Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 31, 1907, NEWS SECTION, Page 8, Image 8
THE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: MAKCII 31, 1907. ; t DiillLTON IN IBAW CASE Alfn!rt Called bj Oemminion to Testify M to Friwner's Sanity. MORNING HEARING BEHIND CLOSED DOORS Hrry Thaw Called Befora Board Early Coansel taya B la la Goad Condition (or Examination. NEW TORK, March W. Th Thaw lunacy commission went Into closed aeMlon at 10:22 o'clock today. Harry Thaw wu Im ' mediately called befora tha board. His counsel reported him today aa In food pliita and fully capable of standing what ever mental teste were put to him. Dr. Allan McLan Hamilton, the alienist, who was summoned last nlirht by tha commis sion, was waiting In tha court house cor (ridor when today's Inquiry waa begun. Dr. Hamilton said be did not know what Was required of him. "I am In tha hands of tha commission," 4e said. i There was much speculation as to the reason which prompted tha calling of Dr. JIamllton. One explanation waa to the ef fect that Dr. Hamilton having stated on the witness stand before Justice Fltsgerald $ta belief that Thaw Is at present Incapable Of rationally advising his counsel, the lun fncjr commission cannot afford to Ignore iilm If Its records are to ba kept clear of objections. The commission's examination of Dr. Hamilton Is likely to be brief, for Hi Is said ha has had no Intimate rela tionship with the defendant since last July. nTtae alienist may be asked his reaaon for stating that Thaw la of unsound mind to Iday and then when he gives tha data of !! last examination tha commission may place whatever value It desires otv his tes timony. Dr. Hamilton believes that Thaw a a paranoiac. , District Attorney Jerome has been per tnltted by tha commission to cross-examine Zlarry Thaw and this phase of the Inquiry was In progress at 8:05 o'clock behind Nelosed doors. District Attorney Jerome's cross-examination was ended at 1:07 and the session was then opened and Dr. Ham ilton cs.Hd to tha stand. Dr. Hamilton was not allowed to testify teofe the commission. TRINITY CHOIR IN ORATORIO Coonod's "The Redemption" (tendered la m. Most Acceptable 1 1 Hssscr. ' The Trinity cathedral Choir, under tha di rection of Ben Stanley, choirmaster and organist, assisted by Miss Bhadduclt, ren dered a portion of Gounod's oratorio, "The Redemption," Friday in commemoration of Oood Friday to an audience that taxed the capacity of Trinity cathedral. The portion rendered tells of the march to Calvary, the crucifixion and the Pente costal ascension. The major part of the anarch to Calvary Is taken by the organ. Mr. Stanley's Interpretation and execution of tha passages were pleasing and master ful. Tha major part of the crucifixion was sung by Mr. Wllktns, tenor. While It was purely recitative. It was performed In a pleasing, well modulated voice. Mr. Minor, basso, had short recitatives during the crucifixion, which were well executed. JWhlle Mrs. Stanley's soprano solos were altogether recitative, they were of suf ficient range to bring out the lyrlo quali ties of her voice to good advantage. She possesses a voloe of refined purity and (inweetness. - Perhaps tha most effective feature of the evening was the symphony, "Darkness," rendered by Mr. Stanley on the o'gan, In Whloh was depicted the falling shades Of evening, tha rustling night winds and the Weep shadows, all of which waa executed most artistically and effectively. The chorus work was -surpassingly good and tha chorus did conscientious work through cut. All who heard the singing last night are loud In their praise of Mr. . Stanley and his assistant. Miss Shadduck, for their painstaking labors to bring about such a musical treat. RABBI .C0HN0N FREEDOM Bella-tons should Ba for tha Charts and Hons, Not tha Schools. Rabbi Conn preached Friday night, com memorating tha Feast of the Fnasover. His theme waa freedom. "The publlo schools," ha said, "should not have anything to do with religion, partlcu- ' laxly in such countries as America, though tha matter Is continually violated. The School should not encroach upon the church or Sunday school. There should be relig ion In the home and the home Ufa should he iwliglouB. X cars not what religion It Va, provided that It ba religion and that the religion ba not merely. formal and oon VentlonaU, hot sincere. Simple, beautiful religious oareaoonlea In the noma can be mads to oamenc tha bonds of home. Men arc free that they may ba rallgloua, not In ny narrow sense, but In tha benevolent aanaa. The