12 thk m;i:: mm aha. tlksdav. octuhku 2:. ink. SHOWING UP STEEL COMBINE Assistant Attorney General Colton Argues Afainst Combine. I hl IntsfMt to tli Plwl corporation lobra It iu organized. Mr. Ri MM tr. C'rnl had no thought that th 8tl corporation in tended to mnnopollss tti awl busings. i Mr. C'arnral' on thouitht. h sM. was ! to retire fmm long and active bust- ALWAY3 IN THE PRICE LEAD ! rosa car, r and devote hla tlm to plill- aninropy. Couneel pictured .he meeting I.etaerR Andrew Carnral and the late .1. P. Mor an. when the 1rsJ was closed for the sal of the Carn'gle proprrllei. Jsmrs II. Heed of ritti-hnrah at t'i meet ing and rouneel n'otrd hltn Jn dee:rlMn the patting Itetween Mr. f'arnegle ami r.lant ririKrallii .. f tin Iepedefit Manufacturer t Aatrrv Mk IMah qajntatlsn. FHTL.AITXrMI A, Ot-r. r uriner , thB ,,,tin lM-tween .Mr. arncgie anrij Two Imrvlrrrl O.hson voters at a meet rgvimrnt dealj;ncd to :io why thel t Morgan. ' Ing t-'un'lny nflernoon iinnnliiiiu ly en- nlted Matea slcel coiTormioii enouio i'" - nPn jtr. ( ai ncgie wss IraMng Jir. ,(rK f'ounty r'nnimiasWuier John . Morgan." Jamea It. Heed la quoted a i J,-n h. the peoplc'a candidate, for re- unylrg. "he turned to the han'ier and rlettiun. JOHN LYNCHJS ENDORSED Gibson Voter for People'! Candi date for County Commissioner. Russ Peasants Line SHOULD RAISE MORE CATTLE ' Up to Learn Fate of , Their Kin at Front Secretary Houston Advises All Farm era to Build Up Their Herds. OFFICIAL FOR THE PLAIN VOTER ! Works in Pecreaa Taaea on "mall llomri. Making nrpmtlnna Vmr Their hare of the Rxpeaae, Reed, who la cent. 'n lhlntegratcl on the (.round that ll i an unlawful trust, a rhargefl by th sTovernment, waa made In the. I'nlted States district court here today. Henrjr E. Colton, special nasiatant to the at torney general In the government's dis solution suit against the big ateel con earn and lis subsidiaries, waa the first speaker. It la expected arguments will not conio to an end until la'e tomorrow. Mr. Colton reverted to tho alleged maintenance, of uniform prlcs of steel products for long periods after the forma tion of tha ateel corporation. The gov ernment charges that the uniform prices , maintained by the steel corporation and independent? waa one. 01 inn reau.ua 01 j p,,,, xna viiry um n-r in ntw nun " wera attended by a majority of the Iron and ateel manufacturers of the I'nlted States. Mr. Colton arrued that the wit nesses tha government hd called and tb document It had prc-nt'd In e.vldeni Mratly prover thai the ste1 corporation took the lead In having the Independent go along with !t In keeping up price. In answer to the argument cf the defence i that price have not been uniform, es pecially In the left few years. Mr. Col ton replied that the government doee not contend that prices have been con latentlr maintained since the govern ment filed Us suit three years ago and congress, throngn tha Stanley rnmmlttea rrease, began Its Investigation Into the ateel corporation's opera tlona. In judging the case,, Mr. Colton told tha court. It should not consider the prlcea brought about by governmental action In comparison with the alleged excessive prices that existed before the I)eparttinent of Justice and congress opened their attacks on tho corporation. Counsel for the government announced to the United Btatee district court today that Ita action against the Oreat North, ern railway ore Interests, so far as they are Involved In the dissolution suit against the united .States JHed corporation amounts to only a question of coats in the present suit. Henry F. Colton, special assistant to the attorney general. In arguing on the ore resources of the Steel corporation to day, told the court that the lease of ore landa by elghteon companies owned by the Oreat Northern interests to the Btoel corporation has been superseded by an other agreement which virtually cancelled the original leaae. The court wanted to know how it eoufd cancel a leaae that waa no longer In operation. Mr. Colton Teplled that the question was now merely one of the pro portion ot the coata of the suit to be as sessed against the Oreat Northern. Tha government