TnE OMAITA DAILY BEE: FUND AY. PEOEMIIER IS. 1901 CHAIRMAN OT THE BOARD Kunntrd aid McDonald Oaadidatca for Head cf Count Camnuuioi. NEITHER IS MUCH EXCITED OYER IT TKffff Will (mtliir Selling Cnro Wnler and Connolly la Sat Kara Jail What lla Will Da. The county commisttlonera have opened blus for various supplies during the year i.vj. These bids were reterred to tha proper cotniuiuce and will ba tabulated and the contract awarded, probably at tha meeting next Balurday. For sewer pip' Ing, sand and cement, the bidders were ounderland Bros., the Omaha Coal, Hay and ituliaiiig Supply company, tha Soulh Oinaha Ice and coal company, C. W Hull Co. and the H. K. C'ady company; for bridge lumber the blduera were the Ne brartaa Bridge Bupply and Lumber com pany, the Chicago Lumber Co. and the Cany Lumber Co.; for groceries at the county huepital Chris Hansen waa the only bidder. The U. P. bakery bid on bread, and P. H. Murray, A. Thompson 'and J. Kantian on meat. For drugs K. T. Yates and Myer-Dlllon Drug Co. bid. The bins on Ice were from the Talbot Ice Co., the People's Ice and Coal Co. and Jamas YVhelan, 1. P. Milander bid on cornmeal and flour. For county store supplies, Alien liroa., Paxton 4 Gallagher, Haydan Bros, and Cudahy were bidders. Kids also were received for the grading and guttering on a place on South Thir teenth street which washes out frequently. Hamill & Co. bid 16 cents for the grading and Hi cents for the brick guttering, J. C. butler bid 18 cents for grading and M centa for brick, the Omaha Construction com pany bid X4H rents for grading and 63 cents for domestic brick. The bids were referred to the road committee. Keaaard or McDonald. The present Hoard of County Commis sioners meets for the last time January 4. The new board will organize one week later. It Is generally conceded the chairmanship of the board lies botween McDonald and Kennard. Mr. McDonald Is the senior republican member and Mr. Kennard is a close second. Neither apiears very anxious for the honor, but It Is understood neither will refuse If It is thrust upon him. No rule of the board requires the senior mem ber of the party In power to be selected aa chairman, but it hits come to be a pre cedent. James P. Connolly, who retires says he has not decided what he will do In the future. "I won't be Idle this winter," he said, "that ia a olnch. But I do not know just what I am going to do. I have not entirely made up my mind." Chairman O'Keoffe says he will be able to continue selling1 Curo water, Just as he has been doing from his South Omaha springs for these years. He ia not con templating any changes In his business calendar as a result of his official career ceasing. FUNERAL OF C. A. WATERMAN Services Over Hay springs Mia Con. darted at Home of Omaha Relative. Funeral services for C. A. 'Waterman of Hay Springs, Neb., a brother of Frank Waterman of Omaha, were held at the borne of his nephew, W. R. Rooney, 173 South Twenty-ninth street, Wednesday aft ernoon. Rev. Benjamin F. Ditfonbacher of Saratoga Congregation:' 1 church having charge, assisted by Key. T. V. Moore of Westminster Preabyterlun church. The deceased waa a prominent merchant of Hay Springs and on the day of his fu neral the public schools and business houses there were closed and memorial services, which were largely attended, held In the Congregational church. As a civil engineer Mr. Waterman ran the original lines of survey for the Fre mont & Elkhorn, Valley railroad from Val entino to the Black Hills In 1894. Later be went in business in Hay Springs. Ha waa well known In northwestern Ne braska. The body waa taken to Northtown, Vt, for burial. Not for Him. "Say Dusty." "Wot?" "I'm goln' to change ma name." "Wot fur?" "Me parents christened me Emerson, but It won't do. It ain't fur me after dls. Call me anything you please if It ain't Emer son. Look at dat paper. It saya 'Eracr son'g works cheap.' If dat'a wot da Emer aons do I qui: dat circle from now on." Chicago Record-Hirald. . One-Fifth of Claim. Moses Kunyselman is the reolpient of a fJiK) gift from the sue '. lallway company, lie got it through ice medium ot the court, nunyseimau urotigm a suit ror 110,. wu damages for an accident which oc curred July 5. 