Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 12, 1910, Page 14

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14 THE BEE: e el e EA FARM AND RA L.CESIAID FOR SALE Avkansas OR SALE-M0 acres good bottom tim- | h-’r lands will cut 4000 feet per acre; two nd on it miles from raliroad town Df' people, for §1.50 per acre. Southern ealty and Trust Company, Ashdown, Ark. “FOR SALE—20 acres timber; 20 acres Iinproved farm adjolning town: near sehools | and churches and raliroad station. T. N. Gay. Devall's Blutf, Ark. KANSAS homes; new list just out; G’!Aénp homes in Arkansas; write for it if Lau ‘want & cheap home where you can v easy and enjoy good health. 0. L. r GET some cheap land in sunny Arkansas; mow is the time, while it is cheap; can sell you 20 acres at $8 an acre, on pay. ments of $10 down and §2 & week; no taxes until paid for, no interest; at this pric it is much betfer than putting your money avings bank; keep your eye on Arl things aré coming our Wway and prices ‘are going to advance rapidly on §00d land, put in a few dollars and wal them grow. Address, stating wha want, O. C. Ludwig, Secretary of Little Rock, Ark. FOR SALE 1,00 acres of nice level bottom 1 sale; all under good fence; 20 ac: riggs, Rich Mountain, and for in good Atate of cultivation, balance in good pas- \ure; threo large barns; three good mow- ing machines; one good hay press; three s and plenty of farming (ools to emn lll’% lgd take care of the hay crop. Price §15 per acre; on-balf cash, balance (o suit purchaser. SOUTHERN REALTY AND TRUST CO., Ashdown, Little River County, Ark. Coternse. d relinquishments, th finest of land, wili go out any time; thi Jand 18 in the underflow district. ~Ca rle Robinson, 2456 W. 2th Ave., Denve Colo. E00d rak cultivate HOM! EADS | | -class | ile FOR SALE—Greatest Bargains in Eastern Colorado—3,040-acre ranch, all firs low land; Improvements worth $3,000; . R. town, Elbert county; only # a Two cholce half sections near Genoa, bar- gains at $7.76 acre. Iive elegant sections in Kit Carson county, the best, at §7.75 acre. Two quarter sections fine agricultural land, | Lincoin_county, a snap at 3 acre. Terms. R. M. Bettesworth, Cedar Raplds, la A GOOD quarter section, subject to irri- gation, eight miles from Denver and near * rajlroad station, only $15 per acre. Address Commonwealth Land Co., Littleton, Cole. BEST orchard and rarm land in Arkan- wan valley close to raiiroad and market for $16 per acre cash. Water rights for same At §76 per acre in twenty equal aunual pay- ments. This land is goin (u; s‘nd“;\ll double its value in u very shor Write W. R. Stover, care of Elks' elub, | Pueblo, Colo. U —— % ACRE: In Nile Irrigation district; small house and barn, water next yea per acre. Ad- dress I. F. Beier, Fort Collins, Colo. | FOR SALE-—160 acres, fine farm and ®tock ranch; 125 acres in cultivation; fine improvements; right at railroad, best farm n Fremont county; water rights; all kin ©of machinery for farm, including 12 h £ horses, 2 cows, b-acre orchard. full bear: ng. Price $15,000: $2,00 casn, balance good 'l:rlrnl. Bottenfield & Howard, Canon City, Julon RANCHES of ail kinds for sale, from 100 | wcres up to 5,000, at the hest bargalans of | wny land offered in Colorado. Write or cail on The Rellly-Rex Real Estate C Kiowa, Colo. FOR SALE—160 acres nine miles from Morrison, 12 acres under cultivation; over 100 acres of timber and 40 of pasture; price ncludes heavy crop of growing rye, imple- monts, 300 bushels Colo. 31 seed oats, 100 seed rye, cattle, S-rcom house barns, granary, etc.; price $.i00, or wil il land at $i250 per acre. B. Mt. Morrison, Cole. S " Calitornia. FOR SALE—Calilornia—1f you are look- ing for an elegant house, withi good income, and a chicken ranch suits you, here it is; 5 minute walk from two churches, sehool. stoffice and stores; one mmile from steam ine depot, 14 miles from eleciric line; and all for only $6,000. Write owner, H. R. Babb, Cotat, Cal. Oanada. RIVERSIDE, Albet finest stock farm of 1,000 acres, Is for sale at snap. For particulars of this and other farm lands write to the own W. J. McNamara, Wesaskiwin, Alberta, Canada. Florida, | FOR SALE-$.00-acre, personally selected colonjzation tiact near ~Arcandia. Fla. | Nothing better in the state. Citrus and | trucking lands, # per acre. Favorable terms. Dixon-Burgess Co.. Waferloo, Ia. " FLORIDA LANDS CHEAP Would you Invest in a 5 10, 20 or 40-acre truit, vegetable, poultry, ‘pecan or truck | arm in Florida’s best agricultural district, | t you could get it for $1.50 per acre under | market price’ We ave just opening new | tract in Columbia county, and while con- structing the campaign will sell a. few teacts on cash or easy payments of $ per month. We have just issued a beautiful §0-| page book, showing plctures of tields and | dwelll in our locality, all In artistic col- ors. We will mail you this book free and send Yon such other advertising matter as| will glve you a good Idea of our proposition. | Our lund is convenient to threa rallroads | and we have Lake City, a medern county seat of 6000 people, In our mj People who know Florida consider our tract one |~ of the very best. It Is endorsed by bankers, | congressmen, farmers and the Board of | Trade, Prices very low; easy buying plan; wr.te for maps and book giving truthful de weription. Columbla-Florida Land Co., 449 Times Bidg., St. Louis, Mo. POSSESSION—$0-acre P rich soll near good town in $2500. _Address owne: Kan. farm, 5 acres in cultivation, well {m. utheast kansas; price | D. R. Finley, Cavey, | | SOME choice bottom farms for sale— 246 acres, 12 miles south of Wichita, on the | Cowskin, just hits corner of pasture; no waste land; two sets of improvements; good house of 10 Tooms; cold and hot water in house; bath, closets; barn, cribs and other buildings; good orchard; one 30 hog tigit; | 6-room nouse, barn, granaries, other build: | ings; this cholce 246-acre farm can be | bought for $20,i00 if sold by June 1. | acres, 2 mlles west of Peck., Kan.; choice bottom land: good Y-room house, barn, other | bulldings; $20.50. 