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THE OMAHA BEE: JUL House, Ho!el and Office Furnishers —Orchard & Wilhelm B14-16«18 South Sixteenth Street Announcement BIG JULY SPECIAL FURNITURE SALE Commences Tuesday morning, July 5th. Manufacturer’s samples and surplus stocks at great price induce ments. This is an annual event with us, preparations for which have been going on for some time, an can safely say we have prepared such a large showing of extra terest to trade now. | t MANY AULOS IN NEBRASKA North Platte Presbyterians Dedicate Their New ¢ hurch | Over Twelve Thousand Licenses Now | Operating in the State. | YRADE GROWS BY LONG STRIDES| 8. Pera Dep 1 rintemdent, owly Eseapes Injury Waea Thrown from Wayne. ¥y State ~ Car Ne (From a Btatt Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Neb, July Based on the purchase and registration Qutomoblies the wave of prosperity flles over Nobraska, and as the yea On It ETows. At this time thers are regis- tered in Nebraska 12,08 automoblies ing the last six monthe there uas been a total registration of 3,492; tor the first six months in 196 the registration totaled 1% for the same period in 198, 1,02; for th first six months of 1907, when the new law first became operative, the registrations numbered 43. During the entire year of 197 the regis trations numbered 3,14; in 18 the total number was 4,28, and for the year 199 the total registrations numbered 8527 Twe automobile dealers in Lincoln esti- mated that the average price pald for ma- ochines in Neberaretaoinneredshnsowamin chines in Nebraska was $1.600. At this rate T thers has been spent in this state for au- | C°NtY completed at North Platte, Ne tomobiles during the last/ six months s was dedicated by appropriate services last total of §5.23800. Based on the same|>uPday morning, the aares 7 Wil Average at e, the amount of money o gty g g i o in- | lams, assisted by Rev. Thomas B. Green- | vested,ac, according to the tot. istra- | v e 4 ® Lotal registra- | .e of the Cilfton Hill Presbytertan church | tions of | I S e show that|°f Omaha, Dr. A. E. Turner of Hastings | the asseasors returned a total of 611 ma.|and Bov. Karnes The dedicatory sermon chines at & valuation of $LYTLE, or an|yrr Droochcd bY Rev. Greenlee, who served | Sssessed valuation of 184,87, The avarage | I8 CHUTCH a8 pastor for seven years and asecssed vaiue was B3, whioh 1s one.| O 16ft In September, 1X6. It was during Qi e the total number regietared waS| 1) ysty ot Notth Platte was the signing | o of the contract for the new buiflding. The Guard Lowes Expert Rifloman. entire auditorfum of the church and the|others participated and in the evening ser- Earl J. Meixel of Company H, Second reg- | Sunday school annex were completely | vices were held, conducted by President A.| iment, Aurora, who has for several years |filled at the dedicatory services. The|E. Turner of the Hastings college. been & member of the Nebraska rifie team ] - Nebraska Nebraska { in the national competitions at Camp Perry, Ohlo, has been honorably discharged and here that has ever been at any celebration association which will be organized to pro- | g igetion | mote industrial enterprises. It is belleved | will make his home In Chicago, whers he has a position inspector of meats for | that such & company ready to aid new en- Mayor Hedbloom and Chief of Police | terprises will 8dd considerably to tml the United States. ‘When at the competition last year In Ohlo Moeixel made the record of fifty-one bulls- «es at 50 yards. Peterson have decided to have as sane a|growth of the city Fourth as possible, and a copy of the new | CHADRON—The water commissioner and a | committee appointed by the city counefl bave decided to lay a second water pipe | frumn Chadron creek to the city, to provide | |in advance for the many new consumers. | Chadron has the largest and best gravity | water system in the state BROWNVILLE—John 8. Furnas has fig- ured up his profits on & strawberry patch | of three-fourth of an acre for this season. From this plot of ground he sold $T% worth of berries and $10) worth of plaats, from which he deducted §110 for labor and other expenses, leaving a clear profit of $ils. e | _BEATRICE—Joh 1 v | Omaha Judge Notifies Secretary of | p Y iy T 0 Ehe e | xr‘kereil‘ began cutting his wheat yester- State He Would Like B.epnb- day. He is of the opinjon that it will aver- lican Nomination. 