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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1906)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BKE: JULY 1. IPOfi. A PROMINENT ATTORNEY Writes a Very Interesting Letter to Dr. llartman Concerning Pc-ru-na. Jnt0y a (swieieilvr M taw "testis. r i will. "Having used Peruna as a tome, it gross m fileasurt to cheerfully commend it for its strengthening and invigorating quali ties. I believe it to be the best medicine of its hind on the market:' Robt. W. Wells. In aiotx TtMlii.wnial was Wrilltn Oi Maryland Uout of Delegates Sine 1901 Court and Maryland Courts. f. What U a Tonic? A toni le a medietas that Inermm the appetite, increase the digestion. Increase th power of th system to assimilate and appropriate food. This la the action of all true tonirs. . To be ur there ar tohtc that r imply tlmulant They Irritate th tomach and an unnatural craving for food la exrtted. Thla class of medicine hould h classed aa stimulants rather than tonics. A tonic, aa above atatad, quicken all ihe funetlon of digestion. It Invigorate th body by furnishing mora fore for the ody. The action of true tonica i not tm- .. . . . yarmrj, put lasting. j The laaaltude which warm weather bring w nue to an under-aupply of nutrition for to body. Plenty of food may be on th table, but the food la not rellhed, or els la not algeated. Slight catarrhal derangement of th tomaeh and bawla will o effectually In terfere with digestion aa to produce great depression of th system. Bj Hon. W. Wells, Attorney, Member or and a Member oftm Bar U. S. Suprtme Where there I no need for regulation or tnvlgoratlon of th digestive organa, a brt eonrae of reran will generally produce the dealred reaulta. Mr. Chan. Brown, RogersvlllF, Tr nn., write! "I feel It my duty to write you a few word In praise of your Peruna. "1 have tried many different remedies, but have found that Peruna la the greateat tonle on earth, and a perfect ayitem builder. "A friend advised me to take Peruna for Indigestion, and It cured m tn a short time. "I wa very weak and nervous, could sleep but little at night, bat PnuM cured tt-at tired, all-gone feeling, and mad feel like a aetr man, ao I heartily recom mend It to all who are weak and rundown. It will glv new llf and energy. "I cannot apeak too highly of Peruna, and will not forget to recommend It on very hand. I will anawer any letter from thou desiring to know what Peruna baa done for me." - J '.y:jw3?;.; - .3 ":V '..;r . '-f -1- .'' , ' .tSjSHHat jWt'.--'-'"" ' f The Reliadle Specialists a visit will tell. Parhapa you are aufferlng In silence; rerhapa you have been uneuccesfully treated; perhaps you anticipate that relief can be secured only through aurg. ery; but more likely you consider your vain hopeless, or at lest susceptible only to temporary roller. lor't fVspslr. even though you nave failed to find relief. There may be health and ha iplness In store for you yet. A visit to our office will tell, hurely it is worth the. trouble, as health Is a prime necessity and paramount to almost anything a human being ran possess. Come to our office and we will make a thorough, searching and scientific examination of your ailments free of charge: an examination that will dis rlose j' our true physical condition, without a knowledge of which you are griplng In the dark, and without a thorough understanding of which no phy sician or specialist should treat you. We want all ailing men to feel that ther can come to our office freely for an examination and explanation of their con dition, without being bound by any obligation to take treatment unless they o desire. Every man, whether taking treatment, or contemplating same, should take advantage of this opportunity to learn hia true condition, aa we will advise htm how to best rersln his health and