Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 08, 1908, Page 5, Image 5

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    TTTF, 0MAT1A DAILY BEE: FRIDAY. MAY 8. 190.
W ?
' 01 V
TWO-THIRDS RILE TO STAND
It's Good!
rare flavor
queitioned purit
Dottled In Dond
have made it the
choice of judges of
good whiskey
"Since 1857"
Traditional Cnttora, Sayi John X. Mar
tin, Will Be Observed.
If rmir denier
yon, write
euat npr.? y,.
for ma of .f
Dealer be will. X I
L iLCadtesaeiajerlBr. r
-J'V Distillers f f
-
BRIEF CITY NEWS
Bar Boot print It.
Budolpb P. atwoboda, accountant-auditor.
ror Oengiuss, no. W. aitcktaii. adr.
Tote Culture, Delmore Cheney, Boyd thr.
Bowman, 117 X. 1C. tKmgias shoe. Il ii
Pa Bourk for quality cigars, 111 8. 15th.
Blashart, r-hotograr hpr. lilh at Farnam.
lalt Myers-Dillon i:.00 sod fountain.
Paata to Ordar, i up; coat and pants,
12Q up. McCarthy-Wilson. SOI 8. ISth.
Popular Prleea at the Her Oruad Oaf
Whit waiter. Open a. m. to 12 p. m.
possession and pay over to the rightful
owner of the land the rum named with In
terest. ,
Xdttl Oaa Laid Away The funeral of
Acne Kiordan, 1 years of e, daughter of
Patrick Riordan, 3H1 Vinton atreet, wat
fcejd Thursday at ! p. m.
Xoraa Stolen Prora Pasture A horae waa
stole from the paature oflL X. Jensen,
Sixtieth and Center street. Wednesday
nieht. Sheriff lirailey la looking for cluea.
Batter aad Era Hea Kay lft A meet
inn of the Butter and Kgg Men's assocla
tlon of Nebraska and Iowa will he held at
the Paxton May 15. The meeting will be
held Jointly with shipper and other allied
interest.
Portland Qrooera Oe to Boston A r re
nal ear ''filled with relaU grocers from
Portland parsed through Omaha Thursday
afternoon., enroute to Boston to attend the
annual meeting of the National Retail
Grocers' assoelat'xtn.
Plana for Elks Vtv Home plans and
figures allowing the probable coat of re
modeling the Granite block, recently bought
by the Elka. will be ready for the inspec
tion by the members of the lodge at the
ngular meeting Friday evening.
Two Brick Apartments A. c. Bubk has
Ik gun the excavation for two brick apart
ment dielltngi on Twenty-third and Nicho
las street, each o them to coat ts.OM.
Each building will contain four apartments
of six rooms each and Mr. Buck expects to
have them ready for occupancy by. the lat
ter part of the eumme
Cearae of Bond Tetee The canvass of
the rotra cast at the special court house
toad , eUictKUv .ocsa a County Clerk
llareriy'a office-Thuraday afternoon. Mr.
Haverly has appointed Lucien F. Hale and
Dan T. Custer as the other members of the
loard to make the count. The board will
complete its work Friday or Saturday.
Pl.-at Soee to Wutertowa The First
battalion of the Sixteenth Vnited States
infantry has been ordered to proceed from
Kort Crook, to Watertown, 8. D-, for a
tliiity-day tour of target practice. Upon
tne return of the First battalloa the Second
lattalin of the same regiment will proceed
to the same point for one month's target
practice.
Lanes Wagons Oo Ortr taa Birer A
procession t.f lunch wagons filed from
Omaha to Council Fluffs Thursday morn
ing to be located In Iowa. The recent ae
, tlon f the eltjr council tn prohibiting these
wagons longer to remain on the streets of
Oct. ah a forced the men to take some action
and they evidently decided to move to
Council Blufls until the question was set
tled. Lockjaw May Prora ratal Lot Jaw
caused by the kirk of a horae. probably
will cause the death of Reonard Felr. a
n.gro. at thr county hospital. He Is a
hostler by trade and about a week ago was
kicked by a horae over the left eye, the
blow causing a deep wound. Two days ago
his Jaws locked and he went Into convui
ESYAN OS THE ITE.ST BALLOT
fcteraal rrtst-l-trsii a tea
Omaha aad . .seres lae Faith,
fal that Taelr rreahet
la "It."
la
not completed. He Immediately called up
Manager Tag-fart on the 'phone and told
Mm of hta dilemma. Manager Tsrxart
simply said "come on." A large sample
rontn was put In readiness snd Thursday
nvwnlng. T. D. Ftllnger. buyer for J. L
Brandeta 4 Sons bought the first order of
goods from the first guest In the new hotel.
