Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 01, 1910, Page 7, Image 7

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    TIIE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1910.
BRIEF CITY NEWS
- Snot pilot 1.
Gold Kesh BR:lhoini, Jeweler.
. r. nwcixwia Certi'le rriintKnl I
Ughtlng natures. Dur;es-Oranden Co. J
Strictly home-made pi, Ilor Grand Caf. j
Itlaabart. Photorraaliar, ittti rarnam.
1660 national Ufa Intimii e-llt
tlinrte E. Ady. General Agent. Omaha.
"Try V Tire o Tutl" Nebraska
IMoJ Co.. Hit Farnnm St. Both Phones.
XaUt We rolicle. slgnt draft at
maturity. D. Neely. manager. Omaha,
- M.mtp Yews'' Money YalaaMe tn ha
American Pafa- Lwpoxlt Vault la the Baa
tullilng. tl ranta box.
Whara eaa jro etart monthly deposit
of $o to $10. earning per cent dividends?
At the Nebraska Savings and Loan Ass'n.
104 Uosrd of Trade, building, Farnara St.
O. trgarter Til la Bankruptcy JWm
V'hl Carter, a nuicliunt of Omaha, haa
Hod hla voluntary petition tn bankruptcy
.n the United State district court. Ut
bllltlea, $1,034.29; asserts, $1,21.
rinal Bisaharg In Bankruptcy Final
d nchnrif in bankruptcy have been granted
by JutlRo W. H.'. Murder In the United
Statmi . district ' court to Andrew lErlckson
of r)lerton,'. 811a k. fright of Bethany
and Willis J. Yates, of Omaha.
Twelfth Ward Xmprovsrs on Laterals
A special meeting of the Twelfth Ward
Improvement club has been called for
Wednesday night for the purpose of dis
cussing grading and lateral sewer. The
club will meet at B21 North Thirtieth
afreet.
Arrested on Charge of Trying- to Cat
Al Harper, a colored porter, haa been ar
rested by Officer Anderson and charged
with an attempt to cut and wound John
Smith Saturday night on Burt street.
Harper lives at Twenty-alxth and C
streets, South Omaha. '
David J. Zee'a Divorce Bait Dismissed
Mrs. Maud W. Lee, wife of David J. Lee,
a city fireman, won a victory In district
court when Judge Estelle dismissed her
husband' petition for divorce, Leo charg
ing extreme cruelty. There waa consider
able testimony that Mr. Lee la a well be
haved young woman.
Walt Jfardln Cornea to His Be sen e
Jess N. Rhodes, who embezzled $ho from
the Merchants' Kx press and Transfer com
' pany, haa escape itrtitiy throws tho ,i.
tlvlty of Walter 8. Jardine, his former em
ployer. , Judge Sutton wished to parole
Rhodes, who is a young man. and Mr. Jar
dine agreed that Rhodua should ho paroled
to hlra and since then haa found the youth
a Job. , , 1
Transforming Bsw Tork X.lfe Building
More than fifty men are now at work on
the Omaha National Bank bulldtnsr, trans
forming It for the use of the bank. Tenants
In the. east part of the basement have va
cated and the workmen are now preparing
that part of the building for the safety de
posit vaults and for the aavlnga depart
ment of the bank, Additional men will be
put to work as fast as they may be used.
- Tangier Tempi Plans Big Becsptlon
Tangier temple, Myatlo Shrine, Is planning
for a notable reception and be.ll to be given
at the Rome hotel on Thursday evening,
February M. It Will be In the nature of a
greeting to the newly elected officers of the
temple, but will be open to all members
and their families., Tangier temple haa
1,200 members In Omaha and the surround
ing towns, and a large percentage of the
membership Is expected to be present at
mo recepuun.
Tredsriok Whltton Pushes Xia Work
Frederick Whltton, vice president of the
Thompson-Starrett company, contractors
putting up the Brandels theater and office
building, is In Omaha overaeelna- the work.
Mr. ' Whltton w'aa'Wra a "week, ago 'and It
was tinder hla 'orders that 350, men were
put to work last week and great progress
made. Mr. Whltton 1 in charge of the
western ' buildings of the company and
makes the rounds every week to the work
being done In Omaha, Chicago and Cleve
land. To Dissolve tit Union
of stomach, liver and kidney trouble and
cure biliousness and malaria tak Electric
Bitters. Guaranteed. 60c. For sale by, I
Balldlnst fersnlt.
