i8eyv A M ) BRIEF CITY NEWS Have Mr.tt Print It, Sleotrlo fane fcurgess-Grandsn Co. Staca-Falooner Co., Twenty-fourth nd Harney, undertakers and embalmers. Phone Dougla3 SS7. Dr. W. E. latey and Dr. S. J. Kalal have removed their offices from 206 Kar bach block to 727-30 City National bank building. As Excellent residence lot, 44x165 feet in Norwood addition, opposite Miller park on Twenty-fourth street. I am going to leave the city and want to sell quick. Will take diamond as part pay ment, balance small monthly payments. This is the best buy of its character on the market. Address Immediately. J-292, care of Bee. Old Type U Stolen Thieves stole 300 pounds of old type from the printing hop of N. O. Talbott, 318 South Nineteenth street, Sunday night. Mrs. Crelghton Much Better Mrs. J. D. Creightgn, who suffered a stroke of paralysis last week, Is rapidly improving at her home, 404 North Twentieth street. B. Z. Cook Buys" Residence B. L. Cook has bought a, $12,000 house between Nineteenth street and the boulevard on the north side of Emmet street. The purchase was made from T. F. Heaiy. Kugel Appoints Bookkeeper Pete Bvaclna has been appointed bookkeeper by Commissioner A. C. Kugel. Svacina will take office the first of the month, when Assistant 'street Commissioner Emery will retire. To Bemain Open at Night After July 1 the naval recruiting station in the fed eral building will remain open two nights out of the week until 9 o'clock to take charge of any applicants who are pre vented by their work from calling there during the day. Women Flnlih CadetsMp Miss Mabel Wirt and Miss Margaret Nattinger have completed the period of cadetship In the public library and are eligible to the reg ular library staff. Miss Wirt will substi tute for Miss Mary Woodbridge during the latter's absence abroad this summer. Three Pined for Speeding C. C. Deerlng, 611 South Thirty-sixth street, and Frank Hamilton, 604 South Thirty eighth street, were fined $10 and costs In police court for driving their ma IF THE PEOPLE OF AMERICA Drank Pineapple Juice They Would Soon Become the Healthiest People on Earth." Get In line with those who are enjoy ing good health. It's a simple matter. All you hsve to do is to drink pure pineapple juice. It will renovate your system and insure you the best pf health. In addition to doing you good, Dole's Pineapple Juice tastes good. It's the most popular drink on the market. It 'is absolutely pure, being nothing but the pure juice of ehoice'pineapples. A great aid to digestion and un equal in cases of throat trouble. Get a start on the road to health by drinking this wholesome beverage. Sold by grocers and druggists everywhere. "Cooling Drinks and Desserts," a neat little book telling how to make pleasant, cooling drinks and desserts, senf free. Hawaiian Pineapple Products Co., Itfl fpORsatisfactioninaideand f out dress in GOTHAM 1 11 SUMMER UNDERWEAR i of cooling, color-fast fab- I i rics Silk, Linen, Madras, etc. Cut full and roomy. .5oc. to 3.50 the garment. Your personal copy of the GOTHAM Book de Luxe pn request. GOTHAM MFG. CO., Aha Makers of Gotham SMrts. Fifth Are. Bid. New York. I SORE FEET ate eased and ceded by using Three's Antiseptic Powder. Destroys offensive "jhin i pdnronous1 germicfdetbst ofs'solTei In stantly in water, TJnequaled as a dounne. SEND FOB FREE SAMPLE TYREE'S Antiseptic Powder J. 8. Tyree, Cbemlst, Washington. P. C chine after dark without a :all light. Harry Burnham was fined 10 and costs for speeding. To Build Apartment House oiaf Nel son has bought four lots ;xtending through from SU-13 South Nlneteentn street to Eightaenth street from the Mc Cague Investment company. He intends later to raze the four houses located on the two streets and build a big apart house. He paid $11,000 for the prop erty. Eenlori to B ana net At the Henshaw hotel Thursday evening the Omaha High , school senior class will hold its annual I banquet, when ' plates will be lata for ' about 2W. The committee in charge in v.. Katherine Davenport and Carson Hatha way. Principal Kate McHugh -will be an honor guest of the occasion. A. O. U. W. rioral Sevlces Postponed On account of the inclement weather Sunday the Floral day exercises of the Ancient Order of United Workmen and Degree of Honor lodges