n TIMELY REAL ESTATE TALK GE YOUR SHARE $50 lew Hotel Project Now Seems to Be Up to Her. HAVE NO FEAR OF LAND BOOM ota&lh The following merchants are offering special inducements for you to visit their stores. In each advertisement the merchant offers a valuable prize (in some cases several prizes) to the person who solves the rebus in his, ad and brings it to the advertiser's store in the neatest condition, before Wednesday, August 14th, at 5 o'clock p. m. Everybody has an equal chance and $50 is surely worth working for. Get busy at once. No one connected with any of these stores will be allowed to compete. Correct solutions of the puzzles will be announced in these advertisements Sunday, August 18, 1907. in Ural F.atate Mn Declare taluea Are on Unnndrr Raala Than f'Ter Rr fore, with o nuiiirr of Inflated Values. prizes Get Your Share THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: 'AUOTTST 4, 1007. $50 In prizes Get Your Share Although Peter Her aHld a short time ago he would not build a hotel, the matter of Initiating a project for one seems to be up to him. One day last week he Invited sev eral business men to !inrh to meet A J. I"ean of Knnsa City, who was to lease the botet Mr. Her once planned to build, but which he later Rave up. Mr. Dean said he was ready to take up the management of a first class hotel In Omaha when It ' should be built, and Mr. Iler said lfe was ready to transfer his arrangement with Mr. rean to any man or syndicate which might want to put up a hotel on his property at Flxteenth and Howard streets. He offered to take stock In the company as part of the purchase price. The business men who were l tho luncheon are awaiting a call from Mr. Her for a meeting, and they aay there la a probability of results If Mr. Hot will make a reasonable proposition. f. D. Wead has had such success in leas ing the apace In the two store buildings he and his associates have erected on Farnam street, one at Eighteenth and one at Twen tieth, he Is encouraged to consider the er"c. tlon of a building at the southwest cornet of Seventeenth and Iodge streets, where the old Campbell homestead stands. He will take a vacation soon and when he re turns he and the other menjbers of the Syndicate which owns the corner will talk , over the proposition. The demand for space In the buildings of the Wead syndicates on Farnam street Is remarkable In view of the fact a few years go It was very difficult to rent stores In the neighborhood. "Five years ago, " skid local agent, "It was a big struggle to rent the store rooms In the Bachelors' building and they brought hut $25 a month esch. Now they rent readily at f50 to '0 a month each. Inside rooms In Mr. Wead's building are leased at 1125 a month, I un derstand, and the corners bring more. The little storea on the south side of the street, near Twentieth, afford a revenue of $75 a month. This Is one evidence of Omaha's expansion." The other day Judge A. C. Troup of the district court delivered an address before the Omaha Real Estate exchange on present conditions In Omaha. He advised the mem bers not to boom, but to continue boosting, lie told them to lay out additions as fast a the clty'a growth required It, but not any faster, .Lest ttjey should Imagine that he was chiding them for something they bad done he remarked In conclusion that never In the thirty years of his residence In Omaha bad he seen renl estate values on a sounder basis than they are at present. Judge Troup lost considerable money In realty In the panic a few years ago and he ought to know what he Is talking about. Jlowever, the realty men told him they had no Inclination to start a boom, and could not hasten the Increase of prices If they tried. "The boom spirit Is a disease, flue to a ertti which floats In the air." sild K. A. Benson. "In no other way can I satis factorily account for It. A boom comes In a day and It goes In a dnv. One morn ing In the '80s Council Bluffs awoke and found there wrs n boom on. All the storea were closed; the merchants were out buying real estate. They had sud denly caught the disease. One day Council Bluffs awoke and found that the boom had passed. The germs had taken wing and flown away between two days. The next day we heard they had reached St. Joseph and a boom had started there." Rose Hill la In trouble. Rose Hill Is a little addition Just west of the. Country club grounds and It Is the site of several fine suburban homes built a few years ago. The street railway rnrapmy built a line down Rose Hill avenue to store cars for rush business from Kruff park, and the Rose Hill people didn't like that. Then the Country club built Its carriage and automobile sheds on Rose Hill avenue, and the people didn't like that. And now the Btnson Board of Kducatlon is about to dd the lust straw by letting a contract for the erection of a two-room frame school house on a lot on the avenue. The people of the Hill are now trying their best to Induce the board to make other ar rangements for a school house. The biggest real estate deal In