Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 5, 1910, Page 2

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: (3] "-IIIIIJIWWWIUIUMM? gLinen Coats { 2 i and Suits MM@MMMWMMMMM Tailored Cloth Suits at Radical Price Reductions Smartly tailored styles, com bined with excellent quality fabrics are features of interes in our linen coats and suits. Coats are made of soft fin- 1 linen with plain or Persian embroidery trimmed collars also heavier linen ecrash with foulard silk shawl collars for auto wear— 96.75$9.75 Smartly tailored linen suits of the very practical and hand- some Ramie cloth, made in gh colors and natural tdn with pretty shawl collars of Persian or moire silk— $12 » $16.50 " |TE YOURG PEOPLES > owN STORE For Small Women HIS is the beverage that’s held in such high esteem by everybody—the young and old, the rich and poor. Within Everybody's Reach You want it and you'll like it. Five cents a glass at all fountains or from your druggist or grocer, in bot- tles, powder form. Orange, Lemon, Root Beer Flavors Two teaspoonsful makes a cool, re- freshing, invigorating - drink—$1.00 bottle has 70 drinks; 25c bottle has 12 drinks. The One Best Drink FOR MINE All the Time " / Leo Grotte Mfg. Co. Proprietors Omaha, Neb. ‘"Good every minute, For the quality’s in it” “BOOKKEEPER” “OFFICE MANAGER” SOMETHING NEW Have you heard of the *“Isco Index Leaf Ledger System' Beats them all. Turns directly to the account wanted We sell inventory sheets and all makes of binders. Call Douglas 1498, or write us for information INTERSTATE SALES CO. 1111 Farnawn Street, (inaha, Neb. Edwin C. Bennett Co. .Electrical Contracting Engineers. 209 South 19th Street ELECTRIC STEEL CONDUIT and RACEWAY EXPERTS Complete conduit system with eclectric wiring, designed and in- stalled for light and power. Electric work by contract or percentage plan specification. We Aim To Please Here are a few of the contracs we have executed: PUBLIC BUILDINGS Hurlington Depot, clt Nebraska-lowa Grain Burlington Headguariers bullding, | First Naveonal Bank ciby enne, \Wyo Hoagland Block, dity Government (officers' Wright & Wilhelmy bullding, eity. Omiuha. Crane. Company, clty Government Y.'M. G A. -cf Omaha. Orpheum’ Theater, cit Government (Administration bullding), Burwoed Theater, ¢ Fort Robinson, Neb. New Morrls Theate Conservative building, eity New Methodist hospital, efty New Wise Memorlal hospital, eity New Presbyterian hosphal, cliy st National Bank bullding, Gran and, Neb. " | culled upon by his sporting countrymen to of the white Elsvator, bullding, C quarters), (pole line court), ters), Fort Omaha Van & Storage warehouse, eity. Nebraska Moline Flow Co., eity, ew Kennedy bullding, city sxpressmen’s Delivery Co., Fireproof Warehouse .city RESIDENCES 1 B M. Gibsou, city | T. J. Mahoney, ecity. | Thomas R. Kimball, city. Hanlghen, iy | Mra. T. L. Kimball, city, Thompson, ¢fty Gien €. Wharton, eit Burgess, ey, R. E. Sunderland, city. And Others on Application. itenry J. M. WL T Mo Ward W. Yates, Cudahy, elty. MeCord, city city RECEIVER- FOR INTERURBAN Electric - Line Des Moines to Fort Dodge in Difficulties, IMPROVEMENTS TO00 EXTENSIVE Half Million Erect ot New Bonds lssued to Power House Go Begging for Buyers. (From a Staft Correspondent.) I MOINES, June 4{.-—(Speclal Tele- gram.)—~The Fort Dodge, Des Moines & Southern Rallroad company, operatifg an electric Interurban system between the clties of Des Moines, Ames and Fort Dodge, was forced into bankruptey today with la- bilities aggregating $3,000000. A petition asking that a receiver be appointed was filed in the United States court by an at- torney for the Old Colony Trust company, which holds a mortgage for the amount of the liabilities. Homer Loring, president of the rallroad, and Parley Sheldon, a banker of Am were appointed as recelvers of the com- pany, each filing & bond of $50,000. James C. Davis, attorney for the petl- tioners, staled that the necessity of the action was brought about by reason of the company, stringency of the money mar- kel, the general depregiation of rallroad securities and the inabifity of the company to market its bonds. Recently it issued $i00,00 worth of bonds with which money it intended to bulld & new power house and make other improve- ments, but the bonds found no buyers in Wall street or by any eastern capitalist. lowa