1903, at Twelfth and DouglHs streets, when, lie waa coming home with Ills 4-year-old daughter from Manawa. In some way he was thrown to the pavement with the little girl In his arms and sus tained a considerable Injury. He claimed the car waa atarted while he waa standing on the lower step. Attorneys for the com pany moved to take the cats from tha jury, but Judge Kennedy decided it was a proper cause for their decision. LOCAL BREVITIES The scavenger sale Monday morning will b gin at block &. in Muyne's addition, and wiA continue to Malta's addition to South Omaha. N. P. Nelson & Son of 4u2S Nicholas street have reported at police headquarters that someone stole 6.0UO shingles they had at Forty-first and Isard streets. This Is the most bulky theft reported to the police for a long time. The January term of the United Statea court for the Lincojn district will convene the third Monday In January and it will be necessary to empanel a petit Jury for that torm. There will be no grand Jury tor the Lincoln term. J times Ij. Paxton, AV. A. Paxton and E. M. Eckman have tui.orpomti.-d themselves to the extent of 20.v aa the Iowa Hog and Cattle Powder company. The manu facturer of animal romodies Is the prtu clpul object of the new corporation. The Heidelberg club is planning to keep open house New Year's day. The rooms at 1713 South Tenth street are to be kept Open from noon until 7:80 o'olock in the evening and suitable refreshments can be found on the premises by a diligent person. Carrie J. Smith charges her husband with not supporting her. She asks a di vorce from him, Charles F. Smith. They were married in OUmore, Ia., In March, lwl, and she aaya ah has been obliged to keyp boarder and taken in eewing lo sup port herself. Mary O'DonneU wants a divorce from Stave O'DonneU. She says thay wsre mar ried April 11, ISO, and in July her hus band took her to her parents' home and left her, and since that time baa not con tributed anything to her support. She wants alimony. The Infant girl of Mrs. Arthur McDonald, who died last Monday at Clarkaon hospital. Is still being held at the Salvation Arm Rescue home at Twenty-fourth and Bunuliv ing street Mrs. McDonald was burled by her brother at Pleasant Hill cemetery Fri day afternoon and it la aaid he will take care ot bis niece as soon aa It becomes old enotifh to bo taken from the home with safety. John Arnold and Albert Lewelllng have been arraigned In police court and both bouud over to the district court, the former on a charge of burglary and the latter on a charge of Incorrigibility. It la charged they wvre caught by Detectlvee Drummy and Maloney leaving a Northwestern car a frw days ago with a dosen black ahlrts and a set of single harness said to have b.-.o stolen from the car. LewelUng is U yeara eld. CUR LETTER I0X Meeeter a a gar Beets. SILVER CREEK, Neb.. Dec. 14. Ta the Editor of The Bee: During the last few days I have noticed various) correspondence from Norfolk announcing the Immediate removal of the American beet sugar fac tory at that place to Colorado. The rea sons set op for tha remaval are about as follows: t. It ia the conclusion ef the company, after a thirteen years' trial, that It can never make a success of It. 1 The farmers do not ralr sufficient beets to supply the factory, alleging that It so much easier to raise ether crops, such aa corn, wheat, oats and rye. X. Beet have to be humored like a babe, from the planting of the aeed until they are t ulltl. . . 4. Rich corn land ta too good for the tedious trouble of raining beets. Having had some little experience in beet growing, and aotne little knowledge of the methods of the beet sugar companies. I wish to offer some observations on the above. First, consider the alleged objec tlons of the farmers. My experience is that It ta no easier to raise ordinary farm cropa than it is to raise beets. Plowing and harrowing are no more difficult in the one case than In the othere. It Is no harder to run a beet seeder than a drill or a corn planter, and It Is Just aa enay to cultivate beets aa to cultivate corn. Pulling and topping beeU Is no harder than husking corn. 1 will admit that get ting down on one's knees and thinning beeta hi work that most men would not like to do. But that is children's work, and in diversified fsrmlng. such aa every farmer ought to practice, there la generally ho trouble In finding children to do this work on a field of ten to twenty acres. A farmer will be very likely to grow the cropa there Is the most money In. and here tofore 1 have found nothing mora profitable than beet. The net profit on ten acres of beets should be aa much as the net profit on forty acre of corn. Why. then, if the conditions are favorable to growing beets, should