9 BRIEF OITY NEWS AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA & THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JTLY 17, 1913. y V,- Sarcophagus, . Electric rsns nurgess-Granden Co. Says Soot Print It Now Deacon Press. ridtllty Storage It Von Co. Doug. 151 'riit riatlron Omaha's high grade fam ily hoteL lUh & St Mary's, 'lrantient rm. Sxtra Talus Coat and Trousers, $20 Steven the tailor. 316 go. Fifteenth street. When you taxe a vacation Hare your silverware, etc., In Omaha Bate Deposit Co.'s burg:ar-probr vault 1618 Farnam St Husband Qlven Blvorcs Joaoplr Bosch crt was granted a divorce from Clara Boachert by Judge Jamea P. English. Kxtreme cruelty Is the charge. Seeks Separation Frances Fenberg has applied for a divorce from Joseph Fenberg, charging extreme cruelty and that he has used vile and profane lan guage toward her. Sental Office Bobbed The dental of llco of Or. Charles J. Emmerson. 21U Cuming street was broken Into Tuesday night and $18 worth of goltl fillings stolen, betides a number of dental tools. aaranirorUi Street Property Sold F. L. lngersoll has sold a row of flats and store buildings at the southwest corner of Twenty-sixth and Leavenworth streets to Clarence Scheer. Ho received 25,C00 for the property. ( Ids, MoXlnley Gets Divorce Kate McKlnley has been granted a dlvorco from Alexander McKlnley. Refusal and failure to provide suitable maintenance was charged. v Saaltj- men to Adjourn One more meeting' will be held by the Ileal Estate exchange when adournment will bo taken,' until September. The real estate nien are planning to attend the national convention f real estate exchanges at Winnipeg. More than fifty Omaha realty agents will leave Omaha a week from Saturday. BUla and Pennies Stolen The home of Ira Henry, 224 McKlnley street, Ben son, was entered by thlevos Tuesday night, who forced the lock tif the front door and succeeded In making away with $7 Tn bills and 150 pennies. None of tho family was aroused until the thieves were leaving the residence. In closing the front door the noise aroused Mr. Henry, who hurrying to his bedroom wondow was In time to get a glimpse of the figure of a man running hurriedly down the street. John Piersdn Whips Younger Sister for Not Cleaning Up Home. SHAME DEVELOPS HIS TEMPER UrotiKht Home Visiting: Friend nnd Loses Control of Self In Embar rassment Over UnnsunMr Untidy Condition. John Plerson, 22 years old, hnd a guest at his home, 661, South Thirty-first street. He brought the frlent. nome yesterday afternoon and was shocked to find the house In what he bellevid was an un usually, untidy condition. He found his sister, Rose, and accusing her of neglect ing her duty as housekeeper, gave her a whipping. Rose, who Is 19 years old. called the police and had her brother ar rested, charged with assault and battery. Plerson told the police that he was ashamed of the house, when he took his friend from St Louis there. He asked his sister to clean up a "bit, and, he told the police, the sister told him he could clean It himself. He took his belt and gave her a thrashing. Miss Plerson now Is very angry at her brother and says she will back the case against him In court. Tho hearing waa called for police court this morning. MkkIc Cltr Gossip. J. D. Courtney, plumber. Tel. 8o. 1004. For a case of Jetter's Old Ace or ttold Top beer call So. SC8. Prompt delivery to all part of the city. Wm. Jetter. The New Century Centurlan and Optima clubs will give a lawn social at Twenty- lourtn ana v streets unursaay evening. A special car will leave Twenty-fourth and N streets tonlcht. carrying the South Omaha arole of Eagles to Florence, where they will he tne guests or. tno uagiet there. A large class will be Initiated. A lawn soclat will, be given Friday evening by the Ladles' Aid society ot Hillside Baptist cnurcn at tne nome ot George F. Chapln, 1312 North Twenty fifth street.. William P. Donahue, secretary of the fire and police board, and bride havo returned from a wedding trip to Yankton, S. D. They are at home at 827 North Twenty-second street. The bflotlffrrintr cases have been post poned until Saturday. A great many minor cases took up the