ST. PAUL FOR PRETTY GIRLS Russian Boy to Learn English in Two Months Advertising Director Searches for Them in Omaha. HIS SEAB.CH BEAES IHUIT A4 flab salts Merruaala ! Oaaaae to Utcanlt la lioaar f tee Maltere Who Will Ha Hara Rest Wee. Curue I Uoihtr, a)vnoe guard ef the Minnesota advertising convention dtltgates, arrived In Omaha Paturaay morning eiwl promptly aat about hunting for two beau tiful your.g women who ara to preelae at the ealilblt of Mlnn-sta ail and Mlimeaota prtxluote at the Hmne during the conven tion. Although of eritioel and fastidious iaaia Mr. M usher .juickiy found two girls of desired pulchritude and these were an gated. . . Mr. Mother la lha director of tha puo lUHy bunau of the Gopher capital. . Heeldea veriior A. O. Kberbert tha Mlnneeota delegation will Indude P. M. Neel, pieident of the Minnesota dera tion of Commercial Club; H. W. Wheelooa, who la the governor's private secretary, aiid Uainuel a. I v arson, the auditor of atata Omaha will entertain during the several day of the convention at m nl',n Tueeday will( be the blggeat day of all. L4nooln la coining k atrong and St Jo seph will pull In by another special train the same day. The euaclal from Chicago, which will bring a number of easterners Monday afternoon, will have at least ) board. ('II for lleeeralloas. Tha Omaha Ad club la aaklng all Omaha business houses to decorate their atora Ironta early Monday morning In honor of the ad inrn. Prueldent Bunderhaid baa written the following letter: To tha Monliunt of Omaha: During next wenk Omaha will aet aa tioat for two ec.K)liily Important organisation, the Aaauolated Ad Club of America, Mm bled national convention, and the ttaenger fet. Leoorationa will be profuse and Omaha will preaant to liar vieitor a da ...rfIW aula annoarauce. lnaammh aa the ad men' convention be gin Monday morning, thla club makee ur wt reyueat tha4 all decorations ba placed aa early aa poaalbla on Monday, ea W'Mly along the line of nmroti and tiiiougfiout the retail aection of the city. Many of the big atorea on whom tha writer ailed peravnaily have agreed to do thla, and wa (eel confident that our request Will meet with hearty compliance. Child Struck By Car is Unhurt Tbree-Tear-Old Tot Standi in Track ' and Hotorman J ami On Brakei. Tha year-arid-ev-half-old aon of Mr. and Mr. Bam George of W South Thirteenth Street eaeaped death Saturday morning only by tha quick action of llotorman W. C, Blake, who waa operating a northbound Benson oar whan tha youngster toddled onto the track directly In front of the car It waa Impossible to bring tha oar to a top, but It speed waa o quickly "brought down that a the fender -struck tha child It waa toed out of tha way of tha wheal and waa not Injured paat breaking tha akin 11 hi ear. - ' Tha child bad been playing on the walk In front of tha atora and tha Mother had momentarily loat eight f him, Hh looked up J net lit tlma to aee hltn running toward tha onooinlng pur. S'rantlo with horror h ran after tha olitld, too lata to aava blin from danger. The car waa atoppad In on length after hitting tha child. Wltnaaaee aald they -could aot aa Jiow tha child nilaaad being Inatantly killed, sturgeon T. T. Harris attended tha baby and aald hi In juria war vary alight Passes Husband On Queer Trip Battening to Omaha to Pwent Hii Suioide, Mn. Philip DrJ.ooll Minei Huiband. Upon arriving ' frantlo with grief and fright In Omaha Friday night, reporting to tha polloe that her huaband had written her letter threatening auiolde, Mr. Philip Dtiacoll of St. Joseph. Ma.. Warned her huaband had departed for St. Joseph to aee her. Tha yoiloe, after making an Inveatlgatlon, discovered tnat t..e man bad . left Omaha sritlay bound for at. Joaeph, Tha couple apparently had paaaed each other on their way between tha cltle. Mr. PiiauoU explained aha had received latter from her huaband " which ha asaiarea ne waa una ui nie ana wouia b ded by the time the letter r-ached her. She quickly took a ' train to - coma her and prevent the act of eelt-deatruotlon, - jrtaoail wa machinist at tha Union Pa. oirtQ shops. 