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. PATENTS D 0. BARNELL, Paxton Bik Tel ‘Bldg._Book frea ovil PERSONAL Jeaned, made Into fall styles ;chm- se’'s Hat Fety, 5 N. 14 Lump, $6.60. R. H W. 3105, B.2345. OMN CANE ls in town. Now Is the m’m |l: mAm trees, trellises, grape vines. k 7704, Ind. A-3649, Red 1510 Ching 6Ll 8. Hih Ave mBN57 Your corn comea out or your uarter comes back when you use Corn Jelly. Haines Drug Co. 1610 ¥a MAGNETIC g™y o JAMES RUBY can _get insurance monej by writing John or Charley. (OME for women during confinement. w Fina homes for bables where mothe cannot care for them. _ Bables boarded. ‘or. terms, address Mrs, Martha A. Lee, 401 oft Bt., Omaha, Neb. Phone Doug- ax 1681, SENT and repair all makes of sew- Inw:ml;mnu. PPhones: Tnd A 1663; Doug. l‘. Neb. Cyele Co., corner 15th and Har- ney. PRIVATE bables for adopt ftortum, 40 15t Avi H - d toupees for men. GRIFFITH, WIGS l.!nlnd 17 Frenger Blk. DR._EGGERS, private confinement home. 1616 Martha 8 ‘el. Douy 6230 THE famous Velvetina Tollet Goods. For sale by aull druggists or phone Douglas 6603. THE SALVATION ARMY solieits castoft in fact, anything you do not nced ct; repair and sell at 134 N. ‘lth cost of collection to the worthy () Qeil’ phone Douglas 4135 and wagon il call aurl;% confinement; Good Samaritan Council Bluf! I MASSAGE AND BATHS. R-308, Old Boston Store Bldg., ith floor. 120 So. 16th St. Stairway on Douglas St REAL ESTATE (Continued.) ! FARM AND RANCH LAND FOR SALE!FARM AN THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 10, 1909. REAL ESTATF D RANCH LAND FOR SALE «Continued.) E more per annum. reference. babies. "Phone, Douglas 7801. Onlitornta. California Fig Orchards FOR $1,750.00—$250.00 down, balance $25.00 per month, we will turn over to you in 5 years, 10 acres of bearing fig trees, which, based on years of exper- ience, should bring you in an income of $1,500.00 or Where will you find any legiti- mate business making a better showing than this? You do not have to live on the land unless you wish; In the event of your not living on the property, the carefully guarded as if you were there yourself. If you do wish to live on the land, you can do so after having paid in 25 per cent of the purchase price. Call or write me for further particulars. This is an ideal annuity for wife and INTERNATIONAL LAND CO. GEORGE D. PERRINE, AGENT. K G tri n W Ei e 18, B Bl to Uni Bl Gilt edged Na Pi 331-332 Paxton Block 3 8 P, MAGNETIC Treatments. Prott, 219 8 16th St OMAHA Stammerers' Ins., Ramge Bldg. Emmerlin Doug. 6186, Private confinement home. Mrs. Dr, King, 184 N. 2ith, Tel, Web. 260 Ind. B-1650. A NEW BOOK, the “Underworld Sewer," by Josle Washburn; price, 31.50. Sold by Bwartz & McKelvey, 10 8. 15th 8t., between Dopglas and Dodge. #Tam de_Voy. Manicuring and massage. ' 16th St Fiat 8 Phone D. 1686 w rent at LIEBEN'S, 410 Howard. D. 4115 E. ALLEN of Chicago, ghetic and massage treatme! 11th 8t LADIES—A confinement home; diseases sclentifically and quickly treated. Address O &, care Bee. " POULTRY Masque Suits alt _glow, 207 N. Use U-NEED-A Poultry Tonlc for days; if your egg Increase does not twice for your tonic. your money will be re- unded. D, E. Neb, == Johnson Co. PRINTING '"PHONE_IND. A-2620 for good printin Lyngstad Printtng Co., 16th & Capitol Av REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE DEALERS, Omah; LD ABSTRACT CO., Est. 186; prompt mervice; get our prices. 1TM Farnam St GANGESTAD, 404 Beo Bldg. Tel. D, 807, — PAYNE INV. CO., first floor N. Y. Life. HENJAMIN R. E. CO., 477 Brandeis Bldg. R et !mn lflATE TITLE-TRUST CO. HA TAMFON, President REAL ESTATE & RE/ E H. Ambl A R L o F & REAL ESTATE LOANS 812-20 Barker Blk. D. 7. CITY PROP! Y ALE. Lady from California Wants an offer on lots (11) and (12), block (5), Bedford Place. Located at the southeast corner of 334 and Pinkney Sts. These lots are full size; on grade and | be sold very cheap indeed. Give us offer at once. A. P. Tukey & Son, 'Phone Doug. 2181 444-446 Bd. of Trade Bldg. 904 SOUTH 33D This 9-room all modern house strikes us a8 being one of the best bargains in the city. All rooms are good size, east front, paved street, barn; only one block to street o If you can use a house of this size sure to look at this, then call E. W. ttenberg, at D. 1810 or 4% Board of Trade Bldg. (291) — T-ROOM HOUSE—All modern _except paved street, on car line, located on near Hickory. Price, $3.000. Terms good party. % P, O. NIELSEN & CO., QN Y. Life Bidg. Both 'Phones. 