Will Go it lone. Assistant Attorney aen/‘l Charles W Lyon today received from Attorney Gen- eral Wickersham a telegram declining to amend his petition in the rate case in- junction. He points out that to do 8o now would require the consent of three circuft judges and he does not feel war- ranted fn doing so. A conference was held and plans lald for etarting suit at once in federal court independent of the governnient, if that can be done, to prevent collection of the higher rall rates. The increased rates are being pald here under the recent notice’ The shippers regard it as a little doubttul it they will be able to secure reduction. No Stickers on Hallots. The attorney general today rendered a decision on behalf of persons at Ot- tumwa that no stickers or pasters are al- lowable on the officlal primary ballots except for delegates. In many places the ballots are sh the names of various can- dldates, especlally for committeemen, but it 18 held thdt these must be written in Improve the Rall Service. The railroad commission today ordered the Colfax and Northern raliroad to put on better cars for carrying the miners to and from thelr work at Valerla. The complaint was that the road bed was dangerous and the cars unsafe. The com- pany has fixed the road bed and now the commission has ordered that the company use shorter and better cars and maintain sanitary conditions. Will Get the Vice President. 1t is (expected that Vice President Jamer Sherman will attend the conven- tion ot the lowa [Bankers' assoclation June 16. On the previous day he i to_be at Jowa City!(to attend soma universlty function and the bankers have invited him to come on ‘here and address them. Convention of Saintws. annual convention and Sunday school meeting of the reform branch of the Mormon church, of which there Is & large membership in lowa, I8 In ses- sion here with several hundred present. Arrangements are being made for & gen- eral reunion in Towa this vear. New College Head. The Rev. ¥ port, Long Island, will be the next of Simpson college. He will be at Indl- anola Saturday to meet the trustees. Strike Nears End. Members of the harness makers' union of Des Molnes believe that the end of | the strike declared March 21 I near. Meeting of Makers' | to be hela in respectively, within the next two weeks and it is thought that these two meetings will provide for a joint sesslon which will put an end to the labor troubles. |Little Rusty on | One Family Tree | | board of the Harness | English Sporting Editor Connects Jefferson the Pug with Jefferson, Patriot of Colonial Days. LONDON, June 4—(Special Cabiegram.)— | The average London sporting editor may {have the fighting qualities of James J | Jeftries or Jack Johnson down to a fine | point, but it must be admitted that they are rusty on American history. | & day or so ago: | drafted the famous statement of Ameri- | can Independence on July 4, 1776. A hun- | dred and thirty-four years afterwards his | namesake, James Jeffries, the pugilist, is | demonstrate the supremacy man over the black man, in what is com- monly called the noble art of self-defense. Whether glove fights are ‘noble, or ‘ig- noble,’ speetacles is a controversial point | with which I have nothing here to say.” The Care of Books. hold a book near a fire drop & book upon the fioor. Never turn Jeaves with the thumbs Nover lean dr rest upon an open hook. Never turn down the corners of leaves Never touch & book With damp or soile hands Always book-miark. Always place a large book betdre opening 1t Always turn leayes from tho middle or forefinger Never pull @ book from the shelf by at the top, but by the back touch a book with a sponge in any form. place another ~book or clse upon the leaves of an open buok Never close a book with a penell of paper, or anything else between leaves Alwiys keep any neatly book covered posscssion Never attempt 1o dry & bo wet, by a_ fire, with a soft, diy cloth Never write upon paper lald upon leaves of an open book, as the pencil o pen point whl elther scrateh or eut book leaves.—Milwaukee Wisconsin ver eve keep your place with the top the hound, borrowed Cammine at Creston. CRESTON, Ia, June 4.—~(Special gram.)