12 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1010. PLACE WILL GO TO HEWITT 1 ciz n v "Some class all right, all right" So says every one who has seen our new spring hats Youman's Roeloffs Stetson's Prices: S3, $4, $5 AMONG THE LOCAL BOWLERS niaha Dike Wade In and Take Two ' Gamed from Tirodeganrd Crowns. '. The Omaha Bicycle Co. took two games from the Brodcgaard Crowns lost night yn the Metropolitan alleys. Hull waa hitch hian for the Bikes with 242 single and 654 'total, while Captain Voss hit the pins for a total of 648 and 241 for single gam for :tht Crowns. Tonight the Glendales and Monte Chrlstos will play. Bcore: i OMAHA BICYCLE CO. 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. (lull 242 2XH 17 664 fcnlomon :...177 m 1S1 M9 Hlnrlchs 19 179 145 4!3 Oil breath 146 1M 171 MO Zarp 1W 201 219 11 1 Totals 26 m m 2.809 v BnODEOAARD CROWNS. t. '1 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Xalrd 170 I'M 212 &61 Voss 19 242 155 m SiiulU 214 170 1(19 K3 Carman 1M 189 179 662 Hough 173 ItS 161 Ml Totals 940 933 876 2,754 1 Francisco's alleys, Omaha league, score: LUXUS. 1st. 2d. 2d. Total. Ohnesorg 178 1.18 185 631 Berger ...159 161 160 4S0 Johnson , 176 156 lf6 485 Conrad 171 1ST 211 W9 Bengele 161 178 liH 633 Totals 844 849 905 2,598 ., DRESHER8. Frush 179 189 190 658 lavls 212 179 179 567 Jensen 182 166 159 M Hehmldt 171 187 189 647 Uoff. , 180 166 221 m Totals .......i.... 924 882 93S 2,744 - Mercantile league, score: QTJARTERMASTER'S DEPARTMENT. 1st. 2d. d. Total. Martls 140 157 143 440 Merits , 141 166 - 182 637 Bcott ...190 165 182 637 .Totals .471 674 478 U63 n . , GATE C1TYS. lt. 2d. 8d. Total. fitockwell 167 179 169 516 Grant ..' 182 156 141 478 Howell ....122 163 148 423 Totals ...471 487 458 1,416 Quartermaster's Department won In the roll off. -''- i ' Grlnaell Meet May Mean War. 1F.S MOINES, la.. March 11. (Special.) -4oes .the Invitation Issued bv Orlnnell college for a state track meet. May 21, at Qrlniiell mean war? This Is the Question Wiwtn ' ' " I ,. I , .ii.-ii.. ..I When the blood becomes overcharged with urio acid it continually grws weaker, Wore acrid, and poorer in nourishing qualitios. The nerves, muscles and joints, instead of receiving their necessary nutriment from tha circulation are gradually filled with tha sharp uratio Impurity with which the circulation Is loaded, and the pains and aches of Rheumatism are the natural result. No amount of rubbing, or the application of external med icines can have any direct and curative effect on the blood; the most to be expected from suui treatment is temporary relief from the pains and aches. There is but one way to cure Rheumatism, and that is to cleanse the blood Of the urio acid Impurity. S.S.S. is the proper treatment, because It goes tiown and attacks the disease at Its head, and by filtering out every particle ff the uratio matter and strengthening and enriching the blood, cures Rheumatism in every form. S. 8. B. changes the sour, acid-burdened blood to a rich, healthy stream, which quiets the pain-racked nerves, muscles and Joints, cools tha feverish flesh, gently removes the cause and drives Rheu matism from the system. S.S.S. reaches inherited cases as well as those which have been acquired, and good results are always experienced from Its use. Special book on Rheumatism containing many valuable sugges tions for rheumatic sufferers and any medial advice free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. Health and Wealth on a Southwest Farm You've got tncrgb hitch it up to a farm along Oklahoma the Frisco, make it work for you it's working Produce , now for your boss. Spend a few dollars this Big spring having a good time in a sunny clime and CroP learning where men with less ability than you have are making several times as much money and living - Frisco an independent life, free from the domination of Farms any commercial circumstances. Go to Oklahoma are Happy in an electric lighted train with Fred Harvey ; Homes Dining Cars. Frisco to the Southwest From Kansas City Goon the Meteor, which leaves Kansas Cry every day. Summer is on Tim. ; ... Fre J Harvey serves the mtals. Travelers to Oklahoma can Along tU i u ' ' profilby Harvcy DiningCars oiy if they go on the Frisco. Frisco Fred Harvey The