Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 15, 1909, Page 3

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O Council Bluff Council Blafs 11 l : | SENTENCES CIVEN AT BASIN| ouncl utts ouncil Bluffs || owa ‘_ owa i ; Brink Gets Death for Murder, Which | STHE ) N MON { lern Rallroad company. The deed transters PR B r R m (E State Board of Health concerning the dis- ; | d " wou not \GRUIT SHOW OPEN MONDAY [£roa the cnicaas areat western matway | PRODE IOWA TRAIN SERVICE| caser "% Shousnt 'that sho "aisease | Will Be Commuted. oliar a plate |company to the Chicago @reat Western | . SR | under control and that there will be no b / N Rallroad company title to the road, prop-| : Toon iven % FOR TWO OTH uy better tomato soup hort Program Will Mark First Day |erty and franchises "Th";'m;;n-h!«mm: Railway Commission Has Many Com- i %TW“IY YEAR! ™ ERS | ’ isa named in the deed is $12. the price X | I] c bll ¢ A N e T r""“”‘" e m A TG lowa Students | Keyes and Farris Go Free for| an mp 8. —— bought at receiver's sale. — ¢ | The mortgage, Which 4 #iveh by the | | X R T N l s f ”' d‘ § CONCERT BY LIBERATI BAND cyiciy’Great Wemem Rairoad compans ONE COMES TFROM oMaEA| Storm 'l heater » i by l We use only full-grown re |to the Standard Trust company of New . M d h " Opening Ceremonies Will Be Brief,| York. Is to secure a bond issue of ihe pur- | State Doard of Health I» Showing | After vlCtOTy. ripe tomatoes, rlpen'e oh the | chasing company. The lssue ts limited to v ¢ . . of Taking: Place ia Anditoriam— | y5o000, of which it 18 recited about fis.| 0"t Tnterest in Iaveatis BASIN, Wyo, Nov. l4.—(Special Tele [ vines IUSCIOUS’ JUICy pc ect ot Wil Speak 90,000 has been issued of New Disease of 3 i ey h . Celebrati ¢ Foot Ball Victory| STom)-Sentences forecasted under the . Th k d Briefly. MT;":M‘:‘_":'":nd"."‘::’"‘ "","vd ‘[';" "":':‘“ Pellagra. ele! s b R . TY | agreement reached for a confession ot | SpCClmeflS. ey are plC ed at othier oounities’ in ‘2ows and. in ten ooun | Results in Riot in Which Three |ine Spring creek rald murderers were . h 1 d f h ¥ The program for the exercises at the |ties in otger states. | (From a Staff Correrpondent.) | Are Wounded. | pronounced yesterday by Judge C. H sunrise when cool an res 4 formal epening of the National Horticult- vt | DES MOINES, Nov. 14.—(Special)—Not | Parmeles. There was no change except | . § h T o e Fruit exposition Monday [COST OF DITCH APPORTIONED | before for many years has the State Rail- | Dixon and Eaton pleaded guilty to arson | brought to us "'cct rom t e morning. was completed and announced road commission been 80 active and had be-| IOWA CITY, Ia., Nov. 14—One thousand [and were given three years each | ] . t near - i e ;. g |Board of Su Fixes WHhat |fore it so much of business relating to train | Iowa university students, celebrating the | Brink was sentenced to death. The sen- ; ;Ore d s—T1 h e on by President W. .| pervisora ness relating to train | N ‘l”""l“‘“ r:‘"“"“""l '_; \:l'“";l:"‘m,w 1t Property Owners Shall Pay. service In lowa as now. Almost every day | foot ball vietory of today, stormed the |tence, however, will be commuted to life | cwW erSC) g‘lr en f g < Keellne, 'The exercise < . ex.| Overruling all objections, legal or other- |some new phase of the train service ques- | Golden theater tonight and were ejected | imprisonment by Governor Brooks as the | l . h d et b it ey g B be Tl at|Wise of protesting interested property |tion comes to the attention of the commis- | by the poiice. They stoned the bullding, [result of the compromise. Eabln and Alex- } our p ant; washe 1ve tlmes. mn tended program, and they owners the Board of Supervisors yesterday |slon and cases are being disposed of with | breaking a number of windows. One stu- |ander, members of the party, were sen- . f 10:30 from the large platform in the east| o 0 1" " abort of the commissioners | rapidity. The reason for the activity ls|dent had his face split open by a police [tenced to twenty years in the penitentiary. | runmng water rom artesian ( end of the ";"‘"‘;’J“"('J“ Smith, pastor of | *PPOTIONING the