6-ROOM, NEW, MODERN In north end Near car, paved street; la; ONLY $250 CASH Balanca to suit—elther morthly, quarterly, ini-ann |} or annually. NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., Sulte 624 N. Y. Life Bidg. SIX-ROOM HOUSE AT A BARGAIN, We can sell you a 6-room house consist- ing of hall, parlor, dining room and kitchen downstairs; three bedrooms and DAtH upstairs, all modern except heat; beautiful lot x5, with nice shade; in cholee nelghborhood; block from car, for $£.750. House ia very convenlently arranged, Owner leaves for California this month. This property i very cheap at price NAm SHIMER & CHASE (CO., Sole Agents. 17th 8t., Opposite Court House, LAST ONE, BE QUICK. Swroom, ' modern bungalow, Ave: a No. 1 home; large lot; birch doors: floored attie: extra well bullt; priced low for quick sale; easy terms. See us at once. HARWOOD & HARWOOD. 418 Bee BIdg. Ind. A 428 Red 4204 "WEST FARNAM RESIDENCE LOT Bast front, sightly location, 50x190, close Best homes in clty. All specials paid. W must see to appreciate. o 8 O’KEEFE REAL ESTATE 0., | 1000 N. ¥ Life. Doug. or A-2ll. DO YOU want a home all in good shape, ¢ lght, city water, bath, foot tront and 13 ground, lots here have nefeased in 6 years from and ‘mnn« this s a fine ln;-fi-nm-m?onx:o » will sell for 0 20 per cent un e spring: " must |I...v5 00 cash nee on time. For sale by owner, 3584 Ave, A. Council Riutrs i vy 7-ROOM, NEW, MODERN Howse. Large lot. In western part of city, VERY EASY TERMS Desira '{v neighborhood, and pri NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO. Suite 3¢ N. Y. Life Bidg. FOR yOour real sstate quick returms, M Reme e with me. no_sain o pay. W W Mitchall, Hoard' of Trads AR, Omaha b 18- ALL MODERN HOUSK—South 234 o Paved street and pald for, within Kin tance. Pri 0. Terms. P. 0. NIBLSEN & CO., 08 N. Y. Lite Bidy Both "Phones. 208 Camden |\ CITY PROPERTY FOR SALE ‘Tukey's Special Sale Will close tomorrow, Wednesday, No- vember 10, at 6 o'clock p. m. Bids must be in at that time. Most of the property advertised is vacant; there is, however, one very good house at 2864 Harney St. that is included in the list. There are so many pleces of property advertised that there is not likely to be many bids on any one piece. There are some very good lots at 39th and Chicago and 31st and Dodge Sts. There are quite a number of lots in West End addition that need filling, but are close to very good property. Make your own terms in bids and bid what the property is worth to you. A. P. Tukey & Son, 'Phone Doug. 2181. 444-445 Board of Trade Bldg. WANTED TO EXCHANGE—160 acres in North Dakota for residence in Omaha or South Omaha. Dan Vance, owner of the land, South Omaha, 46th and West Q. A _chol butldi lo, “Hillsdale.” §1.08 cash, §1 a week. ices §100 to $200; terest, no taxes. Bee us. HASTINGS & HEYDEN. 164 Harney St J WANT an offer on lot 2, block 20, origl- nul plat of the eity of ()maha, with two houses, 1908 and 1911 California street. Lol 66x132 teet. THOMAS BRENNAN, New York Life Bui'ding. WE DARE YOU To make a reasonable offer on fair busm- ness terms for 6-ROOM HOUSE AND LOT. No. 2602 S. 20th Ave. NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., Suite 624 N. Y. Idfe Bldg. REAL ESTATE FARM AND RANCH L AND FOR SALE “ WE are making homes for a million peo- ple on the greatest irrigated tract in Cali- fornia. Our new booklet “California—~Now or never,” the finest California book ever printed, 10c. Easy payments. See our big exhibit at Chicago's great land show, Nov. 2 to Dee. 4. We want an army of “Live ones” with us o bulld this greatest new community. Organize a colony, Write today for free Information. H. L. Hollister, 25 La Salle St, Chicago. Colorade. 