best foods that men and mills and farms produce art . Serro lM Meals served to suit eotry palate. , On the first and third Tuesdays of each mnntk tickeu arc told at special low fares. Ak your home ticket agent about them or write me where you want to go and I v m3i tell you Just how to arnme your trip and how much It will cost. ; J- C. LOVRIEN, Division Passoncer Agoat J Moo Snihlma. II Clt, ,Ms. Prices: S3, S4, $5 which athletic followers have been asking since the announcement has been made that the lesser lights intended to have a seiparte event this year. Has Grlnnell decided to caat her lot with the smaller collt'ges of the state? Is another query which Is founded upon the same cause. weston WILL, CELEBRATE Plans to Walk Eighty Miles on Seventy-Second Anniversary. LAMAR, Colo., March 11. Edward Pay son Weston stated yesterday that on his seventy-second birthday, next Tuesdar, he proposed to walk eighty miles in twontv four hours. He reached Lamar at 9:60 this morning after a twenty-two mile walk from Caddo. He will halt tonight at Holly, thirty miles east of Lamar, a total dis tance for the day of fifty-two miles. Dark Take Early Start. LAKE CITY, la., March 1L (Speclal.) Wlth the early melting of the Ice In ponds and rivers and tha attendant warm weather, wild duck, geese and brant, are making their migratory Journey north ward in large numbers. Tor the last few days these birds have been passing constantly, and within a week, providing the warm weather continues, duck hunt ing will be at Its height. The birds are flying especially low this season. This is the earliest in the spring that the ducks and geese have been known to migae north in luge numbers. For many years there has not been more feed for the bmd2 ln,.Jh9 tlMiB- tor Now are filled with eorn ef last fall a good part of which has never been picked, and the ducks are growing fat on tha kernels as they travel north. Ketehel Not In Condition. PITTBUURQ, pa March 11,-SUnley Ketehel who was matched to meet Frank Klaus here tomorrow night, at the National eUWh?JTfCent.1T .V1" for Postponement of the fight until tho seventeenth because he waa not In condition, asks for a further postponement to March 25th. Ketehel says If this is not agreed to he will forfeit the money already up and not appear at all because he cannot possibly get Into con dition before the 26th. A a barn Backs Now Clqb. AUBURN, Neb., March 11. (Special Tel egram.! A called meeting of the business men of this city was held in the Commer cial cluh rnnmi vmIm-.! .. v- Pf of rj8ln W.000 to join the Mink base iu7. lie amount was raisea within thirty minutea after the meeting had been called to order thus Insuring this city and vicinity one of the fastest teams and a series of four months of the best games seen In this part of tho state. New Platol Record. SPOKANE. Wash., March 11. Prank Fromme, national Indoor pistol champion, established a new world's record when he scored 99 out of a possible 106 at twenty yards. The old record was 98. The shooting was done under artificial light, while the old record was made under DRIVES OUT BHEUMATISM Cornhnsker Athletic Board Tenders Him Work as Track Coach. CHEEBINGTOff FIRST HAD OFFER Decision Reconsidered on Hrcnm. anendatlon of Stndent Members Has Not Yet Accepted Work. LINCOLN; Neb., Maroh ll. fPpeclal Tele gram.) After holding- one meeting In which It was decided to hire Ben R. Chrrrlngton of Omaha, a junior academic student, for track coach, the Nebraska Atheltlo board met again last evening to reconsider its action, and voted to tender the position to I. P. Hewitt, with an offer of an Increased salary. Student members of tha athletic board fav ored Hewitt and their votrs caused the board to ask him to accept the place. Two weeks ago Hewitt waa elected to the position, but would not accept it at the salary offered. The board then authorized the track com mittee to make arrangements with Cher-ring-ton to do the coaching. The board this morning agreed to Cherrrlng ton's terms, but later In the day the studenet members of the board protested against Cherrlng ton and It was decided to increase the salary originally offered to Hewitt. Earlier Date For theBowlcrs Set at Tourney Omaha Bowlers Make Highest Score in Five-Hen Team Class Thurs day Evening;. DETROIT, Mich., March U.