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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1912)
THE BEE: OMAHA,- THURSDAY, . JUNE 20, ,1912. 10 fwtww0 , . 1 " ' . ' . " " ' ' . ...... "' !., .. "1. . ,, ,... .. 1 " ' - (" - i ftj , .... - For the benefit of readers 'of The Bee is offered herewith a list of used and rebuilt auto-. ' '- The recent rainy and cold weather has precluded the possibility of effecting many sales mobiles,' whose worthis. vouched for by the most responsible motor s car:, establishments in . . .. . , .. . that would otherwise have been consummated. This condition is responsible for the exception Omaha. These cars are well worth the consideration of prospective purchasers. " ally low prices at which these cars are offered. To buy one of these cars means a good bargain. Kiist Be Sold ai Once! 11910 Model E MweU 30rhorse power, touring car, in good sha with top, shield, speedo. $ ft A ft and presto . ..... '.V. . .". . . '. ... ... . v w " w 1T1910 Model Q-2 Maxwell, 22-H. P., in good shape. Has shield, presto tank, speedometer and top JACA over front seat: rear seat removable. .. VU. 1-1911 Model E.-A., 30-H. P. touring car, with fore-door, in excellent condition. Has top, shield, ' speedometer and presto tank. 1-1912 .Model, 30-Lr:P.t Maxwell . Roadster; used as demonstrator only; in very finest shape ; 1 can make good price on this car. 11912 Maxwell Special, 36-H, P., used as dem onstrator "only I in very best possible condition; not marked or scratched; $fiAA good price.. . . . . . .............. . . . '. . . ..vUvw 1 Detroit Electric car; . (AAA . 1910m(del.;V.;?.V;..;;....':.;'..i-.........vUU UNITED MOTOR OMAHA CO. 2115 Farnam St., Omaha, Ne,b. do Seeond-band Wmk U0B9 ':"'' .' For Sale GUY L SIUTH, Distributor 2203-07 FARMAM STOEET. C .. u' ;.-.. i.v Sw, D) Good C ondition fee Bargains . 1308 7 passenger, 40 horsepower, Stoddard-Dayton. Fully equipped, windshield, new top, newly painted, good tires. Car in good running order. Only .V..,. . ....' 35 horsepower Stoddard-Dayton. Fully equipped. Recently thoroughly overhauled and put in Al recondition. Only . ......... .'.' ( 50 horsepower Stoddard-Dayton Roadster. Fully equipped and an awfully good bargain, ' at $600 $500 SH000 5 passenger, 35 horsepower, Stoddard-Dayton, fully equipped. New tires. Just overhauled and put in best of condition. Only . . . . ........ ..... Nearly new 5 passenger 35 horsepower, Stoddard-Dayton with - -full equipment and new tires. Cost $2,000 only a short time age. Here is a rare. opportunity at .....,... 5 passenger fully, equipped and in good condition but not yet overhauled. For sale, ; . at ............ ,. , " 7 passenger 50 horsepower Lexington. Thoroughly overhauled and in best of condition; Priced at only $700 11 mUm V V V $400 1200 At these prices these bargains won't last long. You had better call, write or wire :; at 'once to.. : ; ; " ' ' Deright Automobile Co. ' Dealers in High Grade Motor Cars 1010 Farnam St. Omaha, Jeb. 5 passenger, 2 cylinder, chain drive Buick, at ; All used cars in per fect running order $300 $450 $S0 $750 40 horsepower Wayne car, Continen tal motor, combination delivery and pleasure car . . . . .1 5 passenger Buick 19, very good con- ' dition, very good tires, at . V....... 55 horsepower, 6 cylinder Stephens Duryea, 7 passenger, practically new and one extra tire . Hcld-Voodman Auto Co. 1902 Farnam Street Final Clean - up oil Hudson Cars Not second hand. Not used cars. Just a few Hudsons of fered below cost owing to having discontinued the sale of this line. ; Those who respond first will pick up the biggest snaps ever offered in new motor cars. H. E. Fredrickson Automobile Go. 2044-46-48 Farnam Street j ROADSTERS JBLAZING WAY Fredricksoii f und Party ' Bowling Kapidly Across State, CO-OPERATION ON ALL SIDES TrantcoatlnentBl Illghwar VoIbb- : terra Meet wltk Warm Recep tion All Alonu the Route. :NOIlTH TLATTE, Neb., Jun W-fSj.e-Cla Telegram.) The good roadi boosters from Omaha rolled Into North Tlatte at 31:550, tea minute ahead of fchclulQ. Thli nas due to good roads leading Into. town. They were met by the memiws of the Lincoln County Automobile association, officers of the North Platte Chamber of Commerce, and ail the good roads boost ers and the farmers along the line of the Platte Valley Automobile road be tween Maxwell and Hers hey.