tn Ita original petition charged that the lease of immense ore properties oyjhe Great Northern Interests to the Bteel corporation gave tha steal concern monopolistic power in preventing competitors from obtaining supplies and tha court was asked to canqel the leaae. About the time the in It waa begun the leasa was cancelled to take effect In January, IMS, and subsequent to the cancellation another agreement was en tered into, which made the original leaae practically Inoperative at once. In addition to eighteen ore companies, Louis W. Hill. James N. Hill. Walter J. Hill, Edward T. Nichols and 1. It. G ruber are named as defendants In tha Suit as trustees of the eighteen companies, Counsel for the Great Northern will be heard later in opposition to the govern ment's attempt to have the court euter decree asaeaalng costs agalnat the ore cowpantsa on the ground that such decree aside from any question of money would ne an aspersion . of . crime and would brand tfee defendants as violators of the Jaw, Fexelgra Prices Lower, While on the subject of uniform prices as an Indication of noncompetitive con ditlons la the steel Industry, Mr. Colton ssid the Bteel corporation sold products . In foreign market at prices greatly lower than In the United Bute. The defense, he said, contended that It was only the surplus product that was so dis posed of In foreign countries. - Mr. Colton said the fact that the Fteel corporation sold Us surplus at a reduc tion In the foreign markets was an In dication that the corporation Intended to keep excessive prices at home. If the corporation had been honest with the public; Mr. Colton said. It would have disposed of Its surplus product In the I'nlted State at the lower price, Reed Speaks for Defease, David A. Reed of Pitts burgh, of coun sel for the Steel corporation, defended Andrew Carnegie's action In disposing ot said: Tlerpont. I am the happiest man In the world. I have unloaded the bur den upon your bark. I sra off to Europe to play." " The government In Its charge axalnst the Steel corporation referred to Mr. Car negie as a conspirator. t'ounsel said Hcvera! members of the club praised Commissioner, Lynch for the work be has done during the four years of his term aa county commissioner. "I have watched Commissioner Lynch work." asserted Frank Mahopey. "His record Is a record of a people's represent- that, In the light of what Mr. Carnegie , ntlve the plain people. For four yeare has done with hla fortune Mir th! good he has voted every year to Increase the J 8omo. of them have found relatives In of mankind, to refer to him ' In termf ! taxes on corporations and dirn-asn tne the published lists, and others, morbidly PnTKO(iUAI, Oct. I (Correspondence of the Associated Tress.) The Russian capital, regnrdi'd as s city of dissipated energies and midnight gaiety quickened by the Bale of vodka, has become In the first two months of the war a place cf lixm by night. The streets are quiet and 'almost de serted at the hour lien tho night life used to bcKin. The vsky Prospect no longer eWiocs with revelry. The capital. like all cities of all Kurope, Is saddened by Its losses and by all the misery which ehba back from the front. In the general staff offices, which are at one aide of the famous winter garden, the dally lists of the dead are published. In the front of the structure a line of peasants, their black shawls like blots of Ink against the blood-red color ot the building, stand helpless and afraid applied to wretched criminals fn th6 dock la unworthy of the government." David A. Heed la a son of Jamea 11. taxes on the little homo owners. "When yuu rail on John C. Lynch for help, you will find him ready.. He is al- dlrector In the Steel cor- H'S approachable, and It la not ncree- ry to stand with hat In h.ind and send In your card to him. Tou may walk right In anj tell him what you want." Itinera Are ad uracil. Mr. Reed argument waa largely sta tistical, lie combatted the government charge thst the fteel corporation re strained competition. He aald the teel corporation's pig Iron production in creased In len yeare M " per cent, while their competitor"' increase