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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1907)
TU1J UMAIIA "DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, .SEPTEMBER 26, 1907. ANTI-MORMONS WILL WIN American Party Slated for Victory by Salt Lake Mayor. KEEP THE STREETS CLEAR 3 BRIEF CITY NEWS Urn Hoot print It. Joan A. BUman for jsoron.r. Io lotau, undertaker, new location, Hth and Jone. TtU DquBlas COL r. A. sUnsfcart . photographer, removed to Eighteenth and Farnam street. nuut ssxai-anthraclts, $7.50 per ton Central Coal and Coke Co. of Omaha. full Drtse Unit and Prince Albert, latest style, at Vollroer'a, 1078. 16th Bt. Encourag your children to nave and et them good example by starting a sav ing's account with the City Saving Bank. psbltaal SrukuiHi 0t Divorce Judge .Troup. . ha. (ranted a divorce to Morris from Bisslo Rhrllch. Habitual drunkenness was the allegation. I Texas Szcorslon, Tuesday, .October 1, by the Texas tana and Immigration com pany. Mi Be building. Be ad under "Land for Bale" on want ad pag. Out stock of fall and winter woolen Is complete. An order placed now may be filled at your convenience. Ouckert A McDonald, 117 South Fifteenth street. Milliners la Wm4 . Sollalaf Kahl. A Johnson;' 'iwHimfcr."'-now i in Kllaatrlck's Miore, havo leased th south end of the JIAwer floor of the Wood building at Eigh teenth and Kernam -street. Ton Investigation, If an Investor, la Invited. With sixteen years' experience, 1,100 members, $2,(00.000 reaoilrces and a record of never having paid less than ler cent, we believe we can interest you. The Conservative, Ml Harney. pairs on Stat Xotl Repairs havo been started on th new iuartera of th State hotel at Ulli Douglas street. The ntlre building Is being remodeled. The nnnagement of the hotel expects to occupy .he new home early In October. Vra Bbaral at th. DanA dreaa re- acarsal and drill of all the parties who are ;o occupy positions on the floats tor the tarnlval parade will be held at the Den Thursday evening, beginning at. 1:30 sharp. Everybody Is expected to be on hand, large gpae fot rood how toa Jails-her, th McCord-llrudy company' and th Alien Bros, company all have engaged large space for exhibit at the pure food Miow at th. Auditorium. Circular and prospectuses have been printed and ent out to jobber and manufacturer, Additional Olark Appointments dcorge 1. Wliltmore ha ben ppolntd addl lonal clerk In th mailing department of he Omaha poatofllce. Mr. VVhltmor. re ilgned from thescrvlc In January last tnd ha decided to r-enter th. service ind Is reinstated a an additional clerk. Heed f aTw Court Hon Th munl :ipal affair committee of th Commercial Uub met Wednesday t. plan th. w.ra del, jated to it by the executive committee In '.he matter of securing Information regard 'ng the need of a new court house. 8ub ommlttees were appointed for various titles. Tmn'i Band Goes West Navaasar's ladles' Military Brass band, under th. dl ctlon of Iewl Bcrnle, passed west CHOLERA MORBUS Diarrhoea, Dysentery or Cholera lnfan turn can b quickly cured by usinf WAKEFIELD'S Blackberry Balsam Every horn, should hav. supply of this r liable rm.dy on hand. 61 yr of cure. All drucjfitU t.11 it. E8 cent. , Th ORWARD 1U Dentist 405 Paxton Blk. lloura hone A. at. to 1. M. vomg-laa ?. Uneven TEETH It t!l Improve your appearance and ber.sf I your digestion If yOu will let u alialten your crooked teeth. Nothing will add more t. your pleasure. - Our expert treatment will give you perfect satisfaction. Ask us about It over li. 'phone. It' worth th trouble. TSXXi OCT. 16TX. $8, CXOWaTa, $3 V Wort while others rest. Win through sheer energy. The greatest energy-producing food made from . wheat is Uneeda Biscuit the perfect soda cracker. In moisture and dust proof packages. . NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY through Omaha on the Overland Limited Wednesday morning, enroute for Oakland, Cal. After an engagement on the Pacific coast the band will return to Omaha tor ail engagement at the Orpheum. Xotel Bratlena Increasing AH of th. Omaha hotel ar. becoming overt whelmed with applications for sleeping and boarding accommodations for Ak-Sar-Ben week. The demand "for accommodations Is far In excess of last year, but the hotels feel satisfied that they can met all de mand made on them. - Ma, for Cralghton Student Mass for Henry Knich of Santa CJiira. Cal.,- th. Crelghton college student Who died 1 of heart failure Tuesday, was ' said at the church of the Holy Sepulcher at o'clock Wednesday morning. The body rests In the priests' lot at the Holy Sepulcher ceme tery, awaiting Instructions from parents In California. Probate f Bamaoclottl Will Th. will of Dr. Hugo L. Ramacctottl was admitted to probata Wednesday