THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1909. You two wash dishes about hours everv davJ That's one hour wasted! Dishes get dirty, greasy and sticky, and soap yill not clean them. Soapy dish water merely cleans the surface; it doesrrt dig out the corners and drive out the decayed food particles. More over, soap leaves your dishes with a soapy, animal fat smell that is far from inviting. - GOLD DUST is the sanitary dish washer. It not only cleans the surface, but digs deep after hidden particles of dirt and kills the germs of de cayed food which ordinary dish-water overlooks. GOLD DUST sterilizes, as well as cleanses. Besides doing the work better than soap or any other cleanser can, V;T, GOLD DUST will &dvc jjuat iicLu. mc j time -you spend in washing dishes. "Let the GOLD DUST Twins do your Vork." Made: by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY Makers of FAIRY SOAP, the oval cake. I1ECIRA OF OLD DWELLINGS MoTing Homes, Like Flies, Go No One Xnowi Where. , THAT IS, NO ONE BUT PETRIE He la 1h. Man Wk Mom Them, and Ray Many aad Met Them Whtreter the Omn Tell lllm. BRIEF CITY NEWS 909 OCTOBER 1909 SUN . MOS - TU( ' WIO tMU 'FRt SAT I 2 5 6 7 8 9 12 13 14 15 16 19 20 21 22 23 X, 25 26 27 28 2930 i4 10 II 17 IB "Where do all these old houses go?" aiiked a visitor to tha offlc. of the build ing Inspector. , "They're like the flies." aald Dick Orottej I "they go no one knows where, unless It might be Petrle." Petrle Is a housemover and when asked the same question that was fired nt Grotte he woke up with enthusiasm, "They go any pla?e that people want them to go," said Petrle. "When C. N Diets told Oould Diets that he could have a costly brick house If he would take It away we were called In. Gould wanted the house set on certain lots he owned In the next block, but the way wasn't clear. So he bought a lot right across the street and we put the house there. Fixed up In good shape, It represented probably better than 110,000 and when C. N. Diets saw what we had done he wondered why he hadn't thought of that himself. "This house we are moving now from Farnam street to Twenty-fifth and Mason was built probably twenty or more years ago. You will notice that tha Joists are dry and sound and are also a full two Inches. This was bought by Judge Neville for about fseo. I believe, and we are taking it to some lots he owns at the location named. It, will be made Into m very fine residence When placed on the new founda tion. Old Her Home Goes West 'The old Her home at Sixteenth and Jack son we bought ourselves. We will place It on our property at Thirty-fourth and How and H. T. Andrews, proprietor of the ra, making n into a double house, we place, were placed on the stand. bought all the houses on the Her property tory of Jon.s and hi Transfer Clar- ror 6W na w titw that the small ones, ence II. Jones tried to Tide on a transfer l,v" ,n n". reimourse our ong twenty-four hours old and which was not 'nl outlay. , But. of course, such a lucky good anyhow on the line presented. When ' n ma every oay. lane mis the transfer was refused several things Peni joo, wnai wun removing ODstruc- hnnn. th onlv Hrem.nt a. to what tlon. wires, raising cables and HM finnn rtMnv thnt Jnnpi left thft r.r with more or less precipitation. These US ,n the hole M W" "et U t0 the " statements are made by the street car in m m m HoaMaa company In filing an answer to Jones' suit pany denies that the conductor assaulted thlr 'oondaUon.. fix them up in good " I .UnnA anil tfriAn biaII tkam rTS thA ak Irla location. Petrle Bros., like other house movers. buy a good many old houses, take them off Have Bool Print X. : ' X.yn, photo, removed to'lfth Howard Xlnehartk VhotogTapher, tlth at Farnam. Chambers' Bobool of Dancing open. Circular. . Bond itfcimin required for Iowa, Ad dress T Hi. car Bee. Whit. Walter at ohllti Oaf a Quick aervlce and courteous treatment. Equitable Ufa Policies eight drafts at maturity. H. V. N,eely, manager; Omaha. Keep Tour Money and Yaluable In the American pate Deposit Vaults In the Bee building. oxe rent for tl to lit. Divorce for Xonaupport Belle Watson la suing Henry Watson in district court for a divorce on the ground on cruelty and nonsupport. i . t , Senator j Barkett to lecture United States Senator E. J. Burkett has been se cured to deliver-a lecture on "The New Woman aiyl the Young 'Man," at Ilanscom Park Methodist church, Thursday evening, October 28. runeral of Mr. MatUda D.twU.r The funeral of Mrs. Matilda Detwller, the pio neer Omaha resident who died Sunday, will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at ' her late residence, 801 North Twenty-second street. Interment will be at Prospect Hill:,.- .i. Ml Coring Draw On Tear Luella Lovlngs, a colored girl,, pleaded guilty to a charge tf 'Larceny. 