TIMELY REAL ESTATE GOSSIP Omaha Propertj. riCTURE OF HEAITHY CONDITION as Charlsew Heights. It 1 west of Fort I Omaha, blng bounded by Tort street. Wehster avenue. Thirty-third and Thlrty- alxth streets and connlnta of r.j lot, al- Iniurance Company Sellj Last of Itilmost an on grade. The addition is three bloms irons m riorenca car nn ino ix blocks north of the Ames avenue oar linns. The lota are to be Bold on the easy payment plan. "Bungalow City," the name given by the rayne Investment company to a choice collection of bungalows on West Dodge atreet In runde, baa been accumulating suburbs and now It constats of . several blocks, almost all of which have bunga lows. Queer and quaint houses. Tha lots surrounding tha city are owned by George A Co. and by Benson & Carmichael. Both firms are selling a large number of the lots on Capitol avenue, Davenport and Chi cago streets and a score of homes are In oourse of construction. The fourth excursion of tha Payne Invest ment Into the Irrigated country of the North Platte returned Friday morning. The amount of sales since tha last trip mount to nearly $150,000. The edict having gone forth that a, sugar factory would be built In the Scott's Bluff valley In time to take care of tha 1910 crop has aroused new Interest. Also the recent Interview given In The Bee with Henry Oxnard to the effect that not less than ten factories would be built there In the next ten years is causing people to sit up and take no tion. There has been an unusual rainfall in the valley tn the past month and so far no Irrigation water has been needed. The river has been high, but has done no dam age nor Is any aprpehended, all rumors to the contrary notwithstanding. yre-v Flaa of Belllnsj Lots , Makes HmM roaalbl for Ilnndreas and ' mt Sasae Time flood Profits for neuters. Tn the sale of a south side residence for by Thomas Prennan. financial event of tbe National I Ife Insurance company of Vermont, the last week, there Is a story of how desirable Omaha property has be eotr.e and how It has recovered values which were actually only Imagined many years ago when the olty was only a little more than half Its present sir.. It has bees the eustom of the National of Ver mont to loan large amounts In the states where It has large amounts of Insurance In force- Accordingly a number of years ago a large number of real estate mort ( gages on city property were accepted by ' the company. Hard times came on and marry people could not meet them and the property was turned over to the Insurance company to meet the mortgages In due course of time. Tour years ago when the substantial growth of Omaha began In earnest, the National Ufa of Montpeller, Vt, was paying taxes on 120 pieces of Omaha propetty, a large part of which was In the residence district The real estate busbies began to pick up with other lines, and In the four years the financial agent of the company has sold the 120 pieces of prbperty. some of which were valuable, as the total amount of the sales Is something like ir-M.OOO. And yet most of those who .nnra. a,-i!..n.Miuil seaiim...-n slTBKina RXKKFTEBraO RDESSffiaSSBSa fSBSXSBSSM W1"-" " IOWA IN ON CORN EXPOSITION Hawkeye State Will Have Biff Educa- tional Exhibit at Omaha Show. STATE COLLEGE DOES GOOD WORK BLAIR GETS HIS VERDICT Forme Manager of King-man Com aay Wlme ta Lnwsnlt wit) the Hoase. A verdict of $5,020 In favor of Calvin S. Blair and agalnbt the Kingman Implement bought National Life property got genuine company was returned by the Jury In bargains, as the company desired to get Its Judge Day's court A sealed verdict In money out of city property. In securing the case was reached Friday evening at this amount of money from the company's T:90 o'clock, after three hours' deliberation Omaha holdings, the financial agent ha re- and returned In the morning. eetved a sufficient sum to make up the back Interest to his company, as well as I the taxes, and In the opinion of officer of the Company, who are delighted with th wy Omaha property was liquidated for them, the deal oould not be repeated In any city In the west and has not been done by other financial agents, who have had large amounts of city property to handle under similar conditions. Already States Wanting Spare rw,e Bnlldln Omanlttee Anxiety and Plans Will Be Enlarge to Meet Iteejolrements. Iowa and Nebraska will again compete for honors at the National Corn exposi tion. This decision was reached at a conference of officers of the Iowa State college ft.nd the executive committee of the National Corn exposition held