Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1908)
V THtt -OMAHA SUNDAY HKK: MAY IOCS. Telephone (COIV2IE MONDAY Remarkable Sale Beautiful Black , , Dress Voiles. 1 1 "The Best Kvcr" is what hundreds exclaimed who attended the great opening Clearing Sale of Black Voiles. which started Saturday and will continue this week. This isla Bale out of the ordinary. It reprcsents'an importer's and manufacturer's entire surplus stock. Xo matter how nice the voiles or what they cost every piece must go this week. Ask your friends to come with you and give them the closest of inspection. Note carefully the savings. All our 1160 and 11.60 quality, on of All our 1110 and All Our 91. "t and $115 quality, -a fabric the "handsomest and most perfect fabric SI. IS quality now of treat beauty and unusual wearing qual- at the price ever named. J 1.07. 11.10 yard. 79C and 2c. Ity, now $1.23 and IMS a yard. Display la IliUtaU Straet Window. Our Great Ma,y White Goods Sale COMMENCES MONDAY AT 8 A. M. Special Bala Whit Embroidered Mailt and Batistes for Origina tion aad Branlug Dreaaea. All $1.00 40-Inch Embroidered Mulls, 7."o vard. All $1 .15 40-Inch Kmliroidered Mullw SSc yard. All $1 Mi 40-Inch Embroidered Mulls. $1.20 van). All $1.75 4d-lnrh Embroidered Miilla. $1.49 yard. All $2 0 40-lnch Kmbroidered Mulls. $!.! yard. All $2.25 40-Inch Embroidered Mulla. $l. yard. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ibmhhhhhhmmmhwbihbmiihhbhV' flpeolal Pale 40-lnch Bpeclal Bale tin e n Special Bale Walt SnorUl Ralw .lnrh I.lnn rinlaked Sheeting for Women's Soft rinlahtd Mpec Rale HO-lncn lawn. n"a aad Bklrta. riqaea. Linen Halting. 5 nip,.,. ". 40- All $1 50 72-Inch Linen A 1 1 Jfie White . . lr,rh t Iner? Finished Sheeting". $1.00 yard. Piquea, 19c yard. 4 pieces 60c Linen Lawns 15 c p yard All IL83 72-Inch Unen All 5e . w h 1 1 e . Suiting 29c ner vd l,awns, w. per m, Wieetlng, 11. 3 yard. Piques, 48c yard. Bulling; JC per ja. Imperial Long Oloth Bale. Ore Bpec ilal Bale WblU India I Special Bale White Butting-. ll'uXv'XV.Jr v.Td t:'0l,, All HOC WW IndU Llnon. All 25c Repp Suiting.. 19c per l V-MiTr' vVrd Cl0t"' 1 AirWhrt. India Llnon. All ' 2Sc Devonshire- Buit.nW il&.'HW C,0th' "aI.0 Wuh ' India, . Llnon.' ' A..V Adenine Suitings. 25c 1 Wl'Hr nrt' Cl0th, AlH iTc "Whit. India Llnon, P Alf.Sj Silk Repp Bulling., $Bc C,th' 9AV."l52"v,do White .India Llnon.' " Al "fVe Duck Suitings, 10c per c per yard. yard. Special Kale Itcmnanta Wlilt India Llnoa in Our Keonomy Hascmcnt, Monday. 5.000 yards 12 He 16c and 20c qualities Whlta India Linon in remnants of 1 to 15 yards, Monday, npeclal price, yard' 5c. The Newest Styles Special Sale of Lace Cur ' , .,' '' tains 1 Monday. .76c Ruffled Swiss Curtains 39c pair . ; , (i 25 Snowflake Curtains at . CSc pair.' "' 1 1. 50 Nottingham Lace Cur tains 98c pair. $2.50 Cable Net Lace Cur tains $1.87 pair. $2.50 Fish. Net Lace Cur tains at $1.98 pair. $4.50 Novelty Battenburg Curtains $2.19 pair. $5.00 Novelty Battenberg Curtains $3.48 pair. Brass extension rods with . brass or silver finish ends, with brackets complete, at 5c. We sell Mc'Call's Celebrated Patterns. MORE PENSI0NSF0R WIDOWS m l.ai Abolishes Old Feature Barring, Widows with fttSO Income. -All widows of veterans of the civil war - of the army and navy of the United States arc, under tlin act of congress dated April, 19, 1908, entitled to , a pension of $13 Ter month. The law states: "If any officer or enlisted man who served ninety days or more in tlio army or navy of the United States during the late civil war and who haa bee it honorably dis charged therefrom, has. died or shall here after die, l aving a .widow, such widow s'riall, upon due proof of her husband's ath, without proving his death to ba the rult of his army or navy service, be placed U(:irj the pension roll from the date of the filing of her application therefor under this act,, fft the rate of $12 per month during her widowhood, provided, that on id widow ahall , have mur.ifd said ts.M'ter prior to June 1'7, 1W; and the benefits of this section shall .tnclude those ' wldowa whoae husbands If flvlug would have' a pensionable atatua tinder the Joint' resolutions of February IS, ts; July 1. 