Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 15, 1915, Page 5, Image 5

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    TIF.H l.EE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 15, 1915.
Nebraska
REED HAS PLENTY
OF WORKJH DOCKET
Attorney General of Nebraska Look
ing Up Law with Regard to
Corporation Tax.
BIG QUESTIONS ARE INVOLVED
(From a Ftaff Correspondent)
LINCOLN. Bept. 14. (HpeoiM.) Attor
ney General Reed la hard at work on
several cane In which he will appear for
the state.
Among them la the Rock Island rail
road case covering the payment of the
state corporation tax where the road re
fuses to pay only on the amount of the
property In Nebraska; the passenger rate
rase; the freight rate ease; the Rldgell
ease. Involving the payment of warrants
4rewn on the state for expenses of the
fire commission; the case covering rights
of water fro mother states which covers i
the question whether Colorado has full
control of all water In the Platte river.
A matter which took up the attorney
general's attention this morning was one
Nebraska
APPLES FOR NEBRASKANS
Central Fruit Growers Never Made.
Such Exhibit at Shown
at the Fair.
LOCAL MARKET GETS v BENEFIT
(t'rom a Staff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN. Sept. 14.-Whlle the purely
agricultural display at the Nebraska
state fair was a wonderful collection of
corn, wheat, oats, potatoes, grasses and
the like, probably the memory of the
fruit display will linger longer In the
minds of the visitors as the really big
thing of the fair. With over 6,000 plates
of fruit, mostly apples of different kinds,
with a smaller assortment of pears,
grapes and like fruit, nothing quite to
compare with It was ever before seen In
the west.
Fralt Growers Active.
Of course the Central Fruit Growers'
association must be given credit for the
largest dlsplry, for It contained the dis
plays of members of the association, as
well as the association Itself. Marshall
Bros, of Arlington. E. M. Pollard of Ne
hawka, O. II. Christy of Johnson, Val
Kleser of Otoe county; O. J. aLthrop of
involving the right of the coroner of Box ! Brownvltle, L. II. Bauroan of Valentine,
Butte county to withhold personal prop
erty of an Italian who had been killed
there by the Burlington railroad, for the
purpose of paying the expenses of the In
quest. Under treaty with Italy, the ef
fects must be turned over to the Italian
consul of this terltory and expenses of
the case must be borne by the county.
Thomas to Kaeter.
State Superintendent Thomas was In
LUTHERANS AYOID
PEACE PROPAGANDA
General Counoil Sajra it i Not Policy
of the Church to Influence
Governments.
BOOKS OF WORSHIP REVISED
ROCK ISLAND, 111., Sept. 14. Re
fusal of President T. E. 8chniauk to
act In common with other American
denominations In an appeal for peace
to the governments of Europe was
strongly endorsed in resolutions
adopted today by the general council
of the Lutheran church of North
America. Dr. Schmauk, when ap
pealed to by other churches to par
ticipate In the plea to the European
powers, took the stand that "In con
trast with the action of the Roman
Cathollo church, It Is not the policy
of the Lutheran church to participate
in politics or to take action looking
toward the Influencing of govern
ments." It was also resolved that "the counsel
laments the trials, dangers, tribulations
and manifold sorrows, which the ravages
of the terrible war in Europe have caused,
and expresses the hope that God may
of Butler county, and a few others had J hasten the day when the Messing of
FAVORS PERMANENT BRIDGES
Repairing and Replacing Steel and
Wood Structurei Cost More
Than Concrete.
ENGINEER PRESENTS FACTS
George" Yardlcy
Snaps Collarbone
At High Practice
Central High school's foot ball hopes
for IMa suffered a severs Jolt Tuesday
afternoon when Oeor Tardier, who last
year was a star on the championship
Oak Park High school eleven of Chicago,
sustained a broken collarbone diving for
i the ball. Dr. If. H. Hamilton reset the
C. II. Barnard of Table Rock, II. A. Mo-
Comb of North Platte and Christy George
excellent Individual displays In the dif
ferent classes as welt as some of them
furnishing parts of the display of the
association.
