Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 04, 1908, Page 5, Image 5

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    TTTE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY. MARCH 4. 190S.
CHIEF CITY KEWS JUST THE SAME
-tare Vo Txta XV '.
Ufcet-I BAketaa, ijtamond.
Bs Content A Sqnlree. Tel. Dt.
aVIaaaar, phrrtograther. ltt Firnui
AS THE DOCTOR
PROSCRIBED DISTRICT TO CO
SATS
WILL GO
Cribi ITa More After Arril and Whole
win recrite tor you. you m c .' m...
In 1!'. R.rnHllif TOO are in viiaiu.
need ot a rood tonic which thousands
lit N. it. DoutiuihML atta do at tht aeason: orV too nd aome- rflTTT
1 . . X ... . - .. I VIII .
rau aaoovataat-MAito, r. strobode. J tnin Tor your ippeuit, or 11 your
; vetoe CaUure if Intcreete. see n- blood la Impure. Hood Earsapanna
f Cheney. I h a been teeted for then pnrpoeet a
prta Suite ass a ut-. million time. It is a physician pre-
Wat 1 m a - . w . 1 lb IB UJirv rwuvnun-ai v .v,e-v
W thrtn have Beck Springs coal. Oe v , 0A rv Or,. TWller.
Ran Down "I aa !n the clTll war
and my exposures at that time cause
roe to run down easily. Hood's Saraa
parllla hit my need exactly, as it
EAST WILD CN FORESTRIES
Pre, Kara ! BUI, Waata Matter
oa BaaarTelt Foltrtr at (kr
Rfimt.
Pellee Have far Ui Tlsae Ha TaU
artlaa la Mla mm Ar lm
H early "yaaaatay wltfc
Graa4 Jary.
: tral Coal and Coka company of Omaha,
ibia ana nanny atresia.
Aaa Wednesday Sarrtea Pr'rrlrrs will
be feeld la All Saints Vfhorrh today at
ijO: a. tn. td tM fk'm. and erery day
during lnt at p. to. except on Hon-
daya and Batardaya.
Oa Karen a, at p. m.. In tha First
Congregational Mtorch, Vt. Horac II.
1 Fower of Boston will air a tropticen
' lectar on
t M eanta each.
I Wllbetra'a and WhlUnora'a
Tint Btlnr ta Quarter
The police Will carry-out the Instructions
of tha Board of Fire and Police. Commis
sioners regarding tha 'red light dlatrict to
fire a thrill of new life and build me the letter and a month from today there
up each season. " CapU J. P. Thorn p- wm not be an occupied 'crib' in Omaha,"
on, Registrar of Deeds, Lowell. Mass. chief of Poiioe Donahue m speaking
TlUUU O OdrOUUCIl lllU The chief will tnetruct one of hla captain.
tX";; In naual HO.U.J torn or In chocolated XilnLll' t'
. ara on ...e at Orchard tablet called Har-Uh. 100 doae. $1. 011 X Vi ZTZ S
tlva statroient that any proatltutea found
In thoae plaeea after that data will ba ar-
Oaatary
- "- - r.V. ,. ared MM worth. Coraden and Roaa are ln rLrr ul'
i Mra. Anna ProWnf ot New Tork CTty la Iat.r, Krlder seated and proeecuted. whether they be
! vtattina; at tha home of. her elirter, Mra.
i Joenphlne Jelen. la Bouth Fortieth ptreet.
' Thta la th first time tba atatera hare met
I ln twenty- yeara. Mra Droning- ex
J pecta tf remain fr aometlme.
j Drt-rar tn Bortoua Oondlttoa John Lino-
han. drtrer tor tha T. C. Harena company,
auretiea for Krlder.
Bond Company Slacharfad H. H.
Knapp, Omaha manaaer for the Weatern - "'"I" "I
. . . , I aome time and the action of the erana Jury
white or black.
T'e have had thie move In mind for
ployment agency, waa diacbarged by Po
lice Judge Crawford Tueaday after an
argument of the case agaimit him charging
! who waa thrown Trom hie wagon at B!x: him with charging an excenva employ.
teenth and Howard streeta laat Friday tn
a runaway and auffered a fractured ankle.
; la ln a aenoue condition at the omana uen-
I eral hoapltaL A delirium haa added to hla
! lllnee a, which Waa not conaidered aerioua
: at flrat.
