BRIEF CITY NEWS . loot lriat It Tim Co.. Printer. hip Ton Xld to Smith. Oms!ia. ttxtur Burrs-arsaaa c. Dry CUanln- of rm.ntr Twll lltv In lVor,. n Routti Flf'smth. Bantlstry wrt f NaW Tork. Dr. WlcV; rity National p,Ph Bid. Soma OwB.rahlp t the hop of evsry fsmlly. start savings account at Neb. Pavings T.osn Asa'n and lay 1ie fuurnla tion for the futuie hum iso.'i Fatnatn. Omaha Bnbhsr Co.!:. Tl Sprafii. preau nt. I sliowlt K a f.t.r line ct "ary Kind cf rubber irnd"." Inclurllnc vsrlous style ef rubbsr matt and automobile rcrnriea. for very renaonahle priors It 6 Ha nay irt. "Jtitit abound the corner." Oread Jury Xaport BatnrtUy It la ex P'M that t'-e ferl:' Kra nrl jurv. dot In session, will N;,iM, t vork and he rrsriy o report Saturday afternoon. A large ei-ray of itnes has been examined. Iutt It la said no rses of Importance are under ronnlderetlon. Dahlraaa to Addrsas Comroerolal Clab Mayor I'atilrnan will have hi turn before the executive committee of the Commercial rlub next Tuesday. .At this, aa hn Mr. AMrlch spwse tlie floors will be thrown Pn, and the speaker will adilre all the fioon hour ft'isMS of the rlub. Aooidsat IHlar Train A small airl snt on the Northwestern twelve mile, thle side of Boone, la., delayed trains into Omaha Tuesday morning. The trouble was eausM by the derailment of a passenger car. It spoiled a gDod record of perfect time that seiersj of the morning trains had kept for some time. Lieutenant Tot Xatarus Lieutenant T'st of the loo.il naval recruiting: station hss finished his three days' endurance test, urlng which ha pedaled away 100 miles on a bicycle, with which he was only slightly acquainted. "I am Just a trifle sore, but m feeling even more vigorous than when I startPd the test," esld the lieutenant. Xobaoa Oat the Water -nifflcultle f' Roy T. Ilobson with the Omaha Wa ter company, growing out of the water work purchase Litigation were ad justed Thursday, when the weter com pany agreed to furnish Hobson with water at his residence and Hobson dis missed his district court action to com pel the company to furnish the water. More Santera Batnra A party of seven Omaha men have returned from a hunting trip through Cherry county, where ducks wer so plentiful that shooting became mo notonous, and they came back to rest their eardrums. Charles Rlakeley, who wn ranch In Cherry county, was the iiost and had as his guests, Charles Roaen berry. Hoy Pegau, George W. Craig, James Ainscow, f'red Thome and Max Kapell. The lake In northwest Nebraska are swarming with duck now, say the huntsmen, and weather la Ideal for shoot ing. Bonsai of Ilokst Yaildatlon The Trans-continental Passenger association Is taking up a plan for the validation of tickets that will be appreciated by many tiavelers in the west. The proposition IS to authorise the validation of all tourist tickets to western destination when they have not been used the entire trip at cer tain Intermediate points in Idaho, Nevada and Washington. Thus a man might travel as far as Puokane when his ticket read I'ortland, and get It validated at Spokane, Instead of having to travel or send the ticket to Portland to get It validated. Many Blroroea Orasted Divorce war granted the plaintiff In the folowtng cases In the equity division of district court Thursday morning: By Judge Day, Julia Leach against Abraham Leavh; l-na Strauss against Oustav Strauss; Margaret A. McUulr against John AV. MiOulre. Adrian L. Harvey against Em ily M. Harvey; Bertha Holltngsworth gainst George W. Holllngeworth. By Judge Troup. Frank C. Voorhle against Lla A. Voorhle ; Zoa G. Hill against Joseph Hill; Mabel A. Doyle against Charles B. Do,l. vy Want Skill Mea If you at a coppersmith, a blacksmith, a mechanist or a boiler maker. fuel 8am wants to see I on provided as to age and other require ments you are eligible to navy service, lieutenant Poet of the local recruiting! tation announced Thursday that there la a demand for worklngmen of the classes mentioned. Thl demand is due to the fact that the Navy department ha recently put Into service several new torpedo boat destroy era and thee require additional fore. The pay offered range aa follows: Blacksmiths, $.'4 per month; coppersmiths, tiO.