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BRIEF CITY NEWS | 1909 APRIL 909 SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI Sar ' 1123 456780910 NI213141516 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25262728 29 30 THE BEE OFFICE The Counting Moom and Businses Office of The Bee is temporarily lo- €ated on Seventeenth strest, In the room formerly occupied by Wastings -& Meyden. Advertisements and sub- veription matters will be attended to there until the new quarters are reddy. Mave Moot Print I Meat Platters—Edholm, Jeweler. Vollmers, expert clothes fittérs, 107 &. 16 Rudolp) Swoboda, Public Accountast. Rinohart, photographer, 15th & Varnam. Bquitable Life—Policies, sight dratis at maturity. H. D. Neely, manager, Omaha. Twelfth Ward re—The Twelfth Ward Improvement elub wiil hold & mect- ng tonight at 5210 North Thirtleth street. W. K. Taomes, 503 First National Bank BIdg., lends money on Omaha real estate in Sums of 3500 to §20.000. Prompt servic: @ood Priday Services—Good Frida: services will be held in St. Barnabas church at 7 and 9 a. m. and from 12 m. to S pom . Wome Qwnership is the hope of evers famwily, Nebraska Savings and Loan As- sociution will show you the way. Board of Trade bullding. Ladies’ Mats worth $40 for $2 and les aiso everything you can think of, for sale at 2% Vinton street, Saturday, April from 9 a. m. on. Rummage salc @arfield Ofrole Meeting—Gartield Cir- | cle, Ladies of the Grand Army of the. Re- public, will hold its meeting Friday night | and has transaction. Orucifixion Cantata By Ohotr-—7Tic cholr of Bmmanuel Lutheran church will &ive Steiner's “Crucifixion,” a cant in the church Friday evening, no admission being charged. The cantata will be given under the direction of John §. Helgren. Oarl Jaoob Beckman at funeral of Carl Jacob' Beckman Baturday at the age of 57 years, was held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Swedish Mission church, Twenty-third and Davenport streots. Interment was In Lau- vel Hill cemetery. Divorce Granted for Desertion—Deser- tion of Braden Drake by Mrs. Mary Jane Drake was well enough established before Judge Estelle to permit the granting of a decree of divorce, and likewise Mrs. Ella T. Mulline has showed that Willlam K Mullina abandoned her. Traffic Bureau Details—The transpor- tation committee of the Commercial clui held a meeting Thursday afternoon 1 work out details in connection with th opening of the traffic bureau. It is under slo0od the bureau is practically finance and will be ready for business abou May 1. Who Got Those Pigeons?—Perhaps Lic approdch of Easter Is making fowls and pouliry scarce. At any ‘ate somebody wanted some pigeons so much that he stole seventy of the birds from H, Segal's pix- eon house ‘at 1617, Farnam street Tuesday night. The police are trying to tind the Liids for their owner. Good Friday at Union Gospel Mission— At the noonday prayer meeting on Friday, Rev Leonard Groh, paster 8i. Mark's Lutheran, will conduct a Good Frida, vice Lo which all are Invited. This service will be held from 12 to 1| o'clock. In the evening at 7:45, Rev. J. M. Bothwell will speak at a gospel scrvice and will alsc commemorate the day. Judge Troup Solves Problem — Judge “Troup has decided to solve a vexatlous di- vorce problem by giving Arnold Helms a decree and Mrs. Helms some alimony. It is said to be impossible that the couple should live togother and the court's de- cislon will please both sides, provided that the alimony grant, yet to be settied, is not too large or too sm! There may be an irrecoricilable dlvergence on this po Maloney's Schoolmate in Jall—T haven't been in jall since I went to school there with Detective Steve Malony declared Joseph H. Bush in police court Thursday morning. Ho was charged with drunken- ness and the judge released him. Although He 18 not remembered by Detective Maloney or the other officers, it Is probable that the man attended school at the building now used as the city jall, when it was the old Dodge school. Nathan Merriam Sells some important business for who died ver- 10, Wost—The | Alhan Merriam of the Merriam & Holm Quist Grain company, has sold his residence At Eighteentl and Binney streets to Mrs | Eva McCormick of Councll Biuffe, Th McCormicks will take possession the | near future and make It their home mov i"" to Omaha from Council Bluffs. The residence fx one of many beautiful homes | on Binney streot ana Mra, McCormick pata 6,000 for the property Alleged Fugitive Prom Justios —Cha:ged with being a fugltive from justice and said to be wanted In Davenport, 1a, on a charge of embeatiement, Bernard Reéhfeld is he ing held at the police atation until the ar- rival of an officer to take him to the lowa | city. Detective Maloney made the arrest | Thursday morning. Rehfeld, who fs said to have been a traveling representative | of & Davenport cigar firm, gives his ad- dress as 63 South Twenty-fourth avenue. ‘Where 1s W. B. Spencer?