1 we recial bargains that it will be to your in 2.—(8pecialh Parlor and Library Furniture in this sale, con- sisting of book cases, library tables, in oak and ma hogany, library chairs, leather upholstered, in oak and mahogany. Parlor Suites in three pieces, loose cushioned and Dur- leather upholstered; also odd parlor pieces, Here is an example of one of the special pieces: Buffet, like illustra- tion, made of quarter sawed white oak, hand polished, golden fin ish, has one large linen drawer, two small drawers of which one lined with silver 44x12 in. Buffet is 50 in 56 ins. high. Regular selling price $48.00— Special July sale price at ... $36.00 Couches, in leather. Dining room furniture. An unusual assortment in this sale of ahina cabinets, buf fets and serving tables, in golden and early English oak; also dining room chairs. aBEW PRESBYIERIAN CHURCH AT NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASK The First Presbyterian church, just re-| Mission Furniture, in fumed oak, Spanish leather, upholstered, at a saving of ahout one-thir church bullding is probably as beautiful and as modern and complete as any church building in the state. The entire exterior Is pressed brick. The main rooms are fur- | nished in oak and a splendid pipe organ | has been installed. The building s steam heated and electric lighted. ,Its large win- | dows are works of art. A magnificent | pipe organ furnishes the mu: The en-| tre coet of the bullding and real estate was $28,00. All but $5,000 of this was raised by subscriptions almost entirely within the church congregation. No effort was made to raise any money at the dedication. Dur- the afternoon services were held in ich all the ministers of the city and is | Bed Room Furniture. Golden oak and malogan wide, suites and separate pieces, priced at an unusual saving. Brass Beds. A number of patterns of brass beds, in %) and full size, bright and satin finish, at a saving | of about one-third. Besides the above there will be many separate and odd pieces of desirable reduced. See Monday papers for full particulars. Sale begins Tuesday August, except Saturdays, at 9. good, furniture greatly We close at 5 o'clock during July and Stete Officers to Speak. Governor Shallenberger will speak at | Exeter July 4, and State Auditor Barton |law on firecrackers, blank cartridges an will epeak at Aurora. Both piaces intend to | dynamite caps, has been printed, with other have big celebrations. | regulations that will be enforced. Narrow Escape for Perd Frank 8. Perdue, deputy state superin- tendent and candidate for the republican nomination for siate superintendent, came very near being put out of the race early | in the game by an automobils aseident yesterda Perdue with a driver was out in the country near Wayne going at a lively | olip in order to catch a traln. Turning corner the car ran ove an obstruction and both men were thown out in the road. Though: badly siaken up neither mam was seriously injured and the machins was not | famaged. |ume. The title describes the book’ very oners are ingeniously tortured well, especlally if you take in the quoted | Neapolitans believe that the rec | Latin humor, “De Omnibus Rebus, et Qui- busdam Allis,” “Concerning Everything | whose blood did not liquify this year and Certaln Things Besides It is a good |therefore a great processio: companion book for travel, and for vaca- |to appease the saint. Was th | tion lelsure wherev. by the way, the one with The third degree PEECHBS | yccused of crime, S. Hammond & Go: nt eart quake ls due to the wrath of St. Januariu nd is organized Ailing Fidos Keep Veterinarians on the Zun. Fiction. Tiles for Congress Sutton OUT OF THE NIGHT. By Mrs. Balllle elev Reynolds. 2% pp.; $1.20; Hodder & Stough- ton. GOLD LEAF SIGNS AND MANSIONS| rhe tiie of this book takes its signifi- | cance from the opening scene, wherein a the old legal o { & man til « This little valume contains five speeches: | "¢ 18 proved gullty, and in spite of Charles | young woman, who has traveled from Van- | ., o or e Gl uncered pefore | Klein's engrossing and lucrative p And couver to England to find her relatives, |, = ‘oo " scademy; “International |In the custom house of New York they are | staggers exhausted at midnight out of the ., .. gelivered before the Nobel Prize |till doubting the honesty of all American darkness and storm into a farm house, and. | comiiiice; “The Uplift of Nations,” de.