&0 per month; machinists, 44 to $77 pr month; boiler makers, $71.60 per month. Ths salaries, of course, are In addition to board, lodging and medical attention w hich Vncl Bam throws In for good measure. Vhm looal recruiting station Is now ready to a roll applicant who are able to qualify for thu places, and with the approach of winter It 1 expected thai, a good, warm borne under shelter of the navy will appeal te many a lonesome man. nn-; m;i:: omaiia. fimdav. Krnm-:n inw. FIRST SNOW OF THE SEASON Frefiinu Weather Predicted During Present Cold Spell. STEAM COAL DROPS A NOTCH jlealera a that Other Inal Prices WHI PrshakU Remain a Ike. j Are and There Is Pleat mm Head. Boy Falls Into Rose Bus , and Eye is Pierced Tn nty tninliH thorns pbTcinK ''Is I'll ce Whether he will l"!e his slgtt b a result nf the ln niiy lis tint bft-n a i ert i ine.l hy the f.inulv I : i scian e ho ess culli .1 Mrs llinclii v. tiu thci of the lo . i a m , nice or t Hptnlu ra'rick Moson. who is H it t ., , , lnngerousl III at t'ic (litrkn hospital. "viua iiiuuiiv, ui Hiiuiirpne w oi i fen'ln.s1 r.-se buX'one FRACTURES SKULL IN FALL oner Oufferlita Itrllrlam lells KlilenaU and I I'mlmlil) I tall Hurt. l'l'amtl troiihied tRith an stts:k of ic mi. im ti etucti.i. AKiu lMigy, a pmlPi t of Injured Orb. it of the l.azv Indian euninier catne s bresth of snowy winter Thursdsv morning, and the official forecsst of the weather bu reau Indicated temperature down to the freezing point last night end today. At noon a light skit ot melting snow c'stne whliling down over omaiia and vicin ity, the first of the season. While rather strong ss to volume for a while, the fleecy I flakes melted almost as soon as they I touched the ground. At 7 o clock Thursday moinimfhe gov i ernment thermometer in Omaiia registered j ST degrees above srro-not so very cold as -cold weather Is measured in the Missouri valley, yet a marked change from tut balmy air of t lie last two or three days preceding The Cheyenne, Wyo , station registered only Pi degrees shove sero si 7 o'clock Thursday morning, and at various points in western Canada the temperature was down to 14 degrees. Cold wave warnings, sent out by Pore cast Official Welsh of the Omaha ststlon, have appraised the public of what Is to be expected in the way of weather, and the coal man Is a busy merchunt. Many house holders, lured Into procrastination by the prevailing balmlness of the autumn, have neglected laying In a supply of fuel. Now the time for fuel Is here and that is why the coal dealers have more business than they can handle. "The present cold wave." sa d Dr. Welsh Thursday morning for some reason the weather man Is unofficially designated as doctor "extends over the entire area west of th Missouri river, and Is particu larly sever In the Mountain region. Pu eblo has low temperature mixed with snow. Bt. Paul and Duluth have snow and throughout the western country there Is a breath of winter that makes Itself felt. Th pressure In Montana is high consider ably above normal, and that means low temperature. Iowa la also wlthl.i the grip of the wave, but east or the Mississippi th temperature Is slightly hither." rieaty f t oal. Coal dealers say the supply of coal is ample for all requirements and there Is no danger of a coal famine. Clothing store In the retail district aie doing a rushing overcoat trade, storm door and window axe being dragged from summer storage that they may once more do duty and in general the garb of win ter la being taken on in place of summer toggery. Attached to th bulletins Issued from the weather