were postponed until next Sunday afternoon at Riverside park. There will be speaking, songs. band musio and dress parade of all the degree teams. East Hears of Omaha The first far away echo of the Know Omaha campaign was heard yesterday by Manager Par rish of the Commercial club publicity bu reau. Miss Grace M. Lenney, a normal graduate, secretary and stenographer at Pottsdam, N. Y wants a Job here, the result of having received a Know Omaha post card. She (ays in a letter she has two or three girl friends, some of them school teachers, who would like to come out west if they could get positions. To Show Navy In Pictures The navy department advises the local recruiting station of its Intention of sending an offi cer of the department to Omaha who will give stereoptlcon lectures in the local moving picture theaters here illustrating and explaining the work of the sailors op board ship in an effort to increase en listments. The portraying of the United States navy, its maneuvers and the duties of officers and men will compose an in teresting entertainment to everybody, it is believed. Oil Line Are Tested F. D. Wead, chairman of the Commercial club com mittee on the development of Wyoming oil fields, has received a letter from the sec retary of the Natrona Pipe Line and Re fineries company at Casper, stating that the company's pipe from the Shannon oil fields has been tested and found ready for the oil. , The pipe line extends from the Shannon fields to the company's refineries and storage tanks In Casper, a length of forty-eight and one-half miles. The Natrona Pipe Line and Refineries company is owned by the Franco-Wy omlng Oil company. Rebels' Financial Agent Under Arrest; Sought by Federals , EL- PASO, Tex., June W.-Gonzales C. Enrlte, deposed financial executive of the Mexican revolution, fleeing from enemies in the rebel sone, who tried to kill him, into fancied security Into the United States, was arrested early today by C. H. Webster, a Texas ranger, as he crossed the international bridge from Jaurea. Tonight Enrite, once the right hand man of General Orozco, and chief promoter -of the present revolution, is a prisoner of the United States authorities, His provisional arrest, was ordered by the Mexican federal government, which charges Enrite with embezzlement of funds, while consul under President Diaj at Clifton, Ariz., eighteen months ago. His extradition on this charge would place him at the mercy of the Mexican government for his political acts. Though Enrite's flight by no means in dicates the collapse of the rebel cause. it is admitted here that it bears out the reports of disorganization and internal Intrigues with which the rebels are said to be struggling. General Huerta was reported to have moved far north of Santa Rosalia today, while from Nazas, fifty miles east of Torreon, the defeat of the rebel forces under General Campa and General Ague mendo by General , Balnquet and 1,600 federal cavalry was reported to the Mexican consul here. PHOENIX, Ariz., June 9.-WJth a story of how his wife and two babies were burned to death In their home near Tepic by roving bands of rebels, George Arnold Brown, an Englishman, passed through Phoenix today on hla way to Los Angeles, where he will lay his case before the British eousul. Brown said the rebels set fire to his hacienda near Tepic during his absence and his en tire family perished. The rebels then either killed or drove off all of Brown's live stock. He says conditions in and around the city of Tepic and in the state of the same name were horrible. Democrats Getting Ready for Meeting BUFFALO. N. Y., June 9.-National Chairman Mack announced here tonight that a meeting of the committee on ar rangements had been called for Thursday, June 30, at Baltimore, rie will Join Sec retary Woodson In New York tomorrow or Tuesday and expects to arrive in Bal timore Wednesday morning. ARBITRATION BOARD NAMED FOR ENGINEERS' DISPUTP WASHINGTON. June lO.