Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 13, 1911, WOMAN'S SECTION, Page 8, Image 16

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TIIE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST 13, 1911.
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Automobile $2,000
10 Acre Ranch $1,250
Player Piano... $900
Suburban Lot $275
Suburban Lot $225
Encyclopaedia $96
Encyclopaedia $96
Encyclopaedia $96
Child's Encyclopaedia $36
Child's Encyclopaedia $36
5 Prizes of $10 Cash $50
10 Prizes of $5 Cash $50
10 Prizes of $2 Cash $20
20 Prizes oSl Cash $20
TOTAL (56,150
...IN. FREE
First Prize
a $2,000
FAMED
"White Steamer
AUTOMOBILE
A Speedy Car
A Strong Car
A Hill Car
This automobile will be on exhibition in Omaha at a later date.
This five-passenger 1911' model White Steamer Touring Car odorless, smokeless and noiseless is iu
the tenth year of its being. No car has stood the test of time with necessity for fewer changes. For stabil
ity in construction as well as in purpose and performance, the "White Steamer" has held a high place in
the mind of the motoring public. This car needs no cranking nor shifting of gears to get any desired speed.
The increasing number of White Steamer cars being sold .each succeeding year, together with the practical
endorsement of the U. S. government, which owns and operates more Whites than all other makes combined.
An unprecedented
opportunity to win for
tune without the dis
agreeable features of
subscription getting.
Never was a news
paper contest more
liberal or more inter
esting. Enter anytime-first day
or last-with full and equal
chance of success.
WW ms ma
! ' ft 1 JC Jk .
Red Bluff will toon be a transportation center. TU facilities for distribution
are groat, it la the head of a navigable stream, Sacramento River, and la a natural
distributing point for rail and wagon mads to an empire In a condition of continuous
development. It drawa from every direction, which fact la shown by the accompany
ing map of i all road, highways and proposed railroad and high way with Red Bluff
aa a terminus Sacramento Union, Aug:. 7.
Second Prize
In a climate shown by the Govern
ment chart to be the same as that of Los
Angeles, Fresno, etc., lies Tehama county,
California. It is within two hundred and
fifty miles of San Francisco and there ia
situated the famous Lutheran colony,
which has had so much discussion in
Omaha by reason of a local clergyman
taking the initiative in its formation.
The Bee offers this ten acre ranch as
second prize in its Booklovers' Contest.
Here is a livelihood for man, wife and
children for the rest of time. Here is
$1,250 in land, carrying free water, wait
ing only for the plow share and intelli
gence to cultivate it and produce almost
any variety of fruit.
Full information concerning this
land may be had at the office of Trow-bridgo-Bolater
Co., in the City National
Bank Building, Omaha.
Third Prise
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The accompanying illustration tells
only of the outside of this magnificent
Krell Auto-Grand Piano. It tells not of
the vast excellence that lies beneath
its magnificent, fancy walnut case.
Well informed piano men are insist
ent in the claim that the Krell Auto
Grand is positively the most com
plete and efficient player-piano of
fered to the music-loving public.
The modulating pedals and the mechanism to" carry
the tune above the accompaniment are marvels of sim
plicity. The Krell Auto-Grand claims to have in the
absolute, the "human touch" so prized by player-piano
makers. From the inside to the case, from the pedals to
the levers this magnificent $300 player-piano may be
examined with every facility at the piano ware rooms on
the third floor of the big
Bennett Department Store.
Mil1
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1 A- OT
FOURTH PRIZE
Out tn the Uttla town of Balaton they are bulldlnf a tnanufaoturlnK city. They have the Brown Truck Supply Co..
iUea Md the only tnterurban trolley line running1 out of Oka. They have a good hotel, a good poatofflce. railroad tacll
It 1m and the only Interurban trolly line running out of Omaha. They have a fine achool building on Maywood atreet
and nearby la a lot 16 by 100 feet which la valued at U'S, which la The Bee'a fourth prise In thla new Booklovere' Cooteet,
FIFTH PRIZE
Daok of Main atreet la a realdenoe lot SOsllO feet which oonatltutea The Bee fifth price In thia contest This lot te
valued at llli. 00 and here are rook-bottoin valuea. Here la the plane from which men start and fortunes grow. Here are
two valuable prises worth no more nor no lose at the present moment than the prices attached to them, but In opportunity
they will ebow themselves to bo money makers.
iff. "TT"'111' mP givee an loea or too proaunity or Seymour Lake and the now Country Club situated there.
fuu iBiwTii.1 Hm mmj vm dm aw uto oiiicc vi vam jmsos nwuM ueaiewiiy ax an Banna ITCH wt
No. 2
Catalogs
The catalog
ol 5,000 titles
said by win
ners of the
prizes in the
No. 1 contest
to be a neces
sity, is now
ready at the
Bee business
office.
