THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1!UD. - COISSIOIRS oppose noo RAILROAD PLAN fhlnk Carriers Should be Turned Back to Private Owners as Soon as Possible. From a Staff Correspondent. Lincoln, Jan. 12. (Special.) All three member of the Nebraska State Railway commission have an nounced thrir opposition to the plan of former "Director General McAdoo for continuing operation-f the rail roads under government guarantee as to earnings, with a view of their ultimate retention and purchase by the government. The commission ers' views are set forth in a tele gram which they sent to President Elmquist of the National Associa tion of Railway Commissioners yes terday. The members of the Nebraska Railway commission think the roads should be turned back to their pri-' vate owners as soon as possible. Chairman Tom Hall of the commis sion is inclined tq favor public own ership, but r.ot of the brand pro posed by Mr. McAdoo. Commis simier Taylor is dead against pub lic ownership, while Commissioner Vic Wilson eays he is still open to conviction. Reserve Right to Make Changes. In its telegi im, the Nebraska board indicates that it is willing to put the McAdoo rates into effect on traffic within the reserve, as an emergency measure, but will retain the right to change them and order new rates alter an investigation. This is on the understanding that the railroads' will be allowed nothing r.bove the fixed charge and the reg ular dividends while the -McAdoo scale is in efi'ect. " Here is the telegram which it sent: , "Replying letter January 6, are opposed. ..to McAdoo's five-year plan. We favor turning back railroads to private control as soon as congress ran relieve them of provisions of Shctuuiii anti-trust act. If reads are returned, we will, by emergency order, validate all existing intra state freight rates, pending-our in vestigation and determination of their reasonableness, subject to the condition that only fixed charges and regular dividends may be paid from revenues as a return during existence of emergency rates. Com mission is divided on government ownership. ' "Nebraska State Ry. Commission." Ratification oDry Amendment to Be First Act of Legislature Lincoln, Jan. 12. (Special.) Na tional prohibition will be approved in tne Nebraska legislature during tne coming week. When the Nebraska state senate reconvenes Monday afternoon, prac tically the hrst matter to come up will be the bill ratifying the federal dry amendment. It was introduced Thursday afternoon of . last week but went over under the rules. The measure ts. expected to come up for final reading and passage tomorrow and will be rushed over to the house.' . ' ' - Steps were also taken in the house to ratify the amendment last weeTc hut the presiding officer ruled it out of order until four days had elapsed. The senate committee on commit tees will meet Monday morning to complete the assignment of mem bers of Committees. The report is practically drafted, but a few chang es remain-yet to be made. The house committee has already com pleted its report and 'will probably tile it Monday afternoon at the same time as the senate. Doth houses convene at 1:30 Mon day afternoon. Pawnee County Red Cross Hakes List of War Heroes Table Rock. Neb., Jan. 12. (Spe cial.) The Pawnee county chapter of-t'ie American Red Cross has compiled the following list of Paw nee 'uunty-boys who died while in the service of their country: - Hugh E. DeHart, John L. Brown, Table Rock; Will F. Parli. Chester R. Kerl, William T. Little. Mason G. l isher and Walter H. Dusenberry, Pawnee City; August Turnbull, B or chard: . Manford Mecham, Armour; Ross Irwin, "Frank Tlustos, DuBois; Vv ,, --r $. Blair, Lewiston; Charles YVesuS, Steinauer.. Thrc3-Year-Q!d Boy Shot by Five-Year-Oid Sister Tecumseh, Neb., Jan. 12. (Spe cial.) Marie, aged 5 years, and Joseph,, 3, children oi Mr. and Mrs. P. II. ilurpity, northwest of lecum seh, tent to the barn to play. They found an old 22-ca!ibre rifle in the loft, and the. little boy was shot through (the abdomen, the bullet passing eitirely through his body and coming out of his back. The family physician and the parents rushed the child to a Lincoln hos pital, where an. operation was per formed, but the boy died .two hours we r wards. 