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BEE: UNION PACIFIC COTS TIME |1, sume owe o0 ;:;z:;::r,;.f"]nma CROWS SHOW CORN*Lock Me Up, Pvipe I’ve Embezzled Company Money” "RIDAY, MA al Lops Off Two Hours of Omaha-Denver : M other May Lose Trains’ Schedules, | { = Reason Over Boy \}4 EFFECTIVE HERE ON xmrm'rn; ill.n. John McKenna of South Omaha | ¥» High Priee | in Serious State Because of nets in Back of Lost Son. the Big Immigration to | — Northwest. | Nothing has as yet been learned of James \M«Krnnl. the young son of Mr. and Mrs b {John McKenna, Thirtieth and Q streets, . The Union Pacific announces that it will | go,en Omaha, who left home Monday after ahortsn its running time on its Denver ! noon, and Officer Morrison, of Mrs. to be effective through Kansas City May | 4 of lost ;i = 8, snk ARt S, - | danger o ng her mind unless the boy is . | tound soon. No. 11, the midnight train through Omaha | Yankees Shovel Plant Ki Away Snow and| of Cereals. Stein-Bloch Summer Clothes As the Season Proves the Styles I GRAIN INSTEAD OF PINE TREES Tennessee Man Will Prepare Exhibic tion for Omaha Show Displaying What Dixie Is Doing with Kin Corn, This is Confession of Steve Schmidt, Salesman for Voegele & Dinning. “Lock me up. I've been embesziing company money and I'm tired of it." sald Steve Schmidt, a salesman foc the Voexelo & Dinning Confectionery company, Thur day morning to Chief of Detectives Save age at the police station He would not give furthor particulars, but insisted that whet he said was rignt Corn as well as pine trees grow in Maine. William D. Hurd of the University of Maine has notified the National Corn ex- position that the snow has been shoveled off some ground where pine trees were HETHER it is a business suit for a 4% |80 the police placd him in a ced in the for Denver, will leave Chicago at the h:;:";h:"'“:‘v "n"r“"v":‘:') oo g Dol st "‘:‘) "’h"‘"":'”‘ are ETOWIE | poljce station ou the charke of embes S . f th d « same time as now and will leave Omaha | JF OTY on 1o £5 fishing in fcorn o send to Omaha and compete With |ment. When seen later he said he had | ummer morning, or € boal' ~4 0 1099 Pu . 00l Sercy, iriuies Sartier | 8 ir park, and he has not been seen | the corn from Mexico, where the banana |peen appropriating his firm's money for | than now and arrive at Denver at 230 p, | *M¢® The police departments of Omaha |trees had to be grubbed before the corn | taken a considerable id, he did not some time and had sum, just how much, he know. and South Omaha have been notitied and & | could be planted diligent search has falled to find any trace | This {s the latest varlety added to the Of the lad. Every part of the park anG|big corn show which is in the making. 1t is thought Schmidt's confessed pecula- the lake have been searched, and the| . A Mooers of the Tennessce Agricul- |tions have preyed on his mind. for he :;‘lxh:;ulw::\ :\x;n ml:'lml l;: h':-r:”“;n 'l';' | tural college will prepare an exhibit show- | ;‘;"":"" h']’:"::[’l‘ :" ’_‘e“:"r::“f“::‘ r‘h“_ ysy ot gy e d:::m#’:. RN st ® | ing some of the corn which is now being | 0 pers in -“f"m- Neht. - Wheet: dsned Mr. McKenna, the tather, 1s a|Produced in that state, where for years It| pou¢ iy family he broke down and wept. grocer. at Thirtieth and Q streets. ll-;":;:z‘:l:‘r‘i"lh:’ ‘::[\:":y\r':‘ ‘:'::‘u'.' made | The man lives with his wife and three HESITATES TO PUT UP BAR m. No. 12, the east-bound Denver train will leave Denver at 2:46 p. m. and arrive at Omaha at 7:2 a. m. and at Chicago at 9:15 p. m. . The Bt. Louis-Denver train will make up | its extra time west of Kansas City. It will leave Kansas City for Denver at 10:% ¢ m. and arrive at Ellis at 7 a. m. It will leave Ellis at 6:10 a. m. and arrive at Den ver at 4:30 p. m., instead of at 6.3 p. m., as At present. It will leave Denver for Cheyenne at 7:06 p. m. and arrive at Chey- enne at 10:3 p. m. Returning it will leave Cheyenne at 8:30 a. m., arrive at Denver at walk or the links, or a lightweight overcoat or a raincoat for a cool evening, the judgment exercised by your Stein-Blocfi\ commissioners and designers at the season'’s start to-day stands justified. We were at pains to discover the really fashionable thought for the business man— | a good pen of hogs R. J. Dinning, of the firm employing Prof. Mopers has demonstrated that Ten- | Bchmidt, sald that he could not state what nessee will produce corn in sufficlent quan- | Amount was involved, although he thought 