Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 08, 1912, Page 7, Image 7

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    IKE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1912.
7
BRIEF CITY NEWS
Hare Boot Print It.
rivitrlo Fans Burg-ess-Qranden Co.
8taek-7alconer Co., 24th and Harney,
undertakers, embalmers. Douglas 887.
Derailed Freight Blocks Boad Owing
to a derai ei freight No. 13, the Nebraska
limited on the Rock Island, was six hours
late yesterday. The train was detoured
Jown through Missouri.
Auto Fatties at Hanawa Auto parties
are finding the auto concourse at Manawa
a favorite place to stop and the restau
rant a satisfying place for dinners. Thu
patronage tells - the story.
Dearer at Hii Desk D. Clem Deaver
of the Burlington's homeseeklng depart
ment, who has been ill for the last two
weeks, Is able to be at the office, but not
well enough to take up his regular worK.
Divorces are Granted Ernest Simon
was given a divorce from Frida D. Simon
in district court. Ida Gramalzky was
given a -divorce from Franz W. Gram
alzky. Adelbert W. Briggs started suit
for divorce against Katherlne A. Briggs.
Plan for Bepresentatlon At the re
quest of John Brisbane Walker of San
Francisco the executive committee of the
Commercial club will plan for the club's
representation at the Transmt.sUsippl
Commercial congress to be held at Salt
Lake City August 27 to 30.
To Auction Furaitura All the furni
ture and furnishings In the present Com
mercial club rooms are to be auctioned
off before the club moves into the new
quarters in the new Woodmen of the
World building. The house committee ot
the club la now planning the auction.
Delegation to Frontier Days Em
ployes of the 'South Omaha, stock yard3
are planning to muster a trainload of
Omaha and South Omaha citizens to go
to Cheyenne August 15 to attend the
Frontier Days celebration. Tne train will
leave Omaha August 15 and return Au
gust 18.
Jailed for Disturbance M. Welch, col
ored, arresteu by Officer Cooper on com
plaint of Mrs. Pearl Warren, 1516 Burt
street, was given twenty days In the
county jail by Police Magistrate Foster
for carrying concealed weapons and dis
turbing the peace. Mrs. Warren said
Welsh threatened to shoot her.
Speeder Caught Second Time C. E.
Copper, fined heavily several weeks ago
for speeding on the boulevard, was again
arrested by Motorcycle Officer Wheeler
for exceeding the speed limit on Soutn
Twenty-fourth street. He was fined Jll
and costs in police court and warned that
the fine would be ten times as large next
time he was brought into court for thl?
offense.
Xlffdon as Artist Paul Rigdon, pri
vate secretary to Chief Engineer Huntley
of the Union Pacific, has painted a pic
ture of an Overland train bearing down
upon one of the road's block signals. The
work is so good that it probably will be
lithographed and worked Into the com
pany's advertising matter. Rigdon is 25
years of age and has been with the Union
Paciiio since 1902.
Soldiers Tonr Yellowstone Five hun
dred of the privates and the officers of
Fort Sheridan, starting August 15, will
tour the Yellowstone park, being out two
w eeks. They go by special train : from
Sheridan to Gardiner, . Wyo., and from
there hike through the park. The gov
ernment gi-ves the men theifr time and
furnishes ; the rations .and camp - equip
ment,' but -jthy have to stand the rest HI,
Ute ejtpense, even to- paying for the train.
Charlie Thomas is Pursued
by Persistent Opportunity
rvo in mo 5 Hfc
V. fcMI'T CAT
Commercial Club
for Kiln Ordinance
Attempt to Settle
Viaduct Litigation
Officials of the Missouri Pacific rail
road and city commissioners will hold a
conference within the next few days with
a .view to settling the litigation over the
construction of the Nicho'as street via
duct. It Is understood the Missouri Pacific
has appropriated the necessary funds to
construct this and other viaduct; and
that It is the belief of the officials of
the company that all litigation should
now cease.
Mayor Dahlman will be chairman of a
committee from the council to confer
with the vice president and other Mis
souri Pacific officials. The city is at
tempting to force the construction of fie
Nicholas street viaduct and the case is
in the higher courts.
Fredrickson Tells
of Record Rainfall
t E. Fredrickson, chairman of the
country roads committee of the Commer
cial club, with Ms party of good roads
booster?, has arrived In Salt Lake City,
ending the marking of the transconti
nental highway from Omaha to the coast.
In a letter to Ward C. G.fford, assist
ant commissioner of the club, he declare
it ralreJ ha.der the last four' days they
were on the trip than it did in the last:
two yca.s in Wyoming. He said the last !
two days of V. e t:lp the party was riding '
iron 7 o'clock ;n the mornlrij until mid
night. He mailed with the letter two column
from thj Ogden Examiner giving an ac
count of the good roads work done by
the Omahans.