-SL Louis -won its first half of the battU for the 1911 tournament In the annual meeting of the American Bowling congress yesterday. An amendment to the constitution providing that the annual tournament may be started any time between January 16 and March IS, waa passed as a substitute for the propo sition that the meet begin on a Saturday in February. The St Louis delegates said before the meeting that If the February amendment was passed they would with draw their bid for the 1911 tournament, as they wished to open the. event In January In order to allow the base bail players to compete before the opening of their train ing trips. An amendment requiring that all records claimed must be made on alleys which had been planed within a year, or the new mark will not be recognised, was passed. Many other amendments of minor import ance were adopted. The meeting adjourned until tomorrow, when the officers will be elected and the tournament for 1911 be awarded. The international conference committee recommended that a national bowling com mission be formed to handle all matters affecting the association and to arrange international and interassoctatlon matches, and to have tha same relative position to bowling that the national commission has to base ball. Ifo Changes In Leaders. Another day of the tenth annual tour nament of the American Bowling Congress passed without a change In the leaders In any of the three squads. . While the scores In the two-man event were uni formly high, the Individual and five-men teams rolled Indifferently. The Bruns wlcks of Chicago rolled 2,707, which was the high score of the first squad of the five-men teams. Five-men evtnts: Cosmos, Chicago 2.S80 raramitas, Wheeling, W. Va J,ff72 O'Leary'a No. 2, Chicago 2.633 Zleglers, St Paul 2,S4 Colonials, Madison, Wis 2.803 Libertys, Rochester, N Y 2.7S9 B. P. O. E.. Byracuse, N. Y 2,787 lingers, Pittsburg 2.780 Rovers, Buffalo. N. Y 2,770 Vulcans, Oshkosh, Wis 2,707 Two-men teams: Dalker-Wetterman, Cincinnati 1,231 Erickson-Jaerges, Oshkosh 1,213 Cook-Crewson, Sebrlng, u 1,23 Zimmerman-Campbell, South Bend 1,203 Sundvahl-Wllson, Chicago 1,198 Hall-Lane, Washington, Pa 1.1W P. Rlddell-Pump, New York 1,19a Ekgars-Leverenz, Chicago 1,194 Zlmpfer-Orlffllh, Colunmus, 0 1,187 Osler-Erschell, Cincinnati 1,186 Individuals: Olen Fisher, Chicago 660 W. C. Zoellner, Fond Du Lao, Wis 67 Alex Dunbar, New York $66 Max linger, Cleveland 649 (ieorge Oakey, Madison, Wis M2 Max Drossman Detroit .- 641 John Kolde, Cincinnati a... 641 Walter Peters, Chicago. 6-' Otto Wahl. Cleveland. 636 J. H. McCoy, Wheeling, W. Va 63G Out of the twelve teams In the last squad tonight the Mets Bros, of Omaha topped the field with a count of 2,684 to their credit. W. Hartley was high aver age man, with 682 pins to his credit, aver aging 194 flat. Score: 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. 203 1H8 158 639 193 144 im &03 206 174 109 549 1S1 217 214 5S2 170 lit 16 621 923 833 873 2.684 GOOD SCORE BY OMAHA TEAM Ghto and Huntington Lead First Three Squads In Today's Ttolllnar. DETROIT, March 11. J. P. Ohio and V. R. Huntington of Omaha rolled 1.153 and led the first three squads In the two-man event today In the American Bowling con gress tournament. Ohio started with 22S while Huntington contributed 190. A con tinuation of that prce would have given them the lead, but t.iey fell down In the second and third games. SAM CRAWFORD LEAVES OMAHA Wahoo Tiger Goes to Join the Team In the South. Sam Crawford, accompanied by Mrs. Crawford, has left Omaha after a week's visit with Mrs. Crawford's parents in Dun dee, and will Join the Detroit Tigers at Bt Louis and go on south with the team for the spring training. Sam looked in fine form and says he expects to help Jen nings win another pennant for Detroit this year. Fourth Block Goes to Hoppe. CHICAOO. March Jl Willie Hoppe won .v. ... . . v. . .. ,wv f 1 1 1 1 Diniaru rami! mt IS 1 Kallr Hn. ! nl,.kt j , Ora Momlngstar 400 to 23. rtcore: llotHM 400. Hlcrh runs 11 M k a io-y: M n r T i ( n rut a r 9S TTltrh uns arc sta m Average 21 U-12. " ' " Total acore: Hoppe 1,600; Momlngstar 1,137- Ingstar 16 66-67. Whit Sox Win at Oakland. OAKLAND, Cal., March 11. Score: Chicago Americans, No. 1 s