a far mer plant all corn and no beets? It is not true that beeta have to be humored and petted. They need good cul ture, and so does any crop If one would make the most of It. As an Illustration: This year T got 19.S1 for the seed from between two and two and one-half acres of squnsh and still had fifty double box loads of seeded squash for my cattle and hogs, while last year on Ix acres of equally good ground, I only renltxcd 1128, chiefly for the reason that I grew an enormous crop of weeds right along with the squashes. I have no doubt that farmers make eueh objections. to growing beets as above stated. But I apprehend there are many more farmers who would give aa a reason for not growing beeta that they did not Ilka to be robbed by the beet sugar companies. I don't Ilka It. and I won't have it. If I have to quit raising beets entirely. I would I rather be robbed by a railroad company than by a beet sugar company, because the railroad people put It down In plain terms In their schedules Just what they are going to take out of you. and you know where you are at; while with the beet sugar peo ple you may surmise, but never know to a certainty. They weigh and they test, and they fix tha tare at their own sweet will, and tha beet grower has no check on them In any way whatever. We put all sorts ot checks on our public ofllciaJa and yet they find waya to rob us. But perhaps the beet sugar people are always honest, and never need any checks? I once shipped a carload of beeta from which the company deducted 1.391 pounds for tare, when I honestly believe that 893 pounds would have been enough. I don't like to see the beet sugar Industry . In Nebraska fall; It ought not to fail, and In my opinion would not fall If It were con ducted as it should be conducted. Just what change should be made I am not prepared to say; but I do know that there are wrongs that ought to be righted. The beet sugar people themselves, better than anybody else, ought to know how that can be done. They owe It to them selves to find a remedy. If they are honest and are dealing honestly with the farmers they ought not to be under suspicion. It would be to their advantage financially to do ao. If they have not made a success of manufacturing beet sugar they have at least made a brilliant success of gaining for themselves a reputation for crooked work in their dealings with tha beet grow ers. There are many thousands of acres In tha Platte valley alone that are better adapted to sugar beeta than anything else, and would produce them In enormous quanti ties even In a dry season and without any irrigation. ' There Is big money in beets, both for tha manufacturer and the farmer, but the manufacturers have been slowly strangling the goose that laid the golden egg. If they had trented the farmers right they might this year have had more beets than it would have been possible for them to consume. CHARLES WOOSTER. Slot a Valid Reason. NORFOLK. Neb.. Dec. l.-To the Editor of The Bee: Wo aro Informed by laat Sunday's Bee that for tha want of suffi cient acreage of beeta the American Beet Sugar trust decided to remove Its plant from here to Colorado. The reason alleged Is doubt ftil. No one knows better than the factory people; that If they pay for beats ahut 11 costs to rains them, about $6 per ton, and fairly treat their customers, they cun get within a space of fifty miles sur rounding the factory all the beets they can handle properly, in fact they would have to enlarge or build mora factories. If there was a shortage of beeta for a year or two past. It Is certainly their own fault. During the years they have operated here, the supply waa greater than they could prop erly handle, even at starvation values. From 189 to 189 we have seen 'large pitches of beets In December frosen solid In tha ground. During time stated we have seen farmers and others, with their beets yet In the ground at sero weather In squads of fifty, making for the factory, seeking for leave to deliver or pull their crop getting no satisfaction. Sometimes meeting with a fellow with a crop of beets In the ground ready to deliver and who had been to tha bank during the aeason for money to pay for help and about to abandon crop for the reason that the lia bility he Incurred already exceeded the value of the crop when delivered. The court records are alao evidence of some of tha Instances where much damage waa sustained by frosen beets and the plaintiff tha loser with coats. During