Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 08, 1911, WOMAN'S SECTION, Page 8, Image 36

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T1IK OMAHA SUNDAY 11KK: JANUARY 8. 1011.
P
0(D)(0)
p
off F. H. Peterson & Co.. $!""!"s-
T7
it MorrhanHIcoTrancf or Morfa
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TT TT IT 77 IT
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At
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Draperies, Stoves and General Merchandise
Selling the whole stock without reservation and in our well known liberal way, with this proviso only. That all purchases shall
be for cash it should be enough to crowd this store to its doors.
The Peterson Stock has come to us through a cash purchase at 45c on the dollar. It will be disposed of by us at same
ratio. The fact that our own spring stocks are alrcady in transit makes it only more imperative that wc give this extra purchase
immediate outlet, thus:
Our profit is almost entirely good will. Your profit is 55c for every dollar spent.
Original Peterson Prices will be attached to every piece. A Greater Furniture
Sale than this has never been. Your Benefits Are Simply Tremendous.
UR regular goods,
the lowest possible
figure, will be sold
on easy terms
as usual.
METHODIST JJNITY POSSIBLE
Five Million Members of Sect in
Three Bodies.
C0MITTEES ARE NOW AT WORK
'Armed fsn-.p" Principle aa Brtirrta
Roman Caluollca and Anglican
Communions Discussed Freely
ky Church Paper.
By T. V. FRANCIS.
NEW YORK. Pec. SI (Special to The
pee ) Thnt there 1. a chance for the
three great branches of th. Methodist
thurch In the I'nlted Slate, to get together
Is regarded as more than probable. There
are 6.000,000 Amer'can Methodist, now sep
arated in three bodies. They are the Meth
odists North, they Methodists South and
the Methodist Protestants. Combined, they
are 95 per cent of all white Methodists la
this country, all other large Methodist
bodies being; negToes.
The general conferences of these three
bodies appointed committees of nine and
twenty-six of the twenty-seven members
)iave recently held a meeting in Baltimore.
Jt is recognised that there sr. irravo diffi
culties In the way of such consolidation
ard a special committee was appointed
to thrssh out some of thec proh
leins. The Methodist Protestants, for In
rtunce, have no bishops. The larpe colored
membership in the Methodist Fplscopat
church anil their representation In the gen
eral conference Is another hindrance. In
the minds of soma puriies, to the pact.
AsrerM ot Impossible.
It la hoped by all. however, that this
com mission will be able to find some basis
of union, and while tha process will be
slow there :s strong hope of the successful
termination ofthe negotiations.
The outcome of this committee meeting
sai the naming of a subcommittee that ls(
to riKrt on January 10, calling toother,
If need be. the full committee. The aim Is
to get. If possible, a working plan of union
that may b presented for adoption by the
next general conference of thrs. bodies.
An unusual high standard has
always been upheld by F. H. Peter
Son & Co. Theirs has been always
quality merchandise.
$50,000 Stock of Fine
ways priced at
Organic union Is not. however, talked
about In these words, some people belns
frightened by the term. The new expres
sion adopted by the Baltimore meeting is
"unification through reorganisation."
Members of the subcommittee on whom
devolves a momentous move are: Meth
odists North, Bishop Cranston, the Rev.
Dr. J. F. Goucher, Mr. R. T. Miller of
Cincinnati: Methodists South, Bishop Hobs,
the Rev. Dr. F. M. Thomas of Louisville,
Mr. M. L. Walton of Woodstock, Va.;
Methodists Protestants, President T 11.
Lewis of the general conference, the Rev.
Dr. N. L. Jennings of Pittsburg, Mr. S. II.
Harris of Henderson, N. C.
Anglicans and Roman.
"It Is too often taken for granted that
the Anglican and Roman comtnunl'ins can
only maintain a position of unfriendliness
toward one another. "There is hesitation,"
says the New York Churchman (Protestant
h'piscopii i). "even to speak of an era of
that conciliation and good-will which
should mark Christians who. In so many
ways, have a I'ke point of view on funda
mental doctrine and alike maintain the
broad principles of historic continuity. The
'armed camp' principle la no longer satis
factory, even in formal pronouncements,
nor can the general tendency of friend
liness. Interest and sympathy that Is wit
nessed In bo many of the formal and
Informal relations between Anglican and
Roman Catholics be contiavened l.y gen
eralizations based on a part of the facts.
