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BRIEF CITY NEWS 1909 APRIL 1909 SUN MON TUE wED THU I SAT 123 | 4567 0 | 8 9 HNRI314151617 | 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 | 2526 27 28 29 30 THE BEE OFFICE The, Counting Room and Businses Office of The Bee is temporarily lo- oAted on Seventeenth street, in the Toom formerly occupled by Mastings & Moyden. Advertisements and wub. soription matters will be attended to Shere until the new quarters are rondy. Mave Moot Print It. Mk Teeth—Edholm, Jeweler. ‘Vollmers, expert clothes fitters, 107 5. 16 Rudolph ¥. Bwobods, Public Accountant. Rinehast, photographer, 1§th & Faraam. ht drafts at maturity. H. D. Neely, manager, Omaha. W. X. Thomas, 503 First National Bank Hidg., lends money on Omaha real ecstate in sums of $600 to $360,00. Prompt mervice. The fumeral of Mrs. R. W. Baker will be held Tuesday at 2 p. m. from the resi- | dence, 3008 Mason street. Interment, New Bedford, Mass, Paying for & Mome Is as easy as paying rent. Nebraska Savings and Loan Asso clation will show ths way. Board of Trade building, Sixteenth and Farnam stieet Woman Wants No Wtook Yards—Carrie Bennet of Randolph, Cedar county, has brought suit in the United States circuit court against the Minneapolis & Omaha Rallway company, to enjoin the main- tenance of a stock yards adjacent to property owned by her in that town. Good Friday Takes Precedence—On ac- count of Good Friday being this weok monthly meeting of the board of ai- tors of the Associated Charities and weneral conference of all charitahle and philanthropic organizations in Omaia and South Omaha has been postponed un- til next week. Accidental Death by Gas—Accidental death by gas poisoning was the fate of John H. Irwin, according to the verdict of the jury that Investigated the case under the direction of Coroner Heafey Tuesday morning. The body s to be taken to| Schuyler Wednesday for burial. A brother | of the dead man, Raymond Irwin, lives there, Burning Grease Canses Fire—Burning | ®rease in the kitchen of the Chinese res- taurant on the second floor of the build- ing at 1313 Douglas street started a fire there at 8:30 lock Tuesday morning. About $100 damage was done by fire, smoke and water. The place is owned by the Woey Sen Low company and man- aged by Charlle Sing. Determined to Get Women Thieves—The police and Judge Crawford of the police court are determined to do thelr utmost toward getting rid of the woman thieves of the Third ward, who make a specialty | of robbing men. Delma Green, a negress, was sentenced to ninety days in jail on the | charge of larceny from the person Tues. day morning, and the judge says he will treat similar cases In the same way. Six More for Ple Counter — Hix more | candidates for membership on the Board of Fire and Police Commissioners have fijed their petitions with the city clerk, making a total of eight candidates, with | Charles Karbach, present member, and Julius Meyer. The last six to file are: A. L. Anderson, Nick Dargaczewskl, Thomas W. Hazen, John T. Jepsen, Theo- dore A. Spratlen and Philip Lang N N Loomis on Need of Oivio Pride— N. H. Loomls, general solicitor of the Union Pacific, will addresy the Omaha Real Estate cxchange Wednesday noon on the subject of “Civic Pride.” Mr. Loomlis recently spoke at the dinner of the Omaha Ad elub on a similar subject, having made some study of the question which makes citizens do things for the sake of the beauty of the city which they call home Just Think of I+—Chickens at Large!— John White, 2115 Grant street, has the doubtful @lstinction of being the first man against whom City Prosecutor Daniel has ever filed a complaint on the charge of al- lowing chickens to run at large. Mrs. J. C. Reeder, the next door nelghbor of Mr. | White on the west, is the complaiant against him. The case will probably be heard Wednesday morning in police court Thomas Shaw for Oity Engineer— Thomas Shaw has filed his petition with | the city clerk, asking that his name be placed upon the ballot in the spring elec- tion as a candidate for city englineer This is the only petition for this office filed to date, though several others are | being clroulated, one of which is for Andrew Rosewater, the present incum- bent of the office by virtue of appoint- ment. As an Attraction for the annual elec- trical show and as a permanent exhiblt re the | | impo: | docket tions. | willlam Marsh | burglars { o Joseph G The Best Spring Medicine It is as easy to prove that Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best spring medicine as it is to say it. Spring Ailments are blood ailments —that I8, they arise from an impure ished, devitalized condition of the blood: and Hood's Sarsaparilia purifies, enriches and revitalizes the | blood as no other medicine does. | It 18 the most effective of all blood medicines. There is a Solid Foundation for this claim, In the more than 40,000 testi- monials of radical and permanent cures by this medicine, received in two years, this record being unpar- alleled in medical history. