THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 31, 1009. i u i..,. in IW. B. You'll get two kinds-of comfort in wearing a W. B. Corspt the comfort of mind in know ing that your figure is stylish and therforo admired, and the comfort of body that'--comes from wearing a corset of correct lines for your figure. AV. B. Corsets are made in a great variety of models. We can fit you if you will step into our Corset department. Prices from $1.00 to $3.00.-Second floor. ! I ape Gl oves l Special Sale of Chamois Dust Cloths. All out 25c C h a m o 1 dust cloths, each, at Special Sale of Scrub Cloths All our 10c scrub clothes, Monday's sale price, each 6c. Special Sale Scalloped Maderia Tea Napkins 25 dozen $12.00 Scalloped Tea Napkins Monday only, a dozen Stylish Buttons Thert's nothing adds more to a stunning- suit or cot than handweme burtons. We are headquarters for aJI the newest sorts, beautiful Jet Buttons In plain and fancy effc plain Jet Buttons in large, medium and small sliee,' "Fancy Buttons In all the wanted sites. . . v ' - The most complete, stock of Pearl Buttons In the city two and frii r holes. In all sizes. A specially good pearl button; .Monday, at, a card. Be. Main Floor v 9 Grand Showing of IFall .IVIillinery IMoodlay Special display of women's gloves, at $1.S5 iu corner Window. Special Sale of Hair Goods Monday engineering- devices which have held the liver In Us fixed bed and which make the diep waterway. "W e have Known him .this, and now we nro ready to ask Xilm to extend the re vetments which tlo this work Into every ui-nd on the Mississippi, and to carry this Uerp waterway and the protection to farm lands adjacent to It throughout the course of the Mississippi. "We wish to so further than this Im provement, revetment and contraction; and to see some broad ' general plan adopted which shall qover thewliole control of the water In. the river, shall lessen the floods and give us a more general .flow at low water, and at the same tune restrict the channel.. Wo believe that this work must be carried on Dot plecettual. by local divi sions and subject to occasional appropria tions by pongicss, as has been done in the pant, nor do we., believe .that this work should louger be subject .to , the annual arguments and maclilnai$ri of a rlvei s nnd harbors commlttej.)'! '' v( . IMane Are h'etbiv. Mr. Kavanagh ealdf,-., "Kngieers have surveyed the route and '.:have declared a d cp watt-rway feaslol. nd' obx ' sc complishmrht. . The . bent JyU engineers have declared It Inevitable!" he' said. "Chi cago has spent. SuO.OOO.DUu cutting chan nel through the rocky divide, and Illinois Is spending 38.00,no to step It by lucks down to the soft-bottom portion of the Illinois river," the speaker declared. "Prom there to the gulf the way k clear and the lilans are ready," K Mr. Kavanagh said: "The- people will no longer tolerate the 'pork-barrel' method of compelling government engineers to allot funds for river Improvements, according to congressional district, nor will they allow the development of the greatest of their highways to depend upon uncertain appro priations." The spt-aker said that when congress con venes this winter it will have to consider serloutfly for the first time the great prob leun of the conservation of water, which President Roosevelt foresaw, and among eiber things, the establishment of some 2704 and 2708 CMcaao 2704 Chicago; reception hall, parlor, dining ream-and kitchen down stairs, three, bed rooms and bath room up stairs; thoroughly modem plumbing,: excellent furnace;, gas and electric light; down stairs finished in oak, maple floors. Price only $4,300 $500 cash, balance a trifle more than rent. Now ready for occupancy. 