1 - PRISON CONGRESS FOR OMAHA . J a dare Katelle Aaajuaaets Ha Will Try tw e Via; Meetlaa; far 1'b.ta Clir. Judge Eetelle of the dlstriot court wh ytU attend tha Klghth International Prl aou Cuiigreaa to ba held at Washington, p. C, In Cicluber aaya there la an excellent gpportuntty for Omaha, to secure It for neat year. The Judge says ha lntenda t do all In hi power to awing tha ml meet ing and urge that Omaha aund a dcleg ' lion to pull for the city, "Tha meeting ta certain to coma to tha ' middle wast in mi," aaya the Judge, "and there ta no reason why it should not com to Omaha; wa need It and the city will greatly benefit by having tt hara. Tha body of mea who luak up the oongreaa ;iiMiit mora brelixa. heart and aoul than any organisation wa have seen la Omha for a long time" Llteratura dealing with tha work to ba Ukau up el tha coming luaellug kt now ba bul distributed. A broad field la to ba gone over and axperta on criminology from all tha great uatlona of tha world will take part lu tha dUcuaeiuua and In tha so lutlou of problema now confronting those who have to deal with criminal. SENDS OUT JVEED . NOTICES H4 Overseer Avery Malta Oat On aer ta Pxesertr Owatara lt Wtt4i Heads. Henry Avery, tha new read avereeer for pougtaa county, haa declared war ea )), tVouglaa county laud owners muat remove weeds on their road or pay for their removal. Mr. Avery la aendlug out ooplea of tha following notification: YoU are hereby aotirled that unleas you mow or otherwua destroy all weed the middle of tte pubho road running along your land, aa or befura tha lata day of August. WiO, I will aa overseer of road, cause aakl weeds to e mowed or destroyed, and rauae the expense theraot to be aa eaaed against your land and collected a other taxes, aa prvvtd4 by law." With only enough knowledge of tha Eng lish language to count up to fifty, a 19-year-old iluesian boy arrived In Omaha last week and applied for edmlaalon ta tha high a-hool. His name, when ha learn to peak wll enough to have an Amerlran name, will be Isaac Hllverinan. He ba no parent In thla country, and found his way unaided to the home of an uncle, who la a peddler. Anywhere In Europe tha boy could make travel easily, for he la a master of Krenth and Ueiinan, beeldee hla native Russian. These other language ha read easily and peak accurately, which (how hi natural aptitude for language study, and Indicates that ha will not have such a hard tlma a might b Imagined In hi lf-et task of learning English In two months', fly going to (h ll ll iast Iq Kngllsh conducted by MIhs Til ton at Comenlu school, and by talking English to everybody a soon as he get a start, he expeota to learn enough to make himself understood. In clasaea, and he axperta to enter the high ax.-bool aa a Junior. , , , In consulting with tha superintendent of Instruction through an Interpreter, tha boy wa told that he could tali work In Oer rmui, lAtln,. mathematics and Kngllah. Tha Qnrman and Latin and mathematics were aira4y familiar atudiea to him In big work In the Kuacian ."gymnaalutn," And tha Eng lish waa to b hla principal task. Four stuille .were. not enough, he thought, but waa foroed to content hlmaelf With them until he can prove hla capacity for more. - Tha boy wa born at Odessa, January 14, mi, of Jewieh parent. HI brilliancy In study wa demonstrated when hla parenta gava him a chance to take a four-year ooursa in a private gymnasium, or secon dary ''hool. n two year'. time ha had fin ished thla work and received a diploma Which would have entitled him to enter the fifth year of . tha government six-year sc hools. ' . Jill .methodical cutrefulneaa Jn atudy waa demonstrated In Superintendent Davidson' offloa when ha waa being tested In alge bra. . fa figuring out a group of problems, ba moved awlftly and with assurance until NEWARK'S TRAGEDY OF ERRORS l.basT