Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 29, 1910, Page 7, Image 7

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    x-UK NEE: OMAHA. IT? I DAY, JULY 20, 1910.
BRIEF CITY NEWS
Havj K,oot Print It.
Take j our printing to th Tim.
T novas W. Blackburn fur congress.
Slectrlo Fane -aurgsQrndea Co.
srt Dry Cleaning of garments. Twin
City Dye Works. 407 South Fifteenth.
vry Dollar rise I with th Nebraska
Frvinss and Loan Ass'n. helps to earn
another. Six per cent per annum credited
semi-annually. 100 Board of Trade Bldg.
U Months for Bnrglary George Rlgby,
convicted In dlstilct court on a burglury
charge, has been sentenced by Judge Ks
telle to serve, six months In the county
Jail.
la the Divorce Court Thereaa B. Col
lins has begun suit for divorce from
Charles J. Collin. aliening extreme cru
elty. rJusle B. Willis asks a divorce from,owl" to the rush of getting the
Harry Willis, charging doxeitton.
Candidates My Withdraw Till Tuesday
An announcement comes from the county
clerk's office that withdrawals from the
various county political races may be made
up to and including August t.
Hew Station oa Burlington J. H. Teller
ton has been appointed as station muster
of the new station, Amherst, on the Hnr
Ungton. The place Is located fifty-nine
miles eseet of Sterling In Colorado, and
will begin business August 1.
Bass for Insurance Agnes Andrews,
another of tlje late Ernest U. Andrews, has
brought suit agslnst Sovereign camp.
Woodman of the World, for the sum of
$1,090. She states that her son was Injured
In the Woodmen lodge for thin amount,
but that the company has refused to pay.
: Th irtjf Kew Paving District The city
engineer's office is planning to advertise for
bids on thirty new paving districts which
have been recently ordered by the city
council. None of these will be paved until
next year, however, as the paving money
is all expended. The estimates will be put
In wo the contracts can be signed up Jan
uary 1, when more money Is at hand.
Travels is Overcome Helnrelch Fred
erick Wisch of Tuailtln, Germany, a man
60 years old, arrived at the Union station
Thursday In agony from a bad case of
cute Indigestion. lie was enroute from
Hoboken. N. J to Portland, Ore. The
OMAHA ON THE AERO MAP
Application Blank Received from
Federation Aeronantique.
LOCAL MO-TO BUY AEE0PLANES
Next Year May dee Omaha Kataa.t
asts Rldlnir Across the Fields
Aroaad This City Meet
a a access.
The Aero Club of Nebraska is about to
affiliate with the Aero Club of America, an
intention of some standing In time, but
which has not been hitherto carried out
iviatlon
meet under way.
A blank form of application at hand
states "that we hereby egret; It our appllca
tl. Is accepted to abide by the articles of
affiliation as shown In the year book, of
the Aero Club of Amerlcayand we agree
to uphold the rules and regulations of the
Federation 'Aeronuutlque International and
iho Airo Club of America."
All members of the Nebraska chib are not
Just sure what Is the "Federation Aero
naulique," but all think It rounds well.
Omaha's aviation meet has really put it
on the aeronautical map and the flights of
Curtlss here have been reported all over
the country. The meet has resulted among
other things in a pronounced desire upon
the part of some venturesome men to buy
aeroplanes and they will be In the market
for them next year.
Cynics declare that aeroplanes will never
become quite so popular as motor cars
because people will be compelled as a rule
to fly so high that other people will not
be able to observe the proud and haughty
occupants. This being observed, according
to the cynics, Is one of the chief joys of
riding about in an automobile, the vulgar
mob of pedestrians being supposed to look
with admiration or envy upon the motor
ists. The cynics further assert that (he bearing
and attitude of many people sitting In cars
confirms their belief. But, of course, all this
is only the view of cynics.
Our Letter Box
Contrthatlone ea Timely Bnbjeeta
Mot Saeeealag- Tvt Hundred Words
Are tented treat Oar
(birrk and Stat la Eaalaad.
OMAHA, July To th Editor of The
Bee: Some months ago 1 had occasion to
Call attention to a glaring misstatement
of Mr. Frederic J. Haskln on the posi
tion of the clergy of the Church of Eng
land, in Iho matter of public education.
