Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1909)
2 niE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 7, 1909. hfi . pour ib THOMPSON BELDEN & CO.'S Mid- Winter Opening of Handsome Millinery Fashion's Newest Thoughts in Winter Headgear Revealed By This Authentic Presentation cf ate Season Creations Tuesday and Wednesday Of This Week Out of the chaos of designs and multitudes of hal In millinery, that has developed the dominant trends w the wheat from the chaff, setting her In this Mid-winter display we tyles, showing In clear, deft manner Every hat Is a masterpiece of which marks It as being out of the Ings. The accepted custom In many Millinery shops Is hats at a fair percentage of profit, the same as every ot inaugural of the Winter Headwear expecting to be char alluringness of price. We welcome Resting Rooms on third floor. Manicuring in connection. a rsc that rartr with our dollars an lonn a we feet them and sometimes before, nnd sometimes our hard earning are spent for mere superficial, vain dhow, for the uulmportsnt thing of life rather than the fundamental things of life. "Mora and more, throughout the ctlles of the north, I want our petple to realize that they can help the people of the south by living strong, high, clean and moral Uvea. We must draw the line between the clean and the unclean,-the moral and Im , moral, We mint put a premium upon moral loving; and our condemnation upon Immoral life. Above all, we muet set rid of the Idlers. All Be Optimist. "You, who live here In tho north can help up again In the south by looking at the bright Bide of life, Instead of the gloomy, dismal, disappointing aide. There aresome people who never see anything except cloud. "Our race, all things considered. Is mak ing tremendous progress north and south. True, there are wrongs to be righted; In justices to be overcome; but we must rec ognise the fact that we will gain more by emphasizing our opportunities and our privileges rather than our disadvantages and discouragements. "We are gaining friends everywhere In the north and south. Tou must not get the idea that the negro has no friends among the white people In the south. In my recent Jrlp through Mississippi I found thousands of whit men who are Just as much inter . ested In the progress of the negro, in seeing that he gets Justice as men are in any other part of the country. We should ad vertise our friends more and our enemies less, Jn proportion, as the world sees that we are determined to succeed, that we are holding up our hands, that we are going forward In spite of difficulties, the world will coma to our relief," Stay by Mother Earth. "1 have been trying to teach the black race to keep Us feet on the earth," declared Mr. Washington In his adiresa at the First Congregational church In the afternoon at the regular session of the social science department of the Woman's club. "1 myself rarely spend a day at my homo down In Alabama," he said, "without tak ing a hoe and shovel into the fields to work In the corn. After weeks of travel in the east, In the big cities of the east, it' is good again to get soma black old Alabama mud on my shoes. "It la Important to teach our race to keep Ita feet on the earth. "When Tuskegee saw Its beginning some . ot our people protested that our courses in farming. In domestic science and the like were hot what they wonted. We have had to teach them that being worked means degredatlon and that working means clvlllantlon. That Is the difference that we are teaching at Tuskegee. . There Is tio hope for any rao. white, black, yellow or blue, until It learns that any form of labor is honorable and that any form ot idleness Is a disgrace. 'Every ruce knows ita strength, The negro knows he is down and wants to get up. It Is far better than being down and thinking you are up. Let me tell vou that the whites are as much interested In the uplift of the negro as we are. Minimis a Baa. "Tou bear of the negro who burns down a boub. but little of he who builds one; you . hear of the white man who kills a negro, but little of those who are helping the negro tip." Mr. Washington spoke of the Industrial and commercial importance of hla race. II said that the negroes ot the south pay taxes on property conservatively estimated at a value of 1550.000.000. This he pointed out waa little ahort ot marvelous in view of the fact that th negro has been ac quiring property but little more than forty years forty years out of absolute poverty and abject Ignorance. Th closing of the bars of the southland and the general effect of the reform wave. Stars and Stripes A beer just suited to quaff at home a iiight-oap 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. Win a CS8 (sSTErc! to jrcf.tona. Willow Sp: i i i jrjs Browing Co. mt IU oa 14th . aa law. .flotf rnoirM iiAcn all hipm - f formed Ideas which 111 rule the Winter seal of approval o a the tendencies which are genuinely beautiful. entlc picture of these later and more fully developed present an auth Just what the Win beauty and work ter Maid will wear. manRhlp. Every hat has a distinctive, different touch m the stamped out designs characteristic of many show- ordinary away fro to price a hat at her article In our store. You can therefore come to this med not only with the hats themselves but with their you. Washington said, gave hope of more rapid progress In the uplift of his race than the accomplishments of the past. "Bod whisky, mixed with bad white men and bad negroes," he blamed for the crimes and lynchlngs of the south. Mr. 