Saturday. rrof. P. O. Holden, Prof. M. I Bowman, of the State college, and J. Wilkes Jones, former general manager of the exposition and at one time connected with the college. were present and expressed themselves as very much In favor of Iowa, making a showing, which If possible, would win honors from Nebraska. In a conference with George II. Steven son, assistant secretary of the National Corn association, Dean Curtis, of the Iowa State college, also assured the National Corn exposition that the school would make an exhibit at Omaha. The Iowa situation has hung slightly In the balance since the Western Grain Deal ers association decided to pull off a state show at Des Moines at about the same time as the National Corn association se lected for the National Corn exposition. Now It appears that the Iowa state show will be only a big drawing card for the National Corn show at Omaha. The state has appropriated 11,000 for an educational exhibit at the State Fair to be held in Des Moines. This exhibit greatly enlarged, will be brought to the corn show. Alt West is Signed I'p, With Iowa In Una the last western state has "signed up," and the prospect for the corn show are said to be twice as good as last year. The corn show la to do some extensive ailvortlelng the next few weeks. A rep resentative will attend the National Edu cational association meetings In Denver In July where thousands of school teachers will go. Another representative of the pub licity department of the corn show wjll visit during the next three weeks, the grain exchanges at the ten principal primary grain markets of the United states, which include Kansas City, St.-Louis, Cincinnati, Buffalo, Detroit. Toledo, Chicago, Milwau kee, Minneapolis, Duluth and Sioux City. Already plans for state exhibits are forc ing the committee on buildings to plan for larger quarters than was at first intended for the Third annual corn show, Omaha Banks Arc at Top of the List They Beat Every City Except Jfew York and Kansas City in Bank Clearing Gains. Omaha continue to lead the country tn elearlngs. For the week ending June 17 Omaha led every large city excerpt New Tork and Kansas City in the per oent of gain, passing suoh thriving villages as New Orleans, Louisville, Milwaukee, Los An geles, nt Paul and Seattle In the totals. The calendar week shows a gain of nearly $2,000,000 over the corresponding week of last year. MANY FIREMEN AT FUNERAL Seventy-Five Pay Their Reaped fo John Anderson, Who Onro HU Life. Seventy-five firemen, many of them od friends and former fellow worker with the deeeased, attended the funeral of John Anderson, the former captain of an Omaha fire company, who died In Hastings at the Hospital for the Insane. The service was held Saturday morning at St John' church, with Interment In Holy Sepulcher cemetery- Vhe home Is at U30 North Twenty-sixth street N.. P, Dodge started something In Stoux CKy In selling a traot of 400 lots, the plan of which is to be rapidly followed by at least on Omaha, firm. The deal Is unique even In Omaha, where all kinds of liberal offers are made by firms opening new ad ditions, and the Dodge deal wa the first of the kind ever pulled off In Sioux City. Value of Newspaper Advertising Paper Delivered Before Western School Managers' Association at Des Moines, June 5, 1909, by H. B. Boyles, President Boyles College, Omaha, ! Caruso, the-tenor, is inOmaka that is, his marvelous voice U and ho gives dally recitals to mavny a proud owner of that most superb entertainer the exquisite "Vietrola m " Any Tlctor" talking machine will bring om Oemae' nicety but If yon wonll tea this same freat tenor voice an thong Issuing "from the flesh" thea hear It from a "Tlctroln." The "Tletrola- ta a complete "Tlctor," with eenc.UM arntatl horn, and albums for one headred and fifty reoorfl. The 1'f. closing of ths "two small drawers at the front of the machine permit the volume ef sound to be Inoreaaed or diminished. A -Tlotrole" 1 t expensive enough to be r It cheap enough to be common." Purchase one and you will have D only tae mes? essniaite means ef reproducing song, J ' J&?Vl voice, but you will have as well, a pieoe of cabinet work worthy of being placed la A XT parler in the land. We are the largest western agency for "flctrolas" a&d record, and sell complete machine la several finish, at $800 each. 11 Fhone, 1GGS -T.it Tf i 11 Council Dl tiffs, 33 Broadway. PhoccDCta auu..L,.'ar I concluded a number of year ago that newspaper advertising Is aa essential to the business collego that hopes to meet with the greatest financial Buccess as It Is to the up-to-date