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cures all spring humors, all erup- tions, clears the complexion, creates An appetite, alds the digestion, re- lleves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim. Begin taking Hood's Sarsaparilla to- day. Get it in the usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as Sar- satabs. 100 D-.es One Dollar. seventh and Farnam streets as officers are: Mra. Myron Learned, president; Miss Corinne Paulson, vice president; Mrs. C. M. Wilhelm, secretary Mrs. R. Beecher Howell, treasurer; Mrs. E. A. Cudahy, Mrs. Charles Martin and Mre. D. B, Welpton, directors he pro gram Tuesday morning was charge of Miss Boulter ¥. J. Mol Testifies for Jobbers—I" J Hoel, secretary of the McCord-Brady company, wholesale house, was the only witness who testified at the interstate commerce hearing Tuesday morning. ‘ihe purpose of testimony to show the discrimination in freight rates for all classes of commodities in favor of Chicago and St. Louis from Atlantic sea- board points to the Missouri river points. Mr. Hoel's evidence tended to show that 95 per cent of the products handled by the Missourl river jobbers originated in the Missouri river traffic and producing 20ne. Frank Gets in Jall Quick—Within hour after he was discharged from the county jall. Frank Monroe saw the in- side of a jail cell, that time as a pris- oner In the city bastile. The police picked him up on the street shortly after he secured his release from Sheriff Brailey's hotel, and he was trying to =ell some cheap gloves, so it was concluded that he had stolen them. In splte of Mon roe’s protestations and statement that he had been given the gloves by another man to sell, his honor thought jail the best place for him and gave him a sen- tence of forty-five days. Assignment of Federal Cases—The as- mignment of cases for trial on the federal was completed Monday and they as they appear in with one or two excep- company cases against Those chosen in his was un run along about printed docket, The water the city of Omah; circult court of appeals are disposed of. The case of the First National bank of Shenandoah, la, against Nickolas Liewer has gone over until later in the term on account of illness of (he defendant. Al of Tuesduy has been devoted to the heai- ing of motions and demurrers. Three Omaka Funerals—The funcral of Henry Brown, which was to have been held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock at fhe First Methodist church, has been postponed to Thursday at the hour and place 1. N. Watson, the attorney who died Sun- same Tuesday afternoon Rev. Charles W Savidge conducted the funcral at the home, 322 North Fifteenth street. The funeral of Margaret Marsh, the iafant daughter of 4167 Davenport street, was afternoon at the home. The in the vault at Forest The death of the child held Tuesday body was placed Lawn cemetery occurred Monday Petty Burglars Rather Busy—Pelty have made a number of small hauls during the last few days. While the family of Fred Nicholson, Sorth Twenty-seventh street not at ho last Friday, burglars ransacked the place and stole some jewelry and $2 in money. Sunday night & burglar secured § at the home of Thomas Baughman, %% Charles treet, and $10 at the home of J. W. Fysc, 2122 Charles, and s supposed to have & the same man at both houses. The home Berghoff, 2640 Caldwell street was gone through by a prowler, who was evidently scared away before thing. 