2708 Chicago; living room across entire front of house; dining room and kitchen on first floor, otherwise same description as 1704 Chicago. Price $4,100 $500 cash, balance practically the same as rent Houses open for inspection Sunday from 3 to 5. . "C G. CARLBERG Oil J. Y. Life Dido - ioTB moan nstaca ill p CORSETS One-clasp Cape Gloves Ireland, Elite or 1). per pair One-clasp Cape Gloves Elite, assorted tans, One-clasp Cape Gloves, Ireland's "Special", per pair : Main Floor- Special Sale Bath Towels Monday in our Basement. Special Sale C 1 u n y Laee Pieces Mon day, each, $1. Sale Broom Covers Monday Basement Linen Department Ca-LU-Ta Knit Broom Covers, each 10c. Astoria Knit Broom Covers, each 15c. New Nodost Knit Broom Covers, each 25c Howard DuBtless DuBters, each 2 5c. Howard Dustless Broom Covers, each 3 5c. Rlpoff Polishing Mittens, each 10c. Bee, 10-l-'09. ' big central bureau, probably a department of public works, to undertake the entire control of our running watlr. "But," said he, "the deep waterway must not wait for this. In floods and in low water a fourteen-foot channel can be easily maintained." Grappling Hok Catches Painter James Donahue Miraculously Saved from Death While Falling: from Scaffolding in New York. NEW YORK. Oct. 30. Cheeked in his fall from a scaffolding off which a fellow worker had Just pitched to death on the stone abutment of the Williamsburg bridge 150 feet below, JamesDonahue. a painter, today In the sight of thousands hung sus pended from a grappling hook at the end of a long rope, which had caught In his clothing as ha fell. Head downward, Donahue swung In mid air until persons on the bridge structure above swung another rope to him. He grasped It, pulled himself head-uppermost, and then was drawn to safety. Owen Fin negan, a painter, was the man killed. Telephone Connection Ordered. SIOUX FALLS. 8. D.. Oct. 90. (Special.) The Citisen's Telephone company of Cen tervllle complained to the Stat Hillroad board that the managers of the Beresford telephone system had refused to permit a connection being made with the lines of that system. The board fully investigated the matter and at a meeting Just held de cided that the complainant company had a right to connect with the Beresford sys tem. This case has attracted wide at tention among the telephone men of the state. j Orders were Issued requiring the railway companies to construct depot buildings at I 1L -I nil A'1 & P. makes assorted tans, 1.50 black and gray, pr., $1.25 assorted tans, sizes 5to 85c Special Sale of Baby Irish DoylieB and Center Pieces Monday. Monday. $750 8ee display of handker chiefs in our Howard street windows. Grover, Crandall and Onaka. ' Following negotiations between the board and the proper officials of the railway company concerned It was agreed that a viaduct should be constructed over the tracks of the company at Bradley, In accordance with a petition filed by the people of that place. The board also ordered In stock yards at 'Amherst, Marshall county. Var ious, matters not of general Interest were disposed of by the board during its meet ing. . SHAKEUP IN COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY Ac-tin Superintendent Perltlna Kii pended and Inspector Gilbert Re dnced bjr Assistant Mrllnrg. WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.-Frank Walley Perkins, acting superintendent of the United States coast and geodetic survey was today suspended without pay and John .J. Gilbert, inspector of hydrography and topography,' reduced from $3,000 to 12,000 a year as the result of charges of administrative Irregularities. The action was taken by Acting Secretary of Commerce and Labor McHarg. Their cases will be passed upon later by Secre tary Kagel, now In the west. Just on the evening of his retirement from office Mr. McHarg took action on the charges against the two officials, Per kins was at the head of the survey, while Dr. O. H. Tlttman, the director, was in Europe. Dr. Tlttman left early In Septem ber and has recently returned. The charges, Acting Secretary McHarg said today, do not In any way affect Dr. Tlttman and the two officials named are the only pnes against whom charges have been made. Perkins Is charged with suppressing offi cial correspondence and shielding employes who have been reported, nleo with having refused to forward to the head of the do. partmrnt of commerce and labor, charge against the management of the survey and with evading Questions officially ankod him. A charge of Inefficiency has been made against Gilbert. Reports