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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1907)
THE OMAHA DAILY HEE: SATURDAY. .TUNE 2D. 1007. 0C v L 1 II V 17 Wen's Clothing Gold on Easy Payments MEN'S FINE SUITS Baturday we will place on sale a quan tity of men's fine suits that we pur chased from Henry Sonneborn & Co., of Baltimore. We bought them very cheap and you will get the benefit of it. Men's suits that you would have to pay at least $12.50 else where we offer you Satur day, with the privilege of charging them, for only. . LIBERAL TREATMENT f 1 A WEEK $1 PURE FOOD AND PICNIC BOX Good Wishes and Indigestible Proven der Are Packed Together. Ladies' Clothing ON CREDIT LADIES ETON 6UIT8 Made in four different styles, with full pleated skirts to match. These suits come in a large assortment of this spring's newest patterns. Earlier in the season we retailed these suits for $12.50; in order to close them out we have reduced the price, 7 Ff and you can charge them (UvO if you wish at only Vi CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE - SI A WEEK BETTER TREATMENT FOE KIDS Mrs. rrArldrm WoiK Rat Mint the Children, hnt Want Well Balanced Rattan "erred to Them. THE STORE THAT'S SQUARE ALL OVER" OUTFITTING- CO, 1315-17-19 TARN AM ST. MU.X.KB, 0TEWAKT BX ATOM'S OU X.OOATXOX. BIG DAY FOR THE CATHOLICS Laying of Cathedral Cornerstone Will Attract Many Dignitariei. ARCHBISHOP T0 MAKE ADDRESS Ireland, Keaae and Glrnnon Are Spoken Of, but Decision la Not Made aa to the Kprnkrr, The first Sunday In October Is to bo notable In tho history of the Catholic rhuri h of the diocese of Nebraska. Thi Lis the clay on which the cornerstone of J. lie new cathedral on Fortieth street la Wo be laid and during the retrpat of the jjprlcsts of the diocese, which ended Friday morning the first steps were taken look 'iiR toward the gathering- of one of the nuint notable assemblages Omaha has ever siin. Tho matter was taken up with the priests of the diocese and arrangements will he mado whereby a delegation from every church In the diocese will be repre sented. I! Is the Intention of those having the n'attpr In charge to have special trains run from every parish, those on branrh lines of road to be timed as to connect with the specials on the main lines, thus bringing to the city at practically one time thousands, of Nebraskans who 'desire to (. the unusual ceremony of the laying of the cornerstone of a cathedral. On this occasion there will be assembled In Otnnha the largest numberof dignitaries of thi church ever brought together In the Mate. The address of the day will bo de livered by some archbishop. The names of Kri hhlshop Ireland, Archbishop Keane rnd Archbishop Olennon have been sug gested, but so far as announced no selec tion has been made. It Is expected that practically all of the bishops of the church west of the Mississippi river will be pres ent with a number from the states 'further east. Tho occasion of the laying of the corner stone of a cathedral Is one of the most Impressive of the rituals of the church and the occasion Is one which brings together more people than any other In a diocese. The recent laying of the cornerstone of the cathedral at St. Paul was remarkable for the attendance and It Is hoped that the event In Omaha will rival the Minnesota ceremony. TIP SEEMS J0 MISCARRY Letter Falls Into Handa of Police that Mar Divulge Swindle. Acting Chief Of Pol les Mostyn was handed some mysterious documents "Friday morn ing, which may lead to the prevention of a neat swindling scheme. One was a letter addressed to bax 48, Omaha, and spoke In Indefinite terms of bringing some one to Omaha from Mllford, la.. In order to work "the deal" on him. It was signed Orle Fields. The second was also to box 48 and It was a request Vhat the other letter bo sent back to Bert Osborn of Arnold Park, la., as it had been aent by mistake. Csptaln Mostyn says Bert Osborn Is a professional foot racer. If they are not mistaken In the man, and Fields was psob ably writing to him or to an Omaha pal In a scheme to bring some country man Into the city and work the old, old foot race game on him. In which the victim learns something of scientific running and pays very high for It. Ladles' celebrated Kulture $3 .50 shoes Sat urday $1.6. Benson & Thome, 1517 Doug las street. ( o o u