Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1911)
Come R.ghl In Tomorrow And Gel Some Warm Clolhes lor Yoarscll and Ibe o-r. Children. rirst Your flanls Are the first to set nipped, because they're the noit exposed. We have warm gloves a plenty; fur Hue I gloves for outdoor folks, boys and girls, mon and women; and (lores of every weleht and color up to tho blR heavily lined kind fcr the mo torist. Eiclueive agen cy for tbe famous Mark Cross hand-sewed gloves at 31.50 0YERC3ATS Dig, hospitable coats for man or boy Just the very style you like best. In the color and fabric you favor. Convertible collar on bo mo othert.wfth wide revers. Not a freakish coat In tbe house, but some new ideas you'll look for In vain cisewhere. Boys' Overcoat 83.75 na up. Larger Hoys' Overcoats 85.00 nd p- Wen's Overcoats $18 to $35 Nred a Smaler? Everybody wears them now slip one on right; under tbe coat and tho coldest wind loses Iti sting. Whether you walk or ride, stay In doors or out, a sweater Is lndiRpenslble. GlrlV and Misses' 81.25 o S2.25 Women's- 83.50 S0.50 Boys' bi to Men s. 82.50 to 30 Girh' Coats, $5 And more-tho warm est and bPKt looking coats you'll 1 find any where. Mannish mix ture, caraculs, chin chilla, pi us hi and vel vet, made In tho latest' and prettiest at) leg. Coats that your little girl lui been wishing for now la the besi. time to i-hor.ne 'one for her. . I cArs With snug fur-lined ear covering, for mn and boys. Boys. 50 "! 81 Men's 51 and gl.50 m wjia rtmro OWN STOW i: IN: ES WEAR IS JMPOKTANT. Its the underwear which Is responsible for 50 of your win ter comfort. Mentor t'i.lon fults featured here, because they're worthy of It; give conEtaat comfort and iirotott'on ; they don't shrink, loso Rhape, purlicr or rag." It's the bet underwear you can buy, which Is tho only kind you run afford. For women 81.25 o 83.50 For Men 81.50 to 83.00 Two-pleeo Suits, per . garment 81. OO and 81.25' For Iioys and Girls Fanls and .Shirts, per garment 20 to $1 Boys' two-plcce gar ments, 30c values now 30 Girls' Union Suits 11.25 regularly, now, " 08 IIR CAPS Nent, styliHta and warm, pull down over the ears 84 to 815 DES MOINES POLICE SHAREUP I FRIGID WAVE GRIPS EAST Xiunber of Detectives Reduced to ; Bank of Patrolmen. !NEW CHIEF OP POLICE SOON Dlsarderty' KIrsaeat ' la Tanle Over Saddest fhaasre . MaeVlrer In Coatrol of Departaieat May er's Da lira M ted. mm 1518-1520 FARNAM STREET DEMANDS OF LABOR OUTLINED President Gompers Makes Annual Eeport to Federation. XEJSTEICTI02T OF. DIIHGEATION alia aa f far laltlallvr, neferenatam Ileeal Lares fa Protect Lira aaa Health of ATLANTA, Oa.. Nor. 13.-Prsident. ferrnolly opening- ths thirty-first annual Oonventlon of the American Fedwateen of Labor tod)-, declared ba and the two ether labor leaders sentenced ' to -jail fur contempt of oourt ware, ready and will, las: to serve tbelr sentences If thaymuNt. The subject C the aornpere-Morrlaon-a?ttohell eontempt ease ;wm bronchi op la the course f a wsloomlne; adflreee ta Iba delegate. " ' ' i ,. President Oitmpor predicted,..-ai-eat sjttsnge In American method "of govern ant. particularly with regard to political partios. lie guv to tba referendum. Inl Uatlve and the recall liio unqualified en Our semen t of organised labor and da elated that a real reprcariitatlvt demoo. racy had never been known ' In the. Vnlteg atatci, because of the aanerol ab awoHa of these provUiona "This erml-delficetlon pt judex," ha aid tit defense of his endorsement, "tale canotemonlous can't about 'mob aula.' some of which was In President Toft's message vetoing the Arlsona Statehood bill, is mere drivel." President Com para' report, which covers OUty closely printed pates and would stake mora than thirty columns ta a newspaper, says tt leaves many sub jects untouched ot inadequately presented. What Labor Drmaeds. is the mala, the report declares aid says organised labor demands: The referendum, the Initiative and the reil. -aaage of the co-called anti-injunction bills at the next eoaaiuii of i.