of commanders of Coast and Geodec In survey vessels having their wives and families aboard them, some practically living on the craft in violation of the regulations of the department, and of Irregular management and disposition ot these boats figure in the - cases. There are also allegations of favoritism through pigeon holing of reports against certain employes In the bureau. Mr. Perkins left the office, for his home eerly this afternoon. Director Tlttman had nothing to say. U. S. COURT OF APPEALS CRITICISES M'PHERSON Remarks of Jade to Jnrr Declared to Be Beyond l.raral Right of t'oart. ST. IX5UIS. Oct. SO. Because of remarks made to a jury by Judge Smith McPherson of the United States district court at Kan sas City the United States court of appeals In St. Louis today reversed and remanded the case of John F. Rudd. who had been convicted of conducting 'a scheme to de fraud. lludd was accused of using the malls In an effort to sell a spring lever. The rec ords showed that after, the evidence was submitted Judge McPherson - said to the Jury: "No man with the sllghest degTee of in telligence above Insanity weald say that this pump Is practical. Any school boy would know better. "This man either is guilty of a- criminal act or he la an Idiot, insane and foolish. The defendant claims to bellvs,'ia his ma chine. If hs doea he Is an idiot, craiy. If he doea not, he la guilty." The decision of the court pf 'appeals, written by Judge Hook, ays: ' "It Is the province of a court'-to' com ment on facts and evidence, but his com ments should be dispassionate and guarded In older that the Jurors may ba left free to exercise their Independent Judgment." In the lower, court Rudd was fined $500 and sentenced to serve .eleven months in. Jaii. "WE HAVE WITH US TODAY!" Task of Local Speakers in Introduc : injf the. President. PONDEROUS DUTY NOBLY DONE lnlnnts f ar Tmr of 4'trr Mr on President's Train Forecnst r Coming Mes , f to Congress. Knough diversion of the serlo comic order brightens and lightens the hard ship ef the presidential tour from oosst to coast and to the Gulf. Most Impressive In this line is the scramble for the honor of introducing the president to an audi ence and the local variations In the act. A correspondent of Leslie's Weekly, travel ing with the president, sketched the Impos ing Introductions and other incidents of the tour as follows: Mr. Taft will be doubly fortunate If he pulls through his entire Itinerary of In troductions. The Introductory speech Is the nlghmare, as well as the rearing, bucking, damping,' daylight horse, ot the presidential trip. The Introductory speech Is as full of trouble, as the who-shall-rlde-wlth-the president question. Generally, to settle all the local squabbles over the matter, It Is arranged that every promi nent man In town shall have a hand In it. .So the meeting la opened by the chair man of the steenih ward republican com mittee, who makes a speech about our glo-reeus land, our free lnstltooshuns and our noble, patriotic, high-minded, lovable, popular and distinguished guest, the Presi dent of the United States. Perhaps you de lude yourself Into thinking that the presi dent is going to speak now. Wrotig! The chairman of the titeenth Ward Re publican club Introduces the chairman of the county republlacn committee, who thanks the great audience for Its splendid reception to that most loved, most honored, most splendid, most everything else cKiien of the republic, William Howard Taft.' Ha, ha! You think that the president .comes In hers, don't you? Wrong again! The chairman of the city republican committee la Introduced, who thanks the audience again for Its splendid outpouring, Its tremendous enthUHlasm, Its loyalty to country and Its confidence In that highest type of tree cltlienry, the man whom we all love from the bottom of our heart,' William Howard Taft. Now we must have the president! Wrong for the third time! The mayor gets up. You had probably fo) gotten all about the mayor. Well, he fishes his speech from his pocketthere are twelve pages of It and reads all about how this fair city has grown v from the