108 Seave: Dettver ¢ 10 and hertvé, st oo '_”:, """,'h:" ":" y-? """; G004- | jijes to make & good living for a family | it might be rather large for such & man as A Kansas City at 850 a. m. Matntenance T "® . |without making the grain into whisky. [Schmidt to take, as he contessed to have for men Of a“ ages WhOSC associations de_ Price, of Farm Products. L1t appears that Mra Gondson tried to | Ome Of the corn will be sent to Omaha. | been embessling funds for several years. “The high price of all farm products 18 | do her whols duty to the children, hut the | From Massachusetts comes word from | Schmidt had worked for the candy manu- mand that they be well dressed—and who back of the enormous Immigration move- | plaintiff nevertheless has not established |Kenyon L. Butterfleld, president of the | facturers for about four years. ments to the northwest In search of cheap |any reason for the antipathy to the little | 88Ticultural college, that his state will| Until the matter is looked up on. the val”e economy lands,” sald George B. Haynes, immigra- | girl,” declared Judge Redick in district | make an exhibit at Omaha. As a member | company books and accounts, no action - tion. agent of the Milwaukee, who was in|court Thursday, speaking with regard to [of the president's Country Life commis- |toward prosecution or a settiement will be . 3 Omaha Thursday. Mr. Haynes Is an|the suit for separate maintenarce brought |sion Mr. Butterfield visited the 190§ expo- |taken. In the meantime, Schmidt sits in We have adapted the tlme.honored Omaha product who fis doing yeoman|by Mre. Helen Goodson against her hus-|sition and has been boosting It consis-|his cell, industriously reading evervthing service for the Milwaukee in bullding the country adjacent to the company's new line to the Pacific coast ¥ ““On top of the present high price comes the announcement of Patten that the high prices will continue for a year at least He I8 right when he says that the incre up | band, Abraham E. Goodson, a masseur The judge did not finally rule on the case, but declared that he would not grant the decree of Mrs. Goodson, there being a possibility of ultimate reconciliation “These parties can't live together,” sug- gested Mrs. Goodson's attorney “That s true at tently since. In Montana Alfred Atkinson. agronomist at the Montana Bchool of Agriculture, is having 8o many inquirfes and receiving so much encouragement that some $3,000 will likely be invested by the great state for an extensive exhibit, besides the individual in all the papers in a vain effort to foroget his trouble. He occasionally remarks about his family. Stein-Bloch tailoring methods to these cor- rectly judged styles and fabrics. | See them at your best clothier’s. They Stoecker Loses in crop acreage has not held pace with the increase in population and that there is a real demand for farm products. The farm- ers of the more populated districts realize that now Is the time to secure cheap farms for the coming generation and the movement this spring Is unprecedented. “Dakota Is now settled with a farm on nearly every quarter section for twenty | miles on each side of our line and settlers | pa are pouring into Montana on every train. ‘The high price of farm products 1s making cheap lands quite attractive, for under the present prices a farm may soon be mude to pay for itself and no one realizes this bet- ter than the farmers who are flocking to the northwest, a village to a train at times’ It is a sort of an equalization proposition for the young men here have a chance to branch out and make a stake for them- selves. The cost of living in the towns is increasing -and it is some times hard to &t ahead even enough to own a home, but here are chances offered to own a farm and home in a few years." Largest Map of United Stats. ‘The Milwaukee road has sent to London what is believed to be the largest map of the United States ever shipped abroad for tios m court, “but they may i etled. would be. Whereupon the attorneys fell to sparring. Mrs. Goodson's counsel suggested that the rriage state was the most sacred of re- lations and reconciliation to be real must | that to drive Mrs. Goodson back to her husband through the pinch of poverty would not make for such a real reconciliation. The other side thought Mrs would be just what she wanted and utterly spoll any making up in time to come. Judge Redick attorney: present,” replied n as a untary; that Goodson a money allowance sald