30 scres, 2 wmiles from | Clearwater, Kan.; one of the best half scc- tions in the valley: price $0,00 for & a 1, C. Cummiigs, Clearwater. Kan. | % ACRES nice, lever, black la ; ; | mile from £choo cash. 160 acres in - improvements; good black | pey acre; half cash, balance 5 years, § per ceni; we pay rallroad ture to | all purchasers; write for list. Bouthdast | Land Co Dennls, Kan. &0 ACRES corn land in Mississippl val ley of southeast Missouri; §0) acres under cultivation and rented for $5 an acre cash. Carn last yvear weighed out 6 bushe acre at station 21, miles from tand acre {s fine ailfalfa land. We cut it § times each year. It is good for 2 bushels | of wheat, Dralnage ditches on (wo sides, though the tax I8 very light, as this land is never wel. This is better corn ‘'wid than the $200 land of Ilinols and will bring that price. This is a snap and purchasers should not delay. HART-REYNOLDS ¢ Caruthersville, Mo. | CASS county poultry farms, 40, %, 15, 7. | 8, d-acre trucis; some well improved; close to Harrisonvill t 10 1o 3500 | ~rest like ren Tes corn, alfalfa and cloverd la house; barn clhard; of town; #5500, rry $6,000. Patrick. owner, Harrison- ville, M | son, ESTATE | CH LAND FOR SALE REAL FARM AND RA REA FARM AND RA ESTATE CH LAND FOR SALE k N ACRES, between Raytown and Leeds, on rock road. All in blue grass, price, $300 per acre. John W. Luttrell, Independ- ence, Mo. FOR BALE--1n Camden county, Missourl, ©0ld “soldiers, railroad men, labormg men and others ting to purchase land on monthly or quarterly payments, address A. R. Jackson, Climax Springs, M 1,00 RICHEST courn &cres on earth; 1a, ‘mi tmproved, good sofl, 3% miles from New- market, La., for cosh or trade; equity §12,000 on dry goods or groceries. Price $125 per acre. E. H. Lunders. Shenandoah, la. Minnesota. cres, well improved by the old man, fine erchard, good timber, soil sandy loam, clay subsoll bottom; 35 acres culti- ed; balance timber, pasture and meadow. One farm_team, 13 head cattle, farm m chinery. Price, $4,600; $2,000 down, balan on long time. This beautiful home must be old. Summer homes, fine lake frontage, dalcy farms, stock farms. Write me your BIGHTY wants. A, W. Bimmons, Forest Lake, ‘Washington County, Minn. Oklanoma. TULSA, OKIL. 0 acres pasturs iand; good oll pros- pects; §1.50 acre; In fee. John T. Blair & Co., Tulsa OkL RANCH FOR SALB For sale 181,200-acre ranch, 8. W. Texa 1% agricultural, balance gramng; all fenced, #,000 acres wolf proof fence; several ranch houses; stock water; price $5.25 per acre; this_price includes 17,000 sneep, 4,500 cattle, 800 horses; a genuine business propesition, a bargain; value of stock will advance | with the seagon; takes prompt action at this price. Jacob Bozarth, Okmulgee, Okl South Dakota. FORCED to sell good quarter section | near Reliance, S. D.; $18 per acre, if taken soon. Address, Box 392, Cherokee, la. Nebraska. Qfiéer | Arguments Are presented v show that Northport has no chance to become a city, because IT 18 TOO NEAR BRIDGEPORT. { How absurd, when you consider that South Omaha was sfarted after Omaha was a city of nearly 100,000 There is Ben- son which has grown to a little city of 3,000 peuple and is within a stone's throw of Omaha. Havelock, at the edge of Lincoln, is a good example of what a railroad can do in bullding up a manufacturing city. NORTHPORT HAS TWO RAILROADS. The Burlington station at Bridgeport is only a little over a milc ¢ Northport. | This gives the new town the advantage | of competition in freight rates. i The rivalry between the two towns will make business grow. The pride each town will have {n its own growth will make them both good towns. Northport is to have a PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH It will be located on lotsil and 2, block It is a good corner and a building will be erccted in a short time. A Grand Island m&n bought u few days ago and will put up a bullding for a grocery and meat market. Things are doing at Northport and if you want to help do them, get your lot today. Call or write for a plat and then pick your lot and do it quick. PAYNE INVESTMENT CO.,, Exclusive Agents for Northport Lots. S. E. Cor. lsth and Farnam. ! | | 4 BUSHELS WHEAT LAND, 3% PER ACRE. We own and control 2,000 acres of Chey- enne county, Nebraska's cholcest farm land now on the market. The heaviest crop-yielding county in Nebraska rfor ten years; ailfalfa aiso a leading crop; ask for folders and fuli particulars; agents wanted everywhere; write for our proposition at | once. Railroad fares refunded if thin not as represented. Fundingsiand & Sever- idney, Neb. ARGAINS B. Hillcrest, 160 acres, $5,200, cash rent. Midway, 80 acres, ‘Ash Grove, $20 acr , J. T. CAMPBELL, Litchtield, Neb. CHOICE unimproved tarm land, 320 acres perfectly level, 11 miles northeast of O'Neill; §00d black 8oli; will cut over 400 tons of hay annually; best of farm or aifalfa land; school house on land; price 330 an acre. 160 acres, slightiy rolng, 9 miles north- east of O'Neill; goud Soil; cuts an abun- dance of hay, aud Is every foot farm land, Price $25 an acre. O'Nelll, Neb. in_northw - a preat bargain. Phil Stimmel, 300 DeGraw Bidg, Kansas City, Mo. | terings. And they | WANTED-Clty | Nebraska City; Miscellamevns. ¥ DO YOU WANT TO SELL PART OF| YOUR LAND? Write & description of it, bufldings water, near what town. Make 70 words of it all and send It to The Omaha Bes with 72 cents fo b ach ineertion. People in Ne- jave money and waat land. They to The Omaha Bee for real estate of- et them in T Bee. CHEAP FARM LANDS. (o western Nebraska and Colorado. Write ces. NEBRASKA LAI(D COMPANTY, Sidney, N T TO 8ELL YOUR FARM? List It In “the classified columns of The Capital. Glve a good description of your property and make your proposition clear and definite, DO YOU WANT TO BUY A FARM? Make your ant known to the people through tho classified columns of The Cap- | ital. State clearly just what you want and | about what you want to pay. The rates for advertising farm lands Is only 1 cent a word, 6 cents a line or 70 cents an inch for each insertion. A trial ad will convince you of the pulling force of The Capltal's classified columns The Capital is the leading paper of lowa. The duily clrculation exceeds 40,000, the majority of this going into the homes uf the rural population of the state, the people who have the money to buy just what you have to sell, or who wish to sell their present property and relnvest in something larger. A sample copy is sent to all advertisers, or on request. THE DES MOINES CAPITAL, Classified D Des Moines, Ia. S REAL ESTATE LOANS GARVIN BROS., 34 fioor N. Y. Lite. %00 (0 $110,000 on improved property. No delay. WANTED-City loans and warrante W. Favoum Bmiih & Con 128 Faroam St to $5,00 on homes |n Omaha. O'Keete Rbs) Eutate Co., 108 N. X. Lifa Dougias or A-ZIB. loans. Pecers Trust $10 10 $10,00 made promptly. ¥. D. Wead, Wead Bldg., 15th and Farnam. MONEY TO LOAN—Payns investment Co LOWEST RATES—Bemis. Srandels Bldg. FIVE PER CENT MONEY DO YOU WA} | Omaha :B ‘r“ " perty. ma usiness 3 THOMAS BHIB"P?AN, Room 1, New York Life Bldg. LOANS to home owners and home bulld- ers, with privilegs of makicg partial pay- mi-annually. W. H. THOMAS. 808 First National Bunk Bldg. Farm Mortgages On good Nebraska farms, drawing 6 per cent are an excellent investment for idle | money. Safe, sure, well protected. Ask us about them. PAYNE INVESTMENT CO., Southeast Corner 16th and Farnam. REAL ESTATE WANTED WE HAVE BUYERS FOR %, ¢ and 7-room houses. If prices are right an sell your property for you. by ‘IUWATA A‘.fiD LOT CO. Bulte €3 N. V. Life Blidg. FOR SALE OR TRADE—For good auto. | moblle; 40 acres land, 7 miles south of Price 365 per corn crop. A. Rogers, 1625 W. Adams St acre. Q. Chicago. FOR EXCHANGE—$30 Lincoln house, 9 rooms for stock of clothing and fur- nishing goods. Address Y 338, care of Bee. BUSINESS BLOCK, FAYING v year. Corner, 3-story with rice $20,000. Will take half value in good land, balance on low rate of interest, NOWATA LAND AND LOT COMPANY, Suite 624 N. Y. Life Bidg. Red 1999, QUARTER section of Holt county raw land for stock of clothing and_furnishing Suods. Address Y 37, care of Bee. 52000 CASH and clear lot morth about {00 Want good rental property, OWATA LAND AND LOL COMPANY, Suite 624 N. Y. Life Bldg. Red 199 WANTED TO TRADE—$300 to $5.000 worth of good clothing, furnizhing goods and shoes for good land. Shirley, Bues- stetta & Co., Humboldt, Neb. FOR SALE or trade outright, a foot- power welding device now in use; no steam, electricity or gas necessary; simple foot pressure; a fortune. Write for free booklet. price $8060. Midland Investment Co., Me- Cague Bldg., Omaha WANT merchandise or city property: 95 acres, Monona county, lowa, $9,000. 90 acres, southeast Oklahoma, $2.700. 320 acres, Blaine county, Neb., $5,000. % acres, Harrlson county, iowa. $6.000. 95 acre#, Monona county, Towa, $8,000. 155 acres, Holt county, Missouri, $15,000. 200 acres, Fremont county, lowa, $20,000. 400 acres, Holt county, Missouri, $34,000 417 acres, Livingston county, Missouri, $37,- 000. 700 acres, Buchanan county, Missqurl, $56,- 000. 1100 acres, Holt county, Missouri, $85,000. . R. ADKINS, Ist Nat. Bank BIdg., Council Bluffs, Ta. et WE handle exchanges of properties of merit, HARRY H. CULVER, $08-510 N. Y. Life Bidg. Phone D. 76.% VIVANT to sell 80-acre farm 4 miles e 4 aty seat of I er Co., . 65 acres under plow; running water in pas ure, snaae Il farm builldings; all under fencs roding land, clay ioate: proauces well. ' Will sell for $66 un were. want to | retire. W. S kmmeit, R F. D, No. 1, Hevron, Nep. ise MU NEBRASKA. ACRES, complete ranch; dipping v shape. . denorning chute; all bulidings in xood Owner making good money; family wanls to move to city. take Price, $0,00. Mignt some clear city property as part puy- | NOWATA LAND AND LOT | Suite 624 N. Y. Life Bldg. FOR TRADE- acies of hand in Keith | Cu., 1or city proprety. C. M. BACHMA 436-57 Paxton Block co., Red 1909, $4,000 will buy ' section of land 2 miles south of Benkelnan, county seat of Dundy; | sood soil, level 1o4d and close 1o water oz, Albbor, Neb. Owner. New Mexico. FOR SALE-Patented farm, adjoining Willard, N. M. on norti and south; ir.