HtrlagT of Mistakes ta to Blame for tiea Haaeat LyMChlagr 1st Ohio Tosva. NEWARK, O, July le.MSpeolal Cor- raapondeot to ait. Joseph Naw-Pr.) Tha Newark lynching waa a tragedy of error. ' Thl seems to b tb conaensua of un biased opinion. Vlrst, It seems, the people of Ohio arrad lit making- a county option law that took home rule away from certain oltlei, among them Newark. Thla waa the fundamental error. - It'a an error that might b made In any atata; It raises tha question of whether town option la not better than oounty option. Tfce Chala of Brvors. Than there were number of Incidental errors, peovla hara Identified with neither faction involved In tha wat and dry feud, and Who can weigh tha facta soberly, agree; That tha wet have erred In flagrant violation of tha law. That tha drya bava arrad In blundering and untaotful afforta to enforce tha law. Tnat ma aepoaea mayor or iNewarg naa arrad In falling strictly to enforce tha law, That tha polloe erred In falling ta make any deterrp lted effort to protect tha threat ened man. That tha resigned sheriff arred In mis judging tha temper ef tha mob and In failing to call for troop or to make a real defense of tha Jail whan the attack cam a. That tha Antl-SalooA league erred In hiring maroanarlea of a low type to do Ita spying. That the dry deteotlvea arrad In display ing silly bravado In making their raid. All thass InoldenUl blunder, however, hark back to and bava their basis on the big blunder that deprived Newark of borne rule, that made tha town subject to a ao oallad "local" option law through tha vote of people who do not live In Newark, t'aanty Optloa Law Blamed, Tha oeunty option law deprives tha wet element of real local option on tha liquor question. When oounty goes dry, i that aettlea tha matter till another election can ba held. Tha wet element haa no re course. But If a county goea wet, the drya can etui Invoke tha old local option laws and vote tha county dry by piecemeal, township by township and district by dis trict in cities. Thu tha cltle that are wet In popular sentiment are deprived of home rule In tha dry counties, while the drya in tha wat counties are given an advantage not given to tha wets in dry counties. Tha ftntl-sallon people argue that tha liquor traffic la wrong, and that tha and Justifies tho mnvn they use In fighting It. Tha weta, feeling that Injustice la worked thein by tha faot that tha drya oaa drive tba local, option lawt$ tandem while thay themselves cannot, a-i'e. naturally Indignant. Tha injustice seems ti. them to afford good ground for flagrant violation of the law, Thua they lose audi reapeut aa they may have fvr the laws of tha atata. Brevrlaa; ( Two, Years. Tba trouble In Newark haa been brewing for nearly two year. Tha county option law haa engendered a bitter feud between Licking oounty and lu county aeat. The city voted wet by a majority of l.wa The dry vote ot tha county, outside tha corporation of Newark, waa strong enough to wlp out Newark' wet majority and carry tha county by a majority of 745. Thua tha city of Newark went dry, nom inally, a year ago last January. Home rule had bean taken away; tha olty waa mud eubject to a law that a majority of lla cltlaeiui didn't endorse. IteaUlt; Anarchy. Newark waa "wetter" than ever before. Tha wet dement, urging that It la rankly unjust In th nature of thing, for one community ta Impose Its will upon another la a matter of personal liberty, refused to obey tha mandate of tha rural diatriut. Tha city administration, being frankly wet. In sympathy, made only perfunctory efforts tu anforoa tha law. Opca Tew a far Year aaa Half. So for a year and a half Newark baa been an open town, twenty-four hour In tba day, aeven day In tha week. Tb dry element, arguing that tha peo ple of a oouuty have an equal right with tha people of tha county seat In determtn tug how their oouuty seat shall ba run. have mad varloue efforts to euforoe the law over the head ef former Mayor Ath- ertoa. Theae efforta aava been Inef feotuaU They bava served only to engender greater blt- teruee between the tw factious. The last of these efforts, to date, re sulted la tha shooilug of William Howard. "near-beer" saloonkeeper and former cap tain of Newark police, and tha hanghug of ki slayer oa the public square within a tone's throw of th Licking county court bo visa So luuuh for county local option that Isn't local option. If Newark baJ borne rule there would have been no lyuchlug For tbea there wouhi have bean t. .