Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 14, 1908, NEWS SECTION, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 14, 1908.
X
MINES MAY CO TO PRISON BRIEF CITY NEWS
Man with Two Wirei VioUtei Termi
of Hit Court Bond.
TUTJGE TAKES ACTION MOTTBAY
Year la Penltentlarr Mar Not
Trenble, a Wlle Its. Threat
rni to BriK Action
, , far Blaaaar.
Washington P. Haynes. who plesded
guilty to wirs and child abenaonment be
fore Judge Rears severs! day ago and wn
released on a bond to support his lamny,
stars b mat is.
knaolpa T. ttwobode, Accountant-Auditor
lowau, HT N. H. .Douglas shoe, 119.
Fa BVonrke forjjuallty cigars, 11 8. Hth.
Masher, photographer, llth A Farnam.
St. okaa, asatlst, moved to Paxton blk.
M Stella to order. 115: I panta for It
MacCarthy-Wllson. H South lth.
W. . Daly la no longer assoclatod with
Johnson-Rowe-Daly Co. 1411 Howard.
Z a. unable Iife, Paul Morton, president.
Pollclea eight drafts at maturity. H. IX
Neely, manager, Omaha.
telaforeeft Concrete Fireproof, wind-
proof, vermlnproof. (!91 Prendels Bldg.
Bedick's Conrf Boom Closed Judge
Redlck's equity court In the Pea building
will he closed temporarily while the judge
has been rearrested and may have to go I u fof Judg 8utton Who.ls In the -essr
to tha penitentiary. County Attorney Eng- Ju,M guttm, n e 'absent about -two
llah will present an application Monaay io week.
have him sentenced under the plea no nas
violated the terms of his bond
I
Haynes la alleged to have had a check
ered matrimonial career and his arrest
Frldav by the police was at the request of
the father of Mlas Eleanor Thlele of West eary
Point, whom Haynes is anegeu m
married without securing a divorce from
hla fit st wife and under the representa
tion ih.t ha mmm a alnarle man. Hayoa, It
is asserted, married his first wife In
Washington In 1S. They came to Omaha.
where he worked for the Klrkendall Bhoe
company as salesman. On the pretense
thai ha had had a Wife DrevloUS tO his
marrlaae he Is said to have Induced Mrs,
Haynes to go to Chicago to live while he
rot a divorce from the flctltloua first wife,
Thi. i rio.iarf.il to have been a ruse to
Two Cars of Kama for Manila Two car
loads of hams for the use of the fruited
States army In the Philippines will be
shipped from the Cudahy Packing com
pany's establishment to Ban Francisco
I, Edmiston Bays Cheyenne Leader
William 8. Edmiston. for some time a nvrrt-
ber of the advertising department of The
B?e, has bought trjp Cheyenne Leader and
has gone to Cheyenne to take Control of It.
Mr. Edmiston was .on the Nonpanll ' of
Council Bluffs before coming to The II e
Commercial Club Charter Makers Ar
thur C. Bmlth, F. E. Banborn and Henry W.
Yates have been appointed as the commit
tee to consider changes In the charter of
Omaha. The city council and real estate
exchange have named their committee and
enaoic mm 10 carry on the Federation of Improvement clubs wiU
Miss Thlele, a very niim.u
woman, whom he met at West Point. He
finally went to North Carolina and sent
word to Miss Thlele he was very sick and
wanted her to come to him. Taking him
at his word, slie went south, and. she as
serts, they were rnarrled In North Carolina.
Thv afterward went to Derjver, where
Haynes still traveled for the shoe firrm
Wife Na. 1 Still Walts.
Meantime Mrs Haynes No." 1 was In Chi-
csgo patiently waiting for him to get his
divorce from his alleged first wife- and
' anri for her. He had written her a few
times, ravin he was In very hard luck
and without money. Finally Mrs. ' HayntS
. , i a I A Vim. waal
Began to mane inquiries .m sixteenth street, and stole
llvln In comparative luxury iu utu'n
with wife No. 2. Catching him In Omaha,
she had him arrested for wife and child
abandonment. He pleaded guilty and gave
his bond before Judge Sears- to support
tit f.milv and uaa released.
name a committee. '
Delegates to U. . V. at Toledo At
meeting of the Union Veterans ur.lon held
Friday evening, these delegates ' were
chosen to atend the national encampment,
to be held at Toledo in August: Jonathan
Edwards, " Lewis Ducker, W. J. Hahn. E
Mcintosh, Charlea- E. Bruner, L. N. Gone
den, W. H. Hatteroth and 8. F. Moors.
