Till: ItKE: OMAHA. TUKNIUY, NOVEMBER 1. 1010. m 1 1518-1520 FARNAM STREET SsA Solitaire of the smartest pmnll women's shoe stock in the "West. The Hobble Boot The one model around which all others center And genuine triumph In. shoe-making. Kits the font and ankle like a glove. 1n the hard to obtain dull and suede leathers, or patent leather If you choose. We, feature this model at with other at $5 and $Q sizes from z to 7. The ftore that CLEARINGS STILL INCREASE Banks' Business Forging; Ahead at a Most Rapid Bate. BIG GAIN FOR TEN MONTHS . Month Thla Vrtr bat llaa hhown a abatantll Gain Orcr the Cerreanoadlna Month of I. aat Tear. Hank cleaiina.ii for the month of October, 1910. how an lncreaae of $2,706,392 over the corresponding month In 1?09. Clearings for the month of, October, 1909, were 171,797,503 and for 1S10 they were 74.M8,06. Clearings for the first ten months of 1910 ahow an Increase of IHM75.425 over the earn time In 190, the figures for 1910 being 1701, 117.0M and for 1 they were $610,641,609. Clearing f o October. Clearings for October were: 1909. .$ 2.1W.I00 . 2.4C2,81! . 3.041, 437 . 2.722.:42 . 2.W04.W . a ".ti,"2 . 2.17,441 ... 3.H2.7.-.S . 2.4:17.174 . 2.r,.V(.!U2 . a.M6,i . .;,4'1 .. 2..i,tiUl . ,161,9W . S.iiM).67J . . 2,704. i . 8.047.47S ,. 2,iU1.4;4 .. 2,K7,4ta 1910. $ 2.18.094 3.12.8K 2. !. 41 2.W2.i47 ' I.5M.04I 2,67a, u61 3,219,013 i.4.J.M4 . 2.94H.3IU 24fi.V44 3.27S.776 2.74K.4SS 1.663,742 2.6.'7,(irj S.or.l.234 "il.Stlu.Wl 3.8J4.741 'i.lVi.iM) October 1. October -J... October 2 October 4 October J. ,....,.. ..' October .,........ October J...J..,... October ,,..,. I icloher ' H, . .,j October : 10..'. .-, y . .'. . . co.vr Jli.f,,; October li, a,.. tctobcrvia. October 34. ..l.. ...... October 1!U. October u... cloter -K..y. Octobes IK,.. ,...,.. October lt,,.., October ':... October 21 "I October, ii..i,. ' ' October Z3.-,.Yi.. October M, October 26. ;,,,.;,,. 11 SMS 574 S.K8.ft7 2,430,13 2.S1K.714 .874,7(16 tX.2.li,9 2.7L'4,187 October ti..e '.... .. . ' ...jul r... r M v... " 1.-.. October 7.. OrtofW Vs.. October IN. . October ,, October VI.. 8,&!1.7. l.j:w.42 2.909.539 Totals'' Sunday ..171,797.503 174,503.606 . riearlKs for Te Months. 19H9. 1B10. .S S7.1oS.(i78 $ 68.044.968 January .,..'... February ...... March ..J.,V.,. April May J una ..,..Vv.'" iul- r...i.. August -j September ti.ivi.r.vi 62.77.la; 71.7ii9.3oJ Mt.861,24;l 1.H:"9,2.W 89.132.930 7,Hii2.313 62.234.401 6fi.37B.416 70,5!U,3 a 74,iK(3jtl 62.14..'6 5P.274.770 &H. 274.770 Bl.MW.On 7l,iir7,6u8 October . Totals-'; .S10,641,ft $701,117,034 Beautiful Hair Comes With Dry Shampooing (From Woman'a National Journal.) Dry ahaoipoptng aways has been and always will 4e popuar with tha woman who takes prWe .In long, abundant and clOHsy hair.' The tfry et.trr.no dosa away with ao inuch. of th Inconvenience and bother aouompanylog waahlng the hair eliiuinatea Uia.long drying hours and abolishes to danger of catching cold Indeed, Is so all-around satisfactory, that ons wondora why soap and water, eggs, tc, can find any followers whatever. JUijr shampoo certally stimulate the growth of hair. There can be no doubt as to that, Just mis four ounces of powdered orrlf root with four ounces of therox. eprlnkle a tableapoonrul of this mixture upon 'the head, brush the pow der well tncough'tiie hair; do this two or three tlniea, s. week for a whlls and see the rauU for youra)f. This will keep your hair fight,. and fluffy, and beautiful ly lustrous. It corrects the conditions of Uie scalp '4Wat-cause the hair to become freaked. Aujl,' tiluf less, course and brlt . Adv. ers Ay Housecleanina Peacock Coal .The great domestic soft coal nut, egg or lump. Distinctive for free burning:, clean and lasting qualities. A steady, even heat in the range and a quick hot fire in the furance or heater. Peacock coal never had a real rival 1. WcCoun Co. ' South end 16th Street Viaduct Doug. 753; Ind. A-3753 "H0IIE OF THE LONG TON" rnr HI HI $4.00 Mail Orders Quirk)? Killed. never disappoints. Burlington Has Yearly Balance of $1,112,611 Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Road Shows Deficit of