Kvldenct. of cordial ty am Known to al
most every observer. But no such effective
, witness of Its existence has been published,
so far as we know, as the volume that has
lately I r .i w ritten by th. well-known
Kngllsh theologian. Y. A 1-aeey. Mr.
Lacey, with Father Puller, undertook an
Informal mission to confer with some of
th. highest authorities of the Roman
church on th ) question of Anglican orders.
The whole atmosphere of the book shows
that the struggles, prejudice, and antipa
thies of sectarian fanaticism in the nine
teenth century have 'not been abl. to de
stroy the basic principles of Christian
comity and Christtun sympathy on cither
side."
I'nder th. direction of the Assumption
Father, the thirty-first pllgi1niue of tn-
1513-1515 Howard
itents will sail for the Holy Land aboard
a Fabre liner on March 4. Already forty
prominent Canadian and American Roman
Catholics have booked passage and there
is now room for only ten more to make up
the American delegation.
The first stop n the itinerary of the pil
grims, will be made at Marseilles, where
the Court de Plellat, commander of the
Order'of St. Sepulchre and St. Gregory and
founder of the Hospital of St. IxuiB, will
meet the party. From there the steam
yacht FUtile will take them to Port Said,
Cairo, Jaffa, Jerusalem, Calffu, Nazareth.
Mount Carmel, Galilee, Tlberlade, Mount
Taboi Damascus, Baalbek, Beyrout. Con
stantinople, blessed by a representative of
the pope, and at Rome the pilgrims will
receive the blessing of the Holy Father.
Those of the party who wIpIi to return
to America from Naples will sail on the
Sant Anna on May 9; the others will com
plete the ninety-day pilgrimage by going
on to Paris, London and Liverpool.
tleritr Hellef Fnnd.
The first triennial report of the J5. 000.000
geneial clergy relief pension fund commis
sion of the Kplscopal churcfi has Junt been
ixsued. Owing to difficulties Incident to
organization, It Is pointed out that the
commission actually had less than two
years for th. active prosecution of its
work; yet results are reported as follows:
Flfty-nln dlcesan auxiliaries were estab
lished: more than 150.00U leaflets were
distributed; more than &0.U00 miles' travel
was recorded, M8 sermons were preached,
and forty-nine addresses were delivered;
and cash contributions and pledges were
secured from .Ighty-four dioceses and mis
sionary districts "literally from Maine to
Panama and from Alaska to the gulf." All
this was In addition to creating a new and
deeper interest in the whole subject of
clergy pension and relief and to obtaining
the practical co-operation of many bishops
and ether clergy.
Reports are summarised thus: Total
Cash contributions and pledges" paid,
ilf. 077; individual pledges not yet due,
S&,0K; conditional pledges, $t.f0; due on
diocesan resolution, Sl0!t.&4. making a total
of cash and pledges of ..t7. Of this
sum. f lO6.0"O has been paid over to the
treasurer ofl the general cleigy relief fund.
I'llJlUMUllUIJOllUlUlM 1'lUUb
,
Rubel Furniture Company Pur
chases Entire Stock of F. H.
Peterson & Company.
On of the lariat rivals in Minneap
olis Dullness circles in several years
was consummated yesterday when the
nunei furniture company, 1:11.31 Hlxth
siret eouin, ruircnaneri toe entire Mock
of h.. II. Peterson & Co., who are re-
tiring from business. The latter firm
nag Deen located Here for several years.
Their store is at 73 Sixth street south.
A large number of clerks are at
present taking inventory and it is esti
mated that the sale will amount to
$30,000. The eiact sum is not vet
known. Seven well-stocked floors and
a basement will all have to be gone
over by the men employed to help com
plete the transfer.
Frank D. Rubel, president of the
Rubel Furniture company, speaking or
the sale, said: "Our firm was, indeed,
fortunate in obtaining this large stock
of Jf II. Peterson & Co. This firm has
been located in Minneapolis for many
years and the quality of their merchan
dise is well known to the purchasing
public of the Twin Cities. In addi
tion to the seven sample floors and
basement, their warehouse contains a
large araonnt of high-class merchan
dise. "We have secured this stock at such
a price that we are enabled to offer
furnishings for the home at a very low
price. The Peter so 4 stock is now be
ing removed to our store and as soon
at placed upon the floor we will inau
gurate a furniture sale such as has
never been witnessed in the history of
merchandising in the Northwest.'1
From Minneapolis Tribune. Dec. 30, 1910.
