Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 26, 1912, Page 7, Image 7
rilE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY, JANUABY 2ti. 1912. BRIEF CITY NEWS sUt Boot Mat it 0 . aTatasaa, Bajgsaa Qranaea. ttim I Tim Itaaaytariaa Caataa will aenw chicken pi lunch Friday. 11 M to 1:1. 15c aaakl ta cot Booth'a Guaranteed Canned Oyster of jour dealer, call Douglaa : tor iMrut dealer's nunc , Wa" ta Ore Card rasty-St C ciiiaa court. W. C. O. S.. win give a card party Friday aflernoon at Barights I ill. . J far Bolaed Cult Mini Ra te!! Marquette, proprietor of th LaSalle J nolo), has started an actios In district court to make th United State Cleaning company par her MS for a handaome woman suit, which aha say K rulnad while attempting to clean It for her. Kara Anal tori am Stock Donated Clay, ltobinson Co. hold tha record of do ; natlng tha largeat number ot nharea of stock in the Auditorium to tha eliv. i They cava donated S share, accompa nied by certificate. Thia Increase th total donation to 1519H shares. Other donor are: W. J. Broatch, 13 (hares; alary Fitch. H si arcs. Xw Mora CaadldatM for Offlca Two mor candidatea for commissioner hav filed with th city clerk, making; a total ot eight filings. George M. Scliofield and 'John Grant tiled their blanks with th proper number of signatures yesterday. Two mora tommtnionerahlp blank have been taken ou one by John J. Donovan and the other y Christ Jansen. Tw Tina Located Kara Ell W. Grara- ll'-h. employed In' tha Klllnc department of th Drexel 8ho company tor tha last sixteen year and for many year on of that company head salesmen, has re signed his position to become general western agent tor tha Austin-Peterson Shoe company of Rockford, III. Mr, Oramlleh's headquarter will b la Omaha. Ha has leased1 off! lea at M Be building. sTorberg Celetrates Birthday John Norberg. bailiff for Judge George A. Day of th district court, celebrated hi fifty-fourth birthday yesterday. Mr. Norberg has been a district court bailiff for twenf 3ve year. H start ad under former Judge Neville In 18SC and ha on th Job continuously alnca the. He served nin year under tha lata sf. K. Hopewell and when H. H. Baidrtge was county attorney acted as his mesn(r and at the same time performed hi du tie as bailiff. Loyal Myrtle t Xaitlata Th Omaha branch of th Loyal ilyitlo lglon of America will Initiate a claas at titty new member this evening at tha Ancient Order ot t'nited Workmen tempi, Ms) North Fourteenth street. John W. Do ran, an Omaha man who baa for a dose a year been Insurance organiser with sev eral fraternal Insure no organisation ha taken charge of the field men at th Loyal Mystic Legion and will be present at this class Initiation. Their headquar ters are at Hasting, and they operate In nearly all the central, western and Pacific coast states. Moonlight Waltz is Put Under Ban by the Chief of Police ' Chief of Police Donahue has discovered another form of amusement among th habitue of th dance halt which ha ha ordered aquelehed forthwith. This la ta . . ki .. .. . . .r . ik. 'cncrisnea inoonngnt wans, wnen sue lights are turned out and tha dancers glide through th number In th twilight. ' - "If Just aa bad a tha 'bear hug and th 'grixsly bear and tha Texas grind.' " said Chief Donahue, whoa education la dance hall lor I being rounded with a complete poatgradust course. "And It will have to be slopped. I'm surprised at th practlo and at those who prac tice It. It I most common at th un chaperoned dance of th younger pea pie." ' Co-operaUng with dance hall proprie tors Chief Donahue I preparing a eard of 'Instruction to dancers." Thl card, forbidding obnoxious dance, will be ; posted on th walla of all th forty-seren dance hall In the city. Following th posting of the Instruc tion an ordinance will be drafted pro viding for licensing dance hall. It th "card ot Instructions" Is not effective this ordinance will be at eno Introduced before the council. However, th police believe that dance hall proprietor will be able to control the situation without the passage ot any new ordinances. . Miss Carlyle Tells About Farmer's Wife ' Farm women are nothing If not prac tical," said Mia Mabel Carlyle ot the Twentieth Century Fanner, before the household economics department of the Women club yesterday morning. In tell ing ot th Nebraska Home Kconomk-s association, which meet Jointly with the farmer, when the latter hold their week of Organised Agriculture. Eh said that th purpose of the organisation la to study domestic economy and th child. Miss Carlyle slated that prejudice of the farm woman against club Is gradually breaking down, and that much good Is being dune by them toward th science ot household economy and th proper rear ing of children. Harness Maker Dies While jitHis Work Frank Cuber. about 6 year ot