—Senator Cummins large and enthusiastic audience he | afternoon on state issues. Bell Tele {he speakers. Candidate Darrah of Chari ton preceded Cummins. some extended Improvements undertaken by | 4o ancis Luther Strickland, North-| head| The Key to the Situation—Bee Want Ads. the National Association of Harness Manufacturers and the executive unfon are | Chicago and Kansas City One Lon- | whether it's 26 or 336 times I've chewed don paper gravely announced the following | “It was Thomas Jeffries, the patriot, who | ¢ i her"iwho s it that keeps & watchful thin upon a tahie with the a damp cloth anything a paa with wpapers while in your | i accidentally but mop «#f the moisture the| the addressed o this | Emerson | ¥ p' Atton presided. J. B. Harsh introduced | I Mrs. Cleveland is Not Very Anxious For the Ballot Returning from France, the Widow of Former President Taiks of Suffrage for Women. NEW YORK, June 4.-—(Special Tele- gram,)—Mrs Grover Cleveland, who ar- rived from Europe with her childres to spend the summer In New Hampshire, and who has been visiting in this el says that her boy amd girls take up so much of her time that she really hasn't a minute to think of suffrage, or what she would do with the ballot If she had it. In & word Mra. Cleveland is not a sutfraget The widew of Grover Cleveland is de- voting her life to the care of her chil- dren and just at present is thinking more White House Soon to Have a Supply Real Fresh Milk Holstein Cow from the Herd of Sen- ator Stephenson is Going to the Presidential Stables. WASHINGTON, June 4—Special Tel- egram.) — Eenator 1saac Stephenson of Wisconsin, has informed President Taft that tha new presidéntial cow which will furnish mlik for the White house will soon be in thig city. The new cow will take the place of the late lamented ‘wuley,” and her name is Pauline. Pauline is some cow, As cows go. She is worth $1,000 on the hoof and is one of the fin- est products of Senator Stephenson's stock farm at Kenosha, Wis.. She is a full-blooded Holstein. “President Taft will find Pauline a of their education than she is of storm- ing congress for enfranchisement. .urs. Cleveland hes four children, Esther, Frances Grover and Marlon, girls, and Richard Folsom Cleveland. For eight months Mrs. Cleveland had them abroad in & school in France. “Really I know so little about the suf- frage movement that T am not qualified say a word about It” smd Mrs Cleveland when asked for her views upon the burning topic. “There are many good and intellectual people who are working very hard for the ballot, T am told, but personally I have no interest in that. My time has been taken up with the care of my chlil- dren and while I might vate it I could, T must confess that I have not studied the question of suffrage from all its angles. “When Mr. Cleveland was president, T was naturally In an atmosphere of poll- ities, but I saw nothing so alluring in politics that T should spend my time attempting to secure the right to vote. Women should be good wives and moth- ers ficst and then they would not care to be politicians. Many women know as little of this auestion as I “AS I say, 1 have been abroad for nearly a year; I am glad to get back, for I love America the best of all anad I am never happler than when I am in my native land. It was merely for the sake of my children's education that I went abroad. 1 wanted them to know French, for I believe that will be a necessity in a generation.” STOCK MARKET 1S TUMBLING (Continued from First Page.) few days. Missouri, Kansas & Texas, will s0on put out $125,00000 worth of 5 per cent mortgage bonds, the accruements of which will be used in extensions. This lssue will be ratified at a speclal meet- ing of the stockholders late in July. Mis- sourl Pacific is earning at the present, 8.78 per cent on its capital stock. The Baltimore & Ohfo, will earn 10 per cent upon its common, according to pres- ent conditions Southern railway is surpaseing all prev- fous records. And so on through the list. Southern railway, by the end of this month, will have a'total gross of §7,100,000, a record for the season, Incidental news from cther field tain nothing to alarm -Wall street. Steel and copper ‘men are satisfied ‘with the outloglt’ Business in the Pittsburg distriot, Wiestern _Pennsylvania and Ohio, the gréat’gteel center of the worldy 18 not depresfed by any means. The miils are operating /more than % per cenf of their maximum capacity. Charles M. Schwao, the blggest of the independents, who s