THE BEE: OMAHA, Til UKsiJAl', -AUGUST 15, 1912. B&ueft you only-''--knew ft pteasiiFe VicS:orVicfrola fornmigs into jw mm jou A wouldn t b WitnoUtbneviof a 0 . U M"i'WTirMaiMl"ifllftWlWtllMi''i'''' frl y a rag Sown a week BUYS A GENUINE VICTOR fn ST3 7i fhl r u I i y is mi AT T.4E ebraska COR. 15TH AND HARNEY STS. Any Victor dealer in any city in the world will gladly play any music you wish to hear . VictorVictroIas . $15 to $200 Victors, $10 to $100 Victor Talking Machine Company r Camden, N. J. day, CEO. E. MICKEL, Manager 15th and llarnsy Sts., Onaha 334 Broadway, Council Bluffs VictofwVSctrola XVI, $200 '- Mahogany or quartered oak . f 0 Ml ' 1 ' j Mi- 1 '"II I I ! t is? i ) m X You'll always find a complete line of Victrolas and Victrola Records in our new Victrola Parlors in connection with Piano Department, Douglas Street En trance. Call and See Us. Popular Qt firo ?rco Cnccrt Every Noon from OlUlU 12 M. to 1:30 P. M. Hear the ; I " world's greatest artists on tho ' Victrola. Spend your noon hour with us. All are cordially lh- vitcd. TO LINCOLN ON HOG IA60N Best and Shriver Have Strenuous Trip " to State Capital. ' TWO' AUTOS FAIL ON JOURNEY Farmer with Load of Hogr. Finally Help. Them Out Hok Squeal ' and the Horse. Give Them . ' f .the I.anKh. . , -- - Arriving' in Lincoln In . hog - wagon Tuesday, County Commissioner Frank C. , Best and County Assessor W. Q. Shrlver wer ?rady to admit, that even if all i the charges of naughtiness lodged against i the railroads are. true those .same rail roads still have something on automobiles ,when It comes to covering ground. ' Best and Shriver were commissioned to go before the State Board of Equalization at Lincoln and resist the threatened 10 per cent increase in valuation of Douglas county property for assessment purposes. (They decided .there would be ro sense In enriching a" railroad's "coffers by paying -2 cents a mile to get to the capital city ' and they' would just make, the trip in Us county 'automobile..' 1 - Just as Millard was reached the car, de cided It would bolt and torm a new party. .'Millard looked ! 'good to it and it was In favor: of remaining' right there. ; Best arid toiirlver tried kindness-and coaxed awhile; I but the car stood pat. The officials tbea "resorted to threats, but they availed not. After much talk had refused to produce any effect on the recalcitrant, auto Best and Shriver withdrew and caucused. With set Jaws 'they returned and, arming them , selves with monkey wrenches and every ' thing, attacked the ' machine. Best ap , proached from the front, while Shriver executed a flank movement, catching the thing amidships. ' , - ' . Slip Start. Car.; : Best waa attempting to unscrew a rivet when his wrench slipped and hit some- thing that set a-wheel in motion. The trip was resumed. - . , , At Gretna there was more trouble. Thn car balked again and refused to go an- . other steD. There was some talk of bulld- A tlrtk nnilw i 'hii- 4'hia nloTf 'na din ' carded in ; favor of a suggestion ; that ' .1.. . Ai ' . j : l , . 1.1 i.n WiM to -hire' a ifresh auto, "dbriver' said the 1 one they had was too freshi but he gave v In Ho . Best The county " car waa. placed .journny was resumed m a .machine rur nlslied by "the hospItal.s Everything want welf until the officials were a fe'v inlles . from Lincoln when , the Gretna '; Car sulked. ..Threats of -violence would'' not " frighten it. "There was no chance to mandamus it because the nearest court , was in Lincoln. "'.'' . While Best and Shriver were trying to think up some new argument to pull on the car a. farmer driving a wagon full of hogs ' hove In plgTtt. ( The horses saw the crippled automobile and uttered vul gar horse laughs. " The said farmer took pity upon the "wayfarers and gave them seats beside ' hhn. ": ';.-;- ." " '''" ' ; "This Is a horse on' us," admitted Best. The hogs squealed their protests, but ttae farmer refused to give them a bear ing. Later the auto wag towed into Lin coln. . . ... : , "' ,;- '..''. Newspaper Reporters Told to Leave Convention Hall Newspaper reporters sat through the third session of the national convention of stationers and manufacturers at the Rome hotel, disconsolate 'and down hearted. -"J,'-''.: ' Through the many voluminous reports of the various committees , and the dis cussions following them there wasn't a thing that would be of particular news Value and things had begun to look hazy, while cramps coursed down their backs and yawns hid their faces. , t ' The ' committee : on loose-leaf devices, whateverthey are, and the committee on carbon paper and Inked ribbons finally had completed reports, punctuated by commas, Interrogation points and yawns, when Secretary - Mortimer W. Byers peered down over his kryptok lenses and spied the reporters. Immediately .e slid from his seat and tiptoed down to them. "Are you newspaper reporters?"