strength and preserve the powers of manhood unto ripe old age. Do not be satisfied until you have been examined by the itext specialists In the country. You my be sent away happy without any treatment, but with advice that will not only save you much time and money, nut rave you mental Buffering. If you require treatment, you will be treated honestly and skill fully and restored to health within the briefest possible period and at the least expense. Thousands of metwsre longing today to attain health, but are being held back by their skepticism growing out Of wasting time and money with those who treat, but never cure. Banish all doubts and avail yourself of the services of specialists of recognised ability such ss we are. We have made a lifelong study of the dlseese and weaknesses that constitute our specialty, reinforced by an Immense practice. All that expert skill, vaat experience and thorough arfentifle office equipment can accomplish are row being done for those who come to us for the help they need. We cur safely and thoroughly: Stricture, Varicocele, Emissions, Nervo-Sexual Debility, Impotency, BlooJ Poison (Syphilis), Rectal, Kidney and Urinary Diseases, and all dleaease and weaknesses of msn, due to evil habits, self -abuse, sx peases or th result of specific or private diseases. f REE CCKSUITATIO AND EXAMINATION ..i..1-' STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE 1303 F&rnam Et, Between 12th and 14th Sts., Omaha, Neb. INSTRUCTIONS TO VOTERS Information U G1ti bj County CSoiali Chmra tba Primaries, to LIBERAL INTERPRETATION OF THE LAW Kverythlasj RtSMstkU Mast Be Den to Safegmarel th Elective thlse f All Cltlaea at th Tell. Instruction to voter at the coming pri mary election hav been prepared by County Attorney Blabaugh, Deputy Foster and County Clerk Havarly, touching point on which questions anay arts on primary day. Th county attorney ha been re quested by P. H. Connell, a democratic election official, to glv a formal opinion aa to the extent of the power -uf an elec tion official In giving aid to votera. In re ply he referred Mr. Connell to the Instruc tion wlilon will be print. He hold the election judges are th proper persons to decide eaoli case on It merit. Ha holds th law should be liberally Interpreted so as to aastst th voter in registering his vote. The paragraph In the Instruction on this point follows: Any voter who drolarea under oath Hi a Judge of the primary election that he can not read the English language or that by blindness or any other phvsical disability he Is unable to mark his ballot shall upon re quest receive the assistance In the marking thereof of one Judge and one clerk of the primary election officers, each of different political parties and one of whom shall be of the voter's own political party. The Instructions also prescribe that It a ballot la marked with the assistance of the election officials, a certlflcat to that effect hall be placed upon the back of It signed by the officials. Voters ar to be permitted to remain within the voting compartment such a time as Is reasonably necessary to properly mark hla ballot. It he spoils a ballot th voter I directed to call fee a' new on Insttad of trying to correct the spoiled ballot. GRAIN CROP F0R THIS YEAR Estimated Ylelda la Yarlom Conntle of Nebraska Prepared by the Inleai raelge. The passenger department of th Union Paclflo ha prepared a crop report estimate for June of th principal crop producing counties of th state. The acreage of the various crop 1 not yet available, so the yields per acrs ohly ar given. From the yield It I estimated th total wheat crop thla year will approximate U, 000,000 bushels, rye 2.000,000 bushels, oat (0,000,000 bushels. The corn crop promises better at thla time than at the same Urns last year and the alfalfa crop probably will aurpaa Uat