O. N. Titus of Nemaha had eight boxes
of apples packed In the latest approved
method, the apples ranging from the
Exeter yesterday, where he attended the common slse up to the large ones which
dedication of the new $40,000 high school
building In that city. lie says that the
building Is the very last word In high
school construction and is just as mod-
weighed nearly a pound each.
Late Apples Llfht Crop.
The association la pretty well supplied
with apples this year and has at the
ern as It Is possible to make It. The ! present time about 900 oar loads of bulk
equipment placed therein cost something ' apples ready for the market. The early
over $5,000.
Mason at Lincoln
Killed in Elevator
(From a Staff Correspondent)
LINCOLN, Neb., Sept. 14. (Special Tel
egram.) Harry Pettendcl, a Lincoln
brick mason, working on tne new Miller
V aPlne building, was killed this after
noon. He was working on the first floor,
round the elevator shaft at the same
time t!at the company which furnished
the defter was Installing It.
Pettendcl put his head Inside the shaft
to fixe some macon work, when the ele
vator came down upon htm. This Is the
only death on the big buildings now
nearly completed.
FIGHT OVER MEMBERSHIP
IN GRAND ISLAND HOME
GRAND ISLAND. Neb., Sept." 14. (Spe
cial Telegram.) William IL Kearney, In
bis own, and in behalf of his wife, ha
applied for an Injunction restraining
Commandant Walsh of the Soldiers
Home from ejecting- them from their
present rooms at the state institution.
In an interview this afternoon, Mr.
Walsh admitted that be had planned to
discharge them from the home and gave
the reason therefor. According to his
statement, the court answer will show
that Kearney has an Income of prac
tically $5 per day. owns an automobile
and has it in service between the city
and the borne, and that there are forty
or more applications for membership In
the borne who cannot be accommodated
because there is no room.
The commandant holds that where
there are self-supporting members, room
should be made for the indigent and
needy, some of the letters from whom,
be says, are pitiful.
apples were an abundant crop, but, ac
cording to members of the association,
the late apples will not be as abundant.
The apple crop In localities outside of
Nebraska, where the shipments have
been heavy, will not be up to the standard
this year, because of light crops, accord
ing to Information coming to the asso
ciation. The association Intends to follow out
this year the system started last season
of giving Nebraska people the first call
on Nebraska apples. Instead of letting
the eastern speculators come In and
carry off the cream of the orchards,
leaving local people to take the culls or
buy from Colorado, Oregon and Wash
ington. The plan panned out to well
last year that It will be continued this
year and Nebraska people who desire to
get the real Nebraska apple can get In
communication with any of the apple
growers, or with the association at Ne
braska City.
OAKLATtD, Cal., Sept 4.-In a speech
before the Pan-American road congress
here today W. 8. Oearhart, Kansas state
highway engineer, deplifcred the poor busi
ness policy of building cheap culverts bone and announced that Yardley would
ana bnuges wnioh have to be repaired probably be out of the geme for the
or rebuilt after every flood. msVIng the' grter part of the season.
expense in the long run much greater Tardley wss counted upon to he one of
than an original permanent structure j ,hB ,tlirs of tha central team. The fact
would have cost and declared concrete thwt ho pBy(.,i at Oak Park wss suffl
brldges to be the most durable and eerv- rpnt for c,ntral raters to know that he
Iceable under all conditions. . fir..ci,, m,,,. it Is hoped that
Throughout the states of the central h mmr bf) ,b,a , pXmy n ,ome o( th(( l
wi i rora u 10 o per ceni 01 ail ne
later games of the year.
Coach Mulligan put his squad through
a hard practice again yesterday. The
coach Is suffering from want of heavy
line men. Most of the material out Is
light and Mulligan Is anxious to have
some of the heavier fellows In the school
turn out,
Begins in Portugal
universal peace shall again descend upon
suffering humanity."
Books of Worship Revised.
The report of the church book com
mittee announced that the work of revis
ing the English books of worship In the
Lutheran churches had been completed
after many years' work, and It was
hoped that the new forms would con
tribute largely toward a united English
Iuthertsm America.
