4 TUT, OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, DEOEMIVEK 15, 1009 STOCK YARDS OFFICERS SAME Election Makes No Change, at Year Brought Satisfactory Remits. GOOD WORK UNDER BUCKINGHAM Intmrmrnti Are to Be Made This YTfloiM mt the Yards Are to Be Tared, Ho Be port Sara. R. J. Dunham, president. John D. Crelghton, vice president. J. C. Shnrp, secretary and treasurer. E. Hticklngliam, general manager. Hoard of Directors K. J. Dunham, Samuel Mclloberts, le W. Bpratlen, V. B Caldwell, John D. Crelgliton. R. O. Howe, F. H. Davla, C. F. Msnderson, Thomaa B, McPheraon. The above la the net result of the annual meeting of the atockholdera of the I'nlon Stock Tarda company which wi held In the general offlcea of the company Monday morning at 10 o'clock. The atockholdera elected the board of directors. In thla there waa no change from the previous year. No vacancies were to be filled. The absence of any Important, questions of policy, and the fact that the manage ment during the year had been satisfac tory, accounted for the fact that the num ber of atockholdera present at the meeting waa not so large as last year, when many things were In an unsettled condition, II mc VI Barbara la Commended, The officials reported to the stockholders on all the work attempted during the year. General Manager Buckingham's report showed that he had maitu something of a record, hla principle being strict economy and careful management. Thla nad much to do with the good character of the financial report offered by Colonel J. C. Sharp. Thla report ahowed that In spito of the financial stress during the earlier months of the year the net earnings of the company proved most satisfactory to the stockholders. i Thla means that" the regular dividends were paid and the surplus was up to expec tations. "There will be something to be given out later rtlong the line of Improvements for the coming year. Mr. Buckingham will be In a position to state what that will be be fore the work la taken up," aald President Dunham. It is rumored from an entirely unofficial source that the lower section of the cattle yards will be repaved and refenced during' the year. Building; Permits. Alex Ford, Thirty-fourth street, between Castellnr and Martha streets, frame dwel ling, 1 1,7011; Lewis Hokanaon, 819 South Twenty-fifth avenue, frame dwelling, $1,800; Mrs. Mel. Uhl. Fortieth street and Mother Recovers Her Child. There was a lot of excitement this morn ing about 10 a. m. in which the matron of the police station, a petite woman, the wife of a farmer from Blair, and a golden haired baby were the chief figures. A little after 10 a. m. this morning the 'phone In the matron's room at the police station waa kept busy receiving inquiries about a lost boy. Upon further inquiries she learned that a little blue-eyed youngster atrayed away from lta fond parent. At regular Intervals, Inqutrlea over the 'phone to the desk sergeant Informed the mother of the lost child that no baby had been found, and. as hours rolled on, and the missing child did not materialize, tho mother became' rery hysterical. Mre. Knut Peterson Is the wife of a farmer living at Blair; the little family came to Omaha to take. In the sights of the corn show. The mother and child were making the rounds of-The department stores, while Mr. Peterson was at the stock yards selling hla cattle. - They agreed to meet at some particular spot and, Mr. Peterson being a little tardy In keeping hla appointment, tha little tired woman wan dered Into the Omaha Clothing Co., 1316 1318 Farnam street, where the Forced Out of Buslneaa Bale waa going on. Mrs. Peterson had read so much of this sale and, after she managed to work her way near the busy bargain counters, she bo came Interested in so many things that she utterly neglected to look after the little golden haired mite. ' The child, being tired, somehow or other managed to crawl under the underwear counter and fell Into a deep and long slumber, and finally awoke after a pleasant nap. After the baby boy was located, the mother fully recovered from the shock, and the party, accompanlod by Mr. Peterson, all left the store In good spirits. Keeping Our Cutters and Tailors Active There's no dull season with Nicoll. At the end of each season's busy trade we keep our large organization of cuttars cutting, and tailors aewlng by offering you an extra pair of troupers with erery ault order without extra cost to you. SUIT AMD EXTRA TROUSERS, $25 TO $45 ' our Special offer Full