'from the person of Sebastlano Brescl, and received a sentence of one year," "which will date from her Imprisonment In the county Jail in August. A previous good record; aided her In get ting a llglti sentence. The Omaha, Hotels reported a larger business during the event of the foot ball game, between Minnesota and .Nebraska than any event that has recently occurred. Castle & Hill, proprietors of the Her Urand, ( were host to a large number of followers, .of the game, Track laborer Is Hart Abraham Slrlan, a track laborer employed by the street railway coinpaay, sustained a fracture of M'L Vlljht. leg Tuesday morning when a on lilm. lie was attended by the police surqeon. Cy Button i on Trial The preliminary examination, of Cy Sutton, charged with criminal assault on a girl at 313 Vi North Fifteenth .street, u rooming house, was begun In police court Tuesday morning and continued to the next day. The girl Jones. Hallway Mall Promotions The follow ing promotions In the railway mall serv ice are announced through the office of Chief Clerk F. 8. Keller of the Omaha district: Floyd W. Stafford of Lincoln, appointed to the Omaha and Ogden di vision, vice Wesley W. Noyes, resigned; Joseph Langfellner of Omaha, from class 4b to class 4a; Clem Orenvllle, M. E. Win- holts, Oeorge S. Wemple, from class 1 to class 2, all on the Omaha and Ogden di vision. Forrest V. Painter and James W. Grant, from clasa 1 to class 2, on the Omaha and Chadron division. HILL TO BRING FINE EXHIBIT shape and then sell them on the skids. letting the owner say where they are to be taken. The best bidder take the house," said H. F. Petrle. "We never set a price, let ting the people who want the houses do that. The houses now being moved from the site of the new Morris theater, at Dougl and Eighteenth, will be taken to Twenty first and Paul streets, where the circus ground has been for years, and the Dr. Oros.-man residence, from the corner be. low, will be taken to the same place. John Swanson Is the buyer and he will rearrange and put his purchase In shape for renting, Many In the Business. It will surprise some people to know that Railroad Maaraata Will Give Mob- mny men n Omaha una it a very taaa Grain Display One of profitable business to purchase old houses Best, to Omaha. nd remove them to new locations where they own vacant property. Within the last The Montana exhibit nf mln two or three years, with the remarkable by James J. Hill to be one of the best he growth of Omaha In a business way, Hun ever saw will be brought to Omaha and dreda of substantial residences have been Installed at the National Corn exposition 'd r " or nothing, moved ana re In addition to the display to be made by the 1 finished until their original owner wouldn agricultural colleae at Boxeman. .The ex. know them and rented for good prices. It hlblt was first shown at the state fair at I Is a fact, too, that these old-time reel Helena and It was here the Great North- Idences of the early settlers, and of some ern magnate saw It. . . . I who came later, are as a rule built much Mr. Hill was very enthusiastic over the better than the houses of today. They splendid showing In the grain department," Iwcre constructed of good material, by con writes Alfred Atkinson of the Montana sclentlous mechanics, usually working by Agricultural college. . "Mr: Hill openly de- the day, and they stand moving in good clared that It was one of the best grain I shape. exhibits he had ever seen In his life." I "We don't even disturb mantels or any. The officers of the fair have applied for thing else," said Mr. Petrle. "We move space and will exhibit .these grain and I them any distance, over rough road or grasses, grown In a state which, until re- smooth, and set them down Just as they cently, was only a part of the great Amer- I were before we lifted them. lean desert. The state In the last few years has realized the posslollltles or the plains I v-v w t for agriculture and has established a ys- LC-SCTlS U 111011 U1Q tern of agricultural schools. PICKLE OUT OF THE BRINE is Charged with Embczzlcmcn He la Discharged Because Witnesses Aaalast Him Are Too Dll-atory, Say the Coart. jim Pickle, charged with petty larceny, Henry Ivey of Lincoln, Former Car 1 13 lO DOUGLAS STREET Coats, Tailored Suits and Dresses 1510 DOUGLAS STREET Thousands of New Will Be Placed on Sale Wednesday Morning New Coats on Sale Wednesday An immense stock of stunning new coats will le placet! on sale. Wednesday morning, comprising hundreds of various models in all the latest cuts and designs. Every new fabric in both plain and strictly tailored or more trmmed efects. Coats of handsome broadcloths, coverts, diagonals or fancy mixtures, either in domestic or imported cloths. Prices $19.50, $22.30, $25.00, $29.75 and $35.00 New Suits on Sale Wednesday A grand collection of stunning new models in tailored suits will be placed on sale "Wed nesday morning. These suits are all beautifully tailored. The materials are finest broad cloths, imported suitings, serges, chiviots and diagonal cloths, in all colors and sizes to choose from. Some are very elaborately trimmed, some are moderately trimmed and pthers are perfectly plain tailored suits. ' , . Prices $25.00, $29.75, $35.00 