Omaha for several weeks was the sale a few days ago of the Burwood theater by VV. J. Burgess to Bulllvan & Consldlne. The consideration, which Is given out as $60,000, of course Involves something more than mere ground and building, aa the estab lished name and reputation of a theater ar valuable assets. Negotiation for the transfer were begun a couple of months ago, but the money changed hands only last week. South Omaha cannot have a park on the big vacant lot at Twentieth and J streets, for commercialism has laldhold on It and will soon convert It Into a place of stores and dwellings. The city council bad a deal on for this property, but It fell through. Edward Cassidy and Ed ward Phelan sold to J. W. Murphy, who will plat It and place It on the market. It la a ten-acre tract and It brought $10,000. "What a fine place for club houses Capi tol avenue would have made If it had only Sot started as a club district," said a realty man the other day. "It is a flue, broad street, with s good slope and plenty f trees, and I cannot Imagine a better site for a club house than up the avenue toward the high school. But the clubs and fraternal buildings are scattered; their wnsra apparently did not recognize Capl tnt avenue's advantages. The Omaha Club building at Twentieth and Douglas, the Elks got a alts several blocks south of the city hall, the Masons bought near the Omaha club, and the Eagles are the only organisation that located on Capitol ave nue. In the southeast corner of Eighteenth street and Capitol avenue, which the Eagles bought, they will have an admirable site for a home." George N. llkka iulU attention to the cheapness of property on Capitol avenue, between Seventeenth and Twentieth streets, as compared with that on Farnam between the same cross streets. He cites the fol lowing sales made In the last twelve or fifteen months: 8outhwest corner Eigh teenth and Farnam, $51,000; near southwest comer Nineteenth and Farnam, $t0,000; northeast corner Twentieth and Farnam, nearly $26,000; corner Nineteenth and Dodge. $31.000; southwest corner Seventeenth and Podge, $46,000. In contrast with these sales Is that of the corner of Eighteenth street and Capitol avenue to the Eagles for flS.000. It makes a poor working man sick with snvy sometimes to think of the easy way In which the real estate dealers make their money. But think of the risks they take. A year or so ago Harrison Morton talked some of ths Campbell homestead, at the ttulhwenl eerBr of seventeenth and Dodge City In Wisconsin petitors have tried to follow, but we think we hae most of them guessing. We will give to the first five people who bring to us the correct answer to our rebus, a 25-cent bottle of Egyptian Lotus Cream, a most elegant toilet requisite which nearly eveVy one knows all about. Bring answers to all stores. I CUT PRICE SCHAEFER'S Cor. 16th and Douglas Sts., Cor. ICth and Chicago, OMAHA. NEB. Corner 5th Ave and Main St., COUNCIL BLUFFS. Corner 24th and N Sts, SO. OMAHA, NEB. 0 A city in California First A City I. Ilt.kt-.- rant the benefit of our eusy nayment plan, which 11 MlCnlgan '"an that we will accept M. 5, 6 to 10 on " the balance due. SCHMOLLER H MUELLER PIANO CO., Thone Douglas 1638 streets, as offering a possibility for a finan cial coup. One morning It was offered to Mr. Harrison at J3S.00O and he put up $500 as on option on it at that figure. Here was the risk; he had a good chance to lose his 0O0. But he and Mr. Morton organize a syndicate, sold the lot to the syndicate and won. They bought for 3S,C00 and sold for $46,000. "I could rent fifty $15-a-month houses In side of two weeks If I Oiad them on my list," declared W. H. Russell at the meet ing of the Real Estate exchange last week. "We till have a few $40 and $50 houses for rent, but I would like to know how many of you have any for $10.'' "Not a one!" came the chorus. "How many 115 houses have you?" "Not a one!" "How many J'JO houses?" "Mighty few, I'll tell you." "Well," continued Mr. Russell, "the num ber of people In this city who can afford to pay tiO or r,0 for a house Is compara tively sniull. What about th? mass who can pay but about J15. Any man with a little capital who would put up twenty, thirty or fifty small houses to rent for $15 would bo conferring a. lasUng benefit on these people and at the same time he could make a little money for himself." Henry B. Payne of Payne, Bostwlck & Co. has a, puzzling problem to work out and he would be alad to have any real es tate man offer him a solution. "There la a man who haa some money he could invest, but every day or two he says, "Oh, I won't buy now; property Is too high. I'll wait until It conies down a lit tle. One day that man comes In and wants to list at 15,000 a house that Is worth about 3.600 or M.000. You see. It makes some difference whose property Is offered for sale whether It is too high or not. Now, If you tell him his property Isn't worth fhat much he will say he never heard you talk that way before and he will also say ha will go to some agent who has faith