Black or . Blue Cheviot. Thibet or Worsted Suit with extra Trousers of same or Striped ma terial WILLIAM JERREM8 SONS. - 800-11 South 18th St. A Satisfaction that Doesn't Wear Away Is a ready effort to preserve your real teeth. To hinder the work that decay Is doing, la an easy, airopla operation. The Im aginary palna are far more numerous-at present-day dentistry' than real (sins. The pains that a loss of teeth causes are mora severe and lasting. Patients commend our operations, be cause they are such that give tuuru a desire to do ao. Make a beginnlg on that little cavity. It will mean a good tooth and a satisfaction that we will hear about FILLINGS 75 i r CBOWNS $5.00 Taft's Dental Rooms nm& Dewey avenue. Brick veneer dwelllna. IS.mO; O. W. Cohort, Florence bmjevard and Kansas avenue, frame dwelling, $3,am. MICHAELSEN DENIES CHARGE City Electrician Rare Has Not Prae ttervd Dtacrlmlnntlon in Ilia Office. Charges of discrimination and unfair treatment are about to be brought by the American Electric company against Walde mar Mlchaelsen, city electrician. 1 . O. Love, manager of the company, was called out of town suddenly on Saturday and nothing will be done until he returns, and In his absence the company's attorney, John E. Reagan, declines to say much about, tho filing of the charges. The American Electric company Is one of twelve operating In Omaha ,and Mr. Reagan says that when the company gets ready to file Its charges against the city electrician several of the other companies will Join with It What these other com panics are Is not known, but the Informa tion Is given out that the Western Elect! Id company la believed to have the "Inside track" with the city electrician and that he favora that company In his Inspection of work. City Electrician Mlchaelsen knows of the Impending filing of charges against his de partment and says: "I have been very careful In my own work and have Instructed the assistant In spectors also to be extremely careful In all Inspection and to show absolutely no favor itism between one company and another, for, you know, all competitive companies in any buslnesa are more or less sensitive anl have a general Idea that tho 'other fellow' la getting the best of It." When the charges are filed they will come up for action by the mayor and the city council. It will not be a court action. USELESS PIPING IS DUG UP Seven Handred Feet of Sewer Pipe In Court House Square More Than Necessary . Grading of the court house square has unearthed over TOO feet of old water and sewer pipe which County Plumber John Lynch declares was useless when It was put in and profitable only to the con tractors who did the work. The pipes, according to Mr. Lynch, were put in on the theory that the longest way around Is the shortest way to the main. If the short and natural route had been taken when the piping was laid the county would have saved several thousand dollars In cost of Installation and considerable ex pense In the maintaining of the lines. One water pipe which runs from the main on Eighteenth street Instead of running directly to the Jail follows the alley and makes almost a complete circuit of tho building. This alone requires 200 feet more of pipe than the straight course would have taken. ' One of the sewer pipes leaves the build ing on the east side and Instead of being connected directly to the Seventeenth street main, which would have required a comparatively few feet of piping, it leads around the building to Eighteenth atreet using up about 500 feet of aewer piping more than the straight and ordinary course would have required. Mr. Lynch will take out most of the out side piping connecting the house pipes to a linn which will run directly to Seventeenth street and connect with the. main aewer there. - " ' CARTER IS NOW IN COMMAND New Head of Department of the Mis souri Assumes Chars In Omaha. Brigadier General William H. Carter Is now in command of the Department of the Missouri. Brigadier Oeneral Charles Morton, who has been in comraanl pf the department temporarily for bver a year, has been formally relieved. He will remain in Omaha for several days' closing up affairs before his departure for Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo., of which he lias been In command since his occupancy of the temporary command of the department. lie will be accompanied to Fort Russell by hla adie-de-camp, Lieutenant Troup Miller. The ascentlon of General Carter to the command of (he Department of the Mis