cost of the construction | that the residents of the small towns, eepe- | man's club. While the outcome of the trial was sup- Invocation, T Smith, of the Nishnabotna drainage ditch to the town lots and farm lands benefited by the | proposed improvement after making some minor changes in a few of the assessments, The board fixed the payment of the as- sessments on the certificate plan extending over a period ol ten years at 6 per cent. Any person assessed, however, has the privilege of paying the full amount of the tax and thus avolding the interest. clally along the lines of the branch roads, have become keenly alive to the fact that they have been neglected and misused in the matter of train service. The initiative in the work of bolstering up the ralliroads came from Des Moines, where the Commer- clal club started a campaign over a year ago to compel the roads to revise their schedules and secure better connections all through the state. The movement was en- Willlam Bennett, a freshman from Boone, Ia, was struck on the head by a bottle thrown from the opera house and his scalp split open. Another student was cut on the side of the head by & policeman’s billy. Officer Fieseler, who attempted to arrest a Filipino student, was knocked down by the crowd and his head cut. The attack on the opera house ceased when the fire department turned on the water. posed to settle all differences, much bitter- ness still exists. Report reached here to- | day of the complete destruction Wednes day night by fire of the saw mill on the Ten Sleep owned by Willlam Goodrich, a principal witness in the Spring creek raid murder trials. Goodrich declared Brink and Dixon, both of whom worked for him, confessed their parts in the rald and that Brink admitted shooting Allemand. irst Congregational church. B rens Tof welcome on behalt of city, Mayor Thomas Maloney. \ddress on behalf of National Horticult- iral Congress, W. L Smith Responve, C. 8. Canada, Houston, Tex. Formal opening of the fruit exposition, W. 8. Keeline, president ot National Hortl- cural congress. Music, Liberati band. Following s the program for the opening concerts by the Liberati band on Monday: wells, and made into soup before noon. That's the story of Gamplellison™ It 00K the bject!: tirely selfish at the outset, but It was soon There was a dramatic scene in the court AFTERNOON. pm,_":wu"‘l“':;::‘:"']".'::m‘,": By ’f_(:mi‘: Foktd. CHAL - teull ‘onueeHEnG with D568 Burlington Dairy Train. room when Brink declared he aid not kill Pare L o o | s o ” GLENWOOD, I Nov. 14.—(Special.)— | Allemand. “I would not oot a man with | 7 : : e ero Tt L mand, Liberato| The county bridge contract for 101 was | Molnes could not be bettered without at the o) . . ne i e Bolo- Fantanih “Risl | awarded to M. Lana of Harlan, the pres. |%ame time making conditions better all|Through the courtesy of the Burlington |his hands in the air’ he said. An hour We strain out not only all s]cm and Sig. A, Combattente. = ent contractor at §6.% per lineal foot, |OVer the state. road Glenwood citizens and farmers and |previous in an Interview with the judge, SCCdS but every trace of the mdlgcstlble Waltz—Tove's Proposal o '\N(\}w;'m which is 6 cents higher than the price| WIthin the last year the Des Moines in- |dairymen in Mills county were entertained | Brink sald Farris, one of the Informers, 4 o BoDrAng O e iRe_ laree.. paid this year. It was stated that the in. | 1eTests have succeeded in securing very |and instructed by lecturers of national shot the ]flockmlnler ;rlhnmn; l‘)(x:r;; ul[d’\ core-fibre through a straining apparatus, . . sNernie ch be | fon upon subjects of mutual ad-|he saw the sneepman die and that Farris s ¢ s s Selection from Andrea Chernier..Glordano | orease is due to the fact that labor and |™uch better train service Into and out of [reputat D | X 5 b ’ 'l Bl 484 | Pes Moines, sspecially on the Burlington, |vantake. Interested Deopls were in attend-|fired the shot. Farrs Wil get compiete thlh a screen :és fmhq as_pin-points thltz Overture—Semiramide.... .