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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1910)
THE BEE: j OMAHA. FRIDAY. MAY 27. !U0. BRIEF CITY NEWS 4 Wt moot rnst i. i Z.l(hMrir rixtr s n r f S-O randsn Oo. Belt rr Clcanla ot tMrmenta. Twin City Uyo Works, 40.J South fifteenth. g X8SO Itttcul Insurance Oo X10 Uliarirt U Ady, General Atent, Omaha. Card JTartj- Fern camp, Koyal Nelf.h I bora of America will lve a card party - Thursday evening at Barlht hall. I Mika. ton MTlng Increase your earo lgs by becoming member of Nebraska fclni and Ixian Ass'n. Earna t par cant per annum. 1(01 rarnana 8t, Omaha. Tb. Xkdlei cf the Umanuel Baptist , church will hold a rummage aala next Thursday and Friday at V In to a atreot. Postmaster' Conrention Potpoud . '3)a annual meeting of the Nebraska pMt I master which ai scheduled to be held ' In Lincoln In June ha been postponed until after tbe adjournment of congress. Memorial Par Address A Memorial day address Will be made Sunday night : by former Judge K. M. Bartlett to the , Vlrst Presbyterian church of Bouta Omaha. Ing's hall. Twenty-fourth and J gtreeta, while a new Ki,O0O cuurch la being con structed. " "' , . " Money (at Old People'a Some The Old -frVisuple'a homo -will profit I2.UU0 by tba seU 'jAg of tli wtate of Caroline Ayera, now up for probate In county court. Miss Ayera .' left an exittte'of 12,000 to her brother and five sistura, except for the bequest to the home. Tho brother has passed away since ber deattv ' " Application lot Adailiilatratora Appli cation bus been made In county court for a. an administrator of the estate of Andrew tlansen, who met death In a trolley acci dent at Forty-fifth and Uodgo streets. An administrator haa also been sought for the estate of Harry ttlohlleu, recently killed on the Union Paclflo at Valley. ZUllioa Caso Heard Captain Francis J. ' Kiiisun, hero ot several matrimonial en ' gagements, was in Omoha In the spirit Wednesday, his cow and calf replevin case having come UP before Judge Estelle. who Iji taking Judge Iledick s docket temporarily. A deposition made by Captain Ellison In Flathead, county. Montana, waa offered In evidence by his attorney. Mr. Ellison put . cow and calf to board with a neighbor ing farmer. . Hammond II. Young, and tha latter held them for charges alleged due. Kcplevln proceedings followed. SCUOOLMANACEllSTALKSUOP Opening Seuion of Association Con vention Held in Boyles Building. ITIESIDEITT MAKES A SPEECH "Day of lateneltr Is Here One Acre I'rodarra Today Maeh aa Tea Acre of Yesterdari" tho Speaker Declared. New Postal Cars Completed and Ready for Use White Mail Street Can Will Be in Service on Omaha Streets After July 1. aSavidge After Third Thousand Omaha Preacher Has Married Nearly Two Thousand Couples in Thirty Years. I "Matrimony grows apace," quoth Itev Charles Savldge, pastor tt the People's church, as he signed the certificate for the or.e thousand. ' nine hundred and ninety' nir.tk wMlnir rvrerronv which h hnd performed. In his first twenty-five years as a mln , lster Rev. Mr. Savldge married 1,000 couples, and If by June 1 another pair appears at his altar he will have completed the second thousand In six years. "If I can reach the 2,000 mark In that time I will make it 1000 in five years more, said the minister. rniv Kidnav Plna at antiseptic, tonic and restoratlva ana a prompt corrective of all urinary; Inretfvilarltioa. . items. son- tutes. Vor sal by all druggists. An Omaha wholesale and retail establish ment of years' ulandlng. doing a business cf I3.000 annually, and the largest and strongest concern of Its kind between Chi cago and the coast, la willing- to sell ten thousand dollars' worth of Ita treasury stock, which pays bigger dividends than and is every bit aa safe as any bank. This la done in order to handle a greater volume of business, w hich may easily be had. Only a few representative Investors ara desired Address J 713, care Bee. COIN BLOCKS RECONCILIATION rfoalk.ra Appear to Agree Cntll the . . "' . t Broached. Mrs. Mary Walker came Into Judge Sut ton's court room and announced that shi wished to dismiss hef suit for divorce acalnKt., John Walker. "Excellent," said the court to himself. "KeconcU'atlJa Is better than divorce any