| rigaticn assured for next year; Willard is at junction of A, T. & © M. and New| Mexico Central railroaas; (his tarm wil brng fror: $10,000 10 315,00 nside of fiv years; owner must seek lower altitua Price very rvasviubie. Junn T, Kelly, Wi 1w, N North Daketa. - North Dakota Farm Land Fixeursion May 17th, 3,000 acres wheat land, 6 10 15 miles from main line of the Northern Pacific R. R. Good, smooth, Ullable land, good soil and ¥y § PRICE, 1¥" ALL SOLD 10- THAR, $15.00 PER ACRE: if sold in arters and half sections, d Ju nelghborhood One of our firm just returned from North Dakota am plows are running In nearly e nelgnborhood; seitlers and | investors are buying land;' soil and cli- matic conditions Eood. We expeet to see this land advance from $.00 to $10.00 p lacre by next fall. GO WITH US TUES- per acre; 0 mil ki | DAY, MAY 17TH. Round (rip rate from county, M. i fire tim- | Ginaha, $25.00. All your expemses paid if ber 1300 down, $300 year, Address W. | you bLuy o ‘Willlams, Mt, Vernon, Il FOR BALE—160-acre nicely sicuated. well draiped corner farm; house and bar orthwest of Kingsville, Johnson eountv 0,, 45 miles from Kansas ©uy; 30 an acre; easy terms. Address Box 146, Syea- more, 1 “FOR SALE—1600-acre fract In Central Arkansas, on two truni lines R including’ townsite and % bulldlngs. and | acres for sals by the state. You can buy | DUMONT & SON 1006 Farnam St., Omah I St. Omahs, Neb. Texan 10 ACRES of gooa iand, $1,600; investi- | gate this ba . balance easy | terms; itice, Box 339, Clarksvill bt e SO TEXAS SCHOOL LANDS-Over 1,000,000 | MAX MORKIS, 301 BEROWN SLOCK. |and subbers. ___ | Antique furniture cheap. 1020 C W to §19.00. st the same kind of land that is retailing | at from $15.00 to $25.00 per acre in the same | | o | We Are Gettihg Numerous TAILORS DISTINCTIVE styles 15 the kind of TAILOR SERVICE you'll get by patroniz- ing Edward Thiel, taflor, 719 8. 16th St. MISFIT tallored suits—355 and $40 values— at $16. See A. Rubenstein, 2114 S. 14th St Martin & Rubin, Rm. 21 old U. S. Bk. BIdg. ud died D Sl B Q. A. LINQUEST CO.. 25 PAXTON BLK | V. TAUCHEN. Krug Treater Hidg. TRAVELING GOODS TO TRAVELERS—Buy your goods at a real leather store. v aifred Co ) traveling hide leather suit cases, $o. & mon, 1210 Farnam St g 'WANTED—TO BUY SAFES—One jarge and one medium sized Size and price. Address B 570, nd_furni- BEST FRICE for second T calpets, Crflllhlnl and shoes ‘Phon Dougtas 2070 HIGHEST prices paid for scrap mera i PA%B. Ripin, Omaha, Neb. KEISER pays bes! for fur | “\WANTED—3.00 featner beds. Write or | ‘phane D. 1660 Metropoliian ieather Co. | @i N. 20th, | el WANTED 0 B | 5 OR 6-ROOM HOUS.. TO MOVE| | Wil move at once L or co OWATA LAN N . | Life Bldg. Red 198 Cll‘EAP second-hand cash register. Call Douglas L Ar8861 COMBINATION H. N Swift, care F. ern. 2208 Harney St. ‘ WANTED TO BORROW Iving and saddle horse. D. Wead, 1801 Far- WANTED TO BORROW-—$40 or 3500 f. 1 year. Will pay 10 per cent interest. Ad dress, 1-676, B WANT e 1 i Wor Houses of All Sizes. List With Us NOWATA LAND AND LOT CO., @4 N Y. Life Bide Fhone ied e " WANIED—SITUATIONS " for after school hours | WANTED—Work Y in south Missouri Ozarks. 33 cash. bal. | and Saturday; prefer work at private :n.n .”"fluo &rn‘r\h .:ln:- e:l.l-;l'l‘l‘_l:: l:n‘:t:;'d :\uyl “;u.““n- g:lnlx'u&rnm‘wn Address B-612. Bee. tracts; % an aore i and and healthy ' clim: ther | * i i s Peuas h Send for full partioulars today to F. H. formation send 6 Investor Pul FAMILY washing neatly roug! v WPetts, (19 Rellance Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. ;E.. Dept. B, San R:m Texas. or bundles. Tel. Webster G437, TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER| { Lineotn-Cadron | Wabash— OMAHA, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1910. LEGAL NOTICES : NOTICE OF SALE OF IRRIGATION DIS. trict bonds—To ail whom It may concern: Notice s hereby given that the Board of Directors t:ndlho Kimball Irrigation Listrieg has d intention to sell and will #ell the entire issue of the bonds of district heretofore authorized 1o be sald board and by the eiectors of trict, to-wit: The sum of Two Hundred d Fifty Thousand (+250,000) Dollars or any rt of sald lssue, at the office of sald ard on the corner of Firsi ana Chestnut eets in Kimball, County of Kimball and @ of Nebrasks, on Saturday, May 14 191y, at the hour of 12:0 o'ciock noon. Sealed proposais will Le received by tie board at its sald office for the purchase of said bonds until the day and hour named above, at which tim d board will open the proposals and urchase of the bonds to the highest respousibie bidd or bldders, the board, reserving the right to reject any bids, No bonds can besold by said board at less than ninety-five (3%) per cant of their tace value. The sald bonds are payable in from ten to twenty years aud bear six per cent interest, payable semeannually; both ‘est and principal being payable from aseessments levied upon all the real estate in said district. All bids must be accompanied by certified check, payable to the order of the Kimball Irrigation District for not less than two (2%) per cent of the mount of the bid, said check to be re- talned by the district as liquidated damages in case the bid which said check accom- panies enall be accepted by the board and ihe bidder shall refuse or fall to carry out his bid. By order of the Boaid of Director: 1HE KIMBALL IRRIGATION DISTRI by L S. Walker, President. Attest: Fred R. Morgan, Secretary. A2la 24t NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS—-NOTICE 18 hereby glven that sealed proposals for bullding and furnishing an addition to the Verdigre school house in accordance with plans and specifications to be furnished by the Board of Education will be received by the Board of Education of School District No. 83 of Knox county, Nebraska, at the office of Harry A. Walker In the town of Verdigre, Nebraska, on or before May 15, | 1810. Each bid must be accompanied by a fortlned check for $500. The board reserves | he right to reject any or all bids. The plans and specifications are now on file in the office of sald Harry A. Walker, where they may be = pected. Harry A. Walker, secretary. Msate __ GOVERNMENT NOTICES OFFICE OF THE 0. Quartermaster, Cheyenne, Wyoming, May 8, 1910.