Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 30, 1909, Page 2

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THE BEE (CREW SAVED BY LICATSHIP German Steamer Stranded Off H teras in Perilous Position. ALL DEPTS—ind. A-1541 |87 DBaby Blankets Buy your Christmas blankets early while the assort- Y| ment is complete. Teddy Bear, Billy Possum, Santa Claus, SUMMONS AID BY WIRELESS Daisy, Aesop Fable, Rabbit, Fleur de lisle, Jingle, Forget- | menot, Chicken, Elephant and othernew designs can be had £ | ™" in dainty pink and white or blde and white. With them you can enjoy all the remarkable ansing, Invigorat- ing, purtfying, refreshing and curative health-giving effects in with Heavy O from Cuba to New York Goes Aground em Diam. Reduced Prices—50¢, 59¢, 75¢ and $1.00 each. Special Sale of Hand Embroider- ed Linen Pillow Cases, Tuesday 25 pairs $6.70 Hand Embroidered Linen Pillow Cages; gale price, a pair, $4.89.— Main Floor. Nigaraguan diplomat, had dome to take the Nicaraguan at Washington Dt« Roman arrived today. Dr. Roman said the two Americans, Cannon and Groce, re- ceiitly executed In Nicaragua, were officers in_ the Insurgent army, and added that Cannon wne ‘‘a sort of engimeer and en- gaged M laying mines.” He said «the trouble in little more than a tlot PUTTING NAVY O BUSINESS BASI (Continued from First Page.) who added that of legation Nicaragua was one for hulls, “according to practice of ship building ‘firms in this counfry and| 1l naval dock yards of Lngland and Ger- | many. fhe commandants ‘and captains at the | yhrds willvhe kept-there long enough to insure cogtinuity of pelicy, and the com- mandapts ‘will be the énly representatives of thé Gepartment at (he yards, The Newberry lati fdve (he senior naval constructor at.the yards power that Secre- tary Meyer lodges with the commandant. Ineffitient work or performance, or ir- regularlties: under the different bureaus, Seeretary Meyer found, Has been Inspected usually by officers of those bureaus re- porting. dircetly, to them. No machinery has existed by which independent inspec- tion of shipk, shore stations and technical matters under the bureau could be had. That Mr. Meyer wifl provide by his new division of inspeetion, The existing bureau of yards and docks, the marine corps and certain other branches ,of the deparfment not logicaily Included In any one of the four divisions of duties will :ba placed under the assi ant secretary. bugar Trust Frauds m Criminal Court Company Are New Six Former-Employes Placed on Tml ! York. 'NEW.. YORK, Nov. 2.-On criminal charges > revelations of extensive underweighing frauds on the docks of the ' .American Sugar Refining 13 mpany in Willamsburg, six former em- Doyes of.the company were placed on telal in the United States circuit court licre today. Two years’ ago, on November 20, Lichard PArf, then a special agent,of the customs vl raided the Willjamsburg sugar docks:and reported the discovery of tradulent attachménts to the scales used n welghing sublar fmports. It was as on outcome of this raid that James F. Ben. dtrhagel, fopwper manager of the com- pany's Willlamsburg plant, and Oliver Spitger, former ‘dock superintendent, and five checkers' and 'welghers embloyed on the docks at the time were indinted and srought to trial toMay,. The other men under indictment are Pat- tlek J. Hennessey, Thomas Kehoe, John R. Coyle, kdward W.“Boyle and Jean M. W, \'nenm Is I and when eourt g, his, counsel secured @ post- .nmemrnl ufl‘q thia SAYS HE RS SUFFERED PART OF DEATH PENALTY | Hemeg Lawyer Patriek Argues that ile Should Now He Gi Hix Freedom, FA NEW. YORK, Nov. 2.—Aibert T. Patrick, whisie sentenos of death for the murder of | Willlsin Marsh_ Rice commuted life- imprisaumieAt at Sing, appeared today before the appellate division of the wpreme cunn in Brooklyn to argue that, within the, he has alveady suffered tenth 1:.4,”\;»» bas. pajd his debt to tie date in' (1ol sfiould’ be ee. trick gonfédde ghAL:the, solitary con- inement preecding clectroeuting has be ild by the Unlted States supreme court o be ot penalty decreed In teafhl sciténce. He served that time u\ &nd now makes,the point that when court “of ‘appenls reaffirmed the de ssibn. of the court of convietion and s 1+ nby date for exccutlon, It iransgressod My constitutiondl right in ordering him to 1v8 andtler ‘period of solitary confine- nent, theréby duplicating a punishment 1 has alréhdy suffered ‘The failure of the wirden to electrocute, n compllance with the first order of the wurt, arsues Patrick, constitutes an act i nonfeseance, Curlopity Costs Child's Life. SI0UX PALES, ‘S D., Nov. 2.