DUMONT TO LEAVE OMAHA
FOR POSITION IN CANADA
J. R. Dumont of the firm of J. H. Du
mont & Son has resigned to go to To
ronto, where he will become, associated j
with the PInchln-John?on company, a !
paint and glass concern. '
Dumont will leave Omaha September I. :
He was formerly employed by the Mid
land Glass and Paint company he-e, anJ
in geng to Toronto he will work with J.
E. Ebcrso!e, who was connected with that
Oil until a few years ago.
Lit!
"IT3 UN tUWIND-tTG
W
HE WAS BUILT
TOR MUMPS
wcT?eposTcwcAtisrr in
SOOOBYTMflKG HnTLOWIOS
Gee, but Charlie Thomas Is a lucky guy!
He once got a college diploma, he has
been city editor of The Bte for three
years, and now he lias the mumps.
Up until last Saturday he had despaired
of ever having this high honor. He has
never missed out on anything In his life
and even when a boy he got everything
boys should have fr m circus tickets to
measles. But somehow mumps had passed
him by entirely.-
It is said that opportunity knocks but
once at every man's door. She's different
with our city editor. If he doesn't answer,
she goes around to the back door, Just
as she has in this case to deliver what
she forgot on the first trip.
So, Charles Ladd Thomas at the present
time is possessor of several hundred
shares of common and preferred stock
in maxillary obesity and super-agonizing
human torture. He lies abed, resembling
that attractive advertisement of a tooth
ache gum, tl'.r-. epidermis on his counte
nance fitting him like the sack around
the flour. He has a facial physique that
would make any slim man swoon with
envy that's Just how lucky he Is.
It seems that he wasn't satisfied with
a displacement of nearly twenty-five
pounds, so he secured this enormous
cargo of mumps, whlc. he probably will
carry for a couple of weeks o;i the
through rate basis of western classifica
tion No. 51.
With rare discernment he chose the
large variety, the kind that make one
look like a pouter pigeon with an un
usually sulky disposition. They, or lt
says, is mumps Hngular or plural? This is
the trouble with the city editor away).
He probably has changed his opinion as
to that, though. Prior to his own case,
he probably thought mumps was quite
singular, but now, no doubt, he believes
them very plural. He says he has the
kind of mumps that make a pickle taste
like a railroad spike driven crosswise ana
clenched through the esophagus; the
kind that scream and holler as they fol
low an olive down the alimentary canal.
Oh, they're simply fine simply Indescrib
able! Gee. but Charlie Thomas Is a lucky guy I
BIG DEFICITAT KEARNEY
Superintendent Manuel of Industrial
School Deep in Debt.
PEOBABLY $25,000 SHORTAGE
Apropriatlon for Ulennliim i Son
Exhanatrd, bat Repairs Will
Continue, to Be Paid In
Part by Crop Receipt. !
A big delegation of the Commercial
club will attend the meeting of the city
council committee of the wnole this
morning when the proposed new brick
kiln ordinance comes up for consideration.
It is said a large body of property owners
who oppose the ordinance will also at
tend. The Commercial club is very desirous
of having the ordinance passed. At a
meeting of the executive committee A.
J. Vierllng declared that if the ordinance
was not , passed the price of brick in
Omaha would go up $1 a thousand. "The
old ordinance," he said, "is an absolute :
prohibition to the brick business In
Omaha, to Its expansion or Increase.
Seventy-five per cent of the brick now
used here is made outside of Omaha."
Superintendent C. B. Manuel of the
state industrial school for boys at Kear
ney will have a $25,000 deficit April 1.
His appropriations for the blennlum end
ing April 1 are now exhausted and re
pairs that will cost several thousand dol
lars are under way and will be com
pleted. "We expect to realize about $10,000 from
our crops this year," said Superintendent
Manuel while in Omaha today. "This will
be applied on the deficit. All of the $75,
000 appropriation has been exhausted, but
we have done something to show for
it all." .
Mr. Manuel says $12,0CO of the deficit
will result from repairs othe boiler
house, two new boilers being installed
and the entire power house repaired. Al
together six buildings will have been re
paired. Mr. Manuel expected to make up some of
Ms deficit on purchase of -coal, but owing
to the car shortage the railroads have
been Unable t,p lay la .his supply and his
Coal bill will be no less than usual, he
say.
There are now 205 boys In the school
,and these are preparing to harvest one of
the biggest crops ever raised at the in
stitution. Mr. Manuel has 40 acres of
potatoes, 40 acres of sugar beets, 20
acres of tomatoes, 160 acres of corn.
Mr.-Manuel believes the potatoes will
make 150 bushels to the acre. From forty
acres of oats he expects to harvest sixty
bushels per acre. The tomatoes, he says,
will bring In an average of at least $75
per acre. His corn crop is only "fair."