WORK OF THE WOMEN'S CLUBS
STATE INSPECTION OF WIRES
Peek a eyalesa a AlTaeatel by Ike
Nebraska Kleetrlral law
rlatlaa.
vfl
BlacK Ballots
The negro does not vote
in. the South. That is
the palpable truth, and truth
is always interesting.
Southern elections have
become almost dull. Un
warlike citizens go to the
polls, and their hip pockets
are distressingly empty.
Nowadays it is legal regula
tion, and not a shotgun,'
which is disfranchising the
negro. ' ,
In this week's issue of
The Saturday Evening
POST Harris Dickson writes
about 'The Dwindling
Black Ballot."
Now, out in Indianapolis
but read the article for
yourself, in this week's
i'OST.
At tSa Newa-ataad 1 ceata.
ti iH tbe scai ay mail.
Tag Cram PraLieHiKo Cgmpabt
rHILADlLfHiA
Otr lri Art Ivrjrwar
Venus will be dellTered to any
address by -
EEIO NELSON,
11 Oaaltol irn Oaaake.
siona and he has been suffering from them
ever since. The physician at the hospital
have about given up hope of his recovery.
Clalais Persecatloa by Officials Georc
R Thompson, owner of The Pratt span
ment house waa Investigating the bonds
of the city health Inspectors.' Recently
complaints were filed against him for main'
talning a nuisance In the paved aliey be
hind The Pratt by having ashes and other
rubbish there. Thompson declared the city
health department was persecuting him
and his investigation of the bonds was to
satisfy himself that they fiaVe the .authority
to act.
Warriors Are Fined rvld Cassady and
C. Bushnell were fined Ji each In police
court as the Instigators of a fight In the
grocery atore of M. Green, KHO North Six
teenth atreet. Green alleged Cassady stole
a bunch of onions from his atore. Cassady
aald Green refused to accept payment for
the onions when he ofTeaed It. Sergesnt
Michael Whalea came upon the a.-ene
when all were tn the midst of the fight
and received some of the blows Intended
for the others.
Psvlnr Xapidly Bepalred The dilapl
dated pavement on Seventeenth street be
tween Famam and Douglas streets will be
repaired by the Utter part of the present
week, which will practically complete th
repaira on streets in the business district.
rarnam street pavement haa been repaired
throughout the length of the atreet and In
other parte of the city the work of repair
lng Is progressing rapidly. City Enginee
Rosewater expects to be through by July
1. the date when work has generally been
begun In other years.. i
Two Dissatisfied Wires Emma Feeble
hat applied to the district court for a I
divorce from Walter TV. Peebles, a travel
ing man. and asks the custody of their
child and alimony. She' saya he haa called ,
her bad name and that he has been guilty
of neglect. She says he would not visit
her for long periods of time, though she
was easily accessible. Nellie Hope wants
a divorce from James Garfield Hope, charg
iiisr cruel and Inhuman treatment. She
asks the restoration of her maiden name,
Nellie Levy.
Oleaa-Vp of Tag-rants! Eighty-six va
grants were arrested Thursday morning.
A general order had been Bent out and all
the officer brought .In the suspicious char
acter and, loafers until the' Jail was full.
Those who could prove they have steady
Joba were discharged. Most of them, how
ever, are "looking for work" and these
will be brought lwfnre the court and given
a warning to leave town. The recent
epidemic of burglarly is attributed largely
to the presenre in the city of the vagrants
who are making their annual migration.
Blind Haa Disturbs th Peace T. H.
Overocker. the Wind man who stands at
Fifteenth and Famam streets, was arrested
in Billy Atkln's saloon, TL!0 Farnam street,
and charged with disturbing the peace.
Overocker used to be a very familiar figure
In police court, being once charged with
murder. He Is aald by the officers to pos
ses the largest and most picturesque vo
cabulary of billingsgate and other varieties
of vile languaare. He was" exercising h!e
faculty on Mike Kearns when the fight
started. He waa dtschargnd on hi earnest
promise never to do It again.