he would hear at more length Monday, SURVEYS WILL BE MADE FOR DRAINAGE DITCH ON TUESDAY First Real This Canal in Sarpy County. Commissioners of Sarpy county with their | street. It w surveyor, Roy N. Towle, civil engineer, of ultimately be recon- It would not be wise for this court to put a bar in the way of such reconcliia- decree of separate maintenance to grant tep to Be Taken Toward the entries. Girl Within an Inch.of Her Life Struck by Police Auto at Six- teenth and Howard. now the | ternoon. And If it would never have known the difference. Sixteenth at a rapld clip. people were standing on the on Sixteenth going at a rapid rate. with others w turned in sirl Young Woman Comes Near Being The new auto police patrol eame within a narrow margin of striking a girl at Six- teenth and Howard streets Wednesday af- had struck her she The big automobile was going north on A crowd of southwest corner walting for the South Omaha car to round the corner when the auto whisked in and around the car just as the latter from Howard The crossing the street Store Sale Suit Legislator is Required to Return $500 to Man Who Was to Buy Him Out. Charles Mueller wins 800 from William F. Stoecker by verdict of a jury in Judge Kennedy's court, the case turning on the question of whether the plaintiff was bound to buy a number of slot machines. Stoecker sold a cigar store to Mueller who paid 8600 down. Then Mueller discovered, he says, that the slot machines were part of the inventory and he decided to with- draw. Stoecker, who is a member of the legis- lature, declined to pay back the money and the suit followed, with a victory for the plaintiff. CALHOUN PIONEER IS DEAD John Ketchmark, Father of the Late Mrs. Lorenzo Crounse, Dies of Old Age. ROCHESTER, N. Y Write for ‘“Smartness’’— ‘THIS LABEL IN A COAT REPRESENTS FIFTY-FOUR YEARS OF KNOWING HOW CHICAGO: will fit you with more fashion than any other clothes in Amerfca, either made-to- order or ready-to-wear. lled with Spring and Summer fashion photographs THE STEIN-BLOCH COMPANY NEW YORK: : from east to west and the auto came close ) display at the Golden West and American [ OMah®, and o number "'.do";f'""n';w"": Of | mough to the girl to brush her skirts. She| John Ketchmark, a ploncer of Fort Cal- Offices and Shops 1022 Republic Building The Fifth Avenue Building Industries exhibition at London. SRQSEhove vabe ons AL L TLYPE i houn, father of the late Mrs. Lorenzo ditch, will leave Omaha Tuesday In auto- | Was terribly frightened, but not worse ? The map s 47 feet 9 inches long and 13 feet 6 Inches high, is painted in colors on transparent tracing cloth and is flluminated by electricity from the back. It is flanked | of improvement mobiles to go over the line of the proposed which will drain 40,400 acres Douglas and Sarpy county lands. out In wrath at the fleeting autolst. than the spectators, many of whom cried “That young woman may tell her friends Crounse, dled of old age and paralysis of the heart shortly after midnight Wednes- day night at his home at Calhoun, He was 83 years old. He was a retired farmer and % ol N FOR SALE BY : on the right and left hand sides by twenty | This Is the first step necessary in the :;:‘.f:',m:,'_;,r:"v:‘::m':: ,':,':rd:; 'l';: owned much land In the vicinity of his glass transparencies showing in colors some | plan to dig the ditch and have the state treat tas, Pith many others for the base |home town. Calhoun was his home for of the best scenery along the Milwaukee. | “underwrite” the bonds necessary under |y % forty ye Jgd f ! 4 g ¥ vleces of advertising matter regarding the ! ' The map is to occupy & conspicuous place in the Chicago bullding at the London ex- hibitlon this summer. In connection with | ex the map sixteen cases contalning over 50,000 Milwaukée Foad and the new line to the Pacific coast, the Chicago, Puget Sound rail Milwaukee & y, have been forwarded to London. The shipment is in charge of C. C. Morrison, immigration agent, who will have charge of the forelgn exhibit for the Milwaukee. When W. H. Murray arrived at his desk Thursday morning he found a big bunch of American beauty roses awaiting him. | "® The question which the office force was | VAluable now. It Is estimated that the ditch be as Though many the new Nebraska law, which is said to be one of the best drainage district laws in stence. Following the trip of the commissioners, a meeting will be held in Papillion Tuesda: Juneé 6, when the boundarles age district ments