—8ealed proposals, in triplicate, will be received at this office until $:30 a. m, Mountain time, Monday, June 6 1510} at which time they will be opened in publie, for the construction of target butt target houses and range office, plans No. 266, at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyoming. Plans and specifications for the inspection of bidders are on file In this office, also tue offices of the chisf quartermaster, Department of the Missour, Omaha, Nebraska, and the chief uartermaster, Department of the Colorado, denver, Colorado. Proposal blanks and | general Instructions to bidders may be had upon application to this office. The govern-| ment reserves the right to reject or “eccept any or all bids, or any part thereof. En- velopes containing proposals should be en- dorsed, ‘Proposals for target butts, etc., Fort D. A. Russell, Wyoming, to be opened June 6, 1910, and addressed (o V. K. Hart, Captain 15th Infantry, Acting Quarter- master, United States Army, in charge of Construction, Room 3, Keefe Hall, Chey- enne, Wyoming. m9-10-11-12-J3-4 Fort Meade, S. D., May 7, 1910.—Sealed voposals, in' triplicate, will be received ere until 10 a. m., mountain time, May 3, 1910, for the construction of four (4) double bulidings for stable, guard and shops, in- cluding the electric wiring and fixtures, | Information furnished upon application to this office. A deposit of $.00 to insure re- turn, is required before plans are sent on STRUCTING individual application. Envelopes contain- ing proposals should be endorsed ‘‘Pro- posals for Stable, Guard and Shops'’ and | addressed -to the Constructing Quarter- | master, Fort Meade, 8. D. M11-12-13-14-23-24 OFFICE CONSTRUCTING QUARTER- master, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, M 9, 1910. Sealed proposals, In triplicate, sub- ject to the usual conditlons, will be ceived here until 11 a. m., central time, v 24, 1910, and then opened in the pres- ence of attending bidders for const tion, plumbing, heating, wiring 'and fix- tures of the following buildings: Three sets Wield Officers’ Quarters, 2 double sets Company Officers' Quarters, 2 four-set Of- ficers' Quarters. Full information and blank forms of proposal furnished on ap- plication to this office. Plans and specifi- cations may be seen here, also In offices of Chief Quartermasters ai Omaha, Den- ver and St. Paul, Depot Quartermaster, St. Louis and Quartermaster’s office, Scar- ritt Arcade, Kansas City, Mo. The United States reserves tie right to accept or ject any or all proposals. Proposais should e enciosed in sealed envelopes, endorsed Proposals for Public Bulldings,” and ad- dressed to Captain Wm. 1. Davis, Quar- termaster, U. 8. A. MI2-13-14-16-2 RRAL FENCES, FORT DES MOINES, la. May 8 1lu, Scaled proposals in | tripiicate will be received until 11 a. m., 25, 1910, for constructing corral fences | Information on application. 1. &, | reserves right to accept or reject any or all proposals, or any part thereof. J. P, | Ryan, captain, acting quartermaster, | M. 12-13-14-15-26-27, One Dollar Per Yen RAILWAY TIME CARD UNION STATION—Tcnth and Mason. Union Pacifio— Leave Arrive San Fran. Ov'ri'd Ltd. a m. 11:3 p. m. Chi. & Pap. F'st Mail. 4:10 p. m. 5:45 p. m. | Atlantic_Express.... vesrers G:dS 8. m. | Qregon Express B 6:30 p. m. | Oregon-Wash. Ltd I3 §:40 p. m. Denver Special . a. 12:30 a. m. Colorado Special . P 7:43 & m. Colorado Express . P 8:00 p. m. North Platte locai. a 4:46 p. m. Grand Island Local. P 10:30 . m. Lincoin-Beat. Local . 1:20 p. m, Val. & Con. City Lei..12:41 p. 1:0 p. m. nots Cemtral-— Chlcago Express 45 pm Chicago Lamited 45 am g Omaha Express Chicago Local Colorado-Cnicags Chicago Special Pacific Coast-C Los Angeles Limited. Overland_Limited enver Speciul roll Local NORTHBOUND. Twin City Express....a 7 Bloux City Local.. Minn, & Dakota Ex. Twin City Limited PERpRREES Norfolk-Honesteel . long Pine-So. Platie. Hastings-Superior Deadwood-Hot Spg Casper-L nder Fremont-, ibton . Chicago, Rock X LA Rocky Mountain Ltd. Jows Local Chicago Day Dea Moines Local Ci Chicago-Nebraska Xp. . Ltd.a 6:05 bm w &3 | WEST. Chicago-Nebraska Litd. for Lincoln Colo. and Cal. Ex Okla. and Texas Exp...a P Rocky Mountain Ltd.. 1040 pn mabe-St. Louls Ex. 2 9:% am | Mail and ‘Express . allils pm Stanberry Local (from A | Council BIuffs............0 5:00 pm blo:l5 am | Missouri Pacific— | K. C °6:3 am | & 5:30 pm l [ Oimah \cago Ex. Colo.-Califol Perry-Omana Lo ago Great Western—— m | - m orTe s Limited . . 5:00 pm . %‘;,",,",‘3“, Limited. 30 & am Chicago Express .. a 345 pm Twin City press. & 90 pm | |18 the faintest touch of animalism or any- | Baltimore. | needed. She did not | speaks |a the forest and of the | | fields. T wished to liberate this bird and to | restore her to the life that civilization | had doomed her. I married her and I | { have never had reason to regret it | Lincoln Local ROMANCE 0 Former Southern Belle Queen of & Roving Band. [ NOTED ANCESTORS | LINE OF Missouri Law Menaces the Liberty of Her King——Tells Fortunes at the Usual Rates—Cariosities of the Camp. Jesste Mitchell (nee Habershem), a beau- tiful, intellectual and highly accomplished | southern girl of Baltimore, Md., is living in the camp of the Ludare tribe of Rou- manlan gypsies at Hoehn's Grove, No. 800 | South Broadway, St. Louis, queen of the tribe and wife of Gorgo Mitchell, king of | the company, loving