- " |the Great Western and the Rock Island (ance from all towns In the county. De- |immunity under promise of the state, as Tenor Solo—8'lo fos --Ra The board recelved & communicati 3 | a ¥ Tenor B | sogn: Raitr SCOATIeE announcing. the | F9805, In the south part of the state. All (spito the storm, rain falling In torrents | Will Albert Keyes, who also confesged to only way to do this important wor “First Heart Throbs'. .Etelberg | revocation of the appolntment of Sherman | *CUthwestern Iowa has been, as it were, [during the afternoon, the crowd that com- | the grand jury and testified In the Brink thoroughly. Euphonfum Solo—Martha.... -FI0tow | 11\ mphrey, custodisn of the court house, | 3INeXed to the Des Moines trade territory |fortably filled the court house auditorium |trial. The two latter were not in court to-| W ly th lid frui d rot, A Montint | onchielll|C. I. Maxtleld of Neola and George L. |'n this manner. Several entirely new trains [remained and gave close attention till the |day, but will be arraigned later and froed. | e use only the sol ruity part an o VIR Martin as deputy sheriffs who have been |1VE been but on, others have been ex-|close of the program. The Introductory | Rewards aggregating $000 are to be clear thick ftilce:« with all theis tidah Part L. serving without expense to the county, |téPded and better connections at junction |speech was made by L. E. Galley, dairy |divided as lmr"u" ;lts‘o:‘\; w"““:}““"fl:fl ] ’ A N v y ent 8. this ), was offered Y &' March_cuist o Command........ LINSIM | Martin nas moved to California. and Max. |POI"t8 have been made. e fote: ot the Buinkton. el oY O MTAAAtAl wmonera natural flavor and aroma. That is why . Mr. August Pfeifer. fleld tendered his resignation as the duties bt iy Skt bl g el 4 4 2 S I by the state and the Wool Growers' asso- ’ i Waltz—Wiener Mad'lyn Zighrer |of the office took up, $0o much of his| ORe of the entirely new cases to come |Waterloo, In; C. R. Rush of Ames and b the site E F:"“x bt o i pampbel] s Tomato SOUp comes ste_am Tenor Solo—Alda. Verdl |4 . before the State Rallroad commission the|T. C. Cornelicon, chief of dairy manufac- | clation. to the county: b ing to your tablc SO fra rant and SpICy Chevaller A. L. Gullle. last week was that. of residents of towns |turing Investments, Madison, Wis., fol-|Would return his share to the county be- g y piCy Second Hungarion Rhapsodle. ....Liszt | Since last winter there has been more 1 : N land |lowed. C. F. Dean of the Glenwood elub | cause he is opposed to a salaried officer | I’l & 3 h h Pare 1L 5 or less friction over the matter of hoeat- ;r"l',‘,';h“:‘“"h‘: :“"“’_::“m“o‘;‘ “":ro“;:;‘“";'r;:l SFBMAGA ® And.- NENINEITS " bRnd E;VE a | accepting rewards. It is expected the men smooth as cream; and with the most Overture—Flying Dutehman. agner | ing the county jall and recently the super- i 5 y - Al $ & Soprano Bolo—barla. ATIL| Vit ra nstalled a separate neafing plans | [910. It 18 stated that for the st dosen |concert before the opening. o A s AL el delicious smacking relish you ever tasted. Miss Katherine years not a regular passenger train has _— 4 n . Nocturne—~Monastery Bell ...Wiley |the jail. Yesterday Judge Green of the |yil® TUE T AEEHET BOEOORe e | Franchise Election In January. |Sabin and Alexander are the only married Try it for dinner [oday_ Try any of Sexaphone #0lo, selected, Mr. H. A. Hall |district court made the following order: 5 IDA GROVE, Ia., Nov. 14.—(Special)— |ones of the prisoners and both are wealthy. Military Tattoo" 8aro | " 1t appears to the court that the Board | 13Y% and that the service has been main- . Ia., Nov. 14.