-onareea. flaetrictlon of Immigration. further raatrlctlun of cunvlct labor. LesiaiaUun to lelleve civil earvlce am bloyaaa from the executive orders prohlb liin them to petition runsraaa. Uniform laws for protection of Ufa and health In factory bulldlnga. A department ef labor In the federal a,overnment. Employers' , liability and workman's comiwaeallon acts throushout the atatna. iiavara orralnarmant is mode of so. called sclent I flo er efficiency systema. Urantk ta Memharahla). "With Its membership, now mora than 1.7W.000. the (icateat In Its history, and its financial condition excellent, the or sjUsatlon. often called the greatest altmlaUo Institution ot the times, enteri tba thUty-flrst year ef Its work. Despite all opposition ot the most releutlrae kind the American labor ruove rncnt grows and thrives, Its beneficent influence for the common uplift of labor una all out- people exntso all fit-Ida of useful activity, and Is becoming niori generally recognised. The power which labor holdn within Its gruxp Is under stood by our opponent porheps better thsn many of the tollers. The fact Is that labor's oppont-nlM, like the Tories of the past, many of whom are still with us, are afraid te truxt the people. The McNamsra e ase, how over. Is taken up' at some length ,and fully reviewed. Prnsldent Uompers t-xprcasns Ills faith In the innocence ot the mm now on trial at l.o Angoies fur alleged dynamiting out rsf and denounces In unmeasured terms their removal from Indiana to Cullfernlu. Org-anleatloa is Prosperous. The meniberKhlp of the organisation was never so K'eat. According to Secre tary Morrison's report. Its financial con dition Is excellent. The treasury shows a haleure of nearly liiW.noO on hand. Nearly ',0oo.a)0 was disbursed . In support of strikes by the various unions which are af Heated wlfh the frderatlon. "During 1H1 the federation Issued tit charters te unions, bringing the total of Its oixn.i.ia tlon nieiubarsUlp te Mt. Io Individual mombcrshlp the feduratlon gained nearly ;u,OOU during the year. ; : TtFrnnr, Staff . Corrrspondi-nt.) IE3 MOlNF:S. la, Nov. H Special relegram.) An liitcrestlng pltiiittlon d--cloped this nftrrhoon In relation In the sffort to rtorKonlio the police depart nnt by thn ilty coinmltHlon, when four f the men eniployed ns detectives were irilerod to report for duty se patrolmen. Two of them Tally refurrd to do so and ' he otbent t),n resign before they are riHliice.il. At the, same time It became ltnonn that a 'new chief of police Is probably to b named within a few tlavs ami some men who a year ago were re duced In rsnk, will be given their old places. Councilman WaeValr, who Is the new man In charge of the department, com menced ot once the work of reorganis ation, and the heads of various' dopart men is In the police forc.t were called upon for Immediate report. The dis orderly element of the city anj those who hav. conducted Kainhllng games and other forms of vice, ore In a panlo over the sudden rhnnge made. Dutlrs of Mayor. The cltv legal department this after noon devilled that tliu council 1ml acted IKtgally Ih tranHforrlng Iho street de partment to Mayor Hanna, Tim Irral department held that the council Is within Its authority In giving Councilman Mac Vlear control of the police, but could not I nc re me the duties of tie may 01'. Mrs. Anna Henry, colored, was severely burned and probably will die from a fire In her home this morning. She Is the mother of T." FroJ Henry, the bandmas ter at Ingersoll park fur many years, and one of the most popular musical conduc tors of lows. YUAN SHI KAI IS BAOKJN PEKING (Continued from First Tags.) for. A Complete Cure of Bladder Trouble. I am pleased to testify to th merits of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Koot, which I had occasion to v;i for bladder trouble, which my phjsklos we 3 unable to re lieve. Keur fifty cent bottles ef your remedy effected a complete cure. Your truly, FETE It VAN IiEINSE. CreenvUle. Mich. Mate of Michigan i County ot Muihi a:ra ( Tbe foragulng has this 12th day ot July, 38, been subscrlbtd and sworn to brfure i me a Notary Pub.lc In and fur ilontcaim County, Michigan. KKk.ll A. UUAbuN. Notary I'ubllc. Ites te Br. svu4ur e Oa. K lugOaia, M, S. T. Ire Mhst sia-IUet H1U Ce Ur Yes. kwid te lr. Kiluter Co., xtlogbanitan. N. V.. for a -uunple bottle. It will con vince anyone You will also receive a booklet of valuable tnf ors atlon, telling all about the aldneys and bladder, Wnea writlcg. be sure te roeutloa The Omaha Dally ties- Kesjular flfty-eeat and ana oullar iIm bottiee for sole at all drug foreign warships today notified their consuls that tbey could not protect the lives and property of those who re. uslned Inside thl city. Martial Lav at .ssklss, LONDON, Nov. .