Pace la Testimony of Baa ting When
Algodt Krantx 'returned Wednesday night
to Forty-aecond and Hamilton streets,
where he wss tiring with Ms brother, Carl,
he found that his brother had Imitated the
Arab In having folded the tent and silently
stolen away. Ahjodt thereupon hastened to
the home of his brother-in-law and sister,
U. OUon and "Lizzie Olson. CX Decatur
street, looking; for sympathy. Instead of
finding It. he: alleged to City Prosecutor
Daniel that the Olsons attacked him and
beat him up. K.'UU'l face bore eloquent
teatimony to the fact that h had been
beaten by somebody.
Perseeated. Thong- Blot OaUty Barney
Kemmerling made his K4th sppesrance
In police court aa the hero In that stirring
or ma, t-ersecuted. Though Not Guilty."
Barney had been "discovered with a sack
full of bottlea and his record being againat
him he waa arrested as a suspicious char
acter. Barney nearly wept in court when
he reflected upon the fact that an honest
man aln t allemed to earn no honest liv
ing, nohow. Barney's apertmenta in the
Eureka lodging house, where he livea with
a number of other gentlemen r.f l.imr.
mill know him no more fur at least thirty
daya. which is precisely the period to
iih.ii uarney mas ae tile need.
wavy The commla-
sary aipartment of the army haa been
directed to buy 40.0UO noundi r.f rf. i
young chickena, roasting sise. for the use
of the Initrd Siatra battleship fleet now
at San Franciaco. Twenty thousand pounda
of the chkkena sic to be purchased of tbe
jiimour i aramg company of South Omaha
at once. The chickena are to be froaen
and are to be Inspected by Acting pur
chasing Commissary Captain W. F. Clark.
The test of Inspection requirea that the
fowis shall be sawed ii two through the
thickest part and if fhe frozen flesh can
be entered by a knife they ehall be re
jected. The ahipment la to be made aa soon
as the Inrpection is completed.
Boost fer Oalvestoa Plaa That the Gal
veston plan of government would be a
good thing for Omaha aod other metropoli
tan citlra, because during lis one month's
trial In Dea Moines it haa been found to
work aatiafactorlly. is tbe opinion of A.
F. Wrnnerstroni of Des Moines, former
state labor commissioner of Iowa, who waa
In ths city Tliuraday. Mr. Wenherstrom
ssys that by reason of there being but five
commissioner aa against twthve or more
aldermen it is possible to piece the respon
sibility and get mora accomplished, aad
also by reaaon of higher salaries paid more
efficient men can be secured to hold the
public offices. - "So far I have no fault to
find with the Galveston plan." says Mr.
Wennerstrom. ,
The democrats of the country still ad
here to the time-honored two-thirde rule
governing nominations In their national
conventions, and I do hot look for a change
in this rule, elthr before or after the
nomination of candidates st the Denver
convention July 7." says Colonel John I.
Martin, sergeant-at-arma at the convention.
Colonel Martin, who has been oergeant-
at-arms of democratic national convention
since the year one, having bad charge of
the convention In St. Louis In TA when
Samuel J. Tilden waa nominated, spent
Thuraday In Omaha and met many promi
nent local members of the party In the
office of the mayor. He left tn the after
noon for Denver to attend a meeting of
the committee on arrangements for the na
tional gathering.
Despite the fact that Governor Johnson
la reported to have swept Minnesota In
the primaries Tuesday and to have snowed
under the Brvan men. Colonel Martin Is
of the belief that Bryan will secure many
Minnesota delegates and that th Ne-
braskan will be nominated on the first bal
lot.
East Will Fade Away.
"I very much doubt If another candidate
comes before the convention, even though
Congressman Hammond of Minnesota Is re
ported to have been selected to present the
name of Johnson, saya Martin, "and when
the east, which Is backing Johnson, under
stands that Bryan has the great bulk of
the delegatea I believe all opposition will
be withdrawn and the Nebraakan be nomi
nated on the first ballot by acclamation.
Though the guet of Mayor Dahlman
while In tho citv. Colonel Martin said noth
ing regarding his candidacy for the gov.
ernorahlp, not touching on stats politics in
the least. Comptroller Lobeck called on
the colonel, but he, too, talked naUonal
politics.