o o o o o a o a o a o o o o u o o o o o o o o o Men's 4 Women's Summer Clothing Don't go on your Fourth of July outing without cool Summer Clothing. You ought to be just as stylish and seasonably clad as your friends. Here's our invitation to you : Buy before the Fourth ; put on your clothes, wear them and enjoy them. Iay after the Fourth in small payments of $1.00 a week. Cash Store Prices Factory to You 72 Stores Men's Summer Suits' $6 to $24.00 Genesee Shoes for Men - $3.50 Boys' Suits $2.00 to $8.00 Boys' Shoes $1.23 to $2.00 ONE THIRD OFF LADIES' Suits, Coats, Millinery, Silk Valsts All goods are marked as they have been all season you make the reduction yourself. For instance if you choose a suit or coat marked $15 it is yours for $10 one third oft Your Credit is good even at these Bar gain prices. Shirt Waists and Shirt Waist Suits o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o a o o a o o o o o o D o o o o o o o o n 1508 Dadac Street v.j,.d.y win,i 0 Some of the churches and Hund.iv schools spent a part of Wednesday and a Mt of Thursday morning putting up lunches In nice boxes for 400 children, who went over to Manawa picnicking. Probably more than half 400 were interested In getting ready those lunches and they put all sorts of good things Into them for the children from the City Mission, the Mitchell chapel the Jewish chapel and the Volunteers. In j some of tho boxes there were bunehee of i rcses on top of tho food; some had candy j snd one reporter that a silver quarter was And the good thoughts that were put in with the food and the happy thought In the children's minds as they ate It were the but dlgextors possible, especially as they were assisted by a large quantity of diges ters' oxygen and muscular exercise. As a result It was a pleasure to see the energy evolved In the bodies of those 400 children, and the happiness consequent upon an agreeable use of that energy. To have a long ride, and a chance to do lust what they wanted to from 10 o'clock in tha morn, lng until B o'clock In the afternoon In a pretty place out of doors; to have a roller coaster and a tiny scenic railway snd a merry-go-round at your disposal and a chance to have races and to swing and to teeter, such a blissful state of affairs would digest tacks, nearly. nations o Well Balanced. But an Investigation of the daintily pre pared appetizing foods showed that there was not a single balanced food ration among them; probably If there had been such a box it would have been returned with a disdainful repudiation of it. both by the would-be eater and the distributer. For the fact is, we are learning to feed unltnals so as to make great, strong, healthy bodies for them, but the whole world knows nothing, almost, about build ing strong, healthy bodies for human be ings. So In these boxes there were sand wiches, a mixture generally of bread, but ter and meat, cheese or nuts, cake, pie candy, hard-boiled eggs, cookies, crackers and fruit of all kinds much of It bananas. With the exception of the lean meat, eggs and cheese and the small amount of body building food that can be gotten from white flour In the bread and cake, the food was almost entirely heat and energy-producing. Result: A small amount of food to build the bodies of 400 growing children, and a very large amount of food that will make heat and energy to keep that, body engine up to a high degree of motion and action. So, the churches, which teach human beings to live an energetic, but calm, controlled, moderate life of the spirit, were unwittingly giving to a class of children who need all the help possible to overcome heated, tempestuous lives, the food that would put too much fuel Into their bodies for the material contained In the body to hold and work the heat, and thus helping them to an uncontrolled, heated manifestation of life. Children Deserve Better. . j "But children can digest anything," peo ple say. So they give them all aorta of wrong stuff to build up these beautiful bodies, and when, after a while, tha chil dren have all sorts of diseases that show that the body was built wrong, they never think that they have put wrong material ' into It and tha result shows, Just as It would If the should build a house with some good brick and wood and some that was not good. "Know ye not that your body Is the temple of the Holy