—Bellavad to be I, demented or the vietim of oks, W, E. Spencer of 3219 Miami street, has heen rejorted to the police as missing from hia home. 8ince Saturday, when he Is taid to have drawn 51,80 from the bank, his family have not seen him and Wednesday evening they asked the police department to try to locate him. Mr. Bpencer 0 vears of age, and untll recently was i, charge of the linen counter at the [ran dels store. Back to an Army Post— Happy Ja.h' McNeal, an old-time soldier and post hang- er-on, was helped to Fort Omaha Wednes- day by Turnkey Byrnes and other officers of the city jail. McNeal, who is about 6 years old, went to the police station for lodging Wednesday and was recognized by some of the officers. After staying there over night he was given carfare to Fort Omaha, where he no doubt wiil find a place |to stay. He has interesting tales to tell about his experiences In many of the army posts of the country and of his own years jof service. His last “home" was Fort Win- dale, N. M. 'In Boat to River | Congress Up North Omaha Delegates to Bismarck July Will Make the Trip by Water. Dates of the second annual meeting of the Missouri River Navigation congress have been changed from the latter part of May to July 7, 8 and 9. This will make the much talked river trip possible. The Omaha delegation Wworking with Sioux Cityans plan to have a boat come down from Blsmarck to take the delegation {to Yankton. Captain L P. Baker of Bis- marck, manager of the Benton Packet company, will send'one of his steamboats to Omaha, probably the Washburn, a big boat, and the gasoline boat Deapolls wiil | come down to Yankton. At least one day of | the congress will be spent on a river trip. When the boats return to Bismarck a num- ber of Omahans plan to make the trip to Chamberlain or Plerre, returning by rail Captain Baker has a number of pilots In his employ who know the river and it is bis opinfon that the trip can be success- fully made from Omaha to Yankton Captain Baker has taken many cargoes up the river passifg Omaha. On one trip up the river taking officers of the army the captain struck a submerged piling un- Cer the Union Pacific bridge, the boat went down and the officers stayed at the Paxton liotel for a number of days until the Union Pacific rallway settled with the captain, when he loaded officers, soldiers and bag- gage on another boat and proceeded to the head of navigation. Omahans will hold a meeting within ten days to make arrangements for the trip. 1 & Mandel, 52-34-36 West 18th New York City, Sell Their Entire Sample Line of Ln- diew’ Sults to Peoplen Store. These garments were snapped up by our buyer at one-third less their regular value Lot consists of jus' ninety-two lades' suits —every model is a handsome new spring style and is beautifully tailored—made to | retait “from 830 to 5750 The entire lot Koes on sale at § o'clock Saturday morning at one price, $20.75, cash or easy payments If you need a suit for Easter be sure and attend this great sal PERSONAL _PARAGRAPHS. nt Attorney General 8. R. Rush is expected home from Tulsa, Okl., early next week. He will have charge of the land frand trials to come before the pres- ent term of the federal courts in Omaha. These trials will not begin before May 3. Miss Rose Hortense Allen, who has been studying at the Frohman school of opera and music in New York, returned to Omaha Thursday morning. She will visit with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Allen, 920 South Thirty-first streei, for the summer. “There are 12,000 vacant houses in Indjan- apolis and in all the eastern cities you can hire all the common labor you want for $1 for 10 hours work,” said W. W. Mc- Combs, concessionaire at Hanscom park, who returned Wednesday from a two months' trip east. He spent most of his time in Philadelphia, but says that no- where aid he find as much “bustle and life as