waa il pet 1 apprehensive, uie trying to acquire suf ficient, cournge to go uprtslra and look. Women of the better class, dressed In heavy furs, conio forth with chalky facea and bowed heads and step into their car- ' rlages. There Is no sobbing, no outward I protest against the fate which has be- I reft them. x E. A. tichork. chairman of the meeting, j Sometimes they atop and offer money said. and words of consolation to the peasant "We were fighting for an epproprtatlon to grnde streets In this section of the rent. Hteel corporation Increase in stceii cny. ion Know wnni a ume e.c neu. Ingots and rastlnga was 44 per cent, and! went to John Lynch, h strange-, and told competitors' increase 1SW.5 per cent. Reel him whnl we nemied. lie put on his coat, rails: Corporation decrease. 7.9 per rent;lent to Jhe c ity and back to the county ccmpetltor' Inrreaae, 7.a per cent, r.truc-j commissioners, arid within forty-eight tural shanes: Corporation increaae, 42.7 J "ours, an appropriation hud been made to' per cent: competitors' Increase, P4.4 ler women, who face the world as paupers. There is the extraordinary spectacle of aristocracy and peasantry brought to gether In a community of grief. Plates and aheets: Corporation In 40. per cent: competitors' in crease, JIW.4 per cent, tuner pronuria showed that the corporation's Increase ss not as large as that of Ita compet itors, i Monopoly of Ore Dealed. Mr. Reed took up the charge of the government that the Bteel corporation had a monopoly In the country's supply of ore. The Fteel corporation denle such monopoly, counsel argued. Four per cent of the earth's oruat Is composed of Iron, be reminded the court, and mllng'y asked how anyone could monopolise the ore supply when ll I rouna everywnrre. He also reminded the court that the pres ent tariff law had. taken the duty off Iron ore. which glvea American manu facturers foreign ore practically on an equality with the domestic raw material. In , 1901. Mr. Reed Said, the Steel cor poration possessed 4a per cent or tne known ore reserves of the Lake Superior district, sufficient to last tho corporation sixty-eight year at the 1W1 rate sf con sumption. In January. 191? th Steel cor- pnratlon had 4M per cent of the ore de posit o( . the Lake .Superior region, he aid. enough for the corporation' need for only thirty-eight year at the 112 rat of consumption. If further discov ert of ore are not made In that dis trict. Mr. Reed continued, the Steel cor poration' reserve would be reduced accordingly. Mr. Reed criticled the Department ol Justice for ubmlttlng as avldence the report of Herbert Knoa Smith, a com-. mlsaloner of the federal bureau of cor. poratlon.-on hi Investigation of th Bteel corporation, o far aa th report related to ore supplies. The report, Mr. Reed said, was not sworn to. snd th de fense was not given an opportunity to examine Commissioner Bmltu as to th sources of hi Information. Counsel for th defense went over th testimony" of wltnesae to how that It was Virtually Impoaalble to monopolise the Or supplies of the Lake Superior region because the supply ! much greater than th demand of the American manu UctuTer. Texa ore. he added, I being delivered In ship at Philadelphia cheaper than Lake Superior ore I delivered at Pittaburglt. take care of the grading.' Others endorsed by the Roosters' :lub mere: County Commissioner Thomas O'Connor, County Surveyor Louis K. Adams and County Commissioner Henry McDonald. One of the member of the club, seeing Deputy County Attornoy J. M. Fitzgerald In the crowd, moved that Fttsgerald'a superior. County Attorney British Fleet Begins Shelling. Columns of Foe on Trafalgar Day DOVER (Via London). Oct. K.