1903, and June 28. lu." The law provides that no claim agerX or attorney shall be recognised in the adjudi ration of claims under the first section of this act, and that no agent, attorney or other peraou engaged In preparing, present ing or prosecuting any claim under the pro vislore of the second section, 'of this act hall receive a sum greater than $10. . Thla new law does away entirely with the Income feature of former penaion lawa, which barredi widows who. had ao income exceeding VM per . year from receiving a pension. The new law providea that quail tied widows under this act ahall receive $12 per month, without regard to what other income they may have. - TROUBLE IN CANON SETTLED Partington Withdraws Objertlon Height of Boysea ; Daaa. ' to THERMOrOUS. Wye. May l.-(8pecl.) A report has been received here to the effect that the Boysen Mining company, '. which la putting In a power plant In the canon of the Big Horn near Blrdseye, will construct the dam to a height of fifty feet, the Turlington havtiig withdrawn Ita on ter. tlons, and If thla la true It puta n end to the btttsr fight waged by the Burlington against the nimlirg con par.y. The railroad ;aacrt'nt that the building of the dam to a lorialu htlght would prevent It from build ing through the Big Horn canon, and as IU peopht of this section waned the rati 'roml a Urge number of petitions against the dam builder were aecured. and the posi tion of the railroad company as sustained by the people and the stale engineer, wlu iled Ma permit to the Boysen people, . t lllng ti e dam io he built to a height cf ihlrt'y-ferl only. , Th- allied atthdrawa of crpcaitlnn by the rallrvoi! people trail to the belief tint the tljil.ntuD dot not Intend to ou'ld I) ta r a Douglas 6IS Reaches All Departments pecla .Bala White Veritas. Liwii for Oradaattoa Dresses. , All 25c White 18c per yard. All 30c White Peraian Lawns, - Peraian Lawns, 20c per yard. All S6c White Peraian Lawn, 25c per yard. , All 45c White l!tc per yard. Persian Lawn, , All 50c White Peraian Sf,r ner vard Lawns, All 5c' Wtilte " Persian 'Lawn, 49c per yard. Hperial Kale Whit Pin id and Iftecked Dimities. Ail 35c White Checked Dimities 25c yard. Ail 35c Plaid Dimities 25c yard. All 25c White Checked Dimities 19c yard. All 20c White Checked Dimities 16c yard. In Mid-Summer Millinery Are Now Ready RG CORSETS The present Paris ian fashion which de mands high bust, well defined ' waist line and long back has been developed t the hlgheut degree In the new R. & O. models. We have a complete stock of tho newest models and can fit every flguro to absolute perfec tion. Here we allow a most desirable model far medium figure. High bust. . deep hip. long . back, made of batiste. Price $1.00 each. Ask for style A' 15. Every pair guaranteed. through the canon,' and If this Is true then Thcrmonolis will not got the proposed ex tension of the Burlington's Frannie-Wor-lund line. BALDHEADS GAY DECEIVERS What Early Pletr Honda the Rider Man JSow Illdgea with Flaffr Wise. Shakespeare was as bald a a badger himself, and knew the gold-brick value of wigs better than a mod urn Imposition wear ing a $60 toupea. The hlgh-browed William waa going some aa a stage manager aa well ae a common drudge of an author, and the old-time stage manager knew enough about wigs to shake Esau for the porridge and leave him naked aa the babe unborn. The bald-headed man la the game old de ceiver that he wa In bald-headed Will iam time only more so. He seems to have studied over the whole hair propo sition during the last few years, with a sincere desire' to grow a fresh crop and be the real thing In hair. If It lay In his scalp to do It but with a stern resolve to make an Impressive bluff at It anyway. If the dramatic William were alive again to Inquire anxiously, "Haa It come to thla?' ine toupee maxer would respond, to a man: "It ha. Btep right In and measure up for a new crop of genuine human hair, pre. pared by genuine member of the Human Hair Worker' union, duly organised throughout the United State. Tour Job I easy alongside of what we did far John P Rockefeller. We'll give you the same terms we did him, $7& per, and guarantee satis faction." It may be that John D.'a example wa what set the toupee fashion going at the pace it Is using nowr ao a little solid, re liable facr,' from the lips of the man who toupeed