Wark oa Taboraaloala Ward Work on
i tha tiiberouloela ward at the county hoa.
; pital haa been atarted by tha contractor.
I Peter Ktewltt. Excavation for the foun- j
! datlon were being dug Tueaday and the
ment fee. Two attorneye tor Knapp argued
haa had nothing to do with the matter,
aave Chief Donahue. "While there may be
a queatloa ln the minda of some that thla
action la beat, at 111 Omaha can no longer
tolerate the "crib" ayatem, which haa been
,.. ,uJ t inoirt mr. n vogue tor twenty-five yeare ln thla city.
h.t .. fh w.iern FtPfpT- In another month there mill be no pro-
tlon, nothing can be done, though the oraer win reeuii in many w w.r.:..
defendant imlttel that he char"ed 25 ner leaving lown. m raurw
cent of tha flrat montha aalary for get- acaiwr. proou.y, ul
ting John W. Tawter a poaltion aa book- will be better or worae than tha present
keaner. The ordinance nreoennea a maxi- . ... w
mum tea of 10 per cent of the first month'e Mayor Dahlman. who waa also at the
mnlai-r meeting of the fire and police board, thinks
I the resolution adopted is for the best.
material for the building is being hauled y, yjm Q. . HUSTLES MEMBERS tn,n,Kh he doubts the advlBability of doing
Colonel W. F. Cody arrived ln Omaha
Tueaday morning to meet hla daughter,
Mra Irma Btott, and hie nephew, Cody
Bowles, son of hla daughter Artla They
will remain In Omaha for a couple of days,
stopping at the Merchants, and will then
go to Cody, Wyo.
"1 am geting data tor several magaalne
article on the forest reserve queetion,"
said Colonel Cody. "The east la just awak
ening to the advent agea of following the
policies advocated by President Roosevelt
on the question of 'forest reaervea. Every
where I go ln the east the press is anxious
for some data on this subject and have
numerous orders from eastern papers for
articles on the condttiona
"The west la more familiar With the ad
vantage of having the forests protected,
for the people of the west know the pro
tection of the forests means the protection
of the home builders. Tha forests Compel
the snows of the mountains te mdt slowly
and prevent the disastrous spring fresheta
'We must have some ranges, but the
forest reserve protect tha rangea so the
grass can keep growing by irorar protection.
They do not allow the ranges to be over
stocked. Many who care nothing for the
protection of the range would put huge
bunches of sheep In one place and ruin the
range. Oirfora nnenot and others are do
ing a good work along thla line, for the
forest reserves furnish water for the Irri
gating ditches and that la what the west
ln the future a-ilr have to rely upon."
The Buffalo Bill Wild West show will
open for a five weeks engagement at
Madison Square Garden April 23.. William
McCune is now arranging for the Indians
who will go with the show.
Wavr Bflwrra tha Kaaee ta aa
Kerf the Aaaortattoa la the
Taaawarat.
to the site. The contractor expects to have
the building completed In from tw ta
three montha
ataUway Kali Appointments Benlgno
Rodrtguea, a Porto Rican from the regular
army at Fort Mackenale, haa been ap- J To keep the Omaha aoctatlon in the
nolnted to tha Toluca-Worland railway I tmnt rank nf the orcanizationa havinc the
mall postoff Ice vice Frank K. Clift. trana- I largeat membership tho Toung Womon a R,L' J5E OF PICTURE CARDS
ferred to the Lincoln ana uiinga division i christian association haa started a cam-
West. Joseph R Harris, also of Fort Mac- palp, for J,008 members. For several years B--w style of ArehlteetaFo aa fiath.
away with the prose noea aistncu j ne
mayor bolde that thla la a necessary evil
and that it la better to keep prostitutes !n
a district by themselves than to allow thera
to go Into rooms ln the business and resi
dential portions of the city.
ere aa Asaerte
Jlearr Raapk.