souri will not cause any changes In the personnel of the general staff of the de partment. . - i "AUTO CAN'T MAKE THAT TIME" J. A. Boyce Says His Machine ia Inca pable of Speed Charged Against It. "I'll pay any fine you want to Impose, Judge, If any man can run my 11,500 motor car up Farnam street from Fifteenth to Sixteenth faster than the law allows," vehemently declared J. A. Boyce In police court Monday morning when his chauffeur, John Mandcrson, was arraigned on a charge of exceeding the speed limit with the Boyce machine at that point on Farnam street Saturday night. So suie was Mr. Boyce that his automo bile, a heavy, powerful affair, could not put up the performance accredited to it by Patrolman Chapman, the arresting of ficer, that he talked loud enough for the entire crowd of people in the court room to hear him. The case was oontlnued till Tuesday In order to allow time to secure witnesses who saw' the machine at the time in question. COURT ENJOINS THE COUNCIL Prohibits Counell and Commissioner Flyan from Mo ins Fruit Stand. A temporary restraining order has been Issued by Judge Kennedy to prevent the city of Omaha and Street Commissioner . Tom J. Flynn from earning out the orders of the city council to remove the fruit stand on the southeast corner ofSlxteenth and Harney streets. The order was se cured by John and Peter Blrbll s. The petition asserts the order of the council Is Invalid because they are not on the street, but are occupying private ground. (KjUbllrfiwl 1871) Aa Inhalation tor - Whooping-cough, Croup, Coughs, Colds, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Diphtheria. Cr lane la a ateea Aathsjtanoe. buaa 11 aot M or Boti ' U r h U mm lor mJ lh brolklM WSUM UukS M tali the nmtdf tote ta Muaukob! O-eseleae turn ar tM ate, rrad rfrou.l, MMMptio, fa aauMd owr 01 . urlw will liT araM. I'1S pnluas lratmu. 11 Is WO amftll cluldrM. Ft trmu4 throe thr u bur ti.an CtmoIvm Abusers TbroM Tab!. n4 to la for atnipU bouto. .AU. DNUOaiSTS. sbc jxjMtti U ae MrtpUft Tw.ni. Vaf-Osssteaa On i W. 1 ml. At the Theatero "The Revelation" at the Boyd. Mary Shaw and associates In "The Revels tlon." a drama In four arts, bv Ret- -Henry Knott; under direction Of Martin fcmery. The rest: Vera Trelevon. the other woman .... -. Marv Shaw Henry Treleven, her son .... Robert Ijiwler cawara Pennoyer, the man In the chbb Walter Hoi ton cainerlne Fennoyer. his wife Adelaide Fits-Allen Margaret Pennoyer. their dauahter .. Llhlan Rhodes e.mu uessier. an optimist . Gordon Mendelssohn tvatnieen, his assistant, a housemaid. Elanle Ingersoll manes, an old retainer.... James Thornley Rev. Mr. Knott could not divest himself of his sacerdotal robes, even when he wooed tho tragic Muse, and hla drama Is more of a sermon than a play. It loses none of Its strength because of this, but It does not appeal as It would If It were written more directly to the people to whom It la addressed. Tho story Is one of Interest, and possesses dramatlo possl bllitles that auffer considerably from the manner of their unfolding, but the thought la one that forces Itself on consideration. and demands a hearing. The comoany that baa boen assembled to present the play Is one of unusual merit, and through the force of the acting the drama la saved. The story Is not an especially novel one. A youth and maiden love, and he rlJes away to realise his ambition, leaving her to boar alone the burden of their love He weds a girl of fortune and family and becomes rich and powerful, and the father of a daughter whom he Idolies. Ills wife discovers after many years the,, secret of nis early love, and loaves him after bit terly denouncing him for his perfidy. The woman fie deserted in his youth returns, and a scene of strength between tha two women follows. His daughter falls In lovo with a stranger met In the park. The father employs a new private secretary. who turns out to be the young man his daughter met In the park. Under stress of circumstances tho father consents to the marriage of the boy and girl, when it turns out thut they are brother and sister. Then comes the terrible situation. The father says, "My daughter must be saved," and the mother asks, "But what of your son?" The boy learns the truth and takes poison. This skeleton Is clothed with such a garb of words as drives home with force the lesson Intended. Mary Shaw, who heads the company, Is very Impressive in the role of the mother who was never a wife. It Is a part that gives her chances to show her fine