him, dught to "be" worth hearing. A shining pat Is an ever-present source of worry to many a man 'who could give the Apollo Belvidere the minus sign on baldness and still leave him In the class with the Sutherland sisters. Such a man might have atarted off, when young, with a head of as fluffy hair a ever mad the fortune of the Circassian beauty when she marcelled It with Milwaukee beer, to find himself, around J, with little more than an eyelash to his head. He feela conspicuous, and he la conspicuous. Ho catchea colda In his head. Then, perhaps, he visit a toupee maker and ask the olemn question: "Csu I be fitted with a wig that will make me look real?" . fan he? The loupe man undertakes to give Mm head covering that look aa natural aa life, and he doea. Trade In human hair represents every strand the human head can grow, from the delicate, fair treaaee of Swedish Brunn hlldea to the ihu k. black, wiry hair of , Jnhn t'hlnamait. For false tresses ore greatly, in demand by women as well as wigs by men. Knrojw furnishes most of the lislr. In AusciU, Moravia, Sweden and Oermany the peasant women frequently aarrifk one centroi atrand. near the crown of the head, receiving a couple of dollars for a quantity of hair that auffiits only for 1 "' aaBjajsgaaW mtmm i .i i i mmm i . m mmmwmmmml-l-i-mm-mmmU '41 I Ipaotal Bala Kmbroidered Bwlia and Batistes. r All 30c Dotted B wis, -19c per yard. All J5c Dotted Swiss, SBo' per. yard. All 45c Dotted Swiss, SOe per yard. All 75e Embroidered Swiss, 59c per yard. All 85c Embroidered Swiss, 9c per yard. All il uu embroidered Swiss, 70e rr varri All $1.25 Embroidered Iwlss, r per yard. Monday Specials at In fants' and Children's Wear Department. Ruben's part wool shirts for thd little ones, sizes 1 to 6 at 3 5c each or. 3 for $1.00. ' Ruben's silk and lisle shirts, Bites 1, 2 and 3 at 90c each, sizes, I, 5 and 6 at $1.00 each. Infants' very fine quality of cotton shirts, odd sizes, to close at 20c! All of the wash dresses in white and colors that have be come soiled from display, sizes 1 to 4 years, will be closed out Monday at Half Price. All of the children's white linen and pique coata. aUo all of the wash hats that are slightly soiled will be closed out Monday at Half Price. Visit the Rest Room, Third Floor one-fourth part of a aood-sixed swltr-h Cut hair unwashed, uncleam-ri f nm... in free of duty. But. besides the hnn..t healthy tresses that are disposed of by the European peasant, there are the "comb ings" saved by her In a special bag and ia tor ou centa a pound to the Itinerant buyer. They are usually Imported after some necessary cleansing, and must pay a '"" a manutactured material. Like the coarse, Chinese hair, also combines. goods of this class go Into the cheaper srur or oraia ana pompadour. Very, light, golden hair and silvery grayN Commissioners D. H. Smith and Qeorga hair are the color that bring the high- PRice, Attorney P. W. Dougherty and Sec est prices, and hair of unusual length al ways commands special consideration. The cost of a good switch, and even th uiierior one, i rar rrom ex cessive, when the amount of labor and the quality of skill which ara expended are considered. Thorough soap and water waamng. soaking in olive oil to prevent "splitting," dry cleansina. or "melin In white and buckwheat flour to remove all oil, aortlng through comb to grade In lengths, curling-one process after another must be gone through before the hair la ready to go Into 'the. switch, the ouff ,.r the wig that Is td be Its permanent form. s-miaaeipnia North American DR. JOHN M'NULTY KILLED Prafesaor la w .York College Fall .... vowa ijfioi Shaft Meets lastaat Death. NEW YORK. May l.-Dr. John J. Mo Nulty. profeasor of philosophy In the col lege of the city of .New York, accidentally met death hy losing hi balance after alighting from-an ascending elevator In sq Uptown department store and plunging mrougii me eievator shaft five stories to the ground. He waa Instantly killed. H waa 46 years old and married. NO NEPOTISM IN OKLAHOMA Stringent Law Prohibiting the Prac tice is Passes) hy I.rgli. latnre. GUTHRIE, Okl.. May l.