In his town. If you tell him the property Is worth the money and take It on your lst he will soon be on you with both feet be cause you don't advertise It. What can a fellow do?" That Omaha offers today for half the price four times the Inducoments It offered twenty years ago Is the statement of George O. Wallace. According to his ob servations, only the downtown lots are as high In price as they were twenty years ago, while the majority of residence lots are only half the price they were at that time, and lots farther out only one-third the price. He says residence lots will never be lower In Omaha than they are at present. In this connection Mr. Wallace tells of what he considers an Injustice on the part of the city. In the late 'ijOs Mr. Wallace sold to customers a number of lots In the neighborhood which Is to be cut through by the northwest boulevard. These lots declined In price with the advent of tho hard times and are Just now beginning to climb upward asain. The ciiv I. lng the lots and taking them at a price which Mr. Wallace does not thank at all adequate, in view of the fact that the neighborhood la developing rapidly. The property is in Clifton Hill. THIEF CAUGHT REd'hANDED Steals 1. amber front Neighbor, Who Catches Him, hat Makes No Arrest. W. B. Long, contractor and builder, caught a man stealing lumber from two houses he Is building at Twenty-third and Pratt streets. For the last few days he had been missing his lumber and he de cided to lay In wait In the hope of land ing the thieves. With a companion, he hid himself near the buildings snd about II o'clock Friday night was rewarded for his vigilance by catching ths man In the act of carrying ths lumber away and placing it In his cellar nearby. Mr. Long and his companion accosted the man, who did not deny his guilt. He was compelled to carry back the lumber and also some which had been taksn previously and which was found stored In the cellar. Mr. Ixmg has decided not to (Us a complaint against his neighbor. This Is a "gnc" ad page and we know that much business is being; transacted In neary every line of business on a kucsh basis. It haa always been our aim to keep as far away from guessing abmit anything in the conduct of our business as possible. You can't successfully guess In the drug business, you must know. We believe that the majority of the people In this com munity do know that we were the originators (not followers) of live and let live Drices. Some com DRUG STORES A birthday present or wedding gift is ofttlmes remem bered. For this and other occasions I have an as sortment of Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Sterlings, Silver wane, .Watehes and Cut Glass, guaranteed to please the most fastidious. You know my reputation Is not the growth of a year, but has been built up by thp efficient and conscientious service I have rendered my patrons. In other words, my stock Is of the best and my word on an article Is an .absolute guarantee of Its reliability. To the person bringing the neatest and most attractive an swer to my rebus, 1 will present free of charge a nobby stickpin valued at 12.00. N. P. Stilling. Manufacturing Jeweler and Diamond Setter Room 1 and 2 Paxton Block. Payment on a Piano Free To the five persons sending us the name to our rebus, In the neatest and most attractive manner, we will deliver by mall, or otherwise, an order on our house good for 125.00, that amount to be ap plied on the purchase price of any new piano In our mammoth stock, selection to be made any time within six months from date. We Invite Inspec tion of our pianos, for We are strictly a ''one price house, and that the lnweat w win .i. 1311-1313 Farnam Btrsst Fine Example 'if? '"'"- -'iflr tJ.i'. i THE WIRELESS IX ALASKA Remarkable , Achievement by Army Signal Corps Engineers. SOLVES NORTON BAY PROBLEM Climate and Conditions Make1 Wire Line Imprurt Icablr, So Captain Wlldman Devises Sucraafal Wireless System. One of the most remarkable achievements In practical commercial wireless telegraphy Is the Installation and maintenance by the United States army signal corps of wireless communication across Norton sound, Alaska. Norton sound Is a great bay, at the mourn of the Yukon river, 107 miles wide between the points where the wireless stations stand. One ef these, Bt. Michael, j on the southern skit of the bay. Is the j terminus of the land lines, which run 1.300 miles southward to Fort Liscum, which Is In communication with Seattle by a cable 1.600 miles long; the other, on the northern side, la at Safety, near Nome, the most Important center In the northwestern dis trict of Alaska. It had (been found Im possible to maintain a Cflhln nernaa tho j gulf on account of the Ice, and the abso lutely barren and snow-swept nature of the c.iast made ah ordinary land line around It almost Impossible. Aa Nome Is the center of a large fishing and gold mining district. It was essential to provide telegraphlo com- ( munlcatlon, especially ss the usual means or communication are only available dur ing a very few