year' In both quality and quantity. Th report wa mad up Just after th rain of June 17 and IS, and It may be that th re port for July will show materia! change. At that time th Union Pacifle will glv the yield from each oounty aa th assessor re turns on th acreage will be avallabl. Tleld In ten Estimated Tleld of first Bushels, nor acre, cuttlne. wneat, ttye. us is. Adam ll Antelope IS Blaine II Boone M Bog Butt U Boyd IS Brown 1J Buffalo 1 Burt 16 Butler 28 Cs 11 Cedar Chase , Jg Cherry 24 24 II 36 to T a IS 10 i! i ii 12 Cheyenne. ciy Colfsx Cuming Custer Dakota Iawea Dawson Deuel Dixon Dodge Douglas Dundy Fillmore ..... Franklin ..... Frontier Furnas ...... Gage Oosper Grealey , Hell , Hnmllton ... Marian ...... Hayes Hitchcock .. Holt , Howard ..... Jefferson .... Johnson Kearney .... Keith Knox I. .-aster ... Ilncoln l,oup Madison .... Merrick Nance Nemaha .... Nuckolls .... Otoe Pawnee Phelp Pierce Platte Polk Bed Willow glehardson . aline Sarpy Saunders ... Scott's Bluff Seward Sheridan .... Sherman Stanwm Thayer Thurston Valley Washington Wsyne Webster .... York ... 1 ... 1 t 20 M 14 2S II 11 11 11 11 II II 12 1 II 10 II 19 12 15 12 II 18 22 IS U 30 12 IS IS 15 II 1 15 20 IS 1 It 18 18 12 20 12 SO 14 17 IS 17 IS 1 IS IS 20 II IS 20 10 IS IS is h 12 20 12 IS 0 20 1! IS IS IS 14 10 IS 10 20 12 12 14 16 12 23 1 IS II IS 12 20 20 18 20 IS 14 IS 12 IS 20 20 10 18 IS 23 IS 20 15 IS IS IS IS 14 14 20 16 IS IS SS SS IS so a IS 18 40 28 20 is ii 40 SO 27 20 ffi 25 ss ss 20 40 S2 K 82 22 20 20 28 20 14 20 80 IS n 20 IS 80 IS 20 20 si 40 20 30 IS SO 26 27 IS 20 It IS sf 82 18 IS IS so 24 21 27 24 26 20 28 20 27 26 80 SO 3 Alfalfa f her. gh- wa given medical attention and th physician state she Is In a bad condition from th shock. llr face bear a number of bruises. RECEIPTS BIG, COST LITTLE ! at Register of Deeds Office Excessive aad Expense Ar ' Smaller. Register of Deed Frank Bandl haa completed the report of the business don in hi office for the first six month f the year, showing an unprecedented record. The number of instruments recorded by hi fcfr la over 1.000 larger than It wa for th corresponding period of last year. Thla ha caused a proportionate Inereaee In the receipt of his office, and aa the office haa been conducted at a slightly smaller ex penditure the surplus turned over to the county treasury l larger by over 1)0 than It wa last year for the same period. The total number of Instruments re corded the first two quarter of 1S0S wa 1,080, for the corresponding period of 1808 th number wag 8,181. Following 1 a state, ment of the receipt and expenditures of the office during th ix month ending Jun SO: IMS. im. Receipts St. 2K8 80 S7.6M76 Expenditure 4.S71.0S 4.637.24 Surplus $1,697.7) 82,916.32 Mr, Bandl ha paid Into th county treasury sine January 1 $2,600, leaving S41S.SS surplus fee now In hi possession. HI predecessor up to Jun 80 had paid into th treasury $1,000 and had $697.72 on hand. It 1 believed that no previous en cumbent can show ss good a record. While th work and receipt of th office have Increased remarkably the business is han dled at a smaller expense to th county than it wa last year. LAWRENCE JURY LOCKED UP Twelve Men t'aafelc) to Agree Ipead th night fader Lock ad Key. The Jury In the case against George W. Lawrence, charged with holding up and shooting R. I Tlnkham, the druggist at Thirty-third and Cuming street, up to a lata hour last night had not agreed upon a verdict and Judge Sutton ordered It locked up until thla morning, when he will hear a verdict ahould an agreement be reached. Lawrence wa Identified by a half, a dosen witnesses who saw him at the time of thl or other holdup on the same night. Hi attorney, John E. Qulnn, put an equal number of Lawrence' friend on the stsnd who swore they saw htm on th night of th holdup, and that instead of