-The house today pasaed the Nepotism bill previously passed by the senate. Th bill la vsry stringent and provide that no one ahall be employed In any Judicial, executive or legislative department whtre a relative In the third degree Is an officer. The penalty la from $10 to $1,000 fine and work a forfeiture of office. POT CF GOLD FOUND ON FARM Former Owner of Land Claims Find of New London, Wis., Farmer. HI APPLETON. Wis.. Mai l.-Whil plow Ing on his farm near New Ixmdon recently, Louis H.iffmarv unearthed a pot of gold said, to be valued at $..00O. Hoffman had Just purchased the fsrm from Mrs John B hmall. and today ah atarted autt to re cover the gold, saying h sold only the farm, CATHOLIC HOSTS ON PARADE Bif Amy in New York in Centennial Procession. NOTABLE MEN IN LINE OF MARCH Fnd of Week's Program to Celebrate line llnnaredth Tear of Es tablishment of Faith la the East. NEW TORK, May 2.-Slxty thousand Roman Catholic laymen, marching In pro cession today, brought to a climax and formally ended the week-long celebration of the centenary of the founding of the Roman Catholic dloceae of New Tork. No more perfect day could hare favored the parade. Of all the eo.ooo who took psrt In the parade every man save one was on foot. The mounted man wa Brigadier General Thomas Barry, the grand marshal. Be hind him trudged the thousands, millionaire and laborer. In the van wa a delegation from the Catholic club, among them Thoma F. Ryan, Thomas A. Emmett, Jut tlce John W. Goff, Justice Davis and Jus tice O'Gorman of the eupreme court1. Bourk Cockran, Eugene Phllbln, John D. Crlminlns, David McClure and many other men prominent In the city's life partici pated. DAKOTA FARMER WOULD PAY Charles Don oh a e Offrri All He Haa to Settle Damages from fralrle Fire. 610UX FALLS, S. D.. May 2-(Speclal.) In an effort to make restitution so far a lie within his power for the damage done by a recent prairie fjre. Charlea Donohue, a farmer residing In the southern part of Hand county, has deposited In a bank all the money he can scrape together to be ap. portioned among tlw sufferer by the fire,. and In addition has offered to give himself up to the authorities If any of the Injured parties deslre to prosecitje him criminally for having started the fire. Donohue wa burning an old straw stack and had taken the precaution to plow a big firebreak on all sides of the stark prior to touching a match to the straw. But the strong wind blowing at the time carried sparks to the prairie outside the firebreak and In a few minutes a serious prairie fire was sweeping southward toward Buffald county. Donohue was nearly distracted when he saw the fire had gotten awny from him and nearly ran hia horses to death In the effort to head off the fire and extinguish the flames, But his efforts were useless and the fire swept over a wide area In Buffalo county, doing considerable damage. After It was all over Donohue went to Gann Valley, the county seat of Buffalo county, and re ported to the sheriff that he would give himself up If anyone wished to prosecute him. In addition to depositing In a bank every dollar he eould raise for apportionment lining the losrs by the fire, he has of fered to turn over all hi property for the benefit of the sufferer by the fire. The. unfortunate man ha the, sympathy of all who know him and it is generally conceded that not one man In thousands would have acted so squarely about the matter aa he has. If the sufferer by the fire accept his proposition he will have to start life all over again without a dollar of capital. , ; Cream Hearing; Postponed. SIOUX FALLS,' 8. D., May .-(Special.) The State Board of Railroad Commis sioners has concluded the' work of holding Jts regular monthly meeting at the head quarters of the commission In this city. The regular meeting was the time fixed for a hearing in reference to rates on milk and cream, complaints of excessive rates being charged by the railroads having been made from several points, particularly in the northern part of the atate. After giv ing the matter some consideration and' lis tening to a statement by Mr. Stenwell of the Redflcld Creamery company, the board decided to postpone further consideration of the matter until the latter part of June. The postponement waa due to the fact that a hearing on milk and cream rates Is to be held before the Interstate Commerce commission at Chlcsgo on June 1!, and the rcault of that hearing will determine the questions at Issue In reference to rates on these product In South Dakota. A nurfi ber of the northwestern states will be rep resented at the hearing before the Inter state Commerce commission, among them South Dakota, which will be represented by Prof. A. It. Wheaton, the well known creamery expert, and also by the railroad commlasion. retary W. H. Stanley were present at the meeting of the railroad commissioner Just held In Sioux. Fall. Teat of IModent Vote. MITCHELL, 8. D.. May S.