months of the year. Wireless Lin Acroaa Bar. The I'nlted States army therefore decided, after three years had been wasted In fail ure of some commercial companies to pro vide a service, to establish wireless com munlrstlon through the agency of the sig nal corps. Captain Ionard D. Wlldman. mho designed the stations, ami .superin tended their erection and working, has fur nished numerous drawings and descriptions which have been embodied In almost all the recent treatises on wireless telegraphy and In the government reports. Jn b,ls- re tfW IT k "tsJZ - s y " m. m.mm-- w-nrgt) :,is "Ni. iei m Fn m m mm psjIliiL . i To the A A the neatest and most com fiCB 1 Oaw1 Plete solution to our Puzzle iLS we will give a certiiicute A Town In New York famous for Ihe manulaclurf ol Col lars and Culls. ous Graphophones. Disc and Cylinder Machines, $7.50 to $239.00. Gold Mould Cylinder Records. 2S Certs Best Cyliaier R-etrdi Mile. Columbia Phonograph Co., 1621 Farnam Street. Only Exclusive Talking Machine Score In Omaha. fir P A City In Pennsylvania Home of Uncle Sam to get hep, sen y0Ur business or You make a mistake now by of the Trend '"'Ti,::: --f'E: :l".?:i','iW"?S:f:-' m i-A iii . HOME OP HERBERT I. GANNETT. port the chfef signal officer of the United States army for 1906 said: ' "In August, 1903, a wireless section of 107 iplles across Norton sound was established through the professional skill and excep tional ability of Captain Leonard D. Wild man, signal corps. This Is the only long wireless system In the world. It Is believed, that la regularly operated as a part of a system handling commercial business. On August 6, 1904, It completed sa year of un interrupted service over Its course of 107 miles. It has handled dally and uninter ruptedly the entire telegraphic business of Nome and the Seward peninsula, which, togetlier with the. official business, aver ages several thousand words dally. More than 1.000,000 words were sent during the year, many thousand being commercial code words, In which no error has ever been traced to this , section. In a single hour there have been transmitted over this section 2,1X10 words without error or repetl- : tion. The successful installation and oper ation of this unique work by the officers and soldiers of the American army afford an added Illustration of their Intelligence and aptitude." Her vice lllarhljr Successful. It should be borne in mind that this unique record has been accomplished at stations, one of which was built upon a glacier and both on a coast only accessible during about three months each year. To continue the quotation: "The wireless work was done by an al ternate current. 6W volts, sixty cycle, three kilowatt generator: a six-horsepower j gasoline, single cylinder engine, with spe cial governor; a small grid at masthead with only two connecting wires, snd largo ground capacity. The dynamos, built to Captain Wildmar.'a plans, were provided with specially heavy Insulation about the armature colls and collector rings.. The switchboards were of home manufacture. Electric storms gave little trouble, and weather or Ice conditions had no material Influence. The receiver was of the De forest type, modifying by signal corps In ventions. Captain Wlldman found many opportunity for the resourceful minds of himself and his subordinates. Broken Leydcn Jars were successfully replaced by air condensers, the spark was muffled, currents shunted.-and many other Improve ments applied. Captain Wlldman thinks duplexing possible to a certain extent, and caJl-Ui, ' device probable. Sergeant Mo- E tnrti'pNfcb 1 - J- i Z, f . HIMIIIHHMWII I person bringing to us good for Five Dollars, which can be used as part payment on one of our "World Fam A Woman's Glory la her hair to sonic. In other people's opinion It's her teeth. Nothing looks more beautiful, cbiiner and fresher thnn a set of pearly teeth. 1 understand how to make the mouth beautiful, as thousands of people In Omaha can testify, and the cost Is a moderate one In comparison with the benefit. The examina tion costs you nothing. To the person sending us the name to my rebus in the neatest and most attractive manner, 1 will present an order for a Solid Gold Crown va.ued at $5. (JO. Matthews. Original Palnlnsi Dentist. Room 4. Bushman Blk., 16th and Douglas Sts. It Shouldn't Be a Puzzle for You to Fill Your Wants Other people find positions sell furniture and automobiles dispose of real estate and rent furnished rooms and houses through Bee want ads. It's easy in Architecture - i' -' Klnney devised ay key that Increased the sending capacity from fifteen to thirty words per minute." Only Two Days of Trouble. Captain Wlldman, who Is at present chief signal officers of the Department of the Missouri, and In command at the signal station of Fort Omaha, is under orders to be transferred to Fort Leavenworth, where he will have charge of the signal school. He will leave Omaha for Fort Leaven worth, August 10. He has Just received a telegram from the officer In charge of the wlreltss signal station In Alaska, above referred to, In response to an Inquiry, which states In the last three years, there was but a part of two days, December 10 and 11, 1906, In which the line was defective. Messages could, however, at that time be sent bul could not be received. The interruption was only temporary and was attributed to meteorological causes. Since December 11. 