mercantile concern. Great enterprise today are built up by . . . some form of advertising, but whatever Dome time uo air. lwubh uumu ..... .... (Jj In Morntnsslde. a beautiful suburb of Bloux City, for $35,000. The Methodist ool lege, of which Bishop W. 8. Iewis was the , head for many year, ta located In Momlngslde, and It Is high and sightly, corresponding to Dundee In Omaha. This traot Mr. Dodge offered for sale on terms which made It possible for any one to -oure a lot-tl down and M cent per week. method are used, outside of newspaper advertising, especially tn the building up of a private school or business college, are only approximate; and, I think, with pro per newspaper advertising the results could In almost every Instance be greatly Increased. A business college may achieve a measure of success without the news paper, but It can double Its patronage by constant and persistent newspaper ad- Many of the buyers paid much more than vartlatng. $1 down and will pay more than SO oent When I apeak of newspaper advertising, per week. As a result, when the property I do not mean the spasmodlo sort, but la all paid for, Mr. Dodge will realise a conatant ytmatlo effort day after mall fortune for handling thl proposl- day, and week after week. The kind that tlon-eomethlng like $40,000, It la said, and mke our school a household word; that yet he ha mad a home In beautiful Morn- both the parent and the prospective im. t ..v.ral hundred oeonle. etudent think of your school whenever an . ,v,. ,k. ., who Institution of your have been paying more for residences In the Backing house district The Dodge Institution of your class Is mentioned. The kind of advertising that gets In quiries, whenever school Information Is de- tract puts them up on high ground, In the LuIarlli folori and follow-up letters are all air and sunshine, above the packing town homes. Following this plan an Omaha firm I to open a doslrable tract shortly where $1 dow-n and M cents per week will buy a good lot The firm propose to furnish mall bank, similar to those furnished by avlng bank. The bank, may be taken to the office of the company, where the key will be kept and small savings. buy lots which will be more valuable by the time they are paid for. of great value, but the most Important point to consider is Inquiries and exper ience demonstrates that such Inquiries can be gotten through the newspapers. And, If you have the proper follow-up system, I speak advisedly when I say that you can land 60 per cent or more of such Inquiries. John Wojtnarnakor'a Advlco. " While it is a fact that newspaper ad vertising costs money, and many a 'quitter" has lost out Just at the time he should have taken a new grip. John Whera will the Woodmen of the World Wanamaker ay there are only three bslld their $750,000 sky-scraperT While this way to make newspaper advertising pay: question Is the talk of real estate dealers, "First keep at lt second, keep at It; and all admit that wherever it 1 built It will third, keep at It" and I think We can have an Influence on other property. Some afford to take the advice of John, of the officers and friends of the order do The big department etores afford an In net believe the building will be sold at uno of this kind of persistency. They Fifteenth and Howard, but the new build-1,, RO persistent they never, allow an Issue Inc erected en the lots east ana on tne present site, the building now occupied torn down. Offers have been made to the order for the corner at Seventeenth and Harney streets, opposite the court house and Boyd theater. Another offer has been submitted to sell the southwest oorner Of Seventeenth and Dodge, now eecupted by the .old Campbell home, mill another Is Nineteenth and Douglaa, opposite the new building of J. U Kennedy. Some prominent corners are to be used during the present year both In the retail asd wholesale districts. That the Union Paclflo Railroad company will erect the building at Fifteenth and Dodge streets and begin this year, there I eoaroely any doubt Tbe directors of the organisation to bo the City National bank say they will build at Sixteenth and Harney streets with out a doubt. Another building costing $300,000 at least Is being planned for an other vacant corner In the retail dlstriot. Tbe Falrmont Creamery company will build en the southeast corner of Twelfth and Jones streets, and another warehouse is promised near Twelfth and Davenport near the Loose-Wiles cracker factory as soon aa the city council seee fit V give the business houses on the street the same advantages for trackage