Furniture. Garnets.
These figures, the report says, while far
from the total net as a mark, are encour
aging: "We have not attained the 15.000,000
goal; no sane man supposed w. would at
tain It In the trlennlum. But we have be
gun to attain It. Foundation, have been
laid, a beginning has been made, and It
is a beginning of which we are not
ashamed."
Cbnrth and ftorlallam.
"We believe that there is hardly a
clergyman In this land who would not be
come a socialist tomorrow," say. the New
York Kvangellst (Pres.), "could he see
plainly that It would bring In the kingdom
of goodwill, happiness and Justice. On the
other hand, did Christianity have the real
spirit of Christ it would not permit some
terrible things to exist. It has the money,
had It only the spirit, and. it has some
methods at hand which it could use at
once, had It the passion for the un
shepherded world its master had. Some
how, in some way. the church, were It
really Christian, would insist that business
be so reorganised that gltis would not be
driven onto streets, as they are In great
cities, to take out ln.uffle.lent' incomes;
that men would not have to work for
wages on which families cannot decently
subvlst. that men would not have to live
with poverty only a day of f If work fall, or
sickness comes, and with constant dread
of an uncared-for old age. Many Chris
tians are doing everything In their power
to relieve this condition of things. Many
employers are making . employes co-operators
and establishing pension systems.
But so long a. this terrible stat. of things
persists in the heart-sickening degree it
now doe. In our great cities, and still more
In the cliles of Kurope, Christianity is not
completely Christian."
Perslutent Advertising is th. Road to
Big Returns.
iaronalu lias Woman Treasurer.
Mrs. Nellie Archibald of Ashland. Wis.,
has been elected treasurer of Ashland
county. Jhe la the only woman in Wis
consin to hold such an office. he de
feated tne two opposing candidate, about
two to one at the poll.. Mr.. Archibald
is the widow of a former county treasurer
and acted aa his deputy for several years.
Hie is an expert accountant.
f dTl Tf
IX 2111 (J JUL
You know our business methods,
and when we state that wc will place
on sale at 9 o'clock Monday morning
5
Street.
HOW MILLIONS ARE WASTED
Fortunes that Slipped Thraogh Some
body's Fingers Because of Dis
carded Scraps.
Toward the cloe ofthe year somebody
or other of a mathematical or frugal turn
of mind begin, to figure out how much
we might have saved had we begun invest
ing our pennies, in oil and wine at the
beginning of the year. Thin time it Is John
T. Shaffer, inventor of labor-saving and
waste-preventing devices of Rochester, N.
Y., who lead. th. van with Interesting fi
nancial statistics of what might have been.
Mr. Shaffer, by the way, was the first
man to put wire into glass for practical
commercial purposes, thereby causing a
saving In bill, for broken glass. He also
applied the pneumatic cushion to our
bumpers for the reduction of shock In re
bound, thereby causing a saving In nerves.
His great hobby for thirty years has been
a study of the conservation of wasted as
set, of the industrial world. According
to data compiled by him, many millions of
dollar, were simply thrown away during
1910 because we let them dribble through
our fingers. He has more statistics on the
waste problem than probably any othw
man In the country. Of the long list of
material, most grossly wasted In America
corn cobs, oily waste, cornstalks, sugar
cane stalks and waste leather straps
are perhaps the most valuable when scien
tifically treated for conservation.
According to Mr. Schaffer, the lubricat
ing loxes on railroad car wheels are one
great source of unci.nserved wealth. There
are 10.249.4A2 car wheel, in the I'nlted State,
on its passenger and freight ars and loco
motives. They require, on an average,
thirty gallon, of oil per year, which
makes the annual consumption of oil for
our car and engine wheels alone 3O7,43,KO0
gallons.
To souk up this ast amount of lubricator
M. -47,310 pounds of waste are used, or
an average of five pounds to each wheel.
A demonstration of saving oil from wast,
used was made by Mr. Schaffer, and from
sixty pounds of th. oily waste .even KSl
lon. and one quart of oil woe agueexed.