The existing books and services have
been thoroughly revised, according to the
purest liturgies of the Lutheran churoa closed rour years out or mat time, cost
of the sixteenth century. The result is n altogether g.000 when an original
a book upon which all three main bodies ' outlay of $36,000 would have built a
of Lutherans have come to perfect agree- j bridge that would have withstood any
ment and all publishing houses will of the floods experienced In that time,
print from common plates. Tne new book! As an example Mr. Oearhart told of a
Is to be called "The Common Service low water reinforced concrete slab bridge
highway funds collected are expended for
the construction and maintenance of
bridges and culverts," Mr. Oearhart
said. "The amount expended for new
bridges and culverts on new sites is very
small, so that practically all of these
expenditures should properly be charged
to maintenance.
Cost of RrtMiral Heavy. T T 1 A. '
The constant drain on the public funds' JL0V0lUtl0Il
ror renewing wooa rioors ana stringers
and bridges built of light steel Is very
great and the flood damage to these
temporary structures Is enormous. The
damage to Kaw river bridges In lKtt was1 PARTS, Bept 14,-A new Insurrectionary
$1,600,000, The Indirect losses due to In- j movement has broken out not only In
terference with traffic and the ly In Lisbon, but in the principal provincial
marketing crops cannot be estimated, eltlss of Portugal, says a dispatch to the
but are obviously very great. In the Jrurnal from Madrid.
past twelve years Kansas has sustained
a loss on highway bridges alone conser
vatively estimated at $3,000,000."
The steel highway bridges introduced
about thirty years ago and so generally
used today are Inadequate and dangerous
Mr. Oearhart said and the material used
and the method of handling the work Is
if anything, becoming more defective.
As an example he told of a steel bridge
built over the Kaw river In 1900 at a
cost of $14,000. Since the bridge has
been damaged three times and has been
i . . . .... .-,,, jmawm. v -. , i
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; '. - v., ' . v .t M- , 1
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Book and Hymnal." It will be published
in a music edition; also an edition with
words only. The committee sdded a me
morial tribute to the late Re Horn of
Philadelphia, the secretary of the com
mittee, who bad labored most faithfully
on this book and who died just before the
realization of the alms of the committee
had been attained.
Mine Workers Test
Power of Military
Court in Colorado
SUIT TO DISSOLVE
FARMERS LUMBER CO
BEATRICE, Neb., Sept 14. (Special.)
James C. West Monday filed a petition
in the district court for the dissolution
of the Farmers' Lumber company of
Kinney, this county, the sale of Its prop
erty, the proceeds to be distributed after
Us debts have been paid. Plaintiff also
asks for the appointment of John W.
Gardner of Wymore as receiver.
The corporation was organised in Sep
tember, 191$, and since August 1914, plain
tiff has been a stockholder, having pur
chased two shares for $100. Hs alleges
that the company baa never since the
organisation published a statement of Its
assets and liabilities, has never paid divi
dends nor called a meeting for the elec
tion of officers. J. M. Howe Is president
and 8. A, Kinney secretary of the company.
GOV. MOREHEAD GRANTS
REQUISITION FOR RICE
(From a Staff Correspondent)
LINCOLN, Sept. 14. (Special.) Gover
nor More head granted the request of
Governor Arthur Capper of Kansas to
day for the return to Gonoordla, in that
state, of A. O, Rice, wanted on the
charge of Procuring.
It is alleged that be Influenced Pearls
Bessie Bennett to leave Kansas City, Mo.,
and to go to Concordia to enter a house
of prostitution. Rice Is being held by
Sheriff Hyers of Lancaster county, who
turned him over to Sheriff Carl Moore
of Cloud county today.
PAWNEE COUNTY FAIR
GOES OVER ONE MONTH
PAWNEE CITT. Neb., Sept 14,-The
thirty-fourth annual exhibition of the
Pawnee County Fair association, which
was to have been held this week, has
been postponed until Tuesday. Wednes
day, Thursday and Friday, October 13-1$-
14-16. The fair was postponed because
twenty-one other counties In the state
are holding thslr fairs this week and the
racing entries received at Pawnee City
were not satisfactory to the board of
directors. It la thought that by post
poning the fair until next month, a much
better (laid of horses can be secured.
iimm Coast Nates.
BEATRICE, Neb., Sept. 14. -(Special.)