|Men and and bumping into the because she is who she is, changes the |, .. i pefore the University of Berlin; |and tappihg them to convict them of faise |fates of the two people whom she fInds|.p;o1ang's Poliey in Egypt.” delivered at |hood &nd of attempting to import things | there. they THBEODORI N EUROP! 1% pp.; | maxim about the innocence Once a Side Issue to Livery Stables, the Amimal Healer is Now a Very Dignitied Profes- al Man. | age’ close to twenty-five bushels to the | acre. Stephen Miller, living in the same| viclnity bays he has a plece of wheat that | will average close to forty bushels to the | acre. AUBURN—Harry women \ (From a Staff Correspondent.) ot PR —— Board Rejects Claims. The State Board of Public Lands and Bulldings has tnrned down claims amount- Ang to $87.07 tiled by Tucker & Farnsworth, LINCOLN, Neb., Juiy %.—Judge Abraham | L. Sutton of Omaha filed his name with | the secrotary of state this morning as a for some years has been connected with 1 bank of this city, has L t in the State bank of Neb., and accepted a position as “Hello, hello, is this Dr. Binks? Y doctor, our dog 1s sick—seemns to have tever—wish you'd come over right away. Its love story is entangled WIth |, Gyjianall, London; “The World's Devel- . | serious and tragic compiications, and MANY | gyment,” delivered before Oxford uniwers- of its incidents, although they are of the |y [ typical Englieh village, go down to the raw candidate for congress in the Second dis- trict. He states that he desires the repub- cashicr of the bank. Mr. Gipson went this | week to assume the responsibilitles of his All right, godd-bye.” of human emotion, This alleged fragment from telephone con- THE HUMMING BIRD. By Owen, John- bought and p —Boston Herald 1d for in foreign lands Omaha Giants Bea HERRICK DEPOT, S§. D., Jul Herrick. @ruggtsts of Grand Island. This amount of | drugs was bought by Commander Barnes of the Grand Island Soldiers’ Home with- out a permit from the board during the | last six months The total claims filed amounted to $1,123.31 | 56 p) company A “prep” school story, with many of his position. BEATRICEThe Beatrice firemen have completed arrangements for the Fourth of July celebration in Beatrice. The speakers are C. H. Sloan of Geneva and Mayor Dahl- i 8 cents; The Baker & Taylor |cial Telegram.)—The Omasia C | feated Herrick by the score of 10 to 0. terles: Glants, Bauchman and Wrign:; hits, &; Herrick, Miller and Lewlis; hits, lican nomination. GIRL 18 versation is a myth. That is, no such con-i DR. THORNE'S IDEA. By John Ames versation actually occurred !u so many | Mitchell. 24 pp.; §1; Life Publishing com- words. Yet, for the purpose of illustrating | Pany. < former characters reappearing, and tells | the growing fad for giving medical atten-| This book has an underlying vein of hu- | now Dennis de Brian de Boru Finnegan | tion to dogs, it is herein set forth—and, |mor Which crops out at unexpected mo-|appeared at the school, the sort of wel- after all, there isn't so very much ex-|ments giving rellef to the serious and senti- | come he received, how he established him- aggeration about it. | mental passages in which the Story self as an authority on base ball, and The rapid increase of veterinary prac-|abounds. It's a curlous chap who is the quotes in full his report of a base ball tice in this country within the_last dozen |hero of the tale—a psychological study of | game. This report is the heart of the lit- | years is well worth a passing thought. Not,a real boy and a real man with traits tle story, and an example of base ball 50 very long ago, when the family dog|which are wonderfully true to nature and | English it s inventive, imaginative and fig- | fell 1, he was left to get well best | yet transcend it | urative enough to puzzle even a base ball | he could. Of course, everybody was sorry ! reporter. BEATRICE POISONED Death of Miss Marie Johnson Due to Eating Tainted Strawberries. man of Omaha. A number of military com- panies have sent word that they will par- and of this amount the board allowed | BPATRICE, Neb, July 2—(Special ’“Q:‘i\‘:fi;e ndenBare asie Bl #646.2¢, for that much had been bought un-| Word was received ;‘f"h ":1;:“!'” | 'T\j Ll'\l—Thed ler!l‘ner:mp b‘elween r}w;. nouncing the sudden death of Miss Marie)ley Vaught and John Sayer in the hard- In buying on permits it s not necessary (Curred yesterday