In county court and the widow was appointed executrix. The will leave $1 to John Ogle, th. adopted son of Dr. Ramaoclottl's first wife and the remained of the estate to Hri; Ramacolottl, with a request she divide his Jewelry among 'their three s6ns.' " ' '" -;. f James McDonald Qoes to Chicago Th. probation officer will 'send James Mc Donald tai Chicago. James I the small boy who left home with, a tramp and, wound up hta nomadic career In Omaha. His father will not send th money for his re turn and hi aunt,, who Is willing to care for him, is unable to raise the money to pay his railroad fare. The county will pay for bis transportation and he will leave for home Saturday night. O'Xesfe Esi Bant Bt Town T. J. O'Keefe, editor of lite Alliance Herald, la In tli. City. "We claim that Alliance la tit best town in Nebraska outside of Omaha." said Mr, O'Keefe. The Burling ton I preparing to build a depot to cost $100,000 and all other Improvements ar. on th. same scale. Alliance I growing In n way to surprise the- most sanguine cltlsena and there Is no apparent end to the pros perous conditions of the community." Bishop Btnma to Bow. In Bast Bishop Worthlngton of th. Episcopal dio cese of Nebraska returned to New York Tuesday night. H. cam. to Omaha last week to look over the condition of Brownell Hall and to deliver an address to th. stu dents of that institution at th. opening of the school year. He said that be found the affairs of the school In a most pros perous condition, with every indication for th. coming yea being the best in th. his tory of th. institution. federal Oonrt Xey Off No business of a general or Important character was trans, acted In either of . the gederal court rooms Wednesday. Judge T. p. Munger ha gon. to Lincoln and Judge W. H. Munger will leave Thursday morning for Duluth, Minn., where he will bold court for several days. The grand jury resumed work Wednesday morning In the Investigation of minor post office cases, one or two liquor cases and th. matter of an assault with Intent to kill coming from Fort Omaha. Woman Mead. In Tata fot Man -Tears and pleadings of Nina Smith, a boarding house keeper, did not save one of her star boarder, S. Hart, from receiving a tlff sentence for assault and battery In police court Wednesday. Hart beat the woman unmercifully and h appeared before the magistrate With eye almost swollen shut to plead for her boarder. 8h. said sh. had kept house for Hart and his son tor fifteen years and that he was a good man, but wanted . hang himself Tuesday even ing and when she Interfered with his plans, he beat her. Memorials af T. A. Tonkins in Work The funeral service of Fred A. Tompkins, which was held at his 1st. residence, 2716 Douglas street, and burled afforest Lawn cemetery, wer. largely attended. Mr. Tompkins cam to Omaha In 1880 from Bos. ton, Mass. He was a carpenter by trade and wa for five year building inspector under George C. Whit lock. He was highly respected by all who knew him and memo rial of hi Ufa may be found all over th. alty in the shape of houjte and building which be has worked upon. H. leaves wife snd son In Omaha, one sister residing In Msine and a brother In 'Alaska. t'sera of 4aUk Skla Skee Pellsk say It I th bt and most lasting polish tbey hav. ever used. It gives a polish to the leather and it won't rub off en th. clothing. A well saf 1U4 user I th beat advertisement.' t Don't throw your tlm away. If you happen to be out of employment, get em ployment. If you can do anything juat ! fairly well you need not b. without plenty to do. Put a want ad In Th. Be. telling your qualifications and you'll soon te busy again. You are Just th. person som. em. ployer wants, and you'll find that employer If you take the rlgut course. Be. Waal Ad. Produce Result h i Li .1 STANDARD IN LOCAL COURT Rockefeller Corporation Kay Be Tried in Omaka. SENDS CIRCULARS TO OFFICIALS Adopt. Plan of Seeking to Plaent. Official. " Before Whom tt Thinks It Mr Be Ar raigned, The Standard Oil company has set a pac. In the fine art of advertising which some alleged experts In that line of Industry may do well emulate, but will find difficulty In following. The Rockefeller company shows Its fine Italian hand by seeking to placate courts and prosecutor with plausible state ments of Its Interests In litigation. The Idea I said to be. that of securing a fair trial In the future and that thea. shrewd circulars ar. sent to court, and to prose cuter, of law breakers only before whom th. Standard .thinks It. may be arraigned. Aa volume, bav. corns1 to Omaha; officials the inference Is th. Standard believes It will be called on th. carpet here.