-A dispatch to a London news agency from Nanking says martial law has been proclaimed there. General Chang Jen Chung, the viceroy. Is executing all suspects, including some of his own men, snd Is enlisting num bers of roughs. Ths rebels hay e retired te their nearest camp, fifteen miles dis tant ' The government troops are bring ing up artillery to attack them, but are respecting tbe neutrality of tbe railroad. Food supplies In Nanking are becoming exhausted. A Tien Tsln dispatch to the some agency says that Shantung province de olered Its Independence on Friday, the government officials taking office under the new regime. One of the first acts of the sew government will be the re moval of Import duties and the Imposi tion of a heavier export duty on cereals. The declaration ot Independence was precipitated through .the governor. Sun Fao Chi. In trying .to raise a loan ot 1.000,000 taels through a Uermsu bank to replenish the treasury. Advices from 'VYu Chsng say the rebel leaders there bope to arrange a general peace soon. At a secret meeting of the National As sembly la I'eklng Saturday It was de cided to Invite each provincial aseem bly to send two dclegstea to discuss the early opening ot Parliament. Aeeeatbly Seads Memorial. The Assembly decided to further me morialize the throne, demanding ths pun. Ishmer.t of those persons responsible for the Hankow massacres. The royal fam ily are contributing to the paymeot of the Imperial troops. The empress dow ager t.as given tO.OUO taels. The p:sn is to bring to the fullcet strength tbe guarde dlvlelon at the summer palace, tits Th.. .anchurtan at ths Western Hunting park and the mixed brigades In I'eklng, ss well as the field force at the Southern Hunting park. This would give a potential reserve army at Peking of M.uGO men. C'b:na seems to be split la two parts. with the Ysngtee as the dividing line snd, says the correspondent, the situation may take months, tf not years, clear up. since ths palace has proclaimed that It will not use furca. Even the loss ot Its arsenals does not hamper tbe overnmeut, because Uerman firms at Irking are uUvrlog to supply the entire army with arms, ammunition and eiu pment on lung credit. It la evident that a species of ceuuter revolution hs commenced, mak ing the upshot very doubtful. A dispatch from Shanghai to the Dolly Telegrai b says the rtbtla have captured Batow, a treaty pert In the province ef Kwsng-Tung, XX miles from Canton. The I'eklng correspondent of the Dally Tele' rraph represents the dynasty aa being in an Improved position Hecrultlng among the young bannermen of the three wings, Msnchu. Mongol and Chinese, baa com menced oa a formidable scale, under the supervision ef Trine Teal Too. John R.Dobbins ' Denied Rehearing DEH MOINIC3, la, Nov. 13.-A petition for a rehearing of th ecase of John U. Dobbins of Council Muffs, whose con viction of a chuiKO of larceny In con nection with the J. C. Mahray swindles was afflrmnd recently by the supreme court, when filed In the eupremn court today, 'l be attorneys claim that the taking of money on 'sure thing" bet Is not lar ceny, .and that the court erred In per mitting the testimony of other men who had been "stung" In the Mubrey games to be submitted for the purpose of prov ing a conspiracy. Dobbins was convicted of dafrauding one J. K. Hallow, out of several thousand dollars. . , . ., FOUR HORSES AFFLICTED " WITH GLANDERS KILLED noONE. la., Nov. lI.-(Bpeolal.)-8at-urday evening four horses were shot at Ogdon after being under the care ot the state veterinarian for the last ten days. All of the animals' wars suffering from the glanders, having developed the symp toms when the state .veterinarian wee called lit by a loeal veterinarian there. The . horses were the property ot Rsy Williams of Ogden, a rural mall carrier, and both ef the teams were used for this purpose, aa the young man had an extra long route. ' This Is the first appearance of tbe dlsesse In Doone county and horse owners are at a .loss to know where The animals contracted it. , The loss Is a severe one to the young man, as he depends upon this work tq support an aged father and mother. He estimates the loss at tfioo, as the state does not