Later the comptroller assured the mayor
that he was taking good care of his mapls
tree, though he says a bear knocked some
of the bark off the tree, which haa set It
hack some in Its race for maturity with
the tree named Governor Lobeck.
POSTOFFICE" MAKES BIG GAIN
Baalarss for April ftkows a Heavy
Increase Over Tbat af Oae
Year Asa.
The Omaha postofflce shows a remark
able lncreaae of busineas for the month of
April over that of the correaponding month
of last year. Folloaing is a oetaiieo sinie-
ment of the business of th office for the
respective months of April. 107 and 190J:
POSTAL RECEIPTS.
1)7.
Salea stamped paper t af.S'Je.H
Increase. g,. 1 per
cent.
Second-class matter ,0t.a
Increase, xjsb.si per
cent.
id and 4th-clas matter.. iT4.K
lncreaae, J J 5 M per
cent.
MONET ORDER.
Money orders paid S3
Increase. 3S.ti,.4 11 per
cent.
- REGISTRY.
lMt.
Letters and parcels registered a,371 S.&42
Increase,, jkj per ceni.
MAIL HANDLED.
IOT. 190.
Outgoing No. pieces 4,3,!3 4.B10.970
Increase, 148.040 J' per
cent.
Incoming No. pieces ...
Increase, ISS.JrTO 1& per
cent.
Ita.
t S0.U4.1J
.TO1I
.1.J75.740 J.361,010
A S-pag 'booklet, ettitled "Cake Se
crete," ie being ent free to those of our
lady reader who will send their grocer's
nam to Igleheart Bros., Desk . Evans
ville. Ind. It tella how to bake most de
licious angel food and other cakes.
BUSY FORGER PLEADS GUILTY
Maa Wkaan rklnasnaa Caaabt Cannes
ta Grief la the District
Co art.
Prestdeat -B. A. Bullock. PJorfelk.
Ttoe President at. i. Pnimaa, Kearney.
Beentary William Bradford, Uaoola.
Tisasuisr XV, 3. chwtngel, Bolarser. .
Ssecatt Oomnxltte T. X. Prltta,
Oread Zalaadi B. P. Kgaa, Vebraaka City
ML steberta. Tors,
lao ef next aaeetlar t be decided by
executive aasnsalttea. Oasis being- fa
vored aa ta beat eoavenUen city la the
tat af IT shrunk a.
Insulation burned off: the air saturated
ith the smell of scorched rubber; silk
threads dropped helplessly from the arma
tures of magnets; melting fuses spattered
the carpet with hot metal and lightning
arresters worked overtime to prevent an
over charge from making a spark with some
underground wire and start a fire all. all
at the Thursday session of tbe Nebraska
Electrical association, which closed the session.
The subject under discussion was inspec
tion of electric wiring snd how to prevent
fires by proper electrical work, when E. A.
Bullock of the Norfolk Electric Light and
Power company sent this message sitsllng
over an all copper circuit to W. S. Boyd
of the Fire Underwriters association, who
was seated behind the table:
"Fire Insurance companies are making
a big noise about tbe baaard of electrical
wiring, out they are not doing anything
to reduce the moral hazard, when there Is
more danger front overloading policy hold
era with Insurance than there la from
electricity.
"I have lived In Norfolk for yeara Thar
hav been a good many fires, but I want
to tell you that I can count the honest
fires in that city all on the finger of my
hand.
"Insurance agenta actually persuade mea
to carry more Insurance than they should
carry, and then wben there Is a fir th
adjuster coma along and pay th losses
without Investigation to find whether the
fire was incendiary or not rather than lose
the bualnees.
"Insurance companies tell inspectors that
they hsve no backbone and blame the cen
tral electric lighting companies for causing
fires. They tell the managera they have
no backbone but. spesking; of backbone,
the Insurance companies have no backbone.
They pay losses on Incendiary fires every
day until there Is a greater danger of
man retting his own building on fire with
a match and Jug of gasoline than there 1
in th electric wires starting the fires. But
the insurance companies are doing nothing
to prevent or reduce the moral hazard.
They simply hare no backbone."
To this charge Mr. Boyd replied that Ne
braska needed a state fir marahal who
would investigate th origin of fires and
us the police power to reduce the moral
hazard. He named several atatea which
maintained fir marshal and believed. Ne
braska should have such an officer, as the
Insurance companies could not use th po
lice power when they settle losses.