- The presence of several of the local representative of th Standard Oil com pany and their attorneys about th. federal building corridors during the. .sessl (i of th. grsnd jury gives color to a rumor that the Omaha grand Jury may be called upon to look into some of th. Standard oil transaction In this violrllty, The Standard Oil company recently has sent out a number of pamphlets,' som. of which hav. reached th. office - of. tho United States district attorney in Omaha, giving the Standard OH company's view of th. recent $29,MO,000 fin. Imposed against that i company by Judge Landls of Chicago. The pamphlet Is addressed to th. employes and stockholder of th. Standard Oil company and la Issued upon th. authority of the directors of the com pany. , .... Context of Pamphlet. Th pamphlet states: . This pamphlet la Issued 'to bur employes and stockholders in which We desire to em- fihasise for the half million people directly ntereated In Its welfare, the aaaurance of the company s absolute Innocence of wrong lioins- in any of the prosecutions lately In stituted against It In the federal courts. In the matter of the $29,240,000 fine imposed en the Standard Oil company of Indiana. It should be as widely known aa possible that this Is not a esse of rebates or discrimina tion, but simply the legality of a freight rat. and th. verdict was obtained up'on a hair-splitting technicality, aided hy the rig orous exclusion of evidence that would have removed all presumption of guilt. The case has been taken on appeal to the higher courts, to which we must look for that calm judgment which will remove the rights of th. cltlaen from th. field politics and public clamor. So persistent has ben the warfare waged with all the overpowering authority of the federal admin tstratloti asalnst the Standard OH company, that It has beer) manifestly difficult to get a fair hearing before the public, or In a large portion of the press, the latter to Its great harm swayed by socialistic outcry from below and political pressure from above. Attacks of this kind are aimed at the na tion's Individual and mercantile life. . M.aT.tt m Oil Rates. Then follow a long statement by James A. Moffett. president of th. Standard Oil company of Indiana, going Into detail as to th. matter of oil rates In th. tat of Illinois. Th. pamphlet also contains a large number of extract from paper all over th country in which th. action of Judg. Landls is characterised a. playing to th galleries and various other com ments, treating th fin. Imposed by Judg. Landls with levity and referring to th. fine as "an hysterical episode, unjust, blow at a great Industry," and th. Ilk.. District Attorney Ooss Is not disposed to discuss th .matter of th. possibility of th. Standard Oil company being Investi gated by th. present grand Jury and woulj neither deny or affirm that uch action might be taken. W. hav. received a number of pamph lets from -the Standard Oil company sine, the Imposition of th. $30,000,000 fine by Judg. Landls." said Mr. Ooss. Writing a want ad for The Be I only g moment work, and Incur but a trifling expense, and does th. work every time. If you mail a want ad to Th. Be. at mid night, enclosing price In stamps or coin. it will be printed th. next aftaynoen and I- probably answered th. same evening. If you would try this want filling method once you would probably And frequent us. for It afterwards. That's th. case with others. Th. Bee want ads never ' disap point They alway. fill your want. . Th largest and strongest 1. none tod good Jot one'. Investments, whether $1 or $5,000. The Conservative, 1(14 Harney street, has resources of $f.tJO.or Mnd rr serve of 1 06.00 to show for the Investments of ft members, with a dividend rat. of I per rank ftt HE AND COUNCHMEN IN OMAHA Case t. Inspect Street, and Pnkllo Work, with View of Serarlag AaCgeatlea of Improve meat M Heme. "I do not car. to enter lnto a general discussion of th. Mormon question as It pertains to our city and state politic, but I will make thi prediction, that the Amer ican party anti-Mormon will be generally successful In the fall -elections which will turn on a three-cornered contest," said Mayor J. 8. Branaford of Salt Lake City, who la at th. head of, a delegation of city eouncllmen Inspecting th. streets and pub lic works of Omaha for th. purpose Of securing suggestions for Improvements at hem. In company with ' Mayor Dahlman and City Engineer Rosewater the party Is rid ings over th. city In automobile. Inspecting street paving and other public' works and erVlce. Th. party ha been away from horn, for several weeks and has Inspected city serv ice and methods In a number of cities. In cluding Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Chlcsgo and Kansas City. The principal reason for Its trip Is the fact that Salt Lake City Is In process of developing