If. on the average, 1W pounds of wast,
produce, eight gallon, of oil, the amount
T7T7
U
Rugs, Curtains,
UT of town custo
mers contempla
ting the purchase of
of Housefurnishings
will save money by
visiting this city
and this sale.
possible to save from the oily waste used
by the railroads of the I'nlted States In
one year would reach the total of 4.097,784
gallons, and at an average price of only
33'. cents per gallon It. cash value would,
be 1, 35,595.
Discarded corncobs are another neglected
source of wealth. Mr. Schaffer claims that
they can be converted Into wood block in
many forms, the most valuable of which
are lumber, railroad ties and the basis of
many kinds of furniture. He estimate,
that this year's crop of approximately
3,000,000.000 bushels would produce 1.660.000.000
bushels of cobs on the basis of 66 per cent
cob, and these pressed into boards would
yield 412.000.000 ties, which would be enough
for 13.783 miles of railroad. The cobs of the
1910 yield would. If pressed Into lumber,
make. InO solid pile. th. size of the Pulitzer
building.
Of the neglected and undeveloped sources
of wealth of this country peat Is foremost.
Some of the richest peat deposits in the
world are around Black Lake, St. Law
rence county. New Yorki The Ureal Dis
mal swamp of Virginia is worth more than
many gold mines. Cape Kllzabeth. Maine,
has a great vein of peat, located three
year, ago by the I'nlted State, geological
survey. There are vast quantities In the
Dekotas. Minnesota. Wisconsin. Mlchlxan.
the New Kngland states, and their total
value, at 13 per ton, has been estimated by
federal experts at HX.0o0.000.0ii0. One of the
most successful uses to which peat has
been put Is In the production of gas. It
has been used by the Notla Steel works In
Sweden for thirty ears for the making of
gas, and from 13.000 to 16.0u0 cubic yards
of dry kneaded peat are used for gaa
maklng annually. Peat gas is used In sev
eral psrts of Kurope for glass melting and
furnaces.
A ton of dry peat will yield forty-three
gallons of alcohol when treated with sul
Pi uric acid and a special yeast, and the
alcohol will cost about one-fourth what
potato alcohol does. Tar Is also a product
of peat. The use of eat for fuel la known
lb. world over, and peat brlckleta have
proved successful In Kurope. New York
World.
Where He Pell Don n.
Ilarv.y K. (iirnun is private secretary
to Representative Huiker and a demo
cratic in era her of th. legislature from Den
Th
It
4
ver. He was once a newspaper man, but
got discouraged early In his career.
"I worried along aa a reporter for a
week." say. Mr. tlarman. "1 didn't get
anything very startling Into the columns
of my paper, It's true, but at the end of
the first week I thought my fortune was
made. One of my friends told me of th.
Intended elopement of a girl of prominent
family. She was going to marry a man
much below her in social poult ion It was
an event that would set the town hv the
ears, and I told my city editor I had a
sensation to sprlnv on a set date. After
the date had passed he asked me about It.
" "Oh. It', all off now.' I answered. Th.
story Is dead.'
" 'What's the matter?' he asked. "What
was It about?'
"I told him of Hie projected elopement
and added: 'Rut there's nothing In It
now. The girl's father showed up with a
shotgun and spoiled the story.'
"After the rltv editor had finished com
menting on my 'news senm-.' " Mr. Oarnian
said. "I decided to fo-eMake journalism for
politics." Philadelphia Times.
Women Office Holder. In Kngland.
There are now sixteen women member
of town councils as the results of recent
municipal elections In KnKland.
T
MAKES ROUGH SKINS
SOFT AND PINK
"Specialists say alien powder or cos
metic are used for any great period tli.
skin's surface becomes dry utid scaly and
often a pimply condition follows," say.
Mrs. Mae Martin, In the New Voik Kx
amlner. "The reason Is plain. powder tends,
to clog the pore", mvl when these organ,
of elimination are hampered, trouble fol
lows. "Many women now U a liquid, which,
spreads evenly and smoothly and give,
more satisfactory results than any pow
der or cosmetic.
"A splendid and inexpens ve lotion can
he made at home by dissolving 4 ounces
of spurmax in l pint of hot water,
then adding 2 teaspoonful. glycerine.
"Tills rej-pe Is very popular In ex
clusive social circles, and Its use soon
produce, that pink and whit, glow of
health." Adv.
N
V
Ss
V