Fifty Thou sand Dollars. CHICAGO, Oct. 31. The fifty-sixth an nual report of the Chicago, Hurlington (Jtilncy railroad company for the fiscal year 1910, was made public today. De parting from a previous custom, reports on the Colorado & rlouthern lines and the Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City railroad were accounted for separately. Operating revenue of the Burlington was $87,869.M7. an increase over 1909 of $9,266,8X8. Operating expenses were $63,010,964, an In crease of $8,449,967. The net Income from operation was, therefore, $24,8o8.562. De ducting taxes, -etc.. the road received an income of $-l,723,ii3. Adding rents, etc., the gross operating Income totals $34,247,227. Deducting from this Interest on bonds, sinking funds, etc., the net corporate In come Is $13,306,746. After paying dividends and making ap propriations for betterments, a balance of $1,112,611 remains as compared with a bal ance of $1,266,K71 'the previous year. The gross Income of the Colorado & Southern lines was $6,060,969. deducting total expenses of $3,108,336, the net cor porate Income Is placed at $2,951,633. Pay ment of ' dividends leaves a balance of 11,6.11,633. The Quincy, Omaha Kansas City road was operated at an expense of $921,341, showing a deficit of $40,273, as compared with a surplus of $14,968 the previous year. PIONEER TRUST COMPANY SUED Jaanea IS. .Brady tW'a.avts Seavrlr Half 's' ' Million Dantaarea froM Kan 1 ' Ma tltr Firm.' KANSAS CITT, Oct. 3L-James E. Brady today sued the Pioneer Trust company of this city ltr $445,000 for alleged losses which he claims to have suffered by reason of being displaced as majority stockholder of the company In February, 1907. Brady charged that tha executive committee of the company, without his knowledge or au thority as controlling stockholder, issued enough treasury stock to reduce his hold ings to a minority. FIRE RECORD farm Hons Barns. TECUMSEII, Neb., Oct. SI. (Special Tele gram.) The house on the Henry Schmidt farm, five miles northeast of Tecumseh, together with most of the contents, wss burned to the ground at an early hour this morning. John Morrlssey and family occupied the house and saved but few of their household effects. The fire started In the attic and the cause Is unknown, unless from a defective flue. Mr. Schmidt's loss is 41.2W, with $.uo insurance. Mr. Mor rlssey 's loss Is $S00, partly covered with insurance. 4'rlppen Appeal Tharaday. LONDON, Oct. Sl.-lt Is expected that the criminal court of appeals will on No vember J hear the appeal of Dr. Hawley H. Ciippen from the sentence of death for the murder of his wife. Th execution has been set for November 9. The Key to the Situation Bee Want Ads. MOTEaESaTTS Or OOXAX STXAHaHira Fort. ArrliM. Btllid. KKW YORK C.ltlc ,. NEW TtiHK Lapland NEW TOHK blrnla KKW TOHK N. AnwtwiUAi. QlKKNaTOWM ..Mtur.Unl Ql'KBNSTOWN e4rlo SOUTHAMPTON P. F. Wllh.lm. HAVRE L Oaaoog n. I aavoi. HAVHJC. Pills $7.00 m i. ' ai mai 3 HOBBLE o BOOT UTAH WATtB POWER BUOllb Streams Created for Irrigation and Electricity. NOVEL ADDITION FOR OGDEN Land Company rials Area with Or chard for K'jich Rnier Fifteen iaatrlana I nearth Floiirf4 Wealth from Cellar. OODKX. Vtah, Oct.. 81. (Special.) There ar two large hydro-electric power plants near Ogden, where power Is being gen erated for the I'tah Light and Railway com pany, an auxiliary of the Harrlman rail roads, which supplies Ogden and Salt Lake City with electric current for all purposes. Plans are being perfected for the con struction of an additional power plant which Is to bo lndependont of the pres ent company. The farmers of the district have what Is known as the lavls and Weber Counties Canal company. Through their canal, which Is ten miles long, a large flow of water for Irrigation purposes Is diverted from Weber river. This canal is being concreted and Its carrying capac ity Increased so that a surplus'flnw will be obtained. This surplus Is to he sent through a pine at a point near Rlveidale. to the south of Ogd.