now enroute for Europe, spoke of the marvelous growth of the steel and ore center in the south Mr. Schwab in the role of a prophet, sees booming and prosperous times ahead. | con- PRATTLE OF THE YOUNGSTERS. Bobby—Mamma, dinner time, Mamma-—What does the clock say? Bobby (after looking at the ciock)—It says my stomach’s five minutes fast. my stomach says it is “Tommy, queried the teacher, ‘‘can you tell me what an old settler is sometimes called?" ““Yes, ma'am; a pioneer,” was the reply. “Now, Johnny," said the teacher to an- other small pupil, “‘what is & pioneer?" “An old man who pays his debts.” The family next door had a new dog, and mall Ethel was admiring it. “Be careful,” sald the woman, “‘or he may bite you." ‘Why should he bite me?" asked Ethel. Because he doesn't know you.'" | “Well." " querled the little mis§, “why don't you introduce us?" | had frequently been told by his father to say “Get behind me, Satan,” when tempted to do wrong, One day after the father suddenly asked: “Walter, what do you do when tempted to do wrong | “Why and say, down.' he replied, 1 just think of you | ‘Satan, go away back and’ sit “Bobby," and don't chin. T'v ““There me lose said his mother, ‘'sit up st tuck your napkin under y 0ld you hundreds of times——"" * exploded Tommy; “you've made the count! I don't know now this clam!” “Johnnle,” sald the Sunday schooi time, who tells us what we should do, who commends us when we do right, and cautions and punishes us when we do wrong, who knows ything?" Teddy Roosevelt,” | the bright lad. eye upon us all the promptly answered Persistent Advertising is the Road to Blg Returns, The Weather. | FOR N FO " BRASKA—Partly TOWA-~Partly cloudy. rative wt Omaha yesterday: cloudy Deg wnl Record. THE WEATHER BUREAL Official re em peruture and precipitation compared with | the corresponding period of the last three years: 1910, 1909, 1908. 1907 | Maxtmum temperature 5 % T Mirimum temperature 2 Mean temperature seee B 2 w“w Precipitation A8 Temperaturo and precipitation departures | trom the normal at Omaha since March 1, and compared with the last two years: Normal temperature “ Deficiency for the day, . 1 Total excess since March 1 « Normal precipitation 18 Inch al OFFICE-OF OMAHA, June 4 r Walter, the b-year-old son of a minister. | 3 pedigreed water spanel, | glea bovine aristocrat, said Senator Stephen- son. “She 13 one of the best bred cows tn my herd and she is satisfactory for all purposes, She {s fit for any position open to cows in the government service.” JOKES THAT ANIMALS CRACK Investigators Ready with Stories to Prove Thelr Sense of Hamor. For.some time back the question, “Have animals a sense of humor? has been under discussion by a group of men of an In- quiring bent of mind. The members of the group decline to make their names public until they have something in the way of results to show. Even then, they say, they may let the results speak for themselves without disclosing the identities of the in- vestigators. Meantime they have been forming theorles based on their combined experiences. One of the most enthusiastic members of this coterle sald last week that he belleves the positive eide of the proposi- tion to be pretty well proved. “I am certain that some dogs have a sense of humor,” he continued, “and It is more apparent in some breeds than in others. Does any one ever stoff to think, when he sees the saronic smile on the face of a bulldog as he noses the shrinking legs of a passerby, who trles to walk along unconcernedly, that the bulldog probably enjoyes the humor of the situation in his own way? 1 have seen a dog sitting In a dark doorway, paying no attention to any one who passed till & man absorbed in thought came along. Then he rushed out unexpectedly, barking clamorously and startled the man until he nearly fell, then trotted back and walted to have his next Joke With some other unwary passerby. “Here is the case of a waggish dog which I saw myself. He was a Scotch collie and it ever a dog was a humorist a collle is. With a party of frlends 1 was sitting on the face of a green grown hill, sloping down to a small lake or pond In front of which was a beaten pathway. The collle, who had the Irish name of Barney, be- longed to my brother, who was In the party, and was lying curled up at his feet. “A peddler came along and coming a little way up