immoral man Is .a lava.' ' Bar Root print It " With Enamel or Porcolain OH THE HOME We sell the Bohn on a strictguarantee to prove the truth of the claim made for this refrigerator. If after actual use In your home 10 days, It does not prove all the man ufaoturers claim for it, our delivery man will call for it and we will refund the full purchase price. Officially tested and adopted by all American Railroads. Cold and dryness com bined prevent germ life. No other retrigerator is as dry or as cold. We are Exclusive Agents for Omaha and vicinity. t?Jilto'n Roger Cn Rincss.. LETTERS FROMJEE READERS Ontrthution on timet tn1es are Invltod from readers of The Pee, Communications should be written elbly on one side of the paper tnly end accompanied by the name and ad dreM of the writer. The name will not be u1 If the writer aa that It he withheld. Unused communications will not be returned. Correspondents are ad vised to limit their letters to 0 words or they will be subject to being cut down to that limit at tha discretion of the editor. Publication of views of corrennondonte must not be taken to commit The Bee to their endorsement Vote on State Finn Balldlnas. PALMYRA. Nob., March JO. To the Ed itor of The Bee: I see by your valuable pa per that the legislature appropriated S1W,- 000 for the woman's building and other buildings at the state farm. Tou further state thst there were fifty-four votes cast In favor of the appropriation. I wish" to know the names of the fifty-four who cast those votes, and as record Is kept of same you can readily give me the Information. 1 have been voting and working for the republican ticket for the last forty-eight years and I wish to say that not one of those fifty-four men who voted for that ap propriation will ever receive any support from me for any office whatever. Kindly publish the list of names of those who did vote aa above stated and oblige yours truly. J. TL M'KEE. The vote by which H. R. 264, carrying an appropriation of $180,000 for new buildings at tha university farm waa passed In the house was: Ayes Aama, Baroaa, Barrat Bit, Blyatone, Brown, E. W., Brown, E. P., Brown (Sherman), Buckler. Byram, Carlln, Cone, Ciildlo, Doriga, Karlajr, rranoa, rn. Funk. Nays Armstrong. Balrd, Bar. Baaiw, Bolrn. ITla, Dorn, Duncan, Kller, Haaemalator, Hanaan, Hart, Ollera. Graff, Orean, Orlag. Ha mar, Htfraroaa, Hill. Howard, Janlaon. Jobnaon Kelfar. Kllllan. Lahnera, Ieader, Lea. Logvlon, NcCuilough, VrMnllen, Marlatt, Mareh, v Maatera, Matlger, Quarltenbsah, Redman, Rf)-h. fiaundera. Smith, Bloli, Thleaeen, Van Houaan, Weema, White. Worthing. ' Mr. Bpaakar M Harvwy, Han it. Jonea, Knowlat, Kuhl, Line, Mllllsu, Naff, Noyas, Ptlrer, Riper. Fenkel, Flrharrfaon, Prhoettgar, Shuberl, Snyder, Springar, Sreinauer, Talho. Vopalenaky, Walah, Wbltham 14. MEMORIAL TO OLD PATRIOT Meetlna Held at Saratoga Chnreh In Honor of Chaplain DlnVn baeher, Late Pastor. Nearly a hundred members of Grant, Custer and Crook posts. Grand Army of the Republic,- assembled at Saratoga Con gregational church Friday evening to pay honor to the memory of the late Rev. Benjamin Franklin Dlffenbacher, chaplain of Grant post for several years and one of the most loyal Grand Army men of the state. The services were of the Grand Army memorial character and were car ried out according to that ritual, with Post Commander Van Husen of Grant post pre siding. Brief addresses eulogistic and remi niscent of their late comrade were given by several of the members and the military record of Chaplain Dlffenbacher was form ally read by. Adjutant Crelgh of Grant post. "The Vacant Chair," one of the most beautiful and Impressive of the old war time songs, was effectively rendered, the comrades all participating with trembling voices In the refrain: We shall meet, but we shall miss htm. There will be one vacant chair; We shall linger to caress him. While we breathe our evening prayer. Tha services throughout were marked by sad and mournful interest and Indicative of the regard and esteem with which Chap lain Dlffenbacher was regarded by his com panions of the old war daya FIRE OF THOUSAND DOLLARS Damage Wrought to Brick Klin Prop erty Early In the) Morulas'. Fire damaged the kilns of the Omaha Brick company at .Second and Hickory streets to the extent of about $1,000 at 2 o'clock Saturday morning, when the roof covering the long piles of brick became Ignited from gas and was practically de stroyed. The company manufactured Its own gaa for use In the kilns and the blaze caught from the gas plant. While dressing