and shipping plat of a paper to pass without the name of the store appearing therein. They spend con siderable money to announce the closing of the store on Christmas or some other holiday. WhyT There is no direct return, It Is the object to familiarize every reader with the name of the store. I believe in the same theory of publicity for the busi ness college only not upon such a large scale. The constant hammering from the newspaper, dally or weekly, makes your name as familiar in the home aa that of any other well advertised product I believe also In specific advertising. The general stntemont that you are running a business college is not sufficient. Change your copy frequently and enlarge and elaborate upon some particular feature each time. Your faculty as a whole your building the desirability of your location the success of your employment depart ment If you t.ava onethe advantages of attending summer sohool and other term announcements, etc In other words make special features of your business Just as the merchant makes special features of his business. Of course an Institution may be so dead ( In the shell as to have no feature and never will have, but we are talking to and about live people, not mum. mles. This also applies to the public upon whom we dupend. We are talking to live Americana, not to the royal Kgyptians asleep so long under the Pyramids. Another Direct Benefit. Aside from the direct result which one obtains from newspaper edvertlslng It Is a safety valve, which keeps a man atten tive to his own business. By that I mean that If ono give his best attention to news paper advertising, to the inquiries arising therefrom, to following up such Inquiries and giving attention to the students he Is bound to get he will be too busy to worry over what his competitors are doing. No man ever made a suocess ef hi own business who spent too much time and effort In worrying about his competitors. No man ever built up a big business en terprise who lost sleep In making plans to' circumvent hi opponent. In our line of work there is entirely too much atten tion given by many school manager to the plan and methods of competitors. Tbe man who give careful attention to hi advertising ha no time for such useless care. ' What matter It to you If your competitor by some chlncanery secures one of your prospects when your advertising Is bringing you inquiries every day from people whom you land and who never heard of the other fellow' school T Why assume a burden of worry as to condition elsewhere in some other school and neglect the proper cultivation of your own flold? Newspaper advertising saves worry. You cannot carry, another's bur dens If you keep busy with your own affairs. Habit Grows os One. The more newspaper advertising a man does, the more he desires to do, but that does not mean that the eloquent solicitor should be permitted to prevail on you to use . pages and half pages in ''special" editions Just to be a "goad fellow," nor to make the public believe you are doing a big business, nor to "bluff a competi tor. As mentioned above, I believe It Is most unbusinesslike and positively fatal In many Instance to fight a competitor, partiaularly to carry your petty quarrels into the papers and before the public. Some solicitors will play upon Jealousy to secure more advertising, but the public 1 not concerned in your troubles. Advertising 1 expensive and Judgment must be exercised in Its use. Having determined upon the approximate amount to be expended, make it go as far as possible. In many cases the services of an advertising agency 'would b valuable In planning an advertising campaign, but you are footing the bills and you want the agent to present your claims for patronage, not his Idea. You are the man behind the gun and know what you want to say, although It Is some times good business to have someone else say It for you. It Is the agent's business to put your advertising in the best posl Summer Amusements at the Omaha Theaters vi.r...i-j MA HA has settled down to the summer period very gracefully, and the amusement being af forded are quite In keeping with the season. And yet this Is not exactly true, for the quality of drama that Is bsing set forth at the Boyd more properly belongs to the winter sea son, when the managers make their most ambitious effort. Manager Woodward ha been doing some wonderful things with hi stock company this summer, snd proposes to keep it up Indefinitely, apparently. For the current (week he has scheduled "Sun- day," a fine comedy by Thomas Raceward, seen here but once, when