-(Speclal.)- Thore la a strong possibility that the atu dent vote In South Dakota will be tested In the supreme court, the initial steps for which have been taken In thla city, re suiting from the vole cast by ninety stu dents of Dakota Wesleyan university at the recent election In thla city. The vote cast by the students caused the license question to bo defeated by a majority of il votes. For a great many yeara the student vote In the college towns has been a disputed question aa to their moral or legal right to cast a ballot in a city elec- FRIEXDti HELP. Paal Park Incident. St, "After drinking coffee for breakfast I always felt languid and dull, having no ambition to get to my morning duties Then in about an hour or ao a weak, nervous derangement of th heart and stomach would com over me with such force I would frequently have to He down "At other . times I had severe head aches: stomach finally became affected and digestion so impaired thgt I hac serious chronic dyspepsia and ronstlpa tlon. A lady, for many years Htate Presl dent of the W. C. T. t'., told me she had been greatly benefitted by quitting cut fee and using Postum food Coffee: she was troubled for yeara wth asthma. She said It was no cross to quit coffee when she found she could have as delicious an article as Postum. "Another lady, who had .been troubled with chronic dyspepsia for yeara. found Immediate re.lef on ceasing coffee and be alnnlna Postum twice a day. Hhe was wholly cured. Ptlll another friend told me that Postum Food Coffe was a Ood send to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum. "So many such cases came to my, notico that I concluded coffee waa the cause o my trouble and I qtit and took up Postum I am more than paed to say that my days of trouble have d Nop pes red I am well and happy." "Therea a Reason." Read "The Rad to Wellvllle," In pkgs. Kvr rraJ tUr above It-lirr? A new one appears from time to lime. They are genuine, true, and full of human IntereM. " THE UNION OUTFITTING CO. GIVEG YOU MORE FOR YOUR MONEY Than any,other gtore In th city. It KVEltV HALE. You can easily vrrlfy this If yon will call and get out prk-rn and compare them with what other stores ask you for the harms goods Thero Is no store in this city that has so low in expense of doing business aa we. This rop.!lnd with our economical manaRtnient enables us to fmte Tw rower prices, g1te higher qualities and easier terms. Our credit terms enable you to get a roxy. romfortablo and happy horn on verv small payment He sura and buy jour home outfit at THE HTOKK THAT'S HQl'AKE ALL OVEIt. f V.-lr-.1HrT A?V-i' 1 REFRIGERATORS If you are looking fur an econom ical refrigerator that will psv for tt aelf in the cost of th" lc that tt saves you. then be sure and eome IIMI l-'MMI G.75 here. This week we offer a $10.00 refrigerator at the special price of OtPHMIw to Baa a -tw SUIT YOU YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD tlon, wherein the student has no interest, and Is not counted a bnnafldc resident of the town. The students have voted In hia city year after year without but very little protest, hut on this occanion their vote made the town dry and the vote will be contested. Dakota Interurban l.lne. HURON. S. D.. May 2.-(3pei-lal.)