the first year to make sure of sufficient acre age our people organised themselves into committees of ten eaoh and entered Into contract to raise each about 130 acres at 83 per ton. Tha syndicate of which the writer waa a member, after delivering an average crop of beets, upon settlement, found themselves out of pocket over 88,000, all la cash, while other syndicates came out but little better. Is It a wonder then If farmers and oth ers hesitate to make new contracts now. During the campaign Just closed better prices having Jrevalled no complaints are noticed. All beet raisers of this year will resume next year, some Increasing acreage, while many others having abandoned the field years ago, now Intend to re-enter whether this plant Is moved or not. It Is claimed that a guarantee is wanted of a certain acreage, but our cltlsena are tired and want a rest. There is probably a bonus In sight; If ao, the first cost of their ma chinery will have been repaid to them. The question Is often asked among our people of what benefit has the factory been te tha town. Said a grocery dealer th other day: "I only gave IM to get It here and I will give II to help them to get away It they will call for it." I have been feeding fellows, with their families, ex pecting work at the factory and lost 83.000 by doing so. But they are going to move, and are dis mantling the machinery. Tet as they had promised a better deal for next year and having paid fairly well this year for beeta, they are under obligation (as Tha Be aald Monday) to remain. They may be come of some benefit In tha future. C. F. E. TESTS OF ANIMAL SPEED Flea Ranks aa the awtrtest af All la Ita Jamee Mna Makes Fair Speed. A European engineer, Joseph Olshausea, began about fifteen years ago to measure the speeds of all creatures that he could study .and as a result ho has collected a remarkable array of facts, each one based on absolute experiment, to show Just how fast or slow hundreds of animal are. Ha has found that man can attain re markable speeds, but only by tha use ot artificial aids. A good pedestrian'a speed over good roads, he says. Is a sixteenth of a mile In twelve seconds. The Qerman soldier covers a little more than three miles an hour during an ordinary march that does not last too long. But after an eight days' march the distance covered in a whole day often Is only eighteen and three-fourths miles. In quickstep, how ever, the same soldiers have covered five miles an hour. In athletes, tha beat speed recorded by the investigation waa the initial velocity acquired by a broad Jumper, who took the Jump with a speed that carried him through the air at the rate of 398 Inches in a second. The maximum speed acquired by the average person in swimming eomfortably Is thirty-nine inches a second, while oars men In an eight-oared barge acquired a apeed of 197 inches in a second. Skaters a vera re from nine to tea yanla a second, while runners on skids have made aa much aa twenty-four yards In tha same time, and tha Jumper on aklda has developed almost forty yards velocity In a second. Of course, tha latter velocity la maintained only for a very short distance. The man who mad thla record Jumped 120 feet. Ice boats akim over the Ice at velocities that have reached thirty-elx yards a sec ond, or mora than a mile a minute. The fastest that has been dona on a bicycle la the record of sixty-six feet a second. The horse can gallop alx miles an hour for a considerable length ot time. Thu awlfteat dog in the world, the borzoi, or Russian wolfhound, has made record runs that show seventy-five feet in a second, while the gaaelle has shown measured speed of more than eighty feet a second, which would give her a speed of 4,800 feet In a minute if ahe could keep It up for that distance Tha gazelle, however, swift as she Is, is not aa swift as tha ostrich, for that homely but ewlft bird can run ninety eight feet to tha second when he really gets down to It. But then he helps him self aiong with his wings, which may not be of much use for flying, but are ex cedingly helpful in running. The whale, struck by a harpoon and sounding In terror, haa been known to diva at tha rate of 800 yards In a minute. The Virginia rainplper haa made meas ured nights of 7,600 yards a minute, and tha European swallow haa attained speeds of more than 8,000 yards. A apeclea of crow flies in great swarms from tha German mainland over Heligo land every day, goa clear to the English coast and returns