Ethel Barrymore played In It It story is unique in a way and Its action is quite sufficient for the seaaon. Punday is a girl who Is born of good English parents, but has been left an orphan In a far western town. She U reared by four men, friends of her father, who are rough but kindly. At the opening fqrm a is given wholesale houses In all of the play the question of Sunday's future other earts of the city. An npnrimeni bouse and several flats era to be erected at Fourteenth and Cass streets ana Be tween Capitol and Davenport on Sixteenth n four-story brick Is In course of construc tion. These with the new Brandeta build- in et Seventeenth and Douglas streets and the new ll.eoO.0CO court house make the outlook for $0,000,000 worth of business prop erty look exceptionally bright In a week Hastings A Heyden have sold eighty-three lot in the llncoin tteignis addition opened the first of the month. The company ha lota In the addition. Thin 1 south of the Deaf and Dumb insti tute, between West Maple and Wirt streets. , Binoa the first of the year the company has sold thirty lots in the Sulphur 6prlngs addition, north of Locust street and east of Sherman avenue, with Pratt street for thn northern boundary. The addition ha boon sold U a year, leaving out two lots which, bare not been sold by the company, j n4 almost every lot has a new residence. fb Best addltto) which Hasting Hey 1 under debate. A youns Englishman. scapegrace, ton of a good family, is loaf ing about the camp, and proposes dishonor to Sunday, then undertakes to force him self on her. One of her protectors finds her in a struggle with the brute, and shoot him dead. Then 6unday goea to England to live with her relatives. Hare she Is wooed and won by a gentleman, but she discovers it was his brother who was shot out west and flees back to her boys. He follows and explanations clear up the sit uatlon and all erms well. Miss Lang will have the fine role of Sunday, while Mr. Morris will play the dual part of Arthur Brinthorpe, the young Eng Hsh ne'er do well, and Colonel Brinthorpe, his brother. Messrs. Llndholra, Davis, Alderson and Dudley will have the roles of the four western men, and the others in the company will be suitably plaoed In the cast The first and fourth acta take place In the home of the four and Sunday in Silver City, "Out West," and the second and third are at Brinthorpe abbey, Eng land. This give m fine chanoe for eon. ha been chosen with such great car And contain such a diversity of subjects that there will be something to please every fancy particularly and every one aa a whole. A study ts made of program selec tion for' the Burwood display and the constant endeavor 1 mad to choose only such subject as will command endorse ment from educators and head of families, rather than picture that reek of vlclous ness, violence and vulgarity. Very little of the melodramatlo la allowed to creep Into the Burwood' superb displays, and one may rest assured that what little there la displayed la of so mild and harmless a variety that tha wit netting of It would not Influence children to emulate It Plenty of comedy subjects, mythical and educa- ttoral topics are the choice of the Bur wood folks, they sincerely believing that such a combination comprises the ideal moving picture pre gram. The value of the pictures and their enjoyment Is greatly enhanced by the soft velvety melody from the cathedral pipe organ, the like of which does not exist In any mcvlng picture dis play in the west. To hear it alone 1 well worth the admission fee. Today the in tertalnment will be continuous from 1 until U p. ro., an hour and a hall being neces sary for each performance. As usual, tomorrow evening will be so ciety night," this being the regular Mon day evening feature. The picture program ill cease at ( o'clock- and for half an hour the organ recital and vocal concert will hold one' mention. For his pipe organ selections Herr Urbach will play Handel' "Largo" and the intermessa from "Cavalerla Rustlcana," by MaMagnl, Tenor Chaunoey Jeasen will render dur ing the half hour, "I'll Sing Thee Songs of Araby," by Clay; "A Red. Red Rose," by Hastings, and by special request "The Holy City." The regular program will then be resumed. aea wilt tackle to known aa "Hooto Tor I trast in stag setting , and Is fully pro lan' and Is on the South Central bonis- J vided for by Mr. Woodward. Tbe first por. v4, overlooking Spring lake park, It la formaao will be on Sunday afternoon, kw.iki m mm of th moat dealrablo parts a -jv - mmsmmM ntno Juaa insfcBO ox mm oesisi uw w mm v m ourwwa