i a Oakland T 1 Batteries: iAnt, Antnr vr. Block; Chrlsman, Dank. Harklns and Lewis, gplesman. High School Team Wins. TWI'MSrrH Vh xrk o . .. ''ve'y of basket ball waa playsd . ... u"ler evening, be tween the High school team and the schools alumni team. The alumni team no of Charles Ktawart 'OS. iil- "True to Its Name" $3.30. $4.00 INNOVATION, Believing in Omaha s appreciation of a thing well done, ive have endeavored, in every detail, to perfect a MAN'S BOOT SHOP worthy of your appreciation. You will find We Are Experts In Our Line Individuality and correctly new in styles, "unbeatable" for excellence of value XSie StarF-KIngman iS&ioe Company 315 Soilttl Sixteenttl Street (Formerly Hanson Cafe Building) mer Rogers "09, John Berry '09, and they were assisted by Leonard Allen and George Morrlssey, High school players. The school team Included Kenneth Stewart, Robert Wtewart, Oeorge Miner, Charles Peek and Raymond MIHer. The High school team won by the score of 23 to 14. COHMU8KEBS JLOSK GENOA MAN C. W. Gable, Crack Crosa-Coantry Runner, Goes to Washington. LINCOLN, March 11. (Special.) Another of Nebraska's athletes has been lost to the university. C. W. Gable of Genoa, a crack cross-country runner and track man, has quit school to accept a position with the United Btatee government In the depart ment of entomology at Washington. He will leave for the east next week. Gable waa last year elected captain of the cross-country team, but he did not re turn to school In time to take charge of the men. He Is one of the fastest long-distance runners thit the university has pos sessed in several years, and he was being relied upon to do great work in the track meets against Minnesota and Kansas this spring. In the Kansas meet last spring he broke the Nebraska two-mile record. Confident of winning at the Sioux City meet, the Nebraska relay team, composed of MoDonald, Reed, Minor and Davis, left thiB afternoon for the Iowa city. The team has been in training all semster and should be in form to run a sensational race. The relay is to be over a mile course, and each of the Cornhusksr quartet will run one lap of a quarter mile. Reed and Burke broke the university record in the relay last spring. The Cornhusker base ball men returned to the athletic field for training this after noon, after having been confined to the gymnasium for two days. Coach Carroll started to working out the pitchers this aft ernoon with the Idea of weeding out the lm- fiosslbles so that he may devote his time o training the few men who are to com pose the slab staff. - It waa announced tonight at the Daily Nebrapkan office that the Jack Best vaca tion fund had mounted to figures that ex ceed I The Nebraskan has set $400 as the mark to be reached by March 20. Each day for the last week has seen the fund grow by the contribution of Sums amount ing to 130. Trainer Jack Best will spend his vacation In England, where he was born. . The Cornhusker Olympics, between the freshmen and sophomores, will take place during April. These athletic games were postponed last fall because ef bad weather. The battle of the two classes in various athletlo contests settles the supremacy of the one over the-other in university affairs: If the freshmen win they will be permitted to wear class caps; if they lose they will not ton oh the headgear until next fall, when they become sophomores. Bear Mascot Is Drowned. IOWA CITY, la., March ll.-(fipeclal.) Dynamiters on the Iowa rtver raised the body of Burch a short distance above Cor al vl He, and the body of the bear mascot of the University of Iowa athletic teams now reposes in the offices of Taxidermist Dill. The head will be mounted and put on exhibition In the university museum. The last heard of bruin was six days ago, when the motorman on the Interurban car saw him Jump away from the rays of the headlight just outside of Swisher, a station north or here. Evidently Burch ventured too near the edge of rotten ice In the river to get a drink of water and fell in.. When the workmen endeavored to dislodge an ice gorge with dynamite they brought the body to the surface of the water. Farmer Burns Throws llokuff. BROKEN BOW. Neb., March 11. (Spe cial.) A big crowd greeeted Farmer Burns last night at the opera house, when he