made from this h Few ditch enterprises have promised to ditch. of the owners are nonresi- dents and represented only by real estate | d8Y. agents of Omaha, these owners are willing | P- Breen resuiting in the transfer. to pay the extra tax that their lands might will popular as the Papillion well drained, and, though they of the drain- be fixed and apportion- ball park. BREEN INADVERTENTLY RAISES Writes Have #5,000 Where He Should Written $2,000 and Court Permits Amendment. The suit of Michael Mitchell against the Omaha Packing company took a sudden jump from district to federal court Thurs- a mistake on the part of Attorney J. Breen, who appears for plaintiff, asked leave Wednesday to file a new petition in the suit and was granted it. The original are SUM OF SUIT OVER DOUBLE He had two daughters and six sons, of whom Mrs. Mary Crounse, a daughter and Joe Ketchmark, a son, died before him. The surviving members of the family are his wife, Mrs. Mary Ketchmark, 78 years old, the daughter, Mrs. Emma Benenick of Seattle, Wash., and the sons, Henry, Fred Edward, Emil and Willlam Ketchmark. The /body is at the Gentleman undertak- ing rooms on North Sixteenth street. It will be taken to Calhoun and buried there in the old cemetery Saturday afternoon after services at the Ketchmark home at 23 o'clock. CLERICAL ERROR IS COSTLY Carries Out Plans as Announced to Become National Bank. "Berg G London Agency, Selfridge & Company, Ltd, Oxford Street, W. CITY SAVINGS ASHS CHARTERID. C. Patterson Shows Bank How to Be Financier BURT HILL WILL BE CUT DOWN Twenty-Fourth Street Will Be Opened This Summer. unable to decide was what Murray had | Wl Increase them from $#4) tu 360 per acre. | Petition had been MLRM; “;:*"km"“"d Misplacement of Two Letters May vill be % by bon copy from V. Breckenridge, Prevent the City f been dolng to draw forth such a tribute| The trip Tuesday will be made over both |a car reven e y from Open. trom some admiring friends. The question | branches, beginning at Ralston, and also ! attorney for the packing company. and ing an Alley. HALF MILLION OF CAPITAL STOCK LONGEST STREET IN THE CITY s still unsettied and ' any Informatlon | at will be thankfully received by the office foree. \ “Frontler day will be bigger than éver this year, for the celebration will last five days and the promoters of the affair are Lane, following the line to where proposed to have the ditch meet the Mis- wouri river a few miles above the mouth of the Platte it is|filed this in the office of the district clerk. The case went on and a jury was secured by the time the Wednesday afternoon ses- slon ended. Thursday morning Breckenridge rose Read Nebraska Clothing company's an- | when court convened and entered a mo- A clerical error in recording a deed In 185 is preventing the city authorities from opening an alley between Leavenworth and Mason streets, from Thirty-ninth street to Fortieth street and ‘unless the record can be changed the city will be unable to hold Large Subscription to Additionul Stock Alrendy Made and Change s Expected to Be Made by July 1. Borrows Money from First National to Buy Its Property on Tax it Knew Not Of. This is a story of some financing dis- closed by the sale of Ralph Place at Forty- Cat of Twelve Hundred Feet Will e Made Through the Hill at a Cost of About Six Thon- sand Dollars. anticipating bigger crowds than ever be. | NOURCEment on page [tion that the case be removed to the | title mlfl t"’: fl;le.v and to enforce second street and Dewey avenue to the tore," sald W. S. Basinger, assistant Ovans Saake €00 Gt United States circult court, saving that| 4% 0 f" 0 teAr down & fence whish en-| . ication was made Thursday = by |state of Nebraska for the site of the| wne Burt street hiil at Twenty-fourth will i general passenger agent of the Union| yLgA, OKl, May 2.