again every night. Close observation shows that these birda habit ually fly eighty miles in three hours. A apecles of falcon, known as the wan dering falcon, flies from North Africa to Northern Germany In one unbroken flight, making the distance tn eleven hours. Tha slowest creatures are snails and cer tain small beetles. Some of them habitually move only a foot or two In an hour; but part of thla alowness ia due to the fact that they remain motionless at Intervals. By measuring the distances covered by snails whan they were kept going con stantly. It haa been found that the maxi mum spaed of a good healthy snail is five and a half feet an hour. The ladybug Is a perfect race horse com pared with thla, for it climbs a blade at grass at the rata of almost two Inches in a second, or nearly ten feet in a minute. That speed, by tha way, la exactly the average rate of apeed which Nansen's Polar ship Fram drifted with the Ice dur ing Its voyage of two and a half years locked In tha floes. And when Nan sen left tha Fram and pushed ahead with dog sledge he didn't do ao much better, for he rarely made more than nine miles a day. ' None of tha speeds made for any length of time compare with the speeds that are held for a second or a fraction of a second by some small creatures. Thus a jumping mouse found In the African desert leaps through the air at tha rata of 800 feet in a second. Of course she cleara only about ten feet In a Jump, and cannot keep up these Jumps for any great length of time. Still, the little creature ia swift enough to make a fast greyhound work hard for a quarter of an hour or so, till the mouse is wearied enough for him to outrun her. SU11 quicker than this desert mouse is the common flea, which jumps with an Initial velocity of 860 feet In a second. If the flea could keep this speed up steadily, without atopplng once, it would cover al most ten miles In a minute. Hut even tha flea'a velocity is nothing when compared with the velocltlea In celes tial space. Luminous clouds have made a measured spend of fifteen miles a minute, while earthquake shocks have been ob served to move at ratea reaching 600 yards a aecond.-Sclentlflo American. ALL HAVE SUMMER TRADES Trio of Inspects god Catters and Potato Diggers and Ont (or Work. Thomas Martin, James Ray and Harry Galbraith. colored, and part ot a number of suspects rounded up Friday evening by the detectives of the city jail, offered aoma novel reasons why they are in Omaha at thla time and why out of employment or visible means of support. Mr. Martin declared by the rabbit's foot he carried In his left vest pocket, that he la a aod cutter and layer and came here to ply his vocation. Ray said he la Mar tin's partner and cuta lawns for his bread and butter. Martin said when they arrived they found the weather waa not "efficient" for their line of work. Oalbralth said he had been plucking potatoes from the soil In Colorado up until sometime ago and came to Omaha for a winter's Job. He said he read of the Improvements going on here and thought there might be a few openings left for a young man. The police Judge discharged the trio on the understanding they get to work or Council Bluffs lnstanter. Latter (rasa Joese Loblagler. Charles 8 Elguttor la in receipt of a let ter from Judge Charles S. Loblngler, who left Omaha In August to assume Judicial duties in the Phlllppir.ee. The Judge writes that he and wife had an enjoyable trip acTuea the Pacific and stopped enrouts at Honolulu and a number of Chlneae and Japanese porta Judge Ixiblngler bow is located at Tacloban, province of Leyele. but expects to return to Mauila soon. He la a judge of the court of the first Instance. A Christmas. Thtt will be ipprtculed The World' t Greatest Sinferl, Bnd tnd Speiken will tin, pity tnd pek lor you in your own home SMALL COST AND LOTS OF AMUSEMENT. OUR GREAT TERMS By our liberal offer of placing a machine In every home desiring one and paying for it later as desired every one can now possess one of the greatest of all pleasure and amusement makers. Liberal induce ments to out-of-town purchasers. Send for Catalogue. Any woman can save the cost of "her sewing machine within a year by having a "Wheeler & "Wilson in her home. It's a safe investment ornamental as well as useful, and will last a lifetime. Free sewing school every Thursday. Modern drop head machines of all other good makes at less than half the regular price. These machines have been thoroughly overhauled and are guaranteed in perfect condition, The usual agent will sell them for new. k , "We do the Sewing We prepay express NEBRASKA 'Phone 1663. GEO. E. MICKEL, 334 Broadway. Council Bluffs. 