Its lighting facilities. Heretofore electricity has been th only form of treet lighting ued. A new gas company has recently completed a plant and desired to secure a contract for lighting som. of th. streets. Under Its contract it supplies fuel gas at 0 cent, per 1,000 cubic feet and illuminating gas at $1. per 1,000 cubic feet gross. Harrlman Hu Street Cars. The Harrlman Interests have now ac quired th. street car system of Salt Lake C,lty and ar. planning improvements which Include a large central electrlo generating plant which will supply electricity for both lighting and power purposes. Heretofore th. electrlo supply has been secured from water power outside of . the city and trans mitted for several miles, one company sup plying lights for both Salt Lake City and Ogdnn. Because of th. low stag, of water In summer this power I not reliable as the coal power plant, The city also I. Just completing water system on the gravity plan and extensive paving operation ar being planned. For all of the, reasons It wa decided to send a party of counollmen to a, how suoh work I dona t other places. Omaha - is -the last point on th. trip and th. mayor and his friends will return horn. Thursday morning. Mayor Bransford was chosen by th. city oouncll to fill A vacancy and his term will , xpir. this fall. H. ho been . nominated j for offlc by the American party and will face a three-cornered fight In the election. He declined to discus Mormon state pol itics, but ssld that in a three-cornered light th American (anti-Mormon) party would be generally successful. If recent i election ar any criterion. j Speaking of the growth of Salt Lake 'City, ; he ald th. Increase in population since 1900 has been nearly 10,000 and that there Is not a vacant house in the town. . . j MAYOR'S FRIEND WANTS WIFE Schoolmaster ' Come from Crawford ' County and ! Mast IIave ... Mate. One of Mayor Dahtman's former con stituents Is In Omsha In search of a wife. He is Charles "wnBTIesr who says he Is teacher 1n district N SJ, Crawford county, and that hi home.addr- Is Crawford. Mr. Jones reached. (maha Tuesday and Immediately went to the home of . Rev. Frank L. Loveland, paatof of the First Methodist church. To him he explained that he was In search of a wlfeand asked for advice. Mr. Loveland-referred -htm to B. P. Morris, secretary ,of ..the Associated Char ities. He hurried to. the city hall and pre ferred his request to Mr. Morris, saying he desired to leave for home with his wife on the night train, but that if the .woman Insisted ha would be willing to stay In Omaha two days so. tils prospective wife could become acquainted with him before the ceremony. ' To Mr. Morris ho explained that h had been married, but . that hi wife had run away with another man and that he found himself so lonesome In his country work he felt Impelled to secure a helpmeet at the earliest possible moment. He said he had references lrr plenty and had com. prepared tq convince any woman Of his standing In the community and of the seriousness of' his Intentions, but he wanted a wife and that before Thursday night. .''.. ' Mr. Morris took lit nam. and address. with Mr. Loveland as reference, and, while j explaining that supplying wives was not I in line of the charity work aa carried on In Omaha, he would do what he could. If any woman of the s,me mind aa Mr. Jonea applied to him. LICENSE HITS CLUBS HARD i Mar Force Som. la Drop Refresh ment Adjunct and Be Met by Others. . , Prospect of necessity of taking out a city license for the sale of liquor has cre ated considerable Interest In club circles In Omaha and a number of th. clubs face a proposition to Increase th. membership dues sufficiently to raise the $1,000 to pay for th. license. Th. matter has been dis cussed at the Field club and som. of the members favor abolishing th buffet rather I inin to pay ine iicwusv ion, wiiuv muon ' desire to meet the additional coat by In creasing the dues. Th. Tel Jod Sokol membership Is talking of abolshlng th. refreshment room and I permitting a regularly licensed dealer to have th. concession of selling liquor on th premises to club members only.- Some members of th. Elks odg. have Indicated a deslr. to meet th. fee and continue as heretofore. Members of political and social clubs, such as the Dahlman Democracy club, ar. still "up In the' air." The mem- ! bers are confident that any rule which will Include the other club will also govern their case and they ar Inclined to let th larger organisation fight th matter it any fight I to b made. One of the leader of th Dahlman Democracy said: "If w must take out a licenae after January 1 to distribute liquor to th mem bers, w. will do so , provided we don't abolish th buffet. Th matter la one really more Important to audi cluba aa the Turn er than to us, for, while we dispense li quor to member It I a very small part of our business and wa eould maintain our organisations without a single social fea ture." Announcements, wedding stationery and (ailing cards, blank book and masaxln binding. 