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THE BEE Y, MARCH 10, 191 Nebraska—Continued. ‘s ACRES; 15 HORSES; 33 CATTLE M MACHINERY _AND _IMPLE- NTS; WAGONS, BUGGIES, HAR- 58, BTC.. § MILES FROM CRAW- TORD, §7,600,00. ilere’ |8 a property that 1 must unload ing the month of March. Thia is 79l €5 of &% good soii as there is In the sl today, & good black loam soll with a uy subsofl. Squaw Cresk, a never ; stream, runs right through its cen.er d s thickly timbered. There is a worid of imber on the place, consisting of eim, “h, boxeider, and yellow pine, much of hich s plenty iarge enough for lumber poves. ‘There are more than 300 acres © 4ood plow land en the place, 75 acres e now under cultivation The place Is fenced and cross fenced and ail ready s commence spring work. There is & room house on the piace, but it 4| lathed and plastered. Thers (s a Lhree story barn, which with some ke a very fine barn. There barn for five head of horses, mow in very good shape. A good grainery and hen house, good d ceilar. Now then, to & good buyer, proposition. 1 will pay for all the {0 lath and plaster the house rd to fix up the barn In first class (Continued ) "~ NEBRASKA FARM MORTGAGES the safest possible Investment. We r ruoning from five to ten § per cont. We have a aplen- 000 as sure as a government | 4 bringing better returms. It cov. ers an Irrignted farm, one of ths best in the Platte yaliey. . Ark for the Olson mortgage. 1 or_tel PA €. E. Cor OF af ad words of caddest are theser “It might have been - CALUMET (Contnued.) John Cupita and wife to Thomas Cupita, n% lot 15, M. Donovan's subdly ... R A Johnson to Osoar B. Williams, lot 15, block 4, Ames Place s o Biijah Dunn and wife to Emgnuele eotera, wig lot 8 bloek 1, Shull's add 20 | Wil Buford “and Vandenbogaerde, lot & L. Selby's lst add s Elijah Dunn and wife (o Guiseppe Meotera and Marlantonla Honacel, ot 8 /block 1 Shuil's add » J. Herbert MoMillan to Mary 8. Zim- merer, lot 18, block 18, Dundee Place, other ‘consideration and .... 1 Willlam 8. Arnold and wife to Mary L. Busch, §lg of nwig of nwig 30-15-1. Our Letter Box Contributions on Timely Subjects, Not Exoesding Two Kundred Words, in price from & per acre. nd fs in the ofl £3s district and you might get an oll well with your land. P NOWATA LAND AN N Wolte @ New Yore 1iée Bidg wite htl'“r'{”:_“i‘““,’ Government. OMAHA, Neb, March 8—To The Omaha Commercial club: The Brotherhood of Cherry HIll Congregational church has {had up for discussion the commission plan |of city government, which has been thor- oughly tested with best of results in Des Moines, Ia., Lawrence, Kan, and other midwest cities. There seems to be no Question in any of the cities operating under this plan of its being the very best form of munieipal government. The r Sults have been satisfactory in every wi clean streets, efficlent service from offi- clals, less vice, and a surplus each vear Instead of a deticit in thelr city treasuries. This letter is passed to the editor of The Bee with the request that it be published as an open letter to your body, &0 that our write "LL have to hu ' If you get one free booklets, “All About Okla- Don't miss this chance to learn about good corn land cheap. Write Perry DeFord, Oakwood, Okl 15th and Farnam i LY. Life. TOKLAHOMA lands yleld per acre corn, 1 44; wheat $36; oats $27; alfaifa $90; cotton = fi REAL ESTATE WANTED 10; improved farms 30 to $60. Write 1. T. | abney, 218 W. Oklahoma City, Okl - WE HAVE BUYERS FOR |8, 6 and 7-room houses. “are right | We can sell our property for you. NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., Suite 64 N. Y. Life Bidg. T'ROM owner. Strictly modern residence, 8 or more rooms, large lot, location near 12,000 th 160 ACRES well improved, level land, | Woodward county, ~Oklahoma; i-reom house, good water, cheap. Address owner, W.H. Kronneimer, Hacxberry, OKl. well [/ - e LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS-SEALED bids will be received at tihe office of A. I Dyer, architect, Fremont, Nebrasia, untli 3 o'clock p. m., March 24, 1810, for the erec- thon of an Odd Fellows Home bullding at York, Nebraskw, according to plans and speeifications now on file at sald office, Separate bils will be received at same time avoiding Poor Powder - n;‘hu mdch‘;;p v ig can ki / hfiu ‘Trust brands. too often il — Deon't trust them. Put your faith in Calumet—the only strictly hi b-lmdt baking powder sold at a moderate cost. We .ltw 1;?.': guarantee that the results will please you. Guarant Georgia. 1 will make 1,00 ACRES TIMBER LAND In Montgomery Co., Georgla lape If they will do the work. Now then,” with this place there goes fteen head of good horses. 