-n, and. with a fall of 130 feet, made to getierale S,W horsepower, l'art of this electric current will be utilized In propelling the Inreriirbaii trolley cars between Ogdrn and Salt Lake City, and about 2,000 horse power will go to light several small towns, turn the wheels of two or more flour mills and, possibly, pump water from the canal to .land which Is above the line of the waterway. Rlc Demand for Power. The Utah Ught and Railway company In winter has service for all the water power It can obtain In the form of electricity;- and Its lately completed power plant In Weber canyon at this time of the year will afford no excess of electric power, although generating 8.500 kilowatts. The plant has the most modern electric generating machinery in the west. In stead of being built In units with water wheels of 1,000 horsepower, the plant has but one Pelton wheel, a horizontal turbine with automatic deflecting vanes, cupable of producing 6.000 horsepower. It Is fed by a wooden, stone and cement pipe seven feet In diameter, the largest of Its kind In the world. With a fall of 100 feet In less than two miles, the water shoots through the turbine with tremendous force, cre ating an alternating current which moves street cars In Salt Lake, forty miles dis tant, or lights the electrlo signs in Ogdon. In summer, when there Is less lighting to be done and the demand for electric power is comparatively light, these electric com panies have more qurrent than can be con sumed. The period of great loss has passed and new duties for the electrlo cur rent must be found. Within the last month the rtuh Light and Hallway com pany has made a bid to pump water next summer for the farmers and as an induce ment has offered to compete with the grav ity canals by making a rate of 1 cent per kilowatt hour for electrlo power to be used in pumping water from wells or surface streams. The company purposes to extend lines to farms and supply the power for pumps. Will Reach Remote Parle. Lands heretofore looked upon as beyond the reach of water from canals will be brought under irrigation if this innov- Ltlon proves practical, Jlydraullo engineers " wun elctri power at 1 cent per kilowatt hour to lift water as high as fifty feet. This makes possible the cultivation of a great stretch of foot hills above the highest canals that now Ir rigate the arable lands of Ogden and vicinity. Odd Land Denl On. The Fair Improvement company, a new ccrporiaton. has platted an addition to Ogden which Is somewhat novel, In that each owner of a lot la to have an orchard. The seventy-five acres owned by the company, through which runs an electric line, are to be divided Into seventy-five lots of an acre each, on which peach and apple trees are to be planted. The Idea Is to combine city and country life and make possible a home where the family can draw from nature a big fraction of the revenue required to keep the wolf from the door. When Brlgham Toting, that master mind of colonisers, laid out the cities of Utah, he aimed to do that which Is now being attempted by the Farr Improvement com pany. Each block contained ten acres, on which ten families, with an acre to eaon family, were located. Br Intensive cultivation, or truck gardening, each lot I was intended to support a family and yet bring about community Interests. These acre lota served their purpose until the villages grew to be towns rnd the towns, cities, when the ten-acre blocks be came hollow squares, bulJt up on all sides, and that Is why Ogden and Salt Lake today have blocks 700 feet long, which cause strangers to remark the length and to ask questions. On Lous Block Cat. Lately one of these big blocks, in the bustnesa center of the city, has been cut In two by condemnation proceedings on the part of the city and a new business street, to be known as Hudson avenue, is being created by the tearing down of one and two-story buildings and the erection of substantial structures, one of which Is to be, an office building five to six stories high, beautiful In architectural outlines and modern In construction and equip ment Anatrlans Show Thrift. Money does not grow on bushes In the land of the Mormons, but there ars plod ding foreigners who come here and grow wealthy at