'Phone B6I8. CELESTIAL DAY IN COURT Chinamen with Unthinkable Names Up Be fore Cosmopolitan Jndge Andtrton.- MUST SHOW CAUSE FOR THEIR EXISTENCE la This Cooatry, It la Charred, la Vlolatloa of Exclusion Act and Sn Mast Satisfy lacle Itm, Tha court of United States Commissioner Anderson is tha only genuine cosmopolitan oourt In this part of the country. One day it la called upon to try an African for boot legging, then an Indian for belns; boot leased, then a Hungarian, Polish, Bohe mian or Italian striker, an American for eneral "cusaednasa" and lastly a China man for being found alive in this country In violation of tha Chinese exclusion act. Other nationalltiea a're aandwlched In be tween to give variety to the court pro ceedings. Yesterday waa Chlneae day, with Wong Hoi Fun Le Wing Chum Whang Fu) one In dividual), Leo Lung Wai, Leo Hung Won, Leo Hule Hop, Hule Lun, Law Leo Quen. Leo Owon, Lung Swing and Leo Chuck as the various celestials who will have to show tha court why they are in America, how they got here and what they are do ing. The only caae tried today waa that of Wong Hoi Fun Lee Wing Chun Whang Fu, who claims to have operated a Chi nese goodie store at 122 North Twelfth street up to a few months ago, but who Is now doing a little at Ironing napkins at the Bon Ton restaurant, which vocation Chi nese Inspector J. H. L. Eager doea not conalder a mercantile business, and It is through Inspector Eager's seal that the aforenamed Chinese delegation is engaging tha attention of th oourt. Chaoses Ilia Vocation. The specific charge agalnat the much named Wong Hoi Fun la that, having abandoned hla vocation m a merchant, he has beoome a common laborer and as such is not entitled to remain in this country. The defense claims that as tha Chinese emigration treaty expired by limitation on December 7, that tha Chinese now In the country are permitted to remain, as there is no law in vogue authorizing their de portation. The Chinamen have engaged John Lind say and W. A. Wapplch to defend their In terests and District Attorney Baxter li prosecuting on behalf of the government. Stenographer David Dickinson of the dis trict attorney's office Is trying to keep a record of the proceedings, which have to ba submitted through an interpreter, Eu Tong. Mr. Dickinson Is doing all that a mortal man can do In the work and if he survives the ordeal he may try for tbe position as official stenographer for Era press Ann. By the time tha questions of the attorneys and the responses are sifted through the Interpreter they are aa com prehensive aa a Chinese laundry bill. There are no known phonographic characters that will exactly meet the emergency, and Mr. Dickinson is seriously contemplating com piling a system of Chinese phonography to cover these and like cases. No gtar Chambers Go. An Incident occurred during the hearing this morning that may have a atrong bear ing on future cases of this character. It appears that at the preliminary investiga tion of the case Wong Hot Fun's story was taken through an Interpreter, and this statement was offered In evidence. Judge Anderson ruled the evidence aa a masa to be Inadmlssable, aa he held that "a state ment exacted from the accused Chinaman In a side room and under duress would not ba accepted as evidence In this court, Ths place to try the cases Is before this court and I will not tolerate any star chamber proceedings." TASK OF REVISING CHARTER Eissaaaa Appoints Conaelt C'oaamlttee ta Confer with Varlona Or sjaalsatlons of City, President Zlmman ol the city council haa announced that he haa appointed Council men Huntington, Nicholson and himself as a committee to confer with committees from the Ileal Estate exchange. Commer cial club. Improvement clubs and ether bodies regarding tbe revision or the formu lation of changes and amendment to the city charter. This actloa waa taken pur suant to a resolution introduced by Coun cilman Hoya and adopted Tuesday night. Councilman, Hay aaya h was requested The Edison and Victor Talking Machines THE ACME OF REALISM PRICES FROM $10 to $75 Tbe Biggest Stock of Talking Midlines tod Record, lo the West. Victor Records Eichingid Free. Machine Uusineas of Nebraska." charges on all retail orders. i . Kir win I ' I m pre M sjsHttrtsj of yhm ffcrmK W fit pubtto I WaLivt