Will Maupin's weekly. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1911-1912, May 03, 1912, Image 3

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    RECTOR'S
White Pine
Cough Syrup
Is a quick and positive remedy
for all coughs. .It stops cough
ing spells at night, relieves
soreness, soothes the Irritated
'membrane and stops the tick
ling. ,
25c per bottle
RECTOR'S
12th and O 8t.
E. Fleming
1211 O STREET
Jewelry &
Wares of
Precious cMetals
Best selected stock In Lincoln.
Here you can get anything you
-want or need in the line ot
Jewelry, and at the inside price.
Especially prepared for com
mencement and wedding gifts.
Watch repaiting and
Engraving.
see Flemiug fir si
MONEY LOANED
on household goods, pianos,,
horses, etc.; long or short lime.
No charge for papers. No in
terest in advance. No publicity
or file papers. We guarantee
better terms than others make.
Monty paid Immediately. CO
LUMBIA LOAN CO., 127 South
12th.
HOME GOODS THE BEST.
If Nebraska men who smoke would insist upon having cigars
made in Nebraska, the result would be the employment of hun
dreds of skilled workers who would live in Nebraska, add to its
wealth and aid in its development. It is a sad commentary on state
pride that 90 per cent of the cigars smoked in Nebraska are made
outside of Nebraska. Right here in Lincoln, business and profes
sional men who constantly prate about working together for Lin
coln, invariably smoke cigars manufactured in the east. As good,
if not better, cigars are made right here in Lincoln. But instead
of having a couple of hundred cigarmakers at work in this city we
have about thirty. This is due wholly to the neglect of Lincoln
smokers to demand the product of their local factories. There is
no better nickel cigar than the "Nebraska Senators," put out by
G. R. Wolf & Co's. cigar factory. Nor is it possible to find better
cigars anywhere at any price, than the product of the "Wolf factory.
This establishment uses only the best goods and employs only skilled
workers, and as a result the product is deserving of the attention
of smokers who really care. On merit alone the cigars made by
G. R. "Wolf & Co. should be used by smokers everywhere, and when
to this item of merit is added the fact that it is a home institution,
it should mean that every loyal Nebraskan who smokes should
stand by it and patronize it.
THE FOLSOM CAFE.
"What "Delmonico's" and "Rector's" is to New York City, the
Folsom Cafe is to Lincoln. Few cities the size of this are able to
boast of such a beautifully appointed and well conducted cafe as the
Dr. Chas. Yungblut, Dentist
Room No. 202 Burr Block
Auto Phone 3416. Bell 656.
Lincoln, Nebraska.
Folsom. All that will delight the artistic eye and satisfy the most
exacting -appetite is furnished, and the service is all that could be
desired. In fitting up this handsome new cafe A. T. Seeley & Co.,
the proprietors and managers, took every precaution to provide at
tractive surroundings in keeping with modern ideas of cafe service.
As a result no handsomer dining hall is to be found in the west.
Further recognizing the growing demand for banquet ' service a
WE TEACH YOU.
Learn to operate and re
pair antoe. Training in
electric and steam vul
canizing, pattern making
brazing; lathe and drill
preea. Plenty of actual
experience. Free cata-
LINCOLN AUTO SCHOOL. Lincoln. Nebr.
zow o Tweet, auw rtw
If- 1
GOOD SERVICE.
The garage of Roy II. Quincy
at 828 M St., makes a specialty
of general repairing and overhaul
ing of automobiles. His garage
is a new brick building fully
equipped with all modern devices
necessary for the rebuilding of all
kind of cars. Only first class
mechanics are employed and , no
car leaves the shop without the
careful inspection of Mr. Quincy.
lie carries all kinds of auto sup
plies including oils and gasoline.
If in need of high grade work
your business is solicited, a trial
order is all I ask. Auto B4216.
Sensational Capture of Bandits.
Paris. Bonnot, the leader of an or
ganized gang of automobile bandits
who have been -terrorizing Paris and
the surrounding district for months,
and Dubois, a notorious anarchist.
were shot to death Sunday in the most
thrilling encounter In the annals of
French crime. A garage at Cholsy Le
Rol, near Paris, In which the bandits
had taken refuge, was blown up by
dynamite after these two men had
kept at bay for hours a large part of
the police force of Paris, a contingent
of gendarmes, two companies of re
publican guards and a company of en
gineers. Ten thousand spectators
viewed the battle from points of van
Celebrate Traditional Event.
Munich. King Otto of Bavaria
entered upon his sixty-fifth year Sat
urday, and Munich, with other Bava
rian towns, In honor of the occasion,
displayed flags and bunting, sang Te
Deums, had a review ot troops and
perfunctorily drank to the health of
the king, who remains shut up In the
castle of Fuerstenrled, hopelessly In
sane and carefully guarded. All these
celebrations are merely a matter of
form and in accordance with monar
ch ial traditions.