..'-he asked. . ' ., . "Tes," the reporters answered eagerly, thinking, perhaps, he was about to give out a story that could be suspended from a scare head. ' . They were .doomed to disappointment. Mr.. Byers drew himself up like the. sec retary of the national association of un dertaker The reporters sat agog, wait ing for him to ask, "Have you anything, to aay before sentence shall be pro nounced?" . , ' . .. Then It came; He Informed them that the meetings of the National Association of ..Stationers . and Manufacturers, . In eighth annual convention assembled, were strictly private, and-that newspaper re porters were not allowed in the room. ' , The newspaper. reporters left, enviously gazing back at the ten or fifteen 'trade magazine reporters who sat in the room writing notes as long as a midsummer night's dream. " ' ' ' The Persistent and Judicious Use ef ' Newspaper Advertising' Is the . Road to Business Success, ; - WIFE . SOESJER HUSBAND Tina Koustal Says Her Lord; Gets Her Money Mixed Up With' His. FALSE PEETENSE IS CHARGED Both Man ' and'., Wife: gave 300 ' Which They Bank trader Their ' Respective Name., hot Hni- : . . band Took AH. . v Tina Koustal has started -suit against her husband for )300, (charging him with obtaining money under false pretenses. Although .both were married and 'left families in Austria, they united in 'wed lock In Canada two years -ago, where Koustal was employed in the harvest fields. They have been living t 7H North Twenty-seventh street for the last two months. ' ' . " m . " ; . During their two years' stay In Canada, they eaeli succeeded In saving $500, which they put In a bank under their respective nanief. Upon coming to South Omaha Koustal took his wife's $3)0 and put it with, his savings In the bank under his rime. -.'. . . .. ', ' .' SVe told the police of the affair after starting suit to recover the money,' - a year ago and during the last six months Assistant General Manager. Bracken, has practically managed the affairs of the office. He Is an old Nebraska man, hav--ing been superintendent of the Lincoln division of 'the Burlington for ' several years before' he was "called to Chicago. ' DUBLIN TENNIS PLAYER ' ENTERS IN MID-WEST Maurice Goodbody, the premier tennis player of Dublin, .will play In the Mid west racquet tournament at' the Field club next week. Sam Caldwell received his entry yesterday. Goodbody is In Omaha on a visit at present and decided to enter the event and match his prowess against racqueters of 'the middle west ' ' Western Cattle . 'v Bring Big Price Two bunches of range cattle were sold on the South Om'aha market yestertlc.y for extra high prices, about 12 higher than the prices of last year. Braff & Rice of Broadwater, Neb., sold 109 head, averag ing 1,4H pounds, for $8.15, and R. L. Fad dls of alentine sold forty-six head, av eraging 1,219 pounds, for $7.50 for feeders. BRACKEN MAY BE NAMED TO SUCCEEDfRANK E; WARD Local Burlington railroad men are pre dicted the appointment of Assistant Gen eral Manager Bracken to succeed to the vacancy caused by the - resignation A Frank E. Ward, general manager of .the lines east of the Missouri river. " General Manager Ward's health failed GENERAL RAINS FALL IN . . NEBRASKA AND IOWA Light, but general rains fell all over the Wymore and McCook . divisions of the Burlington again Tuesday night. Over the state line In Kansas the rains. were very heavy. - .." . .. ... Some heavy, but scattered showers fell up along the. Elkhor j valley line of the Northwestern.. Wm WOMEN VISIT HERE Two from New Zealand Expect to Find Drunkards in America. THINK WOMEN SHOUU) VOTE Traveler. Have Vast Fnnd of Infor mation Concerning- the Political Affair, of Their Country . Never Saw Snow. ' . ! Miss Edna Cooper and her sister, Mrs, J. Sanderson, both of New Zealand, where they have exercised the right of suffrage for years, talked enthusiastically In sup port of woman suffrage when seen ; at the Hotel Rome. They showed a bound less knowledge of the affairs of their government and of the Issues of the day la their little English colony of the south seas. Mrs, Sanderson said the argument that women , would quarrel with their husbands on the subject of politics under woman suffrage