day." Vrorently Mr, Walki.r and daughter camo into court. Then a hitch occurred. Mrs, Walker wttthed the court to write Into tho ordor of dismissal that the husband was-to pay off a mortgage of 1500 on a property -hl'-t.' Mrs. Walker owns In her natno and on which the S500 was bor- M and loaned Walker. Ho has not been paying tt back, fast enough to suit Mrs. WHlUcr. The court declined to lend Itself (o any such proposition. you go cue ana taut ii over lor an jgiotir.'V en hi Judge Button. "Reach some r Tlirooment iind then eomu back." But n hour, lias not sufficed to settle tho monetary differencea and the recon ciliation has not yot been legally achieved. The opening session of the Western Com mercial School Managers' association Con vention was held Thursday morning at IJoyles Business college, and the first thing on the program was the address of Q. W. Weatherly of Joplln, Mo., the president of the association. The feathering was large and members from the entire west were present Colonel George Soulo of New Or leans and Mr. and Mrs. George Stewart of Skerry's colli go, Glasgow, Scotland, were mong the far away visitors. "Time was," said President Weatherly, when business colleges wA-e few and far between, and students in those days went hundreds of miles to seek wisdom at the doors. It is not so now. The day of the roaring Hon and the soaring eagle In pen manship has gone likewise, the day of the slipshod methods of the old-time professor. was the day of chtaj) things, but all that has been changed. The day of Inten tly In every line Is here and Is here to stay. Ono acre now produces as much as en acres of the long ago. Our schools ave changed for the better. It costs more now tp start and maintain a school than It cost under the old days and It will oost more tomorrow than it costs today. Code of Rtblen. The school man is not responsible fov thls change It haa simply come about as part of the onward march of progress. It Is now high time for co-oporatlon among school 'men. We need a code of ethics to which each member should subscribe and which he agrees to follow out to the let ter, unler penalty ol losing his member ship In the association. This code should be based on th"S 'square deal' plan and not on the 'gum shoe' method now In vogue. It should touch on the relationship of one school to another, to business education In general, tuition rates, in tho broad fellow ship of man. I recommend that a reading circle be established and a committee of three be appointed to select a source of reading for teachers who may wlBh to improve their professional training. This course might be similar to the chatauqua circle estab lished by the state publlo school teachers. A two or four year course should be of fered, and should pertain more to the pro fessional training side than to facts. The middle west is blessed with two good live associations, the Missouri valley and the Central. Each has Its own terrl tory and it is my firm belief that each should be carefully kept to that territory, Let each do the work and cater to the teachers for which It was organised. Let's not as members of both associations, cause unnecessary competition it's bad enough for schools to compete without associations doing the same thing. "High school commercial departments are here to stay, and the only way to compete with tbem is to deliver better goods In shorter time, and, then perhaps, find buyer for the goods and pay the freight. The high school, aa it Is so far, hurts no good school, nor will tt do so until their system 1 ahanged." I' ree Co-operation, Almon P. Gates of Waterloo, la,, secre tary o(. the association, readva ireport 'In wAich he emphasised the ' Importance' of Co-operating and exchanging information concerning the cost of supplies. He told that the present membership of the body Is 106, and that the association la but two yeara old. He read lists of figures relative to the cost of supplies and pointed out the way for saving considerable money by purchasing supplies at the lowest prices, vv. i. vviuson or Lincoln read a paper on "The Advertising Campaign." He said that advertising Is the. wonder of the prcs sent century and that it dates back to the days of Noah and Jonah, and that it is as boundless as