Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 27, 1916, Page 3, Image 3

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    Till-: WA): OMAHA, MONDAY, MARCH L'7,
Nebraska
r
PHONE MEN TO HEAR
ACROSSCONTINENT
Overland Chatter Will Be Feature
of Banquet at Lincoln Wednes
. day Evening.
WILL HEAR THE SEA WAVES
(From a Staff Correspondent)
LINCOLN, March 26. (Special.) Lin
coln Wednesday evening will again bo
the acene of transcontinental tele
phone conversation, arrangements bav
ins been made for a connection with the
lino between the Atlantic and Pacific
The occasion will bo the annual ses
sion of the Independent telephone com
panies of Nebraska and at the banquet
which will be held Wednesday evening.
It has been arranged so that 800 people
attending the banquet will be able to
hear the "waves dash high on the stern
and rockbound coast" of the Atlantic
and the barking of the seals on the
rorks of 'the Pacific ocean.
N. C. Kingsbury, vice president of the
American Telephone and Telegraph com
pany, will send greeting- to the banquet
ers from New York, while O. E. Mc
Farland. president of the Paclflo Tele
phone and Telegraph company will be
at the end of the line at San Francisco.
Local officials of the Lincoln com
pany will talk over the line both ways
and H. M. Bushnell of the Trade Re
view will deliver a speech. In which he
will tell the denizens of the two coasts
what they are missing by not living In
Nebraska.
Nebraska
Sleet Storm Causes
Big Wire Damages
(From a 8taff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN. March (Special.) Tho
sleet storm of yesterday and last nliiht
mill bring a loss of I1CO.000 to telephone
and ther property In Nebraska, according
to estimates given out by reople hero
who are In a position to know. Most of
thta damage will, have to fall on tha
telephone companies of the state, which
seem to have suffered more severely than
the telegraph companels and the Lincoln
Telephone company, being in the renter
of the storm will have to bear a big share
of the burden.
Lincoln was practically cut off from
the outside world as far as telephone
service was concerned. This morning
Lincoln officials of the Lincoln Telephone
company, estimate the loss to the com
pany to be at least .V.frX. This Is the
third or fourth time the Lincoln company
had been hit hard by sleet storms In the
last five years.
Nebraska
NEW METHODiST CHURCH AT
BEAVER CITY DEDICATED
BBAVER CITT. Neb., March 26. (Spe
cial.) The new Methodist Episcopal
church of this city was dedicated today
by Rev. J. W. Klrckpatrlck of Holdrege.
district superintendent. Sermons were
preached by Pr. ftchreckengast of Wes
leysn university, and Rev. B. F. Eber
hart of Harvard, former pastor. The
church, which cost 115.000, Is free from
debt, and Is a modern structure in every
respect.
Prairie Fire Near Orleaaa.
AIMA. Neb.. March 26. (Special.) A
prairie fire aet from a burning straw
stack and fanned by a high wind, burned
over a large area of pastures and stubble
fields In the vicinity of Orleans and
threatened destruction to the farm build
ings on Henry Meyer's place. A' general
call for help over the phone brought
enough assistance to save the buildings.
NEW CARNEGIE LIBRARY
AT BROKEN BOW OPEN
BROKEN BOW. Neb. March 26 (Spe
cial Telegram.) The new Carnegie li
brary was thrown open to the pobllo
yesterday and during the afternoon and
evening hundreds of people from In and
out of town thronged the spacious rooms.
There was no formal program, but there
was plenty of good muslo and refresh
ments were served during the whole
time.
The building was erected and
equipped at a cost of 110,000 and the
comer stone was laid last June by Ma
sonic Grand Master Samuel Whiting. The
furnishings are of quarter oak and are
In perfect keeping with the flnlahed In
terior. The structure Is forty by sixty
feet, is built of brick, with tiled roof
and is a full story with basement. It
consists of reading and lecture rooms,
offices, kitchen, furnace room and lava
tories. The library possesses over K.Ono volumes
and something like 100 people take out
books dally. Miss Charlotte Templeton,
state librarian was present at the opening.
