greater In the United States than elsewhere, and it will never be solved until it is solved right. “It is possible for the old world to send to this continent within the present century 00,000,000 of its people and yet increase its own source of supply. We have got to come to an equalization of economic op- portunities. Hence it will be seen that the race problem is destined to become a most serious one. “Then, again, there Is the problem of lux- ury. It is the struggle for life that makes a nation strong. The great men of Amer- fca came from the ranks of poverty., Men cannot wallow In wealth without becoming bestial. The menace of the nation is the concentration of its wealth into the hands of the few, and the domination of that few by a single more powerful Individuality. The prosress of liberty is to take power from the Individual and entrust it with the many. The concentration of wealth is the supreme peril of this nation. This Is not the expression of an anarchist mounted on % box on a street corner, but is the calm utterance of one of the supreme justices of the United States. These problems are concentrated In the cities. In the cities lie the problems of Dives and Lazarus. Solution In Christ’s Teachings. “As the result of twenty years' study of these problems, I am profoundly convinced of the necessity of the application of the teachings of Jesus Christ to the solution of these problems. They deal with the rela- {tion of God to man and man’s relation to God. We have not taken Jesus into our soclal teachings and laws, and until we do these great problems cannot be solved. The religlon of Jesus Christ fits into the times in which we live. It is for us to make the application. If we will solve them here in America they will be solved in Europe Asla, Africa and the islands of the oceans. The opportunity will never come to us again, such as now presents itself, and it 1s our blessed privilege to now labor for the salvation of the world.” The main auditorium of the church was | tillea with an Interested audience. R dean of l"rlnll) | George Allen Beecher, D. D. L.L. I, of Kansas City Symposium of Addresse s | the afternoon was given over postum of address to & sym- by some of the promi- | was discusged by Rev. Ward Platt of Phila- delphia, and ‘“The Tmportance of Education in Home Missions” was ably discussed by Edmund D. Soper, secretary of the Young People's Missiontary Movement. A number of the Nebraska Schoolmasters’ club attended the afternoon meeting to | hear the address of Mr. Soper. A large number of friends of Mr. and A('-I::'::: "’: | Owing to the iliness of Rev. D. H. Ba Mre. W. B. Cheek joired in the celchra- | § oo, a e jon " e | iin of Springfield, O., and Prof. E. A.|tion of thelr twenty-fifth wedding nl hooping-Cough, » | Stentner of Grinnell, 1a., the program for | versary last night. They had a house tul | | Coughs, Colds, Cat: | this evening has been necessarily changed. | of merrymakers during the hours hefore There will be but un.-‘ address during llw‘ midnight. Several guests from Omn: a and i a B o A | evening meeting, and that by Bishop E. R.| out of town were present. Mrs. Milford °“":: 'I ":" ey Hendrix, D. D., L. L. D, of Kansas City. | Schindel of Hagerstown, Md M. HAMI | i o Siotnes of the beeatbing rsans \ah He will speak upon the subject of “A|of Dallas, 8 D. and Mrs. Thomas Scott wunmnmunmmuuz . s g g < 5 o Gresolene cures becauss ihe alf, rendered | Christianized America for World Redemp- | of Nampa, Idaho, were guesis. Many fine | [ougly satiseptic, is carried over the diseased | tion.” ifts of sliver were presented. Mr. Cheek | [surface with every brsath, 'I-c&'d-c-‘ sad pos ; d Constant treatment. It is lavalvable to mothers The address will be preceded with a short | sald, “You can say the bride looks fine, | |ith small children. musical program, Incluging an organ re- | petter than at the first ceremony, which r frritated cital. H. H. Baldrige will ening meeting. This evening another meetlng will be [ held, beginning at 7:45, &t which H. H Baldrige will preside. The principal ad- dress of the eveping will be delivered Ly eside at the who were scheduled to address this even- | ing's meeting, will not be present on ac- count of illness. Sturdy oaks 'from lttie acorns grow— advertising in The Bee will do wonders for your business. Jostah Strong, D. D., in his address at the Interdenominational missionary mass meeting at the First Methodist church last Two Bishop E. R. Hendrix of Kansas City on | tion Saturday night the subject, “A Christianised A-nerica.” |are to be taken | Rev. D. H. Bauslin of Springfield, O, |Omaha will be pr and Prof. A. Steiner of Grinaell, ia, preparing to entertaln ‘‘The House of High Merit.” | AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA Omaha Packing Company Completes Laying of Asphalt Floors, OTHER WORK ALONG SAME LINE Foot Badly Scalded by Falling Into Vat of Boillng Grease May Lose Member: The Omaha Packing company has com- flooring in the local plant. been golng on at this plant for several months. the best form of sanitary tres the floors from the top to the bottom where the floors are trodden over or come in contact with blood or offal. In the chill rooms it is not so necessary, and these to act as an insulation, The other South Omaha packing have adopted this kind of flooring large extent. The Cudahy Packing com- pany has had men at work for nearly eighteen months making and sanitary. the probable effect of congress, Omaha plant said yesterda market 1s beginning to fee existing In the manufacturing centers and the condition will become more uncertain until the tariff measures are definitely settled. The meat industry of any to actually suffer on account of the unsettled conditions with flelds of in- dustry.” Card at Shamrock Club. The South Omaha members of the of the extra session Sham- | cathedral, presided. The program opened £k e SNLANRRGIONLS. 