Waldemar Mlchaelsen. city electrician.
made an address on rates and service, urg
Jng the best possible serv ice at paying rates
rather than cheap service at cheap rates
'I tMnk you ought M improve your ser
vice, bring It up ft its highest stste of
efficiency. Of course-this will cost you
something, but your patrons, consumers.
will be willing to pay more for good ser
vice than less for cheap service."
After the discussion on inspection the as
sociatlon decided to refer the matter to
the old committee with Instructions to re
port a plan for Inspection at the next meet
ing of the association. This commits con
sists of President T. H. Frltts of Grand
Island. E. J. Sullivan of Omaha and E. V
Capps of Blair.
W. R. Patrick of South Omaha, w ho waa
to have addressed the meeting on "Electric
Ijiw" waa unable to be present. Home
Honeywell of Lincoln, who waa to have
addressed the afternoon session on the sub
ject of "Rates" could not attend snd the
time allowed for Ills address waa spent in
an informal discussion of ralea, led by
President Fritts.
Mrs. Decker Makes Sng-geitioni t
Clnbt in Menag-e for May.
AST HANDBOOK IS ROW COMPLETE
lOaallaa readies; la Cengress aad
R area a af lefersaatlea Alea
Cease la fer bare af
Attention.
Jesse C. Simmons, who is charged with
passing at least nine forged checks on busi
ness men, pleaded guilty to one of the
charges Thursday morning before Judge
Sears, but sentence was deferred.
According to the oocumentsry evidence,
Simmona was about the busiest man in
Omaha trying to increase the circulating
medium by passing S10 checks, all signed
with the name of Henry Rohlf. He has
duped eight or nine prominent business
houses, but he came to grief when he
tried one of his check on a wily China
man on Douglas street. The Chinaman
looked at th name written on the face of
the check and then at the signature on th
back.
"Alle saraee flout side, all same back
side, no good," he said.
Simmona grabbed the check and tore it
to pieces and then tried to get away. The
Chinaman called the police, who landed
him.
HAYDES BROS.
Crown"
A Fierce Attack
of malaria, liver derangement and kidney
trouble is eaaily cured by Electric Bitters,
the guaranteed remedy. SOc For aal by
Beaton Drug Co.
. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS
Mr Julia M. Pratt left Wednesday night
for Boelvn.
l. V. BhoW s l.ft Thursday fer Detroit.
uiier lie will jii Mrs. t.it. ai.il U,geincr
liny sol gi lu Noi.(.ii, N
HOTEL LOYAL'S FIRST GUEST
Representative af. Bis; fw Yark
Haaea Literally Breaks lata
the .Vew Hostelry.
Hotel Loyal haa it a first guest, although
tha hotel Is not to be opened for ten daya
With the elevators not completed and the
Iron men atill working on the stairs, a
guest haa literally broken into the houa
and la cow safely quartered.
D. W. Mllla, representing tbs big Rogers.
Pert it Co.. of New York, heard from afar
of Omaha's new fireproof hotel and
thought It waa completed, n wrot hi
Omaha customer to meet him at th
Hotel Loyal. May 7. When he arrived at
61oux City be told aome one be waa going
to stop at ths Loyal and was told It was
Bay the Retire Llac af the
a hoes aad Oxferda,
Thousanda of our customers have taken
advantage of these salea in th past and
will be pleased to hear of thla big purchase
and sale. The shoes and oxfords are worth
up to M a pair. On sale Saturday, May t,
in two lots IZ.M and 11. Pa.
Orino Laxative FruTt Pyrup la best fo
women and children. Its mild action and
pleasant taste makes It preferable to vio
lent purgaUvea, such as pills, tablets, etc.
Get the booklet aad a sample of Orino at
all druggists.
Mrs Sarah 8. Tlatt Decker, president of
he General Federation of Women's clubs.
haa issued the following suggestion to club
women In her bulletin for Msy:
The srt hand-book, which has Just come
from the hsnds of the printer, will be of
grest value and Interest to the art clubs
and travelers especially and. we hope, te
many members of the federation. From a
crude and unimportant suggestion for a
small twenty-page leaflet, Mrs. E. G. Pat
tiscn. a member of the art committee, has
compiled this fine selection of the veritable
public art in portions of this country. The
book has sixty pages of matter, has been
copyrighted, and. il la hoped. Is but the be
ginning of further publications in the same
direction, the real idea and conception of
the book being to save the time of the
student and traveler, which la often wasted
in visiting the usually very poor and make-
believe public art of many localities.