took two straight falls out of William Ho kuff of Beatrice. Burns was In splendid trim and handled his big opponent In his usual scientific manner. The first fall was accomplished in sixteen minutes, with . a bar-hammerlock, while it took only about five minutes for him to win the second one. There were two preliminaries, be tween Pelkey and Davis, two college boys, and Jeffords and King, local wrestlers. No fall In either bout. Preceding the match the "Farmer" gave one of his characteristic talks, in which he extolled the merits of Gotch and Jeffries. Booth Omaha. Bowlers. The Culkln Cubs defeated the Frd Stell Ings last night in a close and ha. ..-fought game. Bcore: STELLINGS. 1st. 2d. 8d. Total. Snowln 17 177 186 489 Vollstedt 177 152 182 611 Koll 149 ioo 18 47 Zieck 172 154 121 447 Winters 143 136 167 436 Totals 817 769 764 2,300 CULKIN'S CUBS. 1st. td. 3d. Total. Sherwood 201 153 160 614 Mann 126 148 1C2 436 Culkln 146 12H 144 418 Roth , 14S 1H4 140 476 Fagan 126 200 166 492 Totals ...744 813 773 2,335 Mutea Ready to Play Ball. The Nebraska School for the Deaf base ball club is getting In line to be out with the first real break of spring. Saturday evening the club will give an entertain ment at the school to ralHe money for suits for the team. Some lively acrobatic stunts are to be on the program. Barrr and Burns Matched. SAN FRANCISCO, March if-JIm Rarrv of Chicago, who knocked out "Gunboat" Smith in Oakland last night, and Jack Burns of Salinas, Cal., have been matched to box twenty rounds in this city of Tues day night, March 23. Minnesota Defeats Northwestern. CHICAOO. March 10. -The University of Minnesota basket ball team last night d- ;?0,edo the or,h"tern university learn, 31 to 18. ' SIXTY-NINE BODIES FOUND Coroner Says Many Victims of Big Avalaaehe Will Never Be Identified. SEATTLE, Wash. March lO.-The potters' field will be the last resting place of a score of the victims of the Great Northern avalanche at Wellington, the coroner fears. The bodies recovered are clad only- In sleeping garments, or axe entirely nude, and identification Is almost Impossible. There are six unidentified bodies lu the morgue here and more are expected. The Italian consul Is obtaining photographs and measurements of tha dead Italians. The passengers' bodies for which special search is being made are those of Rev. J. M. Thompson of Belllogham. Wash., and E. W. Topping of Ashland, O. Sixty-nine bodlea have been recovered. The Key to the 8ltuatlun-ea Waut Ads. TO THE MEN OF OMAHA AN Our Letter Box Contributions on Timely Sabjeota, ot Exceeding Two Hundred Words. Ax Xavltea from ear Beaders- Chnroh and Divorce. SOUTH OMAHA, March 9.-To the Ed itor of The Bee: In a letter to The Bee, published this evening, a would-be philos opher ploks up the Kansas City news as a pretext for throwing a paper-wad at the Gibraltar Rock of the Catholic church. Not that the church needs any defense, but realizing that any eccleslastio would probably consider It beneath his dignity to take notice of such an epistle, I, as an humble, unlettered wife and mother, Bay a word, for fear that in Xenla Falrchlld's case It may become a case of "the blind leading the blind." Her letter shows a dense ignorance of the church's teaching with regard to di vorce. True, the church never has, and never will consent to divorce with a per mission to remarry. It was Inflexible when the fate of whole nations trembled in the balance. It saw whole nations lost to its faith rather than swerve, in one instance even, from Hs teaching on divorce. Henry VIII could no more move it from the prin ciple it has been teaching' for' twenty cen turies, than could tha humblest peasant in his kingdom. But when the conditions of life become Intolerable, it does consent to a separation and separate maintenance, but no re-marrying. If the church should put its stamp of approval on tandem polygamy, it would step down from Its position as an tnfalliable teacher of truth f n man Hn . k.. I been the teachings of the church on these social questions, that the trend of the best thought In America today . is setting In with a tidal sweep towards Its teachings, disguise them under whatever name you Will. . T Those broad minds that-have given years to the study of the problem, of the