at Anderson, Ind. Tainted | giore as soon as the Invoice is finished. | for the superintendent to have competitive |Strawberries are supposed to have causea A‘xr Sayer just moved into a new home | blds, but Commander Barnes did not even | her death. Soon after eating the berrles L“:fi,\"i,fffl}m{f“ i:vr;;t‘exp@cls to remain In | have permits. The board secured prices on | the Young woman became violently il and | the goods enumerated in the vouchers and atisfied iteelf that the charges were too high. More medicine has been bought at Ihe Grand lsland Soldiers’ Home without permits than has been bought in' years at ay state institution. Mullen Costly Ornament. Governor Bhallenberger's lawyer-oll in- $pector, Arthur Mullen, is proving himselt & rather costly ornament to the state. Bome weeks ago State Auditor Barton held up| the claim ‘of Luther P. Ludden, secretary %o the State Normal board, for_salary for doing the work of that office. He asked the opinion of the attorney general on the question and was Informed that the claim was legal and should be paid. Then the governor and his oll inspector gut into the case and insiructed the attorney ge: al to fight the payment of thb olaim. In the meantime a mandamus was asked ot the hands of the Lancaster district court to compel the auditor to pay that clalm. The district court ordered the claim paid. Now the governor has asked the attorney general to consent to the ap- peal of the cass, The state has to pay the costs In the Lancaster distriot court and It it loses will have to pay in the supreme sourt. This sult followed the fallure of the gov- amor to oust the Btate Normal board through & leglsiative action, Ludden is a member of that board and is the only member that the governor can reach. Mr. Ludden has paid out some $I money in taking care the board and which the auditor s hoiding up Sham Batile ut Heatrice. Beatrice is to witness the greatest battle the members of the National Guard are oapable of putting up Juiy 4 when the blue army and the brown army position near that city, Adjutant General Hartigan expeots to bo ©n hand and personally look over the work ©f the guard of the business of Fix Convention Date. The democratic committes met this after- Boon and fixed the date of the county com Yention for July 8. The convention will cons @ates. Resolutions were passed ory of Charles Jones, who recently dled, wnd adjournment was takes in urder that the committes coud attand his funeral. Special.)—About the heaviest rain of the season feil here Friday afterncon. The rain started ac 4:3 @ad for nearly an hour fell heavily yain was accompanied by & brisk wind and hail Most of the small, although many fell that three-fourths of an inch in diameter fng the storm & team that belonged to Mr, Newcomer, maddened the faliing hail, Polted and ren for home No one was fa. 1t s estimated that \on O TAID fell Y 1 Big Time at Stromsburg. STROMSBURG, Neb., July 2—(Spectai.)- This city will celebrate In blg styie Mon- N @ay. There Is more money subscribed for | pecame unmanageable because of an free atiractions than ever before In the Ristory of the town, and from the number of comcessions that have come in from sut of town thare will be the largest crowd of his own | it 15 about that amount strive for The alistones were epsured | FABEements Dur- over an Inch RED CLOUD—Farmers have commenced to cut their wheat and many of them are enthusiastic over-the outlook for a large 7 A V2 rotato | Y1eld- Rain fell at the right time and the berries were picked was close to & Dotato .35 are well filled out. Corn is looking |patch, and as paris green had been|well and is fast making up for lost time sprinkled on the vines it is thought wme‘;\(us_l' uf'“'.o ,:‘_c'pnd cutting of alfaifa {of the poison had reached the berries and |y the fiack- This cutting was not as |tainted them. The deceased was 17 years| SOUTH AUBURN—Rev. G. K. Wiencke, of mge and left Beatrice about a year ago. | former pasior of the German FEvangelloal At the time of her death she was attend- | Lutheran church here, has Accepted the position of superintendent of hom Il ing the Gospel Trumpet Home at Ander-|gitn ‘90 O & SNt ity ot o ST san. The body will be brought to Beatrice |and Wartburg synods. A 'large ierritory is for interment by the dead girl's father, [Covered by these synods, composing N |braska, Dakota, Wyoming, Kansas, Okla- who reached the bedside a short time be- homa, THinols, Wisconsin and Jowa. Rev. Sorn ki danthi | Mr. Wiencke '{s especlally fitted for tnis larger work through his ha: ing been for MAN |8 Dumber of vears engaged in the forelgn mission work of the church In Persia. dled almost before medical aid could reach her. The patch from which the straw- HOLD Beatrice Engincer Robbed of Small Sum at Door of His Plant. BEATRICE, Neb., July 2.