P. I, Molander. 3019 Cass, frame dwelling,
$2.a; Ed Doraey. 231 Webster, frame
dwelling, $1,800; Robert Ga't, $713 Corby,
frame dwelling, $1,260;- Robert Gait. 2714
Miami. $1,250; Andrew Nelson, 968 North
Twenty-sixth, frame dwellng, $1,000; John
A Pnlmqulst. 811 North Forty-fifth. $1,000;
Preston Madlll, Thirtieth and Huntington,
frame dwelling, $3,&00.
n
And Soon Cured Perfectly and Eco
5 nomic&lly Doctor Called It Ec
zema and Little Sufferer Rubbed
and Twisted All the Time.
CUTICURA AGAIN PROVED
"THE GREAT SKIN CURE"
"My baby boy waa about nine
month old when he bod a breaking out
on bis neck which waa very annoy
in. It used to make him very fretful
and cross because it seemed to worry
him ao much. . In the meantime I waa
sick myself. I lad my doctor look at
tbo baby and be told me It waa ex-icma
and h wanted to treat it. But a frieud
of mine told mo she knew it could be
cured cheaper than suv doctor could Uo
it fur and in much lea time. Bo I
started using tho Cuticura Boap and
Cuticura Ointment which I Boon found
out waa what I ought to bare bad be
fore, for the ecsema scorned to itch ao the
baby could not keep his bead still for ha
was rubbing nnd twisting all tho time.
I used tho CuUeura Remedies about
tkrre time the first day and began to
notice tho good it was doing, for he
bf an to get rest from rubbing his neck.
'Ba I used throe oakes of Cuticura
Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Oint
ment and now no one could tell that be
ever had any kind of breaking out, and
inre then I hav never been without the
Cutioura Soap nor the Cutloura OlnW
Jn1'.,.t IrV,l,uI'I)oJ?eJ' 13 BrownsCt.,
8, W Washington. D. C., Oct. 2, 190.J
SKINS ON FIRE
'With, torturing, disflgurinf eceemas,
raphes and other itohing, burning, blewj'
irg, sccuy and crusted
tUn and calp humor
.are Instantly relieved,
and speedily cured, in the
majority of caaos, by
warm bath with Cuti
eur Soap, to eieans the
skin, and ran tie anoint
ing wtta Cuticura OlnU '
I meat, purest and weet-
est cf emollients to
ootbe and heal tbe skin. ,
Cuimtr Socio ns ) Outran Omtmeat (80. 1
4 t uimi; iwinl 4Or ). (or 1U Ions oi
Oinrutfls C'Mtv fllin, Sc ptt ot u fjli
thmuh.)ul th. worki fattar t)r Cwta Cur- '
I'to. l lil'mmbm at, tk'.na. mm.
tiidt U TnaiMrttt a Cuts al Vb3 late. '
ITCHING
SOOT HEDATQ CE
Some Things. You
New
Few states have come Into the union
with greater promise of future develop-
ment than New Mexico. Bo vast Is Its
domain that a hundred Rhode Island could
be turked away within Its roomy bound
aries with still enough apace left for a
Massachusetts. In - population It claims
nearly 400,000 and f wealth almost a half
billion dollars. Could Daniel Webster eome
back to; earth long enough to learn the
facta about New Mexico and California
he would conclude that he waa neither a
prophet nor the son of a prophet. After
the Mexican ar he Inveighed with alt the
force of his powerful oratory against ac
cepting California and New Mexico as In
demnity. He said It was a sure death
and taxis that neither of them would ever
be worth a dollar, and he beseeched and
Implored, entreated and demanded that all
this "rage brush" be not made a' part of
the United States. He said that our chil
dren's children would not live to see New
Mexico the home of more than 90,000 souls.
Tet Arlsona waa made In the main from
the territory of New Mexico, and together
they hare over 600,000 people.
New Mexico la known aa the land of the
turquolne sky. The records of the United
States weather bureau show that no other
region In America has as many hours . of
sunshine.' Tbe federal government ha
shown what H thinka of the cllmat by
establishing It principal army and navy
sanitarium there. Thousands of afflicted
Americans Journey ther for pulmonary
trouble, and someone has aillteratlvely
tyled It "th land of the lunger." Former
Senator Teller of Colorado . tells the prise
story about the cltmatlo benefits of New
Mexico. Onoe he had a serious throat ail
ment tht threatened to take from him the
record of being the most persistent talker
In the senate, so he Journeyed to New
Mexico. He afterward declared to friends
that his throat trouble began to get better
soon after he reached the New Mexican
boundary, and that by the time he reached
his destination he felt as well aa ever. The
result was that he came back to the senate
to use his famous "Ah, Mr. President" a
few thousand times more before his term
of office expired.