-Tha British fleet chose Trafalgar day (Octo ber ID, to begin the bombardment of the Germane' advancing columns along the Oeorge A. Magncy. I also endorsed, and ". V T the motion carried. , . . , , . I sion for twelve hours, during which time Speakers at Meetlasr. lt ,8 r,prted 4,0Ct Germans were killed Speakers at the meeting were: Police j or wouje(j. Commissioner A. C. Kugel, Mayor J. M. T, r the shins- nine enkhteA Oliver of tllbaon. Dr. J. P. Connolly. tiem to shc thc Gprman trenches throe Southeast! Improvement club; State Rep- mlea Ulan Rnd tney dM ex,outloB resentatlv Edward Simon, K. K. Closson Mr. Lynch s Mr. O'Connor, Mr. Adams, ' Mr. Kitsgerald and Member R. F. Will iam of the Hoard of Education. Representative Hlmon urged the votera to stand by Commissioner Lynch, to pre- i vent "grafting, which has become so notorious in the aherlff office, and against which .Tr"""Lynch Is fighting." "You need Commissioner Lynch and no needs your votes." asserted Mr. Simon; to the batteries placed amid the sand dunes. They destroyed a German field battery, dispersed a German bridging train which had been assembled to force a crossing of tho Yser, blew up an am munition column, killed General Von Trip and all his staff to the west of Wextenede, and compelled the Germans to evacuate their position before Nleu- port The fli'lnr waa ao rapid that aome. runs "He will Stand by you. aa he haa alwaya j dl(irhaiKed fourteen projoctiles per mln atood by you. and It I now up to you to . utai At the end of the day the whole stand by him." roaBt from Neuport to the Weatende, I which had been strongly held by the en- emy, was completely evacuated. Thorne Says Roads Seek to Levy War Tax ;Eay Pf anschmidt Upon Their Patrons ! Acquitted on One Charge of Murder URGES SOUTH TO GET BUSY rJliti Oat that Asrlealtarisls la the orth Have Mirk La rare List of Dome tie Animal on 8s see. Acreage. CHICAGO. Oct. X-Wlth people of ail ; sections keenly Interested In tho supply j of life's necessaries, they recognise the ' supreme Importance of making agricul ture efficient and profitable and rural life comfortable." Secretary Houston of tha Department of Agriculture declared to day before the convention of th National Dairy Show association. He told the association what the gov ernment waa doing to aid the farmer to in crease the nation's rapidly diminishing meat supply, develop acreage production. and declared there could be "no question i thst the key to the solution of many of the problem of rural life will be found In aome form of concerted action or co operation. " ,J "Just what factor hae brought about th serious situation confronting the na tion in its meat supply," he aaid, "no one can with certainty define and o to ascertain them I have appointed a com mission consisting of thy beat authorities I could discover." said th secretary. "This study will embrace an Investi gation of production and consumption, of the methods of producing, finishing and marketing. Certain things, however, now are clear and definite measure for in creasing the meat eupoly are being taken. Way to Increaae sapply. "Unquestionably' the largest hope for a considerable Increase in our meat supply lies In: First, sympathetic attention to the production of larger animal In the settled farming areas of the country, especially In the outh;i second, Increasing attention to th amaller animal, such aa twine and poultry, and. UUrd. the control and eradi cation of cattle tick and hog cholera. "The laat census show a lamentable neglect of live stock In the south. While the avereg.e Iowa farm haa six milch cows In North Carolina and Alabama It has ks than two, and "In South Carolina, one, whllo the average Iowa farm haa thirty- five hogs. In North Carolina and Alabama It haa less than five, and while the aver age farm in Iowa has more than 10 poultry. In North Carolina and Alabama it has less than twenty, and In 'South Carolina less than seventeen. ' "But vital as are these problems: of pro duction, even more urgent are the prob lems of marketing and distribution. It ha become clear to students of agriculture that further production In many direc tions awaits better distribution and that In this field fundamental problems of Justice and Injustice are Involved which demand solution." He outlined government activities along that line. I WASHINGTON, Oct. M.-Prompt de-M clslon by the Interstate Commerce com- mission of the latest application of the QflNCY, m.. Oct. 26.-Ray Pfan easurn railroad for authority to rulse I ...hmM. .t fn,.