1 .: : ::ccrs and Clerks Differ in Amount of Taxes Lincoln, Jan. 12. (Special.) The total taxes due the state of Nebras ka from the 1918 levy as reported by the state board of equalization was a!)Out $7,500 more than the first n p-irts of county clerks indicated. lie difference is accounted for in il.e fact that some property has iicc i -found and assessed since the reports were sent in by county clerks. Assessors' figures now credit the state with $5,673,936 of taxes while the- county cterks" re oorts showed but $5,667,425. E nters Plan 'to Create V ' :r Contracts Appeal Board Washington, Jan. 12. Creation 3i a war contracts appeal committee to settle informal contracts disputes ui-ich contractors and government officials cannot adjust is provided in t substitute for the houie bill vali 'siting informal war contracts - -rtii upon by th senate military wsrmittct, Devil Made Him Slay His Wife and Children (Continued From Fage On.) r . , ... . . aaturaay nignt, atter announcing that the family would visit Sunday Hoskms' father, Wallace Hoskins president of the Nevinville bank. "We were all seated at the break fast table Sunday morning," the little girl told Sheriff Simpson First papa mentioned we should hurry and get ready to go to grand' pas house. Atather objected. She said she had decided that she would not, go. Then paoa Kotawful mad. He began to scold and mamma got up trom the table and went out on the back porch, Then Gladys and Roy began to fuss, too. They talked Dack to papa, l'apa scolded. He talked so loud and mean I thought mamma, who had started to a neigh oors, would hear him and come back. I was afraid. I got up and was going to run. I Jell down and papa stepped over me and opened the back door. He did .not go out, but picked up something just out side. . lie walked across the Boor with an ax handle in his hand. Something struck me on the head and I don t remember any more. Irene ran to a neighbor's house about 75 yards distant and told that her father was killing everybody in the house. When neighbors arrived on the scene Hoskins was standing a short distance from -the back porch, on which was lying the pros trate and breeding form of the man s wife. Her head literally had been crushed to a pulp. In the combina tion kitchen and dining room lay the two children, their heads also crushed like egg shells. Hoskins must have rained blows against the heads of the children af ter life was extinct. Mrs. Hoskins' face and head were mangled and crushed until they looked like they had been mashed under tons of weight. The room in which the children were murdered was a total wreck. The chairs and table were splintered. Even the pictures on the wall had been torn from their places, smashed and scattered over the floor.' A stream of blood was running out of the, kitchen door, mingling with that of the woman, flowing down a half dozen steps and trickling along the ground a distace of 25 feet. Admits the Crime. "Yes, I did it," Hoskinsidefiantly U ,,r-l nA - 1,:. as. " T I,..,. been having trouble with that wo mi ivu l ilia uutsuuiKia. uavt man and her children for a long time. I could not stand it any longer. The final chapter of the whole business will be written when I have done the same thing to my self." Hoskins started to enter the ho'je paying lie would get his razor awl end :t al . Iorts to stop him were of no avail, and when Sheriff Simpson called at the house a short while afterwards the man was sea ed in a chair in the room where the dead bodies of the boy and girl lay- stretched on the floor, lhe blood was gushing from a wound which he had inflicted in his neck from ear to ear, and from his wrists.. The razor lay at his feet. The man wis almost unconscious from the Joss of blood. .A physician from Pres- cott wat, called. He caught the severed arteries and saved him from bleeding to death. Weak From Loss of Blood. : Hoskins was i unable to make a statement until today. He was so weak, however, he was not forced to talk.' Sheriff Simpson declared he would question him more closely as scon as his condition would per mit it. It is said by residents of Adams and Montgomery counties that there are scores of persons living here who have not retired at nights since the brains of eight sleeping persons in Villisca were beaten out with an ax, without some kind of a weapon close by. This is known to have been a peaceful neighborhood and entiiely void of crime, until the Villisca ax murders struck terror into the entire community, and there are a great number of persons -who mm ('. 