17 was result of having been arrested the third v fourth time on the charge of disor- derly conduct Fred St. Peter, who suys he lives at Seventeenth and Jackson the | @ have necessarily Bo0gw over until the cases now pending In the |to advertise it day, was buried in Prospect Hill cemetery | taking any- | 8t. Petor Thought to Be Insane—As (he | A SQUARE-DEAL THE BEE: OMAHA |BEERINE AS A SUBSTITOTE jTempennee Beverage to Follow if | | Daylight Bill Sticks. f |HOW MANY SALOONS WILL QUIT? | | | Imdiy - | Locke One the Proposed Quenching Th the The at Cafes chemes » After er. Brewers may make more temperance or “Lincoln” beer, as it is commonly known, If the daylight saloon bill is signed by | Governor Shallenberger—and this may be | 201a to the real late ones Estimates vary as to how many saloons | in Omaha will close in the event the bill ls signed, but If the governor signs It saloon men belleve about half the saloons will go out of business—that is, they will change their business. The brewers long ago solved the pro- hibition problem. They make a beer with- | out sufficlent alcohol in it to intoxicate, sort of & beerine. Those who really want to wet their whistles with a drink which has scveral inches of foam on schooner may be satistied with a glass of | | the teniperance beer. But even this right maye be curtailed, for | 4 recent decision of the supreme court of | | Nebraska, was that 1o malt liquor may be sold matter what t percentage of alcohol contained, where the sale of ordl- nary liquor Is restricted Lincoln's experience was number of saloons went out of busin H rather changed thelr business. Over the. big mahogany bars the saloon keepers be- }g'&n serving beerine, pop, ginger ale, lemon- |ade, In fact everything from cucumber phosphate to raspberry cider, which looks Just itke certain gem-hued, flower scented, | dream compellers sola at the | saloons. eac no that a large real reguiar Another Novel Scheme. Another scheme has dawned on Omahans, | and it is much discussed. Plans are being | mude to get wet goods to serve after the theaters. The question is “can these wet g00ds be ordered with the dinner before the saloons close and served at 11 or 12 o'clock at night? On this point attorneys disagree, uniess the man ordering the goods takes ther with him, One hotel keeper thinks this will result in Installing a big refrigerator divided into | 100 small Ice boxes. When a dinner Is or dered at 6 o'clock in the evening and the order for wet goods glven, the goods wiil be placed fn an Individual locker and the one ordering the dinner given the key. When he returns with his friends after the theater, he will glve the walter the key | and the goods will be served. The clubs will make some such an ar- rangement. Even In prohibition North | Dakota the brewers are permitted to fur nish clubs with big fce boxes divided up | for Individuals like postoffice boxes. In these the members of the “club” keep thelr | wet goods and each one will hold a case | of beer and several ' botties of golden | wasser of Irish usquebaugh, they may { serve a number of guests from the lce box. Restaurant dealers do not belleve tem- perance beer will cver be very popular With thelr trade. It may be the main drink {in the saloons which become billiard par- |lors with sott drink buffet in connection. It looks llke beer and the slgns used look just lMke real beer It also costs the same as beer. FILM MEN WATCH SCREENS IN TRUST FIGHT Independent Concern Shows What it Can Do to Many Moving Pleture Men. Omaha was one of the storm centers yes- terday in the fight which the Independents | are carrying on against the so-calied mov- ing picture trust. D. W. McKinney, vice president of the International Projecting and Producing | company. the officlal name of the inde- | pendents, spent the day in the city and | with C. M. Simmons, manager of the Swan- son Omaha Filin company, met a large number of owners and managers of mov- | Ing pleture shows, not only of Omaha but from various points In the state and from Towa and Missouri | The Jewel theater was turned over to | them for the day and they gave a con- ! tinuous exhibition of high grade plctures for the purpose of demonstrating that the Independent company 1s fully able to sup- ply all the films which any show needs and that the trust is not able to carry out 1 signs. | causea | screening. | valuable paper. its alleged threat to shut off the supply of those theaters which refuse to use thelr ! pictures. Mr. McKinney has already covered greater part of the United Btates in his fight and 18 now on his way west. He | states that he fs meeting everywhere with a warm reception and that the orders fo his goode tax the capacity of the company. the Our Letter Box Oontributions on Timely Subjects, Mot Nuceeding Two Nundred Words, Are Invited from Onr Meaders. House Flies and Dirt. DETROIT, Mich., April 2—To the Kditor of Tho Bee: I noticed an article in a