—(Spy At a speclal meeting of the city council an ordinance granting a fifty-year fran- chise to the proposed Des Molnes & Sioux City Electric Rallroad company was placed upon its third reading and finally passed. The council thereupon named January 4, 1910, as the date for a special election to be held for a vote of the people upon the question of approving the ordinance The ordinance provides that it must be accepted by the road within sixty days toined by attaching a coach to the rear of a frelght traln. A mass meeting of the people interested has been called to meet at Greenfield ard to consider what shall be done. The railroad company has in- sisted that the business on/the branch line will not warrant any improvement of the service, but It is belleved this can be shown to be an error. It is probable that a provisional service will be established to find out what can be done. Campbell's Soups. If not satisfied the grocer returns your morgey. Do you know any fairer way than that? 21 kinds 10c T > 7a77¢/ of Bupervisors have now provided an in- dependent heating plant for the county Jail at Councll Bluffs, it is hereby ordered that the jaller or person in charge of said Jail hereafter attend to the heating there- of.” Prior to the installation of the independ- ent plant the jail had been heated from the plant of the caurt house. Great Western Deed File There were filed yesterday In the office of County Recorder Barghausen a deed and mortgage which have to do with the re- organization of the Chicago Great West- Postotfice at W ashington to Be Model for All| acan Beet > Tomato Houtlon Printanier Pegper Por Celery Jolienne ‘egetable Consommé Clam Chowder O Chic Asparagus Mock Turtie (- Postmaster General Hitchoock Has| Bouion " Muligatawny 2 | FomuioOkrs. Mution, Broth BODY NOT THAT OF MOTT Ol b DR, and thet the road must be bullt and in|' Plans Which Newly Appointed | Vermiceli-Tomats Chicken Gumbo (Okra) WE CAN CURE YOU Mrs. Mott Semds Word that First| Another similar complaint has been :‘n‘:nr:\‘::" nM’:mr"e ‘h::; u)e:“ina‘:dm;: Official Will Carry Out. Just add hot water, AVERAGE TIME TO CURE Identification Was Wrong. lodged with the commission by F. D. o s i o) " ,eng to a boil, andserve. Poor little Mabel, Wel giadly send soua copy of Campbell's Sent from the table, Menu buok—iree—if you'll write for it, Finished the can pit CamrpeELL COMPANY At M i, Jou Camden N J way agents are making good progress through this section. Farmers are grant- Ing\options on their lands and taking pay for same In stock in the road. Canine of Omaha against the Burlington railroad with regard to train service south- east from Omaha. This will be taken up by the commission just as soon as a date can be arranged for a hearing. The Com- mercial club of Bedford has also taken up with the commission the matter of better rail connections at Conway Junction. As a rule the companies have shown readiness to comply with requests as soon as & proper showing ‘is made as to the need of a change. A pecullar situation has developed in re- gard to some changes in the train service on the Burlington by which better connec- tlons for Des Moines are obtained through Chariton. By a change in the trains on the Chariton-Indlanola branch a large num- ber of persons living in small towns along Ruprore One Vialt HYDROCELE One Visib VaRricocELs One V CATARACTS . -10 CANCER CATARRE GLeer, ETo. 2 GoiTER 310 5 Dass Diais 5103 Days 10 9 Daily Mrs. Jason Mott received a telegram yes- terday afternoon from her brother, John A. Kettring, that the body of the sulcide at Pueblo, Colo., was not that of her hus- band, who mysteriously disappeared from this olty on August 31. Mr. Kettring's mes- eago did not contaln and Information other than the body there was not that of Jason Mott. Wednesday afternoon H. A. Quinn of the Quinn Lumber company, where Mott was employed up to the time of his disappear- ance, recelved a telephone message from Philip Keeline, formerly of this city, now a resident of Pueblo, Colo., saying Mott was dead there. In order to make sure the description of certaln identification marks were telegraphed to Pueblo and an answer was recelved that some of these (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Postmaster General Hitchcock an- nounced today at the White House the appointment of Dr. Charles P. Grandfield of Missouri to be postmaster of Washing- ton, to succeed the late Benjamin F. Barnes. This announcement on its face would not appear at first reading to have any particular significance to residents outside the District of Columbla, but it in reality affects in a measure the future conduct of every first-class postoffice of | the country because Postmaster General | Hitchcock proposes through Dr. Grandfield | to inaugurate certain Teforms in the man- | ner and method of handling city mall, which, it proved by actual experience in | TOBACCO VALUABLE POUCH E. C. S. Day of Thayer, Ia., Recovers $1,900 that He Lost. CRESTON, Ia., Nov. 14.