5- ; 1. w: I vv jr ' j have "never recovered from the shock Men and women here sleep with revolvers under their heads. Seme are known to have retired, taking axes to bed with them as safe jfuards against the intruder respon sible for the death of the Moore family and two little Stillinger girls Mind May Be Unbalanced. The fact that Hoskins was keeing in a convenient place an ax handle as a weapon, coupled with the fact that he is known to have devoted a great deal of his time to brooding over the Villisca tragedy at the time it happened, is taken to indicate that his mind had become more or less unbalanced. During the trial of the Rev. Lynn George J. Kelley at Ked Uak two years ago, it was pointed out that Hoskins actions were peculiar in the extreme. He seemed not to be able to take his mind from the case He thought and talked about it con tinually, neighbors say. No import ance was attached to the man s ac Hon at the-time, his friends believing that Hoskins' mind would become normal again. ' Recalls Villisca Murder. During'the investigation of J. N. Wilkerson, the detective, which is still under way in Montgomery county, the excitement extended to Adams county, and every person in the two counties was either for or against Wilkerson in his attempt to fix the responsibility for the crime on a prominent Montgomery county citizen. -Wilkerson carried his fight into Adams county, making a num ber of speeches and collecting hun dreds of dollars for the fund to be used in connection with the investi gation. Hoskins also became intensely in terested in Attorney General Hav ner's effort in Adamscounty to in dict Wilkerson for some question able tactics he is alleged to have em ployed. , With his mind completely unbal anced, following constant brooding over this subject,' it is thought Hos kins lost control of himself when his wife refused to carry out her agreement to visit his father. Friends of the man also think that MrsNHoskins knew the danger of the situation when she left the room. It is pointed out that the woman did not leave the back porch, and she must have heard her husband beat ing the children on the inside. Mrs. Hoskins was on the back oorch when the infuriated man rushed out of the kitchen and set upon her with the club. Farmers of Aurora Take 1 1 r..i.. n.L.ii mi i.iiiimiv uhhiii riimiHm . . ... i Aurora, Ntb., Jan. lZ.-(Spec.al Telegram.) Farmers of the county yesterday heard arguments for and against the petition to abolish the county agent in this county. The county board sat in judgment. Rep resentative Frank Anderson return ed from Lincoln to assume the lead ership of the antis. N. W. Gains of iincoln, T. O. Shroyer of Humbolt and W. H. Chapman of Seward were out-of-town reinforcements for the friends of the county agent. Num- lerous firey speeches were made. The county board declared that it oriei- nally hired the county agent at the urgent request of the state council of defense. The board took under advisement the question of dispen sing with the agent. Aged Sterling Resident Killed by Freight Train Tecumseh, Neb., Jan.; 12. (Spe cial.) An extra freight westbound on the Burlington yesterday killed John A. Rulla, an aged German resi dent of sterling. Mr. Rulla, who was somewhat deaf, was walkine along the track and did not see or hear, the approaching extra. The locomotive and several cars ran over him before the train could be stopped. Mr. Rulla was a native of Germany andj was aged 82 years. He is survived by his widow and several children. County Attorney L. C. WCstwood conducted an in quest, dividing the blame between the killed man and the railroad com pany for the accident. he favorable judgment of so many who have used trr instead of coTree ror vears must surelv vfe'ukh vith you when you Tina you should make a chan Iowa Farmers Take Big Risks Smuggling Booze (Continued From Page One.) smuggler is concerned, in Iowa. A number of farmers in the south western part of the state, who other wise bear respectable reputations, and who have considerable social standing in their communities, trans port liquor from St Joseph to their farms in machines that are not sus pected by officers because of the ap parect innocence of the drivers or owners. The liquor is concealed in hay stacks or straw stacks and is delivered across the Missouri boun daries to the men who make a busi ness of the game. The farmer is paid from $10 to $20 per case for his risk.' The bootlegger then brings the booze to Council Bluffs, where he sells it to the Omaha distributor who has to take the risk of trans' porting it across tne bridge. This precaution of dealing in the contra band within the confines of the Hawkeye state is to defeat the Reed law, which makes illegal transpor tation a crime. i Bootleggers agree that, the most dangerous man to come across is the' conscientious local deputy sheriff, town marshal or constable, who is determined on enforcing the law. Tb' fools ain t got any sense, said one. "A hick marshal or a rube constable pulls his gat and shoots first, then asks questions , after wards." Omaha Man Killed. It was under these circumstances