The October terra of the district court
will open October snd the jury will not
report until October IL Three important
damage suits, Rex Dobbs against the
Burlington company, Ben Hagerman
against Black Brothers, millers, and
Rigsby, administrator, against the local
lectrlo company, have been set for trial.
The body of Mrs. Isabella Gillette, who
died at Chicago last week, was brought
here today for Interment Mrs. Gillette
was $1 years of age and formerly lived
in this city.
Evangelistic meetings were opened at
the new tabernacle near the high school
grounds Sunday night by Dr. Oliver and
party from Kansas City. Large crowds
were In attendance Sunday and Monday
nights. The meetings will last several
weeks. ,
Monday was one of the hottest days of
the season. The temperature registered
M degrees, and with a strong wind blow
ing from the south the weather was
Meal for the corn, which is maturing
fast
1 For Ialastla.
is ever take pepsin and preparations
containing pepsin or other digestive fer
ments for indigestion, as the more you
lake the more you will have to take.
Whit ! needed Is a tonlo like Chamber
lain's Tablets that will enable the stom
ach to perform Its functions naturally,
Obtainable everywhere. All druggists.
dvertlseiBeot
HASTINGS IMPROVERS
PUSH PAVING CAMPAIGN
HASTINGS, Neb., Bept 14.Speclal
Telegram.) Only one of twenty-two pav
ing districts have been defeated by re
monstrance. Hastings has launched the
biggest paving campaign In its history.
The construction already assured will to
tal more than $300,000. About eight miles
of paving la in contemplation.
News Notes of . Flattsmouth.
PLATTSMOUTH, Neb., Sept 14. (Spe
cial.) The city council last evening ap
pointed George Helsel as the city welgh-
maater and his weighing shal thereafter
be authoritative.
Mayor Rltchey signed the ordinance
granting the light contract to the Ne
braska Lighting company for a terra of
five years. A petition of large propor
tion was presented him some days since
and a number of delegations of ciUxens
called upon h Ira in the interest of, the
city and the consumers, but the ordl
nance baa been signed and has now be
come a law. Ths new assignment of
lights and their location will not be mads
for some time.
The Library board baa definitely de
cided on a location for the new library
and has bought the site.
DENVER, Colo., - Bept 14. R. W.
Ooates, a detective employed by the
United Mine Workers f America, today
was forcibly arrested on a body attach
ment Issued by the military court of in
quiry Investigating charges against Na
tional guard officers.
Coates was arrested in a lobby of a
hotel. When officers of the court pre
pared to take htm to the state house,
C. E. Friend, his attorney, started on a
motorcycle for the west aide court to
ask for a writ of habeas corpus for his
release.
Tho meeting at the hotel was by ap
pointment Coates yesterday accepted
service of a subpoena ordering him to
appear before the military court at 10
o'clock today. At the same time he said
he would refuse to obey the summons,
but that he would be at the hotel at 11
o'clock, ready to be arrested.
When Coates failed to appear at 10
o'clock the court Issued a body attach
ment In accordance with a recent
opinion by Attorney General Fred Farrar
that the court had power to force the
attendance of civilians. Captains Archi
bald Marshall and Edward Smith went
to the hotel, where they found Coates
and his attorney. Coates refused to be
arrested otherwise than by force and ths
officers selxed him by the arms and
started for the stats house.
In the meantime Friend had leaped
upon his waiting motorcycle and was
speeding toward the district court, the
application for a writ of habeas oorpua
In his pocket.
Ooates was taken before ths military
court which ordered him to testify,
few minutes later a writ of habeas cor
pus Issued by ths district court was
served on the military court and an
effort was made to serve it on the gov
ernor. Coates was not Immediately re
leased. The writ of habeas corpus was
made returnable in forty-eight hours.
Thresherraea Have Problem.
STELLA, Neb.. Sept 14. (Special. )-A
meeting of farmers and threshermen of
Richardson county is called for Falls
City. Thursday afternoon, September )(,
for the purpose of establishing a tem
porary price for this season's threshing.
hi order to pay running expenses. Ths
grain la so light and tests so low that
threshermen cannot pay their expenses
from ths customary charge per bushel
for threshing.
Willows for Riprap Work.