Thief la Office of Doctor Dr. A. F.
Tyler stepped ' Out of his office In the
Crelghton block for a few moments Friday
night and returned to find that a sneak
thief had ' entered and extracted a gold
watch and $27. from, his coat. Burglars en
tered the store of J. V. Kopald, 701 North
a revolver Fri
day night.
Marriage Life at' aa End Two Council
Bluffs marriages had their finish In Judgo
Kennedy's divorce court Saturday morning
when Martha A. Warren secured a decres
of divorce from Taylor Warren on charges
VENDETTA STILL RANKLES
Iterenae Animates the Bosom of
Domini Merino Before the
People's Bar.
The vendetta still rankles In the fierce
bosom of Domlnlo Merino. Black-eyed.
Mack-haired, sneering-lipped Is Dominie.
It was last February whetf he first ap
peared In polite court. Then he was a
complaining witness. He had Mopped In
Omaha on his way from Wyoming to
Cleveland. O., where he Intended to visit
his hrother. He had a railroad ticket for
Cleveland. While stopping In Omaha, Me
rino wandered uptown and Into t'he store of
Sam Adler on East Farnam street, where
he Invested In an entirely new outfit. Includ
ing a watch and chain. The watch stopped
running within a few hours and the
clothing which had' looked SO good tumid
out to be shoddy. lxmtnlo Merino a.
manded' a - portion of his money back
This was refused and then the young Itat
lan resorted to the police.
There was na statute covering the wrong
done htm, and though everyone pitied him,
nothing could be' done: For days he hung
around the police station discouraged by
nothing, patiently awaiting revenge with
true Italian persistence. His money gave
out Then he sold his railroad ticket. Next
he pawned his watch, and still he fre
quented the police station, the fierce light
lurking In the. back of his eye. His gay
apparel In which he had Intended to make
so brave, a showing when he vl1ted his
brother In Cleveland shrank In the rain and
wrinkled In the sun. He lived In a wretched
lodging house and picked up Ms meals
wherever he could get them.
Finally he disappeared, vowing revenue.
H was not seen for about three months,
until Saturday in police court the name
was called, which roused memories, and out
from the bull pen came Dominic, collar
less, down-at-heel and out-at-sleeve. But
In his eye burned the same light of re
venge ana on nis up was sun tne curi
of scorn.
Colonel Merino was charged with carry-
As soon as he got out of Jail he hunted! . r,nn.,nnnrt AniM th -..,
up Miss Thlele sna mea 10 inautn ucr w
Superior,
Ella Betten secured a divorce from Herman
Betten, charging desertion. Both women said
they had gone to Council Bluffs to be mar
rled.
City Buys Material Bids for cement
and sand were opened Friday by the city
engineer and the contract for $3,000 barrel
of cement awarded to T. F. Swift & Co., at
the contract price of 11.08 a barrel, as
gainst 11.38 last year. The Dundee Lumber,
Coal A Lime Co., was awarded the con
tract for 2.000 tons of sand at 42 cents i
ton, Z cents less than other contractors
claim It costs to deliver.
Appraisers Are Btatralned Nathaniel
Stone has secured a restraining order from
Judge Kennedy to prevent the city and
three . appraisers. Otto Bauman, Jacob
Counsman and C. D. Olover from apprals
Ing his property, which the olty proposes
tA takjk foe tha nilrnnu of wMonlna SApnnil
NEBRASKANS GO IU bnlUAuU street from William to Woolworth avenue
He declares the object of the city is not
co to Denver with him from
where she had been In seclusion. Instead
of going to Denver, she telephoned, her
father and Induced Haynes to come to
Omaha with her. At the request of her
father Haynes was arrested at the depot
as he got off the train. Miss Thlele has
made an affidavit and this, together with
an application to have him sentenced, will
be preesented to Judge Sears Monday
morning. Under the wife desertion law he
mav be seut to the penitentiary for a
year.