'They con 04 brood mares) 4 yearlings, 2 three car olds, 2 mules, and two saddle horses. he mules are 2 year olds, weil matched, he heavier horses will 0 1200 and are a good western grade of Tirses, The 38 head of cattle consist of nine 1 milch cows, one good white faced wil, thirteen head of last spring’s calves, d fifteen head of one, two, und leur old steers and heifers. This bunc V for the most part, a good high grade ihite faced strain and the red poll strain, hey will match up and rank well with 1Y of the average farm herds in this, or liy other count The farm mactiner: lew disc, one seeder, b Inch stirring plow, aflous other h consists of one hay rake, one one cultivator, and appurtenances and tools hat usually go to make up a ranch., Be- Lies this, there are two buggies, and \Wo wagons, two sets of work harness, and 19, et of 'buggy harness e one land in the raw, without a build- g upon it, or without ‘a hoof of stock, is {orth all the money that I am asking for Diis entire layout. But, this is just one of hoze bargain counter propositions that come once In & while. ‘The first man that \imps off the train here and looks this tace over and says he will take It, is ue man that will get it, for this must have fulck action. 1 turn the place over just [t stands ready for the spring work. ossession will be given any day. #h, and 33300 back upon the plac fose the deal. Now, I don't want any long winded |ijers, asking all sorts of fool questions. niw place is cheaper than you can steal | place, and will make you a delightful (me and a thousand times better than 0 stick around your wife's folks paying ¢nt. It you buy this place and just turn (i and work, you can be worth $25,000 in 1 next three years for this is a dandy \vout and {s really worth today, double that it is being offered Act at once, get right on the train and (e here to me and let me sell you this ! nce—come prepared to deal, for I would 1t hold this five minutes for anybody. ARAH L. HUNGERFORD, “RAWFORD, Misstssippt. LARGE tracts of 1,000 to 20,000 acres .table for colonization or a good invest- |ient; located in South Mississippi on the uit of Mexico. This is excellent land for ‘sing carly truck and the famous paper 1wil pecans; fine transportation facilities; ice $5 to $7.50 per acre; terms. Enter- |ilse Lumber Co., 'P. O. Box 41, Gulfport, ins. Monta A 30-ACRE RICH FARM FREE. Do you want a 320-acre free U. S, govern- 1ent Montana homestead farm? Buy your cket through to Gaiata, Mont. on' the hain line of the Great Northern rallroad ind take train No. 3. Galata 18 the very center of the finest, jrgest, smoothest, most productive crops, eo_government farm lands In Montana, |.very advantage You can think of. Lasi (rge body of prime A-1 free homestead nnds leff in United “States, Your last ance. .\Vhat more easy and satisfactory iay ean you think of to get a_home and ake money fast and sure? Homes! ¢ing taken by the hundred: ng. Galata Is growing so |1 kinds of business houses. lulata best."” MONTANA HOMESTEAD COMPANY, Galata, Chotsau County, Mont. YOU CAN BUY | d-acre tracts from us m the Judith Basin, “ontana, where they raise 40 bushels of inter wheat ‘Pzr acre yearly, and splen- id alfalfa and other grains, withaut irri- ation, for $30 close to troad, Get low ex- jursion rates. Brown Co., 131 1a Salle St ., or Hobson, tfont, [ 10 846 per acre, our free ma Wiillam H Chicago, {ILLION ACRES TO CHOOSE FROM 100 acreés free sov-r“mem homesteads, 320 icres. Will locate you on the best wheat 19d cereal lands in Chouteau county, Mon- ‘wna, olose to #chools, markets and trans- fortation facilities. Twenty-two years’ con- {nuous residence.” G. T. Sanderson, Loca- br. Havre, Chouteau ference, ' Cltizens’ avre, county, Montana, National Bank of MONTANA LANDS—Abbott Miller jompany. Three Forks, Montana, Irrigated ands that net $%0 per acre a year. Wheat ands that net 326 per acre a year. Can be 1id for In one and two years' crops. Write is for descriptian. prices and goiden oppor- unit Land N Dakota, VORLD'S RICHEST WHEAT LAND AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES, Write me today for particulars about rich Yorth Dakota wheat farms offered to you jor $15 an acre less than real value. These larms are in Ransom county, North Dakot he centér of the richest 'wheat-growin ountry In the world. Here land values re increasing by leaps and bounds. Sur- lounding farms are selling for from $40 © $45 an acre. To force immediato and uick sale I offer four {mproved farms at {he surprisingly low price of 35 an acr Chese are 640, 490, 52) and 