Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 13, 1913, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE Ul'M: OM.VJ1A, FRIDAY, JUKE 13, 1013.
5
BRIEF CITY NEWS
ZHetrlo Tans DursMs-Qranflen Co.
dUty 8toraff ft Van Co. Doug. 151.
Root Print It Now Beacon
Fress.
Br. Xlnslar Brnndels The&tar Bids..
Note ud Throat. Phons Douslas USl
When yon talcs your vacation lsaT
your Bllverrrara. etc. In Omaha Safe De
posit Co.' burglar proof vault. IMS Far
nam 8L 11.00 per month for a good
alitd sackace.
Onardlan 0ne for Xnsnraoo Edward
TOley, as guardian for Thomas J. Hart,
has brought suit against the nellance In
surance company of Philadelphia to col
lect $3,000 on an Insurance policy on a
two-story brick building at 801. North
Twenty-fourth street, which he alleges
.was destroyed by fire the night ot the
tornado.
XJjfhts at Fostofflce The new arc
light ot 2o0 kllowats lias been instaueu
at the Seventeenth street entrance ot
the postofflce. Hitherto that entrance
has been very dark at night. Now with
the new arc light and with the two city
lights, one at each corner of the street,
Illumination on the Seventeenth street
slda Is excellent.
Protest on Wow Park Fred P. Stclf-
fler has protested against the city com
mission purchasing the sulphur springs
at Fourteenth and Blnney streets for a
"Bluff park," as suggested by "Uncle"
Joe Redman. The Protestant says he
does not favor assessing adjacent prop
erty to pay part of the cost of the park.
City Attorney Rlne ruled that such as
sessment could be made.
Advises Minister for Wedding Judge
Button of the district court believes that
marriages are more likely to turn out
happily If the ceremonies are performed
by ministers rather than by civil of
ficers. When ho mado returns' to the
marriage license bureau of two weddings
recently performed by him he remarked
that he' never performed a wedding cere
mony without first advising the coupls
to be married by a pastor of a church.
Special Train of Turners The national
turnfest, or quadrennial gymnastic festi
val, to be held at Denver, June 'S5-29,
promises to be one of the largest gather
ings In the west this year. Advices to
the Union Pacific up ,to this 4lmo - are
that It will handle nine special trains
west from Omaha. Three of these will
be from Chicago, carrying nothing but
Chicago turners. It Is expected that the
Omaha delegation will have a Bpcclal
train, ns they have now lined up nearly
00 turners and others who are desirous
of attending the festival.
6EPS0N HEADSJEW SCHOOL
Truant Officer is Promoted to Be
the New Principal.
CARVER MADE TRUANT OFFICER
&aU(nnt tn Promoted to TnWr the
Place Mmle Vncnnt 1j- Slilftlne
of (itnon to 'the 2Sw
School.
TO BE PRINCIPAL 01? THE NEW
PUBLIC SCHOOL FOR BOYS.
Holovtchiner Has
Plan for Ousting
Health Officer
J E. Holovtchiner, vlca president of the
xharter convention and president of the
Board of Education, has carried his fight
with City Health Commissioner R. W.
Connell Into the charter board and will
attempt to "eliminate Connell' by mak
ing his office elective, believing no
health commissioner can bo elected after
having served a term In the office."
Holovtchlner's proposition Is now In
the hands ot the "general committee of
five, and will probably be reported to
the. whole convention, where It will be.
the center of a merry fight, as Connell
. has numerous friends on the charter com-
: mission.
Holovtchlner says he has nine votes
for his proposition arid 'his opponents
eay they have ten. As there aro only
fifteen members on the commission tho
discrepancy Js apparent i
(THREE MEN CAPTURE NEGRO
WHO PEEPED IN WINDOW
Mrs. Stetfe, 2711 South Fifteenth street,
awoke Wednesday about midnight and
glancing toward the window ot her bed
room discovered the face of a negro
peering In through the glass. Her screams
aroused her husband and two sons, who
upon learning of the happening, rushed
out-of-doors In time to capture Major
Cook, who was hoisting his frame over
the rear fence.