' The wife desertion case may not end his
trouble, however. Miss Thlele has Indicated
she is ready to -prosecute him for bigamy
and he may be taken back to North Caro
lina to answer for his alleged plural mar
riage.
really to widen Second street, but to es
tabllsh a new street which will divide his
property. He asserts the proceedings are
Illegal and will cast a cloud on the title
t his property.
Pity for Wife and Baby Rarss Man"
Governor and Llesttenant Leave S
day and Some McKlnley Clab
. . Members Monday. '
Governrlr Sheldon and ' Lieutenant Gov
ernor Hopewell go to Chicago Sunday even-
In, coming In from Lincoln on tne reuiar wm g-ive you Just thirty days In Jail and
evening train and going on to Chicago on wm date your sentence from the date of
the Northwestern. your arrest. I don't do It for your sake,
The McKlnley club's special car to Chi- out because of that little baby and your
iago and the republican national conven- wife." said Judge Sears, Saturday, when
tlon will pull out of Union station at he accepted a plea of petit larceny from
o'clock Monday evening, running on tne Harry Otlllan, and gave him a light sen
regular Northwestern passenger train, tence. Gillian was charged with breaking
Among thoso who Intend to go on' tha spe- into the barn of Charles E. Furay and
clal train are Harry B. Zimman, vr. n. a. stealing some tools. The offense carries
Foster, Frank Crawford. Isadora Zlegier, penitentiary sentence, but because of hi
Harry Byrne, C. G. McDonald, Frank H. wife and baby, who were In court Saturday,
Woodland and other members of the Me- Judge Sears accepted a plea to the lesse
Klnley club, together with members of the offense and gave him a light sentence,
Fontanelle 'and Equal Rights clubs and By dating the sentence at the time of his
arrest he will be released early next week
Boyles Bold Annual Plonio Pupils o
Boylea Business college had an exhllar
atlng outing Friday at Rlvervlew park.
the occasion being the annual picnic given
by the faculty to the students of the Instl
tutton. To the number of 300 they boarded
special cars and started for the most en
prominent republicans who are not affili
ated with any club.
Myron L. Learned and A. C. Smith, dele
cates. loft last - evening for Chicago, to-
aether with Frank A- Furay, William I.
Klerstead. Henry T. Clarke and several
Mhera. Mr. Klerstead will visit at the
home of a sister while In Chicago and Mr.
Clarke goes to Chicago for the chief pur- lov.hia .Vent of th miles-, vea, r
pose of pressing upon tne convention rttoj
nltlon of the inlnnd waterways movement
and to secure If possible the adoption of a
r.anlutlon In the platform favoring the
movement.
John Grant Pegg. city Inspector of
weights and measures, goes to Chloago as
a page In the national convention,
Ing eonoealed weapons. The officer said
he was a desperate man and was carry-
tna- a 44-callber Colt's pistol. Dominic was
fined tl and costs and the gun was confiscated.
"Better fine S3R and give me the gun
back," he shouted as hs wss led away.
And his lock suggested that the vendetta
still burns In his hot blood.
TWENTY CENTS FOR WOOL
Xm Leas Than That Will Be Accepted,
go Wrsnlst Prodaeers
Wire.
"Hold all our woll for cents per pound,
as we would not consider an offer for any
thing less. It brought 2C4 cents on track
at Medicine Biw, Wyo., last year.
This was the Instruction sent to the
Omaha Wool and Storage company Satur
day by the Ware Land and Llva Stock
company,- which has forwarded a large
amount of -wool , to Omaha and Indicates
what other wool growers Intend to ask for
their clip.
Secretary Theodore Becker of the Wool
and Btorace company arrived In Omaha
Saturday from Germany, where he hs
been spending several months. He will
spend several days in Omaha before going
to- Shoshonl and beginning his work.
Discussing the proposition of St. Paul
busness men to organise a wool market at
St. Paul, Charles H. King, president of
the Omsha Wool and Storage company.
said:
, "I am glad the St. Paul people recognise
thla opportunity. I hope they succeed in
establishing such a market, as we want to
keeD this wool In the west and there Is
enough to fill the warehouses of Omaha
and St, Paul and enough room for all the
factories which we will be able to get out
here."