stsnd any part of the loss when animals suffering from this disease are orJered shot by the state veterinarian. All four of the horsea were led Into a trench which had been dug for the pur pose, and killed. A large class of stu dents from Antra examined the animals before they Vers killed. (fentlnued from First Paje.) while being tsken to a hospital. John son was a well known" republtcsn p"'1" tlclnn In Chicago for many jears. Hs was a member of the Illinois legislature flf fen years ago and was sn attaitie ot the Cook county sheriff's offb e for ten years. At one lime he was a deputy county clerk. The coal, freighter John T. VTIM'atp. whh h was driven aground nenr the mouth of the Chicago river yesterday was re leSFed early today after three t igs had woiked for hours to pu'l the big boat Into deep water. Only slightly damaged, the Williams proceeded on Its Journey across Lake Michigan. Kteam Yarbt I. on a Ovrrdae. DfLL'TH, Minn.. Nov. 15. No word tins been received of the aiht Alvinn, which Is more than twenty-five hours over due at te Poo. It Is a staum h. steam-driven vessel, however, and It Is believed I' can ride out the storm. I.anneh and Harare Safe. The ls.Lnch Evening Ftnr and the barge Delta, which were driven out on Lake Michigan Haturday night efore a gale snd w hich were I hough to have foundered with crews of fifteen, are both ssfe on the MIchlgitn shore. The Delta, efter breaking Its towllne. wss blown Intu South Haven last night. Esrly today word was received by the Hvanaton life easing station from Pt. Joseph. Mich., that the Kvenlng Siar landed there rafely. Captain Carland ond li!s crew wero making prcparatlor.j to start out at dawn for a rriils along both r-horc of tho lako In thnlr life host when word was re ceived from Michigan that the hunt for the missing Hunch will be unnecessary. The storm on Lake Huperlor was severe sml It Is feared several vessels have been lost. Nearly a Score Dead. The torpedo which swept over parts of Illinois. Wisconsin and Michigan Satur day night caused the death o( nearly a score of persons. Near Janeevllle, Wis., nine are known to be dead, two are fa tally wounded and others may rllo. The property loss In tho vicinity of Janesvtlle wss heavy. At Ronton, III.. two persons were klllcl snd seven se riously Injured. The town tt Virginia, 111., suffered a heavy financial loss by the tornado. ' At Owwssn, Mich., two persons were killed and ten Injured. The money loss there will reach IjOO.000. Hand Diggers Marooned F.lght Hours QCINCY. 111., Nov. 13,-eorge Pcott and Al Davy, sand dlggern, were ma rooned for eight hours on a sarul boat in the middle of the Mississippi river Paturday night, with the thermometer falling and a blizzard raging. They were rescued Ht ll o'clock by Hoy and Hay Rostter In a skiff, and were nearly frosan. It took two hours to row from the sand boat to Qulncy, a distance of one mile. . Michael Sullivan, P2 years old, a farmer living six miles south of Monroe City, Mo., was ,founa lying In front rf his gate yesterday morning frosen to death, He waa caught In the storm that swept this section PsturdMy night. Oklahoma Hunter lroscu in death M'ALESTER, OKI.,' Nov 13.-Charles Phillips,- a hunter, of Hartshorn, Ok!.; was found frozen ta death in the woods near this city today. , Four Drowned off Fort Terry. FlSHEHLAND. N. T., Nov. lS.-The schoener' K.llth Dennis Was sunk In Plum Out ff Fort Terry Met night. Cepwlij "Cook was saved, floating to Fort Terry shorq on 4 piece of Wreckage, but his wlfo s,nd child and two men who made up the crew were drowned. ME DEAD AT J.l.VtlS VILLw. JURORS ASSESS COSTS v . AGAINST GAME WARDEN WXJAN. la.. Nov. lt-(8Declal.)-"Not guilty" and recommending that the cost ae taxed up to the complaining witness, 8. J. Maurer, deputy gome warden of near Denlson, wss the verdict ef the Jury In the esse of Iowa against A. Bol. lord., arrested for the allesed offense of violating the gome laws In catching muskrats on the farm of Mr. Millard and Mr. Hmlth while lit the employ of the two farmers reeently. I It seems that the muskrats were dam aging the oont for the two farmers and they employed Mallard to traD and kin them, the deputy gome warden believing mat while Mr. Ballard had a right to kill the rats while In the emnlov of th. two farmers, ha hod no right to take the Hide at