The three men took their captive to the
. home of Officer Chadaock, who resides
in the same block, and he In turn took
tho man to the station. Cook was given
ninety days.
E. D. Gcpson, for six years truant
officer of the public school, will be irtn
clpal of the hew school for boyn v, i
the board of education will establish
near Thirtieth and Brown street this
fall. J. B. Carver, atsistunt probation
officer, will succeed (lepson. Tho com
mittee on teachers and Instructions of
the Board of Education will meet Monday
afternoon nntl confirm thtso appoint
ments, mado by Superintendent Ellis l
Graff and President E. Holovtchiner
An assistant to Gcpson wilt bo ap
pointed later. The new school will be for
boys exclusively and courses In alt the
trados will be Installed and taught It
will not bo a parental school, but boys
who have not been making good In the
regular graded school work wilt be given
a chance In this new Institution. It will
bo a day school.
Plans of tho board are to move boiiip
of tho buildings from Miller Park school
to Thirtieth and Brown, where the school
district owns a stretch of ground. 120x
2T0 feet. This ground will bo used for
gardens. It Is believed that about twenty
five boys will begin work In tho new
school next fall .
Superintendent Graff has been plan
ning for several vrnrn In ...inMi.t,
a school in the Interest of the boys who
have been giving their- teachers a lot of
trouble and have been backward In thoir
work. At tho new school they will bo
given Individual Instruction.
Una lluil Hxitcrlrnce.
"Gepson Is a good man," said Super
intendent Graff, "and ought to d6 good
work In such a school. He has had ex
perience with boys and has proven him
self copablo of handling them."
For seven years Cnrvpr han hon In
probation work in Omuha and during
that time has built up a reputation i for
being able to deal successfully with the
so-called "bad boys." The new office
of truancy will represent nn Increase of
nearly 1600 in his. annual solan-. ir hn
not formally accepted tho offer of the
position, out as lie will not have to
assume office Until fall, ho will take
It. He will draw 11,800 a year as truant
officer, Gepson will recelvo tho same
salary as principal of tho new school.
ucpson was Dorn in Dunlap, la., and
educated at the Iowa university, be
ginning hlB work there .in 1S37. Ho
worked his way throuch school nnd
carried off scholarships and was loaded
with honors. He went to Gllddon, Iowa,
after finishing school, was principal of
the high school there and later was
elected superintendent He became in
terested In work among juvenile delin
quents and resigned his superintenilency
tb come to Omaha.
Kmnv the Dud Iloya.
During his work in Omaha he has come
in contact with all manner of boys and
has an acquaintance among parents ot
the city wider than any other local edu
cator. He has been responsible for doing
away with child labor almost completely,
and has compelled parents to keep their
children In School when there was not
BUfflctenfcauso for granting them per
mits to go to work.
"In the majority of cases the parents
really do not need the money their chil
dren can earn," sand Gepson, "and they
can be made to see the advisability ot
having them continue their school work:
Gepson says some of the boys, hearing
that manual training, printing and ag
riculture will be taught have of them
selves applied for entrance. An exper
lenced printer will be appointed to aid
Gepson, Tho faculty will consist of two
men at the beginning. Only men will
bo hired as teachers there. Superintend
ent Graff choso Gepson after searching
several cities for a better man, whom ho
tailed to find.
HHIHbV B sIH
E. D. GEPSON.
CRAWFORD BUYS TO BUILD
ALONG AUT0M0BIE ROW
Still another building Is going up In
auto row. Frank Crawford has bought
the lot at 2125 Farnam street from T. I
Davis and. will build a two-story brick
building there when an agreement Is
reached with a prospective tenant. He
paid $13,00 for tho land. It has a frontage
of a little over twenty-seven feet on
Vnrnam street, with a depth of 123 feet
Excavation Is now In progress at 3021
Farnam street for a two-story automobile
supply house. Crawford's building will
probably be a garage.