-The Board of Arbitration to settle the differences be tween the railroads east of Chicago and their engineers, which a few weeks ago threatened a serious strike, has been ap pointed by Chief Justice White, Dr. Charles P. Neill, commissioner of labor, and Judge Knapp of the commerce court. The board Is composed of Oscar Straus, former secretary of commerce and la bor; Dr. Albert Shaw, editor of the American Review of Reviews; Otto Eidlitz, former chairman of the Build ing Trades Employers' association of New York; Frederick N. Judson, lawyer of St. Louis; Dr. Charles R. Van Hise, president of the University of Wiscon sin; Daniel Willard, president of the Ealtlmore & Ohio railroad, and P. , H. Morrlsey, former president of the Broth erhood of Railroad Trainmen. Messrs. Willard and Morrlsey were named as members of the board by the roads and engineers' respectively. The issues affect fifty railroads, In cluding the Pennsylvania and Baltimore & Ohio, east of Chicago and north of the Ohio river About 25,000 engineers are di rectly concerned- : The parties were brought ogether through mediation under the rdman act. which resulted in an agreement to arbitrate. The demands of the men are or a standard wage in the entire eastern territory. The firemen of these oystems have presented similar demands, but no action has yet been taken by the companies. THE BEE: CLOSE CALL M HAYFL01SER President'! Yacht Nearly in Collision with Big Boat. CROSSES 33W OF NORTHLAND Officer's Signal to Pas Wot Fol lowed and Two Boata with DU tlng;Uhed Goeata rly In Deep Water Crash. OLD POINT. Va'.. June 10-The presi dential yacht Mayflower with the presi dent and Mrs. Taft and party and their distinguished guests aboard narrowly escaped a collision yesterday with tha steamer Northland of the Norfolk and Washington line not far from Point Lookout, where the Potomac river empties into Chesapeake bay. Only the vigilance of the officers of the Northland and the Mayflower and their prompt action prevented what looked for a minute like an accident. As It happened the Northland narrowly missed the Mayflower. Officials and one or two persons on the passenger boat who were looking only got a momentary shock. It was a perfectly still moonlight morning with no sea running and , the lights of passing vessels could be seen for miles. The few passengers awake showed no signs of panic, but they looked relieved when the danger wa over. k The Mayflower left Washington last night about 6:30 o'clock for Hampton Roads. In addition to the president and Mrs. Taft, General William C. 'Rosier, Representative Gillette of Massachusetts. Charles H. Kelsey and Mrs. Kelsey of New York, Mrs. Francis G.v Newlands, wife of the Nevada senator, and Major T. L. Rhoads, U. S. A., and Lieutenant T. J. Tlmmons, U. 8. A., aides to the president, were invited guests. The Northland on its regular trip to Old Point and Norfolk left Washington shortly after the Mayflowor. Although It kept the presidential yacht in sight until dark and although it is a much speedier boat. Captain Posey made no attempt to pass the president Shortly after the Northland ' passed Into Chesapeake bay, however, where there Is. plenty of sea room the officer on watch decided to forge ahead of the Mayflower. At that time the navy boat was probably a third of a smile ahead of the Northland and a few hundred yards to the starboard of the North land's course. The Northland gave a signal that it wished to pass on the Mayflower's port side and a few seconds later came the response from the yacht, one whistle blast, meaning that it wished the North. land to pass not on the port side, but on the starboard. ' Officers in the Northland'! pilot house were astonished when they heard the Mayflower's one whistle, but they were even more surprised when the May flower began slowly to cross its ; bow, It was a few seconds before they grasped just what was happening, but when they did, four or five sharp blasts shot from the Northland's whistle, meaning "danger, lookout." The quartermaster at Its wheel was given a sharp order. He flung the wheel over and the engines of the Northland were slowed down perceptibly. It sheered starboard with a shudder and the May flower made Its way across the North' land's course with a gulf of deep jtreen water between that quickly narrowed to less than a thousand feet. Once beyond the Northland's course the Mayflower seemed to slow up and the Northland passed on its starboard quarter. ' Cocaine Smuggling at Jail is Checked Smuggling of opiates, drugs, and other articles forbidden In the county