4. 100 FRAEIM. with an organ prelude by Ben Stanley, rock club and their friends are looking The closing recitals of the interesting organist of Trinity cathedral. The scrip. | FWard to some good athletic amusements | story of good Queen Esther as told in Eila {ture lesson, from Acts 11:1-3, was regq|Seturday night at Fort Crcok. Juck Fitz- | Wheeler Wilcox's “Mizpah,” will be given | by Rev. J. . Hummon, pastor of Kountze | erald of South Omaha is scheduled for | thls afternoon and evening at the Bur- Memorial church. Rev. J. W, Conley de- | & boxing bout with one of the Fort Crook | wood theater. This Biblical story is being livered the prayer and the benediction |soldiers. The event promises to be one | iven with a degree of splendor wholly un- was pronounced by Bishop E. R. Hendrix, |of the best of the year. Fitzgerald is | expected and positively magnificent and training hard for the match and is in fair & preliminary two cur leaving South condition. There is to be The second session of the publicity cam- | bout between Kelly and Broshihan, | paign of the Home Mission council con- | young fellows well known in South Omaha. vened at the First Methodist church, [ The bout will take place about 8:3 or soon Twentieth and Davenport streets, Friday | after the arrival of th afternoon, with Rev. E. J. Jenks of Omaha | Omaha at 8 o'clcck. A large delegation has | presiding. After & short devotional service aland, promised t Workman Serigusly Burned. nent workers in the Home ard Foreign Mis. | Feter Christianson. Twenty-cighth and ¥ | sion fields. “The Unity of the Chureh in | "Feets Wus scriously mu-n.-.il at bv\ulel Its Mission to America” was the|theme|ard refinery. In working about a ve | of the address by Rev. A. W. Fortune of | f Srease he slibped and fell over IL &0 Cincinnatl, 0. "Our Expanding Frontiers” | that his arm and leg were submerged The grease was bolling and although he was in the vat but instant before he was rescued he was seriously | was taken home-and is burned, amputation of the if nct the foot Fri Call at Cheek Home. arm, wasn't 8o bad, come to think of it.” | Magic Olty Gossip. | Call Giynn Transter for moving. Tel 364 Look for Miss Kate Ryan's millinery { opening later. 519 North 2ith St The Eastern Star {s to have a big initia- len new candidates A delegatl, from women are nt handsomely delivered to any me No. § Improvement club held a meeting last night ai Magison school John Boukal and Charles been recently added to the ment G. L. Bwift and C Jetter's Gold T part of the city The Southwest 1s have depart- fire O. Young of Chica, pleted an extensive construction of asphalt This work has The asphalt flooring is said to be tment which can be used. The area covered Inciudes all rooms have the floors covered with sawdust houses to a the floors safe The packers are doing some discussing of and Manager Culver of the “The eastern | lot the uncertainty will be the last He said to be In & serious condition and may have to endure Every individual ta be perfectly satisfied. and learn our prices. and handsome appearance. to furnish proof. out-of-doors most of the time. style, color and material. of them in the west. were in South Omaha Tuesday on one of thelr regular business trips. George Hoover, 411 North Twenty-seventh street, reported to the police the loss of a lady's gold watch last night. Anthony Kilker, who was hit on the head by Officer J. C. Harder, March 18, is prac- tically recovered from his hurt. Free, a paint brush with every gallon of permanent_house paint, guaranteed for five years, at Koutsky's Paint and Wall Paper Btore! The mother of Mr. O. Ihnen, 1316 North Twenty-seventh street, was taken to the South Omaha hospital yesterday morning for an operation, South Omaha lodge No. 349, Brotherhood of Rallway Carmen, will gve its fourth an- nual ball’ Friday evening, March Rushing’s hall. The South Omaha market took another good upward turn yesterday. The recelpts were fair on all stock and the advance was 6 cents to a dime, Are you depositing a portion of your in- come ‘every Saturday night? The Live Stock Natlonal bank '1s open then from & to 9 o'clock. Winona lodge No. 2206, Modern Brother- hood of America, will celebrate its first anniversary Friday evening at Woodmen hall over the South Omaha National bank All members are Invited to attend. Chief Briggs and the police were active last night until a late hour working on the recent cases of holdup in South Omaha and Omaha. The chief did not turn in until midnight and the detectives were out scour- ing about all night. Several men were ar- rested during the evening, but none were booked under suspicion. Most of the cases turned out to be drunks. Men's fine seamless hose, which would be hargains at 16c a pair, come in three colors, oxblood, dark blue and slate, put up four pairy in a box: special price, c per box. Men's 31.60 hats, 6. Boys' hats, 25c. Men's §0c spring caps, %c. Come in and us show you our mew line of