the hill asked for the time. Barney looked at him lazily, blinking in @ sleepy way, and the man when he was told the time went down to the path and sauntered along. He stopped for a minute or so and stood in a stooping -position to look at something in the pond. “Suddently Barney, who had been wateh- Ing him, wagged his tail slowly, which was his custom when he had an idea. He rushed quickly down the hill and putting his fore paws on the peddier'sback pushed him into the water. Barney then rushed back and lay down again before the peddler realized what had happened to him, The water was only a few feet deep and when the man scrambled out, drenched through and wiped the water from his eyes, the look of astonishment on his face was laughable, though the whole thing was an outrage. We were all seated In the same position as we were when the man looked at us first, when he asked for the time, and Barney was apparently asleep and looked as if he had not moved. Thoroughly mys- titied, the peddler looked at us again, but could make nothing of it and went away shaking his head. Now if that dog was not a joker 1 don't know a joke. “I generally find that mongrel dogs, when they happen to be sociable, have a keen sense cf humor. An aristocratic dog with a pedigree may have ' some in- herited smartness, but has no originality. A common yellow dog with no ancestry to speak of, who has to gain his living by his wits, couldgive him cards and spades at his own tricks In two lessons. “Once I took into the house out of pity a mongrel yellow dog, who insisted on Installing himself at my doorstep and always came back, no matter how often he was chased away. 1 had at that time and 1 tried to took him The yel- teach him some tricks, when I out along a quiet road at times. low dog, who made friends with him, alw came along and beat the water spaniel at his own tricks without tralning Then he began to play_tricks of his own on the spaniel. Wien he had a bone he looked out for his comrade, und when he saw him loplng along he would lay the bone in his path and disappear. The span- iel always made for the bone, but the yel- low dog, just as he was about to grab it, would dart from his hiding place and seiz- ing It run off With it, This happened over and over again, but the high bred span- fel never tumbled to the joke. “You may laugh if you like, but I once aw a jackass with a sense of humor. No I'm not fooling; I mean & real jackass When I was at school as a boy in a country town the shoolmaster on a fine day would bring the puplls into the yard, where we played durlng recess, for a singing lesson. He started them sipging “The Star Span- Banner” one day in parts. Part of the yard was cut out of & hill, and this was faced with a stone wall, forming one | of the boundaries of the yard high enough 10 form & parapet a few feet higher than the hill. Behind the parapet this par- ticular jackass stood, while we were sing- |ing, his neck craned over and his ears cocked as If he were listening to the music. The boys had hard work to keep straight taces when they looked at him. After the class finished singing there was qulet for | & minute and the ass opening his mouth gave & loud ‘hee-haw’ and galloped away If, that wasn't & joke I'm a sinner. { New York Sun. COUNTY ROADS TO BE OILED Expe: wio went to Be ers on Seve of Road The first olled roads In Douglas county to be constructed in aecordance with the methods advised by the Standard Oll com- | pany and supervised by their specialist on e by Comm 1 Stretches tery unaer ihe supervision of E. M. Curlls, who' has made a study of the ofling of roads Olled roads have been used extensively in the parks and boulevards around Kansas |'City and have given the utmost satistac Deficiency for the day 18 inch Total rainfall since March 1 1 lnches floiency since March 1...... 2.6 nches Deficiency for cor, perfod. 1908.. 