that Dan Houston, Omaha, was kill ed in a fight in the outskirts of a Nebraska county seat town, and Joe Beister was wounded in a battle in a small village in Iowa. Several other bootleggers have been wound ed by officers in skirmishes that have occurred in this state and Iowa, the victims being rushed to thjs city, where they were secreted in rooms known only to the fraternity and treated bv sursreons, whose discre tion is summed in the Chinese motto, "See nothing, hear nothing and say nothing. For a long time there was a well defined booze route that ran from Pine Bluff, just across the border from Wyoming, their a wet state, to Omaha. The route was finally discovered by booze sleuths, who de. termined to make it a war zone and f fnr whiskv oirates. 1 1 WO OI incill wcic uaiviii5 road one night when a car approached- . . "Haiti" commanded the officers. The car stooDed. One of the oc- rnnants called out genialiy: xou thfnfc we are bootleggers don't you?" "Yep, responded an omcer. "Well, if you are from Missouri, come and be shown. Look the car over," called the driver. The of ficers accepted the invitation and while their heads were bent in an insoection of the interior of the machine they were assaulted by the crew of the auto who beat the ot ficers into insensibility with the butts of their revolvers, leavingJ the guardians ot the law lying un conscious on the lonely prairie trail, Bootleggers themselves have some exciting experiences. One of them when he felt he was being pursued by officers in the southwestern part of Iowa, hastily ran his machine into a meadow and unloaded his cargo and concealed it in a haystack. Just as he had finished the task he was startled by a huge dog, which, without a warning bark or growl seized him by the leg, embedded its teeth in the calf of his limb and held him. After suffering excrutiat ing pain and mental torture for a moment the man thought of his pis tol, pulled it and shot the dog. Just then the owner appeared and, looking quietly at the quivering body of the slain canine said: "You have killed the best watch dog I ever had. That booze you have cached in the haystack, which is on my premises, will just about pay the bill." The bootlegger was in no position to quibble. He had to let it go at that. The cargo was worth about $800, a pretty big price for a dog. I 7 El iii "i ' 21 Die in Crash on New York Central . (Continued From Pegs On.) sufficient distance within which even to check the speed of his train. When he threw on the emergency brake,, Engineer Friedley said, the engine and tender broke away from the train. Freed from the drag of the cars, its momentum almost seemed to make it leap forward and then came the crash. Neither En gineer Friedley nor Fireman Brill was injured. Engineer Friedley left Buffalo yesterday afternoon at 5:10 o'clock and reached Syracuse at 7:30 o'clock. He laid over there until 1 o'clock in the morning and then took the Southwestern Limited westbound. The train was due at Batavia at 1 :04 a. m.. and the Wolverine was due at 2:08 Nothing to Obstruct View. It was a clear, cold night and ob jects could he seen at a considerable distance. The track, at the point wnere tne accident occurred, is straight away and there is nothing to obstruct the view of train crews for miles. The railroad inquiry is already under way and it is under stod Coroner Snow plans to begin one tomorrow. Only three passengers in the rear coach escaped instant death. They were ' Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Lich terman of New York, and an un conscious woman, said by the rail road authorities to be Miss Flora Doherty of Flint, Mich. Seriously injured, they were taken to the Ba tavia hospital., Miss Doherty has both legs brok en and is internally injured. She is not expected to live through the night. Mrs. Lichterman is more seriously injured than her husband. In addition to body injuries her face is terribly torn. It was said Mr. and Mrs. Lichterman were married only a short time ago and were on their way to Chicago where Mr. Lichterman has business interests. Eleven bodies were removed about noon and brought to undertaking es tablishments here. Shortly after 3 o'clock, nine additional bodies were brought in and it was said that there were no more in the wreckage. Premium Oleomargarine Swet Pure Clean Will Cut Your Butter Bill in Half :'- Sold By All Dealers SWIFI& COMPANY PEOPLE'S ICE & COLD STORAGE COMPANY Manufacturers of Distilled Water Ice 350 Tons Daily Capacity ' Telephone Douglas 50 Best Butter Made Alfalfa Butter Co. llth and Capitol Avenue, Calendars, i Cloth, Leathfr, Celluloid. . . Specialties. Dt'r. E2ATE2 & CO. Northeast Corner '17th end Wrbtw Sts BOILERS SMOKESTACKS TWO PLANTS Drake. Williams. Mount Companyi Main Office and Works, 23d, Hickory and U.P.R.R. 