the to do so by members of tha . Beat Estate exchange, A call for a meeting, there fore, is looked for from that organisation. Prenldent Zlmman stated also that City Attorney Wright and City Engineer Rosa water would be invited to be part of the council commltttee In an advisory capacity. HUSBAND IS HUSKINQ CORN Thomas Kranklln Xewton Writes that , He Never Tnonsjht of I)e aertla Hla Wife. Mrs. Thomas Franklin Newton, who called on Chief of Police Donahue a few weeks ago to ak assistance in locating her husband, whom she thought had left her, haa now been placed In communication with her helpmate. Newton writes he has been at Osborne, Neb., working tn the corn fields and had no thought of leaving his family. He says he wrote several times, but It appears tha wife did not receive tha epistles. Beauty Strength Brain Werkers, Nervous, Fretful, weak ana Care era people restored ! aeaiw ay ut use or EM TABLETS Thur Inilnoe rattful ilp, ears Krronn, tomrh, Klilntf ana Bladder trnnhlri, and pre flue PltimpiiMi, fitramili ai Vitality, ton as its BtrrM and pnrlx tb tilooa. By Hall I.0O, or boxes a.T AIM Wervaa LusUrt Urw Fill. S3 eta. For aeaipie Tablets, enoloee IO oenta to THE NERVAN TABLET CO., Cincinnati, 0. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Scientific Cure for Fits Science ha at laxt discovered a cure for a diaeaae which haa always b-en regarded as Incurable epilepsy or flia. Elixir Koslne, as lis dlai-ovcrtr, a well known Washing ton Investigator, terms It. Is for Bale in thla city by the leading druggieta and In every rase where it has bfn tried and demonstrated Its wonderful powr to strengthen tha nerves, feed the nerve cen ters with new force and atrength and conquer epllersy. LruKKlala everywhere have so much fplth In Kllxir Koslne, both from what they have heard ot the cures It has made in other r I ties and the remarkable renults following Its ue In this city, that they f uaranlee rorriplete and lasting cure or i hey will refund the money. You run no 1 risk In taking Elixir K'isine on these terms, t'se this great remedy and nun more be j well and strong, free from all fear ef tl- leptlo eetxurra. I'riue 11.60. Mail ortiers , tilled. KOHINE CO.. Washlnston, V. or BEATON DRVii CO., lath aid F.- nam bis. 1 ,r 0irnm irl 'fl. ill! tw . . . ----lj-l v?.--y.T r A a J w .- M I XL I- For Christmas Nothing Will Please Her Like a WHEELER WILSON BALL-BEARING Sewing Machine Call or write. I .J.is, i CYCLE CO. Manager. Cor. 15th and Harney. 625 No. 24th St., So. Omaha. 'Phono 4365 ' w. mm LUMU tot Um.1 i I tmm it Rvmpvaa trip Buster Browiv Part That is tho children's part of perthey all know Buster and his dog, Tige. Even though Buster Brown is always Into some mischief the fathers and mothers like him pretty well. too. It would be pretty lonesome In lots of homes on Sunday if Buster Brown didn't oome to call. We Want a Bright Boy in Every Town to Sell The Illustrated Bee All you have to do is to tell people how cute Buster Brown is and how they will get from 82 to 44 pages all for five cents. When they tart once particularly If there are any little boys or girls at their house they will never stop. ' Willie Britton lives at Guide Rook a town of about 400. He writes: "I have sold every paper, so far. Please send me SO from now on." Willie is malting 60 cents every Saturday afternoon in about an hour. If you are witling to hustle like Willie, write us and we will send you TIN PAPIRS Fit EC to start with. Write and we will tell you all about It. THE OMAHA BEE, OMAHA, NEB. WE ARE for your holiday trade. Our Christmas stock Is In and you can have tha pick of our auperb assortment. Diamonds for the millionaire and for the multitude. Nothing could be more acceptable or make your loved one so supremely happy. Inspection and comparison Invited. OPEN EVENINGS. MAWHINNEY & RYAN CO IS in AND DOUGLAS jrj. OMAHA,fstEB r "Follow u 17 ft JJO U noiia ay i R TICKETS ON SALE Dec. 24-25-26.31, Jan. 1-2, 1905 Homeseekers' Rates To many points ia the Houth and HoutheiiBt. Tickets on sale First and Third Tuesdays of each month. One-Way Colonist Rates To many points In the South and Southeast Tirkets on nale December 20. Tor full information, call at Wabash City Offlre. Harry . Moores, G. A. P. A. 1601 FARNAM. SB Gift 1"' ' O Mtfrjt.u.,.. i.,i i.n 'iiiLi'iaeJeUl Uitattlaji mi uui'i ant the pa ! H lira rot IBBejPlieaBpjBISIBflBaPafJBV ml oiri.', unJTM HEADY the Flng " ates asMaalaBnsBeBasanasBJtsslaiieaafckm. .. - . Si 1 1 R