the ambitions of Napoleon He spoke of newspaper advertising by means ot electrotypes, with a key to tell the paper in which the advertisement ap peared. He said that ha thought the best plan was to advertise the good points ot the school and not the fact that It is possl ble to get certain reductions In the price of tuition, etc The best thing for a school he said, was to have an alumni yha Is proud of Its college and who will give plenty of free advertising by the quality of work after graduation. W. N. Ferris of Big Itaplds, Mich spoke on "Human Nature In the School room." Colonel George Soule . of New Orleans gave a talk on the general piincl Dies connected with educational institu tious and gave many pointers to- the man oners relative to methods in use In Amer lcan schools. Robert Spencer of Milwaukee and B. F. Williams of Des Moines also spoke. There were a number ot five minute talks on matters relating to busl ncss colleges. The opening session ot tho Central Com mercial Teachers association will take place Friday morning at 9 o'clock, with a address of welcome by Mayor Uahlman An elaborate program has been arranged, The five new street railway postal cars for use on the Omaha street railway be tween the postofflce and depots ara about completed, and will go Into commission July 1. The cars have been built in the car shops of the street railway company,vat Twenty-eighth and Lake streets, and are fine specimens of car work. Tha cars will be painted white, and will resemble In many respects the ordinary steam railway postal car In general appearance. These cars will be run on schedule time, In order to accommodate the nlnety-slx mall trains that arrive and depart from Omaha dally. The time schedules have not yet been arranged, but will be announced within several days. It Is figured that the In stallation of tho street railway postal cars 111 effect a saving of from thirty-five to forty-five minutes In time between the post- office and the depots. Prefers Class of Vine- I gar to Class of Beer Des Moines Business Man Took Many Treatment and Kept On Drink. Inff Until Mo Took tho Neal Threo Day Cura "lion. James fc. Bruce, "Atlantic, Iowa. "With all of tho different treatments that I have taken for the drink habit In the poet tea years, I, never for one mo ment lost the desire, craving and appetite for liquor that torrlble Internal gnawing which only th unfortunato victim of the drink habit experiences, until I took tbe Neal cure. Then It was taken away since I have had no thought of liquor. I abhor and despls the Infernal stuff and would now ist as soon think of taking a glass of vinegar or poisou as a glass of beer or whiskey. tSlv(d.) ." Tf Neal la an Internal treatment, with out Uiypodenmlo Injections that cures the drink habit In three days, at the Institute oa Ih the home. ; - Cure, a ray It is tha moral duty which every person addicted to the drink habit owea to his family, relatives, friends, society and the public, also everyone who la interested In or knows cf one who is addicted to the orlnk bablt. to. call upon, wrlta or . phono the Neal Cure today for free copies ' of their? guaranteed Bond and Contract, booklet, " testimonials, endorsements and bank references, which will be cheerfully turnlshcd.. Address. . The Heal Car vl.f tule O. D. Ki So. 10th Street OM u!yEB., also Ds Moloca, Davsn pi$ btoux City, Iowa. Conflict Between Creameries and Packers May CaustJ Big- Baise. FIGHT FOB STORAGE BUTTER Local Dealers Bar They Will Fore tbe Bl Packers Oat of tho Batter ! Prices Are Ip. Declarations of war between the packers, who have contracted for Omaha's output of butter and the Elgin butter interests max put the price Of butter up to tl a pound. The announcement of the Omaha con tract for tha output of June and July, about 8,000,000 pounds, for storage purposes by the packers, was answered by ihe Elgin men by open avowals of a combine to put the price to such a point that the contract will be broken or a fortune lost by the packers in holding them. E. L. McAdam of the Elgin board Is the leader of his forces. He makes known his position without mincing words. Army Notes F. R. Mears, paymaster' clerk, haa been transferred from Kansas Ciiy to the office of the chief paymaster of