quali ties for expression, and she does it very well. Robert Lawler, the son In tho play. Is a fine actor, aa also la Mr. Horton, and their share of the work Is done with a finish that makes It worth watching. Gor don Mendelssohn (a former Omaha boy) la doing a fine bit of character acting In' the comedy role. Miss Rhodes. Miss Ingersoll and Miss Fits-Allen are all good, and thla makea up the whole of a very clever acting organization. The piece la well ataged, and the audience at the Boyd theater last night bestowed close attention and much applause on the efforts of the company. Vaudeville at the Orpheum. Charmlon, the trapese performer, has been heralded from coast to coast as doing a disrobing act of highly sensational nature. She doea divest heraelf of a large amount of clothing quite superfluous to a trapese performer, but does not afford food for those of evil appetite. It a as a wonderworker on the trapeze that she com mands attention and her skill In this di rection reaches quite the conceivable limit of performance on a moving horizontal bar, and for this she received most hearty and most deserved applause. Jules Verne'a "Trip to the Moon," flnda itself dramatized In the sketch, "Winning a Queen," presented by Frank Gardiner and Lottie Vincent. The offering which has been seen here before has many points of merit, prominent among these being Gardiner's own comedy and the ingenious way in which the voyage to Luna la set forth. The bill la opened by two banjolsts, Claudius and Scarlet, who succeed ad mirably In winning favor largely through some old songs which they revive. These go way back to the days of '49 and Include such forgotten favorites as "Walt for the Wagon." "Billy Boy," "Oh Sussanna," and "Darling Nellie Gray." It is a genuine pleasure to hear some of them again. Thia number is followed by the Say tons, who appear in the guise of alligators and make the saurians shudderlngly lifelike. The baby alligator la amusing and the ex planation of it ought not to be given, but left to be aeon. What amounts to a chapter from "The Virginian" may be observed In the comedy sketch, "When Hearts Beat True,", given by Martin Van Bergen and Myrtle Krt-sby. Both are good actors, the former In particular and he sings with a pleasing baritone voice two western songs. The other two acts of the wof k are Lewis and Green in a brief farce which was well liked, and the "Six Uttle Girls and a Teddy Bear." , Everett Scott assumes the diminutive bruin role and Is the main stay of the act, although the young women dance cleverly, Scott Is about the best sheep in wolf's clothing, so to speak, who has been seen In some time. Except for the original dog In Buster Brown, his Is the most amusing animal Impersonation on remembers. 'Strona-benrt" at (he Kruv. Two capacity houses were well satisfied at the , Krug Sunday with the production of "Strongheart" by Robert Galllard and a well-cast supporting company. This strong college play seems to have lost nothing of Its original freshness, richness ot detail and grasping human Interest that were Its at tracting features when Robert Edeson first appeared in it two years ago. The present aggregation of players Is much above the aveiage seen at the Krug, being a combination of the two companies that toured the country last season In the play. As the educated Indian whose prowess at foot ball and civilised learning ts as great as that of hla ancestors In the lore of the plains, Robert Galllard offers a most acceptable Interpretation. His bear ing, manners, voice and whole self seem admirably adapted to his present under taking, and in the foot ball scene In the second act, and the scene In the third act where the Inner Indian nature of Strong heart la ariuaed by the refusal of his friend to allow him to make love to the friend's sister, Mr. Galllard's work is decidedly praiseworthy. In fact, his entire series ot efforts for, though surprisingly' natural and easy, they are efforts prove- meritori ous. ' "Wall-cast" most easily expresses the Idea one forms of the supporting company, which does much toward giving the audience a full appreciation of the De Mllle play. To mention names would be unjust, - unless all were mentioned. Scenery, costumes and the little stage effects and other "business" also are not allowed to be vf the sordid variety that auch things sometimes becume after a production has appeared several years. The engagement continues till after Wednesday, with a matinee on that day. Salome" at