, The lad Hand
removes liver Inaction and bowel stoppage
with Dr. King's New Life Pills, the pain
less regulators. 25c. For sale by Beaton
Drug Co.. ...
Music and Musical, Notes
AY
HEN one la really trying to pass I hard work, sings a difficult and very try-
i I,
comment upon musical matters, I Ing aria.. It Is done well, and the crltlo so
,ln a way which win be Just and pronounces nis veraici.
Ir. Lyon's
PERFECT
mm ruwuyi
Cleanse!, preserves and
beautifies the teeth, and
Purifies the breath
A superior dentifrice
for people, of refinement
Established in 1866 by
ball, lunches and all sorts of games helped
put In a most enjoyable day. Followln
was the summary of events; Teachers'
race, fifty yards. Miss Mackerill first. Fat
men's race, Mr. Anderson first, H. B,
Boyles second. . Egg race. Miss Bnook and
Miss Egbert tied for first place; one hun
dred-yard dash, won by Mr. Utschlnsky;
ladles' one hundred-yard dash, won by
Miss Sorenson; ple-eatlng contest, won by
Mr. Elmer Umsted; 440-yard croBa-country
run, won by Mr. Clifford-Boyles snd Mr.
Reasoner second; shot put, Mr. Metxger
first and Miss Jenson second; pole vault.
won by Mr. C, T. Stevens.
BATTLE CREEJCJDEAL REVIVED
Proposition Again C to Locate Big;
Cereal Plant In This
, City.
I
You can rent a Typewriter of us
for $2. SO a month. Thla price Is
below what others ask. We guaran
tee highest satisfaction. , ,
We Want the Business
Central Typswitsr Exchange
1BOT FARNAM
Potato Bugs Killed
by - using Pure Paris Green put up In
package the well known Sherwln-Wlll-Tame
Co. brand. This will go twice as
far killing Potato Mugs as ins tui
kind note our prices: ,
4-pound package for.,.. 10c
H-pound parkage for lo
1 -pound package for...N 14a
( pound package fur ,.tl.t
J-pound package for U
Special quotations on larger quantities.
Shsrmin & McConnell Drug Ca.,
Cor. lath aaa Soago.
OWL DJ1UQ CO.,
Cor. 1st a aat Xaraey.
Manufacturers of the Cauls Creek foods
have again taken up the proposition of lo
cating a large cereal mill and sanitarium
food factory In Omaha. This ' proposition
was presented to Omaha business men dur
ing the fall of 1007 and dropped because of
the stringency.
Charges T. Neale, representing the com
pany, hpent several days in Omaha during
the week and left for Chicago Saturday
after holding numerous conferences with
bankers and businese men.
If the company builds a factory In Omaha
It will mean an Investment of at least
1300,000 and perhaps 1300,000, it Is announced.
Two factories are already In operation and
their value la close to $1,000,000. Mr. Neale,
who claims to be the financial head of the
company, made several propositions to
Omaha bankers, who assured him that the
company would be given all the credit
which it deserved in the event the money
Is needed.
It has been learned that one of Mr.
Neale's propositions was to have an Issue
of bonds underwritten by some Omaha
financial Institution. Mr. Neale has re
turned to the east to open negotiations
with eastern Institutions which will un
derwrite the bonds and act as financial
agents.
Should the bonds be issued snd under
written by an eastern trust coriVpany and
the factory Is erected In Omaha, the bank
ers of this city have assured the Battle
Creek people that it la very likely a large
number of the bonds would be bought In
Omshs.
The Commercial club Is lending all possi
bis assistance to the Battle Creek Food
company, as is also the Chicago Grea
Western Railroad company, which has of
fered to furnish a site for the mill and
.breakfast food plant.
fair to all, and sometimes hav
ing his best efforts found fault
with, It Is refreshing to read an
article like the following, which appeared
In the New York Sun some time ago, and
which came to light In a recent annual
spring clearing of a very topsy-turvy den.
Its writer has something to say which
applies most beautifully In Omaha:
"Two or three hackneyed assertions come
to the surface of musical discussion about
as regularly aa the days of the week come
around. One is to the effect that when a
critic disapproves of the performance of
your pet prima donna he has dyspepsia.