Ghost?" A temple Is a house. We build our houses very carefully, but our bodies we put to gether anyway. And American cltlsens have more heat and energy producing food than any other nation, and we are producing a class of human beings the most energetic, but also with the bodies subject to the class of dis eases that come from the bodies not built strong enough to use the heat and energy this food produces. If any one who studies how to build such bodies had stood at the entrance of the coaster roller and aeen those 400 children struggle and rush and claw each other to be first, their spindling legs and arms flying In every direction, and their faces contorted with the desire to "get there,'" and had noted that the only well developed children were of foreign blood In the first generation in America, children whose parents had eaten simple, body building foods In their own land, and still gave them to their children, they would have put down a few facts for fu ture work. Berrlea la Their Season. Our own home grown strawberries are nearly gone, and raspberries and black berries are here. Mrs. Frovldem puts some raspberries Into her basket and wishes as she does so that she could pick them from the hushes herself and have some dainty branches of the leaves to garnish the dish In which she serves them; perhaps, also, she might And a bunch or two of belated blossoms to put with her leaves. She has always been accustomed to making her dishes look well, as well aa taste good, and her family always having been accustomed to it, would miss this aid to digestion through the eye. She knows, too, the laws of proper preparation of fruit, and as a result her family can digest them well. "The small, arid berries and fruits should be washed lightly, strawberries before they are hulled, as well as any kind of fruit that Is bought with the hulls or stems on: put them In a colander and run water through them gently, drain and then pick over quickly. Chill them a little, but not very cold, as that makes them more acid, heat, and sunshine developing the sugar. Sweet fruits can be made quite cold; peaches moderately so." She knows, too, that much acid In fruit Is nature's way of telling us that It Is not good for food, and that, however, much sugar may be put on It our digestive organs will still have to make way with the original amount of acid, and of the sugar too. so she looks for ripe, sun sweetened fruit and teaches her family to use but little sugsr, so she saves on the sugar and puts Is Into the natural sugar of the fruit, which Is more easily digested, as well aa permitting the acid to be properly used by the digestive organs. She uses the berrlea mostly In, their natural state, not making many deserts of the berries that come after the strawberry. She serves with the berries a cracker or bit of bread or wafer with little sugar In, that the sweet of the fruit may be distinctive. At the meal at which fruit is served very little if any meat Is usd. Hsikroom aa a Flavor. The season has been so wet latterly that mushrooms have grown abundantly. Mrs. Provldem knows that the usual Idea that mushrooms take the piece of meat and are very nutritious Is erroneous, as thev are j largely water, are dense and difficult of I dlgmttlon. and should therefore be used ; more as a pleasant food flavor, and in I an. all quantities, but so used they are Piano Beparfmeii The entire stock of the Per field Piano Co. now on sale. The prices explain why we have broken all previous sale records. . . . $250 Upright Pianos, mahogany cases pUJ $275 Upright Pianos, fl7 C oak cases P $290 Upright Pianos, fl rosewood cases pt $300 Upright Pianos, Q f 0 fl mahogany cases JIUU $300 Upright Pianos, A golden oak oases ) 1 1 Vr $325 Upright Pianos, Skl?fl rosewood cases pwt3 $375 Marshall & Wendall Upright 1ft ft Piano, walnut case !)IOl $390 I version & Son Upright Piano, r r dark mahogany case $375 Haines Bros. O C Upright Piano 4IOD $500 Sommer ClC Upright Piano fyMD y $425 Stoddard Clilft Upright Piano iplf U $375 Pat ton & Cross QQft Upright Piano $375 Emerson C 1 J, C Upright Piano vp IrtO $350 Packard Upright Piano vpl I O $400 Pease P f J? C Upright Piano $500 Smith & Barnes (000 Upright Piano J3 $300 Evhart T n r Upright Piano p l D $275 Delon COO Upright Piano $375 J. B.Cook Clfn Upright Piano piOU REMEMBER Smith & Nixon Piano Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, make these prices possible. They sold this entire stock to us for Spot Cash at Our Own Price. Don't Put It Olf-Buy One o! These Pianos. Haden Bros. Fully Guarantee Every Piano TIME OR CASH A small payment down and a little cash each month buys one of these great bargains. Hay den Bros. Piano Departm't. tUL-O (&. II Kf NEE 3i it ai jura s SOMMER BROS. Saturday Specials Red Salmon, two 1-lb. ting 25f Saratoga Crackers, 2 pkga 25 Strictly fresh Eggs, per dozen. . 