being out on th street holding people up he ws a home In bed so drunk It took two men to move him. , Th Jury began wrestling with thl con flicting cvldenc at 11:80 Saturday morn ing and kept at It through the awelterlng heat of th Jury room all afternoon and night. PICNICKERS ENJOY MANAWA Three Chare Congregation Among; Other Which Enjoy th hade. More than 1,000 picnickers from Omaha found relief from tha excessive heat at Lake Manawa Saturday afternoon, going over tha river In trolley parties. There wer four ssparat church picnics, among them being th Third Street Methodist Episcopal church, which required four car, carrying 450 people; th Walnut Hill Methodtat Episcopal church, three car carrying about $00 people, and two Pres byterian churchea. The cool breeses from th lake and th shade pt th tree pro vided great relief from the sun' rays, and all returned home aa evening approached In plenty time to escape the rainstorm. Saturday night's storm interfered greatly with th pleasures of visitors to Manawa In the evening, but no extensive damsg waa done. Rain came In torrents and th wind created more or less trembling among the more timid. Three tree were damaged by th wind and a few wires blown down. Diseases of r.lcn Cured for 05.00 Pay what you oaa and begin treatment nou Br. McGrew la 4 always hai beets the f-ioneer ( . K a i m a for ftMinuRi ana X V- "Vk 3aling wiut men. J gj Over Thirty Tnous- ' aud Cured C.s ef A i ajf forms ft Dls- - rv.acrdsrs ef 3in guarantee J? year experience, r 7wm M i sara ore- - - Bail IhrOUsT haul th West. A Guaranteed Cure practically assured tor only . ConauV i.iiob and advloe FHKK. Triat" ntby mail. Call or writ. Bo. ffi Office $1 fcouU FuurteeSth atraet. Omaha. Web- green Poison KILLS BED BCOS, KILLS COCKROACHES, KILLS AXTS. KILLS MICROBES, KILLS ALL INSECTS. HAS NO ODOR Does Not Burn or Explode KiUa tit lHUi, Too. Sew tba Point? "GREEN POISON" la easily appli.d rlUi brush or fathr. A 16-cnt hot tla et "QREEN PO180N" from youf crufgut will kill g minion bug. VVnen ' You Write to . Advertisers. rem ember it only take aa extra at rake et twe ef the pen to mention the fact that yocj saw th ad. In The ike. BBEX WANT PRODUCE RESULTS AGED WOMANIS ASSAULTED Thomas Clark Arrested Charge f Belaa- th Gallty Party. Thomas Clark, aged SS years, who live at th Talbot Ice bouse, wa arrested Saturday evening by Emergency Officer Sandstrom and locked up at th city jail charged with aaeault upon the person of Mr. Anton Kohn, 13S4 Oust street, an aged woman, whose mind I slightly affected. The crime laid to Clark la one of unusual atrocity and sine It perpetration at mid night Friday night th victim could not be found for twenty-four hour. No Information regarding th affair wa given tha police until early Saturday even ing. It wa then stated Clark, with a com panion, alao named Clark, paaaed under the Missouri Pacific viaduct and taw th old woman seated on th embankment. Thomaa Clark. It la said, ' stopped upon seeing her and expressed the sudden Idea which entered his mind. Orsbblng hi vto tlm, h forced her behind the aton abutt ment, striking and choking her when ah resisted. His companion feared to Inter pose and passed on, telling a friend later, however, and thl man, after thinking It over all night and th nest day, at Uat decided to tell the police. T'pon hi In. formation tb arrest of Thorns Clark wa mad. When Officer Sandstrom went to the Kohn home he found the husband and two young children alone. They said they had not seen the mother all day. An etTort waa then mad to locate her, but no more reoent hour at which ens had been seen than I o'clock Saturday morning could be learned, ah having been noticed en Mandereon atreet, wandering about In the tall weeda. Ite Saturday night, however, street ear mety saw th woman at Twenty fourth atreet and Ante