per petuity of this glorious republic have come to a realization of the fact that If this re public Is to endure, a decided stand must be taken againBt certain destructive forces promiscuous divorce, race suicide, an archistic teaching and a growing disregard for duly authorized government. What power has always stood between civilized government and these disintegrating forces? The teachings of the Catholic church have been most potent. Severe, yes, but the re sults Justify the severity. If Xenla Fair child will take the trouble to enter any Catholic church In this city (they aro open all day long), and will pick up a prayer book and read the chapters headed "Duties of a Married Man," and "Duties of a Mar ried Woman," she will find a simple an swer, within the scope of her understand ing, to the question: Why Ib the church inflexible on divorce? The church' teaches and commands its married children to live "In peace," but not "In pieces." The church still retains both the fifth the sixth commandments In its Decalogue. A- D. BUENNAN. More Paper Makers Out on Strike Three Companies of Militia Ordered to Mill District in Northern New York. CORINTH. N. Y., March lO.-The strike of paper makers and sulphite workers has now spread to five mills of the Interna tional Paper company. Four hundred men walked out this afternoon at the Fort Ed wards mills making 1,00 odd men out In all at Glens Falls, South Glens Falls, Niag ara Falls, Fort Edwards and at Corinth. Three companies of militia were ordered to active duty today making 250 men thus far stationed at the mills. No attempt was made to molest the troops. ' ' Provisions and bedding continue to come Into the mills as for a siege; S00 strike breakers are massed at Saratoga for con venient distribution and it Is believed that as soon as the company feels It has the Kituatlon in hand It will try to resume oper ations with nor.-unlon man GLENS FALLS, N. Y March 10.-A strike breaker was arrested here tonight for drawing a revolver on a crowd that gathered about the entrance of the Inter national Paper company's mills, when ten additional non-union men were conveyed Into the mills. There was no other dis order here today. SARATOGA, N. T., March 10. -Strikers from Corinth are circulating among the 300 strike breakers massed hore, in an effort to dissuade them from going to work. One striker was- arrested while haranguing a crowd. A revolver and club were found In his pockets. AUTO MERGER IS DENIED President of K.-M.-F.- Companr Sara Transfer Is Not Part of Any Combination Scheme. i DETROIT. March 10-Upon a telegraphic request today from Frederick W. Steph ens of the New York banking firm of J. p. Morgan A Co., President W. E. Flanders of the E. M. F. Automobile company gave out a statement that there was no truth In the report that the recent purchase of the E. M. F. concern by the Morgan Interests heralded any combination of automboile Interests. When you want what you want when you want It, say so threugb The Bte Want Ad column 0 Careful attention to your needs 1 SIMH PURE SEED LAW FOR FARMERS Investigation and Publicity Drives Bogus Seed from the Krarket. About three years ago congress Inserted the following paragraph In the act making appropriations for the Department of Agri culture: "The secretary of agriculture Is hereby directed to obtain in the open market sam ples of seeds of grass, clover or alfalfa, test the same, and If any such seeds are found to be adulterated or misbranded, or any seeds of Canada bluegrass are obtained under any other name, to publish the resuli of the tests together with the names of the persons by whom the seeds were offered for sale." That little paragraph probably Is regarded by most of the farmers of this country as of more Importance to them than the pure food bill, over which there is so much stir these days. The farmer does not have to worry much about the purity of his food most of It he produces himself and knows exactly what It Is. With his forage crops It Is different, for he buys most of his seed for them. For years ha suffered much exasperation and expense because dodder, meadow fescue and noxious weeds of many kinds grew up where ho planted what he supposed was only clover, alfalfa or some special kind of grass seed. Moreover, In