time of the polio and Judge Caiianan con- Charles Hanicke is Seriously Injured in Fall from Wheel Charles Hanicke. Twenty-second and Martha streets, member of the firm of C addock & Hanicke, 108 South Four teenth, was seriously Injured yesterday morning at Twenty-fifth and Farnam strtets. Hanicke wan. riding a blcyle cast on Farnam when passing Twenty-fifth, where the street la narrowed by reason of : repairs on the north side, he waa ' tuight between a west bound auto and a Good Shepherd laundry wagon, bIbo going cast. The auto suddenly swerved toward him causing him to turn Into the wagon. Striking a rear wheel, he was thrown to the pavement and rendered unconscious. Passersby carried him to the Sherman McConneU Drug company on tho corner, where Dr. .Charles, Rosewater admlnls tered rnedlca, Attention and summoned theBtttlfer ifior'rahce ambulance for removal tos Olarkson hospital. Beside' a severe scalp wound and lacera tions about the head, Hanicke gives all the ,symptpms of having sustained a fractured skull as well aa serious In ternal Injuries Mother Sees Death of Her Aviator Son CHICO, Cal.. July 16. Thaddeus Kerns, a 20-year-ol tvlator, was killed late today, when the engine of hla bi plane exploded seventy-five feet In the air. . When the wreckage hit the ground tho radiator crushed the aviator's head, while other parts of the biplane pierced his body,. Kern's aged mother, who had stepped to her doorway to see her son fly past, witnessed the tragedy. rock Island official , finds i0wa crops fine Assistant General Manager Smalley of the" second division of the Rock Island, with headquarters at Topeka, Kan., ac companied by his wife, daughter and two Eon's, arrived In Omaha after having spent two weeks touring Iowa In an automo bile. From here they went home on the train. lilr. Smalley visited every portion of Iowa touched "by the Rock Island lines, and everywhere, he says, he found crops in good condition. Farmers have fin lshed the harvesting of a large crop of small grain, and corn, considering the long hot and dry spell, looks good. Rain, he says, Is badly needed, but generally corn can stand another week of the drouth without suffering any great amount of damage. GEORGIA ELECTS FIRST SENATOR UNDER AMENDMENT ATLANTA, Ga.. July 16. Augustus O. Bacon was re-elected to the United States senate today as a member from Georgia by the direct votes of the elec torate. This counts as the first election held under the recently ratified seven teenth amendment to the United States constitution providing that the voters of the several states shall cast direct bal lots in senatorial elections. Senator Bit con was unopposed. Jelly Mask Restores . Facial Contour (The Woman Beautiful.) Jt has been found that a face mask made of a perfectly harmless substance known as parafined plastold Jelly, has u wonderful effect on tred, flabby, faded and aged faces. It Is said to actually re build facial tissue, .besides noticeably re btorlnir vouthful contour, color and ao- pearance Instantly. If this be true, nont of us need worry over the "ravages ot Father Time." Its harmleasness. Inexpenslvenees. Its prompt action, are other commendable icaiures. iou gel mis suosiance at your druggist's, cover 'your face completely with a thin layer of It and keen It on for at least fifteen minutes. The jelly dries quicKiy ana you must not lain or laugn ar you wilt crack the mask. It soaks oft easily with cpld water. Then you are perieciiy asiomenea at tne transforma tion. Your face feels so smooth, firm. beautifully moulded and girlishly robust. you appear 10 nave ioi ten or nrteen years irom your .age. To obtain the de sired cumulative benefits, in addition to trie- temporary effects, ute. the tratment two or three times a week for awhile. Advertisement court Tuesday tlnued the .cases. are to bo. heard. About fifteen of them General Webster Has Umbrellas to Match All His Suits General John Lee Webster most prop erly dressed man In Omaha, has created a fastidious fashion all his own ho wears an umbrella to match his suit The general came stepping lightly Into tho offices of the Water board he Is at torney for the Water board. Ho wore