That would Indicate that he listened to
music with his stomach and not with his
brain. Of course people who have no
standards of art, but fashion their likes
and dislikes In obedience to the dictates
of fancf, personal inclination or admira
tion for a pretty face cannot easily be
brought to understand that there are others
who form their verdicts according to ar
tistic law.
The other assertion and this Is perhaps
the more common of the two Is that a
critic has1 wholly condemned or approved
such a performer or such a work when as
a matter of fact he has done neither, but
has contented himself with a simple cata
logue of merits and defects. .He has not
wholly approved nor wholly, condemned,
but has criticised. He has made discrimina
tion between the good and the evil. This Is
a practice which seems to annoy many
readers." ,
It Is eminently gratifying to note that
the New York readers do no! read the
articles of the New York critics any more
carefully than do the' local readers of The
Bee read the musical column.
It has often seemed very strange to me
that when hearing a discussion of local
criticism, the stress seems to be laid by the
readers on the adverse part of the article.
It Is very seldom that a person really
brings out the favorable points or the good
things which a critic may have written.
Now, the critics have been censured for
their work, and It Is but right that they In
turn should be justified In asking the read
ers to be fair to the critics, and to read
everything they say on a subject and quote
It without distortion. Just recently I was
asked why The Bee account of a certain
musical event contained what was ingeni
ously termed a "slam" on some one's work.
It was my pleasant duty to Immediately
tike the questioner to task and remind him
of several of the very warm words of com
mendation which were used.
Let the critics be treated fairly. They
mean well, and they are doing the very best
they can. Some of them have different
viewpoints, but not one of them really de
sires or Intends to do anything which Is
. ' 1 LI I . '
nui lur uio jjuuiic guuu.
The critic's task at best Is not a merry
one, He has to meet every aay tne locai
musicians whom he Is obliged to pass judg
ment upon for the local press, and It la not
pleasant to have to say unpleasant things.
But even ths unpleasant things are not
said unkindly by any of the critics.
This article Is not a defense of critics and
criticism, "but Just a little heart-to-heart
talk with the readers of this column, be
fore the present writer signs bis last sig
nature for the present season, to the end
that perchance a morejntlmate feeling may
exist between all those who read and all
those who write the musical comments for
the local press.
The crltlo goes to a performance or an
audition or concert or recital, In probably
the same frame of mind as you; but when
you are at home enjoying a gentle repast
or reclining on your couch already lulled
by tha! caresses of slumber, he (or she) Is
digging away at a serious article wherein
he has to sum up the salient features of
the concert or production which you have
juat heard
He has been obliged also to listen to It
throughout, with more of a nerve and
brain strain than vu have, for he must
give a balanced criticism, a proper judg
ment. Oftentimes this Is why your opln
Ion has not coincided with that of the local
critics the next morning. The fact that
some times the critics disagree Is not to
be msrvelled st, for In conversation many
people will have entirely different opinions
about the same piece or work. The dirter
ence Is usually In the viewpoint.
$ .
Our local critics, dally and weekly, are
Now comes another, a singer of inexperi
ence, of good intention, but Insufficient
groundwork, who mskes a creditable at
tempt at the work, but does not reach, nor
search for, the Inner life of" the aria.
Is it just to praise the latter for what
she tried to do? Is it not unjust to the
other one? It Is kind, it Is generous. It Is
encouraging. If you will, but tell us, is It
justT
Take another case. Miss B spends
yesrs of earnest toll and a great deal of
money, and nerve force and energy, and
denies herself many enjoyments, so that
she may get to the place where she will
make you listen to a Beethoven sonata
with pleasure.
Another. Miss C studies a few months
or a year or two, and attempts to play the
same work at a public recital. ,
Enter the critic. He has written that
Miss B did some very clever work and
so on.
Now what of Miss C t Her work was
poor, she read the notes correctly, per
haps, but her time was not correct, her
tone was utterly lacking In quality, she
has used no shades of expression, she failed
utterly to grasp the soul-thought of the
work, but she did "Just fine, considering.'
She did the best she could. She did not
practice enough, to be sure, and she Is
not ' ready for that big work yet, and she
has not developed ss much as she might,
but after all she could do lots worse.