NEW HOT WATER METER
FOR FEDERAL BUILDING
A hot water meter, the cost of which
Is to 'be HS5, Is to be Installed In the
federal building. The contract has Just
"been let This will measure the amount
ot hot water used. It Is necessary that
this Item bo accurately recorded In order
that a comparative report may be made
monthly to Washington In regard to the
expense of keeping the building supplied
with coal.
Safe at the Police
Court Broken Open
and Contents Stolen
The safe In the office of the police
court was broken Into Wednesday even
ing, and 25 In bond money, 110 In change
and a seventeen Jewel watch were taken.
The safe was about seventy-five years
old and was an easy prey for the bur
glars that handled It.
Clerk of Police Court O'Conner dls
covered, the battered door and the con'
tents gone when he arrived at the office
yesterday morning.
Moorhead Seeking
515 Honest Men m
Greater Omaha
Election Commissioner Moorhead, who
Is seeking, not one, but SIS honest men
to serve as judges and clerks at tho
tornado bond election., says that ho Is
finding his task a difficult one, and that
having put down half the number re
quired he Is racking his brain to find
enough desirable men to complete the
list.
He announces that ho may postpone tho
restoration bond election from July IS to
a later date unless he can finish the list
by Saturday, for It must bo advertised
thirty days before the election, as re
quired by law.
Thousand Go to See
Cadets in Camp at
Missouri Valley!
Yesterday was a big day for the Omaha
High school cadets up at Camp McHugn,
near Missouri Valley, for they were hosts
of nbout 1.W0 ot their fathers, mothers,
brothel's and sisters, aunts, uncles and
cousins. This number of their relatives
left Omaha yesterday on a special
train of ten coaches over the Northwest
ern. The Northwestern special was sched
uled to leave the Union station for Mis
souri Valley at 9 o'clock. Long before that
hour, men. women and children com
menced to arrive and each Individual car
ried a corpulent lunch basket filled with
good things for the basket dinner for the
boys Ir. camp. Tho crowds continued to
pour t'-iroUKh the depot and It was 9:W
before the train pulled out, leaving but
four bvlatcd Individuals.
Last year when the Northwestern ran
the special to the cadet camp It carried
eight coaches ar.d 410 persons. This year,
besides those who went - tho train, It
Is estimated that 200 made the trip In
automobiles,
WITHNELL GIVES REASONS
TelU Why He Let City Electrician
Michar.liert Out.
David Starr Jordan
Speaks Here Today
Tho Commercial club Is planning to
Beat the largest crowd since Mr. Bryan
was there when David Starr Jordan,
former president of l.elund Stanford
university und now Its chancellor, comes
this' noon to speak to the club on
"World Pcaco and Commerce." It will
be probably the last public affairs com
mittee luncheon of the tettson and tho
club wants to make It one ot the best.
Dr. D. E. Jenkins, president of tho Uni
versity of Omaha, will preside.
FREIGHT HANDLER GETS
HEAVY DAMAGE VERDICT
The PessJftcnt and Judicious Use of
Newspaper Advertising Is the Road to
Business Success.
Deputy United States Marshal McCal
lam has Just returned from Lincoln,
where he has been attending federal
court, which has been In session for two
weeks. Tho last case was that ot
Chauncy Hooper of Lincoln against the
Rock Island railway company, In which
Hooper was awarded judgment In the
sum of $20,000 for permanent Injuries ho
received when a freight train struck him
at Enghtcenth and Vine streets In Lin
coln. He had ued for 150,000.
SLIPS A REPQJSniON BY HIM
5nys Mlchaelsen Unit Htm Slsrn
llrquUltlon for nn Automobile
When lie 111 it Not Know
What lie AVna Slnnlnk.