tasks and for pay which the average American rejects as Demeaning. Here are fifteen Austrian, Just In from the "Cut-off." that abbreviated title of that greatent of Harrlmans constructive railroad achievements, the Ogden-Lucin bridge across Great Salt lake, th Dead 8f of America. These strangers hsd been in this country about five year when they deckivd to spend Christmas in the empire of Francis Joseph, so they jcamo to town and Instructed their coun trymen. H. Gaveros. at 115 Twenty-fifth street, to dig up and this is not slang j their savings. Mr. Gaveros went down in I his cellar and returned wit.x sacks of gold which, when counted, prove, to total ! $-1,730. One of the heavily booted, mous- tached, long-visaged, brigand-like rlaim ! ants to a part of this pile of glittering gold had $2.jft) to his credit, another $2.10u j and none had less than $1,100, the savings , of a period at th end of which the aver- age American, drawing $100 a month, If , out of debt, would have aeen fit to con ; gratulat hlmaeif. i Th money had been burled, because th foreigners had no confidence in American ; . banks. j Th men had received $d0 to $70 a month i while loading long strings of cars with i heavy boulders for riprapplng the ap- ' proachea to the treutte over Great Bait i ldke. They did not live In palaces or demand pat de fole gras; perhaps they : ciawU-d Into dugouts at night, attar eat-: ing round steak. However, they have i emerged from their privations vigorous lu body and complacent In mind with Joyful though is of the mil town lu far-away I Austria, where they will be welcomed at the advent of the Christmas season with the tlffereiice usually extended In any man's country to the possessor of a com petence quickly acquired, and where each In his turn may be the cynosure o' eyes beaming love and admiration. BRYAN TALKS AT LINCOLN (Continued from First Psge ) 1 take it for granted that candidates for the legislature are all committed to it. Stand by Party. "our United States senator must be elected by the legislature and therefore we must elect him when w elect the legislature, hut fortunately our state has adopted the Oregon plan, wnlch enables us to separate local Issues from national ones If the legislators are willing to do so. In any district In which the republican candi date refuses to sign statement No. 1. agree ing to .support the national candidate re ceiving the highest number of votes at the electVm; :n such district the democratic candidate should, " in, my Judgment, be elected,, no matter wliat his position may be on etat .issues, . "WlienVbeth candidates sign : sta tement No. 1 national queetionsare eliminated and voters can be governed by their views on local Issue., , . . ., i;. 'In iwch district '1' 'would advise demo crat t j vote against ilemorratic candi dates committed to the programme of the liquor Interests, provided the opposing re publicans are committed analnst the liquor programme. "The stnte officers, except the governor, have nothing to do with legislation and but little to do with shaping the course of the rarly on public questions, and I shall sup port the democratic candidates. Opposes Itahliuan. "The governor, however, stands In a dif ferent position, and I owe It to the demo crats of the state to define my own atti tude and to set forth the reasons for with holding my support from Dahlman. It might be sufficient to say that ho was not the choice of a majority of the democrats who voted at the, primary. 1 Its received conslderamble less than half of the demo cratic vote polled and owes his nomlnntlon to the support of wet republicans who entered our primary and converted a democratic minority Into a combination majority. Even then his majority was only about 200. and whll this majority, secured in the open primary through the aid of republicans, gives him a legal right to the nomination. It does not give him a moral right to the democratic vote of the Mate. He received 27,591 votes, Including the votes of the wet republicans, a little more than one-fifth of the democratic vote cast two years ago. On the strength of this kind of an