jail by persons outside via the window and string route was brought to a per emptory end last night by Deputy Sheriffs Hanger and Mahoney. The two were passing through the alley in the rear of the Jail when they saw a figure crouch ing in the shadow. The figure saw and recognized the officers first and took time by the forelock by fleeing, followed by two bullets. A box of powdered cocaine attached to a string was left by the fugitive, who was a six-foot negro. The "dope"' was destroyed and a search started for the smuggler. SAYS HUSBAND WAS INSANE WHEN HE FORFEITS POLICY Mrs, Ovella Bowers, widow of the late Frank J. Bowers, started suit for $2,600 on policies Issued to her husband against the Ancient Order of United Workmen in district court. She alleges that the com pany refused payment because Bowers withdrew from the order and forfeited his policies. She declared the husband was insane when he withdrew and there fore his withdrawal Is no excuse for the order's refusal to pay. Thinks She's Just Too Lovely, but- Sie Ought to tlss "ftbsorbit She can't imagine why he's cutting his call so Bhort. He's too oolite to tell the reason. If she knew, she wouldn't blame him. One troubled with perspiring arm Pits doesn't always notice the effect as Keenly as another. No need being embarrassed bv exces sive perspiration, unpleasant odor, wet. iauea or aiscoiorea spots, mo need wear ing dress shields even on hottest dava. In stuffiest .rooms, or when dancing or ex ercising. "ABSORBIT." the new wonder. does away with all that absolutely! Marvelously effective. Fine for perspir ing feet. Entirely harmless even on face ana neck. Doesn't Irritate; doesn't clog pores. Cooling, pleasant to use. Easy to apply with pad contained In box. Try it. and you'll always- have it on your dressing table. "ABSORBIT." at rour drag ttore. 96c or null ed en receipt of price, by Von Vog.l Labora tories, Chemical BMg., Chicago, III. 8oM In this eltf tat recommended bj Sherman MoConnell Drue Co-, corner leth and Dodge; 1th and Har ney; 24th and Karoun, alio loyal Pharmacy 291 I No. Mth. J. OMAHA. TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1912. Nebraska Soads Better Than Iowa, Say the Boosters On aha good roads boosters have again proven that Nebraska highways are far superior to the roads of Iowa This time they have demonstrated that the Ne braska route o Kansas City is better and shorter than the Iowa route. The Omaha contingent arrived Monday morning at 4:80 from Kansas City after having been on the road on the return trip for twenty-one hours. Tha trip back was via the Iowa route and the tour out of Omaha by the Nebraska highways. The time to Kansas City from Omaha was ten hours and the distance covered 216 miles, white the route back was 241 mile. x The Omaha men left Kansas City at :! o'clock Sunday morning, expecting to ar rive in Omaha about ten hour later. It had rained all Saturday night, however, and was still raining when they left yes terday morning. From Kansas City the route led to Leavenworth and then to St. Joseph, a distance of sixty-eight miles the mud along the road was at least a foot deep and was of the gumbo species. It was exactly 5:30 o'clock Sunday aft ernoon when the tourists arrived in St. Joseph, a rlda of ten hours. Fourteen miles of this was paved. When the tour ists arrived at Leavenworth they cross t over to the Missouri side of the river and for fifteen miles traveled along the river bank. The wheels of the machine were within six inches of an embankment nearly all this while. PRESIDENT M0HLER IS AT MINNEAPOLIS President Mohler of the Union Paclflo is in Minneapolis in connection with mat ters relating to the estate of Captain W. W. Smith, father of Mrs. Mohler, who died in the Minnesota olty last week and was buried at Cedar Rapids, la., his old home. Captain Smith, at the time of his death, June 4, was almost $2 years of age. He was one of the pioneer merchants of Minnesota and during the war was a member of the Twenty-fourth Iowa, known as the "Methodist" regiment. He was captured during the war and spent a year in a southern prison. January 1 this year he and his widow, who eur vlves him. celebrated their sixty-seventh wedding anniversary. DRUG STORE CASHIER LOSES ON FLIM-FLAM Hurrying into