wilderness, how our sainted fathers fit the Injuns, how our twlce-salnted mothers accompanied our fathers hand In hand down through the years and how now, when we have reached the zenith -of our prosperity, our fair city even , Pittsburg would be called a blond city mi an occcas'lon like this our fair city opens wide her hospitable arms to welcome the president of the United States, Wil liam Howard Taft "Allow me, Mr. Presi dent, ,to hand, you the key to our city." The key is accepted by the president. But don't get excited over the belief that the president is to have his innings at last Nothing of the sort, for, aa I live, here -is the governor! It's all off now for another quarter of an hour, because the governor In going to run; again next election and hs has a speech . that he must' get off his chest for home consumption. He finds the manuscript,- starts In with the recital of all his state -ever did and expects ever to do, saws the air . fn front of the president's face, . proclaims ' him, for the hundredth time, the greatest, grandest, -most Intelli gent, most patriotic and most broad minded citizen of the greatest, grandest and most patriotic republic "our beloved president, William Howard Taft." At last the president Is Introduced. Glad Hand and Band. In spite of the monotony of the travel, the tunes and the handshaking . stunts. President Taft is standing the continent circling, trip remarkably well. By the time he finishes the tour he will probably find some difficulty In sleeping on a bed that Is hitched to Mother Earth. In order to ob tain real, restful slumber after he returns, he will perhaps be obliged to order a sec tion of the Marine band to play "Hall to the Chief" under his window at t or 3 or 4 a. m. The brutal assassination of "Hall to the Chief," which the president has been forced to hear so often on the present trip, Is a erlme second only In flendlshness to the dally murder of "The Star Spangled Banner" and the almost as frequent massacre- of "My Country. 'TIs of Thee." One or more of these near melo dies la hurled at the president aa he ar rives, and Is thrown after him as he flees down the railroad track. If the poor presi dent survives the horns of the village band, evades without scar the young woman with the bouquet and escapes with his life and digestion from the "banquet" prepared by the town caterer who was, until a year ago, the village undertaker, but. "this here place being so healthy that nobody ever dies, he went broke" if he Is able to de clare himself alive and travel-fit after all theso terrors of the wayside, he will be doing well. I.lfe on h0nln. As the presidential train made its way No MaJter How Often one has Toasties for breakfast -or lunch the crisp, delicate bits of white corn, with thesweeftoasty" flavor, always seem new and different. Try a dish with cream for your breakfast. "The Memory Lingers" Pkgs. lCc and 15c. Poatum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek. Mich. Post The Mission Of thosn corpuscle In your blood that have been called 1 Little Soldiers," Is) to fight for you gstlnst the dlsess germs that constantly ondanger your hoalth. Those corpuscles srs made healthy and strong by the use of Hood's Sarsaparllla. This medicine is a combination of more than 20 different remedial agents in proportions and by a process known only to ourselves and it has for thirty years been constantly proving its worth. Ko substitute, none "just-ag-good." down the Pacific coast It took on and dis charged huge cargoes of fruit and local committeemen. The apples, pears, melons and grapes were loaded Into the baggage car and the local committees sm armed ail over. The fruit spoiled rapidly, but the committeemen never. They were Just as fresh when they got oft aa when they swarmed aboard to push their way Into the president's car. After learning that nearly half a carload of fine apples and peaches had rotted In Utah, Mr. Taft gave orders that all fruit over and- above what waa used by the party should be given to the hospitals in the various cities visited. As sometimes one evil consumes another, the danger of decay In