-- All of these tendered the rlsltore - dinner; at which were exchanged, idea, and. pledges of co-operation. This is In the sand hill country where the making of good Toads is necessary, but one that can be easily HOW TO KEEP i HEALTHY , f " '"X An Appealing Rocip . &ur One That Will Do You Good : . : Always serve pineappl Juice at yoa table and yottll ejjoy good haltl . This is not a mere stAtsment, . It's a iocontroTertible fact. ,: .PijBetpple. juic . will keep yon well because it builds up the waste tissues and keeps the sj-r lem In Ant elan eondltioiu ' v ': And la additlott to doing yon goot: this wboleaome beverage baa- a tasir that if very appealing. ::- t'j i .-It contains notbing but tie pure ph? cf ehoiee pineapples, tterlliie4'aad bot tied in "the most modem maimer,; .'J," ;s very effectiTe is eases of wre-tbrov " Dole'e Pineapple Juice ii told by p , oeluy, order aome "to-day," i',' .. "Cooling Prisnke iaad JieWrtsV'; 4eat little book talKag how, to cr.,; many pleaiftnt, cooling drinks, aent te& Eawailaa Plaeapple Products Co, Lt 1X2 Market St. Ban Fraacisco accomplished with the aid of the Union Paolfio Railway company. . Every cltlsen of North Platte is. en thused over the action of the Omaha Comrfiorclal club and appreciate the co operation of such an organisation. They want a fourteen-mile road to follow the railroad right-of-way frcru Maxwell here Instead of twenty-eight miles away to the south of the railroad. While Lincoln county has excellent .roads Into North Platte the necessity of marking them is Impressed upon the cltlsens of the towns and the farmers along the road. They are being urged to paint the poles with white, black and yellow. The officials of the Omaha, Cheyenne & Salt Lake road at Maxwell overtook and passed Esra Meeker with his famous ox team enroute to the Pacific slope. , Dradr Iatand em the Job. Brady Island was on the Job when the good road artists rode Into town. Follow ing" speeches by Mayor Maroott, Mayor Dfthlnun; and - K. A. Debord. William Brady, the champion of the bill recently passed by congress to reduce the Union Pacific: rlghUof-way, told of the Intents and -purposes.. He explained that It was hot" meant to and would not affect' the company by dispossessing it of any right- of-way now occupied or In use by the company, but it would reduce the , width from too to M0 feet and leave for a road a 100-foot strip, on one side for the great transcontinental highway that everybody la this section wants. . I ..... -.. ' .w ... ' , . j;v , Tourists Never Alone. In every, instance the Omaha mayor la Introduced by the local mayor . or president of . the commercial club who appreciate the' co-operattoa and leader hip offered by-the Omaha men. Every. commercial club has a good roads com; mlttee, , and. such committees generally act as escorts to the visitors from 'one town to the other, to show the work done, or being done, and If any county supervisor la dilatory or responsible for unfavorable conditions his name J is learned by the Omaha men for reference end use later on. Ae- the- Omaha Commercial club car pulled up In front of the hotel at Goth burg one of the' ladies in the crowd caught sight of the spade on the run-v nlng board and said loud enough for ajl to hear: ' ' ' "Do they' make the roads as they go alongT " : 8ha was assured that so far aa the Omaha car Is concerned they do make i road when necessary. With any man at the wheel other than Fredrickson the big Chalmers car would have had to be dug cut several times yesterday. OLD BASE BMJLCAUSES ROW Clerks in the . U. P. Headquarters , Have Bad Mixup. FUSsVsTAETS AT BALL GAME 6w Has Shoulder Broken and As. tVo'taeV Loses His Job -No More ; ; ''CntchlBB" Allowed