~ There is nothing | the suit had been for 2000 on the orginal | “ull Lo L0 4 4ed to the oity in 159 | the directors of the City Savings bank | orthopedic hospital. be cut down this summer and Twenty- i Pacifie, who retumed Thursday morning | in the report (hat Crasy Snake has offered | petition, but that on the copy which 9 " It involves the sale of a tax title under from Denver and Cheyenne. will start with “The show | 1o utomobile Hoftinan of who is here toda, surrender to me.” sald Colonel This Is the Oklahoma state militia, Roy | Breen had filed it had been raised to $.000. Breen admitted that the change was made in his handwriting, but stated that it was due to an Inadvertence or mistake inelining to the belief that been removed the cause h; Give Five Hundred Dollars Tow the Child Saving Institute by J. W. Eller. A short time ago it was fenced in. Wednesday City Abstracter Hartley, who has charge of the ocity's realty, ordered the fence removed and the alley reopened to traffic. The city's au- or Supper Post for a charter to become a national with an authorized capital of $600,000. The new institution will be known as the City National bank, if the charter is granted by the comptroller. which there is bank the past have been entirely to the stockholders, Ustactory it s under favorable The Bee a week ago that the City Savings bank would become & national bank, a rge amount of commercial business has the scavenger law and a “sting of in- gratitude” which Is the subject of much comment among reat estate dealers. Ralph Place, consisting of thirty-two lots bounded by Dewey avenue, Emilie street, property But Judge Redick has set aside the Pat- Place for the orthopedic hospital the agents had to settle with Patterson and he Is said to have been paid $5,000 rather than fourth street will be opened to t affic be- fore fall, making this the longest street in the city. Twenty-fourth runs from Flor- ence to South Omaha with only one turn, at 8t. Mary's avenue. on his part and that he had confused the | thority wes questioned and when the city | D0 doubt will be issued, as ‘'ha new or-| - % A cut 1,20 feet long will be made througl case wtih another. abstracter looked up the records he found | anization has unusual strength L\":;L:“‘::‘: {;‘r'r‘""e‘“y“'::e """Vr:;""':;: the hill, the cut to be thirty-five feet deep Judge Duy declared that he would take|that the deed was recorded between the| President John F. Flack, of the savings |, === pio. aeon ge D.' Py oe|at its deepest point. The street will be | the statement as made, give plaintiff leave | city and “J. Weller," instead off “J. W.|bank said: B s -hndldln' comeltitty feet wide and 2,00 cubfc yards of to amend to $2,000 and overrule the motion | Eller.” Unless Mr. Eller can be found and| “A large subscription to the additional ;‘m of Ahé Tbubtes heirs. and the Firet earth must be moved. The council expecis | for a transter. the record changed title to the alley will [ stock has already been obtained and It Is | oo o) pank. to secure bids at a figure considerable lese Breckenridge then asserted that his mo- | P® ® matter of question. expected the change will be made July 1. [ "yt SRSl e rassed D. C !:ln izb"l:' !’::0;“:“\ z d, "‘:l “.‘m’"' ’"" V' > W as been set aside for tion was simply one of courtesy, that the Apal]lf‘llrl‘olllrl ;m\h also been m;‘u»h ll:‘)r Patterson, & lawyer and real estate deaier, { (19 Safe side b o suit having been entered for $.000, and he | % PR ” ~— | mearly haif of the morigages whicl ® | hought the scavenger tax title to the prop- i | himself having tendered”a bond, the case| @ @ ” savings bank now holds. All the mort-| ..oy o $2,600. m:n:;::‘reo::r:“: .t:::'.ug:.: -;:l:r::; | (spe facto removed as a matter of pro- 00 gages will have to be disposed of by| mg produce this $2,600 Mr. Patterson went me. i prbopbege Wl Jogo B il Moy | July 1 to the First National bank and borrowed SRS o5 Sacal A the pmeunt aab R e 2 street to and along a portion of the eastern Considerable strength will be added to|the amount. As soon as he could get to P The court decided to dismiss the jury and | a Dound of. Rivbrviaw Sask The Park " v : the bank by additional directors and | che county treasurer's office he bought the | P0UMdary pas. 3h the question cf urisdiction Is up to the | gt Breakfnst. Lunch {officers. AW the profita of the bank in|iax deed on the First National bank'g{b0erd is doing this work and @010 cublc federal ccurt, with the weight of opinion | yards of earth will be moved, that much belng taken out of a cut and used in a fill circumstances that the new stockholders | terson deed because Patterson did not give | the work extending hver‘lm :;n of the become assoclated with the institution. proper notice and his deed was faulty. boulevard. The deepest fill will be forty METZS SWELL THE FUND Delicious Since the announcement was made In| When the state wanted to buy Raiph |feet The contract for the work was let (o Dugan & Naylon at 11 cents per cubic yard and work was begun the first of last Bullding. | been voluntarily offered to the imstitution | have him carry the case to the supreme | Week. Subscriptions to the bullding fund of the in the event It carried out the plans an-|court, all because he could borrow money - 8 b . - . . It you desire a clear complexion take » g St g g, o5 gl I nounced. So, many business men have | from a bank with which to buy the bank's | ol .