bureau Thursday morning, Is a "shippers' warning," which says: "prepare forty-eight hour ahipments north, eaat and west, and thirty-sixth hour shipments south, for temperatures below freeilng." Shippers have learned to rely implicitly upon the weather bureau for guidance In dispatching orders, and Thursday morning th weather office was one of the busiest plaoe in th federal building. A drop of 60 cents a ton In tteam coal went Into effect Wednesday. Anthracite coal I still tU a ton and soft coal from 15 to fc a ton. and dealer say there 1 no pros pect for a raise In price. CftDtain Mastvn M Ta Sio-hr :. and I.Uer Tah-,"arts sa n. Ml tip.m the sld. walk Pi ken with perfe.-t safety in the nmst deli- ' '" streets and sustained a ti.utuiv ate woman or the nungeat child. The old f "' eknll Thuisday morning. The In- ai d feeble w ill a's i find tliem a must suit- Juto.l man wss attended by I'oPi e tfni mi While pUyina In the fn.nt vaul of his'hle icmedj f ir shllng ami stienathening l!-ii"P t-ml taken to the Ht. .Inst'pu home .Mondav niaht. Moms llinchey. U' theii weakened digestion mid for resniat- hoki.itul. It is u ported he uiobablv will I years old. the son of .Mrs. ,M. IV llinchey of 1 iug tl,e bowels. I-or fHe by all dttigglsts. 'lie If?- e'V-y. 3 On f Pill. TaK I n -si f, '2' TaKe What Pill ? Why. a Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pill, of course. Good for all kinds of pain. Used to relieve Neuralgia, Headache, Nervoutnesc, Rheu matism, Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lumbago, Locomotor Ataxia, Backache, Stomachache, Period ical Pains of women, and for pain in any part of the body. "I have uss4 Dr. Mile' medicines (or over It years and find them sicslknt I keep Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills in th ho;iit !1 th tiro a4 woaii cot think ol taking a journey without them, no matter how short a distance I am going. I cannot praise them snoufh." Miss Loo M. Churchill. 6J High St, Peoacook. N. II. At all druggists. 2t dssee tS. MILK MKOICAL CO., Klkhart. In. Viaducts Are All in Court Railroads Have All These Improve ments Tied Up on Differ ent Pretexts. Practically all of the viaduct improve ments contemplated now are being held up In the courts by the railroads. The West li'odge street bridge, which 1 to be built by the Missouri Pacific. I In court be cause the railroad wants to make It less substantial than the city engineer pre acribee. The Nicholas street bridge ha been halted because the Missouri Pac'flc find that thlrty-ight feet of the already erected freight house will be rut off bv the structure, and th Bancroft street bridge I Just beginning to emerge from the mist of litigation. Tt hss been la court once and the federal Judge straight ened the matter out as to who owned Thirtieth all 06 1 titer lights to It had been given away to the Omaha Grain and Terminals company. A new resolution hss been passed by the council and the ordin ance declaring the viaduct a necessity and the railroad liable passed. On South IOlghteenth street the Chicago Great West ern ha made no move to build it foot bridge, although plan have been approved and all th preliminary' step taken. NEW DENVER LINE IS READY I raeifle Bra web Is t oaspleteal am' Will Be Oyeaed First of November. Work on what Is known as ihe Denver Northwestern branch of the Union Pacific has been completed, and November 1 will be the official opening day of th new line. The lino extend from Sand Creek, sta tion Just outslda of Denver, to La Salle, a distance of forty-four miles An ihe main lire of th fnlon Psclfle in Colorado runs from Denver to La Salle this virtually makes two lines running hers some distance part. Th extension put in this summer and Just completed runs from 8t. Grains to La .Saile. twenty-two miles. The one built be fore wss only from bt. Gralna to Sand Creek. A Keaierasia IhuarltMbl Wlafc. "I wish