in Omaha,” At Cleveland Mr. McCombs v James Whitcomb Riley, the poet Assi in | PLENTY OF CHANCE FOR WHEAT Thirty Days May Do Great Deal tor | Growing Crop. OFFICIAL REPORT A GOOD ONE Nebraska s Up to Ten Yen Not as Good a the Aver- ®e, but One Year Ago, Says Report. | Grain de port of |the wheat most alers of Omaha déclare the re- e Department of Agriculture on crop is perhaps the best and accurale the department has jever made, according to the beet knowl |edge they can obtain from thelr ceuntry | elevators, whose managers are intimately acquainted with conditions in lTowa | braska, Kansas and Soutn Dakota | “It 1s a little early to tell much about ‘it at present,” said N. Merrlam of the | Merriam & Holmaquist company. “Wheat has been damaged some, but the damage is In s=pots and nature may lot for the wheat crop yet | wheat report may out | course, It may get worse inow a report will carry more weight, as dGamaged wheat in that time, or even less, If it is going to recover at all.” While the Nebraska wheat fs up to a ten- year average according to the Department of Agricultur general bellef Is that it is not in as good condition as it was April 6 last year. The department says Nebraska wheat s U1 per cent of normal. Some dealers belleve this is a little high and from 85 to 8 would catch Nebraska more accurately, but they prefer to wait for the next report before getting much excited over the outlook. [“Colonel” Kuncl Died Wednesday, Mr. Kuncl Lives It's Bordering on a Mutiny, This State of Affairs in Shallen- berger’s Staff. all right—and, of Thirty days from will_recover the 1t's almost & mutiny “1s this Colonel Kuncl? over the 'phone. “No, me the reply. “But 1 asked for Colonel Kuncl and the clerk sald he would call him." “There is no such person as ‘Colonel’ Kunel,” was the reply. ** ‘Colonel’ Kuncl i died yesterday, ‘Mr.” Kuncl is living today.” V. F. Kuncl, prominent Bohemlan resi- dent of Omaha and a former member of Governor Shallenberger's staff, took this way of telling his inquirer that he had re- signed. The “colonel not “stand" for the governor's approval of the &aylight galoon bil) and let the executive know it by rveturning to him his commission. Another of the governor's colonels has signified his intention of resigning h's c-m- mand. This is Ed W. Getten. Mr. Getten is now out of the city, but before he left e told a number of friends that governor signed the biil he would “chuck uniform, sword and everything In the tiver. Mrs. Getten said she did not know what the colonel would do, but that it would be foolish for him to throw his uniform in the river., She belleves that the brass buttons and gold braid could be cut off and the uniform be made into citizen's clothes. “A 40-cent thermometer could be fastened to the sword and it would make quite a decent parlor decoration.’ id Mrs. Getten. Former Colonel Charles Fanning sent his resignation to the governor Wednesday, but Colonel William Kennedy has not re- signed nor sold uniform to the rag- plcker. Colon B, F. Marshall Jacks, will not resign “Theie are two sides to every question,' said Colonel Marshall, “and the governor lis entitled to his views the same as we. T am sorry that he saw fit to sign the day- light saloon bill, especlally as 1 went to Lincoln on the spe train Monday as | spokesman for the Omaha colonels on iis staff to protest against the biil. The colo- nels who have resigned acted too hastily They should have waited until they cooled oft some.” NEW STATION, ce Branch No. 1 ix Re-Eat ed on G 1d Avenue, with J. Kuncl, Clerk, asked a man | could his president of the Pos Postoffice substantion No. 1 has been es- tablished at 1802 Garfield avenue and Jo the title of clerk in charge. This number was formerly substation in Bennett's but that station h given to the department been discontinu Do You Open Your Mouth Like a young bird and gulp down whatever food or medicine may ou want to know something of the com- that which you take into your stomach be offered you? Or, do position and character o whether as food or medici { ne? Most intelligent and sensible people now-a-days insist on knowing what they employ whether as food or as medicine. " Dr. Plerce believes they have a perfect right to INSIST upon such knowledge. So he publishes, broadcast and on each bottle-wrapper, what his medicines are mace of and verifies it under oath. afford to do because This he feels he can well the