Now, If the critic does not say some more
or less unpleasant things about such a
performance where does the sense of justice
come in? Is there any justice to Miss
And should Miss C - receive the
same encouragement and praise that Miss
received for her very hard work?
Must Miss B have Injustice so that
Miss C may have Justice?
This Is a point which the public too
seldom looks at, and yet the critics sre
confronted by it all the time. The critics
must at times say things which are not
sweet, but which, taken In the proper
spirit, are mighty wholesome. And if they
are taken, and means are used to mend the
matter, the critics are eager to recognise
the Improvement and comment thereon.
But the critics should not be blamed for
trying to administer Justice.
It is not the part of the critics to look
only for good points, any more than it is
to look only for bad points, not a bit. It
la their business to administer Justice, even
and square, to took over the matter fairly
and squarely from one end to the other
and render Just judgment Just to the good,
to the lesrned, to the artistic, aa well as I
to the bad. the unlearned and the un-
ee Want Ads Business Boosters.
oftltmes misunderstood on ths subject of
Justice. A critic must be just. Now jus
tke, from the critic's standpoint is to mete
out the same justice to alfT There must not
be a separate justice for the -rich and for
the poor. There must not be a sepsrate
justice for the plaintiff and for the defend
ant; there must not be Justice for tne lasy
and Justice for the active.
And so. In musical criticism there must
not be a separate Justice for the one who
does good work and for the one whose
work is not good, What kind of justice
would that be?
Suppose you lake a case, Here Is a singer
who, after years of experience and bard,
Another point which Is sometimes over
looked by the not-too-careful reader (re.
member, dearest of all readers you who
wsnt to agree but cannot this Is not a
scolding article; It is a plain, simple heart-to-heart
talk as before suggested: the
writer Is In the best of humors, having
Just come from a delightful dinner) and
that other point lies here: Ths critics are
bound to take Into consideration the com
poser and his work. Justice again enters.
Not only must the performer have Justice,
and the sudlence, and the other perform.
ers who do the same thing, but the com
poser Is also a party to the case.
Those of us who criticise musical events
for the press sre bound, by 'an unwritten
law, to be the retained-counsel-in-perma-
nence for the masters who are not here to
defend themselves. Perhaps they are dead,
if so, all the more binding is the duty,
What a responsibility we have to feel when
we realise that we are retained to look
after the interests of Bach. Beethoven,
Handel, Haydn, Mendelssohn, Brahms,
Bchumann, Schubert, Grieg and so on. It
makes one shudder snd grow faint tUht
thought of It, and one Involuntarily says
to himself: "Have I been looking after
those Interest, or have I been unfaithful to
my duty?"
You, gentle readers, who sre not writing
for the press on musical matters, have not
taken upon yourselves a public trust: you
are not obliged to come out over your own
signature In the paper and aay things about
the presentstion of the works of the mast
ers, which writing snd which signature
will be on the permanent files of the Pub.
lie Library for the future generations to
see and read and judge us by. It Is
serious matter this "With what judgment
ye Judge ye shall be Judged."
Now, In view of thet, knowing that the
critics must slwsys bear the thought of
the composer well In mind, and the great,
ness of his work, won't you be a little len
lent towards the critics who furnish you
with musical comment from day to day,
and from week to week, knowing the fact
that for them Is not the pleasant task of
writing pretty things about all aspirants
for public honors, regardless of fitness or
preparedness, and regardless of the respect
due the master and his masterpieces, be it
song, symphony, opera, oratorio, sonata,
instrumental aolo or whatever it may be?
Deal gently with the critics. They are
human. They make mistakes. But they
are all, each in hla or her own way, trying
to promote the welfaie of music in this
community. THOMAS i. KELLY.
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DKCSSZIt Here Is the best dresser
bargain in Omaha, made of -best se
lected quarter sawed oak, hand rub
bed ana polished serpentine front.
Kxtra large oval French plate mirror,
r rench turned nn. l'oal
tively worth $26.00; on
sale this week at
air in i r I t'r,
15.95
TABLE Extends to feet, solid Ask
construction, hand rubbed and pol
ished top, massive pedestal claw feet
perfect slide. The regular price of
this table is Jjo.ou but we i
place them on sale again
this
week at. .