'Phone Douglas 1043. 6re.&cls 20th, Center and C.B. & Q. Thona Deuglaa 1141. Oxy-Acetylene Welding STANDPIPES TANKS " fn-.ll i i . ... .. ,-,J., - II I Jli . -l- . is- is . . . n r . I it mvTrr-r ft i'm ihit.hi ii r- Tni nim nj-fii. i.-.i ,. tfJtJ j..;.,..., u. .'. m-. -. - - fTllva .,., ,- r -, N M , imf 1 1 -ti '- 1 1 " ' '" 'nrrmn' nii'T1,1' "i nUMf '"' ",v " Buy From I' 7 t "Y" Pool Gets Clean Bill After Reflection (Continued From Fags One.) covery at the Y. M. C. A., which is a disgrace to the city. Hurry up and get over here. The lieutenant will give you the details." A reporter ten minutes later step ped off the elevator on the third floor,' and found the lieutenant en joying his midday meal. He was surrounded by a dozen others, who were giving him eager attention while he continued to blast the Y. M. C A. authorities. "It would suit me much better to talk to you in a half an hour," the officer replied to a request for a statement of what he had seen to condemn in the association pool. When the reporter returned again in 25 minutes, Lieut. Rehling had taken his departure to the depot. v Find Pool O. K. In the meantime, however several other persons, including a reporter, who had heard of the officers' con demnations, went to the Y. M. C. A. building and were shown through, the bath rooms. They were taken to investigate the swimming pool also R. F. Flower, general secretary of the association, spent a half hour . . i wun mese men. "It looks perfectly all right to us," was the general opinion. In spite of the fact that 300 men had just come out of the pool, it looked as clean and as inviting as any pool anywhere. 'T am at a loss to understand why such an untriithfud report should be circulated," said Mr. Flower. "Cer tainly we did every thing we could for the soldiers. Our pool always is kept in a clean and sanitary con dition." When, just before his train left, Lieut. Rehling saw the reporter ap proaching him, he left a group of officers to whom he was talking on the depot platform. Do Not Uphold Lieutenant. "Lieut. Rehling has no right to make a, statement to the press for these troops," said Lieut. Bliss. "I am in, charge, and if there is any statement to be nude I am the one to make it. I do not know what Lieut. Rehling has been saying, and I do not know to whom he has been ii fiiese Many Articles Being . " Manufactured Here in New Local Plants If you were to ask the ordinary Omaha citizen to name one-tenth of the different articles manufactured in Omaha how close do you think he would come to naming even that number? An interesting feature in that con nection, is a chart that was hung on the wall of the rooms at the Cham ber of Commerce recently. It is a chare gotten out by Armour & Co., showing the by-products of their packing plant, thowing over 140 dif ferent byproducts. The more important of these pro ducts are emphasized by small sam ples of the products fastened to the chart, many of which are displayed in glass tubes. Several of those dis played are: Hair for cushions, artists' brushes and plaster, bone buttons. STATIONERY THAT SATISFIES Loose Leaf Books, Fountain Pens, Engraved and Printed Wed ding, Business and Visiting Cards. Commercial Stationery. W make Rubber Stamp.. OMAHA STATIONERY ',U. 807 and S09 South 17th Street Call Tyler 3-Hauling of All Kinds COUNCIL BLUFFS OFFICE CALL TYLER. 883. We are edutpped to handle yonr healing problems at low eoifr quick service, courteous treatment. Council Bluffs and Omaha. FORD TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO. TAFTS DENTAL ROOMS DR. H. A. WAHL DR. J. F. ANSON 318 Securities Building 16th and Ftrrnam Sts. - - - Douglas 2186 A WORLD POWER . Whenever commerce goes marching- ea yon will find the Electrio Motor turning the wheels of industry, constantly, quietly and efficiently. Electrical Power I Dependable and Economical. NEBRASKA POWER CO. Epsten Lithographing Co. Labels, Stationery, Color Work of AH Kinds 417 Soutb 12th. , Tyler 1240 Nebraska's Only Purely Lithograph House Omaha Ice & Cold Storage Company WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ICE P'ant Capacity, 200 Tone Daily Natural Ice, 40,000 Tone Storage Phone. Douglas 654 107 McCague BIdg. 1502 Dodge St. STANDARD" Cleaners and Dyers Our Dry Cleaning and Dyeing System Is Perfect and Up to the Standard. Office, 1445 South 13th St Phone Red 8278 Nebraska & Iowa Steel Tank Co. A. N. EATON, Prop. 1300 Willie Avenue. Pbone Webster 282. Everything in Sheet Metal Products. Oil