tha Bar weed. "Salomo" entered on her second week at the Burwood yesterday, and tha event was marked by two big audiences. The great Wilde tragedy la winning much favor for lta beauty of language and poetry, and tha terror of lta denouement la lost la the sue- FlME i I I i 141 ' Hit i if v , n If your present farming operations are not reasonably profitable, or if you are now renting and want to get a farm of your own, this new country offers your opportunity. Descriptive books of this country are distributed free at the exhibition car or you can get them from the undersigned. F. A. MILLER, General Passenger Agent, CHICAGO is. gestiva poetry In which It Is veiled. Miss. Elliott la making the part of Salome very attractive, and Mr. Ingraham. is winning as much praise aa Herod as he did In "The Devil." ' The Jtroduction Is the most ambi tious the- B r wood management has .yet undertaken, and Is a most artistic and ef fective .stage arrangement. The succession of pictures presented Is not the least of the attractions of the drama, and this is fully realised In the stage settings and grouping. The play will run all week, with matinees on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. . MOTOR PARADE IN MID-WINTER Motorists, Cadets, Soldiers and Busi ness Men to Cross the River. At least seventy-five motor cars will form in line between Eighteenth and Twen tieth street on Douglas street Tuesday at 2 o'clock under command of Captain Buchan, United States army, who is mar shal of the automobile section of the parade. The High school battalion of eigiil companies. Captain Oury commanding, will form at the High school and march down headed by the band. Picking up the autos, the parade will march down through the business section of the city and past the corn exposition Derore swinging east to ward Council Bluffs and the Horticultural congress. Meantime those going who will make use of the chartered street cars will find these at Fourteenth and Douglas streets. H. B. Weller Is In charge of this section, known as the "Commercial Club Special." The High school cadets will be furnished with free admission to the con gress, but will pay their own car fare. Arrangements have been made to sell tickets before leaving Omaha to those going by motor car and street car. All going will be given corn stalks. A Fortaaate Teaan. E. W. Ooodloe, Dallas, Tex., found a sure cure for malaria and biliousness in Dr. King's New Life Pills. 25c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. UNION PACIFIC IN NEW SHOPS New Balldlnsa Are Being; Filled with Machinery and Mfu So Date for Reception. The Union Pacific is moving Into new and magnificent car shops, which are near lng completion In the Omaha shops yards. Most of the machinery Is installed and the work of moving will be hastened. The old car shops will ba used by the McKeen Motor Car company for the manufacture of motor cars, thus giving the new company ample room to expand for some time to come. General Manager Mohler has not set a date as yet for the public reception at the new shops, but as soon as the machinery is all Installed and the moving completed the public and especially the families of tho employes of the shops will be Invited to thoroughly inspect the plant, which is one of the most complete in the country. E. L. Lomax, general passenger agent of the Union Pacific, and W. S. Baslnger, as sistant general passenger agent, have re turned from Chicago where they attended a meeting of the general agents of the Union Pacific. Post Toa.sties The Delicious Corn Food. , "The Taste Lingers" Made bv Poatum Cereal Company, Limited, Battle Creek, MUh. j ""BU you think bo able lAlnHnnn FORTUNE FOR WORKMAN Furniture Packer Receive Notice of an Unexpected Inheritance. DOES NOT KNOW THE SOURCE Thinks it I'osslble Ills Father of Ninety Yean Might Have Left Him the Money In Germany. Phillip Fisher, 303 Woolworth avenue, for twenty-five years a packer employed by Wright & WUhelmy company, has fallen heir to a fortune in Germany. News of it was received by Sheriff Bralley Monday morning in a letter from Sheriff J. W. Dreger at Minneapolis. Sheriff Dreger said In his letter that Michael Kngele of Kobblnsdale, Minn., a brother-in-law of Fisher, wanted to find his address as he had an Inheritance from Germany. Within a few minutes Sheriff Bralley had located him at the storo. Mr. Fisher does now know who has left him the money unless It Is his father, who was alive the last time he heard from Ger many. He himself Is 58 years old and his father wsn over 90 years of age. Several years ago his mother wrote him they had between 15,000 and 16,000 marks in the bank, $3,570 or $3. 