-. . ' ' .v .-. . . ? t ; i i ; . ' ' ' ' ' : , '" ' - ' .:-'J' ! I, ' ' ': i -f -'.: k.y 1 av - ' . f ... i I i ISAAC SILVERMAN. i near1 tha end as they began to get mora difficult. At one problem In factoring ha stopped altogether and without making any effort to work It out remorkud to his uncle that hla training had not Included that sort of problem, and he probably could not do it very well. He knew a soon a ha aaw It that it waa mora advanced work than ha waa prepared for,' although It waa only a little different from the other. The boy ha a gracefully serious appear anoe, (e polite and easy In hla bearing and I evidently poeaassed of both the brains and the confidence necessary ' to" carry through his plun of stepping Immediately Into his place In American schools. plaualble excuse for tha breaking of "little" law, no circumstances tending to breed contempt of law, and finally anarch and mob murder. Prisoner Proves Check Swindler Man Eeld Here Wanted for Getting . Seven . Thousand Dollan . on . Bogmi Check. Information was reoulved at polio heud quartor Saturday afternoon that a pris oner held there for beating hotel billa, la wanted In Pontlao, Mich., on a charge of pasaing a ohecg for 17,900. Tao man, who has aeveral allaae. Including A. C, Brown ing, Tom Klrker and Byron Dun lap, will ba held for a warrant from i'ontlac upon the termination of his present sentence. Constable t. II. Winchester sent the tele gram, telling of Browning's gravest crime, explaining the man had drawn tha bogus oheck on a Larned,- Kan., bank and passed It on the bank at Pontlao. He waa arrested In Omaha last week on complaint of the Merchants hotel 'for a Judgment of (HI, and Is Under a filrjLher complaint by the ManHhaw hotel. ' Holdup Escapes from State Pen Spenoer Williami, Convicted of High way Bobbery, ii At Large Dragnet Thrown Out. Spencer Williams, a convict who sent up for three year from Omaha April 11, haa escaped from tha Linooln penitentiary, according to word from tha tat warden Saturday morning. William wa convicted ot highway robbery com mitted In Omaha. It la not known how he affected hla escape. The local police ex pect he may attempt to return to this city, RAILROAD MEN ON LONG TRIP. Passaasjer aad Trafflo Managers WaWeter anal Kastts Leave for Weatera Tear. I W. Wakeley, general passenger agent; P, a Must is, passenger traffic manager, and D. Clem Poaver of the land seeker Information bureau of the Burlington left Saturday for an extended trip over the Burlington line in the west. The trip I an annual one, "The purpose of our trip," aald Mr. Wake ley, "la to Inspect tha progreaa and condi tion ot the colonisation projecta adjacent to tha Burlington and to look over es pecially tha poaalbiliUea of irrigation aohemea In thla dry country." . "Tha Burlington railroad haa bean the moan ot plaolng a large number ot settlers on the lands In thla country and Is very mioh Interested in the progress and the future posblblllttea of our great western country," ONE TRACK LAID TO ELMWOOD ttraalagr Complete far- the Seeaaa Track, Which Wilt Ba Lata oa oaa aa Feasible. One track la now built from 'the end of the West Leavenworth car llu to Kim- wood park and the grading I completed for th other. The aecond track will be luatalled at onoe. Special work baa beau ordered for the Missouri Pacific croaalng and will be ahlpped from Vlttsburg July ta Assistant Ooneial Manager Leussler say that tt will take but