Practical use haa at last been found for
the pictorial postal cards. Their relation
to utility haa been discovered by an Omaha
kemle. haa been appointed to the Lincoln I Omaha haa had the fifth largest aasocia
and Billings division. tlon ln the United Btatea and though the
SI Orooar Plea fl-uilty Six of the membership haa not been falling off othera
twelve Omaha grocers charged with sell- I have been growing and Omaha will have
Ing Imitation butter without a permit from to work to keep pace wun otner clllea
the State Food. Dairy and Drug commie- For the purpose of securing new mem'
elon pleaded guilty In police court Tueaday bora the association has been divided Into m(in after a residence of aome three or
and paid flnee of 110 and coat each. They two companlea, one under Miss Ora John- jour year, abroad, travels ln varloua parts
were R. E. Welch. Jena Chrtstensen. Par- son and the other under Dr. Nttllie Watson. of jfrope and careful Inquiry at the libra
dun eipple, Johnson at Goodlett Co., C. The skirmish will be known as the "War ,tatlonery etores and book collector'a
of the Rosea" Miss jonnaon naving com- cornors.
mand of the red poalea and Dr. Watson Henrv Raapke. the architect, haa demen-
.... ru.M . f th- Home Miaalnn be'ne tb wmte. gtrmtri that the carda are really good for
T , . ' The reds started with twenty-six
board of the northwest, and Dr. W. H.
Krarna of Beatrice, eynodical missionary
0 x..v. 1 4 V. MHnptTiat antalcera
and Rev. KathanieKMelffln of Holdrge. "t,
rommg piTor 01 ijowe atchw nrmur-
nhATaPliL. doonrari. churches, libra-
PUBLIC BATHS AT CUT-OFF Hea and theaters. Mr. Raapke has writ-
VointM -omethlna- beside swelling the postal re-
uuiru ui iiiv iwiuiiiwi, . ... . . . ... . . . i
Kearn. of Beatrice, eynodical ml-ionary I a :rZr.r. H ,n the Wrtf of the world;
cu tnjiut. i..a sending more or lesa pminrni mrnxfei. a
substitute for comic valentines and making
the roome Monday fv- THnters opulent.
terlan church. wUl preside at the home Ym JZZrnZ , tZ ln l"' ln- 7,",
m.tin, at Firat Presbvterlan 1 dinner Mrs, J. M. Alkln, chairman of the I architect haa a postal card index contaln-
membenrtiip committee, prealded. Mra. lng. 6 carda Tbey are of the better
Uvara told tha zlrla whv aba wanted 1.000 iti nf thom
lag1B Oat Clus PrlTllegea Delegatee m.mh- vlna- three reasons. Mias Dow. i ..J.
to the dernocratlo and republican atate con- I of th Kattonal Tounjt women a Chrla- lor t0 th8 photogVapha The cards
ventiona to be held in Omaha rlng the Uan aecretarles, gave a very Bhow a ,tyl of architecture, ancient and
i lCH " Interesting talk. Mra Hartora, president modern, and many of them ln perfect de
urnuua,,.. ' 0f the-Omaha association, also apoke. tsil. Arches, windows, altars, drawing
leers ok t n ciu d. a um i ww wu v rii nui
will be thm flrrt big: con vi lion which
a tl S a a.lnja.aw I Btra laa
,:.ve oeen u " ten the Information neceaaary on the back
elded to give vlaltora the privileges of the E11-. a, E, j. coralah ana fe.Ma hnwim th.
club rooms when attending convanUona I , f lh , f fark Coaa- .. . .,,11 t n tnatant who the amhi-
Ttee Boy Oeafeaa Three oya under j aa teal oar ra. tect waa who dealgned the building or in-
18 years ot age, Tony Paeha, lHe Bouth l terlor, what It coat and when It waa con-
vn,.rfu..ti. . AiMVnm rSerlan. Twen- I iw miMia itVia fnr the eltv nt Omaha I
- ... . . .... ja V.ninm I . .w- Vnn nf V T rViniiah
ly-wronu ana j iu 11 n. , ki.u wm i im virv uiiiiui hvi-o .