160 acres, respec- [ively. My terms are very easy. ay’ for particulars. ibout these farms that will interést you wner, Walter L. Willamson, Box 12 Lisbon, N. D. BUSINESS OPENINGS IN FLASHER, North Dakota, for a hotel man, livery, ardware and general merchant. Flasher All have its flrst rallroad Apply to the owners of the townsite, Wil- lam H. Brown Co., Mandan, North Dakota. Tite 1 have some facts A BONA FIDE snap In 10 acres of Nel ton county land, adjoining the Red river Talley, close to' county Seat; 100 acres Ander cultivation, 10 acres good ha neadow, balance §0 acres {ine arable land, | Which can be broken up this spring and ut Into flax; with average crops this land Al 10 to 315 per acre more than ycu write quick; this must ba sold efore seeding; price, $22.60 per acre. Ad- ress Lock Box 6. Lakota N. D. FOR SALE—South half of 30-6-16, w. ot ‘u, being 320 acres of good level iand in junny Southern Alberta, southeast of Leth- bridg A new rallroad Is now building within thres miles. Price for quick sal 15 per aocre. Wil make terms. Addre: x 23, Fargo, N. D. "FOR SALE OR ;"RADE. VALUE 2,600, R oc Erosim. dn e Fouss oo s ts, all In first-cla v shape and Faine Bath, Shiogts rase on both pubdafics rame , gle re ul 18 flafl. well 8 fe. . A good within 10 ft, L‘:'hmo and about from 10 shade and apple trees owm the place. Al s&u‘ufl n a 1 of land that gives jou t. of main street front by 140 ft. flr In a town of about 1,300-1, e he western part of La Moure coun D, Hardware preferred. Write to . Wireh, Forbes, N. D. now Oregon. TTENTION, buyer and h teliable information on Oregon and Wash: Lands Inf Burea of Trade Bldg. Pore: wnd. N—Its ources a SRS B ATt AT no'n of the -t?u; ] = of five work horses (4 of which are | weigh from 116 | three | this summer. | for tself In three years and be | Price $10.00 per acre; to exchange for lorthern land or merchandise. (Chas. Barchus, 200 Century Bldg., Des Molnes, ITa. “South Dakota. HAVE a farm for sale South Dakota; will Riiine, Florence, 8. D. 1. % county H in Codington seil or trade. FOR SALE—Brul y, 8 farms; also lands west of the river at $16 [acre and up; deep black sofl, never failing crops; good schools, churches and markets; for new fllustrated book! state map and prices, call on or address L. L. Hagaman, Pukwana, 8. D, FOR SALE~Charles Mix county, South Dakota, north i of 8, in Jackson townahip, 4% miles from Geddes, well improved, 00d land. Liberal terms. Price per acre, 020 18 (hiorented write to Mathew "R, Faber, Remsen, Ia. DO YOU want 164 acres of good land, | good. rich soll covered with timber; seven mlles rnortheast from the nice, Qrowlnl town of Rainy River, Ontario, Canada, | southwest quarter section, 20 fownship; bast district, Rainy River; price for quick sale, $1.000. Glat Johnson, Yankton, 8. . Box 305 cholce dairy and stock farm, st from Minneapolis in i valued at $8 per more; for par- ticulars, write (o owner. J. Wi, k., Clare- mont, 8. D., Lock Box, 5 TEXAS plantation county; ranch house, road, store, postoffice, townsite, alfaifa, orn, potatoes growing; subdivided. Fed. eral Land and Investment Co., 39 Scanlan Bldg., Houston, Tex. 1500 acres, Brazoria tenant houses, rail- West Farnam, Harney, Douglas, Bemis or Hanseom park. = Would consider double house. Give full B Address 415 Bee. perticula | —=n home n Omaha. Thoroughly up-to-date housé of 10 rooms, large grounds, shrubbery and =o forth. Near Fleld club. Price, $16,00. Free of Incum- brance, Trade for improved or unimproved jand. Nowata Land and Lot company, 64 New York Life Biag. Tel., Red 1999, TWO sectlons of southern Loulsiana pralrie land at $12.50 per acre, clear, to trade for city property or merchandise of equal value. No agents. M, O. Page, Beaver Creek, Mont. FOR SALE or trade, 160 acres in Ward county, North Dakota; equity $1,000; bes: offer in 20 days, gets It. Southern' Business Exchange, 31 Moore Bldg., San Antonio, Tex. TO EXCHANGPR—Tor inproved or wild land in North Dakota, erties, clenr of incumbrances: Two-story hotel on corner lot in Grane, N. D., $2,500. Fifty-thres nice lots close to school house at Lansford, N. D., $,000. Two-story bullding at Decorah, Ia., $3,000, g-room house at Decorah, Ia., on two lots, $8,500. Send full particulars, price and legal de- scription in first letter. Box 252, Fargo, TO TRADE—Ten head farm horses, price $1,600; want cheap timber land; best offer takes them: give legal numbers and | full description in first Avon, 8. TO EXCHANGE—Good farm near county seat, for an up-to-date auto, fouring car preferred. Address Box 27, Steele, N. D, letter. Box 322, WE WANT YOU TO SER the land that