avenue nd. took her ejowvtown, where the pelt Seek aharga LOOKOUT FOR NELS UPDIKE WaralagT Scat Ahead that He Will Flash Throagh State Forty Mile Per. "Tell all thp marshal and constable out tn the state to be on the lookout for me. for I am going through some of those country towna forty mile an hour on th Fourth of July," ald Nels B. Updike Satur day. ' Mr. Updike will take a party out In his big automobile Monday and Tuesday, and will visit a number of elevator belonging to th Updike Grain company on both th Burlington and th Northweetern roads. Th trip will be made as far weat a Hast ings, and possibly to Holdreg. Traveling by automobile, Mr. Updike will get a good Idea ef th crop. INTERNAL REVENUE GAINS Collection for Jast aad Whole Fiscal Tear Show Heavy laere.se.. The collection of the Internal revenue office tn Omaha for the month of June were S23,t33 SS, which U S34.S4S more than wa collected in June, 1006. During the fiscal year ending June SO the collections wer t3.tC6.S42.Z9, while the total collections of th previous year wer $2,25, 071.75, showing a gain Of f29S.S70.64. The ScSimollcr & Mueller Piano Co. Letting' Down JPia.no Prices Never before in the history of our piano business h&re we been in a position to offer such bargains as at the present time. All pianos that have been returned from rental, from schools, hotels, academies, studios, homes vacated for the summer, in fact every slightly used piano in the house will go on sale Monday morning and will posi-' tively be closed out regardless of cost. Every piano is tuned, polished, regulated and guaranteed strictly as represented. TERMS TO SUIT PURCHASER UPRIGHT PIANOS 7 Kimball make $ 72.00 Vose & Sons 8S.00 Arioa 96.00 Sterling IOS.00 Martin Bros 118.00 Singer 127.00 Erbe&Co-' 135.00 Vpl d .Vheelock $142.01 Price & Teeple 148.00 Davis & Co 155.00 tester . . : 160.00 HocUcr 168.00 Steger 192.00 And 52 others at intermediate prices, and on terms as low as $3.00 monthly. We are also giving the greatest values on the best and most reliable makes of new pianos Steinway & Sons, Steger & Sons, Emerson, Kardman, A. B. Chase, Kurtzman, McPhail and over twenty others of quality appreciated by the shrewd and economical buyer. If you are thinking of buying a piano, you should not fail to take advantage of these genuine bargains. Mail inquiries promptly answered. We ship pianos everywhere and refund all money paid if not as represented. LEADING PIANO HOUSE 1311-13 FARNAJVl STREET v- OMAHA Mortality Statistics. Th following births and deaths hav been reported to the board of Health dur ing the twenty-four houra ending at noon Saturday: births Olof Lee, S Knox avenue, girl; Charles Mertensen, HIS Locust, boy; Her man Mettlemen, 11 U Douglas, girl; Krancls Korers. 2316 South Twenty-seventh, boy; , r s.usv, - . ... ..... wa, "v. j , w . . - Jamln A. Redman, XJ22 Ohio, girl; Andrew Smith, 421S fierce, boy; John Targaceuskl, IMS South Twenty-eighth, girl; T. W. Trelhacl. HtS Cedar, xlri. Death Vaclav Tuohek, 101 S South Four- teeenth, SO; Edward O Ilrlen, Omaha. 46; i-yaie von DU.ii. mr a.L u.i, tW, en. w. Sumption. 2ut North Twentieth, 64; Caro lina Mary Whitaker, Fifty-second and Parker, S months; Boso Baxarlo, St. Jo aeph'a hospital. SO; Mrs. L.lillan Wither, spoon Fourteenth and Capitol avenue, 28; John Dougherty. 16U Oak. 80. Mad Dog the Warpath. A mad dog scared residents near Fif teenth and ciilo streets Saturday after noun, when a do owned by IS. McDermott of 111 North Fifteenth atreet bit two per sons, t cM and three dogs. The cat died from the bite. The mad dog was killed by Mr. Harrington vf S10 North Fifteenth street, "iirandma' Bonan of SIS North Fifteenth street and Mrs. Harrington of three doors south were bit by the dog. Mrs. Bonan la tfc vrar old. Mrs. Btebert s fox terrier was bitten, while Mrs. Weston's hound was attacked by the McDermott animal. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Mr. Fred PalTenrath, general auditor of the Nlooil. the tailor, aystem, ha returned from a trip of Inspection. Mrs. W. E. King of Chadron la visiting her father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Eastman. Suug Seward street. Miss Holland and Mia Foa sail front New York for Farts Auauat S, where tbey are commissioned to nil a large number of epeoial erdera They aspect to return with tae largee sloe, the bar ever Imported. UP TO TilE ILLINOIS CENTRAL Belief from 'Frisco's Harmful Rat Bought "from Tuh Eoad. M'VANN RETURNS FROM CHICAGO VISIT 1 i Illinois Central aad Northwestern Official Promlae Do What They Can for Omaha with 'v'risco. Secretary McVann of the Omaha Grain exchange ha returned . from Chicago, where lie went to see the offlclal or tne Frisco, as well as those of other roads, on the subject of the new tariff. I had a talk with the offlclaJs ot tne Illinois Central and the Northwestern, said Mr. MoVann. "They told me they thought they could Induce Vice President Ttiririla of the "Frisco to reconsider Die action and leave the tariff as It has ben, by showing him how the new system will demoralise freight rates. They sajd no radical action would be taken by the other rnnds until Mr. Biddle Is given a chance to make what they call a "final" decision. It la to be honed that their innuence win be strong enough on Mr. Biddle to cau.n him to abolish the new tariff." Tha fMlinz la seneral among the grain ahlpper that If the 'Frisco cannot be In AurcA to withdraw lta rate, the Illinois Central should publish at one a pro portional rat of 10 cent per iu pounas on corn from Omaha to Memphla. In the nnnral adlustment of Brain rates to which all the Omaha and Kansas City llnea have been committed, the agreed difference between Omaha and Kansas City on Memphis business Is 1 cent per 103 pounds, but the action of the 'Frisco widens this difference to 4 cents, and In order to main tain the nrooer difference, there la a reel ing the Illinois Central ought to make the 10 cent rate. It Is true the Rock Island ha a line from Omaha to Memphla. but being under the same control aa the 'Frisco, It would take no action detrimental to a member of It own family. The Missouri Paclflo, the only other Memphis line from Omaha, hauls all Its grain through Kansas City, and would be naturally embarrassed by that fact In taking action which might be construed aa favorabl to Omaha. This put the matter up to the Illlnol Central, which haa It own rail from Omaha to Memphla and no Interest whatever In Kansas City, to glv Omaha th protectlof It. ahould hav. NO KICK ON THE UNION PACIFIC Grain Men Are Satisfied with Aboli tion af Elevation. No dissatisfaction was xpreaMd about the Oraln exchange Saturday aver the an nouncement ot the Union Paolflo that It would pay an elevation allowance) of 1 cent per 100 pound on grain transferred at the Omaha elevator. Nel B. Updike, whose elevatora ar on th Northwestern and the Burlington, said there wa no rea son for any kick among th grain man until It waa aeen what the other roads would do. If th Union Paclflo allowed for transfer and tha other roada didn't, h said, tha elevator on other road at com peting polnta would pa at a disadvantage. He thought It probable the other road would follow the Union Paclflo. Oraln men who have elevatora along the Union Pacific, as well as the Oraln ex change In general, s re. well pleased with the announcement, because all dealer along th road a,re now plainly on an equal bast. Th suggestion Is mad that other road may try to pay an elevator allowanc at Chicago Instead of Omaha, hut In that case the aid of the courts could be Invoked iO protect the Omaha market. COMMERCIAL CLUB AT DEN Trade Boosters Will Hold Farth la Ak-Kar-Bea'e