Mrs. Pattison has made the work a
'labor of love." It waa the hope of the
art committee that the har.d-book might be
given free to the federation, but that is not
feasible at present, and the book will be
eold at 25 cents a copy by the srt committee
and the bureau of information. Ths splen
did results of the trsvellng galleries, and
the hand-book are Jewel in tbe crown of
the art coraittee.
Legislative Measures.
A long pull and a strong pull fer senate
bill No. 6117. introduced by Mr. CTsne;
bouse bill No. li.416. Introduced by Mr,
Dalzell. The title. "A Bill to Investigate
and DevrloD Methods of Treatment "of
Tuberculosis."
The government spends thousands of
dollars In treaties on "Quail Disease, on
Huckleberries." on "Feeding Rice to
Pigs." on "Molssses for Farm Animals
etc. Thla bill asks only three-fourth of 1
cent per capita on the .KK.a people of
thla country, to be used to save our familn
from a scourge which kills 160.000 people in
the Vnited State every year, which mean
more than the entire loss of life during the
four years of the Civil war, which costa the
people t330.000.0fi0 every year; which causes
the death of some one In the world every
two minutes of time. Within the next
month let st least locoes letters or sppeals
go to Waahlngton. Write to Mrs. Rufus
P. Williams, 8b Washington avenue. North
Cambridge, Mass.. .for information.
One, two, three, all together. Let us see
If we are really a federation.
Rnrean of Information.
One of the most Interesting reports to be
heard at the Boston convention will be
from the bureau of Information. It is diffi
cult to give an sdpquate idea of Its area
work because It frequently happens that a
seemingly slight request for help means
day's time for the manager. But gradually
the fllea of subjects in the bureau are in
creasing, many hooka of reference have
been received, thirty magazines place It on
their free list and collections of programs
and study outlines have been made in
great numbers. Probably a low estimate
would be Wno letters sent out from the
bureau the last year, besides Innumerable
packagea, syllabi and programs.
Best of all. tbe help given by the bureao
haa been th olidifying of th federation,
the knowledge that at last we stand on
equal footing with every national organi
sation of any importance in having a regu
larly established center. To the busy of
ficers no measure can be made of the help
given by the bureau, in spreading the doc
trine of both Individual and stale federa
tion. The letter recently wrlt'ten by the
manager of the bureau, at the request of
th president, to a well known editor of a
woman's paper shows the value of sys
temstlc collection of data in the club work.
It is quite the fashion for some loyal mem
bers to reply In a haphazard way, "Oh,
yes. the clubs have done some work; but
I cannot remember what they have accom
plished." Mrs. Wood has put Into concrete
and definite fashion small and large doings
and accomplishments of clubs and federa
tions. These facta eould not have been
available without the bureau. A great or
ganization to be successful must hare a
"local habitation and a name."
Year Books.
State year books have been received as
follows: West Virginia. New Jeraey, Min
nraota, Florida. Indiana. New Hampshire,
North Carolina and, last, our new mem
ber. Alabama ell the correct size and full
of Interest and information.
EARAH 6. PLATT DECKER
Tie Mew SjuHofs
FOR WOMEN
ARE HERE
THE DICTATOR OF FASH
IONS has decreed that Sail
ors shall have wide brims
this year As usual we are
first en the spot with the new
goods.
"We have thorn in popular col
ors and in the newot braids. "Yc
bought these hats for quick sale and have priced them
with that purpose in view. They are just the hats you
want. You'll be de
lighted with them
at
4gcto$MS
Hose Specials for Boys
FRIDAY' ONLY
The well known (leo. "Washington brand. 41 pbm
always sold at 25c, at JL a H-
The Famous "Skidoo" brand, usual -fl Oi.
price 15c, at jLHj'4w
FIELD DAY OF BIRD LOVERS
Festival af
Held
Oraltheloslsts Will
at Bellevae far
Twa Days.
Be
The annual meeting and field day of tho
Nebraska Ornlthologista union will meet at
Befhmie Friday and Saturday of this wvek.
The busineas session will be held in the vil
lage church promptly at 7 o'clock p. m.