we are offering for 35.00 per acre and compare it with others. Then | We have real farras, low at §17.50 per acre. | Basy distanco to Houston, city_of 100,000 Go with us Tuesday, March 15, Low round trip rate. ! NOWATA LAND LOT CO.. | 624 Now York Life Bldg. Red io. | - | WILL take as part pay for 20 acres Btonewall county land standard make type- | writer. Box 182, Troupe, Tex. i TEXAS PLAINS LAND. | Two tracts of 4,00 acres each, in Lynn county; per eent tillable; Santa I'e rail- road buliding near It; for quick sale at $i1 per acre bonus; will not exchange for other property. Address John P. Marrs, Tahoks, ex. TEXAS ORANGES WON FIRST PRIZE over Californin and Florida oranges at Na- tional frult show; yield $400 to $§00 an acre. You get bearing orchard for little cash and small pavment monthly; government report free. Hanford Realty Co. 310 Bank of Commerce,. or Iowa Orchards, Scanlon Bldg., Houston, Texas . | TEXAS SCHOOL LANDS | L Over 1,000,000 acres for sale by the state. You can buy 640 acres for $2 an acre; pay $32 cash, balance after 40 years; fine farm. ing and 'fruit land and healthy climate. For further information send 6c tage. INVESTOR PUB. &0, Dept. K, Ban Antonlo, Tex. WILL trade 320 acres wheat land in southeastern Saskafchewan for Improved 160 acres in centrdl Minnesota; 8-room | house in Minneapolis for Minnesota timber land. Spencer Erickson, 411 Palace Bldg., Minneapoli SWAPS, 35,000 clothing, all up-to-date-stuff, well as- sorted stock; will trade for land; must be oclear and worth the money. If you have a gquarter section land that Is really worth $10 per acre we can trade you a property that pays §20 a month $17.000 stock hardware for land; $20,000 stock general merchandise for land and cash. NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., 624 New York Life Bidg. Tel. Red ig9. TAILORS SKILLED labor commands high wages | and good craftmanship justifies it. See | J. A. XERVAN, 608-610 Brandeis Bldg. G. A. LINDQUEST CO., 25 PAXTON BLK. MAX MORRIS, %1 BRGWN BLOCK. A KODYM MERCHANT TAILOR. 1411 Harney St Doug. &7, SPRING WOOLENS HAVE ARRIVED, TAILOR BECK, 111 So. 15th Young m fashigmable | Shocsal s tatlor. 412-15 Paxton Blk. SISTEK FOR SALE—800 acres near Uvalde, 10 miles from railroad; all fino black vailey abundant water supply at depth of 0 feet; good tract to subdivide; adjoining land mow selling at §25 per acre; can . be bought for $12 if taken quick. Address C. O. Byrd. Uvalda. Texas. | Virginia. 200 FARMS in Piedmont, Virginla, from $500 to $100,000, | from 1§ to 1,20) acres; quality finest; pro- | ductiveness unsurpassed. | 2,000000 acres In Kentucky, mineral, $3 per acre. Iee and electric plant in thriving town. W. W. BRIGGS, Orange, Va. timber and | ‘Wasbingtol | FOR SALW—20 acres, Yakima valley, under Sunnyuide canal; seven in orchard, | five bearing small fruits, small house, ou:~ | bulldings, §% ac alfalfa, balance potaty land, close to ilroad, good community, high school; bargain, price, 9,500, terms ox part. Ad¥ s owner, Norman Sine, Granger. Wa: VIEWS of Yakima valley, Washington, showing orchards, cosy homes, scenery, | sent free. Our thousands of fruit growers ttaried with smali means and have achlevel independence and wealth in a delightful climate. New lands are constantly being brought under irrigation, atfording just as §ood opportunities tor newcomers. For in- | formation, illustrated book, write Com- | mercial club, North Yakima, Wash, FOR Information and literature on farm |1and and irrigated frult lands—Idaho, Ore- gon and_ Washington—call on us, or write us—332 Neville block, Omaha, Neb. Sher- | wood Immigration Co.; J. W. Young, local | manager. | Wiscons! | s | FORTY acrer, good level 1and, 20 cleared, | balance wcod 'and pasture, ' four-room frame house, frame barn, chicken hou: trout brok through farm; $700, easy term: Tom O. Mascn, Island City State bank, Cumberland, Wis. | CHOICR agricuitural lands, $10 per acr: | a1%0 lake shure property, three houj | from twin cities; any size tract, 15,000 to select from. 