—(Special )—B. C. S. Day, a retired farmer of Thaver, was in this city Thursday and when starting to take the train home he dropped an old dilapidated looking tobaceo pouch on the depot platform without noticing its loss and the disreputable looking pouch lay there unnoticed and untouched for some time after the train's departure. Ticket Agent Fogg noticed the red sack blowing here and there on the platform after a Rew Orleans b1 marks were found on the body there. It| g, e W0e Were aceommodated, Ut |while and prompted by an impulse walked | Washington to be pedataciort,neiwl 51 was thought best, however, that some |, volt® (0 (AT SO A accom. |OUt 8nd picked It up, to find it lined with | susurate in the larger "' O S an = member of the famlly g0 at once to|niuie Ottumwa residents would result in | E¥SeRDaCKs to the amount of $10. There |try. Simultanests Wi the SAOUEECRIEN Ret ¢ Won't You Let Me Prove to You|Pusblo, and Thursday evening Mr. Kot-| b oiing the connections for the residents | %eFe als0 some valuable papers in the |that Dr. ‘Grindfieid PoC bEC TUCCe, () eturn i < 3 e oss | POSLD > that T can make you the best fiting suit .l:,r:‘,’-o: %’:,::;;;n law of the missing man, |o¢ the small towns. This will also be f,:?l(, l:‘:' nl::: ,‘flflr,{‘,',’,; di':,h\:,: ::L' L’:: the city postotfics of Washington was to | ————— VIA ——— you ever saw? I may to you right at the J fought out before the commission. : be made a model postoffice for the entire It is to be a pattern of perfec- | : IRoES lliinois Central Railroad Mrs. Mott, who was doubtful from the first that the body at Pueblo was that of her missing husband, was naturally greatly relleved when she received the start what I can do then If the sult fan't all you think it ought to be, why, it's my suit and not yours. MARTIN PETERSON, |dressing. He hastily boarded a train and come up here, where in a short time he learned of the find and was presented with his treasure by Agent Fogg, to whom the Interest in Pellagra Case. The prompt action of the State Board of | Health in taking up the question of pel- country. tion for Information and guidance of post- . cials of other citles. telegram masters and postal officia from Kettring yesterday afternoon, I be- | !a8ra in lowa has aroused a great deal old gentleman could not express enough v . . 4oty e 415 Broadway. Oouncil Bluffs, Ia. |lleve Mr. Mott is still alive,” sald Mrs, [Of Interest in the state. The board sent|thanks, and insisted upon forcing a reward ViCtOl’ to Han Tickets on sale daily, final limit returning June 1, 1910. ——————————— MOtt, ‘‘and I feel that everything will | Dr. Elker to Columbia to attend the con- | uypon him, although Mr. Fogg strenuously g come out all right in the end. Of course | it was a great rellef to learn that it was | all a mistake and that the body of the suicide was not that of my husband.” ference of state boards there and he has reported in such a way that it is now up| to the doctors of the state to get busy and find out if there is pellagra in Iowa. He also makes it plain that it is very important to the people of the corn states | to find out whether it Is true that the disease s caused by eating spolled corn, | Merchants out of thousands, United States | Commissioner Wakefield today found the | as commonly supposed, for if that is true | declined taking It. N Next Tuesday Hall and Cole Bound Over, SIOUX CITY, Ia, Nov. 4.