—(Specfal.) ~Clara SHUmwhy, died- 7. ‘daughter of Mr. 1nd Mrs. Walter Shumway, who hed just nked up thelr residence on what is known s the GBorge Shumway farm in Spink jounty, ‘st her life by drowning as the whult of ehildish curlosity. She met her lenth by fa)ling into & clstern. It is sup- was to set a Exclusive Omaha selling on Mark Cross’ Gloves for Men and Women London made, hand sewed-the glove standard for the entire world, $1.50 a Pair. BENSON & THORNE CO. e 1618-1620 Farnam he | the post of secretary of | look [ in | Bdward mediate the to tell the little girl ralsed the cover and lost her balance and through the opening to her death in th water beneath. The cover went back Into place, and when the child was missed it was fifte Qistracted mother thought of cover and looking Into the cistern she discbvered the body of her child. Hundred Miners Rescued from Mine| |One is Killed in Explosion of Gas in Shaft at Marion, Illinois, raising the | where | Nov. 20.—A long distance telephone message from Marion, IIL, to the | Assoclated Press says, that one miner was killed and over 100 rescued with ditficulty after an explosion of gas in the mine near there today. The victim of the accident | was Frank Morrow, an American. Over 100 men were in the coallicry when the gas blast same, There was an Im- mediate rush for the shaft and as the cage had not been damaged, all the work- were brought to the surface. ST. LOUIS, men £oon n minutes or more before me} | torces of the Creea’s Hu, | crew who remanded aboard the Brewster. | proceedings against Samuel Gompers, John BEAUFORT, N. C., Nov. %.—The Ger- | man steamer Brewster is strunded on | Diamond shoals. The crew was taken off | | By a government Nghtship. NEW YORK, Nov. 2.—-The steamer | Brewster in cargo from Jamaica and Cuba ports for New York is today hard aground and in A dangerous position off Diamond shoals lightship, just south of Cape Hat- teram The steamer is sending out calls | for immediate assistance. The call for help was received by wire- |1e8s telegraph in this city In a message picked up by the United Wireless company and originating with the government sta- | tion on light ship. The messige ship satd the Brewster was aground about six miles Inside the light ship, in a precarious posi- tion. The sea was reported smooth and the wind moderate at that time, however, The Brewster of 801 tons net register and owned by H. H. Schmitt of Hamburg. fafled from Kingston, November 15, for New York A wrecking outfit was ordered trom Nor- folk to the ald of the stranded steamer. NORFOLK, Va., Nov. 2.—The combined | * Open—Ready for Use. The Lion Bath Cabinet gout, Iadies’ 118, maiaria, aervousness, etc. The Lion Cabinet is covered 'with some figure on ‘outside. The LION BATE CABINET, eomplete 1410-1412 HARNEY STREET is used successtully Ia grippe, catarrh, asthma, all blood, your own room of Sanitarium, Hot Springs, Turkish, Russian, Per- fumed or any kind of Medicated Vepor Bath, at a cost of about 3 cents per bath. The Lion Cabinet opens up 5,000,000 pores all at once. From every pore flows tiny streams of poison-laden liquid. They literally wash the blood of impurity. They not only force the polson out of the system, but they Invigorate and stimulate to healthy action every organ of ihe body. They relieve all congestions and give perfect circulation. Pains and aches vanish as If by magic while in the bath. The weak and de- bilitated grow strong and the nervous and sleepless are quieted and made to sleep like a child. for treating rheumatism, skin, liver and kidney trouble, black coated rubber cloth with hand- It folds into an inch space when not in use. with heater H. J. PENFOLD & CO. INVALID AND SIOK ROOM SUPPLIES. OMANA, NEB. Cape Hatteras and Hatteras Inlet life saving stations sue- cecded In landing at noon today Captain Hinz and twenty-elght members of the TEST OF 10WA LOW FARE LAW Injunction Suit at Des Moines by In- terurban Stockholders. - No one was lost Gompers Writ is ACT 1S CONFISCATORY Before the Court|** ¢ ) for Cedar Raplds Another Deficit of $51, and lowa City Rond, Coming This Year. Supreme Judges Take Petition for Writ of Certiorari Under Advisement. (From a Staff Correspondent.) DES MOINES, Ia., Nov. %.