80S, and also owned some farm land. Mr. Flshor has a brother in Chicago. He .'.ays he and his brother will get the property, as his sisters have already had their share. He has taken steps to Inves tigate. URE OPPOSES 0. K. OF PLANS Court House Speclflcalions Probably 1VU1 Be Adopted, Though, by Board Tuesday. Plans of the new $1,000,000 court house will probably be adopted at a meeting of the county board to be held Tuesday morning. The plans will not be materially different from the provisional ones exhib ited before tho bond election except In the interior arrangement of soma of the rooms. Commissioner Ure Is Inclined to oppose the adoption of the plans at present and to favor the plan used by the school board In the erection of school buildings. In stead of adopting the plans now he favora the adoption of a resolution providing the plana shall be considered adopted when the contract is let. He asserts if the plans are adopted now Architect Latenser may be able to hold the county for tho drawings even .if it Is found when tho contract cornea to be let that they cannot be used. If the school board plan Is adopted he asserts the board need not approve the plans until It Is found whether the building can be erected for $1,000,000 or not. All the world loves a bargain. Tou can find bargains by watching tha "Want Ad Pages" of The Bee. GIRL IS INJURED BY FALL Miss Helen Pressman of Red Oak, la-, - Steps from Moving Car at l eenth nnd Dodge. Miss Helen Pressman, 15 years old, of Red Oak. Ia., who with her mother has been visiting Mra. A. M. Fuller, 171 North Twenty-seventh atreet, waa painfully but not aerlously injured about o'clock yes terday evening by falling from a atreet car at the corner of Sixteenth and Dodge streets. MUs Pressman, with her mother and Mra Fuller, Intended to leave the car at tliis point and transfer to the Dodge street line. The young woman attempted to alight before the cur came to a stop and was thrown to the pavement and severely bruised. 8Uo was taken Into Sherman & YOU While in Omaha, you are invited to in spect the exhibit of farm products from the country along the new line to the Pacific Coast. The car containing these exhibits is loca ted at 13th and Jonos Strocts, Omaha. Admission is free. It will be open to the public from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. every day (except Sunday) during the Na- nal Corn Exposition. It is now an established fact that profit- L farming is possible, without irrigation, in the new country in the Dakotas, Montana, Idaho and Washington along the Pacific Coast Extension of the ate Sit Fan F. A. NASH, General Western Agent, 1524 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. "" 1 111111 McConnell's drug store and Dr. Fltsgib bons was called. After receiving emer gency treatment the young woman waa taken home, "ORDERS IS ORDERS." SAYS COP Policeman Refuses to Let President nnd Genernl Manaarer of Corn Show Pnaa. "Tea can't go up unless yea going ti hear the lecture." A policeman stationed at the foot of the stairs leading to the Model Kitchen thus held up ' President Wattle and Gcnerul Manager Jonea of the National Corn ex position. The officials paused uncertainly and President Wattles threw open his coat, showing a red badge Inscribed, "National Corn Exposition. President." The police man peered at It, blinked his eyes twice and remarked: "Yei may be president, but orders is orders. "They Is, they Is," answered Mr. Wat tles. He and Prof, Jones then moved off say ing they would respect a man who obeyed' orders, whatever they were. The police man was stationed to prevent school chil dren from Interrupting the lecture, which, on this day, waa by Mary F. Rouse of the University ot Colorado on "Carving and From New York RICH AND POOR RUB ELBOWS IN COMMON CAUSE t Westerner Says Society People Have "Nerves From Modern Conditions. ' V. T. Cooper, the man who clalma that Americana have weak stomachs and who Is meeting the public of thla city, seems to be attracting an unuaual amount of attention. Each day Not Yorkers' are calling to hear about his theories and medicine In greater numbers, and for the past few days hla 'headquarters haa presented a novel sight. A remarkable feature, to an onlooker, is the varied types of people whom Cooper Is attracting. They range from