1 said then, as I repeat now, that when
ever man attempts to constitute him
self, offhand, an encyclopedia of univer
sal knowledge he must of necessity ride
to a full a thousand times. Mr. Haskln
forms nu exception to the rule. In your
Issue this evening he says, first, "The
Church of England Is the state church in cleslastlcal conditions In England work out
England, the church of Wales, a separate a8 satisfactorily as ours do here. So long
. . ...... . .. l . - -
ownership any landlord In England has of
any chi:rch. Where the right of presenta
tion still rests In the owner of the estate,
as a condition of the orglnal gift of trust,
the landlord cns that right, hut other
wise he has no lawful right beyond that of
the humblest parishioner, except he may
usurp It. That Is no worse than some of
our own ecclesiastical ahuiies In this land
today, when the possession of wealth oft
times puts It owner In the front seats and
pushes the poor toward or outside the
doors of some of our Mammon worshiping
churhes. In England the patron may pre
sent his nominee to the bishop for Institu
tion; yet If he do so, regardless of the
man's morals or of error In rellg.on, the
bishop can refuse to Institute him, and be
can only tie compelled to do so by decree
of a civil court A bishop, of course, mny
fall to do his plain duty, or a civil court
may override his righteous refusal, but
that may happen In this land, where church
and state are s far separate as they can
be In any land. Upon the whole, the eo
Institution of the Anglican Order, is the
established church of Wales and Monmouth.
But Momnuuth la only a shire or county
of Wales. It is about as absurd to speak
of "the established church of Wales and
Monmouth" as it would be to speak of
"the state of Nebraska and Douglas."
Moreover, the church in Wales Is not ' a
separate institution of the Anglican order.'
It is an Integral part of the Church of
England In the ecclesiastical province of
Canterbury. It contains four bishoprics,
Whose bishops are subject to the arch
bishop of Canterbury. Monmouth Is not
one of them. They have been subject to
the archbishop of Canterbury at least since
the final conquest of Wales by Edward I,
In the thirteenth century. Moreover, the
church In Wales has never been "estab-
as men and ecclaslastlot are not Ideal
rtjyn, just so long will no system of ec
clesiastical Jurisprudence or action prove
Ideal. It Is Just as true of the state as of
the church. We are what we are. Ood
helps us. So Is Mr. Haskln. gome saint
and much sinner.
JOHN WILLIAMS.
For, From aad After.
OMAHA, July CT.-To the Editor of The
Bee: Sometimes a proposition carries most
of the meaning of a sentence and makes
the connection between the verbal struc
ture and the dynamo of thought.
Running for office la nothing remarkable
In this country, but when a person has
to run from office, as Mr. Roosevelt has
to do, there Is an uncommon and interest-
r'
Untied" by any legal statute, English or Ing spectacle. And the honor of his sltua-
Welsh, any more than the Church of Eng
land has ever been so established. The
Church of England became so not by law.
but by conversion of the people of the
Saxon heptarchy, before England itself ex
isted as a single state. It helped to mold
the warring tribes of Angles, Saxons and
in Great Demand
Interest Eenewed in Proposition to
Secure Flowing Well in
Baylisa Park.
station authorities, had Dr. S. H. Smith
attend to him at once and, it was thought' A ftpcinn Altrr
that perhaps an operation would be nocded CW. LColtlll VV clLCl
to save .him.
Asks $S,0O0 for Broken Wrist Queenie
Olllen has filed, suit sgalnst the firm of
Byrne it Coxfciell, plumbing contractors for
10,900. She claims that while Connell was
In . the celler at, her home examining
plumbing work, he left open a trap door
leading in - the cellar, and that she, not
knowing the trap door was open, fell Into
t breaking her wrist and sustaining other
painful Injuries. .
; Sfo More Btopovers Stopovws of length
on little or.no oause will not be allowed
by the railroads of the country after Oc
tober 1 of this year. For some time the
railroads have been trying to get together
n'thla question .and now an sgreement of
practically, all the large Unas of the United
States that wherever the stopover reads
to extend the time limit beyond the original
extent of the ticket It shall not be allowed.
is
by
Shaw van Happy
at Bryan's Fall
Sayi He is Beady to Die Since Bryan
Bead Hit Own Funeral s
v- Sermon.