ace, was found dead In hi harness shop at 2M Cuming street, shortly after noon yesterday, death supposedly having been caused by heart failure. Tha coroner Is making an Investigation. Cuber la said to be a thirty-third degree .Mason. He cam to Omaha from Cedar Rapids about thirty two years ago, and as far a Is known he does not have any relatives. He Jived alone in Hie rear of his Cuming street shop, where be hsd been located for the last seventeea years. COMPLAINTS FILED FOR SALE OF ADULTERATED MILK Dairy Inspector C. F. Bout has filed two complaints in police court against A. F. Anderson, proprietor of the Puritan Dairy company located at Sixtieth and Graver street chanting htm with eel ting adulterated milk and also with soiling milk without a ttoense- This if tha first ces of adulterated milk which ha bees brought by Mr. Bosate la almost two year. Bossia said ha refused ta grant An derson a UcEe when fe applied tor H because of the vary unsanitary condition of his dairy. Anorson. however, accord ing ta ta Inspector baa area aM!ng milk, which was amen diluted Irrespee liv at hi failure to secure a license. MAY BE OMAHA MURDERER Jndge Sears Feet Certain Martial! it Slayer of Kiss Eammelliart. 60VERS0B DE8TES JAE01E Velser Tklaks It Weald leap! hie tar Oaa Cassssaaity Have Tw lack Ftewda with Similar Methods. Belief ef Judge Willis G. Sears ot the Douglaa county district court, and the Omaha police department that Bea Mar shall, serving thirty year m th state penitentiary for attempted criminal as sault, la th same negro who murdered Mis Josephine) Rummelhart six year go, ha moved the Stat Board of Pardon and Parol to recommend that Marshall petition for pardon be denied and Gov ernor Aldrich has denied It. Judge Bear was emphatic In hi writ tea statement to the board regarding th Marshall case and asked that what he said go Inta th board' records, so that In future attention might be di rected to It in case tha pardon applica tion should be renewed. Marshall, a negro, waa tried three year ago on two charge ot attempted assaults upon whit women. In eaoh he wa convicted and sentenced to fifteen year In th penitentiary, tha term to b cumulative. Tan year before ha was charged with attempted assault upon a mil negro girl. Ha pleaded guilty to aome minor charg and escaped with a ugiit sentence. Mlsa Mwataselhart Killed. Mis Josephine Rummelhart, 0 years old, a member of th Scandinavian Young women's Christian association, was found dying In a dooryard at Twenty sixth and Dodge street on Saturday night, October i. lttt. She had bee struck over th head with a board and her throat appeared to have been slightly cut. Later It waa learned that ah had been strangled with a rope by a negro. He never waa tndentlfled. The rope strangulation method was employed by Marshall when he attacked th two women for assaulting, whom he I servlr.g time. The opinion of the state pardon board, prepared by John 0. Telser, a board member, I In part as follows: , W find nothing to even suggest exe cutive elemeney. On th contrary, th police Inform me that there waa still a third case In which he eould hava been convicted for aasault upon a white woman. In th cases la which he was convicted ha wee Indentlfied. In addi tion to thl. th brutal degenerate fea tures ot than crime ot personal violence, calculated to render tha victim uncon scious and then to drag them away, are so similar to th manner ot tha Rum melhart murder that petit loner waa gen erally suspected of that crime. It la not likely that any community would have within Its border two such degenerate orlmlnal with th same fiendish plan ot action. Th trial Judge (Judga Sean) teeK that the matter should be placed In tha record aa that In tha futura at tention should be directed to them In case ot renewed application. - Charities Speakers to Attend Luncheon Mea who will be her to address the Nebraska State Conferano ot Chanties and Co tract! on will be th speakers at the aest luncheon "talkfest" of the mu nicipal affair committee of tho Commer cial club, which has been postponed from Friday ta Monday. One ot tha poakr wilt be J. M. Han. son, secretary of tha charity organisa tion society ot Toungstowa. O. Victor Roeewater of th charities endorsement committee of the club will preside. DATES ARE FIXED FOR MISSION SUMMER SCHOOL Th data for tha Women' Missionary federation, composed at women at the Omaha churches, has set th date for it summer school tor Jun ft) to ak Th session wll bo held at tha University ot Omaha, a they were last summer. All ot the study clasaea will be held In the af ternoon and tha prog rani In th evening. Among th instructor eecured (or the meeting are Miss Carrie Barge, who class were popular last summer. Bhe will have mission study and BIMe study. Among the evening speakers will be Dr. Shaler