15 Creamery Butter, per pound. .. .24t? Rock wood's Cocoa, H-lb. tln...21 Jell-O, per package 7H Dartlett Pears, 3-pound can 10 Beechnut Peanut Butter, per glass J' 160 SOMMER BROS. Exponents of Good Living 28th and Farnam Sts. pleasant to the taste. Bo she puts In a few "meadow mushrooms." Creamed Mushroom on Toast As the mushrooms are quite tender thry are not peeled, simply washed carefully, gill sides down, the stems cut off, chopped fine and put In a couple of tablespoons of hot butter and cooked for Ave minutes, belna; careful not to brown the butter too much; then the remainder of the mushrooms are put In and cooked about ten minutes; then the mush rooms are removed and a rounding; table spoon of flour Is stirred Into the butter and cooked until It stops frothing, when a cu of thin cream ia added and cooked until well thickened, the mushrooms are re turned to the sauce and heated. Round of bread are toasted, arranged on a heat? dish, the mushrooms arranged on the and the sauce poured over. Mushrooms I'nder a Hell Wash and drain sufficient mushrooms, cut out the stems and peel If very tough; toast rounds of bread, arrange In a granite or earthen baking dish, or In the plates for the "Individuals" put three or four mushrooms on each round pour over them, basting carefully, a coupln of tablespoons, rounding, of melted Gutter, pepper and salt, and pour round the toast a half cup of cream. Cover wtth the glass bell or bells If they are "Individuals," put In a large dripping pan In which Is a little hot water and cook In a hot oven twenty minutes or half an hour. Serve without removing the glass covers, as they hold the aroma. The Lange Grocery Co. Price is the object as well as quality In these days when everything is high and still going higher. We do Justice to the cash buyers for we hare Do others. Here is where you get the best at the lowest price. For Saturday only we will sell our famous (Purity) flour at, per sack $1.25 We will prove the superior qual ity of this flour in our own bakery any time. Rumford Baking Powder, per 1-lb. can 20 Prunes, your choice at, per vound only 25 15c pkg. Gelatine for 5i 10c Baked Beans for 5 Be can Oil Sardines for 20 Tea Dust, per lb. package, 12 Laundry Soap, 10 bars for.. 25 Fresh Eggs, per dozen 15 Quaker Cornmeal, per pkg.. . . 5 Fancy large Tomatoes, per basket for 20t Nice large Pineapples, each.. 5 MEAT DEPARTMENT Choice Sirloin Steak, per lb., ll Choice Porterhouse, lb., 12 He? Boneless Rib Roast, par lb., 10t Nice medium size Hams, lb., ) BAKERY DEPARTMENT Fresh Bread, per loaf 3 Fresh Pies, each 8? Fancy 2-layer Cakes, each.. 16 Fancy 3-layer Cakes, each..24 Fancy Cookies, all kinds, doz., g(t The Lange Grocery Co. 24th and Cuming Street 'Phone D. 1530 BIRRIES IN FULL MUSTER Season'i Variety ii Represented, but Prices Hold Up Well. LOCAL MARKET ON VEGETABLES A Car fv t.mmm Bsek. If you are ever troubled wtth pains or lameness In th. muscles of your back usa Chamberlain's Pain Balm and they will quickly disappear. Ur. Alexander Vloll.tte of Vulcan, Mich., savs It Is th. bst llnl. nient he ever used tor lama back. For sale by all druggists. Gaiters Eusraioai. To Philadelphia, July 12 to Is; to Boston, July 3 to !8, over Pennsylvania Short Unca from Chicago, via Baltimore and Wash ington, with stopovers. Writ, or call on Rowland. X V. 8. Bank Bldg.. Omaha. 600 pair men's to shoes, narrow wlitt'is. In the Korrls store. Il.io. 1517 Lloufla t , Benson A Thorn Everything that Blight Be Eijeel t l-.. SFMiiu im OUeied, -. Some Novelties from California. The season's offering In berries Is com plete so far as variety Is concerned, Lul the newer things are high priced, of course. Black and red raspberrlta and currants have come In during th. week, and while they are not all that may be expected a little later, they ar fairly good for the first. The currants ar. still small and a little green and sell for 15 cents a scant quart box, or two boxes for 23 cents. Both th. red and black raspberries sell for 10 cents a 'pint" box, that Is literally of tra ditional "raspberry measure." Gooseber ries are larger and riper and sell for IS cents a quart box. Home grown cherries of fine quality are plentiful at 15 cents a quart box, 13 cents a small basket, or 92.