Like Arizona, the territory of New Mexico
la famous for ita geology and for its pre
historic ruins. Its geology tell of millions
of years' of world-making, and afford
examples of how even the solid rock may
grow. The raoe or, the Sandal mounuuna,
which lie toward the Rio Grande, shows
- -
a record ot fcow leet oi perpendicular
geology, each foot of which may have
been thousands of year in the making.
West of Mount Taylor, toward the Zunl
reservation, ' erosion haa had a gigantic
playground, and it Is said that nowhere
else on earth ha It played auch phantasies.
The teeth of time, wind and water hav
been busy for more million years than the
geologist can estimate.
It I said that Nw Mexico possesses. the
oldest living town in the new world, if
ndeed it founding doe not antedate Baby-
Ion. N nevah or any of the other cities of
ancient .tory. It I th little Pueblo town
of Plcurla, one. a flourishing place of
thousand of inhabitants, but now having
only about thirty denlaens of the paaslng
race-the last llnka that bind the prehls-
torlo past with the living present The
'l"ou,ui "" "HUU'
leaves of th withering tree of the Pueblo
will have fallen, and that a noble race
will then live only In tradition. ' 'Rac
uiclde ba become an epldemlo among th
younger Pueblo race ulclde In the shape
6f Intermarriage with the MexIcajr'gTeaa-
- r- ' in its infancy, wnua in' epaniah con-
whlch forgets about the Pueblo blood, qu,.udorM Utt& to find th fabled
Never did a high caste Spaniard or a proud trta8llreB of CIbolBi ther, ar evidences
English nobleman protest more vehemently that Kold waB taken from th. rivr bed
against the Intermarriage of hi children and u-hes of tbe territory for a long
with mean-born people than doe the old perio1 Dy the aborigine. and that placer
Pueblo against thee matches that obllter- w,r, worked by whit men In the
ate hla racial Identity, but his opposition Sa.nU F region 200 year before the Call
meat with little uocesa. foPflla digCOVery. More than $09 commer
That comparatively little of th area of ciany valuable mineral are found In New
New Mexico haa felt the Influence of civil- Mexloo, Bnd of tne8 eoa, th, moBt ,m.
IsaUon la shown by the fact that of th portant. It la estimated by the United
75.000,000 acres of land less than 600.000 state geographical survey that ther ar
acre are unier actual cultivation. But at ieBBt 1.600,000 acre of coal land that
It river valRy. one their famished sands may be worked profitably, and that there
are at!sf!ed with draught of water from ara neariy ,000, 000,000 ton of coal in Bight.
r!,lt.onl.!rrihrJn'!,k?1ewrf ? .k" 'oun nexh.u.tabl.
rigauonlst a thousand fold Water Is th quantlUeB. At Zunl Crater ,omtt Mt
only maglo necessary to transform them from Allulu.rque th,r. ar4 .;
from parched desert of hot wtnd to verlt- beds of nearly pur a wv,raJ
able bower, of wealtn-producing vegeta- minlon tonB y,n ..ight. with the formation
' of more going on all the time. Th tur-
In retuin for th water to satisfy their quolse stones found In New Mexico rival
thirt thy give barley that stand seven those of Persia, and It opal, moonstones,
feet high, oat whose heada measure agates and other preclou tonea hav ac
thirty Inches, pear weighing nineteen quired a world-wide fame,
ounces, peaches that will balance a pound , ' y VBJiSXatlO XASKIX.
of gold, watermelon that weigh forty Tomorrow In Smithsonian Institution.
Fort s Promotion -Good
News Here
Hailed with Pleasure by Many
Omaha Friends, Though Not
with Surprise.
The new of Qerrlt Fort' promotion to
be general passenger agent of th. New
York Central lines is good news, though
not surprising, to bl many friend In
Omaha.
Mr. Fort resided Id "Omaha for several
years while assistant- general, passenger
agent of the Union Pacific.' and waa one
of the most popular railroad men the city
ver had. He was also regarded a ou
Of the' most able.