the Department of the Missouri, this city. Drum Major Fred Wlllers of the band of tho Sixth field artillery has been honor ably discharged from the service by pur chase of discharge. A detail of enlisted men from the Fif teenth cavalry and from the Engineer bat talion have been ordered to Fort Ethan Allen, Vt. for trying out for the cavalry service. . The trying out process means to make expert riders of the detachment. The Fourth Infantry is due to arrive at Fort Crook about June W. The command now enroute by ocean transport service from Manila and will reach San Franolsco about June U. Payment of the regular army troops of the posts of the Department of the Mis souri for the month of May, has been ordered. Payments will be made at Fort Des Moines, la., by Major H. M. 'Lord, chief paymaster; at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo., by Major W. K. Barroll; at Forts Omaha and Crook by Captain W. K. Jones; at Forts Mead, Mackensie and Robinson, by Major W. G. Wilder; at Forts Leaven worth and Riley, by Captains W. F. Clarke and J. D. Taylor, and at Jefferson barracks by Captain Charles E. Morton. Brigadier General F. A. Smith, comman der of the Department of the Missouri, with First Lieutenant A. LaRue Christie, aide- de-camp, will leave Sunday evening for the annual departmental Inspection of Forts Meade, S. D., Mackenzie, Wyo., and Rob inson, Neb. These inspections will con tinue until every post In the department la inspected. BUTTER PRICES MA. SOAR Chanticler Into Breakfast Row; Notes on Eggs Man Camped with Chickens Writes Notes on Eggs that Wife Gets for Table. There are sermons In stones, according to Mr. W. Shakespeare and it la now up to Judge Sutton's court to determine It there are divorces in eggs. Judge Sutton heard what was written by George H. Place of Dundee on the eggs he sent his wife and also what was writ ten In the notes pasted on the chiffonier, the stovetop and the parlor table. One of the egg notes ran: "Don't eat this raw." Another note was to this effect: "My Dear Wife: Think how happy we were when we married thirteen years ago." The Places were In court on a motion by E. M. Bartlett for Mrs. Place to set the trial for immediate hearing. Mr. Bart lett denounced Place In vigorous terms and let drop a remark to the effect that Dun- "The packers succeeded In depressing the ,jca neighbors of the Places wero all for market at this season lost year and bought large quantities of butter, said Mr. Mo Adam In a recent conversation tn Chicago, "This profited them handsomely In tbe fall and they are evidently trying to con trol the market this year and buy at their own prices. I believe that I can control a majority of the Elgin board and we will I .... OP hearing next week. Thursday, make butter CO cents or SI a pound but what we make them break their contracts BUFFALO BILL URGED TO BIk FfBt Saturday. The Armour, Swift. Cujahy and Nelson Morris Packing companies are said to bo those In the butter deal who are not repre sented on the Elgin board. A meeting ot the Elgin board on Saturday promises de velopments. - - - The butter situation has attracted federal attention and, according to rumor among the butter men, representatives of the government have admitted that an In vestigation ot the attack of the packers on tha western market for butter is to be made. In this connection attention may the plaintiff. Place declared a Dundee plebiscite would show matters quite the other way. Take a vote of the neighbors," he cried. "It will show them all for me." Judge Sutton denied the plaintiff's mo tion for temporary alimony and sot the POSTPONE HIS FAREWELL Writes that than la Doing Blearest Business It Has Ever Done Anywhere. Colonel Bill McCune received a letter Thursday morning from Colonel W. F, Cody ("Buffalo Bill"), dated from Wilkes- barre. Pa., In which he states: "I have never seen such business as we are having, We had to order a bigger tent and 6,000 more seats. I wish you were here to handle these crowds like you used to do ten years be paid to the quoting of butter above the I ago." actual price of sales, if the threats of Mr. McAdam are carried out This is done In some cities. E. F. House, secretary pf the Fairmont Creamery company, has gone to