14.00
The Happy
Home N
Builders
fir fj! L.rM-M-TIJnir-1
The Happy
Home
Builders
V.V',
'-.or
i
m
. EVERY DAY TO SEPT. 30, 1908
(gILliAll
Where the nights are always cool and the air fresh
and pure. This Is the place to spend a vacation
during the hot summer months.
And the COMFORTABLE and
DIRECT WAY to get there bs
VIA
UNION PACIFIC
Two Splendid Trough Trains Dally,
Leave Omaha l:S0 p. m. and 12:10 a. no.
Inquire at
CITT TXCXST vmCI, 1334 Farnam St.
I DkAH. Tsx. , al n a. U1S
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CONVENTION OF PHARMACISTS
Twenty-Seventh Annnal Meeting of
State Society Will Bo Held
'for Three Days.
Preparations are being made for the en
tertainment feature of the twenty-seventh
annual meeting of the Nebraska Btate
Pharmacuetical society which will be held
In Omaha June, 15, 10 and IT. The head
quarters will be st Hotel Rome. The en
tertainment committee consists of P. B.
Myers, chairman; H. C. Lane, secretary,
and J. H. Schmidt, A. B. McConnell and
A. C. Adams.' The ladles' auxiliary enter
tainment committee will consist of Mrs.
C. R. Sherman. Mrs. G. W. Hooblcr, Mrs.
H. 8. Weller. Mrs. J. H. Schmidt. Mrs. A.
B. McConnell, Mrs. F. F. Porter, Mrs.
John Beaton, Mrs. H. C. Lane, Miss Mattle
M. Wilson, Mrs. A. C. Adams. Mrs. C. K.
ScarrSnd Mrs. C. A. Melcher.
All meetings will be held at tho head
quarters at the Hotel Rome. The officers
for 1908-1909 are D. J. Klllen, president,
Adarna; F. A. Frlcke, first vice president,
Plattsmoulh; B. w. Green, second vice
president, Ewlng; W. O. Boyer, third vice
president, York; A. Pollman, fourth vies
president, Pierce; F1. X. Wright, fifth vice
president. Grand Island; E. E. Cathcart,
treasurer, Johnson; Oscar Baumann, secre
tary, Grsnd Island; H. C. Lane, local secre
tary, Omaha.
A busy three days has been planned for
the druggists, the first real fun being the
Initiation into the mysteries of Ak-Sar-Btn
at the den Monday night. Program:
MONDAY EVENING.
Ak-Sar-Ben Initiatory ceremony t the
den. N. 8. P. A, Invited guists of the
King of Qulvera.
Colgate theater party for the ladies at
Boyd s theater.
TUESDAY MORNING, $ O'CLOCK.
State board of Pharmacy examination.
TUESDAY EVENING.
Reception, Rome hotel banquet room.
Mandolin solo Melodies from Erminle
A. Booth Evans.
Address of Welcome. .Mayor J. C. Pahlman
Response For Druggists
Ex-Mayer W. D. Haller. Blair.
Selection Mandolin and Guitar
Messrs. Evans.
Address of Welcome
Behalf Omaha Druggists
Mr. C. R. Shermsn. '
Response D. J. Kink, Holdrege
Piano Solo (a) Cavalier Le Fantasllque
(b) Pan (Pastorale) Godard
Mrs. Edith L. Wagoner.
Vocal Solo The Two Grenadiers. .Schumann
Jo F. Barton.
Informal reception.
Refreshments.
WEDNE8DAY MORNING.
Ill a. m., business.
AFTERNOON.
?:0o p. m.. business.
Omsha sight seeing cars, afternoon enter
tainment for the ladies.
Banquet. 7: o'clock.
Ball. o'clock.
When you have anything to sell, adver
tise It la The Bee Want Ad Columns.
FrDS
$3
OXFO
$4 $3-50
We pity the shoe manufacturer that should
offer to make "Queen Quality" Shoes at
present prices for one customer only I or for
one thousand customers only It takes
nearly 3,000,000 customers a year to make
it possible to give such shoes for $3.00,
$3.50 and $4.00. No ordinary manufac
turer could touch it! It requires practically
unlimited capital and the largest factory in
the world.
HfkYDEN BROTHERS
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