him so much that she says she could not be parted from him for | even one day and live. Queen Jessie, 1s 24 years old, light-brown hair, blue of high literary attainments and cal mccomplishments. Her husband Is fascinating and charming in a way, but totally illiterate. He was born in Servia. They were married by Roman Catholic ceremony five years ago. Since that time they have not been separated even for one day. Queen Jessie could not endure a sep- aration. last week a tribal quarrel, wherein the men fought bitterly, was, con- trdry to Romany usage, taken into the courts. Now George Mitchell stands in danger of the law and of the jail, “If he should be sent to jail I ehall die," refined, delicate features. eyes, says his beautiful young American queen, | I cannot live without him even for a a And she is worrying herself Il with the remote fear that there may aration between them. This s no Rigo-Princess de Chimay af- be a sep- fair. There is no animal attraction be- tween the gypsy and his American queen Nine of ten persons asked will tell you that when an educated and beautiful Amer- fean girl marries an illiterate gypsy that she must have been attracted by the animal in him. Yet there is little animal in the lean and slender Gorgo, and still less of it in his pale and pretty asethetic looking wife, who loves him so terribly that not even for a day can she bear to be parted trom him. Queen Jessie is a typical Baltimore girl Baltimore, more than any city in the south, is famegd for the refined aesthetic beauty of its women. She is tall and slender, with a small, well-shaped head that is beautitully polsed upon her slender, well- bred neck. The broad, low forehead, the | even-arched eyebrows, the perfectly shaped the sharp aquilin nose, the thin refined the perfect and beautifully kept white teeth, the round, soft chin, the warm, white | pallor of her skin, the small foot, with its high instep, all denote the fine breeding and the lady born. Nowhere about her thing that would be attracted ism. by animal- Boasts of Her Ancestry. Queen Jessle boasts proud ancestry, but hier appearances more than her claims at- tests her fine breeding. Among her for- bears and relatives are Francis Scott Key, the author of “The Star-Spangled Ban- ex-Governor Lowndes of Maryland; Habersham, the first postmaster general in Washington's first administra- tion; Justice Taney of Dred Scott decision fume; Marie Lioyd Key, a famous Oriole beauty, and Commander Habersham of the United States navy. These may or may not be the relatives of the Gypsy queen. She will not deny or affirm that they are. She does not need the confirmation of her tongue to attest her good breeding. Her ap- pearance attests that, She was ecducated in famous Mount Washington convent at Baltimore with the eclite of the aristocracy of the south. Afer she left school she traveled abroad for two years with Miss Cecelia Hodges of Queen Jessie speaks five lan- guages—English, French, Spanish, Rou- manian and German. She writes very well, many of her stories having been published in the magazines. Her artistio excellent. She has never lived Princess De Chimay, a fast or life, When she returned from Kurops five vears ago she became interested in Beer- | beera Mitchell, sister of King Gorgo. With her gypey friend she visited the camp. Life in the open air appealed to Jessie Mitchell as life in the woods appeals to & captive bird. Slight anaemic, nervous, hizhly strung, the open air was what she know it then, she does mot know it now, but had she con- tinued to live indoors she would have died of nervousness. taste Is like the exciting Met King Gorgo. So unconsciously she, like Hilda Wan- gel, followed her “troll.” She lived in the gypsy camp for some time with Beer- beera Mitchell. The life quieted her strung nerves. She was restful and happy. Then at this most opportune moment Gorgo Mitchell, lean, swarthy, emiling, human and natural, came on the scene. His gentle ways and stralghtforward manner won the young daughter of the south. And they were married and have lived delirlously happy ever since. “\We gypsies do not marry in haste,” sald King Gorgo, who, unable to read his five languages, too. 1 ob. served for a long time before I married her. I saw that she was a natural gypsy, | natural bird of sh tells me she has had none, either,' King Gorgo Is very swarthy, a typical BYPSY, With & tremendous shock of black RAILWAY TIME CARD—Centinuca. Leave. Arrive. Denver and California.. @ 4:10 pm 3:45 pmy Puget Sound Express..a 4:10 ym a 6:10 pm ebraska points 20am a 6:10 pm | Black Hills, Northwest Expross. Nebraska points. Lincoln Mall Nebraska Exy 6:10 pm | 7:00 am | Lincoln Locai. Schuyler-Plattsmouth.. . b 3:05 pm Plattsmouth-lowa .. & 9:18 am Bellcvue-F tr1acuth.. ..al2:3) v Colorado Limized Chicago Speclal Chicago Express Chicugo Fast Express Jowa LOCSL....ciiiirs Creston-Towa Locai Bt. Louls Express.. K. C. tnd St. Joseph K. C. and St. Juseph K. C. ard St Joseph WEBSTER STATION—Fifteenth and nm L PPEREEREEIBTROEREEEREY Webster. Missouri Puecifie— | Leave. Arrive Auburn Local..... ..b 3:50 pm bI2:10 pin Chicago, St Minneapolis & Omaha— Sioux City Expr b 3:00 pm bIL4S am Omaha_Local © 8:20 pm Bioux Oy Passenger.. Twin City Passenger.. Sloux City Local..... b FCYPSY CANP| | mop of er | curls; his ears splendid, his profile beauti- | alr and a great mustache. He fs & fine nversationalist, very keen and very | clever, and, although unable to read, he is entirely the slave of his Ame Like her American sisters, Queen Jessio understands the fine art of making a man work for