About two year ago he was called to
New York and given a high, but anomal
ous position In the passenger depart
ment of the New York Central, and a year
ago his salary went up to $10,000 a year and
he became assistant general passenger
agent. ,
It was he who was placed In charge of
the fain that bore President Taft and his
party over that 13.000-mlle tour, and he
made a distinct auocess of It
,Mr. Fort I a eousln of Mrs. Thomas
Landale, $19 North Forty-third street,
Omaha.
THOMAS KINNEY DIED SUNDAY
ii
LI ad Been a Rettdeet el Osaafca Blaee
1B0T, Worked Cof Valea.
: . . . Paeltie Many 'Year.
Thomas Klnnay, 8$ year old, who since
1867 had lived In Omaha, died at b! home.
141$ Parker street, early Sunday morning,
following an Illness that wa of but a few
hour duration,. ,
. Early In the day Mr. Kinney had been
evidently In th same atate. of health that
had been bla through many years of an
active life. Late In the night he became
ill and In a few hour he waa deed.
' Ms. Kinney worked for the Union Pacific
railway here from th Urn of hi arrival
until 1891. II waa born In County Cavan,
Ireland, and Cam to- America at the ag
of XL. H. came west and located In Omaha
alxteen year later.
He leave a , widow, one son. Vlnoent,
Omaha, and three daughter. Mis Mary,
Mrs. Carrk-k, both of Omaha, and Mia
C. A. 1 Mali- r of Cleveland, O. All the
mmbws ot the family with the exception
of Mrs. ' Maher were with Mr. Kinney at
hi deathv "''
Want to Know
Mexico.
pounds each and cabbage heads that tip
the beam at forty-two pounds. At the
Louisiana Purchase exposition the peaches
of New Mexico were awarded first premium
In the face of the competition of California
and all the south.
These blooming valleys stir the busy
honey be to unusual activity, a single
colony of them making the be keeper
more than 100 pounds of honey a year. In
one case an average slsed oolony stored
19 pounds of prime honey In a single
season. The mountains and woodlands,
which skirt the valleys, offer a rich field
for the old-fashioned bee huntef, since
thousands of colonies that have escaped
from their hives have taken up their abode
there.
New Mexico lead all the American
state In raising Angora goats. Two of It
prise winner exhibited at th St. Louis
exposition were remarkable for their
fleece. One yielded fourteen pounds, which
old for $43. Th other sheared sixteen
pounds, ten pounds of which sold for $6 a
pound. The introduction of the Angora
goa Into the United States waa during th
administration of President Polk. Th
ultan of Turkey lent for a man to come
and experiment with the raising of cotton
'in that country. The choice fell upon Or.
James B. Davis of Columbia, S. C, and his
work was so satisfactory that on hi de
parture from Turkey the sultan presented
him with nine Angora goats. This small
flock was the foundation of the Angora
goat Industry In this country, there now
being over 1,000,000 of the little animals tn
the United States and Alaska.
Of the several Irrigation projects under
way in New Mexico, the most Important
Is the Rio Grande. This project Is partly
In New Mexico, partly in Texas and partly
In Old Mexico. The Irrigating works are all
situated in the United States, though
about 26,000 acres of Mexican land wilt be
benefited. El Pavo, Tex., la in th very
heart of th Irrigated country, and Is
already one of the principal cities of the
scithwest. No finer farming region will
bi found In all tne world than that whloh
wftl be reclaimed by the Rio Grande. At
least IsO.OCO acres of land will be Irrigated
with three feet of water to the acre per
year.
The El Paso Chamber of Commerce de
cltres that the sediment of the Rio Grande
is richer in potash and nitrogen than the
soil carried down by the Nile. Canteloupes
. , Y. - . . laAwfc .ft.. - V.
- y ,
V V
Onions yield from fifteen to twenty tons
per acre, and sell at from $30 to $40 per
ton. Asparagus has been known to yield
as high aa 11,000 pounds to the acre, and
to sell for 12tt cents a pound, or $1,600 per
acre. Of course these crops all require
much attention, and these figure show
their gross value. But when they are com-
rn rtiA with tYim thlrtv HnaHela tt whsa t
" ,.,m.r. .,,. t .
. tho , fh . ,t
pKnitles 0f Irrigation farming.
MMU ,avorlte crop with those
w,0 a ot rAre to kM.p . Ur(?, force o(
ham,s 0nM ,t geiB gooA Btart und9r
lrrlgllyon ,t nUlm but mu. or
M and can , iooM aftr b , man
who , tled up wlth other affttlrs. For m.
t tn po8tma!Iter of B1 Pmo ,n
tion to his official duties, manages a large
da,ry eut, -om. 3000 tonB of fc,falfa
from h ranch below the clty every
It ,,,,,. from flv. to t8n ton. to th.