a day to Install thla when it arrives, aa th tndloatlona are that It will be but a short tlma until the new track I completed. When It la don a public picnic will be held at tb park in oiueDraiion oi me eveni. TWO NEW ASPIRANTS FILE r. D. Waaa aad Dyraa Q. Haatlaaa la Use fa aeaato aa Maasa Naaetaatleae. Two new leglalaUva aspirants Jumped Into the game Saturday. F. IX. Wead and Byron O. Hastings filed for th senate and house respectively. Both men are well known In th real eatate and business world, being president and vice-president of th Omaha Real Eatate exchange. IVlltleally. neither la a known quantity, but each man haa a large number ot per sonal rrieiuia. Mr, Wead ha been an active upper Missouri river Improver and served a terna as presideut of th Navigation con grass for Nebraska. alldtaa- reraalta. W. E. Lane, M North Thirty-fifth, frame dwelling. aio; Mrs, U II. Ni-Kay. l North Twenty-third, frame dwelling. 12 Sou Frank IUr. am? Nebraska, frame dw4-1111-. ftuO, lVtron . Kienberth, fc' 17 Case, brick dwelling, WOO; A. W Ulllvr. tl Larlmore, frame dwelling, tS.fM; Moaa av4wwlliIWBj ;jVa Last Call On Oriental Rugs We're Closing Out the Balance of Our Last Importation, and You're Welcome to a Third Off Monday and Tuesday, July 18 and J 9 Every province of the Rug making Orient well represented in our stock and every size you possibly could . wish. Come here ; Monday andTuesday with only two-thirds the 'money you expected to spend. For instance : . $75.00 $45.00 $24 00 Some Sensational Furniture Bargains Take a walk down town and see them in our north Show Window. On sale Monday morning at 8 as long as they last and that won't V be Ipnge $32.30 Early English Buffet, $20.00 26.00 Early English Dining Tabic. ., $10.00 . 45.00 Engliah Oak China Cabinet $15.00 ; Store Closes 5 P. M. Except Saturdays 9:30 P. M. Miller, Stewart and Beaton Company Associated Advertising Clubs of -Ajmcrica Welcome BRIEF CITY HEWS stave Beot, run n. fake row arlaUar ta Ike TUeea, XUeetrie Taaa arras a-Qraaaea Oa. Vbaauta W. Slaakbajra (or contraas. aat Dry Olaaataat of gar meats. TwLa City Ova Works, 47 South Fifteenth, To Ware Saraers the monthly repay. ment plana of .home loana ia surest oheapaat, qulokeat Mabraalta Bavlnga and Loan association, 101 Board ot Trade buHdlnf. lUoaio at Kanawa Mr. Henry Hlller gava an outing at Lake Manawa to all hla employee" TrMa afternoon and evening, Where they -enjoyed his hoapltallty In a big supper, bathing and, ljpatng..,.v . raw Twin Olrla Arrtre Twin glrla ar rived at the home of Ur. and Mrs. U. T. Crosaman, DOW " Foppleton avanua, Friday evening. Mr. Crosaman la raligloua director at tha Omaha Young Men'a Christian asso ciation, ' i Wew Aato Oempaay - Articlea of Incor poration aer filed by the Omaha Motor Car company with tha following named directors: U. K. Downs. W. S. Stryker, H. M. Hlgby, W, a. Wallaoe and u. M. Homan. Tha company la capitalised at !NX,00o. Seat InteBee Intense heat, ranging from M to 105 degreea In tha shade ta re ported in western Nebraska and In Wyom ing Friday, followed by light and scattering showers In the evening. Holds of grain are being harvested and thrashed along tha Northwestern Una in aptte of tha heat. ay Soaroe aa oartag Hay daalara of Otnaba aay that tha reason tha piiua of tha article haa gone up ao ta that praotlcally none of thla year's crop haa coma In aa yet and tha last season's crop Is diminishing; rapidly. Oraln ta not much higher than tha average price at this time of year, but hay and atraw of all kinda haa gone up ao high that unleaa a horaa can learn to aat sawdust It Is cheaper to support an automobile. are Transforming Besotted Drunkards Into Good THE WORK OF JUST THREE DAYS A Remarkable Treatment Taken Internally That Effects a Perfect Cure of the Pernicious THE CROWHIHG WONDER ANY TREATMENT tbat caa take a besotted drunkard, a worthleaa bum, and, make a good cltitaa out of bleu. Btaka Mm a good huaband, maka hira a lood father, derra