'Write owner, Harry C. A. | Jehnson, 35 "Palace Bldz.,' Mianeapohs, ; Minn. " Wyoming. | FOR ftree deseriptive booklet where you | ean still buy good land cheap, write | Beatty, Pine Bluffs, Wyo. RUFFNER TAILORING CO., 324 S. 15th st. WANTED—T0 BUY "BALTIMORE 20 hand ators pays best prics for 2d-hand furniture, clothes, etc. D. 4265. BEST price pald for second-hand furnl- ture, (‘I.g'll‘ <lothing ‘and sl s Tel Dong. 972 Secon’% hand_clothing, party, afternoon dresses. John Feldman. D 8135, 'Ind. A-203 GOOD PRICE for seccad-hand oclothes, shoes and furnitnre. SELNER. Doug. 5401 JUST opening business; highest price pald for furniture_ and stoves, D. 1530, A-4%3. New York Repair shop, 1117 Dodgs. WE PURCHASE INSURANCE POL- ICIES IN OLD LINE -COMPANIES, WRITE FOR PARTICULARS, PUTNAM CO. 604-5 NEW OMAHA NAT. BANK BLDG, OMAHA. WANTED—TO RENT CENTRALLY located rooming house or furnished flat. Might buy If price is right. Nowata Land and Lot Co., 624 New York Life Gldg. Tel Red 1999. We Are Getii_ng Numerous Calls for houses, all sizes. List with us, NOWATA LAND & LOT CO., ¢ N. Y. Life Bldg. Red 1999, WANTED to rent, modorn, well fur rished house, one year or longer, from May | L Address G. Bldg. W. Updike, 108 Brandels WANTED—SITUATIONS DAY WORK cleaning and washing. Call Web. 3964, early In morning or late in even- ing. Ask for Mrs. Kennedy, Monday, Thursday and Friday. WANTED—By young man, placs to work for board while attending Boyles' college. WANTED—Employment for boy 14 years | of age Saturdays. Address L 407, Bee | STENOGRAPHER—Waut one? Telephone | Douglas 12 -class dressmaker, | St.le and fit guaranteed. Phons | T WANTEL sewir s Harney 155, | | CHEAP tarm land, frrigated, | 850 per Including perpetual 'water i upply more than ample; nd fully pald for. Located al Utah-Wyomin and fenced. Three sets of buildi; crops of alfalfa, timothy, wi Fine m, Also di 20 to tern vheat land located | 810 per aore. | teday. Quinlan & Tyson, 104 Dearborn St., | Chicago. FOR SALE—Arkansas farm, 160 acres, 30 acres cleared, balance good oak and hick- ory timber, $4,000 feet per acre, timber will pay for lund. 2% miles from town and rall- road; fine land and will be sold for §2.400, %ulcl sale. Address Love & Olsson, Little lock, Ark., 31l W. Markham, = REAL ESTATE LOANS MONEY TO LOAN~Payne Investment Co. WANTED—City loans. Peters Trust Ca 100 to 10,000 Iy, ¥. Weat Bide: T aald Terata 7 D West, LOANS to home owners ru home bulld- ers, vlmnhn ¢ making partid pay- ments nnually. W. H. THOMAS. 8 First National Bank Bldg. e i WANTED-City loans and warrants. W. Fernam Smith & Co., 130 hmn.fl- — ———— LOWEST RATES—Bemls, Brandels Bldg. FIVE I'Ek CENT MONEY *o loan on Omaha business gmmu. AS B Room 1. New Yore Late Yide: AAD 0n mproved property. Ne'sele. WASHING t. take home. work. Tel. A-208, “CURTAINS ¢l Phone Webster — REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Real estate transfers for March 9, 1910, furnished by the Midland Guarantes Trust company, bonded abstracters, 1714 Farnam street. . Dou, . Title insurance. Rachel Ioeb and husband, et al, to lots 2% and 25, and Bavings As-' Also day d; work guaranteed ment company, lots 1 to Parker's adi and . H.~RBeach, lots 1 ndd ter’ » John P. Finley and Alderson, lot 42 Stewart Place.. Mary B. L. Wil to Evelyn Hopper, lots 7 and 8, block drews & Benson's Lottis ¥. Bruening Clinten A, Pesch, Dundee Place . ‘Willlam H. Clark and hr!\hllon. #% lot 4, block 64, South & > €. Landen and husbs ph Lollsh, lots § to 11, block 6, Shrewer Place S eiaooin 1ot " E ooll, lots wood add. Dennis Carroll to Mary C, Harbach's subdiv. ... James J. Sullivan and wife t P. Brwin and Elizabeth M. lot 31, Keystone Park .... v *tasd Arthur H. Murdock and wif, J. W Prlug, n% lot §, bleck &, South . block 12, other consideration An- lot 31, block 88, ces and 46, Ken- the following prop- | | Hastings-Superior and place for the plumbing and heating of sald bullding,«also fireproof floors, parti- | tions end roof construction. All bide for either proposition must be accompanied by a certified check as provided in spec- ifications. The right is reserved to reject and all bids. George L. Loomls, Chair- man Home Buflding Board ~ F24 to M13 RAILWAY TIME CARD UNION STATION—Tenth nd Masom. Unton Pacifie— veave. San Fran. Ov'ri'd Ltd. §:15a. m. { Chl. & Jap. F'st Mall. 4:10 p. | Avantic_ioxp: Bx; > 3 pesppEppaEss’ 1 56 proY Denver Speclai Colorado Special Colorado I North Pl Grand lIsland Local.... Lincoln-Beat. Local...1: Val. & Cen. Clty Lol ..i! 3 | Chicago Great Western— Chicago Limited. Twin Clty Limited Chicago Itxpress. Twin City press. | Missouri Paeifio— K. C. and 8. L. Ex. Sat 12 p. m.. Chicage, Noel BBELS285E LT 1] Chicago Day ' Expr Des Molnes Loca, o Towa Local... b10:35 am Chlcago-Fastern Exp...a 440 pm Chicago-Ncbraska Ltd.a 6:08 pm WEST. Chieago-Nebraska Ltd. for Lincoln, Colo. and cal % Okla. and Texag Exp. Rocky Mountadh Lt Chicago & Omaha Expre: Chicago Luc! Colorado-Chis geepep SR 8 Qverland_Limited, Denver Epecia we gg:g @ wd g Fasi Mall. Twin City Sioux City Locul, Mino. & Dakota Twin' City’ Limited...... . WESIBO Lincoln-Chadron .., B Norfolk-Bonstell Long Pine-So. Platte s elre fon am am am | pm pm pm Poupp EEe {294 1 Deadwood-Hot Spge Casper-Lander Fremont-Aloion 1llinois Centrml— Chicago Express Chicago Limited . Minn.