-The Huron tlas and Klectrlc Railway company ias let a contract'-for the survey of Its proposed line from Huron to Abi-rdeen. Cross & Mack, civil engineers of Minne apolis, received the award. The line has already been decided upon between Huron and a point in Spink county, about midway between Lake Byron and Dolan, frpm which place the contractors will survey into Ab erdeen. Immediately following this, tin- right-of-way men ' will secure privileges along the line, and as people In this city and Aberdaen, and at Intermediate point, become .Interested in the enterprise. It is thought that no serious difficulty will be encountered In the right-of-way. Huron Is becoming much Interested and will give every encouragement possible to the enter prise. Sheep Baslneas Productive. OTTO, . .Wyo., May 2. (Special.) David Hummer, one oj the- leading flockmasters of this county, recently lambed out a bunch of 1.000 ewes and was gratified to obtain a VM per cent Increaao. or l.SOO lambs. The lambs are healthy and unless severe weather prevails fully 100 per cent will mature. The 1,000 ewes sheared 7.000 pounds Of wool, which ought to bring 15 cents per pound at least, or $1,050. The lambs will, this fall, bring- $3 per head, or $3,000. The lambs and wool will bring a total of $4,050, and Mr. Hammer will have left the ewes, which are easily worth $5 per head, or $o,000. w Tank I.lne Plant. Hl'KON, B. D., May 2.-(8peclal.)-The Iowa Tank Line, which has been doing lucrative business in this city for sonic time, has decided to erect two Immense storage tanks here. H. C. Wicks, pro prietor pf the line, whlio here Thursday, decided to make this one of the principal distributive points In this part of the coun try, and It is expected that the two tanks to be put in here Immediately will cost between $5,000 and $7,000. Dry Farmers to Meet. CHEYENNE. Wyo., May !. (Special.) A large number of dry-farmera will attend the congress here next Tuesday. Among th speakers who ha accepted places on the progrsm Is Colonel E. J. Bell of Lara mie City, one of the foremost sheep feeders l-of the state, who will speak on dry farming and sheep feeding. Telephone Stork t.lvva Awayt TO Ol.'R PATRONS: Mr. W. C. Bullard, president of the Independent Telephone company, has published a signed statement crlticudug tills company for having made statements which, he says, "even the casual Investigator knows sre not well founded." We have made no statement whatever that was not designed to counter act the efforts of the Independent company to nuulead our patrons by false advertislm,. and we have not. In theaa statements, told one-half that may be truthfully told, con cerning the methods of that company. No crcUlt can be rationally given to the atate mcnts made hy Mr. llullard. that the bonds of the company "are absolutely .gilt edge and the stock will pay t per cent dividend from July 1." while the bonds ara offered ct varying prlcea, far below par. with stock thrown in as a bonus. If the bonds aic, In fact, "gilt edge," It is clearly foolish lo offer them at less than par and to "throw In" slock as a bonus In order to Induce people to take the bonds. If the stock "will psy 4 per cent dividend (annually anci honestly earned) from July 1." It shquld not be necessary to throw It In, without price. In order to get it into the hands of the public. A atateinent of facts will carry more weight than the mere assurance from Mr. Bullard that "'ihe bonds are absolutely gilt tdge and the stock will pay 4 per cent from July 1." A statement by Mr. Milliard of the amount of bonds laue.l snd the amount of money actually received for them and of the amount of stock Issui d fof which the company haa received nothing (excepting, In some eases, polltlcul Influence), with the names of persons who have received either bonds or stock with out paying money, will be more Instructive. s well as moie surpiising (nan tlm mere assurance of future paymcnte by any pei. aon. however, well Informed. Such as sursnces do not carry any guaranty, and conservative men du not often make them. NKBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY. FIRE RECORD. Hri Mill and Klctator. FIRTH. Nb. May !.