'Phone Doug. H04. A. i. Hcs,. I no. They are ly ' f u bs M bs All Indications are now that w will have more people In our city this wk aud next than we bar erer had before during the Ak-Bar-Ben festivities. The streets will naturally be crowded by vis itor and our own people. It la therefore necessary Nth at the el de walks from Chicago to Howard streets on Sixteenth, on Farnam from Thirteenth to Nineteenth and on Douglaa from Thirteenth to Seventeenth be kept open for the use of the people; therefore no chairs, seats or other obstructions will be allowed at any of those streets between the points named. All side streets must be kept clear of wagons, vehicles or other ob structions. AH heavy wagona loaded or unloaded must be kept off the streets laid out for Vhe parades; during such parades other streets must be used. I also ask those who are using part of the streets on which to place building material to clear this away and clean up so as to make all the room possible. I respectfully ask that this or der and request be observed and let us all do everything in our power to have our visitors be com fortable and happy while In our city. JAMES C. DAHLMAN. Mayor. Omaha, September 25, 199,7. ABUSE FROM ' HER HUSBAND Woman Says He Hamlllated Her sad Took All the Moaer he Earned. Far from being a blessing to his wife, Is Earl J. Blessing. 410 North Fourteenth street, and former democratic candidate for , Justice of the peace, it the charges which she has filed against him In police court are true, and on which he haa been arrested. Pulling off his wife's stockings and abus ing her In the presence of boarders, Is one of the' things which Blessing Is accused of doing Wednesday morning, while hunting fof money to convert into -popularity. Aa a, result of Mrs. Blessing's failure to keep her stockings on fourteen hungry boarders are waiting for meals and have joined Senator : LaFollette in boycotting the beef trust, and went onto a strictly vegetable diet. After recovering her stocking Mrs. Earl Blessing went to the pollco station and told her story to City Prosecutor Daniel. She is a little woman and was neatly dressed in white when she displayed her pinched arms In the sttorney's office and told how she had been humiliated by her hus band, to say nothing of .his having taken the money which her fourteen boarders had paid her in advance. I "Now he's oft spending th. money for liquor," she sobbed, "and I have not enough to buy meat for dinner. Earl Blessing ha been on a spree for a week and has taken money from me a- number of times, which I have earned by keeping ; a boarding house at 410-412 North Four teenth street." 0MAHANS TO DEVELOP MEXICO Xacatecas Exploitation aad Develop ment Compear Orsraalaed with nig Capital Stock. . r ,. The 'Zacatcca' Exploitation and Develop ment company ha lseen organised by n number of Omaha, ' South Omaha and Plattamouth buslnesa men for the purpose of developing real estate and mining prop erties In the republic of Mexico. Article or Incorporation were filed with th county clerk Wednesday. The capital stock Is to be $200,000. divided Into 40,000 share at $5 each, and tho holding of the varlou In corporator ar 'given In the article a follow: E. L. Howe South Omaha, 100 shares; D. M. Haverly, Omaha. 100 shares; Q. F. S. Burton, Omaha, 100 shares; A. J. Calvert, Omaha, 11.400 shares; Henry El vldge. Omaha, 1,000 shares; C. A. Marshall, Plattsmouth, 100 shares; H. D. Travis, Plattamouth, 100 shares. The articles give the corporation th I widest latitude. It I authorised to operate j mine, develop 'oil, petroleum, coal, gaa, shale, asphalt urn, asbetoa, salt fields; ac quire and develop water rights for power and Irrigation; cultivate farm lends and buy and sell farm products;, operate quar ries, cut and . buy and sell lumber, build and operate steam and electric railways, telephone lines, canals and other water ways, and conduct general manufacturing business. MILLARD GLAD WU COMES Former Senator Expresses Pleasure that He Will Retsrs a. v Minister. "I was pleased to read that Wu Ting Fang had been reappointed minister of China to trie United States," said former Senator Millard. "While I have retired from politics, I am still watching with in terest th development of the far east, and 1 I am ure the presence of Wu Ting Fang ' at Washington will mean much for the growth of western Idea In China and a more friendly feeling between the people. Mr. Wu I essentially a