-On the| | strength of the evidence submitted before| Young New Yorker to Pay Penalty him in the case of F. S. Hall and George | W. Cole, accused of swindling eastern for Quadruple South Dakota ! Murder, | | | § Routed Through Chicago Liberal stopovers at Chicago, St. Louis and many other points. Diverse routes south of Memphis. Write for beau- tifully illustrated booklet descriptive of New Orleans. De- tailed information at Fowler Sent to Jail. Following a hearing yesterday afternoon in the juvenile court in the cases of Bessie Thompson, aged 13; Iowa Bmith, aged 13, and Cecll Potter, aged 11, charged 'with de- ; o |two prisoners gutity of using the mails to | 5 linquency, Judge Snyder iasaed a werrens | CY must take steps to prevent use of|44raud while they were conducting a gen.| SIOUX FALLS, D., Nov. 14.—(Spe- OITY TICKET OFFICE, 1402 Farnam Street, for the arrest of Fred Fowler, fanitor of | ooron oot In not perfect, The doctor | er) giore at Erfe, Pa., and they were bound | clal.)—Arrangements have been com- | NEB the Shugart bullding on Pearl sirect. Fow. | Por o, that at the conference It was|,yer to the federal grand jury of Pennsyl- | pleted for the execution on Tuesday of OMAHA, s Jor 15 harged With & StAUtOrY crime | oeed ey e d{r"” ls mOSt common |vania, the bonds belng fixed at $530 for | Emil Victor, & young man formerly of | T N T g Mt ol Lo oo p g cmogh v ol torsed et East Aurora, N. Y., who will bo hanged | S. NORTH, District Passenger Agent. or black, who are most likely to have| into custody at his home on Firat avenue, | poor food and among whom a poor quality for the most horrible crime in the history and In default of bonds, placed at $2,000, Aowe Hews of the state—the wanton killing of four | otes. into vacant offices in the building of which he 1s janitor. Two other men accused by the little girls are being sought for by the police. of cornmeal is much used. This does not,| GRINNELL—Dr. E. W. Clark, state sen- " v - | was committed to Jall to awalt his prelim- | powever, prove the connection betweer |8tOr from this district, {s seriously sick |persons. His victims were J. W. Chris s ‘cilfitnds i H inary hearing, which will probably be held | ¢y, S tl W e at at his home and it I5 believed that he |tie, & grain buyer,at the little town of| Monday. Fowler, it Is said, has been under | e oy S the disease. e alto|will not recover. He is suffering from | Rudolph, Brown county; Mrs. Christie,| . . . makes It plain that while the disease has|a malignant disease of long standing. A | g Michael | ange the survelllance of the police for some time | peen most heard from In the southern CONSultation of physiclans was held today, | Mildred Christie, aged 19;.and Michael er as he was suspected of enticing littie girle | DA—Freddy Schwartz, an Ames| Ronayne, & yonng man who, was em- S g ountries and states It s not c | SARYSE o8 it is mot confined 1o | yyen "sohool boy, has disappeared. aud his but is found In northern | parents and the officers belleve that he | It appears it has long existed in|has been kidnaped. The boy left home | Tilinols, and he predicts that investigation | 0T school Tuesday morning and has not | een ployed by Christie. The quadruple mur-| der was committed on the morning of| July 3,.last, the motive being robbery.| ave tried the rest. Just try one package of the new, tempting ?H"—‘lnml, S0 much betier than the best of other break that you will adopt it for all time when you and yours ha loarned its deliclous, different flavor. Change fo-day to hot climates, states, oods once You will find g 2 2 4 seen since. The family moved to| In & confession made by Victor he| " whcre to buy the Judge Snyder, after hearing the stories | Wi PPOW MANY caxes n lowa There|Ames recently from Moline, Ill. i | stated that he hid during the night in the | “ s Ioaste ce es of the children and the evidence of Mrs. :““l"‘d"““‘;h'll:“"“'::‘ “: :‘N ‘“‘: :::“l"'-‘l [ “it MONTEZUMA—Alieging that he falled | Cchristie barn, awalting the coming of e 0 A Johnson, matron of the Aseocl . o . A second national con- | to remove gauze placed in a wound, and | . | — [‘ds Qf var=- nved ChArities | ¢ ronce 1s to be heid at Peorda, IiL, next |that by so doing she has suffered and | Christle to do the morning chores, when 1o, appetizing, satistying—the latest product of the great food €es 1 creche, Truant Officer R. Herner and Rev, | 11t 8 10 8 (100 €8 160l by BOX% | o nealth has broken down, Mrs. W. P.