POINTS WITH PRIDE
TO KANSASSHOWING
Capper Goves Out Information that
Loses Its Force When Nebraska
Comes Into Comparison.
FIGURES THAT TELL A TALE
Urease Is Issue at Coleridge.
COLERIDGE. Neb., March f,. (Spe
cial.) At the citizens caucus Frldny even
ing Dr. Dewey and Charles Harris were
renominated to succeed themselves as vil
lage trustees. This will leave the hoard
fhe same as last year. The question of
saloon or no saloon and pool hall or no
pool rail will be voted upon 1 y the people.
Bee Want Ads sens hundreds dally
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN. March 16. (Special.) fndcr
date of March 21, Governor Capi'er of
Kansas writes a letter to the Stale Jour
nal of this city In which he ai;aln kIvcs
out the Information thnt Kansas has the
largest per capita wealth of any state in
the union.
The fallacy of this statement Is well
known and was recently exploded when
It was shown that Nebraska stands far
ahead of Kansas In Its rer capita wealth
and that several other states In the agri
cultural west cotild claim greater wealth
per inhabitant than the Sunflower state.
Governor Capper In his letter calls at
tention to the fact that Kanpas lias no
bonded indebtedness, having taken up Its
last bond January 1 of this year. Ne
braska has been out of debt for many
years and on top of that has money
loaned out aggregating' $10,000, 0W.
Xrhraiks Does lletter.
Governor Capper calls attention to an
other showing made by Kalians In which
he says that bank deposits have Increased
100 per cent In the Inst tin years. Bunk
deposits In Nebraska have Increased In
state banks alone, according to the rec
ords of the State Banking bnnrd, over
150 per cent In the same period, the rec
ords showing that In 1W5 deposits In state
banks were trO,5o7,V). while the Inst re
port, made yesterday, shows that thero
Is deposited In tho state banks of Ne
braska alone ll.lO.Stil.TSl. The Increase in
national banks has been W) per cent In
the en me period, making a total Increasa
in the period of 210 per cent, as against
the 100 per cent of Kansas' Increase.
Kansas Is Outstripped.
Governor Capper's boast that Kansas
had Increased Its bank deposits $16,000,000
In the last year may be something to be
proud of In Kansas, but Nebraska is able
to show even better than that with an
Increase of t30.OTiO.02K. And this In the
state banks only. What may be lying
around loose In tho national banks of
Nebraska would probably add" to this
amount much more and probably double
the amount.
Prohibition probably has done all that
the Sunflower governor claims for his
state, but corn, hogs, cattle and alfalfa,
with a few hens Industriously sticking on
the Job, has put Nebraska in a class so
far away from Kansas that it will never
catch up.
TOMBS ANGEL BANK
RUPT The Countess Ada
Eugenia H. C. von Boos Far
rar has just filed a petition
in the bankruptcy court.
Not so many years ago the
Countess, richly gowned,
used to visit the sick and
needy in the Tombs, the
slums and the missions of the
Bowery.
Nebraska
Nebraska
Protest on Nurses
Under Agency Law
( From a Staff Correspondent 1
LINCOLN. Man h St. (Special A pro- pjij, (MTV
te.t was filed in the offWe of the Slat j T1,r',' (t;vrces
1 nt'or fnmmlnl n hy K. J. eminent , a
Lincoln attorney yesterday, agilut r -i.ti
rug n rfc-' asso I itirv s to come tinder
la grippe, sge, 47 years. She sur
vived by Iter husand ami six children.