Matthew ot th University of Chicago. John Hoye Expires; Engaged Many Years as Contractor Here John Hoye. a resident ot Omaha for thirty years, and until tea year ago engaged m contracting, died Wednesday evening ot heart disease at Wis Memorial hospital. The body, now at Hulse t Kle pen' undertaking establishment, will be moved Saturday afternoon at I o'clock to th home of Fred H. Hoy. DM Oak street, where funeral service will b conducted Sunday afternoon at t o'clock by Dr. T. J. Mackay. The funeral wUl be In charge of the brlcknuuon'a union. Mr. Hoy was a native ot London, bom on September 15, lKX He came to this country In 1870. settling Immediately la Omaha. Until he retired ten year ago he was engaged in the contracting business. Beside his wife he I sur vived by nine children all of whom live In Omaha: Fred H. Hoye. Che ties W. Hoy. Richard Hoye, Mr. Charles Semen. Mr. Frank moved. Mrs. John Johnson. Mrs. Guy Wright, Mrs. John Dlckerhoff and Mrs. Emily 4arn. Another Hitch in Teachers' Ballots Sixteen teacher ot Omaha and South Omalia, registered members ot tha Ne braska Teachers' association, hava not received ballot for th voting contest between Omaha and Lincoln for th next convention. Superintendent Graft and ManaKer Psrrlsh ot th publicity bureau ot th Commercial club fear there are mora and If so would Ilk to htv their name. Messrs. Oraff and Vanish and Superln tendent Graham ot South Omaha are try Ing to devise some way to gst a vote for these teachers. Mr. Graham called the secretary of the association by long dis tance telephone and asked him why the teacher bad not received ballot. He re plied that their name were not on th list furnished by Treasurer J. A. Wood ard, who Uvea at Havelock, six niue from Lincoln. Mr. Graham la now trying to get Into communication with air. Woodard. JOHN BARRETT IS TO SPEAK AT THE WASHINGTON DINNER The principal speaker at th annual Washlncton birthday dinner ot the Omaha club this year I t be Hon. John Barrett, director ot the Union of th Pan-American Republic, who has also been American minister to Argentina, Panama and to Columbia. Th other de tails of th program are Hill in a pre liminary state. The banquet will be the tint on under th direction ot Ward M Burgess; th aew president of th club. Harris aw Licenses. The following marriage license recorded today: Nam and Add tees. Mstthew Plechota. fiouth Omaha,.., Annie Biweca, imian.., -i Bert Levell. Fremont, we Klitabeth England. Omaha.......... ll.Mn rmitha Jennie L. Clark. Benson. Neb... James W. Applegat. Omaha. ira Am liunNieet vuwi John Casey, Omaha Mb f. rroll Oniaha - Oould F, Lavndr, Omaha . Helen L. Downing, Omaha were Age. ...M ....-a ....3 ....a . .....H .....M H JU DENTIFRICE wwhaltaeaa-t. M. kaMMe mm. T " " . W-m. la. """I - Uliw, swkMl lakM LaRbgsT racKAcTs or Lumraicg OX MABXET. tv. TIM Hm let. m - w. EACH SIDE HS ITS STORY Union Pacific and Union Official Differ ai to KeporU. STjUOBS SAT THEY A1E TOM Easplarere Mepart Men mm Retarw lag ta 'Vark aad Candttlaae Are Left Jaat the Officials ef th Urdo Pacific aay that many at tha striking shopmen are return ing to work. Officials ex tha unions en gaged In th strike say that practically none of their men are deaertuxg. Th Union pacific officials say that none ot the strike breakers are being let out. Th union officials say that this I tru so fsr aa It applle t tha really skilled mechanics, but that large number of th unskilled mea wrm wen employed t the beginning ot th strike are being dismissed. Sam Grace, dlstrlot secretary ot the mschlnlsts' union, save that but two machinist hava deaerted the union In th last two months, and that but twenty eight have gon back In tha four months since th strike commenced. He says that so fsr as ha known th other union are remaining as firm. Ona machinist re turned to work for th Union Paclflo this week and ona ca worker went back ta the Illinois Central. MANUFACTURERS SELECT DIRECTORY CANDIDATES Fourteen Dominations, from which aix director will be selected en February I. a ere mad by tha Omaha Manufacturer' asBodttlon at y eater day's asrettag. The names are J. a Blaacxaard, Alfred Btooav R. U Carter, C B. Coleman. A. J. Eggerss, F. I. Klllck. A. W. Gordon. A. Kletasa. F. D. Paraser. a H. Sevlck. A. J. Vlerung. M. D. Wecca and F. K. Zdler. ICE STILL IS SELLING AT FORTY CENTS A HUNDRED Though Ice xeea will not state s early In th season what the price at ten will be Bxt summer. It may be not more thaa tt cent per let pounds, ennelderiag th tact that th lea house are full and that Ir waa aold at X and 41 cents la former years ot full toe houses. Last summer price waa H cent. In October the price waa lowered t 49 cents; that Is, consumer were allowed m par cant rebate ea coupon books bought at tha rata ef cento per N pounds, provided th kill was paid