for the theater In the afternoon Mrs. George W. Tanner, 214 South Twenty-eighth avenue, overturned a kerosene lamp with which she was heating a curling Iron and the room was soon filled with flames. Furniture was damaged to the extent of about $160 and the build ing to about ISO before the. fire was ex tinguished. Tanner is a driver In the lira department. At tha same time an alarm waa sounded from 1461 Phelps street, near the South Omaha Una. Failures at Brnssels. BRUS8ELS, March . It waa definitely ascertained that the amount Involved In the recent failures announced on the Stock exchange here waa exaggerated. The total only reached about $20,000, but the banks have furnished assistance to several houses. Although no further failures arc antici pated In the near future, the next settle ment Is awaited with soma anxiety. TEST PLAU 14th and Farnam Streets. KNAPP AND MILL READ! Federal Officials at Cnictro U Aniet in ettlement of Trousle. y MEN WILL NOT ABATE THEIR DEMANDS So Owelare Ittorrliiey and Garrettson Befora They Begin Conference Railroads Will Stand Firm Knapp Is Hopefnl. CHICAGO, March JO.-Chalrman Knapp of the Interstate Commerce commission and Charlea P. Neill. United States labor com missioner, arrived here today from Wash ington to proffer their good offices In set tling the wage dispute between the western railroads and members of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen and of the Order of Railway Conductors. The meeting, which opened late In the Vornlng, did not begin under highly fa vorable auspices. The representatives of the men, Grand Chief Morrlssey of the trainmen and Chief Conductor Garrettson of the conductors, were positive In their assertions before the conference commenced that the men would not abate anything of their demands. They declared that It waa not In their power to accept less than the men had asked, for the reason that the membership of both organisations had voted on the propositions to be considered In the meeting and the vote waa over whelmingly In favor of a strike unless the demands of the men were granted. Railroads Firm. C. P. Brown, chairman of the board of managers of the railroads, waa equally ex plicit In his assertions that the railroads could not go further than they have al ready gone, and that it waa not possible for them to make greater concessions than had already been offered. Before entering the meeting Chairman Knapp said: "I cannot say Just now what will be done. My understanding is that both sides are anxious to avoid a strike and such a disposition is a promise that everything will come out happily. Of , course I can tell more about the situation when we have once heard the statements from both sides. We shall certainly do all in our power while acting with strict Justice for all concerned, to bring about a peaceable ad justment of the difficulty." Chairman Knapp and Commissioner Neill were first In conference with the members of the board of general managers who outlined their case and explained the situa tion aa It appeared from their viewpoint. They were with the chairman less than an hour and the representatives of the train men and of the conductors were then called in. Positions Outlined. Following the conference with the general managers. Chairman Knapp and Commis sioner Neill listened to the statements made In behair of the trainmen and con ductors. At the close of the latter meet ing Chairman Knapp said: "There is absolutely nothing that I can say at this time. Both sides have outlined their position and that Is about all that could be expected at the first meeting. We are to meet the trainmen and conductors later today." "When asked If he came to Chicago at the request of President Roosevelt, Chair man Knapp said he had not, declaring that he had neither seen nor communicated with the president In regard to the matter. The trip he said was Imposed on hiss by the duties of his office and he came on that account. Neither the general managers nor the representatives of the two organisation of employes would make a statement at the conclusion of the meeting with Mr. Knapp and Commissioner Neill. It is positively known, however, that In today's conference no concessions were made on either side. DIAMONDS Frenser, 15th an. Dodge. GERMAN NOBLER AS TRADERS Emperor Heads Aristocrats Who Are In Business for Profit to Themselves. I BERLIN, March SO. (Special.) The Ger man emperor, as well aa several of the prominent members of the most exclusive class of German aristocracy are active men of business, who