;'"I?ug" Shawvan, at the Merchants, Is
. uhswlng the Juicy oud of contentment be
woefi -rneals and sleep as restfully as a
Grand Island," says Shawvan, In his pic
turesque way, "and we simply pulled It
tight''
Jnr. ctnawvan is a isxrawr oa ma w'lm'
scale In Boone county. He was one of the
Bryan electors- In the last presidential
fight, and having worked successfully to
carry his county, heretofore republican,
for the democratic ticket, he had an earnest
( desire to convey the electoral vote of Ne
l k..ai r WBflhlnff-tnri Mr. Brvan shut
'' him out, as not being of sufficient polish
to make the kind of ambassador he wanted;
hence today Bryan is Bhawvan's pet aver
sion. . -
. "I could die happy now," continued the
Boone county leader, "since I heard Bryan
pronounce , his own funeral sermon as a
democratic leader In his prohibition speech
mtt riranit Island. Tha democracy of the
state now know him Just as I learned to
know him long ago, m w supremely set
fish. , and when he see anybody on the
ha ia at once against that person. But he
found dictation does not go any longer, and
If he properly digests the truths told him so
bluntly In that convention by men who
have been hie friends he will be much bet
ter for it."
Anxiety to get the clear, sparkling and
cool water that gushes In a never-failing
stream from the artesian well at the Jitttt
Lumber company s premises on Upper
Broadway sends daily crowds there this
hot weather that break all previous rec
ords. The stream is not of generous pro
portions, and it requires some little time
to fill the various-sixed vessels that are
continuously presented. These range in
se from the supply of tin cups maintained
the generosity of Mr. Hafer to four-
gallon palls, and the waiting list often
reaches a score or more.
Thousands of people, dally carry away
the water In addition to the other thou
anda who go a long way out of their route
to get a cool drink. With the exception of
the horse fountain at Broadway and Fourth
street it Is the only place In town where
the thirsty can find relief without seeking
It Inside the places where they get some
thing stronger. In the gray of the morn
ing dawn one will find some persona there
seeking the cooling water,- and when the
town is loeked in sleep at midnight .the
procession hat only slightly thinned.
The popularity of this little spring, for
that Is all It really is, indicates how grate
ful people would be for a real fountain
gushing clear and pure water on the streets
And this revives the proposition to sink s
deep artesian well in Bayllss park. Prop
erty owners around the park and others
near by have expressed a willingness to
aid in such an enterprise, and an amount
of approximately $2,000 has been offered,
It is said the well would cost about $6,000.
Odd Mistakes Are
Made by Painters
Sijns on the Windows Are
finite ludicrous from
Errors.
Often
Sign painters are at work on various win
dows of the City National bank building
putting on gilt lettering to advertise the
tenants about to move in. None of these
sigh painters has so far slipped up In spell
Inc. ' which is a higher record than that
reoontly achieved by other local "artists."
Most conspicuous of these errors has been
the bad spoiler who first painted a picture
of the crowning glory of Athens' acropolis
n.t railed It In large letter the "Par-
thenloh." ' The same man la rasponsibls
for a sign on the way to Council Bluffs,
th picture denoting a work dona In Egypt
b tha late Mr. Cbeopa. and the caption
...4in Tha Pyrmide." But neither of
these is irult as bad as that Krug park
.tn which once advertised "the most
flagrant smoke to Omaha."
If ou axe not satisfied after using ac
cording to direction two-thirds of a bottle
Chamberlain's Htomach and Uver iao-
lets. you can have your money back. The
tablets oleaase and Invigorate the stomach.
tmnrove the digestion, regulate the bowels.
Give them a trial and get well. Sold by all
dealer.
A May's Holiday.
' Th ardent controversy which bs wsg
Ing in England and America concerning th
beat way to dispose of school boys In the
long summer vacation has prompted the
Grand Trunk Railway Bystem to issue
special publication giving suggestions and
practical blots t parents as to what to
do wth the school boy during the months
of July and August The vacation camp is
one of the solutions aad the publication
entitled. "What Shall a Buy Do With Ills
Vara turn"? thoroughly cover the ground.
A copy nay be obtained for the asking by
onivin t H. Q. Elliott. 1T Merchants
Loan dt Trust Building. Chicago.
The Key to the Situation Bee Want Ads
- HslMlag Paratlt.
Loly Hansen, M orby. fram dwelling
l:.U": c. A Bralnt-rd, sit
, swelling, 11,600.
Pratt, frame
The archbishop of Canterbury and York
existed and ruled their people, Chrlstlanly,
before there was any king or Parliament
of England.