prosperous-looking business men and fashion ably dressed women to day laborers and their plainly dressed wives. All rub el bows In a common cause the pursuit of health, or, as Copper puts It, "sound di gestion." In an interview Thursday afternoon, when the striking difference In the vari ous visitors was called to hla attention. Cooper aald: "Why not? Because a man haa a million dollars that doesn't make Ills atomach any better. On the contrary, sitting at a desk all day, riding bark' and forth In an automobile and stuffing himself fulf of rich food will (ut his entire system out of order aa sure as fate. Most of the men and women of thla class whom I meet tell me they have been seeing nerve specialists. The well-to-do seem to attribute all their troubles to nerves. It'a not their nerves. It'a modern conditions that have pro duced tha thousanda of half-sick people among rich and poor alike In thla city, and every other city In America. It'a broken down, over-worked, atuffed-up digestive organa that'a whtra the trouble la. "I am going to make a lot of people realise these facta before I leave New York. Many who are calling now have been sent hers, by friends. Today a prominent woman aald ahe had coma be cause her maid told her that my medicine waa 'doing wonders for her. 8ha aald, my maid la Buffering from Inaomnia, cauaed by nervous exhaustion, and I have for a large part I ft iusin-imna.in.ui in nmtmmmkVjrK ... a lui mmi nimmrmirt- Y Serving." One point she brought out was that It ts no longer good form t ) wait until overyono U served, but to cat wnlle- tie provender Is still warm. The lerturers Monday afternoon -were Margaret, Blair 'and Rg.j Tin. 1 1 rtrt BOYS BREAK STREET LAMPS Company Will Sue Parents ot the l.ada for Fifty Lamps. Complaints against a number of boys on South Twentieth street and damage till s against their parents are 1 ke y to folio a the discovery that fifty street I'ghtsi be longing to the Omaha Electric I.ltju ,and Power company had been broken. Knaliucr Pllnski, one of the boys, was in Juven'ie court Monday and told u 11 ubout r. He Implicated several other boys, who wi J b investigated. Complaints that irany of . l it lights In thla district were out causel the lighting company to investigate nnd tiiey found most of their lamps had be.ni br ik n. Bee Want Ads. Are Business Boosters; Aeroplane Makes Flight. ' HAMMONDSPORT, N. V.. Dec. 14,-The aeroplane Silver Dart, the fourth machine, of thla kind built by the Aerial Experinif n" association, made four flights early today. The balance and control of the aeroplane proved satisfactory during the flights, i World, April 17, '08.) had the same trouble for three years. . I wanted to reply 'tomrnyro't, niad-ini; both you and your maid are suffering from too little fresh air and too murii food,' but I didn't. I sold her tho medi cine and let It go at that. If It muk her a well woman ahe will be positive it re lieved her of nervoua trouble. As a mat ter of fact there Isn't a single Ingrediniit In Cooper'a New Discovery Intended to at oni the nervoua aystem. Get the di gestive organs working properly ami thi nerves will right themselves." Among New Yorkers who have Lecouia convinced that Cooper's medicine is all that Is claimed is Mr. Frank Perkluson. of 207 Butler street, Brooklyn, a voml nent contractor, who, when Interviewed Thursday said: "A few weeks ago ; I began to hear of Cooper and his ideas about stomach trouble. Next, una cr two friends of mine told me that his medicine had done a great deal for them. Twelve days ago I cams hers,'' saw Cooper iiU got the medicine. Today I am perfectly well, at least I feel ao. 1 alecp like a boy, can eat anything, and litvt iu mora rheumatism or atomach trouble. no longer have any gaa on my atomach and fuel aa I did many years ago.) , No one could be more astonished by these fact than myself. They are remarkable, but true. Thla man undoubtedly has a won derful medicine. When I "came in here twelve daya ago I waa all bent pver with rheumatism. Today I can walk (per fectly erect, and feel aa though I oould run five miles. , V "I have lived in Brooklyn tl yaara. A great many people know ws and can vouch for thla atatement. ' I feel ao well I cannot believe I am the a a me man who dragged himself in here two weeks ago." Cooper'a slew Slsoorery, tha remark able mediolM wblek haa sotteA ao tanct ooaunant la Stew York, la mow on sab at leading drug; stores vry-ur throughout tho United, lta tea. Ask yeur drug gist fo it .4