this time of the year, hence the arrest and unusual verdict of the Jury. The cose was tried at Woodbine Mon. day and shortly before the Jury returned Its verdict the county attorney withdrew tbe action and began the case before v. u cose here yesterday, st which time tbe defundant demauded a Jury trial. DES MOINES POLICE COMMISSIONER REMOVED PES MOlXKS, la. Nov. ll-Poilce Commissioner Zell Hoe was summarily removed from his position as head of the publlo safety department by the city council this morning. Nserepaprr critic ism of tho department recently was given aa the causa for the action. John T. Mao Vicar was assigned to the police depart ment, while Hoe becomes head of the health snd- fire departmeuta IOWA CENTRAL WILL BUILD INTO ST. LOUIS J4INNEAPOL1S. Nov. 11-Tlie llawley Interests will extend the low- Central railway from Albla. la, to St. Louis by the construction of SOD miles of new road, according to the announcement today by CI. Wi tTevrrs, general counsel ot the Minneapolis ft. Louis raltwsy and Iowa Central lines. Mr. Severs will leave tonight for lee Molnea, where he will confer with the state executive board. TO O KI! COM IN 0B DAY Take laxative pronie qutn.ne (sbleta DrugsUie ret mid mousy tf 11 (tils tu eure. lW Oreve's signature Is ea each po. ino. Key te the B tuatlon-lWe Wont Ads. Stricken Are Quarter Mile Wide a nil Thirty-Five Miles l.angr. JANKUVILLK, Wis., Nov. . With the ' death ot Albert riohmldt today the death list from Saturday's tornado will reach nine. .Schmidt wss found burled under several tons of hay Saturday after- noon, cut about the lc and Intestines. His father and two slaters had been in stantly killed. Heporta from the stormswept district estimated the los sat $750,000 to tl.OU0.00O. The stricken families, suffered Intensely from cold Haurday night and yesterdsy and while the majority of them found shelter In neighboring farm houses, which escaped the storm's fury, their condition Is pitiful. In some esses ones prosperous farmers todsy are penniless. The Intense cold which followed the tornado In creased their losses. The temperature dropped from 74 to 11 degrees above xero In twelve hours. The tornado district extended from Broadliead, twenty miles west of here, to a point about four miles beyond Milton, which is twelve miles oast of here, mak ing a total distance of about thirty-lour to thirty-five miles and about a ouartcf of a mile wlue.-Jt la swept entirely clear of all buildings. An emeiKer.cy commit tee Is being orgsnlxed to raise funds for Immediate relief. PLOWS PATH THROL'till CITY Twe Killed said Hear? Property Lass at Orroaso. OW08SO, Mich.. Nov. 13. -Two persons killed, more thsn a score injured and a property loss estimated at foUO.OOt) Is ths result of the tornado which struck Owosao esrly today. The dead are: HARRY CORWIN. ogd 3J, and his wife, who were crushed to death oa they lay In bed. ' Miss Queenle Robinson, a school teacher, was the most severely Injured, but she ts expected to recover. The storm swept a path more than l.OCO feet wldo through the center of the city, demolishing twenty houses and d4niaglng hundreds tt others. The three-story plant of the Estey Furniture company was raxed ai.d the City lauudry and several stores were badly wrecked. KA1TOX ISULATKD FOK VltiHT JTwa Killed Bad deves Persona Are Srrtoaslr lnjnred. PPRINGKltl.D. III.. Nov. 1 -Two-were killed and seven seriously injured in a storm which struck Eautou, Jl., Istt night, tearing sway telegraph and telephone wire, and which left the city Isolated and the tragedy of the storm untold to the world until tonight The dead: INFANT CHILD OF Jilt AND MK.S. JAMES PHATLK. Hod." founu i'u from the home, which wah demolished MRS. ALLir: II KN N kXHf.lt, TJ years old. died ot fright when Urn home col lapaud. . 