endorsement he proceeds to announce that he will veto. If passed, the proposition which the last democratic state convention, and he was a member of It. refused by a vote of 638 to 202 to condemn. "And not content with that, he an nounced that he will sign, If passed, a bill repealing the daylight saloon law, a law endorsed by the last democratic state convention by a vote of 710 to 163. "Surely no democrat should be asked to vote for Mr. Dahlman on the ground of regularity. He does not expect It, for he presents the Issue which he embodies as a non-partisan issue' and Justifies his de termination to veto a county option bill on the grounds that his election will mean that a majority of the people want htm to veto It. Since the Issue Is presented upon its own merits, and not as a party Issue each coter Is at) liberty to cast his vote regardless of theuparty affiliations of the candidate." rl.r "In the exerciee of that right, I with hold my support from, Mr. Dahlman. Na tional Issues are not Involved, and the sub ordination of all other local issues to the liquor question makes It Impossible for a democrat to vote for him without endors ing the position which he has taken In re gard to liquor legislation. "I am not willing to turn the demo cratic party over to the breweries and make It the open and avowed champion of the liquor Interests. Our party has a higher mission than that It Is not neces sary to consider Mr. Dahl man's good quali ties, and he has many of them, but no man ts good enough to be entrusted with executive power when that power Is con ferred by those who constitute the con trolling Influence back of his campaign." The Weather For Nebraska Generally fair. For Iowa lartly cloudy. Temperature at Omaha yesterday; Hour. 6 a. m a. in 7 a. m S a. m a. ra 10 a. m 11 a. m 12 m 1 p. m t p. m S p. in 4 p. m 5 p. m..... ( p. m 7 p. m 8 p. m Deg. ... 4.1 Loral Record. OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU, OMAHA, Oct. 81. Official record of tem peratur and precipitation compared with the corresponding period of the last three years: ' 110. 1. luus. 107. Highest today 66 71 4 54 Loweat today 40 12 $4 4 Mean temperature 6! 62 42 U Precipitation .00 .86 .00 l.n Temperature and precipitation departure from th aoi-mau at Omaha alnc March 1 snd compared with tb last two years: Normal temperature' 44 Excess for th day 6 Total excess sine March 1..... lit Normal precipitation .07 inch Deficiency for tha day 07 inch Precipitation since March 1 IS. 72 Inches Deficiency since March 1 13.68 inch Deficiency for cor. period, 190. . 160 Inches Deficiency for cor. period, litOt.. 2.37 Inches Reports from Stations nvt T P. M. Station and Temp. Max. Ra Irr itate or Weather. Cheyenne, cloudy Davenport clear Ienver, cloudy MST uif MM Ml m. Temp. fail. 60 l4 .00 W 6'i .00 4 08 .00 M 68 .00 M T4 .00 48 72 .00 66 74 .00 60 fco .00 84 72 .ot) 4i M .W Dodge City, clear Lander, clear North Platte, Omaha, clear Puublo, clea clear CHILDREN'S EYES We make a specialty of fitting Children's Eyes. You know the proper care now saves a lifetime of EYE TROUBLE. Huieson Opfical Co. Bia Sooth lata Street Lus xnplloatd. Arttfteal Zya. EXPRESS STRIKE SPREADING Fifteen Hundred Drivers of Subsidiary Corporations Called Out. STRIKE BREAKERS BR0UGIIT D! Hnndred Tracks Make tCrly Mora tag Itaaa from Jersey Cly !e rh Stahle lined May Be ( ailed Oat. NIEW TORK. Oct. 3t.-Th strike of the express company drivers and helpers, which has brought th express business In thla city to a virtual standstill, was ex pected to spread today to the stable hands. Daniel J. Tobln, president of the Interna, tlonal Brotherhood of Teamsters, now at Boston, has sent word here that if lar' he " organize all the express drlv- era in me country and call them out on strike. The strikers were caught unawares In Jersey City early today when a dash of 100 trucks was made and tha. anp... brought to this city without trouble. No uisoraers were reported by the pollc In the early hours of the day. Police Inspector Walsh todsv 100 patrolmen to go out on express wagons. Two hundred strike breakers from Pitts burg are quartered in Jersey Citv and will to worn today. The International Brotherhood of T.u,.,. sters this morning clled out between l.r.i. and 1,800 drivers and helner. rv,r,i, . i. the Boston iHspatch. a subsldlarv of th, Adams Express company; Monahan's Kx press and the Manhattan Delivery com Pany. The men went c::t at once. J he way-bill clerks of th AnieH-sr, i.