&0 a crate Strawberries range from 10 to 15 rents a quart box, but it Is safe to Inves'l 6 ate the boxes to the bottom. A few stalks of celery were the novelty of Friday morning's market and sold at novelty prices. Fplnach has grown too rank to be desirable and the s-naller and j more tender sort Is very scarce, it sells for cents a peck. Mustard greens are In, j mid 11 fur cents a ;-evk. New peas hav. gotten down to 6 cents a quart and th. pods are well filled. Wax and string beans are 10 cents a quart. Home grown beets are here In time for Jhe Fourth of July and are tender and of good size. Small cucumber pickles hav. come In also, and sell for 6 cents each. They ar too small for slicing and too large to bottle, but Just right for dill or sweet pickles. Cabbage In t c.nta a pound. Home-grown ts all that could be desired, the r.od lljttuce selling for 6 cents a head and 'lie irf, two heads for 4 rents. Ti California fruit promised came an t. King to schedule. Apricots and bluc plums sell for 36 cents a banket of ttueo dozen each. Peaches are 35 cents a dozen and cherries 40 cents a pound. Florida pineapples are better than they hav. been and sell from 10 to 20 cents each. Watermelons bave gone down to 60 retits each and are of good else and quality. Cantaloupes sell from 10 to 'M cents each. "Fresh" eggs are selling from 15 to 23 cents a doxen. but the safest for general us are about 18 cents, a doxen, the higher priced eggs b.-lng "fancy." Creamery butter still holds at IS cents a package, and other butters sell from 20 to 24 and 26 cents a pound, the country and dairy butter, equaling' th. package cream ery In quality. n H II ce (Tream Till A BAKBBL BOMB TO TEtn CXIXDKXaT Pure Ice Cream Is good for the children. It Is refreshing, nourishing, and healthful they will enjoy It, too. BAX.DTTr'S XilTTXiB BAJUiEIiS or ice cream are nueu wiiii mrrw u flavors of Ice Cream. Mada from H our., sweet cream received direct every morning from Balduft's prlvat dairy station, it is nigiuy navorea with pure flavors ana paraea in tno little barrels so that they will keep hard for a long time on a hot day. Quart size, sufficient for six or eight persona 40 Pint site, sufficient for three or four persons 201 The Store for deiicaci 1M8-20 FA UN AM Telephone Douglas 711 tiding Penults. George gpragua. Fortieth and B. ward streets, frame dwelling. t!.0ti0; Charlra K. Parmer, Twenty-ninth and California street, frame dwelling. U.suO; Hastings A Jlsyden. Nineteenth and Hpenc.er atreet. frame dwelling. !.. same. Twenty-tilth and Knun.t strwt, frame dwelling. $2.'".; same. Twenty-fifth avenus, between fort and Jaynes streets, frame dwelling, I2.0; same, Thirtieth ami Vlntun strep's, frame dwell ing, t-.'xw; same, Nineteenth and Ames uven.it-, frame dwelling, J1m. same. Change FJow! Right NOW Is an opportune time to get rid of that unsHtlafartory cradlt account. CaMh and no delivery re duces our expanse to a point where we can maintain the hlKheat quality at prices which will pleux you. You benefit by our saving. High quality, reasonable price, sanitary Hurround Inga. Give us a call. Our own corned beef and bollnd tongue. Extra tine Just what you want this weather. JOS. BATH'S CiHMiEII 131 TAJaJf AM ST1EET Twenty-fifth and Franklin avenue, live frame dwelling, I'-'.Vp each; same, Ppenccr sift-el, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets, frame dwelling. $J.w'; aame, 1MI Wirt stret. $4.U; K. Vogel. lM'i Jifartn.'t street, frame dwelling. $J.; Hoard of Education, Twenty-first and Vinton streets, brick slur, school Iujuha. fTS.OuO. WOMAN WHO STABS GOES FREE egreaa slip. Kulfe Into Man Who OhJeols to BelagT Hohbrd. ralsy Thomas, arreated Thursday night In the Third ward fur stabbing Charles Ralston of Aahland, who was doing th town and whom she had robbed of $6. was released Friday morning by Juge Craw ford with no punishment. Ehe did not deny the stabbing