Another misstatement: "The establish
ment of the church by law means the In
corporation of the law of tha church Into
the law of the land.' That was never true.
nd It was never less true than It is today.
Sundell Bound
Over for Trial
Kan Charged with Manslaughter
Waives Preliminary Hearing
and Furnishes Bond.
C. Sundell, the man charged with man
slaughter for running down and causing the
death of a 5-year-old boy, Harry Drefs.
was bound over to the district court under
15,000 bonds by Judge Crawford Thursday
morning. Sundell waived preliminary ex
amination.
He was represented at the hearing by
Attorney C. L. Waldron. The county . was
represented by Deputy County Attorney
Plattl. Sundell furnished bond.
M'COOK IS RECOVERING
FPfiM ITS QPARI CT PClfCB
n
Nor
Towa of Coaffreaamaa
rls Ha Dees Hsvlsg a
lege, '
MoCook, Neb., Is Just beginning to emerge
from a gloomy state of affairs, according
to Omaha, visitors from that seotion,
McCook 1 th county seat of Red Willow
county, and 1 the Junction point of sev
eral railroad lines. Sometime since scarlet
fever broke out In the town. The disease
was In a mild form, so mild at first that
proper precautions to prevent It sproad
seem to hav been neglected.
As the days went on, more and more
esses developed and were quarantined, until
finally the police force of the town was
kept busy enforcing ths quarantine. Groups
were not permitted to gather on th
streets, and the physicians had so much
to attend to they got but little chance to
sleep. At the present time the epidemic
Is said to be under control. No deaths are
reported, but several cases of distressing
after effect are said to exist.
Congressman ueorge w. Norrls was
among those quarantined, and he wa only
released to attend the republican state
convention after climbing out a window
and being thoroughly examined and fuml
gated. He arrived home at the close of th
congressional session to find his home un
der quarantine, one of his children being
taken down with the disease. The other
children of the Norrls family had been sent
to friends In good time to avoid oontsglon
and were not kept In quarantine.
KXCl'MSIOX RATES.
K. I P. Eacasaaiaeat, Mllwaskt
Kalarata Teatalar Caaelav,
Chirac.
Tickets on sate via tha Chicago North-
wfsWrn railway, dally July St, S. M and tl,
account K. of F. encampment, Milwaukee
nd daily Auguat . a. and 7, account
Knight Tampiara' conchiv, Chicago. Great
opportunity for sightseeing in the beau
tiful convention cities and to visit th many
adjacent famous summer resorta, lake and
streams ol Wisconsin and northern Mlchl
gan. For tickets and full Information apply
to an uoavt ageui
tlon Is much greater than that of running
for office. Many people seem not to recog
nize this fact. How many ever have an
opportunity to do any runnnlna of this
kind? It Is a rare chance. Happy Is 'he
who Is wise enough to be content with
such high honor and leave the other propo
ses Into a slnula homoKeneou nation, sltlons to his less fortunste countrymen.
Now, there is anotner ana very auiereni
spectacle presented by simply changing the
proposition. Under our present election
laws there Is something Interesting to stu
dents of xoology In the herds of two-legged
animals running after office. The glory of
having one's picture on telephone poles and
barn doora and saloon windows and hav
Ing one's name in all kinds of mouths and
Our Entire Stock of
Manhattan Shirts
AT CUT PRICES
Commencing Friday Morning
$1.50 and $1.75 Manhattans $1.15
$2.00 Manhattans $1.38
$2.50 and $3.00 Manhattans $1.88
r Store
Closes
at
5 P. M.
'The House of
High Merit. 1
V-'
Store
Closes
at
5 P. M.
BERIAH F. COCHRAN.
The law of the church never became the mixed with- all kinds of chewing tobacco
law of the state until It was first re-en- I very alluring to many cuixens woo. in
acted by Parliament since the Norman con- th course of evolution, nave Become aoie
quest or by the "wlttengemot" during the to assume the upright position and walk
Saxon period, or else promulgated by royal part of tne tune on iwo ieei u rv .
authnritv when Parliamentary authority jurymen
. in ahevance. Todav the struggle Is to I "Well," says the defeated candidate, "if
prevent the law of a mixed parliament of a fellah don't git Into the shuffle h shure
all millions or no reUalon at all. being in- won t gll no omce. Aim iu wi vounirjr
cornorated Into the law of the church, you never can tell who'll turn up on top,
Th.i i. .lira to ha a lnnv and a Nuthln' like tryln', anyhow. Maybe the sd-
hm.r nn. Ita ultimate Issue will be the vertlsln '11 pay me. Don't you know, run
r.in of ths Church of England from all nlng for (after) omce is mosuy an aover-
bondage to the state, as they are now free tlsln' sckeem, anyhow.