THREE DIVORCES GRANTED
IN RICHARDSON COUNTY
March M. (Special.)
rrr. granted this term
of tho dlstilet court among well know.t
leoplo of Richardson county. Mrs. Clara
lt.lti I' I., us a fitvf r....il from Kllir'd re
the employment agency law whirl re- I ,,y1 m th roimi, of rtrllnkrnllo aml
quires the payment of an annual liens.
fee of $' and the giving of a bond of
:.tno.
The protest whs mmie In behalf of two
aiS'Hlntl n. one at Oninha ard the othe'
at Lincoln. Mr. Clements explained th'it
the associations were co-operative and
pay no dlvld nils, b.it tho secuilnt of
positions in a patt of the henofLs d.
ilved by the members.
CHARGED WITH ISSUING
INVALID MORTGAGE
cruelty. l'y le Is a farmer I Vlntr near
l'ie-ton. Mrs. rye was formerly a it:rs:
she received a eirall alimony nnl her
I ante of Kill tt restored. Mrs. Cleta
Go. l.at.y was given her freedom from her
li.tlntvl. Charles Gols'y. a firmer rcs'.
t rnt of Ver.lon, now residing in the sand
Ml s of wrthwtst Nrlua'ln on a Klnkald
homestead, Her maiden nam" of Mora.i
was alsa grnn'ed her. S!ie will llvi In
Vrr Vn. Mrs. .I'hll Hermes waa given a
(Mvcrce, Hie child a little girl of 7 yrs
ot nge, nnd some ef tho property wMh
lm luded th home.
EASTER HOLIDAY VACATION
AT BELLEVUE BEGINS
The beginning of Kaster holidays at
Prllevue college Saturday morning saw
the usual exodus of home-loving students.
Severnl Informal parties will be given
to speed the fleeting hours of those wh
stsy here, and somo fortunate ones will
spend a week-end with friends near by.
Miss Mltnnle L. Carter, dean of women,
will go for a short stay with her cousin.
Miss M. E. Oass. Miss Jeanette Goodwill
has gone to her home In Tekamah. Profs.
Puis, Krlckaen, I'rters and Bchmiedel will
remain on the hill, as well as Mrs. L. M.
Churchill, librarian, and Mist Myrtle
Hunter.
ITCHING BLISTERS
BOY'S HEAD
1 'y'rff ?
lit
X I
AUTO BEATS TRAIN IN
RACE FOR HOMESTEAD
FALLS CITY. Neb.. March i.(Spe-c!al.)-Abot't
n wielt ago Al Shnrain
owned a dry gwda sti.re nt llunibo'd.
which he sild to II 11. Ayler and K. A
Wood of Had am. Kan., for which Ay:cr
pave a 'A' chec's and Wood a fcJ.'O'
moitgp.go on Kansas Land. The new
proprietors put on a t lean up s:tlo and
duniH till time Mr. Sherman went o
Knnrns to Investigate." lie found that
Wtod did lot own all tie lird coveted bv
tVe mortgage. He hurried home and ar
rived as tHe sale was closing on Frldny
night. Wood learned that Sherman h:id
returned and he at oru-e hired a Jitney
to take him to TnMo Rock where lie In
formed the hotel keeper that ho waa .an
insurance agent and registered under the
name of K. R. Harris. He went to Lin
coln on the first train out that n'mt I ent
where Sheriff Itntckln found him nt tho
Lincoln hotel. He will be brought t
Falls City. Woods Is a resident of Had
dam and la well Known there. Ayler Is
considered all right as his check was
good.
Alma Bnr Serloealy Injured.
A I. MA, Neb.. Mm eh !f.. (.-prcinl.l-rtanaldn,
the lS-cr-o'd son of Mr. and
Mrs. Slterm Shaw uf this e.ty. was ser
iously Injured when n horse be was rid
ing fell on Mm. Ho Imrt unhitched the
horses and was tldltin one with the her
nes:i on In from the field after h's day's
work, when the nnlnml f-ll calrhlni: the
boy underneath, the horse attempted
to get up and fell onto the. hoy a sec
ond tlne, InJuryltiT him Inler.ially end
In his' lower limbs, lie was brought to
bis home In Alma.