|he intended to pound him into insensi-| T e iTated. with the famous Battle Creek Samitarium. Henfy De Long, probation officer, ordered |2 "¢ P? 2 © expected that|gparks has brought suit against Dr. C.|bility and rob him of the large sum | Cholcest rice grains rolled arent films and toasted Just right . b dS un- Bessle Thompson and lowa Smith com.|® S7eat deal of additional information larrls of Grinnell for damages of | (1.1 he expected to find in his posses- | to bring out their delicate, nut-like flavor. Rice i 1 qyem- 10Us rec v g g B g about the disease will have been devel-|$5.000. She charges the doctor with mal. | Which b P 4 food—fhe most digestible and nourishing of all cereal ol Bttag. o the Wiaie Industs -ll chool for | 870 practice, lack of care and diligence |sion. However, he killed Christie, and Rice Flakes offer it In its most readily assimilable form. ris a ora. The Potter child, unless |°! Y ¥ | he stock judg o | o e appearing upon the scene whd ted isc der the head relaives agres to care for har will b seny| ook By Towa Wrtters. |, JMES.ThS tock Jutelng team o rep- | youne Ronayne tspentie ihon e une Another New Food—Toasted Rice Biscuit {there also. The three children for the pres- | The State historical department is en-|Honal Live Stock show. Which 1a to b6 | sy eeime. and then aiso felt com | a delislous ice tosst. Sorve it alone, or with eream or frult, Chilren thrive on T tod ent will be kept at the creche. gaged In adding to the collection of books | held in Chicago this winter, was chosen | 1\F8t crime - . | Rice Biscult. Ask your grocer for Kellogg's Toasted Ric “POULTR ” | by lowa writers. The original collection ;t‘»\llnnla\ at ‘l‘u\\n .\‘(;q;l\ mmrgn The fol- | pelled to 1:!1:1 Mhllhld n:m:one“ :nd“ ‘E::‘ The " T iy F & t C Battle i, Mi ' | . gy e owing are the members of the te daughter, Miss Mildred, nere would Kellogs Toa L : | N. Y. Plumbing Co. Tel. %6. Nignt, L-1a. ( ¥as made for the purpose of showing|R W. Cagaldy. O. D. Raker. Mark Thorn- be no living witnesses against him. Vic-| Buy and Try a Endorsed by the | theso books at the St. Louls exposition, burg. T. Thompson and Howard Vau i ble to secure only about §13 in| Zackage Today ”;.‘,:.lfa(v"f: 4 | after which the commission turned the |Naker and Vaughn made the team since | toF Was ab Only 10 Cents o n the want adS. o | he Wcather books over to the state historical depart. | N tock show held In Kansas City A |cash as the fruit of the quadruple mur- » ment. But lttle has been done In recent | v y\11,john Power e der. Sl & i i 1 o | VAIL—John Powers. a well-to-do farmer, 7ictor's bod v ot be sent to Eas If you have poultry you R R |years to add to this list, but now ad-|was found dead In the road at the edge| . Vict ”'n;, e T AR E Ry Hour. Deg, | ditions are belng made and it is the plan|of town this morning. He was last seen | Aurora, N. Y. t ~ Y \ can sell it by advertising F<h o s B et e g e Bl m"m!','},.fi“““ at 10 o'clock Inst night. " From | burying ground; neither will it be turned ¢ | s STANMER e Ny o€+ ! hearances he was thrown from the buggy | over to the medical department of the - Th T8 . v P matter while trying to keep the road in the dark e’ WL L . M1 I o your stock in The Bee. The N/ is Pl il by oo A Boged o B RO | state university, as the law provides the y Pyl 1 | s of Injury are a A IR TCaas" ate Taara® 1} 9 A 2 2 camds | broken nq Tt is belleved that he was|bodles of murderers unclaimed by rela cost is small, one cent per §| 104 6| The arrest and conviction of Joe Pascoe |stunned and that he perlehed In the eeid | . be disposed of. Victor's par- 3 P . $1.50 { R 3 |ana Fritz Stavrun, employment agents of and rain. “He leaves a large family. An :,::.,‘ oty Sher ril) hat he hare ta¥ QR 24 un .St lour makes del 'c word per day, or $1.50 per N 2m 2 |Bloux City, and the arrest of Sam Cole | NQU€st I8 to be held “l e ity o 3 - 1 Y 1p. R i o doas B MARSHALLTOWN—Aroused b b witness the death o helr son, and 4 c . o ate the | N—Aroused by ‘what is 4 P 2 . . * line per month 2p -1 - 5 the| qlleged to be poor and unsatisfactory sery. | though they cannot afford to.have the . 