, eut Bom, flve tllne, a year and ,ell(, at
from no to $16 a ton. ;
Tha mining Industry In New Mexico Is
LUND DEFENDS HIS ACTION
IN CASE OF MRS. F0LS0M
Ieslst He Gave Her the Treat me at
She Wanted and Was Gellty
of No Crime.
A lengthy communication has been ad
dressed to Th Bee by Mr. Lund, contain
ing a minute recital of hla experience with
Mrs. Folsom, who got a Judgment against
him by default last week for mal-treatment
of her as a victim of ecxema. Mr. Lund,
himself an old man claiming long experi
ence In such cases. Insists that he simply
gave th woman th course of treatment
she wanted and that had proved successful
tn many similar cases, . and that he
strengthened the solution of Iodine and
salycllio acid applied to her at her own re
quest. His communication proves Mr.
Lund to be greatly confused a to the civil
ult brought against him and the criminal
proceedings which were threatened, but pot
brought. He concludes:
I am not guilty, to my knowledge, of any
crime. I have not oommltted a crime under
the laws of the United States; If I had I
would have been found guilty under the
criminal act. I treat all the diseases as
they come into my offloa. and parties who
have tried everything else I have disposed
of their casea and they are well pleased. I
hav. never misrepresented myself to any
one, but there are hundreds who will be
my witnesses In any case. And all that
waa said to the contrary ia untrue.
The key to the situation Bee Want Ada'
$1.00 to 35.00
AFFAIRS AT S0CT11 mn
Street Eailway Company Preparing
to lay Track on 0 Street.
ADDRESS BY EE7. J. M. LEIDY
A rent ot Stat Aatl-Saleea Ussss
Bpeek mt Presbyterian thereat
Twa Men Arrested en
Bnsplelen.
During Friday and Saturday of laat week
the track gang of th Omaha Council
Bluff Street Railway company tor up
a block o paving between Twenty-fourth
and Twenty-fifth and O streets for th.
new line of th. system which la to accom
modate West L street. Th men found
th work very difficult on account of th
Ice and frost which had mad th paving
almost impenetrable. This waa especially
true of the cement foundation which had
to be broken off In small piece with th
use of wedges and mauls. The company
will continu th work at all events and
It will probably result In the line's being
completed at the time stipulated in th
contract, which I March t 1910. Th ma
terial for the Improvement ia all on the
ground at tho storehouses of th company.
Offorman brother have been employed
by the contractor of the Jetter creek rewer
to complete the west $.000 feet of th
sewer. This company Is working steadily
on th contract and will hav the upper
section of tbe sewer done with the ad
vance of th spring.' They began work
near the Jetter brewery.
Dan Hannoh Is working steadily at the
N street gulch sewer in the holluw west
nf Twentieth street. The ground there Is
oft and tbe contractor. I making all
pcsolhle effort to advance th work a
far a possible before the approach of
the spring freshets. The frost Is a great
advantage at present. Tbe work I pro
gressing at the rata of about six feet per
day.
In private improvements th greatest
project which 1 being advanced is that
of the office building and the hog killing
department of the Cudahy Packing com
pany. Th contract Is let and the con
tractor are only watting the opening of
spring weather, or rather until the frost
la out cf tho ground before bsrniins the
big Improvements. These building will
cost about $250,000.
Her. J. M. Leldy Speak.
Rev. 'J. M. Leldy of the stats organlea
tlon of the Anti-Saloon league spoke at
th Presbyterian chutch in South Omaha
last night on the, plans and principles of
Che league. ' II first took up the argu
ment of the league for county option and
for state prohibition. He then told of the
possibility of law enforcement and argued
that the matter oould be handled with a
great ease aa now holds with the enforce
ment of the S o'clock closing law. The
minister at the elose asked for a sub
scription to th campaign fund.
Snaneet Arrested,
John Sweeney and Dow Thompson were
arrested yesterday on suspicion. They
were found at the Rex hotel and appeared
mysterious to the management so much
o that th police were called. They were
able to give no satisfactory account of
themselves. The police are holding them
pending a possible report from some of
the western cities which may Involve them.
MasTlo City Uoutf,
Mis Lot Lewis Is, visiting friend at
Persia, la. " "
Th. city council meet thl evening in
adjourned session. ' '.
Carl Kemer Is able tV be -eut again after
n attack of appendldtia.
