THE OMATTA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 1, 1911. - - . Ill II..- t v 3 1 1" 11 I '.-Fl.fl'-H'IJI'i!.H.i-PUI 11.111 07 ONQB BgOT . .. ?r. I (0)mjF fflf 1 i A CONTESTANT in the Booklovers' game declared yesterday that the puzzle pictures inthis second contest are hard. This same contestant admitted he was not using a Bee title catalogue. There is his trouble. "I find the puzzles in this second game as easy as those of the first, and- do not see how they can be missed if one uses a catalogue." This is what another contestant told the editor when informed that one person has declaredthe pictures hard. A. Title Caftalogfuc Solves tntne Wlnole . -ipolbliBinni . These little books are sold at the business office of The Bee for 25 cents, or will be sent by mail for 30 cents. Order one now. Back coupons are ready and' may be had at the business office for one cent each. Enter tine Gaironie Today It Is Nofl TFoo JLa-teJ- There js plenty of time for solving the puzzles if you start now. The contest will not close for many. day s.and those who join the workers now have just as good a chance as those who began with the first picture. FIRST TO) EE A $2,000.00 Famed t earner Whit A SttFOimgj Car A IHISll Csir This 5-passenger 1911 Model White Steamer Touring Carodorless, smokeless and noiselessis in the tenth year of its success. No car has stood the test of time with necessity of fewer changes. For stability in construction as well as jn purpose and per formance, 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, is sufficient guarantee of high quality. Car on Exhibition at Drummonds, 18 th and Harney Sts. SECOND PRIZE A Jlein - Acire ainielk i i In Tetama County, Cal. i 1 In a . climate shown by the Gov ernment 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 situat ed the famous Luthern colony which has had so much discussion in Oma ha by reason of a local clergyman taking the initiative in its formation. The Bee offers this 10-acre ranch as second prize in its Booklovers Con test. Here is a livelihood for man, wife and children for the rest of 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 Trowbridge-Bolster Co., City National Bank BIdJ., Omaha. Auto - F T TP T TT Grand Piano 9 I i The accompanying illustration tells only of the outside of this magnifi cent Krell Auto-Grand Piano. It tells nbt 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 "hu man touch" so prized by player-piano makers. From the inside to the case, from the pedals v to the levers, this magnificent $900 player piano may be examined with every facility at the piano ware rooms on third floor of the big Depa enmett rtment Store THIRD PRIZE FVtoro -TBusiini 9 OOO Sim F'ipoo IPipSscs In addition tMte automobile and tenures of land, the following prizes ara offered.. KreU Auto?Grand Player-Piano, value $000. It ia sold by the Bennett Co. Fourth, a lot 25x100 feet, in Ralston; value $275. Fifth, a lot in Ralston, value $225. These lots are sold by the Ralston' Townsite Company, 309 South Seventeenth Street; Omaha, Sixth, seventh and eighth prizes are each a $96 set of the Nelson Encyclopedia, sold by W. iL Hlxenbaugh & Co, 1814 St. Mary's Avenue. Ninth and tenth prizes are sets of "Book of Knowledge," the value of each being $36. They are sold by W. A. Hixenbaugh & Co.