V Have your orders for Groceries and Meat filled at : : : : The Royal: 102a STREET BELL 224 AUTO 1224 'Phones: Young Expert Repairers and -Fin.sl.m- Have yoor chairs tecaned, yoof furniture upholster ed, umbrellas mended. We call for your goods and guar antee all 1 work. 329 So. 11th St., LINCOLN Beti Phone, L 1349. Just cRetumea From St. Louis World's Fair with a fine new line of new goods, Carpets, Rugs, Fancy Dishes, World's Fair Souvenirs and so on. Will be on sale all next week. O'CONNOR 233 North lOth St. mm fXXXXXXXJOCXXXXXXXIOOOOO I always have a number for sale on good terms ranging in price from $750.00 to $1,500.00 and up GEORGE W. HOLMES I3t Ss. I It Si. Phono la-37 ocxooooooooooaDooooooooooo One of the best stocks Xmas presents in the city CALL IN AND EXAMINE BEFORE BUYING. Chs. W. Tlemlngf Jeweler 1311 O Street, PHONE AUttO BELL. AUTO. 12(11. The care taken n the cultivation and the method of practical steri- tmenn wion UOibnil of the Selected bum make it a pure. some coffee for all the family. Put up in ono pound air tight tins onlv. cents buys a pound can of full weight, rich aroma mid delicate flavor. Ask as yuu, grocer lor UOKKO. USE Ubero Coffee FOR SALE ONLY BY The Corner Grocery Co. Eleventh and Q Street. There is no atch, dock or article of j&ivelty we cannot rapatr' . Clocks called for and delivered C. A. TUCKER, Jeweler 1123 0 Street PHONES! BcUS34 Auto 1934 WHITE HOUSE Grocery and Market DKALKKH ijst Fiftv Irnsorinc Frach jmrl I'lirnift Usitc yliuillj UIUIIIILJ, llou mill VUICU ricuu -JI 14SB O HTREET Anto 1480, Hell 86S8. Orders Promptly Attended to by Phone. YOUR CHRISTMAS PHOTOS Go To We Do Not Patronize The following named business firms are unfriendly to organized labor and have been placed upon the "unfair list." Watch the list" carefully from week to week, as important changes may occur: Union workingmen and "wotking- wotnen and sympathizers with labor have refused to purchase articles pro duced by the following firms, Labor papers please note , changes lrom month to month and copy: POOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS". Bread. National Biscuit Company, Chicago. 111. Cigars. OJL1 Cpman of New York city; KreBs, Wertheim & Schiller ot New York city; The Henry George and Tom Moore. . Flour. Washburn, Crosby, Milling Co., Miueaporis, Minn.; Kellcy Mul ing Co., Kansas City, Mo. Pipes Wm. Demuth & Co., New Yock. Tobacco American and Continental CLOTHING. Buttons Davenport Pearl Bullon com pany, Davenport, la.; Kremem & Co., Newark, N. J. Clothing N. Snellenberg & Co., Phil adelphia, Pa.; Clothiers' Exchange, Rochester. N. Y.; Strawbrig & Clothier, Philadelphia Pa.; Biauncr Bros., New York. Corsets Chicago Corset company. Hats J. B. Stetson company, Fmia- delphia, Pa.; E. M. Knox company, Brooklyn, N. Y. Shirts and Collars United Shift and Collar company, Troy, N. Y.; van Zandt, Jacobs & Co., ,Troj, N. Y.; Cluett, Peabody & Co., Troy, N. Y.; James R, Kaiser. New York city. Shoes. Wellman, Osborne & Co., Lynn, Mass.; Thomas, Taylor & Son, Hudson, Mass.; Hamey Bros., Ljnn, Mass.. Suspenders. Russell Mfg. Co., Mid dletown. Conn. Textile Merrimac Mfg. Co. (printed goods), Lowell. Mass. Underwear. Oneita Knitting lliils, Utica. N. Y. Woolens. Hartford Carpet Co, Thonipsonville, Conn.; J. Cajs & S'on, Jacksonville. 111. PRINTING AND PUBLICATIONS. Bookbinders. Geo. M. Hill Co., Chi cago, Hi. Newspapers. Philadelphia Democrat, Philadelphia, Pa.f Hudson, Kiaiber ly & Co., printers of Kansas City, Mo.; w. B. Conkey Co., pubilsners, Hammond, Ind.; Gazette, Terra . Haute; Ind.; Times, Los Aug-iles, Cal. MACHINERY AND BUILDING. General Hardware. Landers, Frsry & Clark, Aetna company. New Britain, Conu.: Davis Sewing Machine com pany, Dayton, Ohio; Computing Scale company, Dayton, Ohio; Iver Johnson Arms company, f ltehburg Mass.; Kelsey Furnace company, Sy racuse, N. .; Brown & snarpe riooi company, Providence, R. 1., John Russeil Cutlery company, Turner's Falls. Mass.; Atlas Tack company, Fairhaven, Mass.; Hohmann & Maurer- . Manufacturing . company, Rochester, N. Y.; Henry Disston & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Iron and Steal. Illinois Iron and Bolt company of Carpentersviile. 