Chicago. Escaping Gas Kills Mrs. SelmaJohnson of hlm " voeamt- Colonel Cody encloses a number ot news paper clippings in which his retirement from the show ring is discussed. All of them discourage the idea that Colonel Cody should think of retiring at his present age. They all urge him to keep going as the real type of the passing west, and say as long as he lives he owes it to the American people to let them see as much Comfort In Summer Shoes is every bit as important as correct style. You don't have to sacrifice the latter in order to secure the former, if you come to us for a pair of REGAL SHOES , FOR WOMEN We can supply vou with a pair of the new Women s Kegal Uxtords, built alter exclusive models worn by the mot fash ionable women in New York this summer. Regal quarter-sizes make these Oxfords fit you exactly, insuring perfect comfort and long service. $400 rtie House ol Hiati Merit' Her Daughter, Mrs. R. G Also of Stromsburg, Recovers Unconscious Twelve Hours. SUIT FOR WATER USED ' . FOR LAST FIFTEEN YEARS Water Company Claim Woman cored Wntn Which Did Not' Itaa Through Meter. Se- HOTEL CLERKS TO DENVER s eBrBB Will Travel Special, Leaving Omaha Early Next Wednesday Moraine The Nebraska and Iowa Hotel Clerks' association, numbering about 200, will leave Omaha by special cars at 6:45 a. m. June for Denver, to attend tlte meeting of the national convention ot hotel clerks to be held In that city June 2-4. Delegates will be present from coast to coast and the convention promises to be the largest gathering of hotel clerks ever assembled at one time la the country. It Is the purpose of the convention to effect a national organisation. The Nebraska and Iowa association will present the name of E. W. Sherman of tha Henshaw hotel of Omaha tor president of tha national organization and expect to land him in that office. Mr. Sherman is on, ot the best known hotel men in tho west. He first became associated with the hotel business In Omaha with the Pax ton hotel In 18S7. He is at present presi dent of the Nebraska and Iowa association, having but recently been re-elected to that position for another year. Many of the Omaha and Iowa delegates wlrl be accompanied by their wives. There yet remain a few reservations tn the spe cial cars and such as may want them can notify Mr. Sherman or Joe Keenan at the Henshaw or Art W. Olrd, secretary of tha Nebraska association, 414 South Fourteenth street, Cnaho. A peculiar case was filed in the United States circuit court Thursday morning. wherein the Omaha Water" company charges Magdelina Plvonka with beating the water company out of some 12,500 worth of water. The complaint alleges that along In 1893 the defendant was the owner of certain premises In Omaha and In building her new business house that she contracted with the Omaha Water company for water meter service to be used on the premises, However, without knowledge of the com pany, the defendant had the water supply of the building connected with other pipes mai were not connected witn meter serv ice, nor was the water so furnished served through a meter. This condition of affairs continued until the year 1908, when the defendant disposed of her property to other parties, and not until thon was it discovered that the prem Ises had been served with water, from which the company did not receive any revenue whatever. Suit Is therefore brought for $2,602.63 and costs, as the amount claimed to be due the water company tor furnishing water to the premises for the last fifteen joars, TESTING FOR NEW HILL DEPOT Character of lrnderlylng bround Bring' Determined Before the Structure Is Started. The work of testing the ground for the foundation for tho now Burlington freight depot Is now going on. Several holes have been sunk In the earth to determine the characttvot the soil. The engineers in charge of the work have not made their report to the general manager's offlca, but quick sand and soft earth has been dis covered In a number of places. It Is expected that a pile driver will be brought to the site and piles will be' sunk to get a more accurate description of the character of the soil. The depot is to be built near the present structure east of Eighth street, between Farnam and Jack eon streets, and the place was at one time the bed of the Missouri river, which ac counts for me onaracter ot the ground Owing to the softness of the earth it probable that a foundation of plies will be sunk before any ot tho masonry work is started. OMAHA, May . 