'Washington was Introduced to his audience- by Judge Howard Kennedy, pres ident of the University of Omaha, who took occasion to remark that this constituted the first public recognition of his newly founded Institution. Bishop Abraham Orant of Kansas City, head of this diocese of the African Methodist Episcopal church, ac companied Mr. Washington. Banquet In th Evening-. "Omaha" was the toast responded to by Booker T. Washington at a banquet ten dered him and Bishop Abraham Grant In the parlors of St. John's African Methodist Episcopal church in th evening by the Negro Business league of - Omaha. Mr. Washington's address was short and to the point, with an occasional touch of humor. The most salient feature of his toast was an appeal to the business men of Omaha to promote the cause of the negro race. Dr. J. H. Hutton acted as toastmaster; Rev. w! S. Dyett, paator of the church, who has had the arrangements of Mr. Washington's coming to Omaha In hand locally, pronounced th Invocation; John Fogg, Orant made th address of wel come and Bishop Grant mad the response In eloquent manner. , During the evening Mrs. Cecelia Wilson Jewell sang, accom panied by Mrs. Flora Caeeell Plnkston. These toasts, besides Mr. Washington's, were responded to: "Business Confidence," G. Wade Obee; "Nebraska and the Hace," Rev. John Al bert Williams; "Our Women," Dr. August O. Edward; "Achievements," Dr. W. M. Gordon: "Negro Business Leagues," Dr. Leonard E. Brltt; "Pluck Accompanies Success," Hemy V. Hummer. Uiv. G. W. Wright pronounced the ben ediction. It was a most de!:ghtful even ing. WASHINOTO. ELATED AT GIFT Sa of Tuake- Happr Ovtf glOO, OOO Left by . Kennedy. When Booker T. Washington awoka at Lincoln yesterday he was handed a mes sage by his private secretary containing the intelligence that the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute had been left a fortune of) $100,000 by John Stewart Ken nedy, who died -In New York last Sunday with whooping cough. Mr. Washington always appears cheerful and happy. When he reached the Rome hotel shortly after noon -yesterday he said this waa one of the happiest days of his life and with a hint ot Irony In hla tone he said: "I shall never forget Omaha. My day In Omaha Is certainly one that will linger long In my memory." "This magnificent gift from a man who was perhaps little known as one ot the wealthy men ot the country Is a big sur prise to me," continued Mr. Washington. I sort of expected a little surprise, but this on Is surely a btg one. During the last ten years Mr. Kennedy haa sent us an annual gift of fl.000 for running ex penses, but w did not anticipate such a munificent sura at hla death. The money will be placed ' in our endowment fund at Tuskegee unless otherwise specified In th will of our benefactor." Mr. Washington's present trip through the west was arranged primarily to adver tise the Industrial Institute at Tuakegee and to arouse the colored people to the Importance of agriculture as a means of earning a' livelihood. "We have a great Institute at Tuskegee," concluded the noted colored man, "but we need funds. It takes J2S0.000 annually to pay our expenses. Our endowment means an Income of $100,000 each year, so the balance must be secured from other sources. Hlcat In to Date. A patent medicine concern In Hamburg, Germany, Is sending through the malls and publishing In th Illustrated papers a pic ture showing Commander Peary and Dr. Green Trading Stamps $1.00 la Stamps (II) given with msiU fo dose a cas f lar( bottles, de- 4 AC llvre la 5liZ3 th olty for.. M-O In Stamp (10) given wtth each two don eaa lets bottles. de- A AF llvered in J.D th ctty for...'' , Out of town cus tomer add 11.11 for cam and btftti. Brewery, S aaa Jtlokory. fkiM Doug. 1M1, Cj" McCalTs Slag Q 4 Now Readv. V ir.n a-hi I marked the early season's stylos headwear. Fashion has separated what It will bring. We mark our Cook In arctic costume Jointly planting the American flag at the North pole. The picture Is remarkable for the flag, which has eighty stars and twenty-one stripes, eleven red andt en white, with the legend under the group: "America . triumphs at the pole, but w have discovered " the remedy. MME. STE1NI1EIL