more the ingredients of which his medicines are made are studied and understood 1ne more will their superior curative virtues be appreciated. For the cure of woman’s peculiar weaknesses and derangements, giving rise to frequent headache, backache, dragging-down pain or distress and kindred symptoms of weakness, Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a most efficient remedy. iving strength to nursing mothers and in or baby’ vorite s coming, thus rendering childbirt Y rescription” is a most potent, strengthenin It is equally effective in lelrcparing the system of the expectant mother safe and comparatively painless. The *“Fa tonic to the general system and to the organs distinctly feminine in particular. It is also a soothing and invigorating nerv- ine and cures nervous exhaustion, nervous prostation, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, chorea or St. Vitus's dance, and other distréssing nervous symptoms attendant upon functional and orTnic diseases of the distinctl * A host of medical authorities of _of the several in { diseases for whicfi it is claimed to be a cure. feminine organs. { all the several schools of practice, recommend each redients of which *‘Favorite Prescription” is made for the cure of the You may read what they say for yourself by sending a postal card request for a free booklet of extracts from the leading authoritie to Dr, R. V. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. come to you by return post. It's foolish and often dangerous to experiment with new or but slightly tested med- icines—sometimes ur, Prescription.” The 5 substitute is made of, but know what yeu are takin ed upon the afflicte as ‘‘just as ., and it w ¢ [ ood"” or better than * Favorite ishonest dealer sometimes insisis that he knows what the proffered Jou don't and it is decidedly for your interest that you should g into yeur stomach and system expecting 1t to act.as a curative, To him its only a difference of profit. Therefore, insist on having Dr. Pierce’s Fa- vorite Prescription. Send 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailin Common Sensc Medical Adviser, 1008 pages cloth-bound. only on a free copy of Dr. Pierce’s Address Dr. Pierce as ahove Some of the damaged | it the | OLD NUMBER! seph Kuncl has been placed In charge with | store, | | | Why Not because It Is Sarsaparilla, but because it is a medicine of | peculiar merit, composed of more | than twenty different remedial | agents effecting phenomens! cures of troubles of the blood, stomach, liver and bowels. | Thus Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures sorof- ula, eczema, anemia, catarrh, nervous- ness, that tired feeling, dyspepsia, loss of appetite, and builde up the system, | | Get it today in the nsaal ligald ahocolated tablet form called lc'r:un':_ At Yo;n; Italian Loses Two Wives From Native Land | Scarcely Gets Second Settled in Cosy Home When In Sta Death, With the bural Thursday afternoon of Mrs. Gaitana Pipitone, an Italian woman, 2 years of age, who died suddenly at the Omaha General hospital Tuesdas, Jack Pipitone, her husband, of Crescent, fa., laid away the second of Mis life's hopes, for which he had left his home in Italy and slaved on a farm In Pottawattamie county for years. Mrs. Pipitone was his wife by second choice, but he had loved her and they had lived happily on his farm until she recently taken serfously 1ll, only months after being married to him Atter working in this country for a num- ber of vears, Pipitone sent money to his 0ld home for the transportation of his boy hood sweetheart to America, where they | intended to be married. She dled suddenly, after making all preparations to come across the ocean and join her love. A year or so later Pipitone wrote home again, proposing that another of his girl friends should come here and become his wife. She was the Galtana, who was only barely to reach here and become settled on het husband's farm before death should cleave thelr happiness. The funeral was held Thursday after- noon at 2 o'clock, beginning at the Hoffman undertaking parlors. 