—(Special.)—For the first time in the history of Beatrice women are playing the game of the holdup, and in thefr first attempt Friday night succeedod In robbing Night Bnglneer Sherer at the gas plant of about $10 In change. Two women accosted the engineer just| Mr. Rudyerd Kipling says somewhere outside of the door at the plant where he | that he traveled half around the world was standing In order to get & bit of fresh |t0 get from a man who had gone down air, and without saying a word one of|on the deck of & sinking ship a desorip- them grabbed him arcund the meck whil [tion of how the water looked when it the other rified his pockets and secured | losed in above the bulwarks. As we re- [ between 38 and §10 in cash. They did not | member it, he found that the line of glit- attempt 1o conceal their identity by wear- | tering water broke like & taut banjo string. ing masks and disappeared in the dark-| In Vivd minutiae of this character the ness as quickly es they came. The rob- | &rt of descriptive writing has one of its bery was reported to the police, Who be-|Stronghoids. From Biclly we have hed gen- |lieve they have a clue to the guilty parties. |eral accounts of the eruption of Etna, but the details which might paint the picture before our mind's eye have not been plent- CHADRON, Neb, July 23.—(Special)—|(ful. Consider how clearly the following Judge Westover today eentenced Jerry paregraphs from the special correspondence Hank, convicted of assault, to seven years|of the London Daily News make it all in the penitentiary. stand forth: After two days of taking testimony in| “Having turned two red, bare, conical the case of the state against F. E. Baumen, | hills, which overlook Nioolosi, you come in charged with embessiement, the court di-|sight of the flank of Etna. Thes mountain, rected the jury to bring in & verdict of [in the fading light of the evening, “not guilty is a picture of white and pearly toned| The & jury reported some repairs|a strangely soft pink hue in th needed on jail, and & recommendation to| whers the flames of the chief orater show. the county commissioners 1o see that in'It seems impossible that ruin and death future the police judges and jjustices of | can come from that high and lovely altar. the peace keep proper records. ‘You see a subtle red line flowing down This, with the indictments of the Craw-| the side of the mountain like & luminous | ford saloon men, who pleaded guilty and|stream; then near the valiey It changes | were fined §100 oach, ended the work of | color until it hardens and darkens llke an the grand jury for the June 1510 term of ugly heap of coals midway. The stream the Dawes county district court. first threatened Nicolos, but then it turned in another direction. “The lava advances slowly, like & moving wall. It Ts curious to see TWO WOME! P |FINE ART IN REPORTING Speciment of Descriptive Writing with Belching Etna for a Jeot. Distriet Court st Aberdeen. News Notes. inter wheat in this lo- cality fast Yuly's® ™™ | now 1t deals with the obstacies 1t meets SUTTON—Mrs. John Rath, sr. died at|O0 I3 Way. I saw two stone huts carried \ today after a long iliness of typnoid |away for several yards like boats; then Bne is survived by 8 husband &nd | suddenly they were engulfed by tho mar grown children. The funeral ar- p ve Bt R hoan et ten torrent. Trees scem to feel the near- BEATRICE-D. D. McGuire, who has|'n# Of the lava just as dogs and horses feel | been acting as cashier of the State bank | the imminence of earthquake. They creak, | Of Odell the last few years, has severed | twist their leaves, give out their gray sap his connection with that institution. He N o, | e oy T B e baon af o mii®(in & sort of perspiration; then, when the CHADRON—At the installation of offi- | }AVa Is on them, you see a flash and noth- gere fur the new year at Masonic lodge No. | ing more.” 135, Rabinson MgFadon was made W. M, B 9 IS R Tm”&; W . Crites 5, W, | 1f this is not an example of the busi John Morgan secretary, Ralph Myers § D, | Bess of reporting transmuted into a fine | Frank Ebener 8. D.. i3 L. Scovil treasurer. | srt, we greatly miss our guess.