-lHpecial Tele gram.) The mill and elevator of the Fh'lli Milling company burned last night st 1" "' o'clock entailing a ls of over $.WD". The properly was owned by W. T. McElvane is a well known fart that w HAVE VOl" r'rtOM 40 TO IW fKU CKXT OS U) hi HANDSOME rllESKXTH FltEB TO ALL On a bill of flO.OO, pretty Itnic. On a bill of 92O.0O. a Handsome Ilorkrr. On Mil of $.10.00, an Elt-xant .Morris Chair. On a bill of iTTI.OO, a Fine Dinner Het. On a bill of 100.00, an I'pholstered Couch IWJ CARPET AM Rl U KALK THIS WEEK. AN OPPOIUTNIIV TO HAVE IIIO MONEY. K low OUTFlTTIW&XOw 1315 IT-1 v FAR NAM 5T. O and William Pamrow. The mill haa been running days only for a considerable period and last iila-ht waa the first time It stalled again with a ni(tht ahlft. The fire Is sup posed to have started from a hot box In the lop Mory of the mill. The los inrud K.OflO bushels of eorn. y.ftm bushels of wheat and four car loads of ground feed. One box car was burned. Heavy l.esa at Byaalla, O. MARION. O. May I. The aeneral stores of Mm nlK'ik aV Mli k and Harris, ftonham Ac Co., the rem ins nt f K. Thornton and the telephone exehniiKe st Uyhalla Wrre destroyed hv fire today. The loss Is esti mated at tuo.ooo. fltOt KK!lt. OF TIIR HOUR Additional Member of Philippine t'ommlssloa lo Authorised. WASHINGTON. May 2.. The policy sought to be stablishcd by the government of providing and equiping buildings for Its ambassadora in European capitals received a aetback today In the aenate. where the diplomatic bill was under consideration. Through a polrt of order by Mrs. Culberson (Tex.) an amendment to the house bill appropriating $4,00.000 for such a building al I'arls was stricken out. Mr. Culberson has d his objection mainly on the fact that the subject had not been properly con sidered. The amendment was placed iti the bill by tha committee on appropriations at the solicitation of the committee on foreign relations and th secretary of state and wa. the object of conaluerable discussion. A number of senators voiced the opinion that such a policy should be Inaugurated at this time as not only comporting with the dig nity of the office of American ambassador, but as creating a fixed habitation for aueh representatives where a practically urjform standard of living might be maintained. The bill was passed, following which eulogies on the life, character and puhlk servlcea Of the late "rnators Mallory and Bryan of Florida were delivered and as a further mark of esteem the senate at 4 : J adjourned until Monday. PROt'EHDIlSGS Or THIS K. ATE Appropriation for Entbasay Bnllalna Strlekea front Diplomatic Bill. WASHINGTON, May .-Passage by para graphs, under auspenslon of the rules, of the sundry civil appropriation bill was con tinued In the house today. Consideration of the paragraph making approprlatlona for the geological survey waa postponed until Monday hy agreement, until which time further consideration of the bill was postponed. ' Tha house, after a spirited and aome what acrlmonlou debate, passed the bill authorising the appointment by the presi dent of an additional member of the Phil ippine commission. The bill appropriating $2.0ii0 for the re lief of the cyclone aufferera In the south was pawned without Incident. At ft.22 the house adjourned until 1J o'clock noon tomorrow, when euloglea will be delivered upon the late Senators Msl lory and Bryan of Florida. DEATH RECORD. Christina Miller. Christian Miller, 41 North Twenty-seventh avenue, died at hia home Friday al the age of yeara. Mr. Miller ramo to Omaha over forty years ago -and during all that time has been employed at Ihe Cnion Pa cific shops. The Immediate cause of hi death was congestion of the lungs. Mr. Miller Is survived by his wife and aix children. George. Henry and Phillip Miller. Mra. C. C. Cope, Jr.. of Omaha; Mrs. Osvrge Nuslnln of Idaho, and Mrs. H. I. McDonald of Alnsworth. The funeral, which will be private, will be held from ihe family resi dence fehinday at t p. m. Fnnrral of . n. Hlrharda. NKI'.RASKA CITY. Neb.. Msy 2 (S.ie. rial.) Th body of A. I. Richards will be taken to Hamburg, la., on riunday morning after the funeral la held liera In the rH. Mary's Catholic ehun li. A larg de. citation of friend will accom pany the body to Hi'liliui g. w here Iho Intel ment will .lake place. Kawla t. Beat. Kdwin C. ll at. 1110 South Eleventh alreet, died Saturday at tit. Joseph a hospital. The (unerul will he held from Ida lata residence Monday at p. in. Interment will be In Forest Lawn. Fuonder of Maxwell, la. Dta MulNKB. Ia.. May 1.