1906. there has not been the slightest Interruption In the transmission and re ceipt of messages. NEW WEEK AT LAKE MANAWA rromlxe of Much Pleasure Is Held Out at the I'rrttj- Resort Across the Itlvcr. With weather most propltlons, and the week one of unprecedented success, Manawa starts August, the third and last month for Its lf07 season with the hopeful prospects of the most successful finish In Its history. Despite the cool evenings of late, bathing at Manhattan beach has been well patronized. This resort continues to be a drawing card for the women, many dainty maids taking a plunge every afternoon. Tho two expert swimming teachers are kept busy Instructing patrons In aquatic arts. Prof. Andrew will make his usual balloon ascension and Miss Pauline Courtney will Introduce at the Casino the beautiful and popular Illustrated song "Good Hye. Sweet Maryland." ' The big roller coaster, miniature railroad and all other attractions will be In readiness for today's anticipated crowd. $M.0O In fre prises. Oct your share. See page six, editorial section. ' Bus Want Ads Are Busluess Boosters. '"SI 'ill A CUv in Michigan A IV Till What Is this . Woman Doing? About Buying Shoes The principal thing In buying Shoes is to get fitted and suited. Never mind the size get fitted. Never mind the price get suited. Many of our most particular pntrons ray only $3. B0. for their shoes. Others prefer to pay $4.00. Wa have shoes to fit every foot and suit every purse. We have the same perfect fitting styles nnd will give you the same at tention aeM satis'irtioii in fitting you with a pair of $2. B0 shoes as V do I you my 11.00. A son foot make a sore head, Let Mryker help yon to forget It. To the person bring ing li the i nrcct solution of this rebus In the neatest way, 1 will give free ten boxes of "2 In 1" shoe polish. Stryker Shoe Co.. 312 South I6th Street. find lost articles through their use. not putting your ad in the Bee NO ADS FROM CLAIRVOYANTS Bee Refuses to Take Money from These Fortune Telling EaKirs. WILL MAKE COLtJMNS CLEANER Palmists and Other' Charlatans of Thesr,CIaii Are Not Considered Desirable fltlsena liy the Police. Some months ago the managementof The Bee adopted the policy of excluding from its columns all objectionable medical ad vertising, and since then no medical copy Is accepted; that la, not subject to editing by the publisher. This policy met with the enjire approbation of the readers of Tlie Bee and the effort to publish a ctvan paper, h,oth In Its advertising and news columns, seems to be appreciated. Another move has Just been made In the same direction; in the future no advertise ments will be reerelvcd from clairvoyants, palmists and fortune tellers In general. While it Is true that most of the people who patronize t li in clues of charlatans are willing victims, the petty frauds which are carried on are so persistent that. In the aggregate the amount which they receive, without giving any return, Is a very con siderable sum. It is surprising thut so many victims should fall Into their hands. As a rule, most of the clairvoyants and fortune tell ing fraternity give only too visible evidence of the fact that If they have the power they claim, they have not used it for their own benefit. If any of the people visiting tfeem would stop to think a moment, they would readily see that If any one could foretell the future, a few days of specula tion on the stock market would put them beyond the need aid squalor In which most of them live. One Itnnchman's Kxperlnce. There Is a class of Itinerant clairvoyants, who travel from town to town, and while this class of people Is constantly under the surveillance of the police, petty crimes of all sorts and sometimes more serious charges are brought to their door. Not long ago, a Wyoming ranchman came Into town and called on one of the clair voyants, whoso advertisement he had read. He suid that he had an Important matter about which he wanted to consult him and asked what his fee would be. He was told that the fee would be from 'l to 5. "Well," said the ranchman, "I am will ing to make It ft0. providing you will satisfy me that you can do the things that I yju claim In your advertisement. In the j first place, you might as well tell me what my r.ame is." The clairvoyant suggested that they could get In communication with the spirits by his writing his name on one of the pair of slates, which would be tied together. The ranchman Immediately became furious and said that "he had seen that game worked before." The clairvoyant Insisted that nothing could be done when he was so much out of accord with the spirits and that he must get himself Into the proper attitude before the