tha unquali fied aad unreserved support of all pay alclana, all clergymen, all lawyers, all bualnesa men, all bankara. and all good peopa who art Intareatd la good gov ernment. ANY TREATMKNT tbat tan take tba semblance ot a man. with, all man hood gone, all seltrespect gone, all shame gone, all decency gone, and be lower thaa a brute, and restore bis manhood, reatore bl selfrespect. send the tingle of sheute to Als checks as be thinks ot other days, restore bt decency, and make a man of him once again, such a treatment ta a greater boon to humanity than a panacea that lengthens out or even, aavea life. AMY TKKATMKNT that can take shattered nervous system and rebuild It. take a human brain that U tot tering on the verge of Insanity and re store tt to Us normal condltlou, that Rugs for,... $50.00 Rugs for ... . $30.00 Rugs for.... $18.00 25.00 Early English China Cabinet...... 12.50 $30.00 Fumed Oak Dining Table , $10.00 $1 10.00 English Meets Long Lost Brother in Jail Elijah Utterbaok, Prisoner, ii Greeted by Brother After Thirty Yeari of Abienoe. Blljuh Vtterback, (8 years of age, while awaiting trial in tha city jail of Omaha, found his brother whom be had not aeen for thirty years.. Utterback left home when S3 years old, leaving a small brother, John, only I yeara of age. Whan arrested he aaked that hla brother, Alfred. 'Who runa tha Blue Front stables in Omaha might coma td sea him. ., t After talking with Alfred ha asked him tt ba ever heard from tlio little brother howadaya and nearly fell over when In formed that tha man atandlhg in ' back of Alfred waa hla long loat brother ba left when a boy. ANOTHER AVIATOR IS HURT AT BOURNEMOUTH Alaa Boyle, tea af Karl ot Ulaaarow, lajarea by Fall of His Moaoplaae. BOURNEMOUTH, Kngland. July H. Alan Boyle, aon of tha earl ot Olaagow, waa aerloualy Injured today whan tha monoplane In which ha waa making a flight at tha aviation meat felt to tha ground. Boyle was ploked up unoonacloua and was found to ba suffering from concussion of tha brain. This waa the fourth acoldent that has marred tha present meet. For some tlma this afternoon, much an xiety waa felt for Robert Loralne, tha aotor, who started rn a round trip flight In a biplane to tha Needlaa. For aeveral hours nothing waa heard from him, but later reports of his safety were received. rinrvrt? at uTOHKlSIKlQ Husbands and Fathers will quench the everlasting tire In the stomach that ls burning to a. white heat, that will cleanse and purify the humorous blood ot the entire system, that will cloar up the skin and restore the complexion, that will rekindle the light of Intelligence In the eye, that will take away all Inclination to drink, all desire, craving ana appetite for drink, and make the drunkard a per manently sober man, is certainly a transforming treatment such as the world never knew- before. ANY TREATMENT that caa replace the brutal Instincts with human Intel ligence, that can change the fiend In carnate (made so by the poison ot alcohol) Into a human being with the highest attributes of human feeling charity, sympathy and lovela a re generating treatment that will receive the plaudits ot th whole world. ANY TREATMENT taken Internally, tbat does this In the short space ot only three days Is certainly the crown ing wonder ot this age. And still the greater wondr. where It ls known, that It dove It in each and every case, no matter bow long the drinker has $60 00 Rugs for.... $40.00 $30.00 Rugs for.... $20. 