the fruit supply is often prevented by the hungry committee men. The number of local celebrities that are sent on ahead to the state line or some other convenient point to "escort the president Into our town" is by no means guaged by the size of the place that the executive Is favoring. Quite the con trary. The larger the committee, the smaller the town, would be nearer the rule. Then there are the members of the governor's staff In each state who must come on board with the governor to help along the official welcoming. They are weighted down with gold lace and titles, sabers and spurs, and, between their ef forts to uphold the dignity of their Jobs and their attempts to ollmb Into the first automobiles in the parade, usually look thoroughly miserable. ' Coming- Menage to Congress. President Taft's message to the Sixty second congress is completed. He has written it on the slopes of the Rockies, In the alkali dust of the lntermountaln states and on the blushing fruit lands of the Pacific slope. By the time the peregrinat ing Whit House rolls rolls into Washing- ten, on Nevember 10, little will be lacking from the document save the executive's benediction for the lawmakers and a few recommendations handed him by members of his cabinet. Taken aa a whole, the present trip thus far might well bs called a try-out of the message. Mr. Taft has evolved It as he has proceeded. Each town has been a paragraph and each state a page. At Boston, where his 11,000-mile tour began, he laid before the financially Interested his ideas on currency and mon tary legislation. His sympathy for the Aldrlch central bank scheme was avowed. and he expressed the hop that congress would recognlre the necessity of early ac tion along lines laid down by the monetary comlmsslon which would result In our adoption of a financial system more ade quate to the needs ol trade. From Boston the president traveled to Chicago, where he gave the business men a look at the paragraph of his message dealing with labor and Injunctions. He wished the antl trust law so amended that labor unions could not be unduly discriminated against, but at the same time demanded that they understand the necessity of obeying the laws like alt other classes; he also wanted to carry out the pledge of the party plat form In regard to injunctions. At Mil waukee the president advocated postal savings banks, and at Winona, In the heart of the insurgent territory, he came out In a resolute defense of Tawney and the tariff bill, and threw down the gauntlet to those who have charged him with forgetting his promises of a downward revision. In the ' Winona speech the president suggested that if more tariff revision Is needed It will be well to wait for recommendations of the tariff board on the subject, and In the same ad dress declared his Intention - of ordering the board to prepare a dictionary or glos sary of tariff terms and expressions for the benefit of the people at large. The president's Des Moines speech , was his declaration of Intention to further amend the Interstate commerce law for the pro tection of the shipper against the oppres sions of the carrier and to ask for more law against the watering of stock. Den ver heard the president's recommends tlons for ' the Income tax amendment to the constitution, to be put In force only when the country faces grave financial crises; Spokane listened with eager ears to his conservation speech in which he pledged himself to continue the Roose velt policies, and Seattle heard with keen disappointment that Mr. Taft was "dead set" against granting home rule to Alaska. In the same speech he came out strongly for a ship subsidy and suggested that congress use the 16,000,000 or $8,000,000 profit annually realised from the foreign malls to start first aid to the vessel owners. These, then, are the hlgn points of the forthcoming message. GAY ACCUSED OF SWINDLING Mas) Indicted In Omaha on Pake Wrestling Match Chars Held at Chicago. CHICAGO, Oct. 30. Thomas Oay of Streator, IU.. charged ' with swindling James Tlerney of the same city out ,f 110,000 by means of a fake wrestling match, was arraigned