Near the Baildlns. v . Gotck Will Wrestle at Cblcaao. CHICAGO. June 19. Frank Gotch. world's champion wrestler, will make two appearances on the mat here within six days. He will wrestle Charles Cutler in a twenty-minute handc&p on June is, at white Sox park. In a field day benefit. and on July 4 will meet Joe BmeJkal. Bohemian heavyweight, at the Coliseum In sk finish match, best two In three (alia An old, second hand base ball, worth not to exceed 10 cents, came close to precipitating a riot between clerks of the auditing and traffics departments of the Union Pacific. It not only did this. but It resulted In Charley Longretf being tent to the hospital with a broken shoul der and a fractured Jaw and Tom Mur phy losing his position. The. game of ball played between the teams' of:. the two departments at the opening of the Young Men's Christian Association park week ago last' Satur day was responsible for the fight, In which about a dosen or more men par ticipated. At the end of that game one of the old balls disappeared. It la as serted that Murphy accused Longren of getting away with the horsehlde covered sphere. Longren and his adherents heard of this and fighting blood was stirred up. The boiling point of this blood was reached Tuesday night. After .office hours, out In the rear, of the building, a couple of the clerks .were Indulging In "catch." ' Other clerks were watching the throwing of the ball, among them being most of those who., were In the Satuiday game. During the proceed- ingv It Is claimed that Murphy accused Longren of Stealing the ball. Longren resented this and the two. went. to It. Blows rained thick and fast Othtre Jumped Into the arena, and In less ttu:i a minute there was a free-f oi'-nll. ' " : As the men' clawed one another and fought up .and down the alloy and out onto the street. McCarthy,' :lcrk In. the mall; room of-the passenger department. Dumped Into the fray as a peacemaker. He was given a "swipe" actosa the late and retreated In good order. . . . .J bearing pollco lnterferenoc, other clerks wlM wer not ball fans, hit who "went interested spectators at the mill, tepar sled the combatants and sent them home. As a result of the fight, an ordr has gone out prohibiting the throwing of balls In the vicinity of the Union Paclflo head Quarters, and It Is likely that there will be-a supplemental cdr providing for the disbanding of all Union Paclflo ball Jteaws.'.- ' ; . . MILLION WORDS WIRED - ' FROM CONVENTION HALL CHICAGO, June 19.-Figures compiled .by the telegraph companies here today show that, all records for outgoing dis patches were broken yesterday, the open ing oay . pi ,me repuoucan national con ventlon.' It was said that approximately 1,000,009 words were bandied. Winners in W.C.T.U. Essay Contests Are Awarded Prizes Winners In the essay contest on tem perance subjects held In the , publio schools, by the Woman's Christian Tem perance union were announced Tuesday In the city hall and prises awarded. Bobert Goldberg won the High school prize of $10. 'Prises tot winners in the grades were awarded follows: Eighth grade, Edna Knudson of Pacific school, gold medal as first prize; Margaret Sheppard of Kel lom and Marjorle Menold of Central tied for second prize, each receiving a silver medal; seventh grade, Ethel Krats of Kellora, a gold medal as first prize, and Ada Walker of Comenius a sliver medal as second prize; sixth grade, Helen Fran son of Lothrop, a gold medal as first prize and Messeta Moon of Kellom a sil ver medal as second prize; fifth grade, Madeline Johnson of Central, tt as first prize and Doris 'McMlchael of Monmouth Park $2 as second prize. The $10 prise offered the fifth grade teacher for getting best results among her pupils in the contest had to be divided among three Misses Minnie Dye and Blanche O'Connell of Farnam and Miss' Cora Bake of Saratoga school. Saratoga, Kellom, Farnam, Leavenworth, Comenius, Central and Pacific schools stood 100 per cent In their work.. ..,..' Mrs. W, T. Graham, head of the med ical temperance