spirits would com municate through their favored medium. "What I want you to do," said he, "is to sit down here quietly for a few minutes, close your eyes, think of nothing J In particular, so that you will not be In an antagonistic spirit when I come hack Into the room; do exactly as I say." Uot Ills Papers. After leaving the ranchman alone for ten or fifteen minutes In the darkened room the clairvoyant told him to arise, keep bis eyes closed and to pluce his hands on his shoulders. When In this position tiie clair voyant abstracted a package of letters from the ranchman's coat pocket snd then told him to sit quietly, with his eyes closed, for a short period longer. Leaving the room, the clairvoyant got sufficient Infor mation from the letters and repeated the proCtas, replacing the letters In the ranch man's poefcet. lie then proceeded to tell him some things that seemed positively miraculous to the, ranchman about his pri vate affairs, and not ouly did lis get ths K rffZfffcl, CLr " $M from the ranchman, but the westerner was sufficiently Impressed by Mb powers that he sent him other victims. "The practices of clairvoyants and for tune tellers," said Chief of Police Donahue, "are proof that there are a great many weak-minded people. They don't know It, , n't know It, . lish and aroi K'omcn fakliW .ders of the' of course, but they are foolis easily duped by tho men and wc who pass themselves as readers of the' 'past, present and future.' Of course, the whole fortune telling business Is all non sense. Most people think this and for that very reason all clairvoyants are a menace hard to get at, for when people are duped by them they are ashamed to complain. There have been many, moBt of them women, who have come to me with the complaint that they have received unfair treatment from some fakir, but when I suggest filing a complaint In police court they shrink from muklng the matter public, Are Vndenlranle Cltleens. "The trouble with the fortune tellers Is not that they are really dangerous crimin als, they are merely undesirable citizens. Most of them are transients and operating under assumed names. Whenever one conies to town I ask for references and whenever I can pot at them I make them leave town. We don't want them If we can be rfil of them. If I had my way about It, they would never be allowed to advertise in the newspapers. "Thy do very little harm by telling their, patrons dungerous lies, for it Is their busi ness to have the subject leave their pluce In a more pleasant frame of mind than he came. Women are their victims much more than men. Jealousy Is the trouble that usually prompts them to seek 'the fakir's advice and they aro always assured that In a short time everything will come out all right.! For such assurance ths vic tim Is always willing to pay a reasonable price. The clairvoyant gets possession, however, of a great number of domestic secrets by these interviews and the victim Is easily persuaded that the money paid for reading la well spent. When a foolish person Is cajoled Into a happy frame of mind by a fortune teller and led to think that he has received some very valuable arivlqe he will usually repeat the call. "For the pas! two or three years there rTave been no fortune telling swindlers In town, but they exist In great number and we have to be on a lookout for them. Their usual scheme Is to sell an absolutely worthless charm to some dupe, who pays a big price for It, thinking that he Is getting safety from all sorts of perils. We don't want the fortune tellers because they extract a great deal of hard earned money from the superstitious and give nothing In return. They are parasites on the weak-minded portion of the public. FEDERAL COURT OPENS EARLY Fall Term Will Brain Over a Month He fore It laaallr Does. The fall term of the federal courts will now begin over a month earlier than here tofore. lTn1 r the old law, before the division of the district, the fall term at Omaha began In November. Under tho new law the term will beifln the fourth Monday In September, or on Monday, Sep tember 23. A grand Jury will be drawn for the term, as well as a petit Jury. "We expect to begin at once on the open ing of the term In the trial of the land cases still remaining on the docket and dispose of them as quickly as possible," said District Attorney floss. "Then wo will take up the safety appliance, and twenty-eight-hour law cases against the several railrnuds, of which a number aro now pending In" the United States district court. Hitherto the railroads have been disposed to compromise on the twenty, eight-hour rams, which relates to the time In which live stock In shipment may be kept on the cars without rest, food or water, and confessjudgment in the mini mum fine of $'00. However, the Department of Agriculture, which Is back of ttuss cases, refuses to make any further com promise and Insists upon the railroads being fined the maximum of ro fr ea, h ir.omuon or tne law. This, of courss ths railroad, will resist, and h.nca the ,.11 win bav, to go to UiV" i