before United States Com missioner Foote here today. Oay Is al leged to be a member of the gang against which numerous Indictments have been re turned at Omaha. He will be taken to the latter city for trial. The fake match Is alleged to have tak!i place at New Orleans on January 24 last, between Cay and Harry Wright. Day fell to the mat. It Is charged, apparently suf fering from a hemorrhage, which In reality la raid to have been produced from a cleverly concealed rubber vessel. GERMAN MAKES FAST TIME WITH AEROPLANE Hau Grade Files Mile and Half In Two Minutes est Fortr-Thre Seconds In Unmaa Machine. JOHANN1SBAL, Germany, Oct. M.-Hans Grade, the German aviator, today won the Lanse prise of Ilff.OOO by flying two and one-half kilometres (a little more than mile and a half) In two minutes end forty- three seconds. The competition was re stricted to aeroplanes constructed In Ger many by German builders propllt-d by Oerman made motors. After receiving the prise, Grade m&de two more flights of about five minutes each In his mono plane. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS J. W. West has gone to Chicago. Harry Pell, claim aKnt of the North western, has gone to Chicago. N. F. Harrlman, superintendent of teats for the Harriuina Unas, baa fxua to Chicago. EPOSITS made on or before No vember 10th In the SAVINGS DEPARTMENT of the UNITED STATES NATIONAL DANK wiil D draw interest from November 1st Three per cent Interest Is paid on sav ings deposits and compounded semi annually. Funds may be withdrawn at any time without notice. The combined capital and surplus is $1,200,000. The total assets are over S13, 000.000. It Is the oldest bank In Nebraska, established in 1856. United States National Dank IU T. BARLOW, trn. A, MILIARS, Vier-rm. 6. W. WATTLE;. Viee-rrtt. W. E. RH0ADES, Ciihltr. .B. CALDWELL, Vict Prnt. G. E. ItVEsiTlCK, Au'l-Cisklcr I. F. MOBSMAN, Ast't-Csshlcr. OPEN ON SATURDAYS UNTIL 0 P. M. GsRCSSS tars and Stripes A beer just suited to quaff at home a night-cap for the sociable evening a refreshing draught for the late supper a delightful glass to sip under the evening lamp. Stars and Stripes is a foaming, sparkling beverage for the keen palate for the connoisseur. Have a case delivered to your home. Willow Springs Brewing Co. Office us- Bout 14th St. Fhone Song. 1300. CITY OFFICIAL. JVOTICKS. SCHOOL DISTRICT ELECTION. Proclamation said notice to the qualified electors and legal voters of the school dis trict of Omaha, in the county of Douglas, in the state of Nebraska, of a general election to be held In said school district on Tuesday, the 2nd day of November, lue, for the purpose of electing four mem bers of the Hoard of Education of said school district, to serve on laid board from and including the first Monday In January, 1910, until the first Monday In January, 1U. To the qualified electors and legal voters of the school district of Omaha. In the county of Douglas, In the state of Ne braska: I, Charles Hard:ng, president of the Board of Education of the school dis trict of Omaha, In the county of Douglas, In the state of Nebraska, do Issue this, my proclamation, and by virtue of the authority vested In me as such president, do hereby give public noMce to the qualified electors and legal voters of the school district of Omaha, In the county of Douglas, In the state of Nebraska, that a genoral election will be held In said school district on Tuesday, the 2nd day of November, 1909, for the purpose of electing four members of the Board of Education of said school district to serve on said board from and including the first Monday In January, 1D10, until the first Monday in January, 1913. The polls shall be open on the day of said election at eight 'K) o'clock In the morning, and shall continue open until six (6) in the evening of tho same day, at the respective voting places, as follows; CITY OF OMAHA. FIRST WARD. First DIstrlct-liXH South Sixth St. Beoond District (J9 Pacific dt. Third District 17U3 South Tenth St Fourth District 19 Bancroft. SU SECOND WARD. First District W2 South Twenty-ninth SL Second Dlstrict-2023 Vinton St. Third District 