701 South Sixteenth street, and continuing at the church of 8t. Mary Magdalene, Nineteenth and Dodge street Burlal was in Holy BSepulcher cemetery. Jack Pipitone has a brother, Tony, living n Omaha, and also several cousins. three r ys Will Not \ Hold a Jubilee Anti-Saloon League People Will Not Celebrate Their Victory in Public Meeting. No jubllee or jollification meeting will be held by the Anti-Saloon league, and the ap- proval of the daylight saloon bill will be accepted by the drys without any public demonstration. “We don't want to rub It in," said Harry A. Stone, secretary of the league, Thurs- day morning, “and gveryone knows we are glad and the wholg eity should be glad. A big meeting Is not necessary, and if we had one It would not.be showing the right | spirit toward those against the daylight saloon bill." The league will meet in executive session Saturday evening In the rooms of the Omaha Commerclal college to select its candidates for the Board of Fire and Po- lice Commissioners, Sunday, April 18, the league will hold its | first blg meeting to starc the campalgn for its fire and police board members and such other candidates on either ticket [ Trio of Democratic Councilmen Put | BRIDGES, JACKSON AND ELSASSER |to |name of a mingle other democratic candi- |carry on the campaign, while the corpora { with him,”” continued the councilman from Down as Tightwads. Thelr ot Refusal te Pay Thelr Share Campaign Expenwes May Cause Split tn the Jim Clab, Three of the present members of the democratic council—Bridges, Jackson and Elsasser—failed to contribute to the politi- cal jackpot in the primary campaign and this lapse on their part may be the cause of a serious split in the Jimocrat clud Other councilmen are denouncing the tiree slothful members and some do not hesitate say (hat they will not vote for snyone who won't hold up his end. { The eleven democrats on the council in the campaign before the primary election banded themselves together and decided to vise or fall as one man. They issued a slate containing their names only, without the date. This was on one side of the card. On the other was a short resume of thelr “record” of the last three years Over the whole was printed In large type this no- tice and injunction: “These are the men. They are deserving of your vote. Vote for them, When the slate was fssued other demw- cratle candidates felt aggrieved and said they were as good as those now on thé councll. Hard things were said against the combine, but it was supposed that within the combine everything was lovely. Now it transpires that this is not the case. Bach to Pay Twenty-Five. h democratic councilman aspiring for had such as- in % to) Ei renomination—and they all pirations—was required to chip tions put up the rest. Eight of the eleven “came across.” But three failed to put up the hard cash, even in a smaller amount. These three are Lee Bridges of the Second ward, Alma Jackson of the Seventh ward and Pete Flsasser of the Tenth ward. Councilman Bridges felt quite sure of the renomination and his assoclates on the council thought he was safe, but the other two had hard fights on thelr hands. C. J. Canan, running against Jackson, wai counted out three years ago, and Elsasser lost his home ward this year, many demo- crats betting that John Killlan would wrest the nominatfon from the Tenth ward coun- climan. But the three were renominated without the expenditure of the 5 per. “Bridges does nothing but second mo- tions put by Harry Zimman, the republican member; Eisasser is not wanted in his own ward; and Jackson, well I won't say anything about him,” satd Dr. John C. Davis, democratic councilman from the | Eighth ward, when he noticed that Bridges turned In & certified expense account of but $12 as against $49.7 spent by the doctor, Can’t Stand for Piker. “When I go hunting with a man who won't wade out in the pond when it comes his turn to get the ducks, I am through the Eighth ward. “1 had no opposition in my ward, but I contributed my $%5 assessment just the same,” sald L. B. Johnson, member from the Fourth. “I thought it was right that I should help the entire ticket. But while 1 could have been nominated without the expenditure of one penny, Bridges, Jack- son and Elsasser had hard competition, very hard for two of them, but they let us pull them through. I understand that Elsasser prides himself on the fact that he did not even hav® a card printed.” The democrhtic nominees held another meeting Wednesday In the mayor's office, but the formulation of campalgn comm_ttees was postponed until Saturday. SYMPATHY FOR LABORER i KNOCKS MAN OFF JURY Herman Schonfleld Admits Wis Pro- clivities and Reéfected by | whom the organization believes to be the | best fitted | [NEBRASKA