and $39.50 New Dresses on Sale Wednesday Hundreds of beautiful new dresses have just arrived and. will be placed on sale Wednes day morning in this special offering of new dresses. You will find from the simplest street dresses to the elaborate evening gowns made in all the popular fabrics, serges, diagonals, broadcloths and silks. Prices $19.50,' $25.00, $29.75, $35.00 and $39.50 FARM DATA FOR THE-KA1SER Information, of American Agriculture Gathered by Two Agents. GERMAN STUDENTS COME HERE Consul General Getasler and Nikola Kaamann Inspect This State and Will Make Report to Emperor William. of on For the purpose of securing data interest to the German;, government agricultural and allied conditions In Ne braska, Consul Alfred Oelssler and Nikola Kaomanns, Imperial German special com missioner- for agriculture Mn" tne United States, spent Tuesday In Omaha and then went westward to Inspect;, the irrigation work around Scott's Bluff.llr: Kaumanns 1 just now ' completing; a . special report to his government on agriculture In Ne braska, and this trip has for a partial object the securing ol .Information on the watered farms of the western, part of the state. "Irrigation has reached Its highest do velopment In this country," he said, dis cussing . his trip, "and there Is much In formation of value to my government to be secured from your Irrigated regions, Contrary to general belief Germany has many regions In which It -Is necessary to Irrigate the farm land. This Is especially true In the African colonies,'! have practl cally finished "my report 'on agricultural conditions In this state, but wanted some more information on the Irrigated region, "We are much interested In Nebraska, because- so many of your citizens are Germans. A part of the purpose of my report Is to show favorable to the stale, I consider it one of the best agricultural states." t Kalsrr Get Report First Mr. Kaumanns' report will not be pub lished until it Is submitted to the German government. Those who have read ad vance sheets of It declare It is gooa boost" literature for Nebraska farms. The subject of dairying, cattle raising, sugar beet ralBlng and various other departments of agriculture are touched on in It. Mr. Kaumanns has already sent samples of various Nebraska grains to Germany to be tested in the soil ana climate conditions of hi country. He has been engaged to deliver some lectures be fore the students at the agricultural school In Lincoln on his way back. Mr. Kau manns will read an address before the Dry Farming congress on Intensive farm ing In Germany. Consul Oelssler was late In arriving in Omaha, having stopped In Davenport on his way. Consul Oelssler ha until recently been stationed at Seattle and Is greatly in love with the west. He will also stop at the Dry Farming congress In Billings, and will then go on to ' Seattle to bring his family back to Chicago, to which city he has been transferred. v The two eminent Germans were met In Omaha by Dr. A. T. Peters and Dean A. Burnett of the state agricultural school at Lincoln. . and by W. F. Stoecker, who took them over the city In an automobile. Thoy first visited the stockyard and pack ing houses In South Omaha and returned to the Commercial club for lunch. Meet Commercial Clubmen. At the .lunch the visitors met the execu tive committee of the . Commercial club, C. J. Ernst and T. F. Sturgesa were also gueBts. Several addresses followed the luncheon. J. B. Kahm presided and H. H. Baldrigo made the address as a representative of Omaha. . "Omaha will ome day be a large a Chicago," predicted Consul General GelBsler when he was called on to speak. "In the course of time farming In Nebraska will be carried on as Intensively as It 1 In Germany today. Then thl country will support a city as large as Chicago." Consul Oelssler said he wa more than pleased with what he ha seen In Omaha and was arfiazed at the growth of the city. He was greatly impressed by his visit to the stock yards and the Swift packing house and anticipated with pleasure his trip to the western part of the state. Dean Burnett of the agricultural college and Mr. Kaumanns followed with short addresses. The luncheon was prolonged so that the Intended visit to the Davis and Woods dairy farms on West Dodge street had to be given up for lack of time. The party motored to Rlvervlew park where they viewed the Schiller monument and the Linden tree planted there at the celebration of the centenary of Schiller' berth. HERE'S A TEN-DOLLAR STORY At Least, It Made That Mach of a lilt with the Police Judge, T. B. Downey, citizen at large, Illumin ated Into an Impersonation of the wel come arch, strolled into a restaurant and requested Officer Byrnes to lay aside his night stick. "I would take pleasure in whipping you," he remarked. "The pleasure Is all mine," rejoined the officer, advancing toward the radiantly confident Downey. "Didn't mean it," said the Joyous one, beating a retreat that carried him Into the clutches of Detective Maloney. "That's worth $10 and costs," decided Judge Crawford, when he heard the story, TH1 LATEST TOTXXX.AM IAD STENCILING All Itenclls, Bye and Brash. a well as Paint for Dyeing At Discount Prices A. Hospe Co. 1513 DOUOTjAS STKEXT. , An expert In attendance who will glad ly Instruct you. N - OLD MAN STRUCK BY A TRAIN John -Keattns; of Elkhora Ho Sev eral Rlba Droken and I la Serlona Condition. John Keating, an elderly man, was struck by Union Pacific train No. 16 at Elkhorn Monday evening and quite severely Injured. He was brought to Omaha on the sunie train and met at the station by Dr. Smith, a company physician, who took him to (St. Joseph's hospital, where It was found sev eral ribs were broken. Mr. Keating has been living at the home of John McCor mlck in Elkhorn. More Contracts or Double Tracks worn Let oy me union racuic tor Line Between Bawlini and Hanna. . . "The Union Pacific has lef the contract for additional double track work between Rawlins and Hanna, making 144 mile of double track work now under way be tween Omaha and Ogden," said A. L. Mohlcr, vice president and general man aper of the Union Pacific, who ha re turned from a trip over the road. Mr. Mohler say that double track work will be pushed as rapidly as possible, a the company need It all the way to han dle It business. "Our business Is very heavy," added Mr. Mohler. "One example may serve to illus trate what business we are.dolnK- Two days ago sixty-four trains pasRed over the hill between Cheyenne and Laramie within twenty-four hours. W are still able to take care of all the business and have no car shortage to date. Business may let up a little about December 1, but the In dications are that It will keep moving for some time." " - stood before Judge Crawford in police court. "I plead not guilty," said Pickle, when the Information was read to him. City Attorney Dickinson called for the witnesses for the prosecution, but none ap peared. They waited long and patiently "Pickle, you are discharged," at last said Judge Crawford. "The witnesses men's Organizer, it Arrested in Omaha. Henry Ivey, organiser of the street car men union at Lincoln, waa arrested in Omaha by Detectives Ring and Murphy to answer a charge of embezzlement. Ivey against Mr. Pickle are too dll-atory." he neh at the city jail and will probably remarked. P 4 ost Jioastles ure pleasing to little folks and grown-ups. The delicate, fluffy bits made from "White Corn, with the special "tonsty flavour, browned to a "turn," are good for all the family. ' "The Memory Lingers" Grocers sell-Pkgs. 10c and 15c ' .; Poet urn Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. be taken to Lincoln for trial. Ivey came to Omaha early during the street car strike and gained employment with the street railway company. He ha been a motorman on Sherman avenue. Aocordlng to information from Lincoln re ceived by Chief of Detective Savage, Ivey absconded with $227 belonging to the union which he Jiad fathered. Ivey wa located here thre weeks ago by the leaders of the striking carmen, but they did not cause his arrest at that time. They now admit that they were familiar with the nature of the case and Intimate it had been planned to cause his arrest later when It should become an effective move. BRITISH 'PHONE MEN HErk Head af London Companies Visit Omaha aad Look Over Lo cal System. Major Walter O'Meara, chief engineer of the telephone service for the United King dom, and O. F. Preston, general manager of the postofflce London telephone service. were In Omaha Tuesday inspecting th operation of the plant of-th. Nebraska Telephone company. W. B. T. Belt of the company escorted the distinguished visitor about the city and they left In the evening for St. Louis. The English companies are using American methods and machinery, using the Western Klectrto switchboard and the Bell aparatus. Mr. P". O. Frit, oneonta, N. T., write: "My little girl wa greatly benefited by taking Foley' Orlno Laxative, and I think It I the best remedy for constipation and liver trouble." Foley' Orlno Laxative is mild, pleasant and effective, and cures nabltual constipation. Sold by all druggist Balldla Permits. Q. A. Nestor, Forty-eighth and California streets, frame cottage, 11.100; B. Ebner. Forty-ninth and Leavenworth. frame dwelling. 11.000; J. J. Kriss, Twenty-third and south boulevard, tl.CO; J. p. Jaooby, 4D3 Marcy, 11,500; Axel For. !329 South Thirty-fifth -street., frame dwelling, 12.000. Uae Chamberlain' Cough Remedy for cough, colds, croup and whooping cough. Bee want-ad are business booster. The Taste of the Nation o has actually been changed and cultivated by Uneeda Biscuit f No longer are people satisfied with crackers taken from the grocer's box or barrel exposed to dust, moisture, handling. They have learned that the only crackers that are crisp, tender, always fresh and really good are those protected by a moisture proof package. These are the kind they get as if just from the oven when they ask for NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY n KG