CIVEN REST (Continued from First Page.) Coulllard's statements aa fast as he made them. The questions of Judge DeValles empha sized the Importance to the state of Coull lard's testimony. The question brougTrt out the statement that the alleged murderess had ordered that their watchdog be re moved from the house on the night preced ing the murder. She explained her desire to get rid of the animal, the witness said, on the ground that it was 111 smelling and also sometimes damaged the pictures in her husband'a studio. Coulllard was followed on the stand by police witnesses. During the afternoon much contradictory testimony was given regarding how Madame Stelnhell was bound, the general appearance cf things In the household on the morning after the crime was com mitted and also as to whether the artist knew of his wife's intrigues with other men. Brothers-in-Law Disagree. One of Stelnhell's models, a man named Antanzlo, 'swore that a few days before mo mqraerstne painter told him tbat he Intended to divorce his wife for the sake of their daughter. On the other hand M. Bouneaud, a brother-in-law of Stelnhell, testified that the painter always had In sisted that his' wife's character had been maligned. He said that Stelnhell had loved his wife and was In no way suspicious of her. M. Bouneaud and his family, however, knew Mme. Stelnhell's character and sev ered their relations with her after the gos sip following the death of President Faun. Another brother-in-law of Stelnhell, oh the contrary, testified that the artist was familiar with his wlfe'a escapades. 'This statement aroused an outburst of Indigna tion from Mme. Stelnhell, who cried out: "You have dishonored the' memory of my husband. It Is Infamous." . Dr. Legist testified that the binding and gagging of Mme. Stelnhell seemed to him to be a "fake." Following the introduction of some fur ther, but unimportant testimony, the case was adjourned until Monday. Hellevo. A boy waa born to Mr. and Mrs. Fin Beckstead. W. H. Harrison celebrated his 6Sth birth day Sunday. Mrs. J, E. Crothers Is visiting relatives at Firth, Neb. Mrs. I. Roby visited in Bellevue th fore part of the week. William Martin spent Friday In Spring field visiting his sister. Mrs. O. K. Hoyt and daughter, Ruth, have arrived from New York. Mrs. H. Hlnlnesen and daughters, Agnes and Rosie, visited Omaha relatives Sun day. The Lad lee' Aid society will meet with Mrs. James McMahon Wednesday after noon. Mr. and Mrs. Branatead of South Omaha took dinner at the Goss home Thursday evening. Dr. 8. W. Stookey left Friday for New tiirk and Philadelphia, where he goes on college business. ' - Mrs. J. 8. Drake of Clay Center, Kan., arrived Thursday and will visit at the Woltetnoth home. " Charlie Carper, Who was shot In the face while hunting Inst week. Is getting along fine under Dr. Ernest's care. F. A. Weare and Hlnson A Marsh have closed a deal by which Hlnson & Marsh are proprietors of the Bellevue store. Mlsa Janet Fletcher, who recently gradu ated from the Presbyterian hospital at Chicago, Is visiting with her mother here. Charles Cha.11 of Bellevue and Miss Mabel Huntley of La Platte were married at Plattamouth last Friday, Judge Archer officiating. j Misses Mildred Stepp and T.ticlle Bets I drove over to Springfield Frldav evening and were accompanied home by Miss Fran ces Martin. Kip Hamblln, who is teaching at Thur ston. Neb., stopped off In Bellevue on his way to th Teachers' association meeting at Lincoln. i The Royal Neighbors held a meeting Friday night, at which they made plans ' for an all-day basar at the court liousei December 10. 1 The Bellevue schools wilt b closed the ! last three days of this week to permit the teachers to attend the State Teachers' as sociation at Lincoln. Raymond Kearns had the misfortune to j slip and tear a ligament loose In his foot j and waa complled to use crutches for ' some time, but Is better now. I A number of the youna folks enloyed a Hallowe en party Saturday evening. The lowe'en decorations, and refreshments were served. Ravmonrt Tonen. aged 1" years, died at th home of his brother, Howard Homan Monday ot tuberculosis, and was burled In the Bellevue cemetery Wednesday after noon, the funeral services being conducted from th Prtubyterian ohurch. He had been sick for th last two yearn. He waa well known In Bellevue, having received his education In the Bellevue schools. At the election Tuesday 14? votes out of a possible 230 were polled. The only county offices for which there was any opposition vera surveyor and commis sioner. For surveyor in Bellevue Patter sun (dem.) received ft votes to Towl'a (rep n. but won out in the country by 7. For commissioner De (dem received 3 votes In Bellevue agalnat FflSg irep.) S7. but the latter won out In the country by tO. E. F. Stepp was elected preclnrt asseeeor and A. H. Hood waa re-elected )uUc of th fac ! Teachers Think They Are as Good as the Animals Iowa Association Goes on Becord for Better Laws Governing the Bnral Schools. (From a Staff Correspondent.) nrcs MOINES, Nov. 6. (Special Tele gramsFollowing the suggestions of State Superintendent RIffgs and President Beard, the teachers' convention today went on record favoring legislation for better rural schools. . It mentioned that Iowa was the best for cattle and hogs and corn, for which everything possible is done, and that something should b done for the farmers' corn. The association elected the following of ficers: President, Hill M. Pell; vice presi dent, George If. Kellogg of Tipton; second vice president. O. B. Hoetwlck of Clinton; third vice president, Marparet Dolllver of Mornlngslde; secretary. O. E. Smith of Indlanola; treasurer, George W. Samson of Cedar Falls; executive committee. Maurice Rlckcr of Des Moines, Frank Smart of Davenport and O. H. Benson of Wright county. Senator Aldrtch of Rhode Island will be the guest of the Des Moins Bankers' club Thursday next at dinner and will make an address at that time. Covers will be laid for 0. He will discuss the proposed currency measure. Auditor Bleakley Issued a call to state and savings bonks today for a showing of their business at the close of business hours November 3. Plaintiff Dies, but Gets' Verdict Webster City Jury Gives J. N. Gaith, Who Succumbed During Trial, $1,800. WEBSTER CITY, la., Nov. uj fXeclal Telegram.) J. H. Ellis, who si f J. N. Garth for $10,0(10 damages for fDlVles re ceived In an automobile acclde y(vas this morning awarded $1,800. The Itlff died during the course of the trip ' Church W 1 1 1 Hot Get bperty. MT. PLEASANT, la., Ns Special.) Judge Bank, In the district court yesterday, set aside and declared null th deed given by John McCulley, by which he transferred to the United PreBbyterlan church of Wln fleld a 320-acre farm and other property of a total value of $76,000. This was In XtW6. Early this year the heirs filed suit to have the deeds set aside, their alleglatlon being that .McCulley was mentally Incapable of realizing what he was doing whan be deeded the land to the church. Th Judge sustained them In their contention. Iowa News Notes. CARROLL The Inquest over the body of Marshal P. J. Hatton, who waa murdered while attempting to arrest two burglars, waa completed today. The Jury defined the crime us murder in the first degree. Ernest Llndquist, one of the burglars, who waa captured after he waa wounded. Is In a critical condition and It Is believed that he will die. MUSCATINE Muscatine will not hav saloons for at least another year. Th board of supervisors today finished can vassing the petition of consent and de clared it to be Insufficient. Many forgeries of names were found on th petitions and the Law Enforcement league will inatitute ci-tmlnah proceedings. The only recourse the saloonlst now have la an appeal to the district court. ROLFE While setting traps for musk rats under a Northwestern railroad bridge near here yesterday afternoon, Eugene Lighter, aged 17 years, was fatally Injured when a huge piece of coal fell from a train that passed over the bridge, striking' him on the head and fracturing the skull. The injured boy was found an hour later by two other boys and removed to his home, where he has lain unoonsclous since. The attending physician has no hope of bis re covery. TRADE GOES BEFORE THE FLAG Almost Complete Surrender of Certain European Condition to! the Americana. Hotel and restaurant cljargcs in Europe are quite as high as in the United States, and with rare exceptions the table is no where equal to that of a first-class Ameri can hotel. The only exception to this gen eral rule is In the case of quail, partridges, irrouse and game birds, which have been preserved, as the foreets have been pre served, in Europe and destroyed, an the forests have been destroyed in the United States. American women who seek the first mil liners and dressmakers in Paris find the prices actually higher than on Boylston street, Boston, and Fifth avenue, New York, and as far as taste Is1 concerned, the church parade on Commonwealth ave nue or even the crowd on a surny morning on Washington street, Boston, could give points to the Bols de Boulogne or Rotten Row In the height of the season. American cut glass Is the most brilliant in the world. American Jewelry Is not merely stronger, but infinitely more taste ful In design than the display in the shop windows of Bond street or the Rue de la Palx. American magazine have largely displaced the familiar "Tauchnlts edi tions" on every book stall that caters to English-speaking touitHts. Even the hldoous signboards that make Pittsburg pickles famous and their maker Infamous, wreck European as they have already wrecked American scenery. The museum idea haa to a very large extent displaced decidedly less Innocent forms of amusement all over th continent. There's Comfort in the flavour of Post Toasties Those crisp golden-brown corn "crinkles" with cream, makes breakfast a pleasure. "The Memory Lingers" rVga. 10c and 15c A Grocer. I ii i ' :.r;.. ' V ifcMi Hundreds of various gas chimneys at, each ,6c An unaqnaled assortment of extra fuallty gaa chimneys that will cost a rood dal mora at any other time. Thia best quality IW Wetsbach tocxed light UOc If you want th biggest ' bargain rrer offered here It la a genuine Welsbacb lamp, as long as they last, for Jast 3o to make you take them off our hands. TtRJi Welabach inverted mantels ...... 