3.49 inches Deficlepcy for cor. period, 1. .37 inch AW X or. tion. They are sald to shed water and guaranteed free from dust In order to show the people of Omaha bhow much more comfortable and free from roads, are to be bullt In West Lawn ceme- | annoyance of dust an olled road management of West Lawn cemetery will oll one-half a mile or more of West Center street, extending from Fifty-sixth street to Sixtieth street The county commissioners have been persuaded by the owners of coun try homes along the high bluffs north of Floren to make an experimental with oiled roads along the river road fror the water works to the Ponca creek, and 43 woon as the work has been finished at | PR West Lawn cematers, the oling of tis |z finsshod worsted beautiful drive along the river north of i Florence will be started. The road has ot g R g et (1 o B |and diagonal blue serges at ::1'1:'»1-\4 olled under the direction of the ;;30, $aa S0, 535 and ;37.50 |The models we are showing DAN CUPID TAKING STOCK |,z 050 lines are very smart and are making a decided hit with the undergrades. We also have the proper lids to rightly top off the clothes outfit. the 0e are specializing in graduation suits Formalities the Usual Young a-Wooln Japan When Mr. Orio Tamura, as we will call young gentieman, is about 20 years old. He 1s an up-to-date Japanese, and has put off all thoughts of matrimony until this comparatively late date—for Japan—in | order to finish his university studles. Now, however, he has finished his training, and has Intimated to his father, as a dutiful son should, that he would like to marry. That Is all he s required to do at present, it 18 the business of his parents to take the next step. Orio's father, presumably, has some quiet talks with his wife on the subject, and then betakes himself to a professional matchmaker, or go-between. These mar- riage brokers are a class apart—discreet men of the world, with a good deal of in- sight into human nature. For the sake of his own reputation and future the go-be- tween usually does his best to please all parties, Sometimes in the east as in the west, love laughs at]restraints, and somebody or other conveys a hint (o the marriage borker that a meeting between Mr. A—- | and Miss Z— might not be unacceptable | to both, in which caee his task is easy. | Usually, however, he takes time to look around him, and he in turn—how Indis- penable the women are in these matters— | consults his wife. At last, after caretully considering the officlal and social posi- tion of the persons and families interested, he suggests that a certain Miss Chrysan- themum would make a mos=t desirable bride for the ‘“learned son of the honorable house of Tamura." twenty-four years our Spring Suits......818 to §45 Al soft”and stiff hats....§3 Straw oNats......$2 and §3 318 South 15th Street. ON OUR RECORD For more than 1 | | {in the Once more Orlo's father consults his in making loans Wite and sundry other relations, and, hav- o TR RS 18 no fault to find with the go-between's vite Invedtors to suggestion, Instructs the latter to proceed. call and examine The marriage broker's next step is to ap- Tanted e oF firet proach the parents of the young lady he mortgage loans has in view and arrange a formal appoint- Ll B ment for mutual inspection—it is known HD% oTho e as the “look-at-each-other meeting"'—be- Compared with tween the prospective bride and bridegroom TR bl by at the house of the bride's father, and in pay a higher rate the presence of that gentleman and the of interest: than go-between himself, Tx‘v‘|‘v‘u1::yx“: o nh:‘l:‘?f The meeting usually takes the form of a safety conventlonal tea party, at which the pros- WE FPREPARE s g 4 . WILLS, Al ssary s not CAR FOR wear her oldest clothes on this occasion. | Here, for the first time in their lives, the | young lady and Orio set eyes on one an- | other. Etlquette forbids them to speak to| each other, but nevertheless they are| doubtless very busy “taking stock™ of the | other's appearance and manners.—World's Work. PETERS TRUST COMPANY NEW OMAHA NATIONAL BANK BLDG ESTABLISHED 1886 INCORPORATED (907 — ONE ACRE , SUPPORTS THREE Real Intensive Farming, Spurred by Mother Necessity in the Orient. Certificate of Publication Office of Auditor of State of Nebraska, Public Accounts LINCOLN, Feb. 1st, 1910 A humble-minded pllgrimage by an éxpert | 1t 18 horeby certified hat the Federal was that of F. H. King of the Wisconsin | Union Surety company of Indianapolis, in Agricultural College to China’and Japan | the state of Indiana, has complied with o n s Pats th il the Insurance law of this state, applicable Stud) y thelr solls could support | "y, “guch companies, and 1is, therefore, three persons to the acre. Western scien- | gyhorized <o continue the business of tific agriculturists have much to