department of the state union presided and short talks were made by Mrs. Agnes Harrison, principal of Farnam school; Miss' Effle Reed, prin cipal of Kellom school; Mrs. L S. Leavitt, president of the Omaha union; Mrs. D. C John,, president of the county union, and C. A. Alden. MINISTERIAL UNION PASSES RESOLUTIONS Declaring that there shoul be one stan dard of morale for both sexes, the Min isterial union at Its last meeting passed a series of resolutions condemning the social evtl and protesting against the segregation of scarlet women. The reso lutions declare for an ordinkace defin ing the punishment of men who frequent disorderly houses aa well as the women. asserting that the Invoking of this law would "be an essential element of good faith" In dealing with the question. WATER BOARD PAYS . JUDGES AND CLERKS Warrants for $2.60 each are waiting 323 judges and clerks of the recent Nebraska primary election of April 19, allowed by the Water board, at the city comptroller's office. They., have been paid 14.50 each by the Board of Education and $5 by the county, making with the adattlon C60, an amount of 110, a figure tiouble'-the amount ever before allowed. SCHOOL CONFERENCE OPENS I Sixteen Thousand Dollars in Profit Made on a "Sixty" Summer Session Under Auspices of woman's Missionary Federation. MANY PROMINENT PEOPLE HEBE Noted Speakers Are Being; Enter- tained at tke Homes of Omaha People Sessions To Last ' Until Jane 25. The summer scTtool , and conference opened auspiciously at the University of Omaha Tuesday evening under the aus pices of the Woman's Missionary federa tion. The laymen's missionary commit tee had charge of the meeting and Rev. Frederick J. Paton of the New Hebrides was the speaker. He told In impressive manner the .story of the reclamation of his South Sea Island borne from can nibalism to Christianity and civilization. Over 600 people were present Classes and conferences under out-of- town experts In religious and sociological matters began yesterday afternoon. Last evening Rev. Finis S. Idleman of Des Moines spoke on "The Present World Im pact of Christianity." The speakers are to be entertained In the homes of local church people. Mrs. May Leonard Woodruff of New Tork City Is with Mrs. G. M. Barnes; Mrs. D. B. Wells of Chicago with Mrs. S, B. How ell,; Mrs. E. P. Costlgan of Denver with Mrs. Ella Patterson. Miss Frances Bates Patterson of Chicago with Mrs. J. W. Griffith, and Rev. Finis S. Idleman with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Saunders. Dr. Shiler Mathews will be with Rev. and Mrs. E. R. Currle, Hans P. Freece of New York, with Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Rhoden, 8herman Coolldge with Mr. and Mrs. Philip Potter and Jenkins Lloyd Jones at the home of Mrs. T. L. Kimball. The university rooms which are to be Used for the school are In readiness. The session will last through June 25. Among the out-of-town visitors is Miss Miriam Woodberry of New Tork, secretary for the National Woman's Home Missionary society of the Congregational board and secretary for the home missions council of the t interdenominational board of New Tork City... HOME TRADE EXCURSION TO BE TAKEN TO RALSTON Thursday, June 27, has been set as the date for' the nekt home trade excursion of the Commercial club. Plans have been made to take members of the club to .t)c Howard Stove Works- and the Browu Truck Manufacturing company's plant In Ralston on special cars. . . - The stove company will furnish the spe cial cars -to carry the- excursionists, to Ralston, leaving the -Commercial club at 12:07 o'doct. Dinner will" be ' served the visitors by the company at Seymour Lake i Country civ" , John Hilling, a farmer living a few miles southeast of Millard, has bought sixty acres of farm land adjoining his place from Donehoo & McCoun, partner farmers, who have owned the property since 1S7& The deal is through the Byron Reed company. The owners paid $2,000 for the land and are selling it for $18,000. The property has a remarkable history in that it has changed hands only three times since the government patent was issued. A mort gage of $280 v&8 taken on it In 1857 which never has been released, an Instance re calling the days when farmers took mort gages on their land for most every kind of bill. OLD FIRST METHODIST CHURCH IS TORN DOWN The old Salvation Army hall at 1711 Davenport street, is a thing . of the past, ' as the last boards and shingles were carted away last evening' and one of Omaha's landmarks Is a thing of bygone days. 