by the Mtbj ot lha month folio whig th pcr chasa, This arraaaeesent (till pre valla. MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN OF THEW.CT.U. HERE SOON The Women's Chris ilea Temperance Union of Omaha will keep tha whit ribbon flying from February N to IT tot thl Is th tlm when th temperance force all over tha country get out after member. Th memberabja campaign la Omaha will close with a memorial cele bration ot tha birthday of Franca Wll lard, th founder ot the union, on Febru ary 17. at tha Touag Womea'a Christian association. Tha federated union ut Omaha, and Benson will gather with th West Sid union as hoatea argaalxatleo. t Bottle After Bottle- The Saci Standard Purity BOTTLE AFTER BOTTLE ku ce molt all sytrcr tana wsxi WHY? Because tha distiller of OarU's Pr Ryt haw used ITS,' b l-rade of gratn. and haw. employed only skilled d-tl Hera, wockinsj in a plant equipped for the dlstiliin-f of our parricular brand. r. F" MH distlUary this brand has made Clark Bro. At Co.. tfaa larEeat wrhistey oittiUert In tha world. It' quality. fUror ffl s!J "!L! mou "-roagixxut the T world. Ititorsad ta bood, auaranhrod by th U.S. Government. 1M proof, and Its purity and quality la not surpassed by any whiskey on the) market. ' Ask for Ciarka's and get tba beat. CIABKE BEOS. A CO.. Fdorla, m. fUVU books o into J good homes, but they cannot long remain there unless they are placed in, cases that protect them from dust and damaging knocks. The Jan- uary clearing sale 'finds this store selling a large number of the fa mous Gunn and Macey sectional bookcases at prices that run from $6 up. The value of either of these makes is unsurpassed. Bookcases of this kind are made by good workmen with an honest purpose. They lack none of the euentiali of good furniture. Each is expressive of true character, high purpose and artistic design. The modern home substitutes the old-fashioned case for the sectional, just as modern industry throws aside obsolete equipment for the more progressire products of the age. In the sectional case there is a combination of convenience, beauty and service thai appeals to every home-lover. For the home of few books three or four sections will suffice now, and these may be added to as the books increase, for the section purchased two or three years hence will match up in every detail with those bought today. We show period styles In these cases. The January sale prices continue until next Thursday. Miller, Stewart & Beaton -THE TAC-POUCY HOUSE" To the Parents of Boys We are now in the midst of one of the best Boys Suit Sales that we've ever had, and we've had soma mighty good ones. We urge every mother or father of a boy to attend this sale. For the benefit of those not acquainted with this store's method of doing busi ness it cannot be too forcibly stated that misrepresen tation or exaggeration is never permitted in a "Ne braska" advertisement-the truth the whole truth is used either in quoting prices or describing merchan dise. Come with the confidence that the values are exactly as stated below. $2.50 Boys' Suits Reduced to $1.50 $3.00 Boys' Suits Reduced to $2.00 $4.00 Boys' Suits Reduced to $2.50 $6.00 and $5 Boys' Suits Reduced lO aVi.efV Omaha's Largest and Best Equipped Clothing Stora The) Favorite Ttyt of Six Generations'' EsUMisaeJ 1884 413-15-17 Sratk Siitftali St Mitt TEA Rivals Coffee for Richness and Surpasses it for Economy. - 300 CUPS TO TEE POUND ONE TEASP00NFUL MAXES TWO CUPS Published by the Growers of India Tea m m wri at a , M 4 times the mellowest 4 times the purest Because 4 times disullecl in copper. (Ordinary wtaawy ami saosa t&an twtoat Bottled in Bond Each bottla is sealed with the U. S. Government Stamp. IU ace Lb guaranteed by the U. 8. Government. Its purity by the Schenley Distilling Company. Its quality apeak for Itself. Vhta you buy Rye. buy 8cbesy. At all 4m1ws, gchspley DtstflUni Company. Laeesco, pa. m Omaha's leading paper The Sunday Bee Contain th fanmUtt comic charaetor$ of tho ag Mutt and Jeff They have made the whole country roar In pink section next Sunday Among other exclusive and brilliant featxtrtt The Sunday Be will have Tour pages of colored comics, the funniest of all; Mm. Una Cavalieri's delectable beauty talk for women; new ideas for spring dress, by Lady Dnff -Gordon; four pages of late sporting news; all tho gossip from Washington; news from every part of the world; Frank J. Carpen ter's interesting letter; cleverly conceived and well executed drawings, and many other articles filled with facts and tLoughts of deep human in terest The Omaha Sunday Bee is read by people of purchasing ability, and goes into more homes than all other Omaha Sunday papers combined. The Bee is the medium for sure re turns of satisfactory proportions. One paper ia the borne b wrti two in the itreet