William O. Melohiorson i broke hi arm
Friday by falling on an (cy walk.
Misa Loretta Moou.y . expect to visit
Denver this week, leaving Wednesday.
Jetter' Oold Top Beer, delivered to anv
part of city. Kred -Hef f linger. Tel. South l&U
Mrs, Alfred DeLanney of St. Louis Is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. DeLanney.
L. F. Dolexal has opened a new grocery
and meatmarket at Twenty-fifth and N
street.
Dana Van Dusen of Lincoln, a student
of the University, is paying a short visit
at home.
i Mis Madge Sturrock 1 reported 111 at
the home of her parents. Twenty-third and
C street.
Mr. W. M. Doty and son, James, have
gone to Falls City, Neb., for a visit with
relatives. '
J. L. Duff and family are vlatting a(
Creston, Ia., the occasion being a golden
wedding of relatives.
Miss Esther Tell haa gone on a visit to
Oakland, Neb. She la visiting her sister,
Mrs. Harry Bradley.
The auxiliary to the .Young Men' Chris
tian association meet on Tuesday after
noon with Dr. and Mr. William Berry.
Offerman Bros, will at onoe Install th
drinking fountain offered by th National
Humane Alliance at Twenty-alxth and L
streets.
Timothy Sullivan of Boston la visiting
his friends and relatives In this city. He
was formerly a resident here, but la now
In the government service at Boston.
Anti-Hazing
.Regulations
Drastio Set of Bule Adopted for
Government of West Point
Cadets.
NEW YORK, Jan. SL-r-Stlll another et of
regulation ta govern har.ng at Vet
Point will go Into effect her thl week.
The now regulation are even more drastic
than any hitherto adoptud and provld that
the most trivial annoyance of underclass
men hall bring aummary suspension.
Violence is barred, a in the past, but in
addition It ia specified that "any cadet
who shall compel or permit an under
classman to perform for him any menial
service or to do . anything incompatible
with the position of a cadet and gentle
man shall be summarily suspended and
turned back to Join th next clans."
New Victor Records Are la.
Several new contributors and many new
records from the old standby, make th
month' output of th Victor Phonograph
company uual. If not superior to that of
th previous month.
Among the new records, "Badinage," by
Victor Herbert, played by the Vienna
quartette attract special attention. It I
light,' airy and haa an undercurrent of
laughter and spring sephyrs which maka
on forget hi trouble and listen for th
bird. Happy LU Sal. a new dialect ong,
by Carrie Jacobs ' Bond, and sung by
Elisabeth Wheeler I another along the
same line. Sal laugh and sing and la
happy because "She ain't got no time to
bother bout herself." .
"When Mallndy Sings." by Dunbar, I a
sermonette Interspersed with snatches of
old hymns, by J. A. Myr of th Flak
Jubilee singers, and la strongly permeated
with the strong religious sentiment of th
southern darky. Jt la very well done.
Th grand - opera records, of whloh
Schumann-Helnk ia on of th star, are
fully up to th high standard t by th
Victor people.
Probably th record ot th graateat in
terest to the people cf Omaha at th pres
ent time are those by Harry Lauder.
There ar fifteen of these and there. Is no
need to say that they ar all good.' Th
whole effect la on of uauauaj quality in
the month' output.
Vegetables
But Mother's Cereals Can
Look at this table below.
6teak. See where vegetables stand on the list.
PERCENTAGE OF NUTRITION IN FOODS t
MOTHER'S OATS . UX."; '..,'.:!!. "'" 'i v " .S
SIRLOIN STEAK
mam
MUTTON . . .
WHITE OR BLUEFISH 1. J U.
BREAD :.---'.-r.r"i'2 y,-,:;.7J M"i
rice ; . g.-s.Tsss2sai sy0
POTATOES. . . . :.r2.i '
ONIONS ilirl 1.4'
Vegetables refresh temporarily. They ratten, but thev do not give the energy and
endurance which every man and woman, and child must have the energy and endur
ance that meats give, and Matter's Oats give.
If you're boycotting meat or cutting down on tho amount you buy, cat the only
real substitute Mother s Cereals.
A. Mother's
18 Packages, 8 Different Cereals
; forOnly $1.95
A Mother's Kit contains a complete assortment of the most delicious cereal foods
made from the big, fat, sun-ripened kernels of selected crops. - Every perfected product
of wheat, oats and corn, all packed in sanitary, sealed, weather-proof packages. A
nourishing, pleasing food for every palate and every meal, and enough to last a big family
a montti. ' V' "; .