Training; Qaartors Monday. Next Monday evening's session at the Ak-Sar-Ben den promise to be a red-letter event In the annala of Alt-Sar-Bsn Initia tion. Th oeoalon will be known aa "Com mercial club night," with several Interest ing features on the program. Ther will be a reunion of those who attended tha last two trade excursions. Th famous bell ringer will be In evidence and Sarah Burn bard will tnak her last, final and farewell appearance at th Fountain of Youth. Among th speakers will be Mayor Dahl man. Colonel T. W. McCullough, Attorney Searle and O. M. Hlteheook. A Dutch band. Imported for the event, will discourse popular airs. Refreshments will be served. The- Board of Governor at It meeting next Monday evening will maks final ar rangement for th big xourlon to Auburn on July 11. Thl matter waa broached at the den laat Monday evening and met In stant approval among th knlghta Th Auburn people ar making extenslv prepa ration for the event. The plan 1 to take a special train down to Auburn lu the morning and return about midnight. WIFE CHARGES DESERTION Yonaa- Woman File Action Against Bar Hnskand, gaylagr Ha Abandoned Her. Through Deputy County Attorney Shot well, Mr. Edward Anderson of 12 North Twenty-second atreet filed with the pollre Judge Saturday morning a complaint of wife abandonment against her husband, who Is an employe of a local piano astsb Ushment irnd earns (ISO per month, accord ing to the wife' declaration. Mrs. Anderson ha been married one year. She said her husband left her a week ago without meana of support. "A week ago I was sick In bed when my husband cam home In an Intoxicate! condition and drew a revolver on me. He then threatened to kill me. Whatever hi real Intention may hav been, the sight of th revolver and his threat ware enough tor any one. Then he left me," stated Mra Anderson. REAL K STATE TRANSFERS. Portsmouth Savings bank to Clotilda M. Schneider, lot 11, block 1, Uka homa Park , S1.S00 .President and dlrectOra of Insurance Company of North America to Jo seph Levlne. lot S, block S, Kountse Ha 4.000 Oeorge H. Anaell and wife to Mike David and wife, lot 12, block t. Pot ter & C'obD'e Second addition 400 Leslie O. Hicks to Mxxle B. Potter, eUO feet, except sSO feet of east of Thirty-third street. City of Omaha.. 6.6)0 Harry May et al. to Carrie R. May, taxlot 14. aei of 2MS-1X S.500 Augustus Doll and wife to James E. Ileum, lota ll. is and IS. block t, Wayne Place Algernon S. Patrick to Kdlth M. Pat rick, undivfe Interest In block 1. Patrick's addition Stephen D. Pangs and wife to Jose phine H. Welnenfellen, lot S. block 10, Summit addition John Robert Nicklen end wife to An thony Nlcklen, undlvVfr of lot 14. block S, lace's aubdlvlaion Allen 8. Romano et al. to Frank Craw ford, lot 7, Beauvolr Place M. C. Peter to Oat City Mart com pany, lots 4, S and S. block IS; lot f, block 18, City ot South Omaha 4,000 Albert Miller and wife to Oate City Malt company, lot S, block IS, City of South Omaha 1,700 M. C. Petera to Oate City Malt company. eH of block U, City of South Omaha I L. at. Bower and Fanny A. Bowers . to Mary C. Eaaley, lot 1, block S. Bo were' addition 1 S00 SO) 200 100 iigairs "fiw Yyp WaaHuim The prices we are making on all kinds of cigars make it worth while for you to buy your cigars of us ana take them with you on your trip. We save you from 25 to 50 per cent. 10c Hazel Kirk Cigars "Monopole." 6c. or 53 per. box ot 50 10c El Afecto, 5c Or $2.50 Box of Fifty 5c Viola Allen, 8 for 25c. or II. 50 Box of 50 5o Smoker ail know thla braad. 10c Hazel Kirk Cigars Reina Perfecto," 5c. or 12.50 per Box of 50 5c Hazel Kirk Cigars -Juniors'" 7 for 25c, or 11.75 Box of 50 10c QUEEN VICTORIAS, Be, of f2.50 per box Of SO. This brand 1 made by M. W. Maadeli e Broa tnakera ol tha famous Chancellor cigar and 1 1U aqaal. 16TH AMD FAR MAM OTRECTO