In this land.
Another misstatement, which was, how
ever, an outward form of truth, though un
true in tact; "The heads of the church, the
archbishops of Canterbury and Tork and a
great number of other bishops sr ap
pointed by the political leaders of the coun
try." That Is true to this extent: The
prim minister of the day is the prime
minister of the king, while he Is In .office.
Under the English constitution the king
nominates to the several cathedral chapters
some reputable priest of the church, or the
bishop of an Inferior see, or a suffragan
bishop. The duty of nominating this man
I
the day, who may be anything or nothing
In religion; though aa a matter of fact and
history, the only prime ministers of Eng
land who have not been; at least nominally,
members of, the Church of England, are
Balfour and it may be Mr. Aaqulth. Banner-
man, I am almost certain, was. Bu be
that as It may, the prime minister doe not
appoint absolutely to any bishopric. He
nominates to the king. The king, who must
be a member of the Church of England,
can, and may, and does sometimes veto the
ncmlnatlon of the prime minister. As often
as otherwise, oftener perhaps, the king Is
first .consulted, and his wishes govern the
prime minister' nomination. That was
notably so in the days of Queen Victoria,
both as to first nomination and to Its veto.
It was so in the days of Edward VII.
It was an open secret that the present
bishop of London, as well as the archbishop
of Tork, were exalted to their present posi
tions by the desire of King Edward. They
were both young men without great social
or political Influence; They were each in
turn suffragan Muaops to the bishop of
London In the wretchedly poor district of
Stepney. For their devotion to their work
among costermongers and other like peo- Instance In Montana sixteen Inches of raln-
ple they won King Edward's admiration fall will do Just as much good to the crops
uu irvivi iiuiuin 10 ineir i as iweniy-iive lucnes wui uo in uaianoma.
present positions, the one by Balfour, the "In my trip through Nebraska, I noticed
other by Asqulth. In fact by Edward him- that In many places a splendid crop of
elf- - I corn and other araln would be erowlna- on
Again Mr. Haskln says: "A a matter one farm and then going on a few miles
of fact, the head of the Anglican churohlwhere different methods of farming had
may be appointed by a Jewish Disraeli, a been used the crop would be a failure.
Burns Tells of
s
Nebraska Crops
Says that Poor Crops Are Due to Bad
Methods Bather Than to
Poor Soil.
John T. Burns, secretary-treasurer of the
s first committed to the prime minister of I Dry Farming Congress of the world, was
in Omaha for a short time Thursday and
conferred with; several of the prominent
groin and railroad, man on th crop question
and on the' coming session' ot the con
gress, the fifth number to be held this
year In Spokane, Wash., on October S, f,
S and " '
Mr. Burns state that In his opinion the
association of dry farmers Is doing the
most practical work of an agriculture na
ture of any organization In the world. The
entire energy of the members' Is devoted to
exclusive dry farming, that Is the encour
agement of th development of the lands
that have been arid
"There are in the world today ,000,000,000
acres of land possible of cultivation which
are going to waste, and 100,000,000 acres of
this amount is In the territory west of the
Missouri river In the United States" said
Mr. Burns. "Our object Is to open to set
tlement this land and to teach the farmers
before they start on It the proper method
to raise successful crops.
"Any territory which has from eight to
twenty-five Inches of yearly rain Is sus
ceptible of cultivation, although, of course.
atmospheric conditions are different For
Unitarian Chamberlain, an agnostic Bal
four or a dissenting Asqulth, quite as often
as by an Anglican Gladstone." A a mat-
Tbe state Is spotted In this manner, show
ing poor farming more than poor land.
The average yield of wheat In this state
ter of fact and history, Disraeli, whilst a could in two years be increased to twenty-
jew by biooa wa an Anglican in religion.
Mr. Chamberlain was, and is, a Unitarian,
but he was never prime minister and, of I the acre.
course, never appointed the iiead of the
four bushels with a little care, and th
corn yield could be raised ten bushels to
CATERPILLARS LEARNED
"ottrtho'ZJrr'r- just how hot it was two
one If his "fcoundatlon of Faith" fairly
represents his Intellectual position. Mr.