TO BE INVADED | | Olty and Kamsas iy wimn | Send Trade Tourists Into State. oux While Omaha wholesalers are planning | an Invasion of lowa on a week's trade | | excursion, Kansas City and Sloux City ,are coming into Nebraska and Des Moines 1s to send a train ever almost the same territory selected by the Omahans. The | | markets will make it interesting for the | | country towns during the next month or| six weeks. | None of the other cities gives such elab- | orate excursions nor does as much for Lhe | country towns visited, however, as Omaha, | {and, with the exception of Kansas C | none stays out as long as Omaha. Kansas | City wlill spend two days in Nebraska. |TEKAMAH 1S_SHY ONE MAN| 1 ek of Oliver U. Vanece, eft There Several Days Ago. | es T Who | | | Entertaining all sorts of fears as to his | | possible fate and whereabouts, the friends [#nd relatives of Oliver C. Vance, % years {of uge and a resident of Tekamah, nhave | ! begun to Inquire what has become of him, | | He is said to have left his home several {days ago and come to Omaha, reglstering | |at the Continental hotel on Fourtec street. Since that time no word has ocen | | receivea from him by his peopie at | kamah. They the police with the request that they | for him METZ. GENUINE BOCK BEER on draught and in bottles on April 9. Ask for it. Order a cas your home. STREET CLEANERS DO WELL | New Machines Put | Satistactory, | Flynn being done by © Work and Are s Tom Satisfactory work three new street flushing machines, ac- cording to the Street Commissioner Tom Flynn. The machines arrived Wednesday { from St. Louls and were put to work that | afternoon in the West Farnam district Thursday morning was put in on the resl | dence section in the western part of the | city, but in the afternoon Douglas and Farnam streets in the down town districts were cleaned. The three machines cost 3,000 the | Dependable Proprictary Medicines. 1t must he admitted by every fair- | minded, intelligent person. that a medicine could not live and ¢row in popularity for | thirty vears, and today hold u record for | thousands uron thousands of actual cures, | a8 has Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Com~ | pound. without possessing great virtue and worth. Such medicines must be and termed both siandard an* every thinking person. actua | lookea wpon Aencudable by | $meatcn & | Lars Peterson have reported the matter to | = Corporation Lawyer, “1 have a sympathetic feeling for the lab- | oring man and in case of uncertainty | would give him the benefit of the doubt.” | Herman Schontield with these words dis qualified himself as a juror in Judge But- ton's court Thursday morning in the suit of John Lynn against the Omaha Packing company | Lynn suffered a cut in the arm while | killing & hog and is suing for $2,000. A Bloody AfM | is lung hemorrhage. Stop it, and cure weak lungs, coughs and colds, with Dr. | King's New Discovery. ¢ and $1.00. For | sale by Beaton Drug Co, Child Saving In Previously acknowledged Payne Investment company... Walter E. Wood, South Omahd Live Stock exchange................ BIOWRS.o.sveseeo s Nagle & Fricke Julius Dreifuss W. L. Masterman Mrs. Eva M. Straig yora Kuncl 4 Fand, 3 ro3ESEEREEEBEBEESES 52 B3| 6333838388832 3888s88 3¢ G v vksal National Live Stock Com. Co Rocco Bros.... 2o g ani Al Charles Lundeen, Tarkio, Mo Mre, Frank L. McCov.......... Frank Nelson, Ariington, Neb Mrs, Albert Noe......... Valley, Neb. Mon_ Brodrick ... C. V. Richards, Hebi B. W. Shonquist ........ M. Woolstein & Co........... @ B Wasinic ron, Neb. Total Balance to raise.. Limit of time, May 1. g2 This Athletic SUSPENDER Res. rts boys trousers stockings without wrinkling. Freedom of circulation and quickness in dress- ing assured. For boys in knee trous- ers. Made for girls also. Only 50 or 75 cents Worth double it. Suy Dealers replace all defec- tive pai be sure it Is W | Medal Flour. OMAHA'S GREATEST Women's Glove Sale The Celebrated and “Centemeri"” makes on sale at 3 and % less than regular prices Fri- day morning. $1.80 XID GLOVES ove. Two-¢lasp, French kid in black, white And colore, nearly every size in this, $1.00, #1.35 and §1.50 grade, @O at f C One and two-clasp “Mannish" Street Gloves, In eape and mocha, tans, sldtes and blacks. $1.26 grade, at 9175 DRESS OLOVES $1.16. Fife dress Kid Gloves, In bludk, white “Centemeri,” “Adler” and Regular $1.50 ‘1.15 and §1.75 quality, at. .. $3.50 LONG GLOVES $1.59, “Oentemeri's” 16-button Kid and Cape Gloves, In black, white and opera shades; $2.50, ",M -n.d ‘1.59 $3.60 values at. 20¢ SHORT LISELE QLOVNES 1te. Wrist leAgth imported Lisle Glov in black and colors. These gloved are regular 266 and 35c areden, at 18¢ $1.00 LONG LISLE GLOVES 3%, Imported 12 and 16-button Lisle Gloves, in black, tans, modes and white, sizes 54, § and ¢4 GO only: $1.00 grades, at. 3 $1.75 LONG MILK GLOVES 98¢ “Eegeers” 16-button, heavy, double finger tippéd Bilk Gloves, in black, white and new shades. 