-i t their freight rate. I expected fter the ,h. m,rt.r , hlM .,., ni.eh November conference of the commission. Pfanschmldt. at hi second trial at Ma- v..o..... .rsu.ncm. wiu oe nesra murs- , tod. ThJ f,t t,,., uite1 .... In a verdict of guilty, from which ap- ",y undcr,t,,1 tht th ! Peal wa. taken on error, case will be given right of way at the Th8 younK n ,t, u neld on th. commissions November .conference snd ' ohlirge of havlns murdered hi father, probably will be declued within a week rt . chni te.rhe that h. Tiiero i little evidence to SUPREME COURT ADVANCES NEWS INFORMATION CASE WASHINGTON, Oct. W.-The supreme court oday advanced for hearing on De camber 7 the Oregon minimum wage law cases. Th Hew York Tribune oaae. In volving th "right of the government to compel ft newspaper editor or' reporter to divulge the aourco of hi Information, alfco was advanced to the same dat. Coal Situation in Austria Alarming .VIENNA (via Parll. Oct. Th coal Ituation In Austria I becoming alarming. Th reserve stock of coal have been used up and th dealer are scarcely able to meet th demand Of hlr customer from day to day. NInety-tlve per "nt of th household coal come from Upper Silesia. There ar large stocks of coal In Blteala, but there ar no freight care to transport therm All effort to obtain coal from western Bohemia and Moravia have failed. Th mine owner already have sold their out put la advanc and refuse to make new contract. . u.,. iikto is HUH eviuence to ' ,lv, Inherit l.l. father', wealth and oe conswered m detsll. jm.rry Mis Esther Reeder. Fred Wolfe. Th position ot th shipper, wss clearly , ,ut4-, sttorney. announced that the de outllned during the hearings. ' They con- fnAant will b. tried on the Dendln tend that rail ay credit Is better than. ! charge. that of any other American security I Tlm crlln(, wlth whlch pfanschmldt was abroad. Admissions that railroad .ecurl- charge1 W8, one of the moat gruesome ties sell today on a higher plane than '.vy committed In llllnoia. Tha mur other public utility or Induatrlal bond derp, victims were found In IMS In tha "",,",ro ev"T wimess pre- .mt,uidt.rnlt ruin, ot Pfanschmldfs aenttd by the carriers. It Is maintained that since no evidence of unjuat or Inequitable rate waa ad duced, the carrier ar asking th com mission to exceed It legal powers, con fined to the regulation of interstate com merce. The railroad attitude was charac terise by Mr. Thorpe aa an attempt to levy a war tax o the shipper for the benefit ot the road. Tha Want Ad Oolumn of The B,ee Are Read Dally by People In 8earch of Ad vertised Opportunities. Meat Injurious . to the Kidneys Take a Tableepoonful of Halts If Batk Harts or LiladiW Bothers . Meat Forms t rie Acid. MORTIMER M.THIESE HAS SEVEN COUSINS IN WAR Mortimer M. Thtes. - inansger ot O'Ntll cafe, opposite th city hall, ha always been a firm sdvocat of Great Britain sloe th war in Europe start!, but Sunday, when hia brother came here from New York, Mr. Thtese suddenly switched when he was told that seven of his cousins are In the German army. One of the cousins la attached to the kaiser personal bodyguard. "V W ar a nation of meat eatera and our blood I (llled with uric acid, aa a well- known authority, who warn u to be constantly on guard agalnat kidney trouble. The kiduey do their utmost to tree the blood of till Irritating acid, but become weak from overwork: they get luggiah: th cllminatlve tissues clog and thus th sstsHia retained la the blood to pot son tho entire ay stem. Whe your kidneys ache aid feel like lump of lead, aitd you have stinging pains In the bark or th urine la cloudy, full of sediment. or-be blaJdr t Irri table, obliging you to ek relief during th night; when you have vei head ache, oervou and dissy spoils, aieeplews neas. acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your phannariat about four ounce of Jad rlta; take a tbl apeonful In a glass of water before brk fast each meVntng and in a few day your kidney ail) act floe. This famoua salt U Made from the arid of grapes an4 Union lui, combined iin lit hla, snd has been ' used for geneir.tnns to fluh and atituulut vlogted Kldiie). to neu trllie the arid in urirr io it I so lunger a source of irrittioi. thus radlnf Uri nary and bladder tiiaordeta Jid Falls is inexpensive and eannot in jure; make a dc'ishtful effervescent titliut-water drink, snd uolxxly rao anake "v tniaUka by titkliiv a IHlle occasionally to keep the kidneya clao a ad at-tKe Advrrrnewocnt. - , ! SCHOOL BOY'S LEG IS BROKEN BY MILK WAGON The police ar seeking the driver of a milk wsgon which struck 1-year-old Freddie Knglc. 