spring suits. For 310 we offer sults the equal of those other stores ask $15 for. They come in all the latest colors and are put up very fancy. This includes pure all _wool blue serge suits, with silk lining. For $15 we offer suits that are strictly hand tailored and absolutely guaranteed. Large variety of patterns and colors fo choose from. Other stores ask $20 for same quality. Ne- braska Shoe and Clothing House, corner Hth and N Sts.. South Omah; but goes to still further strengthen the Dbelief that whatever is offered at the Bur- wood from week to week Is of the best In quantity and quality. There will be a matinee this afternoon at 2:15. A Correetl In last night's Bee the Elite Cloak Co. ad. read Tailored Spring sults, $6.75, $7.50, $5.75, §10 and $1260. It should have made “skirts" Instead of ‘“‘suits."” m—————— Quick Aetion for Your Money—You get that by using The Bee advertising columns. Bronchitis, lnghflnd. ie nothing better oot 8o Th posiage for sample vaitle huulm woriptive 5«;” - V.B-(‘m Owe " SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-Ease, a pows smarting, nervous feet and | stantly takes the sting out of the corns and bunions I's the greatest comfort disce | Foor-Ease | & certain cure for sweating, ealious, aching feet. Try it todey. Sold by ai and Shoe Siores. By mail for e In stamps. Don't accept any substi Trial package FREE. Address Allen 5. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Superb Spring Clothes for MEN AND BOYS Not for many seasons has there been shown such a compre- hensive range of new colors and attractive patterns as may be seen in the new Spring garments. in style, color, material or pnce may To fully realize the truth of this statement you must visit ““The Nebraska,” examine our clothes, note their perfect fit You'll find none but the best garments made, by the fore- most clothes-artists in America. The materials and tailoring are strictly high class from the very smallest detail of lining or finish to their stylish cut You can’'t possibly secure an equal for any garment without paying much more for it. Men's Suits $7.50 to $32.50 Men's Topcoats and Cravenettes $8.50 to $25 The bright sunshiny days of spring will take your boy We’ve made ample preparations to fit him in that new spring suit he must have, and we show every new We've never seen better boys now showing—few stores ever carry its equal—and none Style, service, comfort, handsome appearance and every other quality necessary to resist boys’ wear is bind in these garments at prices surprisingly low. Bring in any size boy Saturday. Boys’ Spring Suits $3 to $10 Boys' Spring Topcoats $2.50 to $5 FARNANY &-F7FTEENTH 575, Head Our Way for Your New Spring Hat It makes no difference what your years, your figure or your complexion, we have a hat that is suited to your personal pecu- liarities, and in the style you want, too, Nebraska'* Give us a chance We have the ultra styles, moderate styles and standard shapes, in any color you prefer, in soft or stiff hats. We will meet your require- ments in price and give you val- ues that will surprise you. * clothing than we're Ovur “Asbury” Hat— Is a “stunner” for men who like a hat that has lots of character, plenty of style and good value at 52'50 a moderate cost 1t's incomparable, at .. Hats are greatly favored amongst the most particular dressers. They have dlstingtive styie and handsome appear- com- ance that is never scen in other brands. Ahead of all others, at Vi The “Stetson”— Tells its own story. It's intrinsic mer- its are known the world over. We have all grades up to $12.00 including an exceptionally ¥ strong value, at .. » A PIANO foryour home Terms—83.00, $4.00, $5.00 a month. Secure when the rental is so moderate. Free moving months. Rental allowed if purchased. Come and select your piano to- morrow. Delivery made promptly. Also expert moving, tuning, repairing and repolishing. Oall or 'plione your order. Satisfactory service gusranteed. 'PEONES DOUGLAS 1635, IND. Al685. SCHMOLLER & MUELLER PIANO CO. 1311-1313 FARNAM STREET Boys’ Base Bal Uniform FREE This means you—and it is really free— no trick about it—just send us two paid-in- advance subscribers for the Dally and Sun- day Bee and we will send you the complete Base Ball Uniform by express charges pre- paid. The subseriptions must be for the balance of the year, 1909, and the price each subscri- ber must pay is $4.00. ‘This pays the subscription from May 1st, 1909, to January 1st, 1910. We will start the paper at once, but will ' make no additional charge for the extra time before May 1st, when the prepald subscription begins. This extra time will help you get the subscriptions. Don’'t wait—get them NOW. ABOUT THE UNIFORMS The color is gray——they are for boys—not men, and consist of 5 pleces—pants, shirt, cap, belt and hose. The pants waist measure are in sizes from 24 to 32 inches. The shirts, chest measure from 26 to 34 inches. We also have some blue uniforms In men’s sizes for the Big Boys, but for these we must have 3 prepaid subscriptions. Use this order blank. =Aan THE OMAHA BEE, Omaha, Neb. Please send me a Boys' Base Ball Uniform FREE. Size of Pants, (waist measure) 8ize of Bhirt, (chest measure) Bize of Cap My name is Address ., I Inclose money order for $8.00 in payment of two subseriptions to the Daily and Sunday Bee to January 1, 1910, (If men's size uniform, send $12.00 and 3 subscriptions.) SEND THE BEE TO THE OMAHA BEE, Omaha. Neb.