-St. Paul lixp, 3 bl Chicago, Illwn]lk‘v & St. Pauke— Overiana . Lifuité Omaha-Chicago - Colorado Epecial,, Colu.-Cllflorn)’ y-OmaNa Lcal St _Louls Exp. Mall and Express. Sisnberry wcsnul.(":;’: K. C Lyv. Counci!” BHir1s)....b 5:00 pm BURLINGTON STATION—Tenth ans Masvn. —— Burlington— Depver_and_Californis..a Puget Sound xpress...s Nebraska points. Black Hills.. Northwest Express Nebraska points.... Lincoln Mall Nebraske Express. Lineoln Local. Lincoln Local....... Schuyler-Plat{sniouth Plattsmouth-lowa .. | Bellevue-Plattsmouth Colorado Limited Chicago Speclal Chicago IEXDress. Chicago Fast Express Towa Local Creston-low: Loeal. St. Louis EXpress..... K. C. and St. Joseph. K. C. and St, Joseph K. C. & St. Joseph WEBSTER STATION —Fifteenth Webster, PREpPEOR FUPRED PEBERR | Missourt Paciffe— Auburn Local... Chicago, St Omabhae— Bloux City Expres: Omaha_Local Sfoux City Passeng Twin City Passenger. Bioux City Local 50 pm b12:10 pm | Paul, Minneapolis & { b 2:0pm bl em | € 6:20 pm ; b 9:20 pm b 6:30 am o §:35 am OCEAN STEAMSHIPS CRUISES DE LUXE to the WEST INDIES By New “AVON” 11.500 Twin-Serew v Tons EASTER| CRUISE, 18 days, $85 UP Ro Bepna | $30 to $110 First-class only, According to location. BERMUDA NEW WEEKLY SERVICE | AP, “OROTAVA” From Ple © 6.000 % vy j—| Fans in all rooms. Co-;lro(- uE‘fr‘:m Beoklets on Request. THE ROYAL' MAIL STEAM PACKET (0. | SANDERSON & SON, 3% State St, N. Y. | 149 La Salle Street, Chicago. W. E. Book, 1504 Faruam Street, Omaha. X, C. Shislds, 1001 Farsam St., Omaha, HAMBURG AMERICAN All Modern Safety Devices (Wireless, etc.) London--Paris-- Hamburg Blucher | Pros, Lincoin innatt April 21 April 23 April 2 April ) Plymoita 1SSURD. Tourlst Dept. for Trips Everywhers, jburg-American Line, 45 B'way, W. ¥, Or local Agw A PAPER FOR THE HOME OMAHA BEE BEST IN THE WEST From New York March 25 | business men may have their attention called to the benficial results of the com- mission plan of government in the other clties and with the request that this form your body and results of your investigation @s-to its adaptability in Omaha be pub- lshed in the dally papers. Our papers do not seem to discuss the commission plan of government very thor- oughly, and ft may be that they do not consider Omaha sufficiently modern to edcpt the method pursued in other wide awake citles, or is it that our present plan of government Is satisfactory, and does not the Commercial club, as a body feel that they could place before the primaries for nomination, a number of competent busi- ness men, any one of whom would be capable of managing one branch of the municipal affairs in a satisfactory manner? If ®o, cannot the Commercial club recom- | mena a list of such men, five of whom | When elected would assure this city a clean end business administration. | COMMITTEE ON PUBLICITY, COMMIS- SION PLAN OF CITY GOVERNMENT, CHERRY HILL CONGREGATIONAL BROTHERHOOD, Divorce Far Preferabl OMAHA, Neb, March 8—To the Editor of The Bee: With suspended breath we re- | celved the news of the Cudahy-Lillis affair in Kansas City. It was a deplorable, brutal way ‘of bringing to a climax the unpleasant relations of an ill-mated pair. The Catholic church is the most rigid ot | all churches 1n its attitude against divorce; yet would not divorce in the case In ques- tion have been a semi-respectable way of relleving the strained situation? Surely it was the door through which all concerned might have made a decent exit. Not that I approve of divorces as an easy means of throwing off the matrimonial yoke, but that it 1s the most acceptable way of un- tying the knot of the galling leash that binds the wretched mortals whom we call incompatibles, It is with a chill that one reads the ac- count of such butchery, such slaughter- house methods of attack. And the children. They are spattered with the blood of the man whom their father attacked. How could he do it? Why did he not spare the innocents? A resort to a di- vorce court would have brought upon the children scarcely any odlum compared to that which, like a thorny coat, now hangs heavy on their tender shoulders. XENIA FAIRCHILD, (Wil Miss Fairchild please send her ad- dress to the editor of The Bee?) A Word for the Negro. OMAHA, Neb.,, March 8.