—Chicago RISING CITY—William Janeke in trying | Pos to Jump out of his DUEEY after his team uto- | caugiit one of his feet in the wheel | is leg was broken twice below the knee tor the Toraation ‘of & Toodl "’ ARLI l.n"v‘b TABOR, ‘la, July 2 ial ram. )—Tabor defeated Ph _teany, a to I0. xw 2 Ml.‘Hlu and Snut. ive | merer. Umpire: Fred middle, | and looks | Tele- ! it Bowser had distemper—that's the only | SN LOVE CALLS MEN TO ARMS. | | name dog disease used to have—but there M-.y»n:rbd";;w t,:almers» 352 pp.; $1.50; Small pIVORK-A was never a thought of caliing a doctor. | RIS LT Ly non Jonn escapes | Blitsnrn b Now-a-days, dogs have long latinesquej, ... ‘i, spanish galleon in Killellan bay| Another volume dealing with the findings Bames for thetr alimants, much after the| .oy pociy comes to)the end of his story|of a close range investigation of the ranks tashion of men and women, and the mo-| .. 1,y yonne deughter, the winsome, but|of the wage earners in the American steel ment Fido shows aymptoms of uneasy fesl: | e wrorinogs there is breathless action [district. Here the master and servant law, ing, stralghtway goes & telephone call 10, 4 "gooicn romance. The book if full | court interpretations, employers® Hability the doctor. 5 | of big scenes and alluring characters, not |companies, relief associations und The practice of the old-time veterinarian |, o0yt ¢ whom 1s Bordeaux, as he calls | itable societies enter into the problem. was limited mainly to horses. Moreover, |, o O Y LI T R0 I axper OUR SLAVIC FELLOW CITIZENS. By the o. t. veterinarian conducted his prac-| ‘;:rnhl‘l‘) (3:'@!!18 Bll(“h 479 pp.; $2.50; Charities tice as a side lssue, for there Was seldom | e By 423 ublication Committee enough of 1t Lo yield a lving aione. Some-| &) pov. §180; Heary Holt & Cor -7 | A study of the social character and condi- times he was also & proprietor of a livery | This romance begins and ends literally in | tons of immigrants from Slavie countries. stable, or, perhaps, he owned a feed store. a cave—and in one so dark that the hero The matter for this book was originally | He might have one professional call &/ capnot distinguish the woman who is his Prepared as a series of magazine articles, | month or he might have two, but certaln|companion, and who refises to disclose her | Which appeared in Charities and the Com- | ft'was that day after day brought no call|jdentity, He Is given permission, however. | MON& | at all. | to search for her ai her stopping place, a| ; HIGHWAYS OF PROGRESS. By James | Now witness the change! Your veterinary | fashionable mountaln hotel. A scenarlo of (g = o0 PP PUERIRY SV surgeon is no longer the keeper of & foed | holding interest from the start, it fs made| A collection of studles fn the ‘appiied store. Nelther doss he operate a livery absorbihgly so by the entranco of & sec-|economics on the great problem of our aple. Instead, he has an office down-|ond woman Who was concealed In the cave | progress, upon which the future of our town and a classy residence out on the|_unknown to the two leadig charaoters—|country depends. Many of the addresses Biill. A gold leaf sign of dignified design and heard thé¥r conversation, “nd articles which go to make upv the | Misoellancous. { nu'chad luoln:r:‘:u‘;“lf::n:h::‘:ll::fl t:; volume have appeared in the public prints. profession b | THE FUTURE OF TRADE UNIONIS; the wall there hangs & beribboned diploma| FRUIT GROWING IN ARID REGIONS. | AND CAPITALISM IN A BEMOCRACY | attesting that Dr. Soandso has finished his | By Wendell Paddock. 30 pp.;: $.60; Tn.‘galu»a_rle: W. Ellot. 128 pp.; § veterinary ocourse and that he went forth Macmillan company. sy E, o | from his alma mater with cum laude li-| This volume la the othgrowth of over| An analysis of the paramount industrial ake sick animals well. The vet- | ©\6Nt years' experience in inter-mountain | question of the present, a question which is ConE 1D A dency. | borticulture. The peculiar fitness of many | complicated as well as momentous, and re- grinarian of today is on the ascendenc!aria lands for frult growing was long in | #arding the solution of which there is, nec- | Year by year his profedsion—yes, It 18|y o 0y pparent, but thelr orchards have | essarily, a great diversity of opinfon. clearly @ professsion now—becomes TMOT€ | within comparatively recent years become | THE HEALTH OF THE CITY. By Hollis | rufiun;rl:l;p:?:l:‘or:‘ d&f,’.:;‘:d;:a other | & o8t Important source of supply. Godfrey. 