Charles M. Wlthnvtl, headof the de
partment of city flro protection, and
water supply, who peremptorily dismissed
City Electrician Waldemar Mlchaelsen
from office gave his reasons for so do
ing. Ho said:
"I made It a point to trust Mlchaelsen
and depend on him. The head ot this
department, as well as tho other com
missioners, must sign a large number ut
requisitions on the city purchasing agent
for supplies. Mlchaelsen brought me
about twenty-five of these requisitions
)o sign one morning.
"I glanced through the requisitions and
signed thrm. I did not examine thm
carefully. Later I found he had put In
a requisition for an automobile for him
self to cost 13.000. Any supplies for the
city costing over 150 must be advertised
for and naturally he requisition was not
honored.
"However. Mlchaelsen kept this requisi
tion and showed It to a number ot peo
ple, telling them I would sign anything.
No business man, I believe, would keep
such an employe and I felt that It was
not safe to keep him. Ot course, I ought
to havo examined alt the requisitions
carefully, and you can depend on It I
will In the future, but It Is customary
for a man to put some dependence In his
employes. When you can't depend on
them they ought to be let out."
Mlchaelsen, who said ho would mako
charges that Wlthnell had violated city
ordinance's, "slept over It" and decided
he would not, at this time, say anything
further. He has Intimated that he will
"spring something" later.
Warmer Weather in
Next Seven Days
According to the National weekly
weather bulletin temperatures above tho
seasonable average are to prevail for the
next weelt This applies to the region
west ot the Mississippi valley, while a
return to normal temperatures are fore
casted for surrounding districts.
Announce in Advance
Thei First Great . .
Anniversary
Sale
Beginning Next;
Monday, June 16
Water Board Tries
to Collect Money
Borrowed by City
The Water board has decided to force
the city to return tll,X0 which was bor
rowed by tint commissioners to pay the
cost of opening a certain street for a
water main. The water commissioner
has asked tho board's attorney, John L.
Webtser, to procrrd to collect Up mnnri
In the maiim-r he sees most fit. Tlf nun
cll has refused to return the moiirv,
whloh was "borrows!" from the boar.!
several months ago.
Cnn't Keep it Srrret.
The splendid work of Chamberlain's
Tablets Is dally becoming more widely,
known. No such grand remedy for stom
ach and liver troubles has over been
known. For sale by all druggists Advertisement.
Key to the Situation Bco Advertising.
BLOTCHES ITCHED
AND
BURNED
TEAMSTER INJURED IN
C0LISI0N WITH A CAR
Louis Drattsburg. 400 South Twenty
second street, driver for the South Omaha
Packing company, was painfully Injured
at Twenty-fourth and Franklin streets
In a collision with a street car. Neither
of the team was hurt any, while the
wagon was damaged somewhat. Drafts
turg was given medical attention and
then taken home.
POSTMASTER WHARTON
RETURNS FROM. CONVENTION
Postmaster John C. Wharton has re
turned from Lincoln where for two days
he attended th. meeting ot the post
masters of the state. He did not stay
tor the election of officers. Mr. Whartoii
responded to the address ot welcome at
Xoiicoln And yesterday read a paper
on the parcel post.
A Drrak for Liberty
from stomach, liver and kidney trouble
la made when a S5 box of Dr. Ring's
New Life Pills is bought. Why suffer'
JTor sale ty Beaton Drug Co Advertise-ment.
So Intensely Had to Scratch and,
Make Sores. Ashamed to Go on
the Street. Used Cutlcura Soap
and Ointment. In Seven Weeks
Face and Body Without Blemish,
2005 Sun St., Cincinnati, Ohio. "My
face and body were full of red blotches large
and small. They would Itch and burn so
Intensely that I would hare to
cratch and that would maks
sores. I 'would loss rest on
account of the Irritation. They
caused disfigurement. In fact
I was ashamed to go out on
tbe street for fear everybody
would look a me. My cloth
tog would Irritate tbe break
ing oat on my body aad srerr
few stapa I would take I would bare to
scratch my leas or body,
"I was troubled for six months and used
soap, , , , noth
ing did me any good. Than I started to use
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. I got relief
immediately. In seven weeks I considered,
myself cured, my face aad body without a'
blemish." (Signed) Christian Voweler, Apr.