'Iho Injured; James Prater, back wrenched. car U liuur. leg broken hamuel Plater, iad crushed. Mrs. Janiaa Prater. Injured internally Two other children of Mr. and Mrs James Prater, eligbuy Injured. outer rienulnsei. whoo mother was kliUd. badly bruued. Tbe Prate- home was tbe only one la the teen prvper which was much Are We Making, Madam, a Million-Dollar Mistake 7 .4 -) When we select our wheat When we wash, brush and scour it When we r.iss it through 2C grindings When we situ ,l 10 times through silk. No doubt this is adding a mil lion dollars per year to the neces sary cost of our milling. Is it our mistake? Or is it your mistake when you fail to get it -when you fail to specify Gold Medal Flour? Think what this means: Gold Medal Flour now far outsells any other flour that's milled. ; " It feeds 24,000,000 folks daily. ' Just because housewives millions of them have , found that Gold Medal excels all other flours. Next time you order be sure you get - ' ' ' ' ' ; j) II ll "37 Washburn-Crosby's j Vgpl pja. III ,M,?!!e6 J jr.! ii! il!' i : il; damaged, snd it wss demolished, killing the baby, which was hurled agslnst a tree, and Injuring all other members of the family. Farm hoiiKce snd barns in the vicinity were topplod over and here the others were Injured. Beattie iS.Denied Appeal by State Supreme Court RICHMOND. Va.. Nov. U.-The su preme court of sipesls today denied the petition for a writ of error by Henry Clay Seattle, Jr., convicted of murdering his young wife last July. This decision on the appeel from the Judgment of the Chostcrfleld court, whicli sentenced him to die In the electric .chalr November "4 la final. Clemency or re prieve by Governor Mann only ran save the condemned man. Ilea tt lea last hope of judicial Inter ference was dashed when the supreme court aunounted that the' trial court was plainly correct In Its ruling and the ap peal Is therefore denied. No further comment was made on the ease. All five Judges were present when James Keith handed the decision to the clerk. Beanie's father told lilm this stternoon of the court's decision. The old man wss trembling and in tears. The son was unmoved. le lighted a cigarette snd then proceeded to discuss the os.iibl)lty of executive Interference. lowerful Influences ore said to be at work on Uovernnr Mann for snd agslnst either commutation or pardon. It la not believed he will intervene. The governor said that he would Issue a stateineat tomorrow. DEATH RECORD. Dr. I. K. Ha wee. KAIRUL-RV. Neb., Nov. 11-Bpeclal.) lr. 8. K. Hawea died suddenly st his home on North K street at T a. m. Sunday from heart failure. He had been a suf ferer from heart trouble for a number of years. However, Haturday he was n bis office as usual and waa down town Saturday evening. He apparently waa In good health and spirits prior to bis sud den demise. Dr. Hawes was one of the leading eU sens ot Fairbyry ajid hod often taken active Interest In the municipal affairs of tho city. He was onoe sn unsuccess ful candidate for miyor on the law and order ticket. A telegram was sent to 1:1s son. Wil. Ham, who Is a medical student in Crelghton university. He has another son in Omaha. I Sauiael Ilnnirhton Urates. 1 OTTAWA. Ont., Nov. U Samuel Haughton Graves of Chicago, president of the White l'ass A Yukon railway, was found dead In his bed st the Aylmer aertmcnts bore today. His death was due to heart failure. A HEALTHY, HAPPY OLD AGE May be promoted by those who cently cleanse the system, now and then, when in need of a laxative remedy, by taking a deseitspoonful of the ever refreshing, wholesome and truly beneficial Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, which is the only family laxative generally ap proved by the most eminent phy sicians, because it acts in a natural, strengthening way and warms and tones up the internal organs without weakening them. It is equally bene ficial for Lie very young and the mid dle aged, as it is always efficient and free from all harmful ingredients. To get its beneficial effects it is always necessary' to buy the genuine, bear ing the name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front ot every package. POSSIBLE PROTECTION For your Jewels and Private Papers by renting a Safety Boa In our mod ern Steel Safe lie posit Vaults at a cost ot from (3.00 upwards a year, ac cording to size snd location. Let us have the pleasure of show ing you how strong, roomy and con venient they are to see them Is to place your Valuables there. Omaha Safe Deposit & Trust Co. Street Level Katreara ta Vaalta, 1014 raraant Street. LB.nUNGo. South End 16th St. VIADUCT "Homo of the Long Ton" I Utf2 (On ILL THr -t-W IHt OMAHA DEE OUT IN THE WSi 5 christmis oari rC ecrn! uniy -c saiiit M..d rec ivc ; " I'L. veo floeet tlold Kmbossed fnr'.Jt ..Uis Pmi Curd r'llKK. to tiur'-docj uo-t csr.l rtrr. Capitol Card Ce Sept. 894, Topexo, Xasv