! SX0 Pierce street, have coniessea to urn- I member 01 tn uoara 01 nrm. omnus- i Aanounoements, weaaing stationery ana
tective Savage they robbed O'Brien lunch j sionera, who says one ot his main reasons calling carda. blank book and magazine
room. i:8 Bouth Thirteenth street, laat Fri- In th securing of Cut-Off lake for a pub- binding, i'non ioug. A t Root. Ina
nici.t Thv admitted ther went to I lie nark has been that public baths, free -
' l .... ......avAieaMriiMiiaBi
the railroad yarda where they secured a I for all the people, might be estawianed iflw m LilAo t KUbLU LAliU
. heavy Iron, with which they broke ln the there. The appraisers are now endeavoring
front door and secured $36. SO. to secure the land by th lake and tha L-ri.latioa te Be Advoeate hy West
o- a wra.ld.at puk. Members xard hope to get clear title to the realty ep stock Grower, af Soath
, , i.i rfi.h an tha executive u" - ""a itmmmxm.
t v..ini Corn exnoBltlon property tnis year,
. ,.un ivaairtent Funk. nave talked of the free bath que- Frank Stewart of Buffalo Ois. S. D.. la
Vic. President P O. Holden and members I "on many time, but have never had a , Omaha, the guest of Mayor Jamt
ot tha executive commUtee of the National KooO. place for an est abliehment or the charlea Dahlman. While In Omaha Mr
. i-nm a.ao.iaHr.n at tha roome of the Com- ort. Mr- Cornish, -but at cui-uif Btewart will lasue the lnvitatlona to the
mercial flub Friday evening. The commit- w ""V w lu """"" " Omaha Commercial club and live stock
tee ot tbe National Corn association meets Pullc bath, the first In Omaha Th lake dealers of South Omaha to attend the
ln Omaha Friday and probably will select furnish an excellent plunge In the ,ixteenth annual meeting of the Western
.v,. .h. Kia roni ahow ln Omaha I summer urao aim i iiujw inai n south Dakota mock u rowers' association,
vt uui 01117 un iiuui. nut 7 of which he la the secretary.
and children at all times 01 tha year. ..We u advocate a law at once which
wl 1 1 mwlria fnr Ilnv rt VMfArnmMit
r ri nsi ituiprs vmitr r 1 1 rj 1 r I "
OUUUrt bflMdCa lUUItU UUriU landa" said Mr. Stewart. "Tbere la no
provision at present, regardless of th
Law Is Hot Trail of Yeathfal faot there are thousands of acres which
Lovers Toe Teer tmr Mar- mill he worthless for anvthlna: but irraxinr.
rlaae Usa At present we are all renegade. We are
aafe aa long as we don't fence the govern
business
Invitations will be sent to all
men te attend tb reception.
Protect oa Sirs aa Pol aa In a letter
to the chief of palloe, Waldemar Michael
eon, city lectrtclan, call attention to the
violation of the ordinance prohibiting the
tacking ot signs on electric light and tele
phone poles ln the city. Th promiscuous
1 talking of algn oa the poles maae 11
; possible for moisture to enter and thereby
. rot the pole. The electrician wants the
license clerk Into giving thera a permit to
" M0.L " "1 'n' Unpaged' U. are-wrnderirg ewher
Too youthful looking to fool a marriage mmt landa but the situation Is anything
but agreeable. We must have aome Ian-
which will look toward leasing the rangea
, . . ., ... Alien, a;ea la, are vuunms wn"w
are In the ' ut , Mr vrhal over the west In search , a place where
do n away wl h the .Ign. VLr. they can ret marrtP(L IIot on their trail 1.
beheva. ha will be doing .omelhing to J c.mpbeU of Garfield county. Okl..
Uaihud Stataa Xheingm Wait tut Indian -
. Th Culled 8.uXe a trvanea ot Blackbird
; Bheridan. an Omaha InAian. haa brought
' suil agalnat .Albert Krlder, Frederick Cora-
' den and Otto Q. Rose to recover about
ItU) for lease rioney. Sheridan la an In
dian allottee and hla landa to Krlder
whero both of the young people come from.
The pair eloped more than a week ago
and the officer ha not been able to locate
them yet, though he haa struck their trail
once or twice.
The parents of both are farmers in Gar
field county and they opposed th match.
telling the children they were too young
to the cattlemen."
The date for the convention have been
selected. It will open April 13 and con
tlnue te and including the 15th of April.
Omaha la always well represented at the
meeting, sending from one to two carload
of delegatea
MOVE FOR CLEAN STREETS
X Caae Beeort,
There is no case on record of a cough or
cold resulting ln pneumonia or consumption
after Foley's Honey and Tar haa been
taken, aa If will atop your cough and break
up your cold quickly. Refuse any but the
genuine Foley's Honey and Tar ln a yellow
package. Contalna no opiates and la aafe
and sure. For sale by all druggists.