Railroad May Build
Spur Tracks in City
An ordinance granting the Missouri
Pacific and other railroads owning right-of-way
in Omaha to lay spur tracks on
streets and alleys, when permit for the
same has been given by the city com
missioners, has been drafted by the legal
department and will be considered at an
early meeting of the council.
This ordinance arises out of the con
troversy over the proposed spur track of
the Missouri Pacific at Twenty-seventh
and Boyd streets.
In an opinion accompanying the ordl
nace Assistant City Attorney iAmbert
holds that the council cannot grant "an
Irrevocable permit," but such permission
may be revocated at any time for cause.
Further Mr. Lambert holds the railroad
laying and operating such tracks must
pay all damages and must "serve all
alike;" discrimination in favor of any
part of the public, any business organza
tlon or private individual being equiva
lent to a revocation of the permit.
TO BUILD NEWLABOR TEMPLE
Central Organizations Now Casting
About foi a Site.
SEVERAL OPTIONS SECURED
BalldinK Will lie Three Storlc-j IHnh
and the Dininnlona About
One Hand red by One llan
ilrrd and Fifty Kt,
Negotiations for a site for a nev; Labor
Temple are under way, the preliminaries
belnK handled by a provisional organiza
tion of Omaha labor men. Options on sev
eral sites have been secured. The build
ing will be three stories In height and
about 100 or 150 feet square.
The officers of the present organisation
are: W. A. Ohrismiin, secretary-treasurer
of Nebraska State Federation of Labor,
president; J. W. Light of the Barbers,
vice president; David Coots of the Stone
mosons, secretary; C. L. Shamp, general
secretary of the Stationary Firemen,
treasurer.
The officers of the present organisa
tion are considering a plan for purchas
ing a property and having erected upon
It a modern building, payment to be
made by the laboring men In Installments
through a period of yenrs. Some sort
of plan to raise money for the annual
payments will be devised.
VISITING NURSES PLAN
FOR ALL-YEAR CAMPAIGN
The local Visiting Nurse association Is
planning to inaugurate an "all year"
campaign, the main intent and purpose
of which will be to save the babies of
Omaha.
Since the success of the summer baby
camp at Klmwood park, the association
has decided to push the work of home
visitation where the little ones are con
fined during the winter. Miss Lillian
Stuff, who has charge of the work at the
baby camp this summer, will continue
her efforts hereafter during the entire
rear.
Police Will Arrest
TInlicensed Peddlers
City Licence Inspector Berkowltz has
given the names of peddlers who have
refused to take out licenses to the police
and will request their Immediate arrest,
fc'erkowitz declares there are several who
have repeatedly refued to take out a
license.
Every woman's heart responds to
the charm and sweetness of a baby'i
voice, because nature intended her for
motherhood. But even the loving
nature of a mother shrinks from the
ordeal because such a time la usually
a porlod of suffering and danger.
Women who use Mother's Friend are
saved much discomfort and suffering,
and their systems, being thoroughly
prepared by this great remody, ate
In a healthy condition to meet the
time with the least possible suffering
and danger. Mother's Friend is
recommended only for the relict and
comfort of expectant mothers; it 1b In
no sense a remedy for various Mis,
but its many years of success, Jind
the thousands of endorsements re
ceived from women who have used it
are a guarantee of the benefit to be
derived from its use. This remedy
does not accomplish wonders but sim
ply aBslBts nature to perfect its work.
Mother's Friend allaya nausea, pre
vents caking of
the breasts, and fOflltlCril
In every way tScZy rV T
contributes to RriftI&tlll
strong, healthy
motherhood. Mother's Friend Is .ioM
at drug stores. Write for our free
book for expectant mothers.
JRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, f .
Second Regiment
Returns from. West
CompanyL of the Flri regiment and
Company tl of the Second regiment of
state militia returned to Omaha yester
das from the nations! encampment
at Pole Mountah., Wye. Captain Elsasher
of Coninny L said that as far as he could
learn he had heard of only one man of
the entire Ncbnicke. regiment that hnd
been In the fleW hosplta! during the en
tire encampment. This was considered a
remarkable record, as the change of cli
mate was great and the militiamen wore
11 tender and unused to roughing It as
they had to do In the camp.
41
At Fountains & Elsewhere
" Ask for
"HORLICK'S"
Thi Original and Genuine
MALTED MILK
The Food-drink for All Ages.
At restaurants, hotels, and fountains.
Delicious, invigorating and sustaining.
Keep it on your sideboard at home.
Don't travel without it.
k quick Ianck prepared in a minute.
Take no imitation. Just say "HORUCTi"
Hot In Any RWk Trust
If You Destroy Hies
for
Sanitary Reasons
Wly Not Do It in a Sanitary Way?