8c All oar Xo. 4 Inverted Wla baefca are out to 80 for this sal. eral See our BURGESS-GRANDEN 1511 Howard Street next door to It gives the wandering Yankee quite a shock at first wheev he walks off the boulevard of Paris into the middle of a French audience only to heer from the stage the familiar "All right, BI11T" "euro." as the swinging trapeze performer makes the good, old-fashioned "leap for life." Not merely American athletea, but Amer ican monologue artists and even alngers of American dialect songs fairly cumber Eu ropean programs. As European cotton mills counterfeit American trad marks, so do some of the European managers now advertise as Far Famed American, per formers who are neither far famed, nor Arrow-lean, not even speakers of the English language. If American waterproof cuffs and collars, apparently much more extensively used abroad than at home, be excepted, the moat striking Invasion of Europe Is by the American shoe. Quarter of a century ago no man would have dreamed It possible. When the Vienna Board of Trade some years ago asked for a protective tariff against American shoes, most of us who saw the Item supposed that our exports were confined to coarse, cheap Bhoea. On th contrary, the most expensive shoe shops in European capitals now advertise "American shoes," or "American styles," os "Shoes made oi the latest American lasts," as their very greatest sttractions. The American combination of beauty and comfort, baaed on a study of tha anatomy of the foot, has not yet entered foreign factories. Tha European last maker still clings to the clumsy, though serviceable, English "squaretoe" or he simply provide for a sole of huge length tapering evenly toward the middle. The French comedian who plays what we should call the John Drew parts at the first theater In France wears upon the stage In a drawing room scene cream-colored "cellar flappers" of a size and shape that would excite the envy of a Bowery banjo king, but would certainly dispel every emotion hut hilarity In the heart of any American stage heroine. It Isn't merely American control of skat ln rinks and street railways that Is re sponsible for the quirk response of the audience when to the guileless question of the Innocent maiden in the Ixndon comic opera. "Where is this America?" the lead ing comedlon answers. "If nnn may Judge from the advertisements. I fancy most of it Is here." Botftn Commercial Bulletin. Wbr Tbey lteslgued. Former Commissioner of Immigration Itobert Watchorn aaid recently of an immi grant : "He was a bad cuse. He waa as Ignorant r,f government as th two I'ollsh police men were. Two new policemen were once put on the Warsaw force. They did good work, they arrested a lot of people, then suddenly they reelrned. " 'Why are you resigning? the superin tendent asked. "The older of the two men answered re spectfully: ,, . . " 'We are going to start a police station of our own, sir. Boris here will make the arrests, and I will do the fining. " V ah Uigtoa gtar. Tried Him Oat. Tti Devoted Mother John, hat do you Uilnk of this young man who wants to marry ILauraT Th Fond Father I think he's all rlht. Th Mothei Why. I supposed you had met him but one. . . Th Father That's all. But I gave him th supreme teal. I played bridge Hh hlra all the vtning.-Cieveland Plain Dealer. days si Mocdiy, Tuesday and Wednesday we will sell at 20 DISCOUNT ti Gas and Electric Reading Lamps Bom of th most beautiful designs yott have ever seen are Included in this big sal. W show a reproduction of aa aleotrlo reading lamp wbion would make a most useful and aooaptabls Christmas present. All odds and ends of our past year's business must be olosed out within th next three days, to mnk room for holiday goods, whloh are arriving daily. Below w list a few of th many remarkable bargains la small lighting supplies. These must b olosed out at one. W hav oeaced to consider their cert and marked them to sell at one. Lay in a supply for fatute needs and save moaey. O V fla you , , $ xf )f Over 1,000 assorted gas globes. go st, each 11c Actual values up to $3.00 are offered at this ridiculous piic during; th three days sal. Wot n la th lot hut what la worth maay times th sal prloe. ' In most patterns you will find sev of each, hut