—To the Editor of The Bee: The recommendations of the recent Douglas county grand jury con- talned the following: We desire to further recommend that the 1ls be =0 drranged that white prisonérs may be together and colored prisoners con- fined by themselves. By this recommendation the grand jury bas committed an outrage upon the colored people of this county and state. This in- sult, In effect, declares that there is a dif- ference between white criminals and black criminals. The grand jury has gone even farther than that and enunciated principles wholly viclous, which can but result in a discrimination amounting to infamy. The history of the advance of the mon- ster of race prejudice in America shows that ssparation in public institutions has meant discrimination and a denlal of right and justice to the weaker class, That class, in America, has been notonly the weaker, but submerged, and in addition— black. It seems to me, that just at this time in Nebraska, when the negroes are working as never before and buying homes apace, that the spirit of justice in the stronger class will {mpel them to ignore the criminatory recommendation of the grand jury and rise to the point of true great- |ness and evidence the capacity to be the holders of power without abusing it. After all, those of us in the fight as members of the negro race, must rest our case on fundamental justice, and those of us who are struggling for better things have an almost impossible task, unless the door of hope and opportunity is left ajar. H. J. PINKETT. Hebrew Months, GRAND ISLAND, Neb., March 7.—To the Editor of The Bee: Wil Hebrew scholars orientate to straighten me out? In Watson's eccleslastical dic- tlonary, under the title: “Months, omitting the Hebrew, he states: “Some- times called new moons, from the circum- stance of thelr commencing with the new moon, anclently had no separate names, with the exception of the first, which wns! | callea Ablo, that ‘the month of the | | young ears of corn,’ EExod. xill: 4; xxif: 15; xxtv: 18; Deut. xvi: 1. During the captivity, the Hebrews adopted the Babylonian names for their months, which were as follows and they were reckoned thus: (1) Nisan, from the new moon of April. (2) Zif or Ziy, |also called (Artemissius, Tar and Iyar). (3 Sivan. () Tammiz. () Ab. (6 Elul, | () Tishri. &) Bul, 9 Kislev. (10) Tebeth. (1) Shubat. (12) Adar, also the interealary | month Ve-Adar.” Tebeth, Shebat and Adar, | torm the new moon of January, February |and March, respectively. But, under the title: “Nisan,” he states, “a month of the Hebrews, answering to our March and which sometimes takes from February or | April, according to the course of the moon, It was the first month of the sacred year, at the coming out of Egypt, Exod. xil: 3, and it was the seventh month of the clvil year. By Moses it was called Abib. The name Nisan was introduced only sinee the time of Ezra and the return from the captivity of Babylon." I cannot recomcile |his statements as to ABIb or Nisan, Artemis, Iar, Iyar, ZIf or Ziv and Sivan, the first three months of the sacred and | the seventh, eighth and ninth of the civil year, that is “begnning with moon,” respectively, Who can? What s the classical or technical name for the operation of maiming captives or prisoners of war by cutting the retractor muscles of the pollex or thumb and pallux | or great toe, so that the vietim could neither draw the bow, swing the sling nor run, common among the anclent Isvaelitish natlons? SAMUEL P, BRIGHAM. | ——— The fact that Chamberiain's Cough Rem- edy Is pleasant to take has made It & fa- the new of government be given consideration by | some of your|: under all pure food laws—both Refuse substitutes —get Calumet, Received it Award World's Pure !':d E.lp-dmg: Chicage, 1907 ate and National. If you want to stop that cold right off and in the easiest kind of a wa just get a bottle of Dr. Beil's Pine- ar-Honey. It's the largest selling Cold and Cotgh Medicine in the world because it sicps coughs and colds quicker than any other known remedy or prescription, and it does that be- cause it gets at the cause—kills the germs of cold—cuts the mucous and gets rid of it naturally, It contains no habit forming drugs— nothing harmful—only real old fash- foned pine-tar, sassafras, rhubarb, honey and other beneficial ingredients ~all plainly stated on the bottle. Made by the same known scientific E. E. SUTHERLAND S'topé:C:olds and : -‘-‘Cou:gh'ihg Quick process for the past twent: e, You ought to fapku Dr. Bel l'ny}‘;i‘ne Tar-Honey 3““ as soon ds you begin to feel “coldy”—jdst the minute your throat bsgins to tickle—then you'd stave off these colds and caughs. Keep it in_the house—always ready —that’s the right way. Every time you sneeze, shiver, “sniffle” or “feel "¥ufl in the head’’ you need it. At all druggists in :ic, soc and $1 bottles, Children take it readily. Look for our trade-mark (the