34 acres sub-irrigation land Sed county, Colo., 4 miles from town. §i acre. P. O. Box 178, Council Bluffs, la. Idaho. wick per FOR SALE—Eleven 80-acre relinquish- ments under Carey act; all within 3 mfies town of Downey, 0, on main line J. 8, L. Ry.; #4 per acre; §1,000 cash on each 80, balance nine annual payments; good soli for fruit or general farming; water right first claim on Portneuf river; buyers must reside 30 days during 1910; owners opliged to sell. W. H. Eldridge, Twin Falls, 1d: FARM of 73 acres, on banks of Wall lake, lowa; well improved, good boat landing; good fishing; an ideal resort no trades; rice §160 per acre. Address Box 6, Audu- on, Towa. Nebraska. FOR SALE. Quarter section of good level divide iand in Dundy county. Address Lock Box Wauneta, Neb. 10 & LOANS to Lome owners and home bulld- ers, with privilege of making partial pay- ments semi-annually. No commission. W. H. THOMAS, 503 First Nationul Bank Bldg. $100 o $10,000 made promptly. F. D. Wead, | Wead Bldg., 18th and Farnam. SECOND MORTGAGE loans negotlated. | y Rooms 417-1§ First National Bank ig. Bell phone Dougl FIVE PER CENT MONEY 10 loan on Omaha Business Property. < THOMAS BRENNAN, JRoom 1, New York Life MONEY TO LOAN. WANTED—City loans. Pete WANTED--Clty loans and warrants. W. Farnam Smith & Co., 1320 Farnam St. PAYNE, BOSTWICK & CO,, N. Lite. A L A Ma H. o 3 31 Boyle and_wit H. A. Morrison and wife to C. G. Cari- berg, lot 5 block 16, Omaha Heights Jessie C. Elmer Guy block TN Christ Rasmussen and wife to Pru- dent Baert, Charles lot 6, tensen, et al, lot 7, 14, block 11, Brigg's Theresia Kaiser and R. Judah, Maul's subdiv 8. Thomas Foster to R. B. Towle, Nelson's 8ddition ...........ce.coeeuns Marfe Thomsen and husband to J. C. Edwards, block 29, Kenwood Realty Morrill, lot 402, Kenwood nise's addition . Josephine Ev den's subdivision Minnie E. Irving Smith, wood's subdivision . Julia Dundee Place Omaha, REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. F. Morrison and wife to T. F. part lot 8, block 32 ountse Place s Hitchcock and husband to . W. Kellog, lot 4, block 16, Cen- al park Gean Eeabrooke te Whitey Scabrooke part lot 18, Tukey's replat Charles Nelson to B. 8. Flor, tract In X T . , Flor to August Ulhle F. Beckmeyer, et al rnst, nw. % sw. i, Hastings & Heyden to lot & block 6, Collier Place. Willlam Rosenblatt et al., to Cecella Buchtell, part lot 4, bloek 213%, John Knaus to Willlam Markman, 5 acres in sw. i, 80-16-12. to Joseph Senzeria lot Florence. . A, lots 18 and 19, block 2 enson v Tgh tasen 3 elger, et al., to G. Grabe, . F. Porter's addition zabeth Christian to H. N. Chris- block 6, Creigh- on's first addition ited Real Estate & Trust Co. to South Omaha, 66 feet strip In Gov- ernment lot 8, 2-14-13........ . J. G. Kelley and wife to J. C. Michel- sen, lot 3, block 7, McCague Maguire, addition Spring Lake park Investment Co. to Mary lot 20, block 6, Solomon's B. Harmon, lot ace. ¢ husband to R. lot 14, Drexel & a R. Ayers to A et al., jon .. thaniel Melster and wife to Alice Holmes, lot 8, block 3, LaVeta lace $ysiise lot 61, et al, trustees, lot Kountze Place.. Co. to % ‘Neilfo M. B. Walter and wife to § 1 herman, part lot 7, block 6 De- ra) o, Cramer and wife . . Tay- lot 4. block 7, Myers, Richards Tilden's addition sagersvrs H. Weldenfeller to J. F. rsmann, lot 11, Hastings & He VanLiew and husband to lot 7, block 3, .She J. Van Liew and wife to same, L. lot 13, block 4, Plainview | Lucta A | land ana wife, lots 10 and 11, block Comstock to J, Caugh- William Hagedorn's addition...... ggle E. Johnston and husband to M. Jaeger, lot 20, block 101, S. Brooks and wife to W, A. hapman, east 1% of west 78.7 feet 16t 6, Hawe's addition W. Thomas and wife 66 foot strip to in east South 14-13 . Total...... RAILWAY TIME CARD Private money, §500 to $5,000; low rate. $500 to $,000 on homes in Omaha. O'Keefe | Real Eatate Co., 101 N. Y. Life.” Doug. or LOWEST RATES—Bemis, Brandeis Blag. GARVIN BROS., 318 N. Y. Life. $200,000 on Improved property. No d nd city loans; optional pay- = db 6% FARM ment; no dela bernsen. Omaha. REAL ESTATE WANTED WE HAVE BUYERS FOR 5, 6 and 7-room houses. If prices are right we can sell_your property for you, NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., Sulte 624 N, Y. Life Bldg. VACANT lots and houses. Have cash buyers. 