re- qent lssue of your paper the “Fight Against the Fly published on this subject lately Georgla, Florida and Louisiana engaged in an anti-fly campaign boards of health of several are now issuing bulleting pestiterous fly. Much can be don by the house These insects breed in it each on and are while the other concerning the to remedy the fly and mosquito. filth and airt and householder would see that thelr Own premises ure kept clean and free from | dirt and refuse of all kinds, these insects would not find a place for breeding. While it may be Impossible to exterminate flies and mosquitoes, a great deal may be done 1o lessen this danger and annoyance by the proper use of screen doors and window screens. In this day of wmexpensive screens and wire cloth there is no excuse for any householder of even moderate means being without screens, which add much to the comfort, health and security of the home. It we will get rid of the flies, we must first get rid of their breeding places and In the meantime, for the sake of health, comfort and cleanliness, we should keep these insects out of our home by proper Very truly yours W. D Brandt Not a Candid OMAHA, Aprl 6.—To the Editor of The Bee: In your paper you published a news Item giving the names of a number of can- didates who elreulating petitions for the excise board. In this article you have connected another person's name with my occupation, viz: John G. Brandt, secretary Nebraska Savings and Loan association, thereby creating the impression that I am a candidaic for membership on (1 of Fire and Police Commissioners. I desire to say that T am not circulating the petitlon referred to and tention of dolng %o, and there give this ction space Yours truly, JOHN R Secrelary Nebraska Savings oclation. BIGGERS, .. have you cor BRANDT, and Loan Thaunks, Anyway. OMAHA, April —To the Kditor of The Beo: Please let me address through your columns the republican voters, I thank you all most heartlly for your sup- port for me as candidate for councliman at the primaries. I am triend. wish to your republican JOHN YIRAK. Passover Opens with Services Rabbi Cohn Tells What World Owes to Great Event Which Freed Jewish People. The beginning of (he Feast of the Pass- over was celebrated Monday at Temple Israel with a service and sermpn, Rabbi Frederick Cohn preaching on “The Signifi- cance of the Passover.” He used for his text, “Thou shall tell to thy children on that day all that the Lord did for thee," taken from Exodus x{il. The musical part of the service consisted of a trio, “May the Words of My Mouth,” by Ward, sung by Miss Myrtle Moscs, Mr. Swartz and Mr. Gray; and “Oh, How Amiable Are Thy Dwellings,” by West, sung by the quartet cholr. © Feast of the Passover began at sun- down Friday night and will eight days, commemorative of the d ance of the Jews from Egypt, as g the book of Exodus. It Is commonly known as the feast of unleavened bread and dur ing that perlod matzos Is eaicn for eight days. he Feast of the Passover first great significance to the Jews because It brought them thelr freedom,” said Rabbi Cohn, It also brought them independence, nationality and further development, mnd it was their beginning as a nation. It is of significance not only to the people of lsrael, but also Lo all the world, because of the Influence of Israel on the world. Had there been no passover there would have been no Easter. Without Judaism there would have been no Christianity, as Chris- tianity is directly and historically a pro- duct of Judaism." continue for liver- v in is of On Wednesday morning promptly at 8 o'clock we will greatest sale of silk dresses that has ever been held In Omaha. Sce page 3 for advertisement ORKIN BROS. 1510 Douglas St beginning open the our A great deal has been | now | states | evil | (CROUND FOR MEW SCHOOL| (Board of Education Selects Site in North Omaha. |ADDITIONS TO OTHER SITES Board Believes Posters Near Build- Are Ohjectionable and Wil Try to Abate Nuisance. The purchase of additional two school sites was authorised Mond by the Board of Education, together with | the selection of a site in a new school dis- trict created by board action Three lots will be bought adjacent to the | Forrest school on the south for $1.50. The Forrest school will be erected this summer and the additional ground will not only facilitate the work of construction, but will &ive the children more room for play when the new bullding is occupled. Five lots adjoining the Windsor school on