152J Vinton St. Fourth District 1704 Vinton St. Fifth District 1204 South Sljtteenlh St. THIRD WARD. First District 161 Webster St. Second District 31s South Tenth St. Third District 313 North Fifteenth St Fourth District 410 South Thirteenth St Fifth District MS Mouth Thirteenth St. FOURTH WARD. First District 1611 Davenport St. Second District 423 South Eighteenth St. Third District 718 South Sixteenth St. Fourth District 31 Houth Twentieth St. Fifth District 315 North Twenty-fourth St i' lt'l It WARD. Flist District A04 Sherman Ave. ' toeuoiid Dlsirlat MJ01 ttnermau Ave. Tulrd Disu-iei ul bherman Ave. iBarn.) Sourls Diairiet MS bherman Ave. Fifth District Hi North aixieenib St SIXTH WARD. First Dlstrtet Nona Twenty-fourth St. Second District IMS North Twenty-fourth St. Third District 800 North Twenty-fourth St. (Um, roar.) Fourth District 1123 Military Ave. SEVENTH WARD. First District 271s Leavenworth St. Seooud District lifli Georgia Ave. (Barn. rear.) Third District 133S rarK Ave. Fourth District 210 Mouth Thirty-third 8t (Barn, rear.) EIGHTH WARD. First District 1304 North Twenty-fourth St. Second District ISO Cuming Ht Third District 612 North seventeenth St Fourth District 2414 Cumiag St NINTH WARD. First District 1&7 Cuming St. Second District S2J0 Burt St (Barn, rear.) Third DUtrtot 4M Davenport HI. (Barn. rear.) Fourth District Zil oouin Jinnj-tiiio St. (Bain, rear.) Flrta District 2914 Far nam St TENTH WARD. Fliwt District 1018 South Tenth St. Second District 1621 Leavenworth St Third District 2121 Leavenworth St Fourth District 1430 South Sixteenth St. Klftb District 1424 South Thirteenth Et ELEVENTH WARD. First District 4108 Hamilton St. Second Distrlctr-itt2 Farnam St. Third District 14 Soutn Thirty-fourth St. (Barn.) Fourth Dlatiict--706 South Twenty-seventh St. TWELFTH WARD. First District 4412 North Twenty-fourth St Second District SS24 Ames Ave. Third District 3VU Corby St (Barn, rear.) Fourth Dlstrlot MIS North Twenty-fourth 6t CHARLES HARDING. President Board of Education. ATTEST: i. T. BUHUfcHrt Secretary Board of Education. 021-12t. The Beo U the only paper ad mitted to thousands ot homes. Women srs ths buyers, which ac counts, in part, for ths remark able returns to our advertisers. Green Trading Stamps 91.60 In Stamps (IS) given with each two rtoziii cases of large bottles, de- Si 4 ftP llvered In A l.H the city for. . $3.00 In Stamps (SO) given with each two dosen cases of large bottles, de- CO OC livered In Jil.lU the city for. . " ' Out of town cus tomers add $1.IS for case and bottles. Brewery, 3d and Hickory. Fhone Song. 1S85. STEADY GROWTH Due to dcHs(tora and borrowers speak Ing so highly in its favor. OMAHA LOAN & BUILDING ASSOCIATION Southeast Cor. 16th & Dodge fits. The depositors receive their six per cent interest and they are pleased and naturally recommend the Omaha Loan & Building Association to their friends. The borrowers are given fair terms and they also are pleased. When both the depositors and borrowers recom mend the company to their friends, Its growth is sure and steady. Assets over J2, 900, 000. 00, all loaned on first mortgages ou homes, tho safest of all mortgage loans. Assets $2,000,000. Reserve 1)00,000. O. VV. Loomis. Pres. G. M. Nattlnger, Sec. A Trcaa. W. R. Adair, Ass't, Sec'y. Cold weather is just abound the corner. Order your coal now. Scranton, Pennsylvania, An thracite, "best by test" for $10.50 Dominion Lump and Nut our leader for . . . .$5.50 Arctic Lump and Nut for $5.00 S. & II. Green Trading Stamps every time. PEOPLES COAL CO. Tel: Dong. 3471, $V3 or 6768; Ind.: A-1468 Gentle Dentistry "I'd sooner have my teeth extracted. Doctor, It hurts as to have them filled." This from an Intelligent youns wo man the victim of too strenu ous dsntlstry. ) Upon my assurance that It would not hurt her aha per mitted me te treat and fill one. "Do them all, pleaaa" Oentle Dentistry pays. Dr. J. B. Fickes 1 210-217 Board of Trade. Both Phones. I Oth and Farnam 81, B. W. wi diii 111 ti ten "suJ-ir Omaha Trunk Factory I We alee aatrry a floe Una ef Icaraes faaSa Pea.. 106S -ISoe rusaa SL-Isa, JlOOft iii coal m R I II