—(Special Tel- egram.)—Judge McPherson in the federal court today lskued an order restraining the | Cedar Rapids & Towa City Interurban rail- | road from complylng with the lowa law fixing raliroad rates at 2 cents a mile. The writ Is returnable December 15, when WASHINGTON, for a writ Nov. of certiorari 20.—~The in petition the contempt Mitchell and Frank Morrison, officers ot the Amerfcan Federation of Labor in con- nection with the Bucks Stove and Range litigation which, if granted, would have the effect of bringing up the whole case, King Noncommital on the Alsop Claim| Formal Request that Edward Act as Mediator Has Been Made, ~A request that King Alsop claim dispute between the United States and Chile was made by the United States, through the foreign office today. His majesty had been commubicated with informally on the subject before, but at that time gave a non-commital reply. RIPPLE OF REFORM WAVE " "EVEN IN OLD WYOMING Waters ‘of Prohibition Crusade Are Washing Shares of one G ch and Dend Man's Trail The day of “The Last Chance” | Wia Steer” past out there ulches of Wyoming. ““T'he ripples of the reform wave nnd pro- | [ hibition are creeping up around us,’” sald | C. E. Breniman, representative in the Wyo- | | ming legislature from Shoshoni, at the Iler and The last plece of prohibitory legislation | | that wes put over made it illegal to run a | ‘nlrmn outside of the corporate limits of a |eity. The lguor people have LONDON, Nov. and “The along the pechaps brought a great deal of what is coming on | themselves. wa | able a hearing will be had on the constitutional- ity of the Towa law. The sult was brought by Elizabeth McClintock of Pennsylvania, a stockholder of the company, who says she asked the company to charge more thari 2 cents a mile and the company re- fused, and that unless it does charge more than that it will lose money and thus de- prive her of protits which she ought to have. She shows that the deficit of the company last year was about $51,000 and this year it will be $49,000. She makes the rallroad commission, the attorney general and all officlals who have to do with the enforcement of thée law parties to the suit. The case is intended to bring to a test befors Judge McPherson the entire statute of lowa regarding the 2-cent fare and to .ave it declared unconstitutional because It s confiscatory. Brought Baek from Nebraska. Governor Carroll foday issued & requisi- tion for the bringiig back from Nebraska of one Nelson Capron, who violated a parole by leaving ‘the' state. He served time from Casper, dounty for perjury. He was found at Du The governor also 'wsued requisition to etch from the Wisconsin state reforma- tory ong Mike Ross, indicted in Buchanan county” for uttering a forged’instrument. After his Indictment in Iowa he went to Wisconsin and is now serving time for a| similar offense, Big Lumber Company Formed. The secretary of state today received the articles of incorporation of the James A. { Smith Lumber company of Osage, capital | $1.000,00. The company is formed by Sen- ator Smith, the veteran member of the | Iowa legislature, who owns a large num- today formally presented to the fed supreme court by Alton B. Parker of New York. M, were s Gompers, Mitchell and Morrison present. Mr. Gompers wore his fez . usual, and was the objuct of consider- attention on the part of spectators The court took the subject under advise- ment. Bryan on Way to South America Will First Hunt Ducks in Texas and Then Make a Tour of Panama, EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 2.-—Wiljam J. Bryan, who is preparing to tour South and Central America and visit the Panama cdpal, passed through this city last night. He said that ‘after hunting ducks a few days in the neighorhood of Galveston, hi would visit his ranch at Mission, Tex and then go east through Atlanta to orida. He sald he would sail later for | Panama and then make a\tour of Central and South America. EVICTED TENANTS [N RAIN Three Hundred Persons Thrown Out by Employers Hecnuse of Strike. LUDLOW, Mass., Nov. 2.