do not hesitate to canvass orders on behalf of their respective Arms. 7hls Interesting Information is con tained In. an urgent appeal addressed by a young German nobleman to his fellow aristocrats to emancipate themselves from the obsolete Idea that It Is beneath their dignity to participate In any commercial occupation. The emperor possesses extensive pottery works on his estate at Cadlnen In east Prussia and conducts them himself with great commercial seal. Exquisite produc tions of the Imperial factories are sold In the Berlin branch of the business, which Is known as the Hohensoliem stores. Tha emperor thus openly trades under his own name and moreover frequently seises suitable opportunities to canvass orders. When her notices a likely pur chaser of wares from his factories at court or other festive gatherings he "asks him whether he cannot place an order and if the answer Is in the affirmative, the emperor draws a pencil from his pocket and scribbles the-order on his cuff, and Linings 1 Gas Ranges does not conceal the pleasure ha has In having done a stroke of business. Prince Chrtstaln Hobenloha, a member of a mediatised royal dynasty, possessing equal rank with all tha reigning houses of Europe, carries on several different busi nesses on his ancestral estate at Oehrtngen. Wurtemberg. One factory makes oatmeal sold under the name of Hohenlohe oatmeal. Another makes cakes, sold under the name of Ilolenlohe cakes. A third factory pro duces corsets and under the name of the Hohenlohe corsets, and .much sought after by south German women on account of their princely trade mark. Prince Egon Fuerstenberg owns large breweries, which supply many south Ger man Inns with excellent Fuerstenberg beer. Prince Guldo Donnersmarclt, one of the wealthiest Siloslan magnates conducts a silk factory, the proceeds of which are sold under tin trade mark of his royal arm a HORRORS OF CONGO STATE Representative) of the East African TrudtnpT Company Tells What He Observed. 1 LONDON, March 80. (Speclal.)-The Congo Reform association has forwarded to Sir Edward ' Gray, the secretary for foreign affairs, a remarkable description of the Intolerable conditions, prevailing In the Congo Free state written by Mr. J. C. McLaren of Perth from hla own personal observations. Mr. McLaren ia a representative of the East Africa Trading company. He recently arrived In England after a long Journey In which he traversed the Congo Frea state from Duflle on the Nile to Boma on the AtUntlc. "Wherever I , went," said Mr. McLaren, "during the year I was m CJsng It was the same tola from everyone. It waa that the government waa bad wanted every thing for nothing. "One of the great grievances Is tha amount of food stuffs the people are com pelled to supply their wives 'without pay ment' to feed the different units of soldiers and their wives at the several stations. "Another abuse which weighs heavily upon the people Is the commanderlng of labor. One day Chief Badult of Buta sent for me. He told me the usual tale of woe and asked if I could not Intercede for him with the 'English Lord' to give him land In the British territory or he would pur chase the land with Ivory and move with all of his people. " "We are only Bulmatadl's (the Congo government) dogs,' he said. 'A couple of days ago the officials here commanded all my young men and boys nearly, and left me only with women and children and old men.. How can they cut down the big trees and clear the land all by themselves? I cannot get crops oft the same land forever, and then will be Imprisoned If we cannot supply all the food demanded. I am ready to die.' " Of the "rubber curse" as Mr. McLaren calls It ho saw many signs of tha usual character. "I was In Magombo's village," he writes, "and saw Magombo (a chief employed and armed with Alblnls and ammunition by the administration to force rubber and Ivory from the surrounding villages) returning with his victorious army after a raid loaded up with loot and about twenty-flvs prisoners. "It was a gastly sight to see the prisoner prodded and lashed, while staggering and falling under heavy loads. "While at Duflle, Congo Free state, inside the station I saw ten or twelve women mostly In a nude state and under the charge of guards. They were carrying water. "I asked the Chef de Posts if these women wero prisoners and If so what were the crimes they had committed. - He re plied that they were political and not criminal prisoners. They were the wives of chiefs and headsmen and were held until their husbands ransomed them as