w advise an early cholo. window display of numtroui other MILD IN LOOKS, BUT OH, MY! Famous Artillery Punch of Savannah Puts Mescal on th V Bam. Borne sections of the south familiar with various brands of southern hospitality are wondering If Savannah will spring Its fa mous Chatham artillery punch on Presi dent Taft. So far In his tour of tho coun try the president has shown great wariness at banquets and kept his glass turned down. The Savannah hrew has a record worth mentioning, whether It gets Into action this time or not. According ' to the Atlanta Journal the artillery punch takes seven days In the making. The most distinguished vlotlm of Chatham artillery punch so far of record was a for mer president of the United States. He was entertained very royally in Savannah, and In the course of his entertainment he came upon this delightful breW. - It pleased him and tickled his palate. He drank on or two and probably a third. All after that was extra ballast, and the result was the president of the United States lay "sick with a fever" on board a warship In the port of Savannah for two or three daya. An official of the confederate statea and governor of Georgia died short), after a visit to Savannah where he attended the celebration of th Sesqul centennial of the city's founding. He left Savannah a very 111 man. He was over entertained, th doctors said. Ills entertainment consisted largely In drinking the Chatham artillery punch and headache from which he never recovered. The most recent distinguished victim of Savannah hospitality was a United States admiral. A bowl of punch brewed a week befoi was the main decoration In the saloon of the cutter. , The admiral fought shy of the big bowl until near the end of the first half of the trip. Then he con sented to take a little salad and a small glass of punch. The Vimlral has always declared it was the salad that made him 111. It was announced that the distinguished guest was a very 111 man and that he must be hurried back to Savannah. The guests were put on another vessel and the cutter cut for th Savannah docks. The man whose genius tiad planned a marine battle and who had represented this great government most successfully In one ef lis most tryU.g crises was. bundled tj bed by his wife and a committee of sym pathizing natives. Iq about twelve hours he recovered. The punch was first brewed for the Chatham artillery by a local valoun keeper. It proved such a good bit of ammunition that it has been kept In the family and lis formula has been cherished as a val uable token from one generation to an other. Like fraternity secreta the real for mula served to so many visitors with the expected effect in Savannah haa never ben written. There la always in Uie Chatham artillery a man with th secret of th brew wrapped up on his breast. The present keeper of this great asset of thrt Chatham's Is Lieutenant Mariana i I'apy. The lieutenant says that Captain It. J. uuvant amy knows It, but it Is In the J off.clal keeping of Lieutenant Papy. Th ' captain haa Just been acquainted alth what it la so If Lieutenant Papy U killed In batilt there will be on left alive with th kevret till in his breaat 1- asiimg saie Jupiter Inverted gxa lights, each 63c On of th modern practical power ful llg-hts. It's brightness Is unequal ed. We ean d3tonstrat It give six times the llrht you now get, and at th same time actually redaoes th gas Mil. These wl'l rnfl fast. 500 plain, tancy and O colored electric globas, at Up-to-date designs In olectrlo globes are Included In this slashing sale. Many patterns and oolors and several of most designs. Sortie are worth 81.88 each but all go at th earn price. bargains CO. tStSl gas offico 4 Gentle Dentistry ' If you have an aching, sen sitive tooth, you undoubtedly dread a visit to your dentist, because you know you will suf fer additional pain. Come and talk to me about it. My succesa In painless oper ating la bound to be of ad 1 vantage to you. Dr. J. B. Fickes 810-217 Board of Trade. Both Phones. 10th sad Parnam RU, 8. W. We Make AU We Sell Omaha Trunk Factory W sue aarry a ftns Ma mt &atuf g Boa. 106 ISO l-asaaa St lad. -! Our Best Assets Satisfied depositors and satisfied Borrowers. OMAHA LOAN & BUILDING ASSOCIATION Bontheast Cor. 16th & Dodge St. AKKKT8 OVEB 2,900,0O0 1. Depositors satisfied knowlna- that their money is loaned only on first mortgages od homes, the safest of all mortKafte loana, and satisfied also with the six per cent, interest, which they receive so promptly and regularly. I. Borrowers satisfied, with the fair Interest charged, with their semi-annual settlements, and with the priv ilege of repayment in whole or la part at any time. a. W. Loomls. Pres. , G. M. Kattina-er, gee. Treas. W. R. Adair. AsX Sec'y. You are judged by the paper yo read. Bee readers have bo cause to apologia for a lack wo f selfreapect or laUUig ac. 1