the west comprise the other purchase. These will be Bought for $2,800, but the price will be cut by the ordered sale of the south forty-nine feet for the present site for $600. The new school district formed Monday | 1s In the extreme northern part of the city and is bounded on the morth by the city limits, on the east by Florence boulevard on the south by the Northwestern rallway | tracks and on the west by Thirtleth avenue The commitiee on bulldings and grounds was Instructed to select a site as near the center of this district as possible, conducive to price. Architect F. W. Clark presented the plans for the new Forrest school and they were looked over by the board, but were referred back to the architect and the com- mittee on buildings and grounds for some | minor alterations. Friday night the board | Will meet again and go over them more | thoroughly and if they accepted at | that time bids for construction of the build- ing will ba advertised for at once. ground for Board ana Contractor. Creditors of Willlam Malr, the contractor of the Lothrop school addition, presented claims aggregating $4,100 and asking that the 31,000 balance due the contractor from the board be pro-rated to them. The board felt that it could not become a party to a| collection scheme and the request of the creditors was referred to the Jjudiciary committee for recommendation, The action three wecks ago whereby the purchase of 3 chalrs for Kranklin school | for the use of children and patrons during evening entertainments was ordered, was | reconsidered, and upon motion the matter | was referred to the teachers' committee. This committee will not only investigate the chair proposition, but Is intructed to thoroughly Investigate the schemes for ralsing money to buy planos, pictures and other articles used for Interlor decoration of the school rooms and report to the board the advisabllity of the bourd countenanc- ing this procedure, otherwise. Member McCague sald he belleved under this pro- gram the poorer children feit that they | were not as good as those in better cir- | cumstances and that claes prejudices would arise, while Dr. Davidson maintained that everything legitimate ought to be done to beautify the schcol rooms, belleving that the children without exception enjoyed the work. Cole Objects to Posters. Former President Cole of the board sent in & communication objecting to the posting on bill boards In close proximity (o the public schools ¢f flaming posters adver- tising “The Lady and the Burglar,” “The She Wolf of th irfes” and kindred “blood and thunder” theatrical productions. The board agreed with the former president that the posters are harmful to the youth- ful cye and referred the communication to Attorney Balrd with the recommenda- tion that he take It up with the cwners of | the bill boards or the city councll and see what can be done io alleviato the evil City Boiler Inspector Wolfe reported that | he had inspected the hollers in the New Vinton school and in the additions to the Franklin, Farnam and Lothrop schools and found them to be perfectly sa A lLife Sentence of suffering with throat and ckly by Dr 1.0, 3 lung trouble King's New For sale by commuted e Drug Co B R NUINE BOCK on draught and In bottles April 9. Ask for it your home. Beaton BEUR and after Order a case sent to on Bulld 1. B. Waoc Permits Thirty-second street and Fopplelon avenve, frame dwelling, $2,500; | H. W. Sump, Eighth street and Fe avenue, frame dwelling, $2,500; Metal Con- crete Chimney company. Twenty-eighth and Gold_streets, chimney. § John Klanck, Florence boulevard and Laird The West has never seen the equal of onr $3.00 Hat Display The extent of the variety we show at this popular price cannot be too strongly emphasized—certainly Oma- ha has never known anything like it. We feature in particular Crofut & Knapp at this price. This line contains more and snappler styles than most stores show in their entire assortments. Be sure to see our novelty soft hats in the new grey semi-tones and our very rich and highly finished black and brown derbies at 00 The world’s greatest hat builders contribute to our immense Hat department. John B. Stetson’s $8.50 to $12 Crofut & Knapp .. Knapp Felt De Luxe Morean & Co's (Paris) . ““Asbur, productione . “Lawton" . . ‘““Nebraska Special Oranges for Health Physicians state that an orange eaten beaf cach meal will so regulate the system ss to make the call of a‘doctor a rare occurrence. For Health Or;nges