STELLA, Neb., Sept 14. (Special)
Willows are being cut on the Missouri
near Brownville to be used by the gov
ernment in riprap work near Kansas
City. The willows are loaded on barges
snd this week a steamboat will come to
take the barges down. Ths government
Is doing extensive riprap wrk all along
the lower Missouri river in an effort to
prevent floods.
of his design, built st Ashland, Kan., In
110. "This bridge," Mr. Oearhart said,
"has been under ten to twelve feet of
water five or six times during the past
five years, and It has not bean injured
In the slightest The actual cost of this
bridge was $1,130. A hlght steel bridge
would have cost not less than $3,600.
First Cost Sllsrhtly Higher.
'To reduce the highway bridge expen
ditures a better system of flnanolng
should be provided to meet the higher
first cost of permanent structures. The
extra expense, however, will not average
to 80 per aent more than the prtoe now
paid for temporary structures. The plans
and specifications should be prepared by
expert engineers employed by and rep
resenting the public and not some special
Interests, and they should be approved
by the state highway department and
the work carried on under the direct
supervision of some competent engineer.
"Since the bridges and culverts must
be maintained if the roads are to be
used at all, and since they can be made
permanent why not build them right
and do It nowT"
Whetzel Elected
Omaha Moderator
PtiBnU l.I rM Bonds Approved.
PAWNED CITT. Neb., Sept. U (Spe
cial.) At a special election held by the
village of DuBols, eleven miles southeast
of this city, bonds in the suin of $7,000
were voted for the purpose of lighting
the village with electricity. As soon ss
the bonds are accepted by the state aud
itor ths work of constructing a trans
mission like from the municipal plant In
this city will be started, and it Is hoped
to have the line completed by Novem
ber U
taiasitr Coaaplalat tared.
Dr.. King's New Life Pills wtl rid the
system of fermenting foods and polsmi.
Keep stomach snd liver healthy. 'tit;.
AU druggists. Advertisement.
PA PILLION. Neb., Sept 14. (Special
Telegram.) The Omaha presbytery con
vened in the Presbyterian church last
evening. The opening sermon was
preaohed by Benjamin F. Pye of Teka
mah. after which a reorganisation was
held by electing Rev. C. N. Whstael of
Creston, Neb., moderator, and Ror. Mr.
Ellis of Monroe and Rev. B. F. Fye Of
Tekamah, clerks.
TJhs attendance was very good, there
being about thirty present Fifty or
more should have been present, but in
terest In the "Billy" Sunday meetings de
tained many.
The meeting adjourned this afternoon
to meet at the Presbyterian headquar
ters, the Toung Men's Christian associa
tion bulldln In OraahBj October 4 at
1:30 p. m.
The women of the' Presbyterian church
served a fine chicken dinner at the opera
oue.
TWO YOUNG MEN HURT,
ONE FATALLY. IN UPSET
KHARNET. Neb., Bept It. (Special
Telegram.) Naale Altmeler will die and
L. A. Schroeder Is tedly Injured as ths
result of an auto accident west of this
city this evening. The young man were
returning from a wedding west of the
city and were speeding their machine on
the Lincoln Highway when it struck a
shallow ditch at an angle which turned
It ever twice and righted Itself back
ward, facing just the opposite direction
front which the young men were travel
ing. Altmeler sustained a broken back, a
number of broken ribs and serious In
ternal Injuries, and Schroeder was In
jured In the back and chest Both men
were thrown out of ths machine when it
struck the ditch.
Altmeler Is the son of Phillip Altmeler,
living north of Kearney, Both men are
about 90 years of age.
Straight Heats Rule
, At the Grand Circuit
Meet at Syracuse
SYRACUSE, N. T.. Sept. 'l4.-fltralght
heat victories ruled at the Grand Circuit
meeting this afternoon, not a race going
beyond the regular limit Single O
scored an easy triumph In the Onondago
2:07 pace, over four other starters.
Carpenter drove Almah to victory in the
1:19 trot a gainst eleven other starters.
Idora Worthy gave Almah a stern chase
in the first two heats, but fell short on
each occasion coming down the home
stretch. Cox won handily In the $.08
trot piloting Margaret Drulen across the
line to win easily ( with Joan close up,
iRythmell never being a contender.