411 Karbach Blk. Red %07, A-354. AR FOR RIGHT PRICE LAND ‘We will exchange 10-room modern house. Corner lot; ear at door; choice location. Also 9-room modern house, lot 100x120; l;room house, new and modern in ay. NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., Sulte 624 N. Y. Life Bldg. FOR BEXCHANGE—200 acres cornering ‘with a good town of 1,000 people in Neosho county, Kan.; new b-room house only 7 blocks frem city school, park and churches; %0 stone; all tillable; acres of timber; al} bottom land; incumbrance only $2,600. Price $14,600. Want merchandise. Would not object to some huildings. What have ou? Address, HE ALLEN COUNTY INVESTMENT CO. LONGTON. KAN. HIGH grade plano for good residence lot. Will pay difference. Bee, Y 17. Chi Lin Chi Twl Chis Oom Stai Chi Chis Oy Om: Pa Fi Twi D FOR SALE or exchange—For clear land, stock of clothing, located in eastern Ne- braska. ivoice about §10,0. Fol i R. Collins, 438 Maln Tw O Mir FINEST income merchandise What have you got. 8. J. Locl WANTED TO BUY BEST price paid for second-hand furni- ture, carpets, 3 othing and shoes. Tel. Doug for trade. I Liny HIGHEST prices for _furniture, BELL'S Furn. Store, 1406 Dodge. ete. Red 3531 BALTIMORE 2d-hand store pays bes price 2d-hand furniture, clothes, etc. D. 4265. | Chi Col . WANTED—TO RENT FARM BARGAIN—Must be sold on ac- count of owner's health; well improved 3%0-acre farm, en and a quarter miles from town; price, $3 per acre; easy terms, J. T. Campbell, Lichtield, Neb. GOOD LAND CHEAP. 160 acres 4 miles south of Dix, Kimball Neb., every acre can 'be culti- good 'Swedish settlement; $10 per . 'G. BONE, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA. 812 Shugart Block. Phone 814 | Oklal OKLAHOMA Land $5 Per Acre No. 206-180 acres Umber and grazing d’ on_lliinols river, in Adair county. arly wil black oak’ timber. will make from iwo Lo four ralirond ties to the tree; some white oak saw timber; some white pine 16 to M inches in disméter and % to 00 feet high. 300 w0 40 atres of this land can be cuitivated; about 60 acres now under cultivation. Ten miles of Westville, and new railroad now building within three miles of land. The timber alone ought to y more than we ask for the land. Price, . T acre. Jo‘. 428,620 acres tmver and grass land in Cherokee und Adair counties at § per acre. No. 546130 acres timber land within three miles of Peggs, Cherokee county, at $ per acre. Ne. 3680 acres of good upland prairie; 0 acres in cultivation; good black soll; & nne ghance for oll; three-fourths mile’ of the city limits of Nowata. Price, #0 per acye. Ko, 439100 acres of best grade creek bot- tom land; 1% acres in cultivation. Good bouse. barn end outbulldings: two miles from Nowata county seat. Tice, ”‘rr acre. You might get an oil well with this 60,000 acres of land to land. Let us show you. P. S.-We have choose from. You had better go and look I‘l over. You may miss a good thing If you lon* NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., Suite 64 N. Y. Lite Bldg. FARMS FOR SALE—10 acres up; home- steads, relinquishments and deeded valiey and upland. " Ira 8. Corawell, Bertrand, South Dakota. FOR SALE-Four fine Lincoln count D, farms. For full information ulnn J.'W. Latreille, Lennox, 8. D. Toxas. TEXAS homes and investmen FERGUSON & i WANTED—December 1, by man and wife, 2 rooms, preferably unfurnished, in privaté family, in West Farnam district. Address B-699 Be WANTED—SITUATIONS \ d.:l'"..o.:\llon welling either In el ing res elther In or will travel, Al Taterecces Address W 807, care Bee H. Morehou Coal and Wood - Tion 1 WANTED--By young man, place 1o wi for board while atinnding Boyles coliege Bcth phones. Chs Tow Chi Col Okl | Col Co.. LEGAL NOTICE, NOTICE OF SALE OF ELECTRIC LIGHT PLANT-By virtue of resolution of the undersigned Board of Directors, the Clind- ron Electric Light & Power Company will gel at public auction to the highest bidder, | I\ for cash, on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 18 | %9, AT 10 o'clock & m.' AT THE OFFICE |y, OF'SAID CORPORATION. CORNER SEC- |, OND AND EGAN STREETS, CHADRON, |yon NEBRASKA. all the property of the Chadron Electric Light & Fower Company. us & going concern, and eonsisting of Lot (. in Block 4 City of Chadron, Chil nd power house thereon, its cosl houses (hi and office ang power house furaiture and | Chi fixtures. and supplies on hand, and per. |low sonal property of every characier; alvo all | St. ts contracts for street lighting and sal N Bla Nor bel its customers, its franchise, ar 1ts pole res, lines, dynamos, transformers. en: | s and machinery of o stree: lights, and other lights, wher- ever located and on hand. This property s in most prosperous and perfect condition since its opening; the seryice the demand for light and power, from its | Ch present and prospective ' customers, is| o, §reater than its present enlarged capacity: An increase of the plant and its ca tually needed at this time. An enticely sutficient reason for this sale will be given | O/aha 8lo to an; . Tw uiring purchaser. Dated, o . tober 14, 1908, WILLIAM ELLIS, J. F. MOTE, BYRON L. SCOVEL., Directors. OCEAN STEAMSHIPS CANADIAN PACIFIC— WEEKLY SAILINGS BETWEEN MONTREAL, QUEBEC AND LIVERPOOL. Nothing better on the Atlantic than our Bumpresses, Wirslees on B BSENiaMIN, 0. & 33 So. Clark St, Chicage, § OLstoN 14 Oregon and Washington Wab Colorado-Chicago Raplds-Omaha Norfolk-Bonesteel . Norfolk-South _Platt, Hastings-Superior Deadwood-Hot Spring Casper-Lander Fremont-AlSton. Missourt Pacific— Chicago, Milwaukee Overland Limited Overland Special Perry-Umaha Local, Chicago, Rock isinud & Facific— Des Molnes Rocky BWRLINGTON of | Kansas City & St t and power to citisens or cnadron, and | Kansas City & St. bhunsus City day only. Omaha-Carroll Local...a 3:45 pm & 9:90 am — UNION STATION—10TH & MASON on Pacific— Overland Limited. na and Japan Mail..a 4:00 pm Limited Los Angeles Limited. Portland Speclal Coloi North Platte Lo Colorado Express. Grand I o Speclal nd Local. col eutrice Locs V(l:lpl also and Centra: cago Limited . in City Limited cago Express aha-St. Louls Exp, Malil and Express.. nberry Local (from. Council Bluffs)... 1llinols Centrai— cago Expre Chicago Limited. _a b -Ft. Dodge Local.b 4:16 pm Chicago & Northwestern— Colorado-Chicago cago Daylight Spl aha-Chicago Lo al(:% pm a 3:28 pm & 7:00 am @ 3:28 pi aha-Chicago Spe ific Coast-Chicago Los Angeles-Portland Limited . Overland Limited. Carroll a12:05 pra & 7:06am Local. & 4ham a9:66 pm t Local Cedar @ 3:35 pm NORTHWESTERN LINE—NORTH. in City and Dakota aylight | Minnesota and Dakota in City Limited. Stoux City Local. Dakota-Sioux City- maha ola: Omaha NORTHWESTERN LIN coln-Long Pine. a a b b u pm pm & 6:0 pm - 3:5 pm a11:00 am b 6:%pm b 1:3 pm 9:40 am a 6:3 am .all:l5pm & 5:50 pm | & St. Paul— al2:15 am 5 am am S0 pm 13 55 cago-Omaha Sp o.-Caliturnia kx. EAST. Rocky Mountain L't'd..a; lowa local ago Da Local a Locat cAgo- 1A k ebraska Lt Nebraska Ltd. ¢ Lincoln 3 0. and Cal. Ex. . and Texas Ex. orado Mountain Li 4.50 1 30 am 22: am Leave Denver and_Califoria..a 410 pm Puget Soand Ex ‘a 4110 pm praska points 8:20 am ck Hills . thwest Ex... points Mall.. cu le orado Limited cago Special cago Ex cage F a Local Louls Ex all:w am a 20 am « Sl Joe.a 4w pm description, | WEBSTER STA.—13TH & WEBSTER Missourl Pacific— perfect and | Auburn Loc ieoonnb 8:50 pm by tea Paul, inneapoiis mal Leave. +.b 2:00 pm Arrive. Local .. ux City Passenger.... in City Passerger. gluux City Loecal erson local ........b Daily. b Daily except Sunday. ¢ Sun- 4 Daily except Saturday. 400 600 2,000 | 6,000 W pm | 16 pm 10 pm % pm | 0 am bli:d5 am | c 6:% pm | Conductors and Trainmen Ask More Pay Employes of Railroads East of Chi- cago Will Demand Advance of Twelve Per Cent, CHICAGO, Nov. 9.—~Demands for 12 per |eent wage increase and uniform schedule are to be made by conductors and trainmen on every rallroad system cast of Chicago, it was reported here today. The wage-Increase movement, it Is re ported, involves 125,00 men employed on rallroads east of the Illinols Central's main )| Southern line and north of the Chesapeake | & Onio railroad. Inctdent to the projected demands of the eastern rallroad employes came the an- nouncement that switchmen and yardmen in Chicago, controlled by the Brotherhood | of Railway Trainmen, already had served notice on eighteen rallroads terminating in Chicago, demanding a wage advance of § cents an hour. Switchmen and yardmen who are controlled by the switchmen's union in St. Paul and Minneapolls, have also filed a demand for an Increase of & | cents an hour. Locomotive firemen on rallroads west of Chicago are taking steps to have existing schedules opened and will ask an Increase. Wages of conductors and tr.inmen on roads east of Chicago are about 12 per cent lower than the operatives in the west, and the movement for the increase is sald to be