the seed for which he paid fancy prices often an exces sive amount of Inert matter was added by unscrupulous dealers, solely to make weight. So common was the adulteration of seed that all efforts of the farmers to even check it were futile, until somebody devised the plan of giving due publicity to dealers who deliberately or carelessly sold adulter ated or misbranded seed, by having the government, through the Department of Agriculture, ascertain and expose them In its official bulletins. Last year, under the little law which hus been quoted, 1.814 samples of seeds were purchased and analyzed by'' government agents. A bulletin Just published by the Department of Agrloulture gives the names and locations' of Individuals and- firms found to have sold . adulterated or mis Franklin Model G A Challenge While we acknowledge what other manufacturer have done in the production of good automobiles of medium size a? low price, there has not yet been one produced that equals Franklin Model G. We brought this model out in 1906. Its immediate and continued success caused other manufacturers to at tempt to meet its competition, but none has suc ceeded. Franklin Model G is the onjy touring car of low price which has enduring quality. So certain is its merit, like that of any Franklin, that we would match it in a transcontinental time contest against any auto mobile made regardless of size or price. Model G Runabout In the runabout type Model G, now in its fifth year, stands distinguished in a market flooded wiTh so-called cheap runabouts. Model G is not made to sell at a low price; it is made for service. Having all the well-known Franklin principles, it is light and flexible and has no equal for comfort, reliability and endurance. Model G has ample power for all roads. Being air-cooled, it is not subject to freezing troubles. It does not deteriorate and rattle and seemingly never wears out. Compare it with other low-priced automobiles in weight, tire equipment, appearance and service. Model G Touring Car, $1850. Wheel base, 91 M"i lire, 32 s front, 32 x 4" resrj four-cylinder. 3tf x 4". Two-passenger runabout, (!?S0. Runabout with surrey-type body, J1SO0. Franklin Model G made and holds the world's record for economy. GUV L. SMITH. 2205 Farnam Street, OMAHA, NEB. 11! SHOE "For the Man Who Cares'" $5.00, $6,00, $7.00 We are proud of our shop we want you to be branded seed. The Ut-t Is much shorter than thnt for the previous year, the total number of offenders being only forty.' Two years ago the list contained hundreds of names. Publicity Is proving a panacea for seel adulteration, and adding much to the pleas ure and profit of the farmers. No adulter, ant was found last year In the govern ment's purchases of seed of tho two Btapla forago crops, clover and nlfnlfa. whereas In 1908 nenrly a third was adulterated or misbranded. Chicago Inter-CVean. SIX WEEKS' T0UR0F THE WEST John M, Flxa and I.eo Cornell Mako California Ranch Their Oh- ' Jertlve Point. John M. Flxa and Leo Uoraeh have re turned from a six weeks' trip through Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California, Ari zona, Old Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kan sas, Missouri and Iowa. The travelers left Omaha February 2 for California, to visit the ranch of the Cali fornia Farm Products company In the Sacramento valley, Glenn county, In which ranch about 100 Omaha people are Inter ested. After visiting the ranch, of which Mr. Flxa Is treasurer, he and Mr. Borach mailt a tour through southern California, Ail-' zona and Old Mexico, returning by way of Texas and Oklahoma. BULLITT AGAIN LOCKED UP Civic Reformer Who Was Fined for Annoying Philadelphia Mayor Refuses to Pay. PHILADELPHIA, March 10,-Logan M. Bullitt, whose arrest late yesterday after noon on a charge of annoying Mayor Rey burn caused a sensation In political circles In this city, was given a hearing before a city hall magistrate today and fined $10 and costs, which he refused to pay. Ills attorneys took an appeal, and pending ac tion on this Mr. Bullitt was again placed in a cell. l Moat Food :a Polion to the dyspeptic. Electric Bitters cure dys pepsia, liver and kidney complaints and debility. Price, 50c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co.