Here's good food that every member of your family will like. It's so good that
you'll forget all about meat being high priced so good you won't miss the meat. A'
Mother's Kit contains
S package Mother' Oats (Standard Site)
2 package Mother' Yellow Corn Meal
1 package Mother's Whit Corn Meal
1 package Mother's Wheat Hearts (the Cream
of th Wheat)
Cut Down Your
Fuel Bill, Too.
J - - - j t o y
prefer not to wait to save the coupons, buy a Mother's Kit, take the Special Fireless
Cooker Certificate and the 18 package coupons to "your, grocer, with only 89 cents, and
get your fireless cooker right away. It cooks things better, saves hours of work and worry
every day and saves 80 per cent of the fuel bill besides, . '
All the best grocers everywhere sell Mother's Oats and other Mother's Cereals. II
your grocer doesn't, send us his name and yours and we will send you a', useful sou
venir free. But buy a Mother's Kit today from some grocer. '.
THE GREAT WESTERN CEREAL COMPANY
OrXHtATTKO MORS OATMaUL HILLS TH AK ANT OTHER ONI OONCE1UI. I
, Railway Exchange Bldg Chicago.
Cost ot Living
S oaring Upward
Even in Italy
Vice President 0'Hern of American
Catholio College in Borne Says
Poor Suffer Most.
Father Charles A. O'Hern, vice president
of th American Catholio college at Rome,
tossed aside a paper he sat reading In th
home' of an Omaha brother.
"In Italy, In America, th cry every
where 1 "th high cost of living.'
"Now over In Italy things are different,
tn the strangely contradictory situation
that the rich can live ' cheaply, while
necessities cost the poor very dearly. Of
eourse, It Is only relative, you understand.
The luxuries, as compared with their
price here, are cheap, the necessities ex
pensive. One can live at the hotels In
very fine style for less than the equivalent
of $6 a day. To buy salt one pays 6 cents
pound and for sugar 12 cents, which you
see make them even higher than the
high price here."
"There the high price are caused as
much by government monopolies area by
any one factor. Th proposition to increase
the price ot eome ot the commodities was
auSssissiSSiis
iiiisiiiiiii'iis
i jf - aa;ir.K '- .-r- is1 1 'tt r---a t r i II t I 1 1 I I f 1 1 l I
vif a i iyi nirni? xi iy y-wu m m m i m t-
Will YOU Accept This Instant
C EN'D us your name en a postal.
We will rnnil you cample of
lionaon catarrhal jelly frr'.
At All Druggists J
25c and 50c
Sanitary
Tubes, or
Sample
FREE
'.;'
I un,i, list r;irs?,'t jiiJ: t
Can't Replace Meat
Mother's Oats arc. more nourishing than the best beef-,
t&xr'rr&rrrrZ'ZT -" . .
. r jrrrri-r.rTT!-T:s5f -n nr.-1.?
.rsra.?:r;r?Tr;r
1 package Mother's Corn Flakes (Toasted) ,
1 package Mother's , Old-Fashlonad Steel Cut
oatmeal
2 packages Mother's Grits (Granulated Ilomlny)
2 packages Mother's Pearl Ilomlny (Coarse)
So that all users of Mother's Oats and other Mother's CereaW
may have the best way to cook the best cereals, we give away
a splendid $3.75 Fireless Cooker free with 125 Mother's Cereal
rniinnns. '1 ruare' ft ronkpr rotirori in evp.rv nackarc." If YOU
the cause of the downfall of on prominent
official. Th poor are making their pro
test heard.
"Father O'Hern has not been long
enough In Europe to forget hla interest in
America. He came to Omaha Sunday to
speed a few hour with hi brother, John
O'Hern. 1622 North Twenty-fourth (treat.
South Omaha, superintendent for th Ar
mour Packing, company. H lft yester
day afternoon for th east and wilt soon
depart for Rome.
"It waa amusing to those : Italians
watch the Dr. Cook controversy," - said
Father 1 "O'Herti. " ;"They considered his
final exposure a showing him to be typi
cally American."
"Oh. my Initials? Why, Is thl an Inter
view?" exclaimed the young priest No,"
I haven't anything to say," he declared
modestly. :.
"Wa used to call him Charlie befor he
got to be vice president ' of the college,"
Whispered his brother.
CHOKED TO DEATH ON STEAK
PlttsbertT Man Who Refsaed to Join
Meat Boyco -""ets Sodden
.i'd.