munw oivcraioa starts tnia afternoon with a pro- t I gram which, la its eourety. will outcla It Iksol Snftata Tttto-Trnat company tin I any previous offering. The moving picture CA -a Xfr.9t AAn: t be known I section ot the twur and a half program The Increased attendance at the Air Dome theater, corner of Eighteenth and Douglas streets the last two weeks has been phenomenal Last Sunday evening It I estimated that ever TM people w turned away, and with, tbo axcnptloa ot two night the large auditorium baa been well filled during the last week. The of faring mt the Ulloua Stock oompnny this week wUl bo ''Cousin Ilolon." a four-act comedy drama. Lewi Randall, an Amer lean, la practically an exile la Central America, fearing to return, because he has committed a murder in the United States. Tom Long, also an American, and who bear a marked resemblance to Randall, dies, and his papers and effects are given to Randall by a native priest Randall dis covers a letter and photograph of Helen. Tom Long's cousin, and is very much Im pressed by her picture. Randall returns to the United States as Tom Long; he Is met by the father, who accepts him a his son, and by Helen, who believe him to be her cousin, but aside from this, things do not run very smoothly In the Long family. Randall soon discovert In Tout Long he Is Impersonating one of the worst rascals ever residing In that community. In Central America he bad formed a liking for Helen from her photograph, and upon meeting her falls madly In love, but is treated by her in silent contempt as the original Tom Long before he went to Cen tral America robbed her of her small for tune. Randall confesses to Helen that he la not her cousin, but. the statement Is treated by her as a Joke and a ruse to keep from working to pay her back the amount of money he has formerly stolen. The complication are satisfactorily ex plained in the last act and the play ends happily. The story is interesting and fascinating, the characters are true to life and not overdrawn. The play 1 entirely new and will have Hs first performance on any stag at the Air Pom tonight Miss Fitch has arranged for her annual alfresco dramatlo exhibition at Haneoom park. Thl time the play will be given near the rose garden in the northwest corner of the park. "Twelfth Night" will be repeated at the evening performance. and a matinee performance of "Much Ado About Nothing" will be given. Colonol Gardiner of Fort Crook will supply the Sixteenth Infantry band to furnish the muslo, and other plan are along line that will make this the most enjoyable outdoor entertainment ever undertaken hero. 1 Fitch baa been busy for aome time re hearsing bar player in the two dramas to be gtven, and expects to furnlah smooth performances. Tuesday June td, bM boon looted, a U flte ble light-wake It attractive. There ts little or no value to be attached to a "free" reading notice In connection with an advertisement The nice things the ad man says, about your college he will re-hash and use for some other to morrow, and use it over again for a little I by 4 concern In the next town and pos sibly make it stronger for the weaker In stitution. The public may be fooled occa sionally on a free notice, but the discrimi nating young person or the wise parent know hot air, whether promulgated by an auctioneer or In a "free notice," for which you are charged along with your ad. Steer clear of the reading notice, but if you can make real new out of Incidents of school life and your publisher will use them In a special column or page that Is devoted to sohool reading matter, by all mean furnish the paper with suoh infor mation. Every change made In the college building the college faculty athletics, school entertainments, receptions, positions filled, term openings, etc., mentioned in thl way, la good advertising. How to Pick a Papeb. Now a word to the newspaper. X num ber of them have In recent year pre sumed to establish school Information bu reau In connection with school advertis ing. I believe this is wrong In theory and a serious error. A paper secure a large list of schools for its columns and then assume to advise young people where to go. There Is no advice about it They se cure catalogue from the several schools and the - inquirer Is deluged with school literature, and he is deeper In the mire than if he had made no enquiry. The paper reoommends every institution which pay the prloe for an ad, whether It b a half Inoh or a half page. The publisher ha no personal knowledge of any school beyond what the advertisement asserts and he is not in a