entered into jointly by the Brotherhood of Rallroad Trainmen and the Order of Rall- way Conductor Purple Ties or Somber Black? President’s Cabinet at Washington Spends Hours Deliberating Which to Wear When He Returns. WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—For more tahn two hours tonight six members of the president’s cabinet considered whether they should wear purple or sombre black ascot ties with thelr frock coats and top hats when they meet President Taft Wed- nesday evening on his return from his whirl around the country. At least, it was solemnly declared by all of the members that they threshed out mainly the matter of recelving the presi- dent at the Union station. They acknowl- edged, however, that they had discussed in & general and Informal way other ques- tions of state and the manner in which these will be laid before Mr. Taft, who has been out of touch with the general trend of affairs. The conference was held in the Depart- ment of Justice. It was called by Secre- tary of State Knox who with Atorney Gen- eral Wickershara, was the first to ar- rive. The two were closely followed by Secretaries Wilson, Dickinson and Ball- inger and Postmaster General Hitchcock. Secretary Knox will advise the members of the cabinet tomorrow the proceedure to be followed in_ greeting the president on his arrival. The custom is one that was established long ago, but which fell into disuse during the administration of Mr. Roosevelt, who had his own ideas of en- tering the capital. These were so lacking in formality that Mr. Roosevelt's cabinet members ardently welcomed them and escaped reception comimittee duty. The custom dates far back and was sus- pended with the death of President Mc- Kinley. When President Taft arrives he will be received with all the old pomp. SOUTH DAKOTA RANCHMAN WINS BRIDE FROM OMAHAN Dr. G. E. Farley on Polnt of Marriage When Lochinvar Arrives and Takes Woman Away. SIOUX CITY, la, Nov. 9.—(Speclal)— | Young Lochinvar came out of the west again in the person of Willlam Keller, a cowbay from Rapld City, 8. D., and carricd away Miss Adye Farron, slthough she was engaged to marry Dr. G. Edwin Farley, an Omaha dentist, the Invitations had beén | {ssued and the trousseau already prepared. It was the reviving of her old love for | her boyhood sweetheart, and they are now married and living at Primghar, childhood home. Dr. Farley has returned to Omaha and is taking his disappointment as well as he can. Miss Farron came to Sioux City from Primghar and was a soclal favorite. Hor boyhood lover, Keller, followed her, but other men paid her attention und he shortly became discouraged ard went west to be a cowboy and renotnce his hopeless love. Then Dr. Farley came on the scene, they were engaged, the festivities for the bride had commenced, when the girl's siscer wrote to Keller to make one more attempt. | He came back on the first train, pleadsd his suit and Miss Farron dismissed the doctor and left with her old sweetheart. Dr. Farley has left Omaha, it 1s reportsd, and will engage in business at Whitemore. The Omaha directory does not give the {name of Dr. Farley as in business here now or recently. WESTERN MATTERS AT CAPITAL | Sunderland Brothers File Complaints Against Burlington for Alleged Freight Overchérges. (From a Statf Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—(Special Tele- underland Bros. of Omaha today filed a complaint against the Chicago, Bur- lington & Quincy and the Chicago & North- western rallroads alleging excessive frelght rate charges on fourteen shipments of soft by complainant at Ainsworth and ine, Neb., during the winter months he petitioner requests defendant railroad companies 10 refund the sum of $%0 excossive charges on sald shipments, wiih Interest at 6 per cent. The Interstate Commeree commission to- 46 am | day received a complaint directed against 46 am | the Chicago Great Western, Milwaukee & St. Paul and the Chicao, | Milwaukee & Puget Sound rallroads from Ole 8. Quammen and Carl Austad, retall dealers in lumber and bullding material at Lemmon, 8. D, slleging excessive rates on ‘lhrvv carloads of stucco shipped from Gypsum, la., to Lemmon, 8. D, and de- manding reparation for alleged excessive rates In the sum of $40, with Interest David D. Jones has been