61 17 North Twenty-third j street, al Twenty-fourth and Saratoga.; Th youngster was on his way to th Saratoga school when th wagon hit him, and hi left leg was broken at the knee. Dr. tniis. who took rare of him, or dered the boy sent to th Swedish Mis sion boajiltaL DR. ANNA SHAW GOES TO GRAND ISLAND TO SPEAK Dr. Ann Howard thaw baa gone to Prand Island, where ah spok last evening. Dr. Bhaw was forced to camel a number of her speaking engagement for town la Nebraska because of an at tack of laryngitis. Khe wa the guest of Mr. snd Mrs. Francis A. Brogsa during hr atay la Ontaha. Dr. Bhaw speak at the Urondel theater Friday evening. Head of Schools Ordered to Reinstate Six Union Teachers CLEVELAND. O.. Oct. tt.-J. M. H. Frederick, superintendent of the Cleve land public schools, today waa found guilty ot contempt of court by Judg WUParu B. Neff of th oommon plea court and ordered to reinatate within a week alx teacher, whom he failed to re appoint laat spring, because, lt was al leged, of their activities In a teacher' union. H will be sentenced Friday. riuperintendent Frederick wa accused ot contempt tor violating an injunction Issued June t last, restraining school heads from refusing to rvappolnt pro union teachers. Attorney for the teacher assert that th decision pave th way for the un ionisation or teacher In ll the larger cities of the s'ate and will result In higher and more uniform wae. home, eleven mile southeast ot here. Th bodies showed sign of having been beaten and chopped. Young Pfanschmldt was arrested, tried, found guilty and sentenced to death, al though he stoutly maintained hi In nocence. He waa granted a new trial on error and was given a change ot venue. Transfer of German Crew at Hawaii May Be Propriety Breach HONOLULU. Oct. Sw-Transfer ot th crewef . the German power schooner Aeolus, sunk by the Japanese battleship lllicn off this port Saturday, from that warship to a launch of the North Gor man Lloyd ship Lockshun outside tb har bor yesterday, ha raised questions as to the propriety of this act. The Lockshun Is interned here snd there is uncertainty as to whether the sending out a launch did not constitute a breach of neutrality. As there were Chlnraamong the crew ot the Aeolus, a possible breach of th im migration lawa also Is Involved. It 1 understood here that the situation has been laid officially before Washington for decision. Th German schooner Hermes from th Marshall Islands was more fortunats than th Aeolus, from th cam Islands, tor lt succeeded yesterday In running the blokade against German vessels estab lished outside this port by the linen and i now'safe under protection ot American neutrality. Have Dark Hair f arid Look Young Don't stay gryl Nobody can tell when yon darken Krai, faded bsJr with Tea and Sulphur. Grandmother kept her hair beautifully darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Bag Tea and Sulphur. When ever her hair fell out or took on, that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonder ful effect. By asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Saga and Sulphur Com pound," you will get a lajge bottle of this old-time recipe, ready for use, for about GO cent. This slmplej mixture can be de pended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and Is splendid for dandruff, dry. Itchy calp and falling hair. A well -known downtown druggist says everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur, because It darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell It has been applied It's so sasy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two. It Is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and abundant. Advertisement. Headachy, Bilious, Sour Stomach! Regulate Your Bowels! 