the Owl drug store a well dressed young man made a small purchase Sunday afternoon and ten dered the girl cashier a targe bill in pay ment. After he had gone she found he had short changed her $10. He tried to work Miss 8herwood, ths cashier at the Beaton Drug company, in the same way, but did not get by with it. She gave a good description of the man to the police. To pissolve the Union of stomach, liver and , kidney troubles and ure biliousness and malaria, talto Electric Bitters. , Guaranteed. Only 50c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Free Our new booklet, WiHneef Coca- Cola vindication at Chattanooga, for the asking. BRYAN IS ITJAYS SCHWIND Peerless Leader's First Secretary! Says Sentiment Will Not Down. SLATED TO LEAD THE HOSTS Lincoln Man Retarne from Trip Tfcroanh Dixie and Says Falr lew Statesman Can't Tnr Down Demand for Him. Disclaiming that he Is a prophet or the on of a prophet, William F, Schwlnd, the well known land man of Lincoln, convinced a group of prominent demo crats in an Omaha hotel lobby that it will be Bryan again. Mr. Schwlnd is Just home from an ex tended trip south and a sojourn In St. Louis. He denies having any Interest In politics beyond the convictions or a modest democrat. He was Mr. Bryan's first private secretary, however, and Is his neighbor and friend. "I have been convinced welt enough that Mr. Bryan Is slated to lead the democratic hosts again from what I heard south," asserted the Lincoln man, "but when I saw so many evidences in Missouri of Clark men getting ready to stampede to the Nebraskan I btcanie fully convinced. "The fact is, Mr. Bryan will be unable to turn down the demand that is sure to come for his nomination. You enn hear it wherever you go. His friends need not urge It. Mr. Bryan don't want It, but all who know him know very well know he will not balk at a big task. I think his best friends would not urge him against hla will, but the sentiment will not down. Mr. Bryan Is independent. His place in history is made. The presi dency would make him no greater. "You may set it down, however, that the Baltimore convention will name the winner. And they will not take any chances. It is Bryan under the surface everywhere, and you can't get away from it. And ho will be the next presi dent, too." The Persistent and Judicious Use of Newspaper Advertising Is the Road to Business Success. We Give Away Free of Cost Tba People's Comtaoa Sense! Medical Adviser, io Plaia Boglish, or Medloine Simplified, by R. V. Pierce, M. D., Chief Coasolting Physician to the Invalids' Hotel aod Stir gioal lostitate at Buffalo, a book, ot iwo urge pages ana mwmr una illuiitntioM. in PrMoh cloth bindint. to any OM eeod 31 stamps to oover oost of wrapping and mailing eajf. Over 680,000 copies ci , this complete Family Doctor Book were sold la elotfc bindiag at regular priee ec W.50. Afterwards about two and a half million copies were givea away as above. A aew, up-to-date revised edition is now ready for mailing. Better send NOW, before ell are gone. .Address Woild'i DisnKtAir Msdical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, Bnffalo, N. Y. DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION THE ONE REMEDY for wotnan'o peculiar ailments good aswufli that its makers are not afraid t print its ontslde wrapper ha every ingredient. No Seerets Nn Deoepttoa. THE ONE REMEDY for .women wbioh oontalne no eloohet Mat no habit-forming drags. Made from native medioianl forest roots el wel established curative valne. 3 2 i 3f 3 2? a J $ 3 Here's The Road to Comfort if . A vanished thirst a cool body and a refreshed one; the sure way the only way is via a glass of K7 Ideally delicious pure as purity ' crisp and sparkling as frost Delicious Refreshing Thirst-Quenching Demand the Genuine as made by THE COCA-COLA CO. ATLANTA, GA. I Judges Announced for High School Drill Lieutenant Clark Lynn and Lieutenant C. F. Leonard of the Fort Omaha signal corps have been secured to act as Judge") in the annual competitive drill of tr.e Omaha high school cadet regiment, which will be held at Fort Omaha this afternoon, beginning promptly at 1:30 o'clock. Following the battalion, company and Individual drills, regimental drees parade will be held and the promotions for the next