\ oring Laxative for constipation and | $70,000 mark and 3384273 ls left t0 raise called at the bank and written Lo officers | Property on a tax which the bank did not What “Kayser” Means before June 1. The fund was given a boost of $500 in subscriptions from Charles A new dainty of pearly white } SOSR and directors expressing tion at the expansion of thelr grat!fi the institution know existed when Patterson got on. Mver trouble, as it will stimulate these organs and thoroughly cleanse your sya- % Z and Fred Mets, and of §165 from the and officers of national banks In the city N ’ B : k Block :;'.“'_;m:h,n"n,:::‘we;::f flo v ';” b ‘That name in the hem of a silk glove means thi: | Thurasay Bridge club. The condition of el have encouraged the move to such an ex- €W ric 2 % - A 3 corn, by the makers of Postum by all druggist The makers of the gloves have the infinite skill attained |the fund to date is &s follows: . tent, that the outlook for a prosperous by 25 years of experience. Fyawiossly . scknowledged and Grape-Nuts, banking house could mot be much better on Leavenworth ilding rermit " . d 4 ~ Mets X President Flack stated that the bank J. Gluck, Fortisth and Dy mirets ‘The pure silk fabric is our own famous weave. It is so y “Bridge ciub Toastie WG AL would maintain a savings department as — brick siofe Pufding. SW; Mart Themp wl;::fipt:feflly Woven, we put a guarantee in each pair. | Westiminater” Bresoy. 85 oasties are_ fully cooked,| /. 10 depostiors now have 311000 | Building to Be Erected at Corner of i?:'m: a'i:fi:. n‘u.n“.( 5, . r.udm '"« illi ~ Y 1 1 deposit In e institution, almost all of < Nort reet, rame wel ' t is perfection, as millions of women know. The SR L PRI rolled into thin wafers and T hariacn) an ihien" the thens (19 Nineteenth by Mrs, C. H. 82,0, G. W. Jones, Twenty-elghth avenu. tips are our pateat tips. Omaha ..oy ks 10| toasted a ori lden-b paving interest Andrews. and Fort street, frame dweliing, 81,50 . The finish is due to fifty operations through which every Maxine Helen Hreuel. 1w 0as! a crisp, golden-brown. e Kayser glove goes. 1 ompson’ . A brick business block three or four|——— { Sinc: the women of today were children, these b Jire, SRET" | Ready to eat direct from the LOWE BOUGHT SOME LOTS stories high and covering & tract 14 by | 3 ave U E. Daady 1.0 : . - d 00 fes t the o f Nineteenth and been the standard silk [ . Travis 1® box with cream or good milk. JiEnene o o 3o Moo g, Uo el o samnary o6 If you wish dis- i gloves. But you may get H. Willlams he e ntad : ; near future by Mrs C. H. Andrews, whe ¢ a glove that is vastly infe- ” Eive Graham oo {-EEThe exquisite flavor and crisp has just secured the properts. The 1ats|| timctive filnish and i rior unless you look for the " 1) 3 ?| tenderness i E. E. Lowe of Hyannis has been sum-| were purchased by John Simons of Cedar 0 same in !hzhm R e v b oy (?e]lghts ‘the most moned to appear as a defendant in the | Rapids, Neb, and deeded them to his a mother's care of : George Teeny 1o | fastidious epicure or invalid. Muskogee (Okl) land and lot trials. Mr. | daughter, Mrs. Andrews, who has lved Hn: our bundle : Short Silk Gloves foyme Toie® Y- Lowe was formerly United States|on them for & number of years, but has en, y [ S0c, " P Friend ... y 100 | ! . N commissioner at Hyannis. His part|recently moved to the Dunsany apart. ¢ 8¢, 81 oo’"uA “ Marshall Colling 10 The Taste Lm“" in the Oklahoma land deals is merely | ments. 'hould come to us. Long Silk Gloves ?",:’,.."'“fl','f" Lo as an innocent purchaser of some of the 75¢, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 Paten e o F 12! Popular pkg. 10c. lots and the subsequent transer of them A Total Eeclipse | t M“M Mildred Thompson 100 | Fami P to other parties who are the principal'de. | Of the functions of stomach, liver, kidnsys PURITAH.H | | JULIUS KAYSER & CO. Makers Silk Gloves Unknown Smith . 1o | Large Family size 18c. | jo 2005 "“The transactions in which he 1| 4nd bowels is quickly disposed of with u i & ; 10 summoned are the same in which Governor | Electric Bitters. ¥c. For sale by Beaton UNDR \ stz L Sold by Grocers, o Haskell sa prominently figures Drug Ca L 3 s