The Messina Springs sweepstakes for
B-year-old trotters was won by Bunlooh,
Revelry finished ahead of ths field In
the final heat, but the judges ruled
against him on the ground that he ran
part of the distance. The S-year-old di
vision event was completed by Etudora
epler, capably handled by Ernest White.
Summary!
Messina Springs Driving club sweep
stakes for it-year-old trotters, two In
three, purse, $l,Uu (first heat Monday:
Bunloch, to. a, Sahib, Miss Bubrosa
(Jonesi ! 1 1
Roy Hlngen, b. s. (Mitchell) $ 1 $
Revelry, blk. g. (White) t t
Also started: Peters Pride, Lord Monte,
Monoma.
Time, 2:2S4. S:234, t 25U.
The Onondaga, 2:07 pace, three-heat
I'lah, purse, l,uuu:
Slnaie (.. b. s..
fQosnelll 1 1 1
Rastus, tor. g. (McDonald) t I $
Major Ong, b. g. (Murphy) $ $ I
All
Tt
Pacing,
ii.uuu:
C'amella, b. m., Cumner (Cox) 1 1 1
Patrick M., blk. c. (Stokes) 1 1 1
Peter 8., b. g. (Grady) I T $
Also started: Joe Patchen III. Fern
Hal, Prestollle, EJlsha J., June Forst,
1 1 j3to5X
Tkt quality printer wrgtt
hU customtr to tpend
monty for good ensnwhifi.
Ucamt it it mttuty wtU
gpenf. The bttt printer in
the ituintu cannot gtt r
g nfti tat of an inferior cut.
We make them to tmt the
jok
If
.22'a Have the Call!
X 71111 tlss tisB c M rifl-Hootlng to the Vtrrrl
V V el a grort. Rrminfton-UMC became the fastest
ninf .M am rrm ration In the world.
Whatever mke of Jl rifle you shoot, RwningtoivUMC
Crtridjre will giro 70a bettor eurer result than ooj other
In the world.
Go to the tWiag dcaJW ihe one who &pl&jt the lie
Ball Mark of tamnfto- UHC.
IU U tell you what sportsmen thank abot those ramcoa
cartridges ee4 We'll show ye Dse Bembiftoa-UMC .It
Hifles, csagie Knot, Mide-ecuoa ana Aateioeaing
m a eiass by themselves for lent," easy operation
and ccastet t perlormastce
Sold br ywur home si e I e r sand 11SS
shJmt leading merckestte In Nebraska t
r) rwYsTOty
f;ji:n;i,.'((i; ,
BssBsMsMfeMtSssnK&aei
AHl'IKMENTI.
ngle (J.. b. s.. Anderson-wiiKes-
Llttle Oyp (Oosnell) 1
Jor Ong, b. g. (Murphy) $ $ $
Iso started: Jeanna Hal, Frank Patch.
Ime, IJttk 21041, 2:06'.
aclng, 2:14 class, three In five, purse.
Peter Oakley.
Time, i.vtAi.
t.OVA. t:07a.
Roumania Orders
Mobilization of a
Part of Its Army
LONDON, Sept. 14.-A partial mobilisa
tion of Roumanian troops has been or
dered In preparation for eventualities
following the concentration of Austrian
forces In Transylvania, according to re
ports from Bucharest, says a Rsutsr dis
patch from Athena.
ATHENS. Sept. 12 (Via Parts, Bspt.
11) The situation on the Roumanian
frontier is not oonstdered immediately
menacing to persons in official circles,
especially In view of the fact that Rou
mania Is not yet fully prepared for
eventualities. The tensity of the situa
tion has prompted steps, however, for a
closer understanding between Greece,
Roumania and Sorbia, with a view to
eventual action in the event of an Aus-tre-German
attack. Bulgaria bas not
been Included In these negotiations, for
It to bow admitted that the Turoo-Bul-garten
agreement finally has been signed
and that Bulgaria will not accept Ser
bian concessions.
BOYD,
MOTION
PICTURE
Victor Hugo 'a Masterpiece
LES MISERABLES.