this was the only way to make the chiefs and headsmen feel the punishment," UNIVERSITY FOR JUTLAND Denmark May Establish New School of Higher Learning- on Western Island. COPENHAGEN, March SO. Special. ) Twenty years ago the question of a second university in Denmark waa raised. It being claimed that It should be established at Aarhuus. the capital of Jutland. This claim for a new university equal to that existing in Copenhagen has now taken .a very Interesting and tangible form, seeing that at a meeting just held there It waa advocated by man In the front rank of the sclentlflo world and by others on politi cal grounds. To foreigner It may seem ridiculous that a nation with a population of lens than 3,000.000 should have two universities, but In reality tha situation Is not as It might appear. For many years there has been a movement in the Jutland peninsula tend ing to separation from tha Islands with their commanding center of culture In Copenhagen. The difference between these two halves of tha Danish kingdom may be Illustrated by the simple fact that the dialectical differences between the west Jutland peasants and the Inhabitants of Copenhagen are as great aa those between the latter and the other Bcandanavlan peoples. Sympathy with the new university idea Is unexpectedly great. RULERS' STATUES ARE BARRED President of Hungarian Chambers Decides Work la To Poor for ls. VIENNA. March SO. (Special.-A curious state of affairs has arisen at Budapest, where a memorial consisting of the statues of the emperor Francis Joseph and the late Empress Elisabeth was to have been erected within a few days In the new Hungarian Parliament houee. . The figures wera de ilgned by the sculptor. Karl Ssechey, and after his death the work was handed over to an Italian. Tha stat ues have now arrived) at Budapest, but a committee of artists has come to the con clusion that the work has been so badly carried out that the work would b a dis grace rather than an ornament to the building. The president of the chamber considered that it would be an offense against good taste to erect the sculpture and It has accordingly been rejected. I AMBASSADOR VISITS POPE Roaaaa Press Makes Muea of Audlenro of Walt at the Vatican. ROME, March X Special. The Catho- lio press is making much of the tact that the ambassador of the United State to the Qulrlnal. Mr. Henry White, who has been appointed to the embassy of Paris after presenting his letters of recall to King Victor Emmanuel III, prior to his de parture from Roma, took the opportunity ef being admitted to audience of his Holi ness, Pop Plus X. It is declared that the only occasion in which such a visit could paid la that In ths Interim between hi ceasing to b ambassador ta the Qulrlnal and hla de parture for Parta This is declared by th Cathollo press to be going out of the way I to recogcla the lmportaooo of the pop, whom tha French govemxLaMt haa vainly I attempted fct tTBOrn COLTON DEATH LIST GROWS Tw1t rersooi Injured in Wrtck An IxptoUd to Die. TWENTY-TWO ARE KNOWN TO IE DEAD Southern Pacta lection Foreman Em pire Result ef Apooleetl Fit Induced by Witness In; th Accident. COLTON. Cal., March 10.-Th list of those who met death In th wreck of the Sunoet expre, which waa wrecked Thurs day afternoon in the Southern Pacific yards, waa completed last night and the search for additional bodies supposed to be buried under the debris of th demolished cars was abandoned as useleeu. The cor rected list of dead. Including two men who have died since last night, 1 twenty-two. Eighteen of these wero Italians, nearly all of whom were Immigrants on their way to San Francisco. The other weri ALBERT W. 8 HIE, mall clerk. Los An gelos. GEORGE ta SHARPS, Muncle, Ind, H. I. WALTERS, Sacramento, Cal. PATRICK EG AN, Southern Pacific sec tion foreman, resides o believed to be Col ton. Egan'a onth la believed to be due to an apoplectics fit induced by witnessing the accident. Fully half a dosen Injured were reported last night In a condition aa precarious that death Is but a matter of hours. PRISONERS ARE INGENIOUS Rival Monte Crlsto and Ubby Prison .in aa Attempt to Escape ' Jail. Four convicts of San Quentln (Cal) prison recently planned for them a rogulAr Monte Crlsto escape by means of diving suits constructed by themselves. But had It been Monte Crlsto he would have suc ceeded. Dumas would never have been so careless as to allow his hero's plans to be discovered and frustrated. Th attempt suggests In patience and dogged persever ance the thrilling old 'tales told in the memoirs