all might know or th bnm f received from your Foley Kidney Remedy." says I. N. Regan. Farmer. Mo. Hi kidney and bladder gave him so rauc pain, misery and annoyance, be could nol work, nor ales. He says Foley Kidney emcdr completely cured him. Sold by a I grvggisl. INDIAN LANDS BOUGHT FAST I rw Tracts I p at Aarllea are Be ta; Beagkt by Maar Settler at ( nod Prices. Contrary to expectations In many parts of the country the Crow Indian landa. which ar being put on auction sale are being eagerly sought after and good price are being bid en th farm. Th highest price received up-to-date i 114 an acre, although many of tb no-acre farms wer sold for Ss and 110 an acre, and th poort price given wss ft aa sere Th ruling ef th government provide that no farm ran go for lea than SJ an acre. A totai of over tuo tract of Indlaa land wer opened up lor settlement In thl y. When you have a cold get a bottle of Ctiarr berlain a Cough Remedy. It will soon fig you up all right and will ward off any tendency toward pneumonia. This remedy contains no opium or other ni-. cotte and may be given confidently to a aby a to ar adult Sold by all xugglt. TTTT7TT fh ti 1L mmmmmmmam 1L JJL 1L S2ss3 TT(T -- - The opening chapters of Robert llichens' new story, "The Dweller on the Thresh old," in the November Century, give promise of u story, in some resjiects, the most remarkable he ever wrote. This story is written around that strange influence which one human being sometimes exercises over another an influence belonging to that other world which borders so closely our own and whose phenomena are so little understood. Robert Hichens' books are for more than the passing moment ; they are litera ture. His new story is worthy of the long series of noteworthy Century serials. The November number is brought up to an unusually high fiction standard by the addition of short stories by well-known and popular writers, including Alice Hegan Itice and Ellis Parker Butler. CENTURY MAGAZINE SS rents a copy. Si. a year. At all book tore. or The Ontnry Co., Union Square, N'ew York. I Is a tunnel of light walled ia at the sides by impenetrable blsckorss sad arched by the slisdowy rastsee of foliage between which peril a pi you csn see the stsrlit "Night Riding" over sbove ky. II nus sa4 see wrlttr ky Mr. KIsHnf r Mr. Bufcsar It weal he called real Hlerstart. we Iklnk all sever ustof sfesvM be feed Utrrstare. tSsoerj Meter Ce. Do you know the joys of "night-riding" of automobiling over country roads in the dark ness? If you don't if you ate only a daylight motorist you have missed half the delight that your car can afford you. To slip quietly along some woodland road, to watch the beam of brightness from your lamps boring its way into the wall of darkness ahead ; to listen to the call of night birds and the eerie noises of the forest this is to feel again the thrills of childhood, when bogies lurked behind parlor chairs and ogres haunted the dark hall stairway. At night an automobile seems to run better; it motor, in the night air, bum a sleepy lullaby of peace. At night the toad seem better ; little inequalities that would bother you in th daytime axe paased over unnoticed. A you glide along what a wonderful panorama unfolds itself! Ahead is tunnel of light walled in at the side by impenetrable blackness and arched over above by the shadowy masses of foliage between which perhaps you can see th starlit sky. A you turn corner or awing around curves what wonder ful vistss doe your headlight beam explore I You arc in the nave of a vast csthedral. The roadside trees, their bole shining white in the glare, stand like mighty column. All th while you sit rapt in wonder, your eye ever follow ing th light-beam. Each turn of th road i an adventure; th top of each hill an unknown land. On you go into the darkness, till th spirit of th woods enwraps you with its mystery and th spirit of the