861d under the maker's guarantee. $1.60 &‘ 4nd $1.76 grades, at. o & $2.50 LO! SILE GLOVES $1.15. “Eageer'y’ and ‘Powne's” extra heavy imported and domestic Bilk Gloves, 12 and 16 button, in black, white nd color: $2.00 ‘1.15 8 .00 ILLINOIS WOMAN MAKES REMARKABLE RECORD Picks Eighty.-Five Gallons ef Berries Besides Performing Regular Housework. Mrs. Anna Maring, R. F. D. No. 1, Box| pressed with the claims of L. T. Cooper 57, Dennison, Clark county, Iliinols, relatés| and With the statements made by persons an interesting experience with the Cooper| WhO had used his medicine, that 1 decided remedies, which have grown largely into| '© 1V® It & (riAl, and procured & treatment of Cooper's New Discovery. Popular favor during the past féw Years.| .pvom the first day I started to use the 8he sa | New Discovery I began to improve. It put “For years 1 have suffered agony from|my stomach and bowels into perfect con- stomach trouble, always expeplencing se-| dition, cleansed my system of impuritie vere pmin immediately after eating. 1 had|and built me up rapidly in flesh ana & very poor appetite, and often went with- | strength. I was soon sleeping soundly at out my meals In order to' escape the dis- | night, and In the morning feit rested, and tress that was sure to, follow. My digestion | ready for the day's work. By the time | was bdd, I wae troubled with gas on my | had taken the full treatment my health stomach, and my bowels were in a wretched | Was better than it had been for years, condition. “Last summer I picked elghty-five gal- “I tried everything, 1 heard of in an ef-|1ons of blackberries, besides doing my other fort to get rellef, but could tind nothing | Wotk. The neighbors a!l ramarked how well that would help me. I became weak, run|! was looking. And I told them it was down and greatly discouraged. I could do| Cooper's New Discovery that was doing it scarcely any work and felt miserable all(1 can never be thankful enough for the the time. I had no strength—everything | benefit I have derived from this splendid was a drag, even my very existence. I| Cooper medicine.” oould not sleep, and was #o0 nervous and Cooper's New Discovery Is now on sale worn out that life hardly seemed worth the | by all druggists everywhere. A sample bot- living. tle mailed free upon request by addressing “Having read several announcements of the Cooper Medicine Company, Dayton, the Cooper remedies, 1 was finally so im- | Ohio. man guides you to ] ® 6 [ When going to California, wouldn’'t you like the personal attention of an experienced tourist agent? One who knows the country travérsed; who helps make the journey a pleasant on who takes special care of elderly persons, women and children. The Santa Fe carries newest style tourist sleepers every day on three of its four trains between Chicago, Kansas City and Cal- ifornia. The fastest tourist sleeper service to California. Three times a week these excursions are personally cen- ducted. Our de luxe folder, “To California in a Tourist Sleeper,’ télls how cozy the cars are, and how economical—Free on request. California homeseekers should ask for our San Josquin Valley land folder, telling all about the greatest irrigated valley in the world where intensive farming pays largest profits. Samuel Larimer, Pass. Agt.. Until April 30 one-way colonist tickets At bt ™" 1o Glifornin are an ale st $38 from Chicago and $26 from Kansas Oity. Des Moines, la. '25 LOW ONE WAY COLONIST RATES Every Bay te Aprit 30, 1808 Te PORTLAND, TACOMA, SEATTLE and Many Other Points in the Northwest. Train Service and Equipment the Best that Money Can Buy, via Union Pacific Eleotric Blook Signals all the wa Tive Safe Road to Travel Ask about the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Seattie, Wash. Inguire at CITY TIOKRT OFFICE, 1834 FARNAM ST, "Phomes Bell Doug. 1928 aad Ind. A-3281, Oregon u Washington and Idaho