—Rain during| “Now, out there in Wyoming we are in- | ‘anrd to let everybody have his own way as much as possible, with maybe not so close attention to what the dry stautes hooks happen to say—just as long as they don’t get obtrusive. That has been the | mistake—they are bringing It on them- selves. “Wyoming I8 just about to get a taste of | what the other western states have been getting In the way of liquor leglslation. | Representative Breniman is on his way to I]\u Live Stock show in Chicago. ‘TREASURER OF PRESBYTERY | SHORT IN ACCOUNTS | | ‘Pm-lmr. Charch Official and Over | Twenty Thousand Dollars | are Missing. Pa. Nov. —Willam C.| treasurer of the Pitisburg pre. ry, who disappeared on September | |20 last, is short to the amount of $21,-| |054.54 in nis accounts to the chureh, ac |eording to a statement given out today. |The entire fund from the sale of the | Fourth Presbyterian church, this city, is! |charged to Lilley's indebtedness, this amount being $13816. The trustees would |not say whether or mot they would prose- | { eute. ROADS AFTER OKLAHOMA LAW Four Companies Ask Injunction to Prevent Tux Sale of Lines. PITTSBURG, Lilley, form in | GUTHRIE, Okla., Noy. 2. —Four raiiroad companies asked the United States elreuit court today to restrain the state authorities from issulng tax warrants for the selsure and sale of thelr properties on account of their fallure to pay the constitutional tax of 3% of I"per cent on their total gross reve. nues. A large amount is involved, as the state clalms taxes not only on Interstate business, but on the Oklahoma portion of interstate business enteting and leaving the state. The roads in the suit are the Santa Fe, Rock Island, Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas. CARRIERS AND POSTMASTERS Names of New Federal Appointees fn Nebraska, Yowa B Dakots. WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Rural carriers appoinied are as follows: Nebraska—Pender, route 1, C." A Johnson, carrier; Clay Griffin, substitute. Towa—Derby, route 2, W. H. Parker, car- rier; A. C. Parker, substitute Postmasters appointed: lowa—Packard, Butler county, H. J. Fisher vice J. W. Daly, restgned. South Dakota — Maitland, Lawrence county, Robert D. Kyle viee J. Keller, re- | ownea {at his home ber of lumber eoncerns in lowa and Min- nesota, also a humber in the Dakotas, Preparing for a Corn Show. Local committees today took charge of the new Coliseum, just completed in Des- last night and carly today added to the migery of the 300 persons evicted on Saiur- day from tenements owned by the Ludlow Manufacturing assoclation because of a strike In the mills of the company. The household effects of the evicted persons|Moines, and commenced preparations for a were plled in a heap In the street. Tho| corn show, which Is to be hel dfor two {owners found refuge for themdlves and | weeks, commencing next Monday. These their familles In the houses of friends.|corn shows have been held annually for The work of eviction was suspended tcday, | several years, but this year the plan is but it was announced that on Wednesday | expanded into a pretentious affair, with the occupants of sixteen other houses |$20000 in premiums and a guaranty from by the company would be ordered | ine Commerelal club. o leave "r]\p“mnu.\vl development 1oday was the| Discrimination Has Been Common. importaticn of a band of fity Italian| The State Railroad commission has just strike breakers, who were taken to the|Cl08ed one complaint case that has been mills under police guard, | hanging firg.some time and which indicates | much the nature of various complaints that NEBRASKAN GETS HIGH PQST | ®r brousht fo the attention of the board. | This was a complaint on the part of the Frank White is Appointed Director | Nitional Petroleum assoclation to the ef- of Education in Philippine fect that the Burlington and the Rock bl | 1slana railroads refused to accept for MANILA, Nov. 2.