It is a new
catalog the
old ones will
not do.
At Bee 0!fice....25c
By Mail ...,30c
tHf '' t ! K2ill k s, 'r '!'v -w( -HH';iKv .'mm.
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Prizes Six, Seven and Eight
In many reepects are the choicest prizes In this long lis t. To the ambitious boy or girl, as well as to the ma
tured student, an Encyclopedia, brought up to the last hours, is by far the greatest possible gift, but here is an
Encyclopedia brought Into being by man's ingenuity which Is probably the last word In Encyclopedia making.
Here is a loose-leaf Encyclopedia with a system of perpetual addenda. In this plan of Encyclopedia when a sub
ject grows old or modern thought puts new phases on It, the makers of this wonderful work send a new leaf to
take Its place and by the use of a key the metal binder Is unlocked, the pages loosened, the old page extracted and
the new leaf takes its place. Presto! the Encyclopedia lsup to the last hour. It cannot grow old.
This Encyclopeda contains twelve volumes and Is sold regularly at $96.00 a set. The work is produced by
Thomas Nelson & Sons of New York, London, Dublin and Edinburgh. This house was founded In 1798.
- The Omaha representative is W. A. Hlxenbaugh & Co. and these volumes will be on exhibition from this time
until the close of the Booklovers' Contest at 1814 8t. Mary'e Avenue. Three sets of thla magnificent Encyclopedia
bound In three quarters morocco; will ba given a prUot numbers six, seven and eight.
Prizes Nino and Ton
are constltttted of two twwilyftmr volume cloth bound set of the Book of Knowledge, an Encyclopedia- made espe
Clally for children and regularly sold at $38.00 a Bet.
To the man who conceived this idea belongs much credit It tells children In child language of the evolution
of this sphere on which we live, from a ball of fire Into the cooled earth we now Inhabit, as well as explaining
the process by which the simple leg of a chair Is made, the' Invention of the telephone, and every con
ceivable need of early education, as well as that needed by many grown-ups, telling1 It all In the simple language
that he who runs may read. These sets contain hundreds of plates In colors and thousands In black and white.
This la a great opportunity offered along consolation lines for those who fall to win one of the first and
larger prises; These books are also on exhibition at the store of W. A. Illxenbaugh & Oo., 1814 St. Mary's Avenue,
Cash
Cimslafcnroni
WW
S Co aln Prizes of SIO.OO Each
lO Cash Prizes of SG.OO Each
lO Cash Prizes of $2.00 Each
20 Cash Prizes of Sl.OO Each
Tho Cash Prizes as indicated above are to be given as consolation awards that many contestants who work hard and miss by a small
margin maybe honor mentioned in some small way for time expended. The Bee is anxious that even the pennies spent for coupons may be
recognized at least in part. '
Thia Contest is for education, a test of skill and entertainment for the great family of Bee readers. It ia offered following experience with our Number One contest, with a degree of certainty that will be appre
ciated much more than the First one and entered by many more contestants. i '
The same care will be exercised in guarding the secrecy of the answers to the titles. The 6ame man will serve aa editor of the Booklovers. Contest; the same artist will draw the pictures, "and thia same condition
shall prevail but one man will know the answers to the puzzles as they are conceived, drawn and appear. Not even the artist may know the title to the book he ia representing in hia work. The knowledge remaina
with one man and he knowB how to guard it very carefully. I r
Contestants should consult the rules carefully as to their territorial rights as well as to have a ready answer for all questions likely to arise during the contest. Members of the family of any Bee employe, even
though remotely removed mu6t remain out of this Contest, as no prize will be awarded to any person filling such description. s
EXTRA COUPONS will be placed on sale in the Bee office at one cent each within a week after the printing of the. first picture, which will be published in the morning' edition of The Bee on August 16.