For llhenmntlsm.
Apply Sloan's Idnlment to the painful
part la nil you need. The pain goes at
once. Only J."h. All druggists. Advertlst;-
TIMBKR I.AKE. S. P., March Ifi (Spe
cial.) When his rival for a piece of South
Dakota land made a Milwaukee train at
Isabel, while he missed It, LI ye Kyle of
Arlington, S. 11., was discouraged, but
not disheartened. He chartered an auto
mobile and started overland, arriving In
Timber Lake five minutes ahead of the
train, filing on the quarter section of
South Dakota land which was the object
i
of the race Just before his competitor
Itot to the land office
Nntrs from Beatrice.
BKATItlCK. Neb.. March 2. (Special.)
Captain Mao Abbott of Company C
Friday received rysh orders from the
War department to recruit his company
to 110 men. or fifty more than the com
pany Is at present, on a-count of the
Mexican trouble. He has opened a re
cruiting station at the armofy.
Mrs. Mary Jsne Keel, a' pioneer of
Gage county, died at her home here
yesterday afternoon, aged hi years. She
la surlved by her husband and four
children.
I Mrs. Ida Sheperd. wife of B. Shepcrd.
i died Friday evening at her home In
DEATH RECORD
airs, M. A. tlarh elder.
ItKAVHn CITY. Neb., March 21. i Spe
cial.) The body of Mrs. M. A. Bachelder.
widow of the late Cnlvln H. Ilachelder.
a pioneer of Furnas county and former
clerk of the court, arrived here Fri
day from Green Bay. Wis., accom
panied by her daughter. Mrs. Anun
Height. Funeral acrvlca were heM ut
the Presbyterian church, and Interment
made In the Mount Hope cemetery.
Itobert I.lddell.
TRCUMSKH. Neb., March 2a. Special.)
Rev. Robert Llddcll. d'rd today at
Geary. Okl. He was psstor of the Te
cumseh Presbyterian church for three
years, leaving here five years ago. He
was 60 years old and Is survived by his
widow and three children. , Dr. Llddell
waa a member of the Tecumsrh Masonic
turnover, after a few weeks' Illness of order.
Got Worse. Affected Ears, Neck
and Face. Scratched Day and
Night. Terribly Disfigured.
HEALED BYCUTICURA
SOAP AND OINTMENT
"When four months old my hoy suffered .
with b'Uters and a kind of araly skin on hut
heuil. I got hime ilvo and he didn't
kh-ui u Improve hut got norm and his ears,
nrek, and f.we we-e oiTortod. He scratched
day and night the I'chln.-j was to Intense,
and we had to keep bis bands pinned the
whole time. Tho s'uln was sore ami In
flamed, and be didn't have a hair on his
head. It was Juat a rap of sore eruptions,
and Ills face was terribly disfigured.
"lie cot so hod we had to keep a mask on
his face. The trou'ito lasted for months,
when a lady told my husband about
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and we got
them. Tho third day I noticed a big
Improvement and In two weeks my boy
was healed." (Signed) Mrs. II. A. Thielo,
343 6th St., Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 25, 1015.
Sample Each Tree by Mall
With a?-p. f kin Book on request. Ad
dress post-Card "t'nttrura. Dept. T, Baas
ton." Bold throughout the world.
ELL-AWS
Absolutely Removes
Indigestion. One package
proves it 25c at all druggists.
: : : :
JOE HURTIG'S RECORD BREAKERS
1 :TOnn n a
IT - 1 11 11 I iJ II J XI
m "The ianoing f?n MX Fl v Ffl f nrTfS
j lemons" 8 uZIJ3 OuOZIJlS
II 'mmimmmmimmmd
BIGGER, GREATER, GRANDER, MORE MAGNIFICENT THAN EVER