-'!;?.. . i? i'
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I -' i mi J -riM I, J i.mnf lira, - fe ftiwr j-in'i
Ti Si
"14 .r t
NEBRASKA ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL, LINCOLN
This magnificent sample of the growing sentiment of the com
monwealth is the offering of the great state of Nebraska to the
destitute crippled and deformed children of the state. It was
opened for the reception of patients in 1905, and since then scores
of unfortunate little cripples have been treated, all of them ma
terially benefited and most of them cured. Many of these little
ones were deemed hopelessly crippled until examined by the skilled
surgeons in charge of the hospital, then in a few months they were
restored to overjoyed parents physically restored. Some of the
cures effected have been little short of marvelous. Little spines
sadly curved have been straightened, diseased hips and knees have
been cured, little twisted feet have been brought to normal, -little
eyes have been made straight, little arms useless from birth have
been given strength and suppleness. Quietly, day after day, this
splendid sample of humanity's growing interest in humanity has
been doing its magnificent work. The best surgeons are gladly
lending their aid. Dr. Lord, the chief surgeon, is devoted to his
work, and gives to it the time and the service that the common
wealth could scarcely purchase of a man whose first consideration
was irierely financial reward. Dr. H. "Winnett Orr, the superintendent,
is also giving the hospital his devoted services. The chief recompense
of the splendid men and women into whose care is given the crip
pled children is the opportunity to be of service to the helpless,
to see little cripples given strength, to see the roses come to little
cheeks. If the great public would only visit the hosptal and learn
at first hand of the splendid work it is accomplishing, there would
no longer be a shortage of funds; it would be supported in a way
that would allow it to work to the fullest advantage. Great as its
work is, it is handicapped by lack of room, by lack of financial
support, and scores of little ones who might be benefited are not
received because of inadequate facilities. Nebraskans ought to know
more about the Orthopedic Hospital ; more about what it is doing
io make well the crippled children, who, if not given the state's
attention and care, will grow up permanently crippled and the use
fulness of their lives either discounted or destroyed.
One of the present ambitions of the superintendent is that at the
next legislature provision will be made for a modern fire-proof
building for the surgical building and that further educational
facilities will be provided so that after hospital care is finished
these patients may be further safeguarded against subsequent de
pendency. Nearly five hundred little cripples have been treated at the hos
pital. NJnety-five per cent of them have been benefited and a large
percentage cured. Entering the hospital helpless and without a
possible chance of an even break in the battle of life unless helped,
the children go forth with the handicap removed and given an equal
opportunity with their fellows. It is a splendid work that the state
is doing. It is a loyal and unselfish service that the splendid sur
geons are giving to the little human atoms that drift to the. hos
pital's doors. '
beautiful banquet hall has been provided on the second floor. In
addition to this cafe and banquet service A. T. Seeley & Co. are
bakers of fine bread and other bakery goods and manufacturers of
fine confections. A handsomely appointed soda fountain dispenses
soft drinks of every description and is presided over by an artist.
The Folsom cafe is, in every particular a credit to its management
and to Lincoln.
Prince Says He Was Crazy.
Lincoln. Albert Prince, charged
with the murder of Deputy Warden E.
D. Davis at the penitentiary on Febru
ary 11, last, and who is now on trial
in district court, was on the witness
stand Thursday for the purpose of tell
ing the stories of cruelty to other pris
oners which were declared to have
came to his ears and which are al
leged to have had such an effect upon
his mind as to have rendered him in
sane to the extent that he could not
tell the difference between right and
wrong at the time he stabbed the
deputy warden to death.
No National Shoot This Year.
The national rifle match, conducted
annually by the war department and
participated in by regular soldiers and
members of the national guard, has
been abandoned for this year, accord
ing to notice Bent out by the war de
partment and received by Adjutant
General Phelps of the Nebraska na
tional guard. The Nebraska guard
refused to send a rifle team last year
on the ground that the national shoot
is largely a fake in which professional
shots are allowed to compete under
the guise ot being members of the na
tional guard or of the regular army,
and on the further ground that the
money spent by state guards In pre
paring a rifle team will do more good
if expended on the different com
panies of the various states In train
ing the officers and men to become
fairly good shots.
HANDY MAIL BOX
Weather Proof Handy Durable '
Msda of oxydized steel used with
or without lock. Self closing.
Made in Lincoln
Invented by G. Westelin f
rice 75c
Lincoln Mail Bax Cczpsty
235 North 12th Street
THE CENTRAL
National Bank of Lincoln
' Capital $150,000.00
Surplua and Undivided Profit. $50,000.00
WAGEWORKERS, ATTENTION
We have Money to Loan on
Chattels. Plenty of it. Utmost
Secrecy. - .
Kelly & Norrls
Room 1, 1034 'O'
Bates: Day. 50c Week 12, 12.60, $3
New Building 163 Newly FnrnlsbedBoomi
BUBOFEAX PLAN
GLOBE HOTEL
E. WILSON, Manager
330 P Street Lincoln. Nebraska
nun
Bodies of Few Women Found.
New York In reply to a question as
to why the bodies of none of the 300
women who went down with the Ti
tanic had been found, an official of the
White star line said: "You must re
member that a large percentage of the
women aboard the Titanic were saved.
There were 30O women lost, as com
pared with 1,200 men. Only 300 of
this latter number have been found."
Bad Fire at Morningside.
Sioux City, la. The main building
of Morningside college was totally de
stroyed by fire Monday night, with a
loss of $200,000. Nothing is left but"
the outer walls. The firemen were
helpless on account of the poor water
pressure. Nothing was saved other
than a few books, secured by students,
who formed chain gangs and rushed
into the burning building.
LIBERTY FLOUR
From Selected Nebraska Wheat Best Wheat in the World
Best
by
the
Oven's
Test
LIBERTY
ar.r FLOUR
IH.O.BARBER SeSONS
LIBERTY
A
Nebraska
Product
Worthy of
Nebraska
H. O. Barber & Sons. Lincoln