her. It is the custom of the gypsies as it was that of the Indians and other aboriginal races, to let the women do the work. The women do all the camp work, cooking, etc. while the men trade horses, play cards and have & good time about town and camp. The fortune telling of the women is the chlef source of revenue. The women are the| producers, the men mostly the consumers, | though many of them make good money trading horses, manufacturing copper ket tles, samovars, urns, etc. Queen Tells Fortu Queen Jessie 1s not above telling fortunes, Her love of the occult is natural. Long before she became a gypsy she studied psychopathery, astrology and other occult sclences. Now she is telling fortunes in a tent. She even goes to private houses and | tells fortunes, for, owing to & bad winter | in the show business, her husband, who ls a producer of gypsy entertainments, is not as rich as he has been But when King Gorgo is “on his feet' he does the work and Queen Jessio lives llke a queen. She has weaned her King from his gypey life and put him to work as the veriest American stock broker works to supply his queen with gewgaws. She has implanted in him a love of education and of progress that is wholly forelgn to the gypsies, who do not believe In nor care | about education. There {8 much the lean, wiry that is attractive about Tsigane with the immense black hair, but most girls | would find his immense black moustache trying. He is gentle in his ways, speaks| softly in a low voice, and has about him | an air of breeding (hat belongs to most gypsies. For there is not a low type in| the Ludare camp of 100 people. Every head is well shaped, every eye keen and bright, | every back strong and stralght, every | mind alert and keen. But not one person in the camp save the American queen can write his or her own name or would recog- nize It if printed in letters a foot high be- | fore their eyes. | Some of the women are very beautiful.| Goonah, a woman of the tribe whom Queen Jessie says is the most typlcal gypsy she| has ever seen is a perfect beauty. The | children are all splendid specimens, rolling in the clay dirty, but healthy and sound as | nuts. One boy of 6 years, & son of Goonah, might be a model for a Rubens. His head | ix beautifully shaped and covered with | ful as a Greek god, his chest deep as that| of a lion. | The parents of Gorgo are in the camp. The father Gorgo, sr., is 9 years old, but he can back a colt or make a trade as keenly as a man of 40 vears. His wife, | Coolodi, is §8 vears old, tall as a pine and still a strong and active woman, During the entire winter not a single soul from the aged great grandfather to the little tot was il for a moment. John Mitchell, elder | brother of Gorgo, is a grandfather and looks 30, but i{s a grandfather many times over. He is slender as a boy. and there is not a gray hair in his black name. Gorgo is 40 years old, and has a head of hair that | would do honor to Samson. Gargo Mitchell speaks Roumanian, Slavic, Austrian, Italian, French, man and English, though he cannot write a word. He learned these languages at flm| hand from the peasants of the nations through which he has traveled. Thoreau, you know, holds that he who travels afoot travels faster than he who goes atrain. The Sage of. Concord argues | that the gypsy who earns his way as he | goes travels faster than the millionaire | who first waits to make morey with which | he may pay his way, so that he wilt not | only see more, but see it sooner and faster. | Bob Gilkas, one of the tribe, has traveied | all along the line of the Andes and Rockies with a tent show. He now speaks of traveling all Asia in the same way, with a | wagon. | They are strange people, these gypsies, | wonderfully' true to nature -and tremen- | dously virile.~St. Louis Republic. HUSBAND FULL OF PRUNES| Got & Thrashing for Overworking His Appetite in Com- pany. Because his strapping wife thrashed him at the dinner table of some friends with whom they were dining, when he insisted on eating more prunes than she thought were good far him, C. T. Harrington of Portland, Ore., is suing his wife, Ella, for divorce. Harrington told the episode of the prunes to Judge Cleland. | All went well at their host's dinner table until the dessert was brought to the table. It was prun Mr. Harrington s partial to this delicacy, and proceeded to eat his | fill. His wife offered sundry warnings in | the shape of winks and table, but appear. “I think you've eaten enough of those pruncs, hubby,” she volunteered. No re- sponse was forthcoming from the indus- ous hubby. i r. Harrington, if you eat another| prune I'll thrash you.” | A smile went around the table at what | all consldered a little joke between hus- | band and wife. Another prune disappeared | into Mr. Harringtow's mouth. Then ke | an Amazon of old Mrs. iHarrington arose in her wrath and proceeded to “‘wade into” h husbana in & manner that transformed into a prize fight| kicks under the the prunes continued to dis- the quict dinning room Ing he certainly did keep her word that | je.” admitted Harrington, “and I was erribly hurt and mortified.” Spanish, Ger- || | treatment | Flexner, FEW STICK TO THE SERVICE Relatively Small Proportion of En- ‘ listments Choose Navy as n Career. Tho relative infrequency of reenlistment in the army and navy has long been a sore point with our officers. The men as A rulo serve one or possibiy two terins and then drop out into eivil lite, marry and with what they have learned and saved while in Uncle Sam's employment set up as indepsndent citigens. All sorts of schemes