'About ten weeks ago the old frame structure was condemned and a small force was soon put to work tearing it down. ' Regular meetings at the site of the old building wiU be held by the . Salvation Army followers every evening hereafter, however( as the floor of the gospel room of the hall has. been left Intact and a tent will be pitched over the floor and seats Installed. Ensign and Mrs. S. A. Moyer, local officers of the Salvation Army, will fit up the little frame cottage near "the old hall site for their home. This hall was erected in -1880 as the First Methodist church, Dr. J. B. Max field, deceased, beimr the first pastor. In 1882 Rev. Charles,, W. Savidge. now pas tor of the People's church, was assigned to duties at the Davenport street edifice. When Rev. Mr. Savidge took charge of the congregation it numbered about 300 members and in three years a debt of $7,000 had been paid Off. ' In the early '90s the church was taken over by the Salvation Army workers for Veai fronts pue ssuneew fodso ' ajsm time It has been the scene of many stir ring revivals. ----;--... Key to the Situation Bee Advertising. Bubonic Plague in Porto Rico SAN JUAN, Porto Rico. June 19--FIvo deaths which have occured since Friday ' last in the vicinity of San Juan have been diagnosed by the insular board of health as cases of bubonic plague. Seven suspects have been connflned and placed under observation. Acting Governor M. Drew Carrel, con-, ferred today with the medical authorities and has decided to take extreme measures to eradicate the disease. The authorities -have the situation under control. Caught in tke . Act and arrested by Dr. King's New Life Pills, . bilious headache quits and liver, stomach and bowels act right. Only 25c , For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Summer Aids tt Beauty (Esther In Household Helps.) : ?'Face powder i helps that 'shiny look only a' few minutes, and then, when rubbed off, a woman's appearance is worse than ever. A true complexion beautlfler is made by dissolving an orlg- , lnal package of mayatone In a half pint witch hazel. Gently rub this lotion over face, neck and arms every morning. If 'holds' , all day long, and your complexion -soon is clear, smooth, satiny and free from blemish. "Short-sleeved waists sometimes prove embarrassing to a woman never troubled with superfluous hair on her face. Dela tone -will remove wild hairs. Just mix powdered delatone with enough water to cover the hairs; apply, and after two or . three minutes rub off, wash the skin and the hairs will be gone. "A great advantage of a dry shampoo is that one is not compelled, to devote hours to drying the hair. The best sham poo powder Is a mixture of four ounces -of orris root and an original package of therox. Sprinkle -a little on the head, brush through the hair, and It removes dust,' oil and dandruff, leaving the scalp clean, cool and refreshened, and the hair light, fluffy and lustrous. . "To make thin, short eyelashes grow , In long thick and silky with a beautiful curl, apply plain pyroxln to the lash roots with thumb and forefinger daily. Rubbing pyroxln on straggly eyebrows will make them long and silky." Adv. Tired? Nervous? Co To Your Doctor All ran down, easily tired, thin, pale, nervous? And do not know what to take? Then go direct to your doctor. Ask his opinion of AyeVs non-alcoholic Sarsaparilla. No alcohol, no stimulation. A blood purifier, a nerve tonici ,a strong alterative, an aid to J i; t .1 ...... Jla J. O. ArvCo.. UIKcSUUn. 1X1 VUUI UUUUI uw-iut. - . LoU, Ma