bell) and Granny Metcalfe's picture on every bottle. That identifies genuine Dr, Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey, Made by MEDICINE COMPANY Stealing a Ring from Crazy Man Charge Hangs Over Jack Roach, Who Has Just Served Ninety Days in Jail. Stealing a gold ring from an insane man | is the charge against Jack Roach, a man | who just finished serving a ninety-day | gentence In the county jail. | Shortly after Roach began his term, an | insane man by the name of Charles Wajba was brought in. When the man's wife came to visit him she noticed that a hea: €014 ring was missing and notified Jatle: Osborne. Osborne asked Wajba to paint out the man who took the ring and he designated Roach. Upon searching Roach he found the ring In a pocketbook which he tried to conceal in his trouser leg. Roach finished his sentence Sunday and just as he was about to pass into the warm clear alr of treodom, a warrant was served on him charging him with larceny from the person Roach appeared before Judge Crawford and later pleading not gullty, was bound over to the district court under $500 bonds. Storz Delicious Dock Beer. Now ready In botties. An excellent and Invigorating epring toric. Private families promptly supplled. 'Phone your order Charles Storz. 'Phones, Webster 120; Ind., ¥| B-1261 ) COURT HOUSE STEEL WORK WILL UNDERGO INSPECTION Will Not Be Accepted if Faulty, Says J. W, Bedfford, Chairman of Committee. No alarm should be felt over charges that the construction of the court house Is faulty,” declared Jeft W. Bedford, chair- man of the bullding committes of the Board of County Commissioners, “In the first place, we are making only part payment on the work and accepting finally only that part of the work which is covered up. There will be a thorough in A strong man is strong all over, No strong who is suffering from week sto; oconsequent indigestion, or from some of the stomach and i irs digestion and nutrition, woak or diseased there is a loss of cares di e the nerves, You can't afford to accept @ secrer alooholic medicine oF tNowN comrosiT vorite with mothe verywhere may thereby make a little bigger profit, spection of the riveting and bolting of th steel before it is accepted by the board." | Frank McLaughlin, who made the state ment Tuesday that “50 per cent of th riveting on the court house is imperfeet," admitted the next day that he and | Thomas Bannon had not examined the en« tire work. “It 15 stated that you looked at only thirty-eight rivets, all told, Is this eo?" Mr. McLaughlin was asked. “Yes," was the answer. This fact seems to bear out George E. Caldwell's contention that the examination wasg not thorough enough fairly to declars how well or Il the riveting s being done. Later in the day, Mr. Bedford announced that as chairman of the committee on con- struction, he had instructed Architsct John | Latenser to make an investigation of the | work ana report to the full Board of County Cd>mmissioners, Mrs. G. P. Cronk Asks for Co{x | She Gets it from Her Attorney, W, W. Slabaugh, Who Orders Two Tons. W. W. Slabaugh, attorney for Mrs. George P. Cronk, crdered two tons of coal sent to the residence on Georgla | avenue, and this is expected to relieve the | trigiaity of the 1 At the time Judge Slabaugh was doing this, the Miss Maud Gordon, was sending for reporters to “call the attention of the ity to Mrs. Cronk's lack of fuel.” M don #a'd she had appealed | to the @iks and that the order had voted | that since Mr. Cronk 1s well able to pay for conl himself the funds of the lodge ought not to be drawn upon. Cronk 16, nurs n A Dloody Affafr Is lung hemorrhage. Stop it, and cure weak lungs, coughs and colds, with Dr. King's Ne covery. o and $L.00. For sal by Beaton Drug Co. Vanderbilt with Gould Road. ST. LOUIS, March 8.—Cornelius Vander. bilt of New York was elected a director of the Missouri Pacific Rallway company here today No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach men can be mach with its other disea: associated orgens, which im- For when the stomach the nutri contained in food, which is the source of all physical strength. When & man ‘‘ doesn’t feel just right, when he doesn’t sleep well, has an uncomforteble feelidg in the stomach after eating, is languid, nervous, ont, bo is losing the nutrition needed to make strength, hould use Dr. irritable and despond. Plerc Geldem Medical s of the stemach and other ’ tlon and nutrition. It eariches the bleod, tavigorates the lver, strengthe the kid, nostrum s & substitute for this mene 10N, not even though the urgent desler Ingredients priated oo wrepper. e e e e et et e L y