of Silvio Pelilco and Casanova or the daring escapades of certain prisoners of war. like Baron Trenck or th union soldiers who dug their way out of Llbby prison. The wonderful tale of the prisoner In the Chateau d'lf secretly digging their way to freedom for fully a year with no other tools than an Improvised chest, a knife and a wooden lever and th miraculous scape of Edmond Dante through being pitched into th sea sewed up In the wind-. Ing sheet of his dead comrade no longer appear farfetched when compared with the recent Jail breaking attempt at Ban Quentln. Th four convicts in question were Rupert Downes, serving a nine-year sentence tor burglary; J. B. Black well and Perry Hale, serving ten-year sentence each for rob bery, and William Brown, with three years still to serve for burglary. All four were "hard case" convicts recently transferred from Folsom prison. Their plan waa cer tainly an original on and ha added an other chapter to a long aerie of thrilling escapades. It really resembled certain other escapes famous In history Insofar as It required a wonderful combination of Ingenuity, pa tience and reckless daring. Though It was on th verge of execution when It was frustrated, the chance were from the start all against It success. It discovery was accidental, but It was the sort of accident that might reasonably hav been expected. One day Robert Jones, a subforeman of a construction gang of convicts engaged in leveling th cemetery hill which run down th bsy at San Quentln, while walking along th beach stumbled upon a dirty yellow bundle under th exposed roots of a tree. Th bundle had apparently been washed .up by the waves. When Jones undid the bundle he found It to be an im proved submarine contrivance for 'swim ming under water, evidently constructed by th Ingenious hands of prisoners. It was a swimming suit worn somewhat like the famous rubber suit worn by Captain Boynton when, he fastened a harmless torpedo under a British battleship In New Tork harbor, only It was not mad of rubber. It was a canton flannel shirt, coated on the outside with resin and wax and pro vided with a headpiece of the same ma terial, with a small pane of glass over the face and a breathing tub with a spigot and plug. There were sleeve ending In water-tight mittens and belt guards at th waist so that with th aid of a tourniquet the suit could be mad absolutely alr-tlght. The guard replaced th bundle and in formed tha prison warden. Watches were set on the convicts belonging to th con struction gang. A guard with a powerful field glass was placed at McRae' point, where, unseen by the convicts, he could keep This strip of beach under observation. Two days later another diving suit, al most Identical with the first, appeared In th sam spot. Two days after that an. other and Anally a fourth. Four prisoners were observed hovering around In th vicinity of th hidden suits. Portland Ore gonlan. ' AUTOMATIC STOP FOR TRAINS Simple Safety Devle Which Set th Break if Dancer Slgrual 1 Is no re. On th subway In New Tork City, and on th Boston elevated, operating prao tloally all th lnterurban aervio of that city, ther la now, and for om time ha been, in ua a slmpi mechanism, a me- ohanlcal trip,' by means of which, when an engineer run past a danger algnal, th moUv power la shut off and th brakes ar sat mechanically. This la what 1 known as the Kinsman stop. It ha been highly ucoesaful and ha permitted much freer and closer running of train than had theretofore been deemed poaslbla. It 1 a practical and demonstrated success. Its lnvsntor has llkewls developed an lectrical device of th aam nature and this is now being tried by one or mora steam roads. It la extremely simple. It consists nvrly of an Inner guard-rail about 110 feet In length, forming part of an open circuit In connection with th ordinary block signal. Projecting from under th engine la a heavy steal arm strong nough to resist all breakages and fixed on a stiff, but sufficiently flexible spring, so that It may be knocked about without danger. The arm scrape along th guard-rail aa th cngln passe over It, thereby closing th circuit, and if th signal be at danger It automatically shuts the angina throttle and throw on th brake. It la et a little beyond th dan ger signal, so that if th engineer has obeyed th signal It ha no effect. If he has run past, th train i automatically stopped. With this d.vlce goes a very ingenlaua recording apparatua, which Shows every time such an au tornado stop Is made; la ethsr words, how oftaa th nglnaer ha gone by hla