have been suggested to encour age longer service, and some of them pu into practice—pensions, higher pay, im- proved rations, etc. Up to date, however, little fmpression has been made upon the steady outflow from the ranks, and the average recruit persists in his refusal to consider government serviee satisfactory a8 a permanent carcer ‘This tendency makes for inefficlency in both branches, because it results in a per sonnel the largest part of which is com posed of first-enlistment men—that |s, greenborns who are learning the business It Is more serlous for the navy than the army, the former service requiring & longer apprenticeship before satisfagieyy efficlency is attained. You can |.A a battleship in two years, but it takes six to make a seaman gunner, saye Lord Charles Beresford. The term of enlistment in the American navy is four years In a recent paper by Captain Dillingham in the United States Naval Instituta Pro ceedings, In which the longer-service prob. lem in the navy is discussed, that during 1%8 more than of the enlisted men « 80.45) were serving under their first en listment. Assuming that half of this num ber had had sufficlent training to be partiy efficient, the rest, constituting something more than one-third of the entire force, were nothing more than students learning the business it is shown three-quarters out of a total of At first sight this condition of affairs acems of rather serious import. But a turther consideration of the real purpose or the n al organization of such a power as the United States in times of peace puts o less disquieting complexion on the case If It merves as an efficient school for train- ing gunners and engine room machinists and the other varieties of specialists re- quired in the operation of a modern battle #hip, it has served its chief purpose. 1f it graduates into civil life every year 7,000 or 8,000 trained men, it is thus maintaining a large reservo of available material out- side its payrolls which can be called upon in the emergency of war, There is, In fact, much to be said, from an economio point of view, against making military and naval service for the enlisted man a permanent career. If he can be suf ficlently trained by a single enlistment and then returned to civil life to become a pro- ductive, self-supporting unit, the social r sult is manifestly far preferable to that produced by permanent service conditions | Thero are, it is true, several rather large ifs involved in this conclusion, but it cer- tainly deserves consideration in connection with Captain Dillingham’s proposal to re duce the present service pension perfod so as to encourage enlisted men to consider the navy a career. At present a sailor has to merve thirty years before he is entitied to @ pension.—New York Press. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will allay the cough, relleve the lungs and prevens pueumonla. SERUM MASTERS DISEASE Preventiye and Curative Treatment of Cerebro-Sp ingten One of the foremost of American sur- geons, who on Saturday sailed from New York for Europe apparently upon a some- what hurried call, was anxious for import- ant professional reasons that thers be no announcement of his departure. He ex- pects to return in the mid-spring, and may, at the annual meeting in St. Louls of the American Medical association, or that dn- partment of it which deals chiefly with surgery, make some rather Important an- nouncements. The surgeon was especially pleased that he would bo able to Teport to his frienas in Europe that the demonstration of the success of the preventive and of cerebro-spinal discovered and perfected by Dr. Simon at the Rockefeller Inatitute, is now complete. It was made by Dr. Flexner himeelt befors a large gathering of men of sclence and of medicine two or thres evenings ago. Heretofore no more has been elaimed for Dr. Flaxner's discovery than that in all probability i would be founa as avallable for use in meningitls as is the diphtheria serum for the cure of that once dreaded disease. It was known, however, that Dr. Flexner would not go further than to express hope of the success of his methods until he was able to make a dem onstration to his medical comeagues. That Gemonstration has now been made. Tt is regarded as Justifying the claim that cere bro-spinal meningitis is now under control. Physiclans regard this as the most im portant medical discovery sincs the perfect ing of the serum for diphtheria. For thera has been no more drcaded disease than cerebro-spinal meningitis—it 1s deadly; it comes with almost volcanio violence, som times sweeping through communities, es- pecially lable to affect children, produc what Is often called infantile paralysis has alto been as mysterious a disense is scarlet fever.—-Philadelphia Leds curative meningitis, A Serlous Breakdown results from chronlc constipat King's New Life Pills cure ach, ‘liver and howel trouble Fos | sale by Beaton Drug compan Thursday is H Look for a ho ome Day. me in The Bee. Several exceptional offerings on the Real Estate page. There Is no temptation to You pay in as much as you can The more you pay in the sooner you have the home clear. spend money put 1nto a home, spare over a specified amount. This gives you a saving plan with a home at the end. A home bought on the ea you the same as you are now Thursday’s Bee will advertised for sale on the Make your selection ar as a beginning. sy term plan practically costs paying for rent, have -lots of good homes easy term plan, nd start next month’s rent d y LY ) el \ *

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