111.; Carborundum company, Niagara Falls. N. Y.; David Maydole Ham mer Co., Norwich, N. Y.; Singer Sewing Machine Co., Elizabeth, N. J. btoves. Germer S'tove company, Erie, Pa.; "Radiant Home" Stove, Ranges and Hot Air Blast. Erie, Pa. pany, fo'ag Harbor. MISCELLANEOUS. Advertising Novelties. Noveltj Ad vertising company, Coshocton, Ohio. Telegraphy. Western Union Tele graph company. WOOD AND FURNITURE. Bags. Gulf Bag company, New Or leans, La., branch Bemis Bros., St Louis. Mo. Brooms and Dusters. The Lee Broom and Duster company of Davenport, la.; M. Goeller's Sons, Circleville, Ohio. China. Wick China company, Kiltan- ning. Pa. Furniture. American Billiard Table company, Cincinnati, Ohio; Biumby Chair company. Marietta, Ga.; O, Wisner Piano company, LrooIJyn, N. Y.; Krell Piano company, Cincin nati, Ohio; N. Drucker & Co., Cin cinnati, Ohio, trunks; St. Johns Ta ble company, St. Johns, Mich. Leather. Kullman, Salz & Co., Ben- icla, Cal.; A. B. Patrick & Co., San Francisco, Cal.; Columbus Buggy and Harness company, Columbus, O. Rubber. Kokomo Rubber company, Kokomo, Ind.; B. F. Goodrich Rub ber company, Akron, Ohio; Diamond Rubber company, Akron, Ohio. Pens. L. E. Waterman & Co., New York city. Paper Boxes. E. N. Rowell & Co., Batavia, N. Y. Paper. Remington-Martin Paper Co., Norfolk, N. Y. Typewriters. Underwood Typewriter company, Hartford, Conn. Watches. Keystone Watch Case com pany of Philadelphia, Pa.; Crescent Courvoiseer Wilcox company; Jos. Fahy, Brooklyn Watch Case com- D. M. Parry, Indianapolis, Ind. Old Gentleman "Tell me, my friend, why you are so ugly to passengers.' Brutal Conductor "So they'll hate th' street car company wot employs me. See?" "N-o, not exactly." "Why, when they hate the company, they'll Just laugh to theirselves when they see me cheatin' th' company by not ringin' up fares. See?" Twenty years after a girl would't marry a man he feels like apologizing to bis grandmother about it. If everybody came early to avoid the rush they wouldn't be any better off. What is regarded an affair of the heart is often merely the result of a torpid liver. ALLEGED DYNAMITER UNDER ARREST; BELIEVED TO BE WHOLESALE MURDERER Vv e CLOCKWORK ' !fiiXlcV '' , it MAKta a en "fj ruse iANrrc Xoxs SJ . . xx. whicm . uOKTSAkUiMCaw . er X XwBKaSsSarSNXV Gessler Rosseau, the self-confessed dynamiter arrested in Philadelphia with an infernal machine in his pos session, has been positively identified as the "G. Rosseau" who on May 9, 1903, sent an infernal machine to the Cunard line pier In New York for ship ment on the Umbria. He is believed to be a dangerous fanatic, and the New York police are taking steps to have him brought back and placed on trial for the Cunard af fair. An interesting feature of the case is that there are grounds for believing that Rosseau was concerned in the loss of the White Star liner Naronic, which sailed from Liverpool a dozen years ago and was never heard of again. Several hundred men and wom en were lost with the steamer, and her disappearance ' has always been shrouded in mystery. . In . the house at .. 287 Washington boulevard, New York, where Rosseau made the machine sent to the Umbria, was found a part of a note written in French on a scrap of newspaper, which read: "The destruction of the Naronic was complete. Mr. Lebrun, who at this moment has left for Chicago " The police will pursue the sugges tion contained in this note to the limit. They will endeavor to ascertain the IRASCIBLE RULER OF CHINA. mpress Dowager Is Sensitive About Her Supremacy. . The Chinese empress dowager re cently severely lectured Yung Luh's daughter for wearing blue mourning shoes. The enraged old lady inquired how she dared to come into her .pres ence in mourning, and particularly when her birthday was about to be celebrated. When the bewildered young lady explained that she was in mourning for her father the empress dowager replied that she was su preme, and that the mistake must never happen again. It was on the occasion of this birthday, by the way, that the American Bible Society pre sented to the dowager empress a sumptuous edition de luxe of the Bible. The book had silver covers embossed with bamboo and bird de signs It was printed on the very finest paper obtainable, with the big gest type, and a border' of gold en circled every page. It was incased in a casket of solid silver, the whole weighing ten and a half pounds, and there was a gold inscription plate on the cover of the casket. Kitchener's Military Record. General Lord Kitchener of Khar toum, commander in chief of India, has just entered upon his thirty-fifth year of army service, he having join ed the royal engineers as a lieuten ant on Jan. 4, 1871. He remained ex actly twelve years a lieutenant, be ing promoted to a captain Jan. 4, 1883. From that point his promotion was somewhat rapid, he passing through the ranks of major and lieutenant colonel in little more than five years, his colonelcy being dated April, 1888. He became majoir