alamala It Is a mechanical "surprise test." Thie reoord- lag apparatua la under lock and key and is opened only by th Inspector at th and of th run. Everybody' Magazine, Now la th tlm to make your want known through Th Bee Want A4 page. , THE EASY TERMS STORE ibiaCuuiuu uumi mm uu WILL TRUST YOU THE STORE THAT'S SQUARE ALL OVER Are you able to pay cash Mr. Salaried Mant Arc you compelled to stint and deny yourself tho ordinary comforts . ll. 1 j t ta mt oi iuo in oraer to pay casii need of it when you can cet Q prices and pay for same on the people of Omaha. Note Our Terms: On a bill of Note Our Terms: On a bill of XXTEWSIOW TaXX.ES If you are In need of a table see the golden oak finish, t-foot extension tables that we are offer ing, 42-inch square tops at $4.50 SBXSSEmS Built of solid oak, with 3 large easy, sliding drawers; you'll ASI f want one as soon as you J ..til see them Our price vseww Center Tables, $2.50 kind 91-23 Go-Carta, the $8.00 kind,, $1.65 Soft Top Mattresses, the $3.60 kind COUCHES The soft and restful kind, every home should have oneYou need It See the on w ar offering this week at t .- - - '- - v. : THE mmi OlITFITTEiJ 1315-17-19 Farnam St. LOOK FOR THE GOLD AND RED SIGNS . ,.'v- The Reliable1 Many, of you are suffering from physical weakness, your nervous system is being depleted and your mlud weak ened end Impaired. Life is not what it should be. De spondency and gloomy forebodings have taken the clac of bright prospects and happy ambition. You no longer enjoy your dally la bora or duties; your nights are restless and unrefreuhlng and each niornlnaT you awake again to the cheerless realisation of your physical impediments and weaknesses, and you have neither ambition nor the power to maintain your position among your fellow men. v In many cases neglect, ignorance, worry, overwork, etc., are the cause ef your condition, while in others It Is some disease, or frequently the results of neglected or improperly treated diseases, which cause Kdiney and Bladder plseaaes. These diseases (or symptoms of diseases) cannot be cured until first their cause Is removed and cured. Men, don't delay. Ion't give up if others have failed you. Com today to the MEN'S TRLK BPUCLA.LI.ST3 and learn your true condition. Get the right treatment first and be cured safely and thoroughly. ' For a safe and prompt cure of the diseases that so Insidiously destroy th Intellect and strength, secure the services of the eminent specialist tif th Btat Medical Institute. They will restore to health the pitiable victim of Nervous Debility and Brain Fatigue. We do not quote misleading prices In our announcements. We make no misleading statements or deceptive, unbusinesslike propositions. Wi ear tu.n at the lowest charges possible for skillful and suoosssfol senrloes. W be ll av. la fair dealing and honest msthods. We treat men only, and cure promptly, safely and thor oughly BRONCIIITIS, CATARRH, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES, KIDNEY and BLAD DER DISEASES and all SPECIAL diseases and their com plications. fret Cinioltitloi ind Examination -frs PSS: fASZ Su.a;? STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE X303 Farnam St., Between 13th and 14th Sts Omaha, Neb. GCOD TA' y DENTISTRY ia th kind you ret II you have your teeth fixed at Taft's. We use, only the Dest materials, ana every dentist U a graduate and ex reiienced In all kinds of work. Fillings 75e P- Crown 15.00 TAFTS DENTAL ROOMS HIT Dougla SUwt. ior your ctooust mere is no everything you need at ciush the easiest terms ever given to $50 $2.00 per month $100 $4.00 per month InOBT BEDS The best line in the city. Pee the ones we offer this week. Come in all sizes, white or pea green enamel; the biggest vaRio in Omaha rox,srjro beds Built or solid oak, with a guaranteed $1.65 i .... ... Jl ruaranteed fj Tl $11.59 A A son spring, just the thing ior mat small room. See our special at... Chairs, the $1.25 kind (lftc 8 unitary Coaches, $5 kind, Jkii.RO $2.23 Carpets and Draperies, Ingrain Carpeta, all wool, sell every where at 75c, our price DDL Brnssels Carpets, good grade, our f ro price 0.30 Ingrain lings, good priced?"... 2.98 O Lace Curtains gee the A 5.50 ones we are offering sr.::..;.. 1.25 FOR ffli lis L h.- J Specialists No matter what kind of Insurance ya.ii carry, the best policy will be to have your laundry done the Deit Insurance Policy NKW WAY tlon. A phone will bring door. We Insure satlafac s call to Dougla 254 our wagon) to your CITY 8TEAM LAUNDRY 107 ut 11th tret 0C0, a EEs - it ' ) I I 1 i 1 I