promote the IActiun of the gastric juices —aid digestion—act mildly on the liver and are wonderfully cooling in cases of fever. The choicest, ripest and most luscious oranges that reach the market are “‘Sunkist.” Ask Your Dealer for “Sunbkist” The California Fruit Growers’ Exchange label the choicest oranges from their 5,000 groves “‘Sunkist.” The delicious flaver of this perfect seedless f:uit makes you keen for more of its kind, Ask ycur dealer for “‘Sunkist” Brand. Hot lemonade made from large juicy California lemons (sweetened with honey preferred) will break up o cole Served hot, it opean the pores of the skin, A severe coid - be broken up in one night if given this #trent Mostly Seedless THE CHICAGO SPECIAL-|s made up of as fine equipment for general travel as can be assembled in one train, The brilliant electric lighting of the entire train is generated from the dynamo, and is in charge of a special electrical engineer enroute. The chair cars are as handsome and as comfortable as modern car building can make them. They are in charge of dis- ciplined porters. The standard sleepers, the library observation cars are of the latest patterns, There are no handsomer dining cars than those on trains Twelve and Five, nor is there anywhere better dining car servie t The departure is 6:30 P, M. Sleepers and dining car service available at 6:00 P, M. Number Five is the opposite train, Chicago to Omaha; leave Chicago at 6:00 P, M. for Omaha the Omaha Electric Light and | Power company is bullding one of the most unique llluminated signs ever erected | and will place it on one of the buildings along Farnam street. The sign will be animated and 88x54 feet in size. It will be in angle iron construction on a skele- ton frame and llluminated with over 1,200 lights. Pity it Wasn't Baining Mard — “If were raining a little harder, I'd let g0 and get washed by the shower' re- | marked Police Judge Crawford Tuesday morning. He was talking to Lizsle Col- lins, a Third ward character, who does | nothing but wander about the streats and is occasionally sent to the county for a few duys so.she may “wash This time she was given ten which to acquire that quality sald to be next to Godliness Tuesday Morning Musical Club—Offi- streets, is being held in jail until an in- | sanity complaint can be filed against him. It 1s thought that the recurrence of hils improper conduct indicates that he is mentally unbalanced. He was only cently released from the county jail after | serving a thirty-day for the same offence, and the police say he had been 1n Jail once twice before that on similar charges. Patrolman Mansfield arrested him Monday afternoon near Sixth and Marcy streets and the mun | could give plausible reason for s presence there or his actions. 1t is pr posed to have all previous witnes Is assured you when you buy Dr. Pierce’s family medicines—for all the ingredients entering into them are printed on the bottle- wrappers and these are attested under oath as being complete and correct. You know just what you are paying for and that the ingredients are gathered from Nature’s laboratory, being selected from the most valuable native medicinal roots found growing in our American forests and while potent to cure are perfectly harm- less—even to the most delicate women and children. Not a drop of ailcohol enters into their com- position. A much better agent Is used both |-ul1:::‘r:“ him testify before the \nrum(\‘ for extracting and preserving the medici- up.” | — nal principles in them, viz.—pure triple- Juve i |JAIL TO IMPROVE TEMPER | refined glycerine. This agent possesses in« ¢ oo trinsic medicinal properties of its own, being a most valuabie antiseptic and antiferment, nutritive and soothing demulcent. Glycerine plays an important part in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in the cure of ‘indigestion, dyspepsia and weak stomach, attended by sour ri ings, heart-burn, foul breath, coated tongue, poor appetite, gnawing feeling in stomach, biliousness and kin- dred derangements of the stomach, liver and bowels. Besides curing all the above distressing ailments, the “Golden Medical Discover: is a specific for afi diseases of the mucous membranes, as catarrh, whether of the nasal passages or of the stomach, bowels or other organs. Even in its ulcerative stages it will {i(]d to this sovereign remedy if its use be persevered in. In ChroSc Catarrh of the Nasal passages, it is well, while taking the “Golden Medical Discovery” for