10 Cents Koley araarlb Taatjeie. Tea will Hive their positive action. They bi a Ionic ffcl oa the boaeta, and glv a wholesome, thorough cUansing to th entire bowel ttart. Stir the liver to healthy activity and keep stomarh sweet Conetipatloiv headache, dull, tired fevlhvg nevr afflict those who ua Foley Cath artic Tablets. Only Sc. Specially com forting te stout persona, who enjoy tha light sad fre feeling they give. Ail dealer ,vrywkr. AdverttsamaL y- V You'ie bullous: Yo'i hat a throbbing l and don't resort to harsh physics thst sensation lu your head, a bad taste In ; Irritate and Injur. Remember, that your your mouth, your eye hurt, your akin Is! aour, disordered stomach, lasv liver and yellow with dark ring under your eyes. ! cloggei bowels csn be quickly cleaned your llpa ar parched. No wonder jou jand regulated by morning with gentle, feel ugly, mean and Ill-tempered. Your thorough Caacareta; a 10-cent beg will system is full of bile and constipated keep your head clear and mak you f waate not properly passed off and what you need ia a cleaning up "inside." Don't continue bing a bullous, constipated nui sance to yourself and those who love you. .1 cheerful end. bully for months. Oct Cae ca rets now wake up rel reehed feet like doing a good day's work make yourself pleasant and useful. Clean up! Cheer up CANDY CATHAHTIC I 1 I A 1 B ) iaccHr OXCS-ANT Dftl STORE ISO IS SO CCT )0tS- Belier Shoes for Men . Thousands of Satisfied Customers the Proof W ar putting extra aluea In our Men' four dollar shoe. They wear as well as the higher priced ahoet, the dlffer eno lies only In the ex tra finish, the quality of jnaterlal Is the ssme. We have them la all sixes from 5 to 12, AA to E, in button, blucher, English and .high toe lasts; materials. Gun Metal and Russian Calf, Vlcl Kid and Patent Colt. Price MM DREXEL 1419 Faruam St. Petroleum . Carbon Coke! THE m4dERN FUEL Is easy to regulate, goes farther than Hard Coal, and above all ffo Ashes A $10 "BONANZA" SEMI-ANTHRACITE, a Ton.... $8.00 SEMI-ANTHRACITE BRIQUETTES, a Ton. . . .$8.50 "WOODBURN," Lump or Nut, a Ton $5.50 OUR S5.00 (XAL IS GOOD COAL. Hwf 1 rhone Tyler t-7.4. 210 South 17th. St. IlrandelH Theater Dldg. 0 t Life-Size Portraits of Safe Home Matches Examine them. care fully. Note -bow strong and sturdy they are. Note, too, what fine heads they have full, round, well made. Safe Home Matches are better than any matches you have used heretofore. They are made in a better way. No poi sonous materials are used. A child might suck the head or sev eral heads off Safe Home Matches. He wouldn't be poi soned. He wouldn't even be seriously ill. For that reasonalone Safe Home Matches should be in every home. Safe HomeMatches burn wih a steady flame, not by fits and starts. They light: any where. And yet they are safer than any other brand or type of match. We ask you-o use this new match and to urge others to do likewise. We do not ask you to pay more than you have been paying for matches merely to see that you get better matches than you have been getting. The new safety atrike-anywhere" match. Sc. Alt grocers. Ask for them by name. iCLMimdL dC&cA- Gtonfiany TT Hf If i9 n n Lentils yel offered" - The above is what the United States Government announcement says about these lands. Segregated Coal and Asphalt Lands in Eastern Oklahoma, to be Sold at auction 'from Nov. 16 to Dec. 2, Inclusive Residence not required 385,000 acres to be sold Buyers have right to oil, gas and all other minerals, except coal and asphalt. Coal mines iirthe district have an annual pay roll of .$8,000,000. Good markets for all farm products. Agricultural lands in this tract will produce corn, cotton, potatoes, alfalfa and all other farm and truck crops. Timber and grazing lands 6plendid for live stock production or fruit culture. Lands appraised at from $1 to $25 per acre. For full information, descriptive circular and advice as to how to get mapt and other data from the Government concerning these lands, address J. S. McNALLY, Division Pasasmg or Agnl ROCK ISLAND UNU 1323 Farnara Straat Phon. Douglas 428 L. M. ALLEN, Passanf Traffic Manager 718 L Sail. Station, Chicago Swap Anything in the "Swapper's Cplumn" f