Asqulth may be a dissenter, though I am
not certain of that because of any state
ment made by, Mr. Haskln. But whether
he Is or not, his appointments . are con
trolled by law and the royal approval: and
Yeansrstera Tried to Crawl Tare Feet
oa Cement Sidewalk aad
Died la Attempt.
Two little caterpillar tell simultaneously
from the same restless bough. The way-
.w u.ura mo- war4 youngster landed In th parched
Ject to the law and to the crown, not as I Rraas a few lncne, frora th .,deWalk. and
egnosuca ur uiBBeiiiers, Ana even men tne
cathedral chapter may refuse to ratify the
appointment. If they choose to run the risk
of the penalties of the old statute of pre
munlre of Richard II. That would not be
a serious risk In these days if any chapter
chose, for cause, to take it The statute
was enacted against what was deemed the
aggression of the papal authority on the
authority of the English crown In eocleal-
astlcal appointments. It wa that terrific
statute that enabled Henry VIII to work
hU will upon Wolsey and both houses of
the English convocation. These had al
lowed this statute to fall Into disuse, with nalr' coat" of tn nect" enioke.
Henry's own consent All at once ha writhed and struggled onward. Flv
six feet of burning Sahara stretched be
tween them and the foot of the root tree.
But both started to make the Journey. One
ventured out a few inches and hesitated.
The other plunged boldly onward. Two
colored men eating their luncheon on the
parking, watched the struggle.
"That' man caterpillar that' goln'
ahead. Bet you fouah doll ah s mine make
It an' you'ahn doan't," said tb negro.
"I's don take de bet," responded the
other, and both watched the struggle. The
blistering heat of the cement made the
They
-ten
worked It with terrific force. Wolsey fell fifteen Inches of th Journey was acoom-
and . the bishop sullenly yielded, though P"hed. One of the men tossed a bit ot
not without the enacting of a saving clause cool watermelon rind ahead of them, and
against Henry's demands. The old Plsntag- both eagerly sought ita shade. Again
enet statute still remains, but no heads they struggled on. To lend new encour-
would fall today did any chapter refuse to agement pieces of Juicy melon rind war
obey It ,1 stretched In a line clear across th cement
Again, Mr. Haskln writes: "in the rural The heroic travelers bravely struggled from
parts of England the churches are th pri- I on piece to another, but the tragedy coded
vat property of tb landlords on whose
estates they are situated." That 1 abso
lutely untrue. The churches ef England,
with th exception of certain private or
collegiate chapel and certain churches
known as "royal peculiars," axe the prop
erty of the people of eacn pariah, held In
trust for the members of the Church of
England by ancient or modern gift of de
vout churchmen, who gav th land, built
th church and endowed It for that end.
Those patrons, aa a rule, retained the right
to nominate to the bishop In each case
the .man whom they preferred for the liv
ing. That remained aa a permanent civil
right to th owner of the estate, whether
by Inheritance, purchase or royat gift.
after the attainder and confiscation of the
estate to the king's as. That 1 an the
wnen mey touna a space wner seven
Inches Intervened. They lifted their eyas
and gased full Into the foe af th pttll
sun, than slowly sack.
CLUB SETS UP R0AO SIGNS
Osaaka - Aateniaalla Claa t Havtac
La-as PaJated (or Plaew oa
Oatlylaa; Bead.
E. II. Bprsgus, president of th Omaha
Automobile club, announced Thursday that
the club ia having a number of signs
nted to be placed on all the road lead-
ng Into Omaha, and pointing the way. lit
!ays this mov Is being taken thirty daya
ahead of Topeka, Kan., which was reported
previously to have carried It out
Our New Store
Opens Saturday,
July 30th
At 308 South 18th Stroot
Opposite Court House
Carrying the finest line of Imported goods
ever placed on the Omaha market.
We will be pleased to have you call at any time for the purpose of inspect
ing our goods. ,
Our salesman can then explain their merits and the proper ways of preparing
them, thus enabling you, without experimenting, to get satisfactory results.
Antionetti Olive Oil has a pleasing, deli
cate flavor that is due entirely to the
grade of olives used.
Olives (green or ripe) exceptional as to
quality. They are the choicest part of
the entire crop.