was no argument at all. She denied that' she and her husband g'uarreled about it. and said that those who did . would quarrel with them about religion or beefsteak just the same, so It might as well be one thing as the other, The two women were surprised to learn that In America woman suffrage obtains In but six states. ' The two women sat modestly In their iwom yesterday working the most deli cate pieces of embroidery: and lace work, while they talked in. a quiet, even tone of the government affairs, thus in a measure refuting the argument that suf frage unfits a woman for household duties. . - The two women are touring America for the first time. They have never seen snow or ice, and they Bay they have no conception of what below sera means, but they like pur people, say they are affable, pleasant, and they like the American 'trees. Both said they were rather afraid to come to1 America, for they believed drunken men would everywhere be reel ing on the streets, and no one would be safe out-of-doors. They were agreeably surprised,; as they say they have scarcely seen an intoxicated man In America. A Dana-erca. Wound Is rendered antlsceptlc by Bucklen's Ar. nlca Salve, the healing wonder for sores, burns, piles, eczema and salt rheum. 26c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. For The Nervous Woman, Or the woman who experiences hot flashes nothing is to good to soothe, quiet and calm the nervous system as pur glyceric extract of native steoicat plants, and made without aloohot, which baa been sold by dntfAista for tha past forty years, and most favorably known as Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription. In younger years tome women suffer from dizziness,' or fainting spells, hysteria, headache, bearing -down feelings and pain. AH these symptoms of irregularity and female disturbance are relieved by the use of this famous ' Prescription V of. Doctor Pierce. - .- ,. As a powerful, invigorating tonio " Favorite Prescription " imMrta strength the whole system, and in particultrf to the organs distinctly feminine. ror over-worked, "worn out," " run-down," debilitated teachers, milliMers, dressmakers, seamstresses, " shop-girl," house-keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, it is an excellent appetizing cordial and restorative tonio. "My disease wss etHd leUwentun.'' writes Mas. Ltdia McDon ald, of Mecosta, Mich., Kouto 1. I btd nervous ehiUa and Bomb spoils and they would leave me very weak. Then I had faiflsimnotton M the doctor said I had a floating kidney. I doctored even noatae with cjr family phjmlcian. Bo said I would bare to have an operation. Then. 1 stopped Uktae his medicine. After taking three bat tin of Dr. Plerct'i pied'rinet 1 have not had any Dermis cbiU or weak svelis. I am bitter than for years. , "tilt Am,icl,tJr la v .U. tk. --- ... . . m . Jhrse renmltee have nd oar ever so nmcn in a ehert For White Cars Being .Economical ( 1 Small bore and long stroke motor. . , 2 Gasoline is heated by hot water around, the carburetor V ' bowl , , i 3 Hot air is taken from exhaust pipe for vaporizing tha v , gasoline. t ! ' - 4- Carbureted gases are expanded by being carried through ', the hot water chamber surrounding the cylinders.1 B Lubricating oil is forced through the center of the crank ; . . shaft, and each drop is measured and used on a. bear.. ' " '' ing surface.' ' ' ' . 6Friction of wearing parts' in the White motor is reduced ' : n . . ,to a minimum because water in . the radiator never boils. 1 . 7 Every ounce o? gasoline is converted, into power, because Whitemotors never miss an explosion." " . ' & No batteries are used for ignition, electricity item is'" ' ' nothing. ' - V 9 No doctor bills to pay because , White motors cannot give a back kick. , ' i - , VIO-rClutch mftchanism is perfect; needs no oil' and , no at- ' . 'f tention; never slips and never jerks.; . ; " 11 Four forward speeds in the ' transmission give White -. . . motors a better chance to. deliver 'their, power eco- ' 'nomically. ' , . ; 12 Less tire expense on account of the flexibility of all . working parts. v" f ... 13 Imported English ball bearings from motor to the rear axle make White cars roll easy. , . . , ' . to Mm. tired imlins- We bbt gn& faith in your audictDes for tmmla tmibloa." time. McDonald. Dr. Pnrv'$ Mmumt Ptlltta latoet mlH natunl htwtl mmtnemt. White Touring Cars and White Trucks : share equally well, in ?all mechanical de- tails. White products are ; made right. ; . . 'H. PELTON . ' : : 2503 Farnam Street Phone Douglas 3301 1'