general in 1896, lieutenant general in December, 1899, and general in June, 1902. Lord Kitchener is now in his fifty-fifth year. To Secure Brains of Eminent Men. An attempt is being made to form a society which shall have for its ob ject the education of the public to a realization of the advantages to sci ence attending the study of the brains of illustrious personages. A commit tee, consisting of Dr. Alexander Hrd licka. Dr. E. A. Spitzka and Prof. B. G. Wilder, has been appointed for the purpose of preparing a general form of brain request, which will hold in law and not be rendered null by any action that may be taken by relatives of the person making the bequest. whereabouts of Rosseau at the time the Naronic was lost, and they will compare his handwriting with the handwriting in the note. He will be called on to tell who "Mr. Lebrun" is and to explain the meaning of the note. There is also a theory that Rosseau is the man who attempted to blow up the statue of Frederick the Great in Washington a few days ago. The machine found in Rosseau's telescope bag by the Philadelphia po lice is similar in detail to that sent to the Umbria. Inside the bag was a box, which fitted snugly in the case, and was neatly made. The works, which were those taken from a clock, were simple. The box was about eight inch es deep and 12 by 18 inches long. The works occupied one side, while BERNHARDT SOON TO RETIRE? Tragedienne Expresses Unwillingness to "Lag Superfluous." The rumor that has been going about that Mme. Sarah Bernhardt contemplates retirement seems to be well and truly founded. For some time the actress has been in the habit of condemning, in private conversa tion with her friends, the folly of the player, male or female, but especially female, who clings to the stage with quivering and enfeebled hands and can not see that a new generation of playgoers want something more for their money than a great name and a great reputation chiefly made when they were in their cradles. It is a continually haunting fear with Mme. Bernhardt that she might one day hear herself, spoken of as "a woman who really used to be a grand actress," and not long ago she told an old friend that she seriously thought of retiring from the stage in something like a year's time. . End of a Famous Boom Town. The postofllce at Le Beau, in Wal worth county, has been removed by the newly appointed postmaster from the town site to his farm, a half mile distant. This marks the final down fall of a town which at one time hoped to become a metropolis. In the early 80s Le Beau was the county seat of Walworth county, and a rival of Aberdeen. The enterprising residents of the town believed that in time it would become the capital of South Dakota when the territory should be admit ted. Then it lost the county seat, the railroads failed to arrive, the terri tory was divided into two staites, and it was at one edge instead of the center of the commonwealth, and finally the end came in the removal of the postoflice to a farmhouse. St. Paul Dispatch. , Bagpipes English Society Fad. Society people in London are tak ing to that terrible "musical" instru ment, the highland bagpipe. It is even whispered that there is -a fair royal piper, and that the daughters of Scot tish nobles are rapidly becoming pro ficient in the art of skirling the pipes In the hapless experience of many visitors to- the north. One alarmed writer, in noting the new fad, says that the pipes are trying enough when manipulated by experts, but that life will not be worth living should amateurs take to trying it. a dry-cell battery was on the other, with two wires coupled to it. A dial bore mechanism by which the ex plosion could be timed. When the hour for ignition was reached a little steel arm was automatically moved, and, connecting with another, formed a circuit. On one of the wires was at tached a fulminating cap ready to be applied to a dynamite cartridge. , The box was not loaded, but it was ready for business. There was a small box for caps in the valise and a copy of a Washington newspaper What Rosseau "proposed "to do with. the machine has not yet been made apparent, except that he told the Phil adelphia police his mission was to rid the seas of English ships, and that there was a powerful Irish organiza tion at his back. READY FOR AN EMERGENCY. Habit of the Frontier Second Nature to Late Senator Shoup. Ex-Senator Shoup of Idaho, who died recently, clung close through all his residence in Washington to one old frontier precaution that seemed ingrained. He would never sit with his, back to a door