the necessary constitutional treatment, to cleanse the passages freely two or three times a day with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. This thorough course of treatment generally cures even the worat cases. In coughs and hoarseness caused by bronchial, throat and lung affections, except consumption, the “Golden Medical Discovery” is a most efficient remedy, especially in those obstinate, hang-on-coughs caused by irritation and congestion of the bronchial mucous membranes. The “Biscuvtry" is not so good for acute coughs arising from sudden colds, nor must it be expected to cure consumption in its advanced stages—no medicine will do that—but for all the obstinate, chronic coughs, which, if neglected, or badly treated, lead up to consumption, it is the best medicine that can be taken. To find out more about the above mentioned diseases and all about the body in health and dis- case, get the Common Sense Medical Adviser—the People’s Schoolmaster in Medicine—revised and up-to-date book of 1000 pages—which treats of diseased conditions and the practical, successful treat- ment thereof, Cloth-bound sent post-paid on receipt of 31 cents in one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing enly Address Dr, R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N, Y. TICKET OFFICE, 1502 FARNAM STREET Telephone Douglas 3580. re- sentence or it you es | PILES CURED Without Outting, Tying or Burning. All Kinds of Piles Cured—Blind, Bleeding, Internal, External and Itching Piles Cured by DR. WILLIAM CREIGHTON MAXWELL A Graduate of Bellevue Hospital Medical College of New York City resided in Omaha for 22 years and has had 28 years of iseases of the rectum. Nundreds of the most prom- Nebraska, and from all parts of the United y Dr. Maxwell. on guarantee is given in every 1. No Money Paid Until Cured 524 Bee Building. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. All patients must come o the office for treatment. Thirty Days for Ole Jensen in Hope of Making Him Less and e taken under treatment by And sen- » was heard in police court Tuesday is have on ’ “'.H; ‘&I\)( )O'| print told ) side During the spring every one would be benatited by taking Foley's Kidney Rem- edy. It furmshes a needed tonlc to the | kidneys after the extra strain of winter, | and it purifies the blood by stimulating | the kidneys, and causing them eliminate | impurities from it. Fcley's Kidney Remedy imparts new Ie and vigor. Ple ant 10 take. Sold by all drugwists Extravagance is not necessary to gocd printing. The best work depends upon the good taste and capability of your printer cers of the Tuesday Morning Musical Irritable club for the coming year were elected | pjections to his former friends using his Tuesday morning, when the club met wt| OPecl 8 (" ST S v the heme of Mrs. T. J. Mahoney, Thirty- |Phonceraph got O. leventually Into jall a few days ago. to cap the climax Judge Crawford tencea him to serve a thirty-day term when 2 H {the cas: at and theDirectoire ... : | Jensen said to thrown bricks e ‘°"“"'1_|"_“""‘",“” be a hard one for | ) o ugh the windows at home of Mrs adies. he directoire mode endorss *| Slarpe. &6 North Twenty-fo phlhas slready lift scorntul eyebrows at such a| SIS T RO et Sk e Diskeliniom 86 Bulgy hive. Vot in short, | Lo gingty charged with kenness and wheresoever It may be deposited, has mer- | e ous destruction of P S ited great condemnation and is anathemia, | MVCI0US d¢ . - s l';‘c Ma 8ot 1o g0 % | (he judge Tuesday ghat he merely broke a Many ,“',M.A_m.m. Methods. 1. Exerclse. !n[mflnn by aeccldent while rescuing his Dieting, 3. Wortylng. 4 Tight lacing, | Phonesraph trom the f"wm-‘;‘. I"Ix; a:‘ r; 5 Marmola. All these are suggesied, but . who werd enjoying 'Homy ol not all should be adopted For Instance until he arvived nsen had been 1 and 2 are not e while 3 and { are | arrested before on complaint of Mrs. Sharpe ::1“:‘:;‘;-m:rm;n:nlvllfl them on one |and the judge thought a term in Jall would Whet 1& 1t? A harmless powder obtain. | improve his behavior able of any good druggist, w i, when | mixed with 115 ounce Fluld Extract Cas. chra Aromatie and 3% ounces Peppermint Water and ta T meals and at bed- Ume will without eausing any inner dis. turbances or gutward fiesh wrinkles, re. duce the excess flesh, proportionately and uniformly, 12 (0 16 ounces & day When you wuy Gold M he sure it ts Washburn-Crosh, Modal Fleus. This is Lmportant, A. L Root, Incorporated, 1210-1212 Howard Street