THIEVES HAVE PLENTY DRINK
Bevel la Palace of Baerkai Betweem
the Hoar of IS P. M.
a A. M.
Thieve who broke Into the aaloon of
Walter Brandes. 1002 South Tenth street.
between 12 and S a m.. Tuesday, found
themselves ln a veritable oaccnananan
utopla with the finest drink to be had
for the plucking and a cash register full
of money. They took t from the regls-
ter'and selected six bottles of champagne
and two of the best old rye.
From the wholesale house of Hayward
Broa, Twelfth and Howard streeta. a thief
took aeven pair of shoea.
Miss Thelma Mersrhelm, milliner, 104
Paxton block, reported the disappearance
of four pieces of fine Bilk from her es
tablishment.
Commercial Club Confer, with Street
Commitiioher to Condition!,
MAT BORE INTO STTUATIOU SOME
Why la It other Title Hare flea
fitreet the aaae Asaeaat
ef Moaer thaf la lae ta
Oatahat
After a conference with Street Commis
sioner Flynn, the Omaha Commercial club
Is to begin a campaign for clean atreeta
and expecta to find out how other cltte
have cleaned streets hy expending th
same amount or leaa than Omaha apenda
The munlclpil affalra committee of the
Commercial club discovered a lot of things
at the meeting with the street commis
sioner, and among othera they are wonder
ing why the city paya a small army of
street cleaners at 26 cents per hour for
sweeping, or t2 for an eight-hour day,
when the railroads and shop report that
there are many men who are wanting work
In' ten-hour day at 11.60 per day. But the
committee la to find out what other cltlea
are paying and whether the cltlea which
have funda for cleaning the streeta use the
fund a a pension for a number of nld
men who do very little sweeping during
the eight hours.
The Commercial club will also file ob
jections to the way ln which contractora
abuse the privilege of the atreets when
building or altering business blocks.
Coa tractor Reapoaslhle.
During the laat year, according to the
members of the municipal affairs commit
tee, contractora have been reaponaible ln
a large measure for tbe dirty streets In
many block They tear out old bricks and
plaster, lath and floora remove dirt from
cellars and pile building material aa high
aa poaslMe ln front of the building. Tbe
trash ' removed from the old buildings la
never hauled away until the work on the
building ia completed, and in many Instances-
It is ao thoroughly scattered over
the pavement and blown ln every direc
tion that the contractora are aaved the
coat of removing the trash ln wagona.
All these thing have been brought to
he attention of the street commissioner,
as well aa the fact that the city haa but
tour sweeping machines, one ot which is a
chronic invalid and not able to work.
Why the city aJlowe the street railway
company to crowd the anow from it
tracks, fofthe city to haul away; why the
company ta permitted to scatter tons of
sand along its tracks to blow over the
streets, and why the storekeepers throw
and Bweep almost everything Into the gut
ter, are a few . other points of interest
which the municipal affalra commmlttee
will investigate.
Dealr Frlaat
posscases aufferera from lung trouble till
they learn Dr. King New Discovery will
help them. 50c and fl.QD. For sale by
Beaton Drug Co.
T"
bout li re year ago una wm wn nn. -i-ht their allrmed av-av
quired that Krlder r.hould build a aultable I fy Ti they pui for a J)e,nM at
bouae oa the premise ana mass n ra- 1 ccu Bluff, but were turned down, as
provement. which he ha failed to do and they appearra too young. Sheriff Campbell
Sheridan ciaima mat . ne naa oean cam-
Rusty nails,
dull saws,
nicked Chisel, holdrege loses mustache
BRYAN VOLUNTEERS COME IN
Advaaee Curl of the Demacrati Ar
rives ta Float for State
Coaveatloa.
E. V. Garrett ot Fremont, atate secre-
tarv of tha Brvan Volunteers, advance
called at tbe county Judge office Tuesday lh- democrats, has arrived and ia
and left word that a license should be re- maklne thlrg reBdy for the reception of
fused them It they applied. vtr T.-n t the P&xton hotel. Mr. Gar
rett ia one of the delegates to the demo
cratic atate convention Thursday.