A 9100,000 IVodurtlon enacted
by French Hum. Afternoons, 1
to 5, All Sents 10c.
Ma-lits, 7 to 11.
Children, 10c. Adults, 23c.
nnAllflFISl TORICHT 8:25
u toat r JAd All This Week
T BTOOX rlUIOT,"
Edward Lynch tiV't?1
"THE SHEPHERD OF THE KILLS"
statuses, IBs Me. vga, tSe, gSo, 60a.
it
EM
UsBSBMSS0riL
iMl'lEHKilTI.
"THE QUITTJSU"
And Three Other Acts.
"THE WHIRLPOOL"
4A And an Assortment 1fin
WO r.f Klioto-Plava. lJO
Phone
Bong.
44
Ths Oslr Risk Class Vu4Urllto Clrault
Dillf sUUbm. 1:11. Bwr Nlihl. s.U.
OtlMr 4ts This Wmis
iMr 1. lKl!r Co..
Its UusloAl KnM.
Wslur fchsoBon Marts
Assls. EUal
itr Cllstoe Oryhsum TrtTM Mki,.
rnesa: MatlBM, Mast Smui iopt Cat an
Bus., lw si tsw. W. sushi. IDs, Si. Ms JtS
Is.
JtteVvexyUaV
Class
I U. gi
HOUPIHlj j
"OMAJtAB rmH OIMTga"
XJ gi I ttTl . aU7 BLatsle-so-Boe
XHfHf Taga, le-aa-eo-Tse
STAR & 6ARTER SHOW
Frera the Star ft Oarte Taeator, Caloa,
go. Vaudeville Includes "The (treat lei-
uge"; Willie KUea at Co.; Wolfe
The Aeroplane ti'rl, Anderson tt Tail
man. Hig Heauty Chorus.
Indies' Dime Mattnss Week Bays.
TURPIN'S DANCING ACADEMY, 2Sth and Farmrn
Opens Monday, Sept. 13th. Adult beginners Monday and Thursday, IP, It Adults
sivm el, Tuesday. Bapt. 14, I P. M. (Note) Only nsw daucos taught In this olae
Hltfh s hool begli.uers Saturday, Hpt. It, I P. M. Pupils joining classes on opening
dale will be given f 1 reduction on ticket. Application received bow. Harney lltl
YOUR first chew of
"PIPER" lays the
foundation for lasting
content, and the more you
chew "PIPER" the more
solidly you build for a life
time of tobacco satisfaction.
To know the real joy
that lurks In tobacco
to get the supreme juicy
richness out of chewing,
chew
Mill 1
mm
IS1DC
Caswbf Tsbsres Csiwysf Flsver
Added to the good
taste of the ripe, rich
leaf of "PIPER" is
the zest of its de
licious "Champagne
Flavor." There you have
a double satisfaction
in your chew.
8U by dsalen every
where la te aad lee
cat saalta ry, fell-
-twi fitndlSeasd
FREE L-.V.'i."-.:
and we'll send a full-si 2 s 10c
cut of "PIPER" and a hand
gome leather poach FKXB,
anywhere In u. 0.
. The tobacco, pooch and
mailing will cost va 34c,
which we will gladly apsnd
bscaase trial will
make yea a ateady user tt
"P1PEK."
AM tJ THE A MEXICAN TOBACCO COMPANY
tae'4rirEK"flaver.
1
NewYerk
11
.silaist.Aia.,LiiH.ai,.
UllLLOlV
'Springs
1 iVi
INTOXICATING UQU0Q ALCOHOL 4
OMAHA, NED.
mi 1 u 11,111 au. 11 .1 niiaa.ijin.i.miisiMia.siai'
Willow Springs Beer
HAS STOOD THE TEST OF TIME
No better beer bxpwed than
"Stan and Stripes" and "Old Time"
Order a ease for your home.
HENRY POLLOCK LIQUOR HOUSE,
Retail Distribators. Telephone Douglas 2103.
WILLOW SPRINGS BRWG. CO.
Telephone Douf las 1300.
Persistence is the cardinal vir
tue in advertising; no matter
how good advertising may Be
in other respects, it must be
run frequently and constant
ly to be really succcessful.