appointed rural carrier and C. S. Jones substitute for route four at Oakland, Ta Postmasters appolnted dow Madison county, W. H. Hop- kins, vice R. E. Rouse resigned. South Dakota—White Owl, Meade county, Jennie the Chieago, Nebraska—Mea- Grove FOR ALL THE NEWS THE OMAHA BEE BEST IN THE WEST A. Hayes, vice J. W, Shaw removed. m—— Every union officer Civil war now residing in Nebraska is earnestly requested to report to Frank B. Bryant, United States Army bullding, Omahas, Neb., by letter or in person. A matter of the great- est importance requires immediate action, Papers throughout the state please copy. thelr | ' (oneert. Madame Teresa Carreno opened Miss Hopper's serles of subseription congerts at |the Young Women's Christian association auditorium last evening with a plano re eital which for brilllancy and artistic suec- cess would be difficult to surpass at any time or in any place. Carreno did her Omaha audience the honor of playing & program which she might as readily have placed before a crit- lcal musical gathering In New York Berlin. 1t was not tempered to suit the possible or problematical demands of | & western audience, but conformed to a severe standard in program building and contained two sonatas—a thing which does not occure with any startling degree of regularity in this partof the country. Th | MacDowell sonata was especially welcom: as It has not been heard here before. It was, of course, expected that Carreno would play something by MacDowell, as #he has always taken a great interest In him and his works, and has done more to popularize them in this country and in Europe than any other one person. In her manner of playing Carreno is pr eminently herolc. Her gtyle reveals no moonlight mawkishness or swooning senti- mentality, although she well knows how to be tender and, on occasion, Isgcapable of developing a most retined and%@clicate Iyricism, and is as well able to adapt her art to the simple but classic contour of a Beethoven rondo as to proclaim the mar- | tial measures of a Lisst polonaise. The opening number, Chopin's Buimor sonata, was played with an admirable mastery of the various and shifting moods and a supreme Indifference to technical difficulty. The first movement, written In Chupin's most eloquent and noble style. found in Carreno™a worthy interpreter, and® the scherzo, with its playfvl and whimsical characteristics, was given with an absolute fidelity to detail. Carreno proved, too, that she has grasped the es- sence of the Chopin style by her finely concelved and finely executed delivery of the slow movement. She caught its elusive moods readily and followed it at will in its sustained lyric flight, The Beethoven rondo was interpreted in & most intimate, unconventional and heart- to-heart manner and seemed to bring the hearer into close touch with the old mas- ter of Bonn, in one of his gayer hours. Schumann's “Bird as Prophet” was next revealed in all its mystic loveliness and was followed by the well known Erl-king. whose impassioned sweep and hair-raising climaxes were in viyid and startling con- trast to the romantic and imaginative Schumann number, The rugged theme of MacDowell's “Kal- tic” sonata, which followed, were an- nounced by Carreno with a strength and authority only possible to one who pos- sesses the most thorough and solld musi- clanship. The work is extremely difficult and almost austere in fts character, but is individual in the extreme and abounds in splendid effects. The artist's reading of it aas masterly. Carreno's bravura in the Liszt number with which the program closed, was phe nomenal. Her soft. passages were of feathery lightness and her climaxes aston- ishing in thelr power. When the listener thinks that she has reached either the limit of her strength or the capacity of the instrument, Carreno quletly pulls out another stop, and lo, another climax, stronger than any before, bursts upon the astonished ear. Carrend's queenly bearing, as well as her finished art, was pleasing to the audience and recalls and encores Were numerous. The audience last evening was so large as mearly to fill the auditorfum of the Young Women's Christlan associaion, which, by the way, proved tp be an a most ideal recital hall, It {s beautifully appointed and decorated and carries sound well. 4 P-D TENNESSEE MARBLE NOT FOR LINCOLN STATUE Sculptor Daniel French Arrives and Rejects Stone on Capitol Grounds. From @ Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Nov. 9.