3 p. g |opening wedge In what State Labor Com-|jce and an Increase in rates witheut bet-| body shipped back for interment in the | 1ous reada an 1scul 1 4p. 29 | missioner Van Duyn promises will be a|terment In the service. more than 100 i i 3 | h s old home, h sent money to an W | 3 - 33| general cleanup of the state from river |farmers of the county met here today and | 1% 1r-.! oy v Bk St ptl\p-me o Sunkist is made from Nebraska’s finest wheat. L+ 21| o river and from Minnesota to Missouri, | {O0K St€P8 to organize a county-wide rural | Aberdeen un s Ne cs o 7p. | e e Hogo b |'phone company, with which to do battle | seeing that the body Is given decent in-| Each kernel must be sound, plump, sweet. The wheat ' Tt 9-{0:( r:e,"::r;ll C t;:mnlxnhmer :‘lm vm;-.I:z;-s':mx\xmg-.q;xl:uny-' . Company. | tcrment here is thoroughly cleaned and reduced to flour in the Loeal Record. k. cleanup and | FHE N the Bell intereats. Tho termol™ | A German Lutheran minister, who has most modern of sanitary mills. The process is auto- these fellows who run employment agen- : ' he farmers | | OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU, | tjes must ones the 1 g 8 who own close to 90 rural lines in the | repeatedly visited the condemned boy in matic—hygienic—insuring absolute purity. No hu- i OMAHA, Nov. 4.—Official record of tem- S me‘ r:;a 0 the last letter | county propose to enter the city, estab- | pis cell, states that Victor at last has man hand touches the product from the time the / perature’ and precipitation compared with | °F v Boes thelr license. I fing that|llsh an exchange to handie their business | ' coaieq sincere repentance for nis | wheat enters the mill until the flour enters your . . the corresponding period of the last thred | there has been considerable complaint from | 804 Withdraw entirely from all connee- | kitchen. years: 1909, 1908, 1907. 1906. | a1} the large cities of the state and the|LO0® With the local city company. Later|deed, and has expressed deep sorrow that chen. | Maximum temperature .. 3 % % | ouce must stop.” "1t e proposed to organize a city 'mhone | he could not live over again that portion | Pes Suibies L ) il h baki Minimum temperature ... 3 2 21 2% connections n' the® business Lpnes direct|oe his life since July 1. The sangfroid| se Sunkis our for a ome ing Mean temperature 3 % B B8 Epldemic in Greeme County, A Pusiness places and| ” ’ e s st ¥ | Precipitation ) 3 e el oo homes of this city. |and care free expression Victor has z | ! h oceurr near o y wo peared — FOOD. FOR 30", 2 it e o33 | rpen s marmoas 2t Oeaha stace Harch o, [Faton. In Guthile county, from spinal A cara, bt B ik Hecip eyt L : 3 N X sy shadow o o o NERVES s Sae yowty ul vigor 30d compared with the last two years > '\':_“:::::“;“‘:‘: b':l‘n’;"'h:“""‘:;""_"_‘;; :’: This 18 to certify tnat all druggists time, it is sald the young man has dis-| work ar mental exertion should “take| Deficiency for the day | was well Thursday morning and betire| i norized to refund your money If Foley's | played no feeling which®would indicate ee an GRAY'S NERVE FOOD PILLS. They Wi | o o af Ly e ot e o ore|Honey and Tar falls to cure your cough or | that he Wil prove a craven when the i meke you eat aud sleep and be &' man| Normal precipitation T80 inch | noon she collapsed and died Friday noon.|cold. It stops .the cough, heals the lungs | (ime comes for him to step on the scat- f 3 o o e © 1.04 inches | There have been ten cases of the disease |and prevents serious results from a col 1 Box; 3 boi .50 b B cold, Rupm a octulinie 'sB6E oo Sl AMAl gocs MArGh T8 inchas | with Lo desthechat of Louise Mever and |prevents pusumonts and consumpiion. Con- ' will rent that vacant house, fill those vacant "7 ¥ a0ta aad Botge Dot Fxcens o LS e S-year-old son of Broder Nahnsen.|tains no oplates. The genulne is i g g i y for cor. period In 1908, 3 Inches > D & yel- Don't be afrala to gve Cnamberlain's 0] [¥) M b L e e e el P e e P NN M L See ¥ N orecaster. | all druggiss ’ tectly safe. at a very small cost to you. Be convinced. A

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