school year announced. TWO NEW GARAGES ARE , ADDED TO THE AUTO ROW Two more garages are to be added to Farnam street's automobile row. F. D. Wead, as representative of the Manual Marblestone estate, eastern investors, began excavation for a garage at 2301 Farnam street. The work will be fol lowed In a few days by the construct ion of a garage for Dr. A. P. Paxton, next door east. The Wead garage will be 44x132 feet, a two story brick structure. Architect Willis has made the plans. The building will be occupied by the Omaha Taxi Ser vice company. Dr. Paxton s building will have a twenty-two foot frontage on Farnam street with a depth of seventy feet. It will be occupied by the Paxton-Mltchell company. DRIVER THROWN FROM WAGON HITS AGAINST CURB Louis Lawso, 1430 North Sixteenth street, was painfully Injured Sunday morning when he was thrown from his wagon at Fourteenth and Cass streets. Lawslo was driving north on Fourteenth street when a Sherman avenue street car bumped Into the rear of the wagon. The horses became frightened and Jan away, throwing Lawslo out again the curb stone. He was attended at the po lice station by Dr. Harris and taken to his home in the police patrol. Key to tha Bltuation-Bee Advertising. ft 1 Whenever rn an Arrow, think of Coca-Cola. one-eaat 7 Doctor Tells How to Shed Bad Complexion We cannot restore degenerated facial tissue any more than we can restore a limb. It Is useless to attempt to convert a worn-out complexion into a new one The rational procedure is to remove the. comDlexlon Instead remove the devital ized cuticle. Not by rurgteal means, how-; ..... i ... . ,UIh ever, as me unaenjim tuns in wu mm. too tender to withstand immediate ex posure. Applying ordinary mercollzed wax will gradually absorb the offending cuticle. By degrees, a new. youthful skin appears; a skin us soft and delicately tinted as a rose petal. No ladv need hesitate to try this. Pro cure an ounce of mercollxed wax of Uiu drujTKlst. Spread on a thin layer Deiore retiring, removing this in the morning with eoap arm water, in rrom one 10 two weeks the complexion is completely transformed. An approved treatment for wnnKles vs provided bv dissolving an ounce of powdered aaxolite in a half-pint witch haxel. Bathing the face In the solution brings prompt results. Dr. Rupert Mac kenzie in Popular Medicine. Adv. The A.T.8.S.F.Ry.Co. C Nseenqeela m Gieckyour trunk cnd go this summer excursions You will find the weather cool and pleasant, espe cially up in the Sierras and near the Pacific beaches. The cool way to go is on the Santa Fe, through Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona more than a mile up in the sky. Stop at the Petrified Forest and Grand Canyon of Arizona. Visit Yoaemite, too. Low fires til summer. Special reduc tions for certain Pacific Coaat Con ventions. Fred Harvey metis. Aik (or our Summer travel folder ' "California Summer Outings," "Titan f ol Chasms," "Old-New Santa Fe." Bimuel Larimer, flea. Aft., " i llfi 7th St., Dm Moinw, Iowa. . Phont, Walnut 161. a REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER ANO CHILD. Mas. Winslow's Booth ino Svavr has beea used for ovtr SIXTY YEARS by MILLIOMS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT 6UCCESS. It BOOTHE3 the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN ( ClTRES WIND COHC..a4 is the best remedy (or DIARRHCEA. It is ab. tolutely harmless. Se sure and ask for " Mrs. winstowa Booming oyrup," ana iaa no other dud. Twentv-fivt cents bouls.- HOTELS AND Ot'MMUR HKSOKTS. ... Tszr... , Evans Hotel Hot Springs, So. Dakota AMONG THE BLACK HILLS. A delightful place to spend your Rummer vacation. Swimming Pool, Golf Course, Tennis and all other out-door amusements, alBO MusSc and Dancing. The best waters In the world for chronic ailments of the stomach, liver,, kidneys and rheumatics. , A modern hotel, with all Im provements. Service and cuisine unexcelled. Rates $2.60 per day and up. Special rates by the week on application. Write for booklet. Address 1 'v- EVAHS HOTEL CO. Hot Springs, South Dakota. Muscallonge Galore Over 40 lakes, accomodations for 80 guests. Bass and Muscallonge fish ins at the door. Write tor 32 paga booklet. Bus meets all trains at, PISE COWH CAMP, Sorsst, Hubbard County, Minnesota. 573!6Mj