00 $18.00 Rugs for.... $ 1 2.00 Oak Buffet. $35.00 Man Overcome by Heat in Trench Telephone Workman it Found Unoon icioui Underground and Taken to Hospital. While working In a trench at Twenty- third and Douglas atreet, E. Ratt, an em ploye of tha Omaha Telephone company, waa overooma by gaa or heat or both, shortly before -noon Saturday. W. L. Kgee. who happened to be passing, discovered the man lying unconscious In. tha trench, and oalled a polloeman. Ratt waa taken la the Wise Memorial hoapltal and waa attended by Dr. McClan aghan. Ha wa reported in a not serious condition. Ha Uvea in Council Bluffs. FOURTH MARCHES TO FT. RILEY Ordere Ilecelved to Oct Raady to Co to Maneaver Case a Baelc ' by Rail. ' ' Headquarters, band, machine gun platoon, first and second battallona of tha Fourth Infantry, less Company H, have been ordered to prepare for tha march to the maneuver camp at Fort Riley. Kan. - Tha command Is to report at camp not later than August 18. It will return to Fort Crook by rail, at tha conclusion of tha en campment. Tba order also Includes First Lieutenant Clemens W. McMIUen. medical reserve corps, two sergeants, eight prlvatea of tha first class, or private hospital corps, one ambulance, one wagor, five mounts and ona regimental infirmary. From ' Fort Leavenworth will gx bat talion headquartera and Coirpanya K and Ls Third battalion engineers, and from Fort Riley tha Seventh cavalry, laaa troope C and D. - a ' ' a si mm v B Sober Men, Making Drink Habit. OF THIS AGE drank or to what excess or bow far he may be lost to drink a perfect cure is effected In every case. NEAIi -X)AY PRINK HABIT CTRKJ). Eadorecd by each am) every publlo official and prominent business or professional man In this state who has Investigated, by over 600 cured patients In Iowa and Nebraska alone and by the most prominent and leading business and profeaslonal men from nearly every large city In the country wbo have visited. Investigated and shown their satisfaction and approval of the work done at the Des Moines Neal Institute by establishing and opening the KOUTY-ONE NEAL IN STITCTEJJ throughout the country In recent months. Is the treatment that perfectly cores all cases ot the drink habit la three days' time. Call apoa. write or phone N'KAL INSTITUTE nearest to you at either IE8 MOINES, DAVENPORT or SIOUX CITY, IOWA, or OMAHA, NEBRASKA, or banker HON. JAM EH E. BJU'CK, Prvaldeat, care ot any In stitute or at his home address, At laatle, Iowa, $48.30 Fumed Oak China Cabinet $15.00 $4.30 Early English Dining' Chaira....... $3.25 $25.00 Early English Cel lar ett $10.00 HOTELS. ta the Bhopplg Ulrtrlct 11th and ateoee, ea JNrtttcoat liana1 4 KlHIKKUWI'.' aCrf Hotel Kuppor llta and KoOee Kansas City. Mo. In tha IhopyiBg District. Wear aU the Theaters, 1 " 00 Beaatlfnl Booma. 100 Mvata Batha. ( ' Vat aad sola water in all rooaos. apaolono JCobby, Varlora, i Telephone In every room. ' ' Beaatlfal Oafs, larteot Oulslae. $1.00 to $2.50 Per Day . Buroyeaa laa Kupper-Benson Hotel Co. r. a. Bsnsos, Kim. Rural Res! Ilome NEAR RED OAK, IOWA Pleasant, well ventilated rooms. - Ex cellent table; fresh fruits and vegetables, poultry, eggs, cream and butter, all pro cured xroru. our own farm. Large grove, plenty of ahade, and plenty of oatdoor axerclae and amnsementa. Rural route. Auto meets train. .. . References required. For Women and Children Only Rates $1.00 Per Day, Including Board. OLD POINT COMFORT DOTH -QUUBEBUN BOATUNG. BATHING, FISHING, SA1LIXG, ORCUSTKA, TENNIS, GOLF. Unique sea food Culslna, ' FORTH. UONROU, Largest Mili tary r-oat oa the Allan uo Coast. iUUKTUN BOAUd, tt.e UenUeavoua ot tha Natiun'e WarabiVa gpaalal Weekly Bates Au ta Oetobaa Baeklete at Oblcara, Boek Sataaa- ft yaatfta, aa Wabaah Batlreada. Oa aaareaa tt lO. W. A Da at a, MurB- roAXBxaa mobbob. ta. Tonka bay Hotel ; LAKE MINNETONKA Nw Miaoeapolie aad St. Paul " " . I Open June 15th te September 1st AN IDEAL PLACE to apand , your vacation. Firat-cUas room and table aerrice. , Special Weekly R,u, rite. fpT deaisiptivsi postal ' folder to P. J. Mabtdorf. Mgr. 1 Tonka Bay Hotel TONKA BAY u MINNESOTA ' 1- ZZZ3 HAY FEVER oa ASTHMA If yoo suffer, tall or write me at ene norTh.0b;..hi?-yoyu7irf!i1 rai- J. O. McBRIDE, Stella, Neb. Are You Going to Buy Land N. farmer aaal4 think ml kalns a some kafor SafOrtT 1 i from A a im '4 .e-e J ewra. ,a varr mam In u anion. e tat to oa fl4 )T Sna 10 fur I waa lha- Ulal aubacriDtl.. I, atMa at tba sd mi 1 mint aatM 0 I