58 pp.; 31.26; Houghton, Mifflin | e do n . | company. cities 1s perhaps no greater than It Was| ..o pip pyeE Deon e o g | A IBteresting book on ail vital problems ten years ago. But be that as it may, UNITED STATES. By Sir Horace Plun- of city sanitation the owners of dogs are more prosperous | kett. 174 pp.; $1.%; The Macmillan com- | supply, air, food, ice, nolse, plumbing and than they ever were before, and it {s Pany. | housing are all treated. therefore easy, since the doctor idea is so| The substance of this book appeared in | Hrmly et for the. veterinarian to make |fIve articles contributed AND 332 THE PP.; $1.50; the J. LAW. char- | Water and wasts, milk | Better Be Safe Than Sorry Geta “Kerr' Abstract at 305 S. 17th St. Why? They are abeolutely stracts They are made by experienced abstractors. Every abstract checked Our rates are the most reason- able Our _methods modern We will way The Kerr Abstract Co. correct ab- s DOUBLY are the most plesse you In every | lo the outlook | WHAT MAKES THE WORLD GAY his fee. One veterinarian who lives in a | Under the title, “Conservation and Rural el L #0000 home in the Walnut HIN district | Life" The author has spent ten years in |y, told a Bee reporter that he averaged from | Fanching and farming in this country and | six 1o ten dog calls a day. From §L40 to | Pas been throughout his life a close student | 3250 per call is the average fes, owing to | °f Tural life | distance and the nature of the case, 0 it | e -y | [ will be seen at this rate that there is §00d | pia EaCLre Thy reor NITHER LIT- money in being a veterinarian. And here's | Wilkinson another feature of veterinary practice that is well worth consideration: The doctor | who walts on your sick child is expected | to say nothing about his bill for at least a month or two, but the man who rushes | out to see ¥ido finds mothing in his code | of ethics to prevent him from collecting | | his fee then and there. | Bo, with dogs coming down with cirosis of the liver, fatty degeneration of the heart, mitral regurgitation, lumbago, | The woman who neglects her health is neglecting the Bright's disease, anina pectoris, locomotor | very foundation of all good fortune. For without health ataxis and other complaints, why shouldn't | loye loses its lustre and gold is but dross. the dog doctor live in & $10,60 house? | Womaaly health when lost or impaired may generally be i regained by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Ladies. lnl the Ragged 'mn\unllnl of Virginta | "“:'.',":,“’""' dwell & primitive folk who, it is said live R Rl R e N mostly on wild berries and philanthropic old women. A northern man who \'uua‘d!\ is 100 In the privacy of their homes thds section was greatly shocked one M)“ feal Notions Jolts the Seri L In California a young Indian girl Is ac cused of witchcraft because some on the eservation fell sick, & pumpkin withered snder her shadow and a dog near the shack howled all night. In Yucatan pris- Here and There Wing of | | By Prof. & pp.; $L.3%; nalls company. There are fifty-four essays in this vol- Willlem Cleaver Funk & Wag- | Fortune Telling Does not take into consideration the one essential to wom- an’s happiness—womaanly health. 10 See Lwo of thess meuntain women busily engaged In pulling each other's hair and tearing each other's clothes. It was only | by sheer dint of muscie that be finally suc- the two combatants apart. | | ceeded in getiing | "%rl:nt &m wo ashamed of yourselves | to at Mke thet?™ he demanded. "Wlll‘ | f & women are invited to consult us by All correspondence held as secredly Medical Assosistion, R. V. Pierce, M. D. De. Pisacs’'s Gauar Fauny Docrox Boox, The Medical Adviser, newly revised up-to-dete edition—I! Plain English hosts of delicate questions which every ought to kmow sbout, Seut free to amy eddress stamps te cover cost of wrapping and mailing esly, were you fighting about, anywayT" Dusty, n-h:;-l::. w-wl'u‘hlhw paused » moment, &l en one of them, o SragRling 1ocks DACK. frotn hes eyes replied, “Well, mister, what's er woman ter 4o when another Woman cusses hec?" Lippincett's 306 8. 17th Bt. 'Phone. Doug. 5487. _OMAHAS FAVORITE BOTTLED BEER | FAMILY TRADE | | | |