—(Special.)—Danial Chester French and H. Bacon of New York, the former having thé contract to construct the statue of Abraham Lincoln on the state house grounds, were here today and looked over the ground with the members of the committee selected to look after the work. It was agreed that the statue should be erected on the west side of the state house, between the street entrance and the large rose garden In front of the west en- trance. The statue will face the west and the driveways that now enter the grounds on Fourteenth street will be closed, and the driveway on the east side of the build- ing will be used exclusively. At noon the two visitors weré' entertained at the Com- mercial club by F. M. Hall, among the guests being W. J. Bryan and Governor Shallenberger. TR 4 S dardiS b ' 3 < e R DENT’ e B wherter thasie: n i A Swell Aok, \atichs ‘work. GET DENT'S TOOTHACHE 6UM. ‘At all druggiste, 18 cents, or by wall. Dent’s Corn Gam %% i ©. 8. DENT & C0., Datrol, Mich. gencles. Imi- on't do the SCRATCHED HEAD TILL [T WAS RAW Eczema Broke Out on Baby's Head Causing All Her Hair to Fall Out —Could Not Sleep — Spread of Fearful Disease Averted and Easy, Economical Cure Effected, for ——— A FRIEND ADVISED USE OF CUTICURA —————— * When my lttle girl was four months oM her head broke out with scsema. ~ triad everything but nnlhinsdxd hef any " St b a an the did nothing but soratch her head, which was like & raw plece of meat, Al of her hair fell out, A friend of mine told me_about Cuti and the good it di for her little m : of Cuticnr ”;l d - of Cuticura Soap an T ST~ Doxef Cubiours Ot ment 1 used I could see a change. 1 used just two cakes of Cuticura Soap and fwo boxes of Cuticura Ointment and my little girl's head is cured. Her hair is growing fine and long and her skin is like velvet. Friends say that my quick action jn using the Cuticura Rem- edies kept the eczema from spreading all over her body. “1 still use the Cuticura Soap and alwaye keep a box of Cuticura Ointment in the house, 1 used them for my hands, which were g0 badly chapped that the skin would crack and biced. I would ery with pain, My hands are entirely cured now. You ' certainly have my permiseion to publish this letter in an paper, for 1 know how wonderful Cuti- cura is. Mrs, F. Davis, 200 E. Indiana 8t., Chicago, 111, Jan. 18, 1909.” Aro little patshes of eczema on t Ne ekin, scalp or hands which are instantly relieved and speedily cured, in the majority of cases by warm baths with Cuticura Soap an: gentle anointings of Cuticura Ointment, pures* and sweetest of emollienta. !vflem soap (25¢.), Cuticura Ointment (80e. ;% Cuticura Resolvent (80c.), (or in wt form ol CThocolute Coated Pills, 25¢. per vial ot 80) are sol lhw“lnwl the world. Potter Drux & Chem. Corp., Bole Props., 135 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mam. @r-32-paze Cuticura Book. mafled A fl-..l. eItk (Reatient ABd Cur Of diseasen Of the AKIR Dependable ! You can depend on a Waltham Watch and you can doubly depend on it if you are sure to buy it only of a Jjeweler. A watch sometimes WALTHAM WATCHES gets damaged after leaving our factory, but no regular Jjeweler will sell a watch until it is in perfect order. N. B.— When buying a Waltham Watch always ask your jeweler for one adjusted to temperature and position. The Greatest of Winter Trips /. MISSOURI \' PACIFIC {IRON MOUXTAIN —T0~ HOT EPRINGS, ARK, SAN ANTONIO, TEX,, AND MEXIOCO CITY Three Famous Tourist Centers in One Journey. Ask for descriptive literature and information. No charge. THOS. F. GODFREY, Pass. and Ticket Agent 1423 Farnam St., Omaha, “"MAKES LIFES ou eon go like this a few times in safety. But there’!l be a “once too often.” Then vou'll wish you hadn’t, 3 [.ikcwnsc you can wear ill fitting shoes for a while without bad results. But some day your feet will go back on you. Then again you'll wish you hadn’t. Wear CROSSETT shoes and you'll have no regrets. Com CROSSETT SHOE WALK EASY (e‘r:, durability, hityle,— that what you get when you wear CROSSETT’S. 4 $4 to $6 everywher: LEWIS A, CROSSEIT, Inc., Makers North Abington uss.