Tank and Supplies. talking. I do 'know he has no tu thority to set himself up to talk for these troops, and if he has assumed this authority, he has exceeded his bounds and what he has said will amount to nothing. , "However, I desire to take this occasion to state that the people of Omaha and Secretary Flower of the Y. M. C. A. have been most court eous to us from the time we arrived at 11 o'clock this morning. We en joyed our three hours in the city, and I know the occasion will re main a pleasant memory with all of us. Mr. Flower was particularly kind and generous, and I know the boys enjoyed their swim in the pool, which to my certain knowledge, was perfectly clean and sanitary. There was no occasion for complaint on this score, and if 'there has been any criticism on this account, I feel per fectly free to say that it was un grounded and unjust. "I am exceedingly sorry that this incident should have come up to mar our otherwise delightful visit to your town." The Weather Comparative Loral Rooord. 1918. 1)17. 191. Highest yesterday ..M 1 1 1 Lowest yesterday ...S3 11 4 1 Mean temperature ..40 8 11 10 Precipitation 00 .00 T .11 Temperaluro and precipitation depart ures from the normal: Normal temperature .......20 Excess for the day ,...20 Total excess since , March 1 1131 Normal precipitation 0.03 Inch Deficiency for th day 0.03 Inch Total rainfall slnca March 1 13. Inches Deficiency sines March 1 8.0 inches Deficiency for cor. period 1317 T.43 inches Deficiency for Cor period 1316 13.11 Inches Coughs and Colds Relieved "About three years ago when I was suffering from a severe cold on my lungs and coughed most of the time night and day, I tried a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and was sur prised at the promptness with which it gave me relief," writes Mrs. Jas. Brown, Clark Mills, N. Y. Oib combs, etc., leather, glue, sand pa per, soap stock, toilet soap, rennet powder, glycerine, thyroid powder, peptonum siccum, ox-gall, tennis racket strings', strings for musical instruments, surgical ligatures, pep sin, pacreatin, tankage, tallow, oil, lard oil, oleo-sterin and neatsfoot oil. Germany Surrenders 16 More Submarines London, ,1 Jan. 12. The German superdreadnaught Baden, has arriv ed in Scapa Flow and has been in terned there with the other vessels of the German fleet. Another flotilla of the German submarines, numbering 16, is to leave Germany tomorrow for sur render to the allies. This group comprises 13 submarines which were in the Mediterranean when the ar mistice was signed and three others inspected by the allied naval com mission at Wilhelmshaven. Telephone Vout. tOt Attorney General , Quits Wilson Cabinet! (Continued From Fat One.) and before then he served as a spc cial assistant attorney general in the investigation of the New Haven transportation system in New Eng land and obtained a dissolution oi that system without resorting to suit. He was born in Mississippi but now has his home in Texas, where' he gained recognition . i prosecutor of the so-called oil trust. Throughout the war, the attorney general's duties have been arduous, The functions of policing the coun try, seeking out dangerous enemy aliens for prosecution or internment, combatting German propaganda and rounding up draft slackers were lodged mainly in the Department of Justice. . Mr- Gregory has made no definite plans for the future and has not yet determined where, he will prac tice law , Police May Examine Teeth of All Omaha Citizens Don't be alarmed if detectives in terfere with your lunch within the next few days to examine the teeth marks you insert in sinkers, pumper nickle or cheese, for a five-tooth gold bridge must be found. It be longs to Mrs. Maude Kelley, 2411 Cumin c street, and was stolen out of her home Saturday afternoon. Po lice have entertained the theory that some hungry, toothless thief, whose gums are probably worn out, stole the artificial molars. -4 Ride a Harley-Davidson VICTOR H. ROOS """The Cycle Man" HARLEY-DAVIDSON Motorcycles and Bicycles 2701-03 Leavenworth St:, Omaha Best 22-k Gold Crowns . . .$5.00 Bridg-e Work, per tooth '. . .$5.00 Best Plate, $3.00, $10.00 $15.00 McKenney Dentists 1324 Farnam. Phone Doug. 2872 HEAVY HOISTING 1212 Farnam St. Tel. D. 353 Atlas Redwood Tanks Are Guaranteed for 20 Years Against Decay. ATLAS TANK MFG. CO. 1105 W. O. W. BuildingDoug. S237 FRED BOISEN, Manager. POLLOCK OIL CO. PHHTfl ENGRAVINGS for Newspapers Fine Job Work Bee Engraving Dept. 103 BEE DLDG. OMAHA E. J. Davis "If VmT ns Used Oar csS'ry Brandetol C.oods x5.GOOV..liil(iu)r! fiot f.w fe-rsxl C$K Frier- SQ jfi. Jift Q tMp'" $9 aMi- , Wf 11 i !r: 7 J ' i V