Artichokes, plain and in tomato sauce, are
rare treats at this season and are espe
cially prepared from the choicest va
rieties. Imported Tomato Sauce, highly seasoned
and with a flavor that is unequalled.
Genuine Imported Macaroni is not to be
compared with the ordinary kind to
test its superiority try it, and you'll"
never use another kind.
Oalbas Olive Oil as a medicinal agent is
unequalled because of its absolute
purity.
Egg Plant Salad is a delicious summer
dish, pleasantly seasoned, wholesome
and appetizing.
Peeled Italian Tomatoes are much the
same in appearance aa the domestic
grade. The difference lies in. the flavor
and quality. .
Tunny Fish in Olive Oil is a pleasing dish,
with a delicious flavor due to its having
been prepared in olive , oil light and
wholesome food for summer. "T'V
Genuine Imported Spaghetti will no
longer be a rare treat. Can be bought in
any quantity.
In buying Olive Oil, whether for use on salads or as a mclii
inal agent, get that which has been proven absolutely free of cot
tonseed or other adulterants. The 4 4 Antinotti ' ' and the ' 4 Calbas ' '
has- We recommend its use because it's cheapest in the end to
buy the best. '
A. Minardi Co.
308 South ISth Street. Opposite Court House
2
lKCO-CEWQYA
ITALY
Dahlman Forces
Most Optimistic
saaeBBBawa 9
Look to See the Mayor nominated
with a Bosh at the Com
ing Primaries.
Dahlman democrat have so far recovered
from the Orand Island affair that they are
proclaiming that things are crtgfcter for
Mayor Jim than ever before.
'Why, he 1 sure to get the nomination
from republicans If he doesn't from demo
crats," said one of th Dahlman followers.
Here's the situation. Jim Dahlman is the
only candidate from either party who will
veto a county option bill If it 1 passed by
the legislature; consequently every liberal
In either party will stand out tox Jim at
the primaries. By forcing county option
into politic they hav forced party lines
out."
Another prominent democrat remarked
with some heat that Dahlman was the only
man who could consistently stand on the
democratic state platform. "Bhallenberger
certainly cannot," he declared. "While
they were preparing tb resolution Bhallen
berger took his opportunity to say that h
would sign a county option bill, that put
him oft th platform for good. Jim Dahl
man declared that if a county option bill
came up be would veto It and that put
blm squarely on the platform. Th Bhallen
berger endorsement was merely an adminis
tration endorsement and a matter of form."
Rent an Office
in the
Heart of Omaha
L0MAX ANNOUNCES HIS
THROUGH TRAINS IN AUGUST
Writer, raclfl Will Ovaa Vm It
Paawagtr e-vt aa Tweaty
leeead ( That Heatk.
H. L. Lomajc. passenger traffic manager
of the 'Western PaelOc, make the an
nouncement at the Omaha office that on
August tt that road wHI begin to run pas
senger train between Omaha and Ban
Francisco, making connections with th
Missouri Pacific, Rock Island, Burlington
and Union Pacific at pints in Colorado for
th trad east of th lines. Freight trains
on the road have been running s'lnoe the
first of the year on this new line.
Is nsTer written of those who cur Coughs
and colds with Dr. King's New Discovery,
Guaranteed. We and tl.M. For sale by
Beaton Drug Co.
IMS. W.ew.Ty l.yl.jiilfl,S .
Bee Building
There is some available space for rent at the
present time.
ltoom 023 Located oa top floor, facing court, with 270
square feet, Including vault, which rent for $25 per month.
Ground Floor Office Just off court, which gives easj
access from Farnam street. This space will be remodeled to
suit tenant.
Rooms Available August 1st
017 Court room, 8x14. Kent for $10.00 per
Room
month.
Room 040 East front,
per mouth.
HVixlS, good light. $22.00
Room 048 One of the best suites of offices In the city.
In the corner of the building facing 17th and Farnam.
This space Is divided Into three rooms with tiled partition,
giving a total of 670 square feet, and Is fitted with large
vault. Rent, $00.00 per month.
Rooms 218 and 220 Nice suite offices located in north
west corner ot building. The larger room Is partitioned so
as to afford two private offices and reception room, and Is
provided with vault This makes a good combination ot rooms
and has been occupied by insurance company; may be rented
for $02.00 per month.
The Bee Building Co.
R. W. BAKER. Supt. 17th and Farnam
am
HI