—Frank White was to- | {ransportation ofl products in less than car- day appointed director of education for |l0ad lots on more than one day & week the Philippine Islands to succeed Dr. Bar- |t Keokuk, Dubuque and Clinton. Now rows, resigned. Mr, White has been as- |the Burlington hams agreéd to accept such slstant director of education here for sev- | Shipments any day. The matter of greatest eral years. He was reared in Nobraske, | importance was the fact that this discrim- was graduated from the University of | ination has been common in Iowa. It is Chicago in 1600 and came to the Philip- | explained-that the Ofl trust, having large pines in the following year. | aistributing houses well scattered about organization has been put up to the mem- bers and the vote thereon will be can- vassed tomorrow, the result the future of the order. of Iowa Workmen is a distinet organ tlon from other workmen lodges R. Clark of Montezuma s president and the late H. B. White of Waterloo was an officer until his death. Should the mermbers vote to dighand, and it is thought | possible, the affairs of the order will wound up before the first of the year. is generally thought that will favor disbanding. be It Sigma Alpha at lowa City. TOWA CITY, Ia, Nov. Spectal.)— Delegates attending the biennial provin convention of the Slgma Alpha Epsflon fraternity here last week elected the fol- lowing officers: R. H. Monier of Carroll- ton, Mo., presiden Frederick Apt of the University of Kansas, vice president; Ar- thur T. Wallace of Des Molnes, secretary and treasurer. Representatives were pres- ent from the University of Iowa, Ames, University of Kansas, University of Mis- sourl, University of Nebraska, University of Arkansas and Washington university, St. Louts, Mo. Glenwood. GLENWOOD, Ia, Nov. 20.—(Special.)— Judge Woodruff is holding his first regular term of court in his home town. BEDFORD—A Harlan contractor has fin- {shed the Bedford sowerage system for that city. Next year it is hoped the system will be extended to the residence portion of the place. CRESTON—Country roads leading to this city at the present time are almost impas- sab Farmers coming here Saturday, were obliged to use four-horse teams, and many who desired to come and made the attempt were forced to abandon it because of the heavy black mud. BLOOMFIELD—Mrs. ~ Calvin Thomas, living near Bioomfield, 18 a victim of a gun- hot wound, accidentally inflicted by h 10-year-old son, while playing with a shét gun that was “supposed not to be loaded."” The shot entered Mrs. Thomas' head fust back of the ear, infiicting a very serious and it is feared, fatal wound. CRESTON—Funeral _services over the body of Albert Frey, a former Creston man, were held at Lorimor Sunday at the home of his mother. Deceased had been In poor health for about two vears, and recently submitted to an operation for tumor of the brain In a Des Moines hospltal, from which he was unable to rally. He was bout 30 years of age and besides the aged mother, a wife survives him. CRESTON—One hundred miles a_day is the record of Conductor Charles, Flint of this city as he figures it, since he began work for the Burlington railroad In 1861, forty-elght yoars ago. Forty years of that time he has been in the capacity of con- ductor. He figures off one whole year out of the forty to allow for sickness and vacations and then calculates at the rate of 100 miles per day, he has traveled more than 1,216,500 miles, or a distance of more than forty-eight times around the earth. FIVE SWINDLERS POSE AS AMERICAN MILLIONAIRES Paris Authorities Charge Them with Stealing Jewelry from Promin- ent Famili PARIS, Nov. %0.—Four men and a womnn who have posed hére as American mil- lMonaires, but are alleged to compose a §ang of international swindlers, were arrested today charged with extensive stealing and Gefrauding of Jewelery. Jewels valued at $15,000 were found at their home. The po. lice claim these were stolen from Furopean houres. Two of the men gave thelr names as John Francks of New York, who is said to have once teen expelled from France and Jacob Hymen of Philadeiphia. CHANGE IN GRAIN STANDARDS Missouri Hoard of Trade Considering Revision Adopted by Grain Exchan, KANSAS CITY, Nov. 20.—Representatives of the boards of trade of St. Joseph, Mo. Bt. Louls and Kansas City today attended a meeting of the Missour! Rallroad & Warehouse commission at the Baltimore hotel in this city. The purpose of the meet- DEATH RECORD. does nearly all business in car-load lois while the Independents are compelled to South Dakota Ploneer, handle a large amount of the business in | small lots. Now, the Burlington at least, PIERRE, 8. D., Nov. 2.—(Spcelal Tele- |, omigeq to'end the discrimination. | gram.)