Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 10, 1911, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 12, Image 20

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    12
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 10, 1911
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To aid those who are just starting and to give those who have been in the contest since the beginning a
chance to secure extra coupons at reduction, The Bee announces the following combination bargain offer to
become effective Monday morning: ' v
26 coupons, value 26 cts, and one Booklovers' title catalogue, value 25 cts, both for 45 cts; by mail 50 cents.
This offer will continue all next week.
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The game has only started there are to be 75 pictures in all, and it will not be too late to join the ranks for many weeks yet. Better
get a catalogue and back coupons under this combination bargain offer and-solve the puzzle pictures.
v "They're easy," says John Bath, winner of the big automobile in the first contest. He had all but three correct then, and ought to know
what he is talking about. Since they are "easy" you will stand a chance of getting one of the grand prizes listed below if you go at it right.
Enter
and yoti may be riding in your own Auto in Becembfer f
IFIrst Prize
A $2,000 Famed
White Steamer Automobile
A SPEEDY CAR A STRONG CAR A HILL CAR.
Car on exhibition at Dnunmond's, Eighteenth and Harney Sts.
This five-passenger 1911 model "White Steamer Touring
Car odorless, smokeless and noiseless is in the tenth year of
its success. No car has stood the test of time with necessity for
fewer changes. For stability in construction as well as in pur
pose 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 suc
ceeding year, together with the practical endorsement 'of the
TJ. Si government, which owns and' operates more Whites than
all other' makes combined, is sufficient guarantee of high quality.
V
Second Prize
In a climate shown by the Government 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 is situated the famous Lutheran colony which
has had so much discussion in Omaha by reason of a local clergyman taking the initi
ative in its formation. The Bee offers tins 10-acre ranch as Second Prize in its
Booklovers' Contest. Here is a livelihood for man, wife and children for the rest ot
time. Here is $1,250 in land, carrying free water, waiting only for the plow share
and intelligence to cultivate it and produce almost any variety of fruit.
. . Full information concerning this land may be had at the office of TROW-BRIDGE-BOLSTER
CO., in the City National Bank Building, Omaha!
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The accompanying illustration tells only 6f 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 insistent in the claim
that the Krell Auto-Grand is positively the most complete and
efficient player-piano offered to the music-loving public
. , The modulating pedals and the mechanism to carry the tune
above the accompaniment are marvels' of simplicity. 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 $900 player-piano
may be examined with every facility at the piano ware rooms
on the third floor of the big
Bennett Department Store
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FOURTH PRIZE
Out ta th little town of KIton they ax building a ufacturlnc city. Tby bav tha Brown Tnick Vtg. Co.; tea
Regera Motor Car Co., and the Howard Btova Work. rhy hava a ood botal, a good puatofflca, railroad facllltlaa and
tb uoly lnusrurbaji trolley Una running out of Omaha. Thy bav a fine school building on Maywood street and nearby
ta a lot ii by 100 feet which la valued ac 37. wblob la Tba Bea'a fourtb prlsa la this new liooMovara' Contest.
FIFTH PRIZE
Back on Main street la a reside noa lot (0x110 feet which constitutes Tba Bee's fifth prize In this contest. Tbls lot la
valued at JJ.VOO and here are rocs-bottom valuee. Her ta the plan from which men start and fortunes grow. Here are
two valuable prises worth oo more nor no leas at the present moment than the prices attached to them, but in opportunity
they will thaw themselves to be money makers.
. The accompanying map gives an Idea of the proximity of Beymour Lake and the new Country Club situated there.
' Full Information may be had at the office of the Balstoa Vowmsite Company at 30 Boetb 17th St, Omaha.
razes six.
ieven, Eight
Are In many respects toe choicest prizes In this long
list. To the ambitious boy or girl, s well as the
matured student, an encyclopaedia., brought up to the
last hour, Is by far the greatest possible gitt, but here
Is an encyclopaedia brought into being by man's In
genuity which Is probably the last word in encyclopae
dia making. Here is a loose-leaf encyclopaedia with
a system of perpetual addena. In this plan of encyclo
paedia when a subject grows old or modern thought
puts new phases on it, the makers ot 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 encyclopaedia is up to
the last hour. It cannot grow old.
This encyclopaedia contains twelve volumes and is
sold regularly at $98.00 a set. The work is produced
by Thomas Nelson & Son of New York, London, Iub
lin and Edinburgh. This house was founded in 1798.
The Omaha representative is W. A. Hlxenburgb &
Co., and these volumes will be on exhibition from this
time until the close ot the Booklovers' Contest at
1814 St. Mary's Ave. Three sets of this magnificent
encyclopaedia, bound in three-quarters morocco, will
be given as prizes, siz, seven and eight.
Prizes Nine and Ten
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Are constituted of
two. twenty-four vol
ume, cloth bound sets
of the Book of Knowl
edge, an encyclopaedia-
made especially
for children and reg
ularly sold at $36 a
set.
To the man who
conceived this idea
belongs much credit
It tells children in
child language of ty, '
evolution of
sphere on wbthis
live, from -we
fire into th ci
earth we no ywd
as well as iipiainin
the process by which"-'
the simple leg of a
chair is made, the in
vention or the tele
phone, and every con
ceivable need of earlv
education, as well as that needed by many grown-ups, telling it all in the
simple language that he who runs may read. These 6ets contain hundreds
of plates in colors and thousands in black and white.
This is 9 great opportunity offered along consolation lines, for those who
fail to win one of the first and larger prizes. These books are also n ex
hibition at the store of W. A. Hixenbaugh & Co., 1814 St. Mary 'a Avenue.
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MORE THAN
5,000
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"(Caislhi Corasolai'ttiioini A.'W'siiPdl
J Five cash prizes of $10 each; ten cash prizes of $5 each; ten cash prizes of $2 each; twenty cash-prizesof $1 each I