progressive; not necessarily In the nolay sense of the word, but his every thought haa been for the best Interests of his country, and, often handicapped by conditions, he always suc ceeded In creating a favorable Impression for th. people who sent him to America. I "I met him on several occasions and was always Impressed wtlh th. straightforward ness of the man and his evident deslr. to Impress the American peoplo with the fact that the Chinese ar not what on would Imagine from acquaintance with the coolie. He I a good man for both countrle and I will be glad to see him back at th post he filled so well." MASSIVE STEELP0WER POLES Eighteen Clgaatle' Pillar Placed la Vale Paeiflo New Shop Balldlag. Eighteen massive steel poles for carrying heavy, power wires front th. power house to the new building, hav. been Installed at the Union Pacific shops by the Western Contractors' Supply company. They sre forty feet In height, ar. four feet square at the base and weigh one and one-half tons each. Such a sle la made necessary by the , weight of the wires th. poles ar. to carry. I The Western Contractors' Supply com pany has secured the contract for erecting a SOO-foot steel span bridge across the Nio brara river at Spencer. Th. work will be done In October. Ay.r a hula are liver piUs. luey act directly on tbs liver, toaka mors bile secreted. Thi is why they .cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, aick-beadache. Ask your doctor knows a tetter lax knows s better laxitiva pill, we cer- tben use bis kind. kits fO.inrCt., LOW: 1 SIMS. Our New Style Books For the Fall and Winter of 1 907-8 are fresh from the press arid , ready to mail to our out-of-town customers. . The book for Men contains many handsome illustrations of Fall and Winter Suits and numerous ' samples of the goods from which the Suits are made. The book for Women is profusely illustrated with beautiful pictures depicting the latent styles. These illustrations were made from photographs of the jiarments offered for sale. With these books in hand you can buy Clothing and Furnishings as easily and cheaply as you could if you were in our Big Store. When you write state which book you want. THEY ARE FREE. n iaii.ii OMAHA. M-SAR-BEN VISITORS VVant Ro orris 1 oi(H Thousands of strangers are coming f to Omaha Tell them of your vacant rooms through an ad in the Bee, Cost is small, returns larger. TOWMLOTS A JEW MS Opening sale of lots will take place in the new town of Lemmon, South Dakota, on Octobert and al; Jlefctingerorth Dakota on October 17th. Sale at Bowman, North Dakota will be held later. These towns are west ,of the Missouri River, on the Pacific Coast Extension of the ' CHICAGO, ilLWlKEE&ST.PAUL . RAILWAY Lemmon will become a county seat in the division of Butte County. It is 197 miles west of Aberdeen, South Dakota, and 107 miles west of the Missouri River in one of the best agricultural sections of the entire west. Ilettinger will be the County Seat of Adams County, North Dakota, and Bowman of Bowman County, North Dakota. '-Special train-service, including sleeping cars, dining cars and coaches, will be offered from Aberdeen for each sale. Fixed prices will be placed on the lots and the choice will be by auction. Descriptive map and folders sent free on request. F: A Nash, """ General Western Agent, csas saoa t l -m t,3 Many of you are troubled and peVplexed; waiting- thinking- turning- wishing and finally despairing about your physi cal condition, meanwhile allowing sums special disease or weakness to blight your future career and prospects. Why silently suffer on, vitiated with disease, without taking proper stt-ps to be curd when you have health within your grasp? Our superior skill will avail you nothing un less you give us the opportunity to dem onstrate our ability in the treatment 4nd cure of th. diseases and weaknesses that constitute our specialty. The resource of th Institute are' within your re.icli, hence why experiment with ilansero'J and unreliable treatment as wull as quick cure fallacies that only ergravate the trouble! Btart right., and start at one W treat men entr and care promptly, safely end tnoron'ffkly, and at th lowtat eost, BrtOSTCHITta. OATlaSX, RUBTOUI DTDltlTT, BLOOD roi OS, IUN XHSXaass, KIDNEY and nz,DBt jD aad all SpceUJ iimeass sh w&&ssa v-att tsiv Consult Frea STATE A1EDICAL INSTITUTE DOOTOK Call and Qo Examined Froe or Writ ' Office Ileur 6 A. 51. a. P. M. Sunday 10 to t Only 1303. Farnam St., Between 13th and 14th 8ts., Omaha, Neb. Permanently Established la Omaha, Nebraska. , ' aaassaB Bee Want Ads Lli.stiwiaaJ!aiiswusBjm. A1LESM1 Omaha, Neb. BCaraOQZS3 vecipiioauons IHi KUIA3U Sptciilltis ot tai FOR Hi f- -v. , ' I i j ,- .- NisiB- 'ii Ti i" mil ii mMi Produce Results