4
4
1
Hours
Decide
issues
ft Napoleon's re-enforcements arrived
an hour late and Waterloo was lost
ft In business, as in war, hours
decide issues.
ft Pennsylvania fast trains between
Chicago and New York have "saved
the day" in many a critical situation.
ft The Napoleons of finance, commerce and the professions
travel via Pennsylvania Lines and reach
NEW YORK IN 18 HOURS
on "The 'Pennsylvania Special"
ft This famous 1 8-Hour Train is a logical result of the advanced
state of operating efficiency attained by the Pennsylvania Lines
ft It leaves Chicago, Union Station, auarter to three p. m.,
every day. Other good, trains at 8:1 5 a. m.t 10:05 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., 3:15 p.m., 5:30 p.m., 9:45 p.m., 1 1:45 p.m.
ft Pennsylvania Station, New York, is One Block from
Broadway.
Full Particulars Upon Request
PENNSYLVANIA
LINES
Address W; H. ROWLAND, Traveling Passenger Agent
319 City National Bank Building, OMAHA. NEB
3 ..ti xJssj I
OISONED Flies drop into the food,
the baby's milk, everywhere, or ere
ground into the carpets, Tugt and.
floors. A poisoned fly is more dangerous
than a live one. The poison is an added
danger and does not kill the germs on the
body of the fly. Fly traps ere of f enshre
and unsanitary, the care of them disgust
ing. The fly destroyer that catches both
the flies and the germs they carry and
coats them over with a varnish from which
they never escape, is
Tanglefoot Flj Paper, Nsa-Psissmi, Saitsry
. Sold by all firatdftss grocers
and druggists
P
4
i
A story with a moral
for the agricultural supply man
Here is a little story, many years old. A young 1
farmer was complaining because he had so little money Said a neighbbrj ,'
"If you dig deep enough in that turnip field next", you 'houses you will find i
gold." So all summer he toiled and dug; he had, a wonderful crop of tm
nips, but found no gold. One day the neighbor met him, looking weary and -sorrowful,
driving a load of prize turnips to market.' : ';, (
"I see you found your gold,' said the neighbor.
"Where?" snid the lad. "There," said the smiling, neighbor,' as he pointed
to the big, round, yellow turnips. " ' ' ....; :; ;', . "... ;V; ; lM" vi
The wonderful gold mines o South Africa, the
Hand mines, yield $175,000,000 a year. Their discovery startled and thrilled
the world. The yearly output of the farms of the state, of Nebraska eicdeds'
$400,000,000; the total farm population is a little ?over half a. million; the '
state is not yet half tilled. This has not thrilled anybody yet it's time it did. ,
It is time for the people of Omaha and the state to
wake up and realize that Nebraska is full of gold; that all it needs is to be
scientifically and thoroughly and completely cultivated and farmed.
Some things are being done in Nebraska and are
well done. Fortunes are being made Ly those who are doing good .work,
using both their brains and their bunds.' ' ' "
In order to compel our own people , to do as well
as the best, and to attract those who are ambitious to, come to a .state where .
so many opportunities lie open, The Bee is about to issue the : ; : 1
Nebraska Development Number
of
The Omaha Bee
The Bee asks those to co-operate wi(h it in distri
buting this magazine who will soonest and most directly be benefited by. a
greater larm output. .
vA
The creameries, the live stock commission men, the'
poultry supply houses, agricultural implement concerns, alf depend for theVv
growth of their business on the growth of the farms.'
They will do well to stock up with the Develop-;;:
ment number, and send it out far and wide, all over the United 'States, toV
Canada, even to Europe. ., . ,- ,
Nebraska needs more farmers, who will produce
more grain, more cattle, more cream more turnips:
This magazine number will aooeal'to farmers: first.'
because of its appearance it is about 14x10, on book paper, stitched, .edges' a
trimmed, beautifully illustrated; second, because it: contains, just the infor- 'V
mation which will inspire him with enthusiasm for Nebraska. - . - :
The development of Nebraskais bound to- come, v
Why not bring it about in your own lifetime? ' ' v ' ' .
,. ,,. ,. fplease deliver l ' J ; .;
On publication attached list. ...... . . . . ,. . ; ; .copies,, of the ,
NEBRASKA DEVELOPMENT NUMBER THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE
for which fire1 enclosed $
Name .
Address ,
R.l?,i1Vhe ? ' 10 centa Pp Py r copies to'bc dajiverwl In 6mha,' South On.hi or
Council Bluffs, nd at 15 cents per copy to be mailed to any address, postpaid. In the United
States or Canada and 20 centa to Europe. 7 --
( 1 w .1
Cut out tho coupon and mall to Development Department. Omaha Bee.
... ... -. - -
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