Following this a series of lectures will be
given aa follows: "An Ecological Sketch
ot the Evolution of Nebraska'a Avifauna,"
by the president. Prof. Myron H. 8weck
of Lincoln; "Th l'e that Bird Have
I Made of Structures Built by Man," Dr.
o4cott of Uincoln; "The crow Family in
N braska," Prjf. Laurence Sruner cf Lin
coln. Saturday morning the union and friends
will meet at Bellevue and proceed north
ward to Child's point with "heir picnic din
ners. Saturday evening at Bellevue the
regular program will be (riven, at which a
number of the Omaha bird enthusiasts will
speak.
a0
All frood corn is about the
same; it's the way
Dnr,i Formerly cailed
I USl V tU Jail's Maaaa )
Toasiies
are made, that counts.
"Tbe Taste Unfer."
made by
Postum Cereal Company, Limited,
Battle Crew. Mich.
Dletarbea lha t eagreaatlea.
Tbs person who disturbed the congrega
tion laat Bunoay by continually coughing
Is requested to buy a bottle of Foley's
Honey aad Tar. All druggists.
Osssntt, lata, to J.x. 1
C. E. PERKINS WILL FILED HERE
Copy at Teslnsaent af Lata Barllaa;
tea President Hrearded la
Prabale Caart.
A copy of th will of Charles E. Perkins
of Burlingtoa, la., formerly preaident of
lha Chicago, Burlington dt Quincy railroad,
has been filed in th local probate court.
The filing of the will here is necessary
because of tne real estate holdinga ef Mr.
Perkins ia this county. It Is estimated he
left property worth IJWi.OOO.
Mrs. P. L. Perine haa been appointed ex
ecutrix of tbe will of her husband, who
died suddenly a few day ago. Mr. Perine
had transferred practically all of bia prop
erty before his death end his estate con
sists only of a bank account amounting to
shout 1.
Ths body of Peter L. Perine a as taken
east last evening to Baldwinat LW. N. Y
wtttr bur tl sul bt suaii
ttr
J ' :
Ssewiwi i isiiaan. Q
The King of All
Cylinder Machines
The new 4BQ" Columbia Graphophone is the one
machine of its kind. It embodies the very points which,
have made the great success of the Disc Graphophones.
Compact, convenient, shapely and simple, it i3 an entirely;
new departure in talking machine design. i
It has the famous Columbia Aluminum Tone Arm
and a big flower horn. No rubber tube, no horn crane,
no horn stand and the horn swings in any direction.
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(TtVAJf S P AJUZJm
Get what yoa tstt fori
Familiarize yourself
with the pacK&ge to you
cannot be imposed upon.
There is none other Mas
good as Jap Rose" be
cause we originated the
process. It is our own.
Perfect for the bath.
IT CAwwOT 1 IHTTaTO
Jas. S. fiirK TL Co.
3 UN. Water St, Chic.fi
TT lend as la tea lay
F rPP larae drewiaa ef jeee
V . CkUarea by Mariaa
aUUar. erUhauiear Advertlslag.
Type "BO" on Easy Terms
with a comrlete outfit of Columbia Cylinder
Records, tur own "election IJ4.65 on easy
weekly terms.
Other outfits $12 and $200. and all the way
between.
Sold by your dealer, or by
Columbia Phonograph Co.
1021 Farnam St., Omaha
Psi jiaaeiaw'
ft-
-1
mm
On the night of May 3d two" highwaymen "held up"
the conductor of one of our cars on the Hanscom Park
Line and robbed him of what money he had in bis pos
session. "We hereby offer a reward of $500.00 for the
arrest and conviction of the guilty person-. j
OMAHA AND C0UI1CIL BLUFFS
STREET RAILWAY COMPANY
SUMMER FLOWERING BULBS
C ALADWMS, Mammoth Bulbs, each 25c; 5 for 51.00
TUBE R0SLS. Mammoth Pearl, doz. 35c; 3 dor $1.03
CLADIOU. in Superb Mixture, doz. 30c; 53 far . - $1.03
CINNAMON VINE. Extra Large, each 10c; 12 tor .... $1.00
DAHLIAS, Assorted, each 10c; 12 for $1.03
TliE NEBRASKA 8E&D GO.. 1613 toward St.
Bee Want Ms Produce Results