-.. press company, who have no orgaizatlor and no special grievances of hir nn . day decided to go out on a sympathetic 'me inis atternoon. I The Adams Express coiiinmiv ,,.,-..! nine trucks this mornln-. Hi,tu. thhsers upset an express wagon on West runuway near Mlecker street shortly be fore noon. No one was hurt. A riot at Broadway and Si,Hnr strt. New York, which came when i, tacked a United States Express wagon, was suppressed by the police ofter a shower of iones naa been thrown. TO CtHK A COLD I 0E DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets r ..i7Tu . " '"""y "i ti ihiis to cure. k. W. (.ROVE'S signature Is on each box. o! Guarantee of Daposits Is of no especial Ir.terewt to persons having their mony invested with The Conservative Savings & Loan Association of Omaha. The stat law Insures these investors that their money is secured by first mortgage on real estate, (mostly homes in Douglas county. Nebraska) with th principal repayabl in monthly Installments, thereby Increasing th security from the outsat all notes and mort gages being non-negotlabl and always on fll In the association BM,ie tnl tn Conservative ha a reserv fund of $UB. . a M.w. " proUct,on to Its members. An association oper- ated on thla plan cannot fall or b run out of business. Investments of from $1.00 to $5,000 received any day from any part of th country and dividends allowed from tha data of the re ceipt of each amount Present dividend rate e par cent par annum. Resources, $S.401,77$.70. Reserve, 1I6.S00.0. The Conferva. i. e Savings S loan Au'n, 114) XABSTET ST., OMAHA. Oeo. r. ttlxaore, l-r..l..n. avj, W. XtUui., or.tary In Our New Art Gallery At 1517 Dodge Street We? are exhibiting a rare collection of H . ' A From the personally selected etock of Nahigian Bros, of Chicago Direct ImporUra and WhoIeaUrs . TbJajrecUon .un4-4si, la magnitude, any previous dis play In Omhi d ln br-oty of color, uniqueness of deign and fineness of texture Is second to none In America. Imperial KeShns tlie finest product of the Persian looms Itoyal Kirmanshah. and Baruks, of the finest quality; tho famou. Harpootai Bokara the prince of Oriental mg-s and, in fact, choice) specimens of all Persian. , Caucaaiau and Turkoman rugs are displayed In large number. We request your inspection, whether Intending to Pur. chase or not. Direct Importers' prices quoted on all pieces. This In. ures a saving of SO to 33 per cent on your purchase. H.-P. WHITMORE ART DEALER 1517 Dodge Street Lecture on Oriental Rugs The Method of Weaving by Hovsep Nahigian Wednesday, Nov. 2nd, at 3:30 P. M. In the Art Galleries. 15 IT Dodge St. II. P. Whitmore. WILSON TO SPEAK IN OHIO eemarr of Aarlealtare Will Make Greene raa He. WASHINGTON. Oct. Sl.-A fourth cab inet officer has been ordered to Ohio to help th republican ticket. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson s dates In New Tork state have been curtailed to enable him to speak In some of the rural dIMrtrta of President Taft s stat on Friday and Satur day. Secretary Wilson leaves tonight for New York state to fill engagements made for him In some of the upstate counties. t expected he will leave for Ohio to speak In Oreene and Mercer counties, Ssretary Wilson has been much In de mand. He Is popular among the farmers, and tha republlcsnts are apparently more anxious about the voters In the rural dis tricts than they have been for several years. The request for his service In Ohio cam on Saturday. Secretary of Stat Knox, Secretary of th Treasury MacVekgh and Attorney General Wlrkersham ar th other cabinet members who will participate In th Ohio campaign. SEVEN THOUSAND BRANDS! nth Dakota Herd Owner Take Ail Tnntnare of Law tot Prnteet tek. PIERRR. S U. The stat brand ts fall meeting -s-sstng upon 1W !een filed