PITTSBURG, Jan. 81. A doien foreigner
discussed th. meat boycott at breakfaat
In a Mulberry alley boarding house today
and all except "Mia" Skovlac, a Slav,
agreed to eat no meat. ' Rkovlac, delighted
with having the breakfast steak to htm
e,lf. tftrkled It so v'nli"it'y thn be choked
to death with tbe first mouthful..
Enough for sevcrnl day' tree t ment.
Enough to prove to you conclusively
that It I th most mitrvclous remedy (or
catarrh, th pleasantcst, infest, most
soothing and healing method for the
treatment of this foul dless.o.
Kondoa' Catarrhal Jelly I applied
directly on the raw surfaces.
Reduce th thickened membranes,
atop abnormal discharges, clesrs tho
nasal psssar.es for easy, natursl breath
ing. and permits the air to pass through
tho lungs over healthy surfaces.
That Is tho ioclcal way to cure ca
tarrh Dr. Kondon way.
You would not apply salt water ta a
wound nor spray it with a violent medl-
Ask Your Physician or Druggist
cine which would burn, itch and irritate
the raw places;
r or the sam reaton you should stop
th us of sprays, snuffs, douches and
atomiser (or catarrh. The delicate
lining o( th nasal passage is rv, In
flamed sor from th action of th ca
tarrh germs.
'Kondon' Catarrhal Jelly is toothing,
healing, pleasant od cooling. Apply It
ence and you will have Instant relief.
Continued use, three time a day, will
effect a permanent, safe and speedy cur
e( Catarrh, Catarrhal Ueafnets, Hay
Fever, Asthma. Cold In th Head, Ca
tarrh of th Stomach, or any complica
tion resulting from chronic Basal catarrh.
Kondon MIq. Co.,
FREE
at eref let's
f ttrtttM
FREE
atsxxfWs
r sfrtts
- rf
ft .wiiw,UmJ1
i..lWtaA.'l
,"r.llUmim,M
.1
r " m s r t
IS
Promoter. Dying
in Hospital
Man Who Spent Half Million in Two
; Month ia Charity Patient at
Rtvr Orleans.
NEW ORLEANS. Jan. 31. Three day
ago Lewi Tewksbury or rtew Tork pro
posed to promote the building of a $3,000,000
hotel In New Orleans. Tonight he lira In
what I believed te be a dying condition
a a charity patient in a local hospital.
He fell from a bootblack stand her Friday
and sustained a fracture of the skull.
Tewksbury is reputed to have spent
nearly a half million dollar In New Tork
In less than two months. He formerly waa
a druggist In New Hampshire and decided
he would go to , New Tork to make hi
fortune. He. engaged In the brokerag
business. After marrying the widow of hi
former partner he disappeared.
Upon his subsequent reappearanoe h
brought cult to recover $125,000 which sha
alleged he had misappropriated. He Won'
the - ess.
Tewksbury went from 'New Tork to
Mexico. A few days ago he cam to New
Orleans and announced ttmt ho wa plan
ning to erect a hotel here. . .,
Th key to th situation-Bee Want Ada.
ti.s!..Usst4iu!sst..iis
Relief FREE?
Tho blessed relief that even th free
amplo will . bring you will encourage
you to continue in us until a complete
cure Is effected.
You cannot afford 'to neglect nasal
catarrh even in its earlieit ((. It
will not ret better vl Itself. Neslsct ot
cold In the head opens th way lor th
attack ot th catarrh germ. ,
Over 10.000.000 packages of thl won
drful remedy hav been sold in 16 years
Thousand hav testified to It merit la
unsolicited letters. Raliils:
1 Seattle, Wash.
Oenllemenif hav had a bad oold sod
Catarrh in tbe bead lor months. I hav
beea to a good doetor and had ii treated,
but did cot est much relief, sol heard ol
your Catarrhal Jelly and bay used it
(our days, nd im Ads ia the hU.
Plsas send me a lr sample of PUssse.
B.O. 6THWART.
Remember, that Kondoo's Catarrhal
Telly Is sold by over 8o,000 druggist in
the United State but if yours doe not
have It, send to u (or 2$c or 60c lube
(stamp er coin), and v will mail al
ence, postpaid. Tbe 60c aise contain
thre time much the S5c slic.
Every package 1 sold under our abso
lute guarantee of satisfaction or money
refunds;, bend for (re sample today.
Rilnncapolls. Minn.
FREE
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