night bresthes into you its calm. You forget your worriea and care. Then you wend your way homeward, rested, refreshed and at peace. And how you do lep I CHARLES M. BTKFLE. "It Runt with Eagernea" Thst is whst ths owner ef s Coal men "Forty" ssid recently, describ ing his csr. A telling phrsse thst I It describes batter than any ws ever heard ths peculiar charm of a "Forty." Ws could tslk to you by ths hour giving you th ststistics at this csr, the cold reason-why facta ef it bore snd stroke, wheel bsse, frsms dimsnsieaa, length ef spriags snd sll thst. And ia sll these things this csr Is the eauel ef ssy made, And yet that wouldn't give yeu aa adequate idea of )uat what this csr is. Beyond the design, th steal, iroa, wood snd rubber, there is still s grsst something in this car which dimes siorts snd materisis csnsot account tor sn intimsts, bumsn quality. "It runs with esgeroass." People sre sll mads sf sssctly ths sams rr.eterii.le. In general features they srs sll alike. Yet aome sre "dif ferent." There is sbout some s some thing you csn't explain by caternal tirmi-l personality, s superiority which riaea from within, from reasons useaplained. A Chelmera "Forty" among auto mobiles has thst rsra quality. A quality of youth sad life and unflag ging snetgy. "It runs witheagerneea." A. great insny very psrticulsr people sgrce thst there is no mere besutilul car, either .i.ie or in finieh than the Chalmers 'Forty." The price of 7so includes Bosch, magneto, Preat-O-L'te tank and (ae iampe. If you want high power, maximum seating capa city and some of ths Anal words ia lines and hniah. then yeu really ahauld see thia car. Ws shall be pleased ta show you lbs new model aay time yeu call. II. E, Frcdrickon Auto Co., Omaha, Job. CHALMERS MOTOR COMPANY, Detroit, Michigan. if-Jceaaeef mmJr SaUvm Jareal If you're one of the most Critical Young Men in town here's good news for you H I I -Z. -A- Si. 0 : ' '.-';' ' ',-' i I IW-J rfo' Il d'".,.','itSii. .'Ul i-lJ:..'r..'..'jl.ltlf iii, t. I i 111 in -mill 11 Akeacl Vtu voiiu men who d nwiiitl tlif utmost in stylf. tlio nt'Wt't tt' t-oloriiis. twt-lu-sivtMiess of pattrms. rfoot lit nnl sujiorior tnilorinj? are tlie ones who will lest appreeiate the new models we have just rtve'rvetl. They're- oiiiik nifn'B garments In ry eiiso of the wortl "nob by" In stylo, distinctive in ctil.gnd tallinpd on both form-fitting and loosp t-iit tnotlcls. Th'v havo cery point on may (ioninnd b sitlf mgny not nsuglly grrn at those price. Young Men's Fall Suits $12.00 $15.00 $18.00 9IcDra4 ftaCfotMn "The Houe cf High Merit" IsJ .' ry ' B - , . I mmmmm HOTEL GOTHAM A Hotel ofrefinecl el cgance, located in Newrorks social centra Easily accessible to t!ieatre and slioppincL districts . $ ingle Poem wiV Batfc i5?9 BouUa Dboat wHh Bath 3S2t SS9 Wetherbee tfWood Rfth Ave. FiftyvfiY?Ii St. NEW YORK-CITY $100. REWARD Some dealers sell inferior imit ations even when the customer distinctly orders RUDEROID ROOFING. Consequently, we offer $100. for information lead ing to the conviction of any person selling: an inferior imitation on the representation that it is RUDER OID ROOFING. Yon can atways tell Ruber- oid Roofing by the Trade Mrks (..town here) which are outside evrry roll and stamped - t . . j -1 . . ta every irri ui tne marrriai. Be careful. There are over 300 imitation of RUDEROID Traaa Bark H II. S. rat. OSlaa K .1 u I. ru. o&c ROOFINGi THE STANDARD PAINT COMPANY MANUFACTURERS 6EMER&L OFFICES: 100 WILLIAM STREET, NEW TDM 'KU.ADSI.rxIA. sgaTov. ENGRAVED STATIONERY 1 WEDDING INVITATIONS. AUHOV'iZ EM EHT3 VISITING CARDS All correct forms in curreni social uje engraved in tha best manner and punctually delivered when promised. ElMOOSSEP MONOGRAM STATION ESI Y and other work executed at prices lower than usually prevail elsewhere. A. I. ROOT, Incorporated 1210-1212 HOWARD ST. saSaVaBaaMBMSaVSt&ajM lH0NC D. 104 VWV N,- V XV.i