1910. There will be meeting of the Fifth Ward Kepubllcan club Thursday evening at S o'clock at 11 3S North Sixteenth street for election of officers for the ensuing year. FRANK E. BTON'B, President. WILLIAM KIETU3TEAD. Treasurer. live Want Ads Are Business Boosters. CENSUS MENJTILL AT WORK I'lrklna- Vp Scattered Odds and Ends Which Were Missed on the First Honnd. The Census department la still gathering up and collating the scattered returns for this census district, and the final report may not be sent In until after the mlddl of June. In any event, the returns for the district will not be sent In by June 1, it Is the desire of Census Supervisor Saun ders to see that Omaha guts credit for every Inhabitant within Its corporate limits. All the returns from the country are In but from two districts, but these are ex pected dally. The department has been materially as slated In these closing days of the census enumeration by business men and business houses. The city enumerators have completed their work and turned tn their schedules which are now being verified at Supervisor Saunders office by a oorpi ot half a dosen young women clerks, as sisted by several special agents. The ItlBh Cost of Living L&rsen I 'ncreases the price of many necessities Honey and Tar maintains its high standard of excellence and Its great curative qual ities without any increase in cost. It Is the best remedy for coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough and all aliments ot the throat, chest and lungs. The genuine is Id a yellow package. Refuse vubstltutea. For sale oy a" uruggista. Mrs. Selma Johnson, who, with her dangh ter, Mrs. R. Q. Larsen, of StromsbutR, Neb., was overcome by leaking gas in a room at the Windsor Wednesday morning, died Thursday morning at 1:20. Mrs. Johnson did nnt recover nnnRolmid ness. Her daughter, Mrs. Larsen, will re- MOTORCYCLE AND CAR COLLIDE cover, but will be unable to accompany the body of her mother to Strgmsburg for the Alfonso Keely lilts Street Car Head' funeral. On and la Badly Injured' They came to Omaha early In the week. Taken Home. Mrs. Larsen was to undergo an operation at an Omaha hospital. ,. ... . Caught in a tangle of vehicles and street The two women were discovered In their cars on South Sixteenth Btreet, Alfonso room by an attendant., ? Police surgeons Keely, riding a motorcycle, ' was struck In were called ana administered restoratives, head-on collision by a northbound trolley, For a time ft was thovgh.t(ttbat it would; be He was picked up by the police ambulance. possible to save them bot.r Mrs. Larsen His Injuries consisted of a series ot bruises did not recover cousclousuiesa for nearly I extending over his legs, arms and face and twelve hours. .. ..-.. , the entire left side of his body.' Keely was taken to his home. 5146 North GRANT POST ON MEMORIAL DAYN Sixteenth street. He is an engineer. - For Men who Dress "better" Veterans Will Attend All Saints' Chnrch Sunday Honing Will Condnet Rltaal Monday. Post Commander S. B. Jones of Grant Post No. 110, Grand Army of the Republic, has issued a circular order .for the infor mation of the post members relating to Memorial day. It states that on Sunday the post, accompanied by Grant Woman's Relief corps, will attend divine service at I All Saints' church, Twenty-sixth and Dewey avenue. The sermon will be deliv ered by Rev. T. J. Mackay, a comrade of the post. Members are requested to meet In front of tha post hall,, Nineteenth and Farnam streets at 10 o'clock Sunday morn ing, and will march from there to the church In a body. Grant post has been selected by the com mittee of arrangements to conduct the ritual service of the order at Prospect Hill cemetery Monday morning. Members will meet at the cemetery gate. The post will assemble Monday afternoon for the parade at 2:30 o'clock at the north ironi 01 ma yuEiumce. tuemoers are asked to wear uniforms as far as possible and to provide themselves with white gloves. S r PROFESSOR B0EGGILD SPEAKS Danish Dairy Expert to -Talk at M. C. A. to Milkmen on Jus "fi. Prof. Bernhard Boegglld, a Danish dairy expert, will speak at the Toung Men's Christian association on June 25. The lec ture Is being arranged for by the Omaha Milk Dealers' association. - Since his arrival In the United States on May 8 Prof. Boegglld has lectured at many of the universities and In several of the principal cities. He had a conference at the Department of Agriculture and spent several days In Washington. His speech - in Omaha Is, according to announcement, to be concerned only with general conditions and dairy science. QUARTERS FOR. THE SINGERS Behrena says inaicaiiona Are Tor a Bla Attendance at Omaha Snenacrfet in Jnlr. " Quarters were engnged in Omaha Wei. nesday for a number of Chicago aid Ml! waukee singing societies who will be here July 20-28 at the meeting of the.Nat onal Paenuerbund of the Northwest These quarters were engaged by Theodore C Behrens, who Is a former president of the saengerbund. - Mr. Behrant told tr ends here that he had attended enroute a highly enthuHlastlc meeting of the Du buque, la., Saengerbund which promises to attend the Omaha gathering in orce. Mr. Behrena left Omaha Thuisday for Bur lington. la. iru Coaaterfvlt Dollar buy trouble, but a genuine quarter buys Dr. King's New Life Pills for constipation, malaria and Jaundice. For sale by Beaton Drug C Sarsaparilla Orijrinated in a physician's pre scription years ago and has al ways been pure, safe, beneficial an honest spring and all-the-year-around medicine. iir:2iiw Under-wtiar Int.. ft. Tkl. 1 . It b Oa Iim Cassis Gun Potoskcit' Union Suits never pull open between buttons. They bt perfectly everywhere. For Men An, jm. For Boys $1.00 Sua 50c 50c. 25c. Buy 'Poradmit' from your regular detlct Hwubommy lUutlnUj Book Fm Cbalmers Knitting Company 60 .wukiatta St.. Asubrain, M. T. I 60 .fukatlN St., Awtrn, It. I. Get! It today In usual tablets clid barsalabs. liquid form ot 1U Du.s 11. ONE DOLLAR Will buy 11 full quart of most any standard brand whiskey, such a Ouckenlielmer, Oolden Went. Hchen ley. Gulden blieuf, Winchester, etc. 0R.F0R 75c a full quart bottle of Maryland Rye Whiskey, or, Tennessee White Corn (Moonshine.) IIome-Mode Grape Win red or Xp.e.'. SJl.OO Bottle Beer by the Case. J.AST CLX1II XV ATTBJTDAWCr Kail and phone orders promptly fUltd. CRCKLEY BROS., WISH MERCHANTS !31 tr. 16ta at. Opp. 1. O. Both rhon. 4 x1 , . mt" k. 1 ' i .1. i 11 . j .t.v ' t 1 . 1 w Mt a. .r.i m, r. - T : -v. .- Goto Colorado and See Real Skyscrapers - UIC - 1 V lis Get away from the chimney tops and go to the mountain tops; quit breathine coal dust ' 1 . . . t r 1 a.- Tr. 1. a. V ana nry taint, nave a reai vacation, x a.c Rock Island to the Rockies I and whiz out to Colorado where the air is as swttt and vital as on .1 r . j t a: - tu..:iJ A-ii.. j ii..:.. 1 W home younger and stronger and twice as eager to tackle your tasks. I f Any way of eoine to Colorado is worth while but the best way is the J Rock Island Lines ' direct to both Denver and Colorado Spring You're attended with every courtesy from the moment your trip begins. Big beds as ' comfortable as those at home and perfect .ventilation. Only one night on the rails and next day in a mountain fairyland. Let me tell you about delightful vacation spots, interesting tours, and show what you can do at slight expense. Splendid Fast Trains Every Day for Colorado, Yellowstone Park and the Pacific Coait. Specially I. .v. ,,iirl r,n ffirra all slimmer tn the flclitrhtful resnrtt if the t. ..nAiii.n r( vfuip life fall nliinr ril writ irti:tr Mrn....t . I 1 S t it il WW ' MoNALLT LowTt' p mjMm a. 0mah' Neb ( Summer V 66 G as service Gas Rano Service: It may be that you have had your gas range for a long time and that it doesn't seem to be doing just right. Possible there is nothing really wrong and it merely needs adjustment. Our expert can tell just what is wrong and what must be done to correct it. If adjustment is necessary, he will attend to that at bnce without charge. If new parts are needed or special work is to bo done, he will give you an exact estimate of the cost. You can than decide whether to have the old range repaired, or to buy a new one. Ilis advise will be in the line of GOOD SERVICE. Omaha Gas Company