—In the death of Phillp Pickering | in this eity today Inulhvr‘ Hughes county ploneer is gone. He came | to the county in 1882 and has resided on his farm or In this city ever since that time, Southwestern Frait Men. CRESTON, la, Nov. #.—(Special.)—The | Southweptern fHogticultural society will open In this clty, Tuesday, November 2, | 'with the following, program: § to 12 m. | Greetings and placing exhibits in position. | 11:30 p. m.—Invocation,president's address, | J. H: Betchel, Hamburg; secretary’s report, | W. M. Bomberger, Harlon; treasurer’s re | port, J. P. Hess, Council Bluffs; directors reports from. Clarinda, Lenox, Garden slgned; Sink, Unlon “eeunty, Otfo Ceder- berg vice J. Bratt, resigned. Scott’s Emulsi A mu s'"" | Grove, Woodbine/ Griswold, Waukee; is the original—has been the | “Newer Pl\:hh,mul:o uu(n; Wesley ;?m’x: . | state secretary, avenport; open Heus- standard for thirty-five years. | jions on reports and year's work. The eve There are thousands of so- | R bt e vgied 18 talje 2 toples: “Apples,” “Peach and "“Gri called “just as good” Emul- |} p. b, spencer of Randolph, E. T. Dalby sions, but they are not——they of }(u’:nb;lr[l and J. ,I\ l.—\ulnlu,:;;u:h ot . ) . . Coun utlfs, respectively. ' Fxper are simply imitations which | jeace with Apples.” . H. Deur of Mis- are never as gOOd as the | sourl Valley; “notes on “The Year's Or- otiginal; They are like thin | s wi retisse tarcss Decamber b T 'l‘ ' A fine list of premiums have been an- milk: is thick like nounced for best exhibits, and yisiting dele- a heavy cream. \ gotes avé expeeted from Ames college, trom H H H castern lowa, Nebraska, Missouri and one 1 you wa.nt it thin, do it from the promological department of Wash- yourself -— with water —but | ington, . . don't buy-it thin, Towa Workmen May Disba FOR SAL® BY ALL DRUGGISTS IOWA FALLS, Ia., Nov. 3.—(Spcial)— —_— Tomorrow - will declde the fate of the Bend Mo, name of paper and this od for our Pt~ o > lowa Workmen, an organization with a m-fl-l-l ?A-“W membership scattered over the state. The SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl 8¢, New York | question, of disbanding or continuing the { \ it | Nattonal |today for the construction of a new |a business office to talks on the | D. B. McCalla, Clarinda. The | ing was to ascertain whether the farmers grain dealers and millers of Missouri desire the grain trades and weights now In gen- eral use In the state changed in conform- the standards established by the Grain Dealers’ assoclation 1r Chlcago, November 18. Later a conference will be held with representatives of the Kansas boards of trade and the Kansas Raflroad and Warehouse commission. to Towa Roads Incorpora PIERRE, 8. D, Nov Articles of Incorporation 2.~ (Speclal.)— filed here elec- Towa. The new company Towa City, Ottumwa & Southwestern Flectric Rallway compan as nominal headquarters at Plerre and at Towa City. The in- 8. J. Smith, Roscoe Wil- Towa City, Ia., and P. Plerre, 8. D. The pro- posed mew line I8 to be elghty miles in |length, extending from lowa City to Ot- tumwa, crossing the counties of Johnson, | Washington, Keokuk and Wapello. The company is authorized to furnish “electric. ity to towns along the right-of-way as well as to operate an electric rallway. were tric rallway In to be known us the corporators are: son, Frank Fa ¢ Peterson Township Digs Artesian Well, PIERRE, S Nov. 9. —(8pecal)— The first plat for an artes an wvll at town- ship expense which has been filed with the state engineer's department for many years, 1s one which has come In from Murdo township, Lyman county. The plat shows & location on a ridge which will allow the water to flow into two different “draws” and give benefits to the great- est possible number. While a number of other townships west of the Missourl have determining | The grand lodge | the majority | Prices Kvery suit in our entire stoc now marked far below regular prices. Look them over while selections are choice. Up to $25.00 Suits, now $15.00 Up to $40.00 Suits, now $25.00 Up to $60.00 Suits, now £35.00 Up to $75.00 Suits, now $45.00 TR RETIROT Y L I Stylish Coats $25 Worth $30, $35, $40 Our showing of women's coats is most complete, successfully meeting every demand for better looking, better wearing and het- ter fitting garments An excep- tionally large collection of fine coats, worth $30.00, $35.00 and $40.00; on sale Tuesday, at— Char'es | Worth $25 and $30 These are of rich black Russian Lynx, made with extra large rug muff und large shawl collar with linings and are specially priced, at.... We also chow hundreds of sets in mink, fox, lynx, squirrel and wolf, at specially low prices. We can easily save you 25% on your fur purchase. been discussing township actlen, none have yet got down to business except the Ly- man county proposition. There is yet a question In regard to securing an artesan flow on the higher lands west of the Mis- scuri and this may account for the delay on the part of townships to take up the work. Now that a move has been made, it 1s possible that others will walt to find what the outcome will be before they get Into the game. If the well in Lyman county proves a success, a number of such wells will, no doubt, be sunk within the next yeal John Says: “Six llttle pennies, Six Ittle cents, Gets one ‘TRUST BUSTER’ A smoke for gents. “Yew I'm mvriting poetry now, can't help it, the cigar is so good." Central Cigar Store FIRE RECORD. 321 South 16th Stree. General Stores at Glenwood. GLENWOOD, Ia, Nov. 2.—(Special)— Fire originating in the dental office of Dr. B. G. Woodrow at midnight last night completely gutted the upper floor over Howe's grocery in the Woodrow bullding. Dr. Woodrow's loss is everything pertain- Ing to a dental stock and furnishings. The water loss of J. H. Howe, grocer; A, B, Edwards, barber, immediately under Wood- row's office, and H. B. Dull, grocer on the nerth, will be conslderable. That the fire was confined to the one building re- flects credit upon the fire department. The fire had been smoldering some timie and had broken through the skylight when dis- covered. B. Baking Powder, Received Award . World's Pur nliln-fl-J Store at Fullerf g, | FULLERTON, Neb!, Nov. 2. —(Special.)— Sunday morning fire was discovered in Frank Leach’'s shoe and furnishing store. It had gaingd such headway that it was impossible to check the flames until the entire inside was burned. What guods were not destroyed by fire were Injured by water. Mr. Leach held an insurance .of $4,000 on the stock, while the puilding, gwned by James Loughran, was damaged to the extent of at least §1,000, with no in- surance. Chicago, 1907. Thomas Meagher T cide, MANILA, Nov. 2.—Thomas Meagher, son of the the Irish patriot, dled today of pneumonia, following an attempt at sul- cide. He was a graduate of West Point and lived many years in Montana and California. For several years he had oc- cupled minor posts in the government here. fine line of Leatber goods Farvem St.—Ind. A-1008 I S ——— TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablef Druggists refund money if it falis to cure. E. W. Grove's sigfiature is on each box. 2se. MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMSHIFS. | Port. Arrived, Salled, NEW YORK Baltie NEW YORK. Lituania MOVILLE - California LONDON Montfort 'HAMPTON. " 8t. Louls QUEENSTOWN. 5 QUEENSTOWN. LIVERPOOL. - Arable, Lusitania, BOYD'’S Ionight Tomorrow and Matin: THE GIRL rrou IIECTOI’S Seats Now —Jauies XK. Hackett %p-ann anadian.......) . Carmonia Monmouth. THE BUCKLE OF OMANAS AMUSEMENT BELT WM. GREW STOOK OOMPANY Monday. Thesday a5d vunudu.‘nuu. the Music;” ‘Thursday, Pri Saturday, | “The Man Gn the Box. Matinees Tues day, Thursday aad daturday. Fight prioe 860 and 3bc; Matizes, ono price, Jc. KRU THEATER —PRI 18¢c, 25¢. .0‘, TO-NIGHT -MATINEE WEDNESDAY SAL THE CIRCUS GAL Thureday— 518 HOPKINS" (Established 1579) Whooping-Cou %‘- croup, oughs, D}ph&herla. Catarrh. || Bronchitis "Crasolene Is a Boon to Asthmatics. ll 208 1t mot sewra more effective Lo breathe n remedy for Ssesaen o Lhe bessting orsass thaa 10'take the remedy lute the sioma Cresolen cures becausa the nir, rendered strongly sntiseptic, Is carried over ] Tiate with evory breahs giing prolonged a e e tmai "1t s {avaiuable to tmothers with srall chiidsa. TN" vi‘.‘ - “C Yo' Tenden --Gl‘ I-!n-flhlu roliof from Goughs or 15 Eomunel fhe roat ALL DRUGAISTS, tal de- .-w.l: " Vapo-Oresslcne Co. b~y g New York. ADVANCED VAUDEVILLE Mat. Every Day, 2:15—Every Night, 8:15, This Week: Hyams & Mclatyre, Curzon, James You! ond & Kingaton, Mme. Panita, The Arlington Four, Douglis & Douglas, the Kinodrome and the Orphcum Concert Orchestra. Prices 100, 8¢ and fna \

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