Reservations have been made at the Pax-
ft
Raw la th Tlsae
to buy that office desk you've been think
Ina- about- Wa'ra offarlnjr rood aualltv
wll made roll and flat-too desks at lea. Uon hoteJ by these democratic lights: W
than manufacturer a oost. Com ln and J' Bryan, room Ti: W. V. Allen. Madison,
them. ORCHARD A WILHELM room 1: A J. Bnaiienoerger. room z; r,
W. Ann ton, Urana laiana, room 22; Bryan
Volunteers' headquarters, room 17-18; Har
mon and Colville, room 1; Morrlssey, room
Barll-ata- Geaeral Massstr Jetae w- H' Thompaon. Grand Island, room
th asaki of th Baoth i -r. u. iu weoer. aiparawo. ana ur
ltallraa Maawate. I Bummera, Oakland. Kooma also hav been
reserved for T. b. Alien and c M. Gruen-
The habit of cut ting-off haa become ao of Lincoln, chairman and secretary ot
craod work of vour cook if you "Eer,J wtth railroa m tma tim
0 . . . 1 of retrenchment that General - Manaaer
ElVe hCT POOr llOUr. VJlVe lier Hqij of th Burllnnoo made a mlallck reserved twelve roome at the Millard hotel.
and whacked off hla mustache Tueaday. u,u" "l awjurwi
He haa Joined the raoka of th smooth Quarter at in Mensnaw tor xn Bulfalo
neral manarera. of wham thera ara threw coumy aeiwuou.
In Omaha." Jokingly remarked a friend
Thar are Walter. Mohler and Holdrege
Give these to a carpenter.
Ask htm for rood work !
It s just as absurd to expect
Gold Medal Flour
made by Washburn-Crosby.
Her delicious bread and
biscuit will be ample reward.
Mkil'i Goat far Paas'i Baayf
Red Cross -- Cough Dropa he per box.
Gold
Medal
Flour
SoU by
Grocer
Everywhere.
&
mm
slB-tiMIt1
aw
wt Hf ait ni"
Mr. Heldreg had always worn hla mus
tache short and "stubby," but when It was I
removed entirely the difference waa aa J
great aa If h bad worn a Texas Bill tor all
Lbeee yaara Borne of his oldest friends 1
fallfed to recognla him.
Olrra I m ta I) la.
B. Spiegel. 15M North Virginia street.
Evanavilkr, Ind a rites: "For over flv
year I was troubled with kidney and blad-
PRATTS COME BACK IN SUIT
Fear ef OefeaaVaat Attack Validity
ef IrrvlM Vmmm Theaa ta
th tame.
1 j r our vi i.ie aeieuw.u in uie auu, ox
Julia Montgomery Pratt against hr hus
band and hia hir for a ahar In hat prop
arty her filed motion ln district court
der affect lona which cauabd me touch pala attacking tha validity of the aervlce bad
and worry. I lost flh and was all run
dowa, and a year ago had to abandon work
upon them ln tb caae. In all the motions
It la aaeerted the earvtoe by publication
entirely. I had three of the bast physician was Insufficient and not properly made.
I who did ma no good and I was practically
given up to die. Foley Kidney Cur waa
reoomnM-nde and th flrat hottl gav me
great relief, and after taking the second
buttle I waa tntlreiy Cured." Why not Wt
, U help you? For sal by all druggun.
Thoae who file th motion are Margaret
Louisa Pratt Olaoo. HJalme Olaon, Har
riett Belie Magee and Henry W. Mag.
The suit Is a companion caa te Mra
Pratt application tor divorce, which la
atiU pndin'ia Judg Kennedy' court.
Your Oven Isn't Hot
A fierce heat is required to make
beans digestible; you can't apply it
It is simply impossible to bake beans at borne, and bake
them as tbey should be baked. You lack the facilities.
Home-baked beans are heavy and hard to digest, because
of insufficient heat. You fail to break down their fibre.
Let us bake for you. We bake in live steam, and our '
ovens are heated to 245 degrees. The result is, our beans
are digestible.
That nutty flavor and that sparkling
zest are found in Van Camp's alone
The nutty flavor comes from using only the plumpest,
ripest beans. It is also due. to baking without bursting.
The piquant tans comes from vine-ripened tomatoes.
Our sauce costs us five times what some sauce is sold for.
The delicious blend comes from baking the beans, the
tomato sauce and the pork for 90 minutes together.
Van Camp's pork and beans
baked with tomato sauce
Baking beans at home is a bother. It takes too much
time. That is why you don't serve them frequently.