Sfl, 1012.
It costs nothing to learn bow pure, sweet,
effective and satisfying Cutlcura Soap and
Ointment are in tbe treatment of poor com
plexions, red, rough hands. Itching scalps,
dandruff, dry, thin and filling hair, because
you need not buy them until you try them.
Cutlcura Soap (33c) and Outlcura OlnW
manf (SOcJ are sold everywhere. A single
set is often sufficient. Liberal sample
of each maUed free, with 33-p. Skin Book.
Address post-card "Outlcura, Dept. T,
Boston."
4VTecdr-faced men should use Cutlcura
foap Sharing Stick, 36c 8ample free,
iirggagasa
It will be a sale of Sensational N.ney-Sa?inf
Opportunities in every section of the store.
Se Papers for Particulars
ass ksssssss csccscss eesseaEcacae sKCEflRK
!!
01
H
It
II
1
Peerless
Beer
Since 1854 until today has been ac
knowledged unexcelled for quality. The Rea
son because only the choicest materials and greatest
care go into its production. Bubbling with energy and
bounding health, pure mellow and matchless flavor, Peer
less is the best beverage for the home. Order a case today.
W. C HEYDEN, Mgr.
rUuit ZR DiUj Gl AitMuikA2M4
CARL FURTH. DUtributor
710 S. 10th SUt, Onuha. Uth.
ntt h0 Dmlu 44J! AitMUtic
John Gund Brewing Co.
La Crosie, Wisconsin
II
Polfl"Ae (
aeppHBJH0JfjHSBSJ0JSjV if
The Frost
and CarbonProof Oil
Polarine affords the highest possible degree
of lubrication, no matter how hard the service
conditions. It will not congeal in the crank
case nor clog in the feed pipes. It burns cleanly,
without carbon deposit.
& I IV ...
aik your aeater aoout quantity
diftcomits and iron barrels for storage.
Red Crown Motor Gasoline is Best.
Standard Oil Company
(MHO KASHA)
Omaha
c
Whenever You Go Picnicking
Bo suro to tnko with you
a few bottlos of .
THl? BEER YOU LIKE
REFRESHING
INVIGORATING
NOURISHING
Browed and bottled by Prod Krujr DmvliiR Co.
Phone Douglas 1889 for a Oa3o,
OonHumcr' Distributors
Luxus Mercantile Co.
109-11 North 16th Street.
Excursion Rates East
Tickets on sale daily until Soptember 30th
via the
CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST.PAUL RAILWAY
ROUND TRIPS PROM OMAHA:
Atlantic City, N. J $45.60-$46.00
Bar Harbor, Mo $&0.50 $54.50
Boston, Mass $42.50 $46.50
Buffalo,N. Y .$33.50-35.50
Detroit, Mich S27.50
I Montreal, Quo. '. $36.50
New York City $43 .DU-ilj.DU
Portland, Mo. .$43.85 -$47.85
Quebec, Quo $40.50
Toronto, Ont. . . . A $31.10
Pinal return limit GO days from date of sale. Liberal
stop-over privelegos. Low rates to many other summer
resorts in Canada, Now England, Now York State, North
ern Michigan and the "Wisconsin Lake Country. Ask for
copy of booklet " Summer Homes" or for any other in
formation desired.
CITY TICKET OFFICE, 1317 FARNAM STREET,
'Phone Douglas 283.
. W. E. Bock, City Passenger Agent,
Omaha.
Remember
Now in our New
Location
1819 Farnam St
Fully equipped for everything in the Typewriter Line.
Supplies, Repairs. Lato model rentals. Free Employ
ment Bureau for Stenographers. L. 0. Smith & Bros,
Typewriter Company, 181& Farnam Street.
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