or an open window, but always took a seat or stood in a room where he could command the entrance and where no one could come up behind him. In his early days in the west he had got mixed up in one or two feuds, but being a man of the world and quick on his feet had contrived to come through unhurt. During those busy and trauble-filled years he learned the necessity of caution. He had seen too many men snuffed out 'from be-' hind not to recognize the potential danger, that lay in an unwatched door or window. The habits of a lifetime are not easily shaken off, so that even in the same seclusion of the senate restaurant Mr. Shoup always ... sat where he could keep a wary eye on all who entered the room. . Whistler's Wit. In Whistler's student days he was on one occasion dining with a group of friends in a Paris restaurant. The attention of the young men was pres ently directed toward an English fam ily near them, of whom the father was endeavoring in execrable French to p?an a dinner. Leaning forward. Whistler, in his most charming man ner, inquired if he could be of aid. The stranger drew himself up with a manner of offense and haughtily re plied, "I assure you, sir, I can give my order without assistance." "Can you, indeed?", quoth Whistler, airily. "I fancied the contrary just now, when I heard you desire the waiter to bring you a pair of stairs." Lippincott's Magazine. No Job for Him. An Ohio man wrote to Elmer Dover, secretary of the Republican national committee claiming to have done great work for Roosevelt in the' cam paign, and asking for a job. He said he would like to be "chief tuspido rian" of the treasury department. Mr. Dover wrote in reply: T regret to inform you that there is no such posi tion as chief cuspidorian of the treas ury department, although I think there might very well be. Unfortun ately, however, , while you have coin ed a word I can not coin the job." Prices Right Clothes Right Treatment Righ All Right We don't want to carry over any of our winter stock. We'd rather sacri fice in prices, so we've hammered them down to the bottom prices . Men's suits and overcoats. from $7,50 to $10, worth from $12 to $18.00. V Boys' suits and overcoats, from $4.00 to $7.00, worth from $6.00 to $12.00. Winter underwear at half , price. Best values tor tne money in the city. Men's caps 25c to 50c, worth from 50c to $125. Coys' caps, good ones at 10c and up to 35c, worth three , times the money. Mitts andj gloves from 10c to 75c, worth twice the money. We try to win your trade by deserving it. HANG UP HIS PICTURE Very Few Countries Cam Produce Sncff Honesty as This Denis . Mulvihill, mayor of Bridge port, Conn.,' who was raised from the position of a stoker in a sewing ma chine faetory, which he had. held for thirty-three 'years, to be chief execu tive of a city of 82,000 inhabitants, has prepared a bill to be presented to, the Connecticut legislature, which will cut down his salary by one-third. He now receives $3,000 a year. In explaining himself, Mr. Mulvihill says: . "I am not worth that much money. I have been thinking it over and have decided the pay is too great. This job of conducting the city government is easy. No man is worth $3,000 as mayor of Bridgeport." - ; Mayor Mulvihill, whose slogan when he was first elected a little over three years, ago was "rugged honesty," served for over a quarter of a century as stoker at $14 a week. Tells Her Troubles to King Oscar King. Oscar II. of Sweden 'is to be ap- , pealed to to assist Igna Hanson to clear herself of , the charges of perjury 1 brought against .her as a result of a suit she instigated for $50,000 damages against the Chicago City railway com pany. A Portion of1 tne Indians Fed - The committee in charge of the dis tribution of relief supplies to the starv ing Indians on the Campo reservation near San Diego, Calif., has concluded Its work. When the Indians had been relieved on the five reservations' to which the public's attention had',, been called the committee had on hands sup plies wihich were not needed there. These have now been distributed among the Conejos and El Capitans. Another Road for Oklahoma A charter was granted to the Kansas Oklahoma and Poteau Railway com-' pany, capital ten million dollars, to build a line from Guthrie to Wagoner, and Porteau, Indian Territory. The in corporators are Oklahoma and Indian Territory men. "Bliggins and his wife must get on very happily," said the gossip. "She says she never scolds him." 'That doesn't indicate happiness," an swered Miss Cayenne. "It is sad. It shows that she considers him beyond 1 hope." "