learn | Figelity and Burety insurance in this state from those farmers who have made the | for the current ending January 31, soil respond for twenty, and perhaps even |1911 forty centuries of service. | Summary of Report Filed for The @verage farm Is supporting three | Bnding December s, NG persons to the acre and in nearly all parts e A9 18K of the densely populated sections, two A three, and sometimes four crops are taken from the same field each year. But this is not the only cause of their longer growing season. The almost uni-| J3WMitied Askels . .. o 3 versal practice of planting nearly all erops LIABILITI in rows and in hills In the row permits one | Unpaid Claims and Bx- crop to be planted, germinated and often | yhenred Premiums hoed before another crop has been removed | All oth liabllities oo 16, 9 from the field, thus utilizing for grow(h | CAPItal Stock paid up .. 300.000.00 all of the time wo consume In removing | > mies and wiher Habii- the harvest and in fitting the ground for | itles . the next crop. Then there is the other | 10W! - very extensive practice of starting crops | Auditor of in ‘nurseries under conditions of Intense | year first above tertilization, securing on a much smaller | (SEAL) area rapid growth and strong plants, which are then transferred to the fields. In this manner even the vast areas covered by the staple rice erop arc handied, the plants | being grown thirty or more days in small | beds, gaining thereby thirfy to fifty days, | during which another crop on the same tield Is matured, harvested, and the ground fitted for the one to follow Human labor s the one asset of which they have an excess, and it Is freely used in securing the effect of longer seasons, which, because of their geographical posi- tion, exceed ours(” In southern China two crops of rice are regularly taken, and this | is true even in parts of Japan. In the | Chekiang province & crop of rape, of wheat, of beans, or of green manure precedes the summer crop of rice or of cotton. In the | Shantung province a crop of winter wheat or of barley 1s followed in the summer with | a op of millet and soy beans, of sweet | POtatoes, OF peanuts. As far north as| A Tientsin and Peking, in the latitude of Co. AM: Porhape’it is-Just sa we ™ umbus " After a city attains a certa it | L (:\\‘nxlml’flhl‘l::lr:‘ 'L‘:m‘"n" copringtield: | aiways threatening to close its dance hallsy . . 01 About all that can be sald favor of followed his crop of wheat with one of |some places of amusement: T afford & onjons and these with cabbage the same | Place 10 go, ear, realizing a gToss earning of 3163 goid | The meanest devil on ear per acre. Another farmer planted a crop of | see people squirm. Irish potatoes at the earliest opportunity | Ever remark how spring, marketing them young d | strive to be commonplace, and followed with onlons and then with cab- | favorable attention? 2 204 | <1t yo » look for info bage, realizi 03 Sra for ‘tha three | ou are looking age, realising §308 per acre for the three | oyt Fing e sneyaigpedin more crop: | year the Year, | Premiums All othe | Total sources $334,274.99 DISBURSEMENTS Hold 814.96 ayments 149,387.10 | Pata polie All oth Total ... $202,814.48 13.86 § my hand and the seal of the Public Accounts the day and written. “ILAS R. BARTON, )v of Public Accounts, PIERCE, Deputy. N Cdsady Jr. Co. State Agents Audl Omaha Tel, Douglas 1520 Municipal Bonds, \Investments, Insurance worried E the Turks. new song for weddings is *I pe as much as the comir man just to fight and sttract un= nation, you reliable than a womam in a trince When a man tells you what people are | saying about you, tell him what people say about him; that will quickly take his mind off your troubles.—Atchison G phy. Having seen Halley's comet, we are in clined to doubt the statements that it once ANNOUNCEMENT! By special request of numerous citizens, the wonderful Power Rug Loom will oper- ate in our south show window for three more days. Monday, Tuesday and Wed- nesday, June 6, 7 and 8. Last appearance in Omaha of this interesting piece of mach- inery—the special exhibit of interior furn- ishings continued for the three days on first tloor. You are cordially invited to attend, Miller, Stewart and Beaton S. W. Cor. 14th and Douglas Streets, & e — e

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