position to advise young people, Wo advertise to get the direct Inquiries. In response to newspaper ad yerttslng wa do not expect students to rush to our doors, but we do expect to get inquiries, and we want to answer these in our own way and make our own argu ments. We do not care to do business by proxy through any paper's "school bu-1 reau." A number of large papers recently have been lndueed, or have concluded to abandon this scheme. Included among these are the Kansas City Star and all of the Omaha papers; and probably otherB, I believe we should assert ourselves In regard to this matter and give the papers that do this to understand that In our opinion they are assuming a prerogative that absolutely belongs to us. Ita Help Is Needed. Newspaper advertising Is most valuable In placing your Institution In a right light before business men those upon whom you depend for positions for students. Busi ness men take note of your constant and persistent advertising; they admire persist ent solicitation for business; they appre ciate your efforts to bulldt up a good school; they commend you as a business man, because you are doing business in a business-like way and they believe you are teaching business. I believe from thl point alone the newspapers advertising is profitable, aside from the direct business it brings. It is a point too often over lookedthis matter of our standing with business men. Whonever possible I be lieve w should place ourselves before the PU011O in a PBSineaa lignu e are (MCS' ing business and that fact should be im' pressed upon both the student who desires the education and upon the business man with whom wo associate and upon whom we depend. Newspaper advertising more than anything else will bring about these mutual business relations. AMUSEMENT!. AMUSEMENTS. ..I N ONLY PHONES- Bell, Doua. ISOO'Jnd. A-1506 PEOPLE CROWD THE BURWOOD O HEAR THE 10 llOCRE HOWoVER 200,000 Vo There are that many souls in the Omaha district and every mother" son wui go once any way ethere ewteO om oftoner. week OOOSAM and to Omaha' only "worth while" MOVING PICTURES ENTIRE CHANGE OF PROORAM TODAY AND NEXT THURS. tartlsr Today Mr. Jeaaea W1U Slag "X Wonder Wio X Kissing Ker Mow." 11 HOUR SH0W:gH"2SIOc BOYP,?"sixth slq WccK CAPACITY Today 2:30 Tonight 8:15 All Week eveey THE W00DVARD STOCK CO. NIGHT. Presenting BTXSTj VAmaTKO&yrS Snocess, II jro oxra rsatss t"cKTAi" Next Week "MERELY MARY ANN," . .1 1.. i. i.u. ''. wiiMf Hiii.'iUi.uTrj.rx BEAUTIFUL LAKE UADAW'A Moil Delightful A Sojcmer letorti Big Program very Afternoon and Evening Here Are Justs Few of the Many Features Tbat Will Please You r.lanawa Concert Band Bathing, Coating, Fishing, Dancing, Roller Coaster. Merry-Go-Round, Vslniature Railroad, Roller Skating, Cowling, Shooting, Penny Arcade Japanese Dall Came. . And Many Other Features ADMISSION FREE Chicago Film Exchange America's Foremost Film Renters Omaha Office 14th and Douglaa St Our Exclusiv Film Service can be seen at the KHUU Theater every afternoon and evening, dally change of program, two thousand feet of films each day. HILLMAN STOCK CO. 99 Cousin Helen Admission, lOo and BOO. jTSXT "wTB ''To Burglar- WW." The Borglum Studios riAjro i.i!BtnTiamrr mztkod. Aagnrt M. Borglum, Madam Borglum, rupil of Wager Bwayne, arls, Will Teach Soring the Summer. 1810 Capitol Avenue Ml mil OMAHA vs. LII1CQU1 VINTON STREET PARK Sunday June 20th. CAME CALLED 3:45. n o w o u P RALSTON rifteen wig at- ana BatUDgl the A complete park. tractions I Boatlngr and dancing every night. By far most exhilarating air aad attxaotlT pot ta the west. BAJXT BASTS COWCXBTS Take So. Omaha car. free admis sion to park. '1 . J v o- ni il I in t ' 7 "Tentind It" fcy the toady br.k of om Icwely Inland 1V or eobl river, wll stocked with fUh -it a root boaltby aud dlhUttl iperiaoc, par Ocularly il (with Judicious laroihoui ht) cat or two of The beer that makes the world smile with you" hasbeeo Included la the cjmmlssarUi. In the afternoon of a not, fatiguing day, a few foaming glume of this famously rich and refreshing malt and hop Urew.aJd wonderfully to tha rest and enjornwut of f !cntciQg. yachting . fishing or outing parties. The snappy thirst-quenching aud ehilaral!..j qualities of Poorloas har mod it always "first choice" by msa who know. mail order invited. Sold la cafbn, restaurant, hotel and first-class bar. Brewsd by the aaclusivo Cuad Matwral Proooae Tha 014 Conba Method." JOHN GUND BREWING CO. La Crowe. Wisconsin. W. O. MJKYDEN. Maaa&er Omaha Braadi, Omaha, jiab, Telephone IoagiAS UM4, Uidepemd, A-aadn. j a mkmmmkmmwmmmmmkWu-mmtm.