sine )f th commission. oct. 31 Special ) commission closed yesterday, aftr brands which had th last mealing The result of this .nesting show g record of 7.0M registered brands in ur In th stats. While the big herds are being broken up the owners of a few head of cattle appear to consider the brand proposition to be the best on for identification of their cattle In case they should slray or be stolen, and th number of brands sr more likely to Increase In stead of diminish by the breaking tip of the free rang. Mnrrl Th following granted: marriag licenses were Nam and Residence. Albert W. Zimmerman, Rloux Cltv. Beulah Shaffer, Sioux City Ernest C. Robey, Omaha. Vera V. VanHant, Omaha Bentley O. McCloud. Chicago Florence C. Olmsted, Omaha John Spicks, Omaha Roslno Bolburck, Omaha aSMhnxtnnmnllanaanxalnsnnn 11 7TV ,...40 II II r xfisf 111 "The Liver Pills act So Naturally and Easily." Such a statement, coming from the cashier of a bank, shows whal confidence reponsihle people, hav in these pills. Mr. A. L. Wilson after trying them wrote: "I have used Dr. Mile" Nerve and Llvr Pill snd also your Anti-Pain Pills, on myself, with good results. The Liver Pills act so naturally and so easily that I scarcely know thnt t hav taken a pill. Frequently being troubled with headache I take an Anti-Pain Fill and get Immediate relief In every ose," A. L. Wilson. Sparta. III., Mr. Wilson waa for a numbsr ef years cashier of the First National Bank of Sparta. , Dr.MiW Nerve and Liver Pills are different from others, Man kinds of liver pills are "impossible" after one trial on account of theii harshness. Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills do not act by sheer force but in an easy, natural way, with out griping or undue irritation. They are not habit forming. . If tha first bottle falls to benefit, your druggist will return th price. Ask him. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart. Isnk .eep Your HONEY and Valuables' In a safe deposit box tinder your own lock and key In the I only burglar and fire-proof safe deposit vault In Otnaba 'not connected with a bank. Our boxes rent for only, $1 for three months. Call and 1 aee them. Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m, and until 9 p. m. on Saturday night. AMEEICAN SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS T. O. Xmr, rs. Start th wek right. Dispose of last wk' fronoa. Wnn' things look 'bins,' tak a 'TIUIT BUBTEaV CXOASS out of your pookst and say: 'BUav n bless John for sol ing gloom chars Uke this.' - Central Cigar Store 321 So. 16th St. AMUSEMENTS. TOsTIOXT, WEB. MAT WHO. FRANCES STARR In THE EASIKHT WAY, Mom BOo to Sa.OO. Mat SBo to Sl.BO. To rns List. SSVEST BAT Till AFTXmnOOaT AT 4 T. M. ", Antonio Scroti XV OOITCSBT , , mos, f l.oo, gi.oo ana ss.oo TlekM) to Students for Seoond Bai cony BOo. BOYD'S TOIilGlJj Soar las ISIS, aso, . KeUneeei Tuaaday, Tharaaay, Saturday MlbSBVA LANG snd Cnmpany In THE GIRL GF THE GOLDEN WEST Vxt Wk A WOM AST'S WAT. ADVANCED VAl'DEVILLK Matinee Every Day, 2: 1& Every Night, Si 15 Engagement Extraordinary of .' SUSS AXS1ETTB KB I. LEMMA, ' "Xh StlTlog Veuus." Henri French: Flanagan and Kd waido: Lou Anger; Marie and Billv Hart; Harvey-De Vora trio: liujantand Nsvaro; Klnudrome; Orplieunt Concert Orchestra. Prices Matinee, JOc and i5c. Night, 10c, l5c ul Rile. ar.iEnicAn ltTst ASTD BOUOX.AS KISH CLASS VAUDEVILLE; Today, :15. Tonight. t:ia. SAM J. CrKTTS S CO., QXOKOIA OABO'EB h CO., MUSICAL tlOB, ABO TITS OTHEB BIO AOTS. raiCEti '; Dally Matin, except Saaaay, 10 snd Sbei 1,000 reserved sats AT 10 CERTS. Bvsry BvsiUBg lOo, gSe sad BOo OMASA'S TVm CBBTEA." . Brgs., 16-88-60-760 BaUy Mai., IS-aa-BOo THE ;HEAT IlKIIMAN MiOW SXTBAYAQABSA ABO AUDBVXXX.SI In t,o Nw 1 IUim, A bum. . , ami Ulf MiraflltD list. ,, Wn.L. J. MINKKHt. orlinul omdi.n. Cunirluvr Ststari. KUn Stirl4a, JAMKS J. CVKBtTTH VA.hr.- wiu Lun Huuai n4 tVnipjnv. X,a41s Dim Matta Bery Wk Say 4K sa J I I u II I n II n iiidV ssswsssiniS I John Says: wm II I Thursday (RUG THEATER Prices, 15c, 25c, 5c. few at 7.V TONIGHT AND A I.I. WEEK HANLON'S SUPERBA " hi" . DAY 4, lt.lt 'Et A M YAH ). -i