-J. W. Max well, aged 73, founder of the town of Max well, la . (ell downstairs at the Klrkw4 hotel laxt night, breaking hi neck. He dud within a few minutes. lltnMOM M HAIR OMIfcTIOV Former AH.r.er r.l line tall from Democrats. COLl'MBl'S. (.. May 1 The J. njoci atlc state convention meets here nett Tuesday for the selection of a full stt. ticket. Edwsrd H. Moore of Toiangsloan liss lcen selected as teruHiisry chairman. The torn- sW V 'mi EXTENSION TACIES The r-ent val ues In the cliv. This ,-. we ntt'-r an rlrasnt tj-lneh s.hmi lahlo. esttA well m 'Is a n. I fin lulie l. k-foot ex tension, nn $ 4J value, at 04.95 9 DRESSERS An tinmat-bsble bargain, made of cl if oak. Ins three arge .ind m sliding draw ers ana a r-ncn iwvel plats mirror; ea'ly worth $12. so; our tiperlnl price, only....... ., 8.2S GO-CARTS Now Is the ".Inie to buy that Uo-Csrt tc the dear lit t In one. It la better to buvi. a go-cart thmn ony doctor bir.s. t ur prices re the lowret In the city. at..t we carry a full TV a run 1.90 line or all I Inds. Prices rtiw up from . . . . . 3-Room Complete Outfit Q 59.50 Tarma, $.00 Cah, f 4 Monthly. Special Inducement to th Newly wed. porary organization nil probably bs made permanent. From i tpotts received from all over the state '4dy It aeema that Judson Harmon of C:1nrntl will be nomi nated for governor, II to will accept It. Benjamin Franklin with a Wig. In the window of tv Philadelphia street. rhctogrsphei- there Is a photograph of l.iijiimlri Franklin with a wig. As thero were no cameras It Franklin's day and ..aa- I,l..l...r.l ....... r mnwtt. m nil. til nlfflll'ik occasions much con ment. It waa taken one lav In esrly M:-r,;ii Just after a soft clinging anew had f iilen. and the subject w.ia the Frsnklln t itue on the nostofflce filasa. The snow c,ued the top of the icmt on the statue and hung down In fluffy mas. With c llttlo skilful retouch ing th ph')tngraphei not only made It a very becoming wig, hut he obtained such a lifelike piMaranr in the photograph that to the lay obM- ver It seems that the gyat tatman an I scientist must have returned In person t.i sit for his picture. I'hllmlelpli Ji Record. ' Transparent. A fine, i-ohust soldier, an Irishman, sfter serving t'Bolo Ham ior some time became greatly reduced in weight, owing to ex posure anl scanty ri.tlnus, until he wss so weak he could hardlv stand. Consequently he got leave of absence to go home and re cinierate. He arrlrcd at h!s home station looking verv much of a r(i k. Just as he stepped off the ttaln one of 111!" old friends rushed up to him snd said - "Well, well, Pat. I am glad lo see you're back from the front." "Itctroria. I knew I was getting thin, hut f nIVver thought yo( rtould see that much." aid Pat Philadelphia Public Ledger. t.entu aad Obesity. The antsls of Renins are filled to ever flowing with the names of men who tolled and sehitved fame under a full hahlt. Nothing nan be mure unjust than the glh about "fat and folly" and fatnees and Indo lence. M.trtln Luther waa aa fat as Calvin waa thin: Ernest Renan's nbealty did not obscure his Insight and brilliancy. .Many writers and Hieakrrs have too long Hkcn Invidiously of fstness, hut the best retort wo have beii able to glean In our researches Into this weighty subject la that of C. It. Ppiirgeon, iho f.imnim preacher. "People," said Bpuia-on. "say I am fat. 1 am not fat. 1 am bone and flesh. M. limbs, tluink find, a-e amply clot hod, and I am In my right mind." Strand Magazine. I randrd hln Still a f e. NEW YORK, Mar 2.-The Ov Island llfesavlng crew, whl.h returnid t Uay from the stranded ship, f'eier P.I kmcrE. at Zaclu Inlet, reports It lyii't epsy, In bout th same position aa iteniay. WILLOW SPRINGS Stars; Stripes BEER ' ! Case 3) Thlrt .($.3) Cirr-en Tratllnfr KLaiup 'Vee with each rase. Order a Trial Cru for Your Komi Stars and Strl; beer thut Is dest Perfection. 1 the art of brewl IngTedientg are finest. The wat' brated Willow 8 most care is tak and it la agd r rlpenew. Us at peals to all. Thirty ($3.00) Stamps with ev penr U a bottle Ibed 1n on word lx perfection In f because all the ? tha beet gn1 r it from tha cele rtnffB and the ut u In the brewing, v Just the propf prlor flavor p- Orfo Trading ry case 2 rtoien large bottles price f $2.25 Fifteen ($150 Green Stamps with ewy case Trading -3 dozeu small bottle - . ffl nc price y l.CJ Out-of-town customer add $1.25 for rase . nd bottles, which will be refunded on their return. Willow Springs Brewing Co. Walter Mote, r ldeni. X. T. wayward, Tntiuw Of floe, lor w -My jt, raoa Jtoug-las 1304. rtstrr. Id ant Wirhttr Mi: Jrfcyso Oowgtas IMS I i A o Tl -TllfT oBUI (ml) T