Van Camp's are always ready. Put the can in hot water,
then open, and you have a delicious meal steaming hot.
You will eat more beans when you know Van Camp's.
First, because they're convenient. Second, because they're
so good.
Beans are 84 per cent nutriment; yet
see how many you get for ten cents
Beans and meat have about the same food value, but
look at the difference in cost. Suppose your people ate
beans once a day think what you would save.
Why not tempt them with beans which are as good as
beans can be f Then note how soon they ask for more.
They will like Van Camp's better than meat.
10, IS and 20 f per caa.
Van Camp Packing Company. Indianapolis, Ind.
mis
m cum
IS A WINNER , ,
It's ttie Best Wyoming Coal
Handsome to look at-clean to handle-lasting
to burn. A reputation
and demand has been established
within the past two weeks through
Its Intrinsic merit.
58.00 Per Ton taper larp Kut
Satisfaction Guarantee) r Money Refe-ft.
C. D. HAVENS & CO., 1805 r""a st-
PHONES: Domg. 317-lnd. A1171.
A Dromincnt gentleman of
r.rtitfaukee write :
"Katmmo cured me ofnervou dye-
nrntta. i waa' In m wrotchcd condi
tion two veara a so, my atomach refused
ta da if duty, and In seven weeks I waa
w - T W . 1
rrtuctri from 140 to 1 15 pounds, and It
seemed that all my vitality and strength
had fled with the flesh.
"Ka tamo ga ve new life to me. Two bot
tles did moro for me than any amount of
doctors had been able to do.
"In three montha I waa as well a a ever,
m a M. m J a a -
my nctn mna .zrengtn naa rviurncu,
and tho. who hta teen mo oeioro
would hardly believe me when I told
them that nothing but Katarno had
made that wonderful dlfferenoe"
N"
AR-J
0
SCHAEFErVS CTT PRICK DRUG STORKS dor. 15th and taooglaa Sts
Cor. leth and Chicago Bts., Omaha. Cor. 5th Are. and Mala BU, Council
Bluff a, Iowa, Cor. 24th and Jf rta bouth Omaha,
The A B C and X Y Z of
ADVERT!
S1G
NO. 2
A SERIES OF TEN TALKS ON ADVERTISING
written by Seymour Eaton of Philadelphia
for the readers of THE OMAHA BEE
Advertising and news are first cousins.
The railroad and the stage coach are grandchild and
grandfather.
Four out of five advertisers still use stage coach meth
ods. The agency that distributes news has the quickest,
cheapest and most effective machinery for 'distributing
advertising. That agency is the daily newspaper.
The man who passes your shop window is going some
where. He is on some other errand. If you want to catch
him when he is not in a hurry put you shop window in
the newspaper; a few articles at a time. You can make
a hundred and fifty thousand people look at this kind of
window every day and with much better selling results
than if that hundred thousand walked by your shop one
by one.
I know a retail store in one of our large cities, a branch
of an English house, which until the autumn of 1906 was
managed by an Englishman; austre, conservative, digni
fied ; a man who would have been shocked to see his shop
advertised in an American newspaper. He had an exclu
sive trade and his net profits amounted to about $20,000
a year . This Englishman died. His assistant, an aggres
sive young American, took charge. He advertised ; adver
tised continuously in the best local newspaper. Last year
this exclusive shop made a net profit of over $80,000.
"Why? Simply because there are five hundred thousand
well-to-do people in that city who never knew that this
shop existed until they saw those advertisements in the
newspaper; and the shop has an excellent street location,
too.
This is a concrete case, the facts of which I personally
know. The Englishman depended upon the quality of his
goods and his beautifully crested stationary and his at
tractive shop window and his perpendicular-backed'dress-parade
clerks; all of which were above criticism. The
young American put the whole show into the newspaper;
admission free. '
Show me ten Bhops which advertise regularly in a daily
newspaper and I will show you nine that are making
money. The failure of the tenth is probably due to bad
management of some sort.
Some people value goods by the price they pay; others
by the shop in which they buy; others by the effect the
goods have upon their neighbors. It is only the common
work-a-day sensible people who value goods by the goods.
If you want all four classes as customers it is your busi
ness as an advertiser to make the cap fit.
P. B. TALK No. 1 will be published la
THE DEE oa Friday, Marrh .
(Copyright, ltd, by Tribune Company, Chicago.)