a dull gray suit and carried a dull gray umbrella. Another tlmo the general tripped Into the Water board offices he wore a light green suit and carried a light green umbrella. When interviewed the general refused to say Just how many umbrejlas he owns. He says to do so might make known the number of' suits Jie possesses a thing the general keeps absolutely secret Victim of the Seat is Without'Tood for Three Days Patrick Ryan, aged 67 years, was stricken by the heat yesterday while he sat on the bank of the river In a weak ened condition, resulting from lack of food for four days. Ryan Is a laborer and has been making his home at the People's Rooming house. Thirteenth and Douglas streets, but on account of the extreme heat has not been able to work and has ollnntlv ernnn without meals. Dr. C. B. FolU called Coilnty Physician Schiler'a, attention to the case and Ryan wll be provided for. His condition Is serious. CANTELOUPE, 3 for 2Sc IMiUK PLUMS, per hnskct RED RASPBERRIES, per box 40c 10c Cool SUMMER DRINKS At the New Fountain on the Balcony. Choice - of - the House Sale of Women's PUMPS, OXFORDS AND SLIPPE RS REGULAR PRICES $5.50. S4.00. $4.50 and $5.00. THURSDAY. THE PAIR. $1.95. Shamp Looks Up New Oo-Op6rative Plan C. Ij. Shamp of the Central Labor union and member of a special committee of labor organisations which Is planning the establishment of co-operative stores In Omaha, went to Kansas City to Investi gate and bring back a report on the ad visability ot establishing at least half a dozen such stores In Omaha. "We have no Intention of starting flfy teen or twenty new stores," Shamp said, "but we Intend to buy out several ot the storekeepers, now In business and grad ually increase until we will te eventually be catering to the majority ot the people." The plan of the co-operative store boost era Is to qell stock in their stores, prob ably a share each to a great many people, and then to sell goods at a profit which will merely be covering the operating cost. Crap Same Ends in a Cutting Scrape . Frank Allls, Emrole, Neb.; David Louis, Ottawa, la.; Joe Davis, cotored, Denver, and Ed Lewis, colored, Tenth and Dodge streets, were arrested this afternoon, charged with being suspicious characters. The squad were occupied in a game of "crape" back ot a billboard near T,enth. and Dodge streets, when Lewis, becom ing disgruntled over the winning of the white men from him and his partner, secured a brick and tossed It at the rest of the crowd. Louis took exceptions and started In pursuit ot the negro with an open knife. Ho finally overtook him and stabbed him In the back, inflicting a wound an inch deep and three inches long. The wounded man waa cared for and, all were then arrested and locked up. trm I . HERE'S by long odds the greatest shoe-buying opportunity offered by any store in this city. An annual event Choice-of-the 'House Sale of Women's Pumps, Oxfords and Slippers that sell regularly at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00 for $L95. The styles are all new. Tho kind that are in tho greatest domand ,iust now. Tho high grades of ma terials used and fino workmanship in theso shoes will demonstrate that those aro real bargains. There's not a pair reserved. Every sizo included. Light and heavy soles. WOMEN'S TAN OXFORDS AND PUMPS WOMEN'S WHITE BUCK AND CANVAS PUMPS . . WOMEN'S WHITE BUCK AND CANVAS OXFORDS . WOMEN'S EVENING PUMPS AND SLIPPERS . . . WOMEN'S GUN METAL PUMPS AND OXFORDS . . . WOMEN'S BLACK PATENT PUMPS AND OXFORDS SATIN AND DEMI-SKIN PUMPS AND COLONIALS . Regular Price $3.50, $4. $4.50 and $5. Your Choice. Men's $3.50 to $4.50 Oxfords $ AT THIS price wo include all of our regular stock, best stylos in lace, button and blucher models. Gunnietal, patent colt, black or tan kid skin, volour and ton Russia calfskin. $3.50, $4.00 and $4.50 values, Thursday specinl, tho pair 245 $6 Nettleton Oxfords $ - - 1 i i iii i i AN opportunity to buy men's famous Nettle ton Oxfords at less than cost to make. Combination lasts and English effects, in all sizes and widths. Regular prico $G.00; Thursday, in this groat clearance, tho pair 3 Clearance of All MILLINERY 1 ' ' " 1 1 1 M ' " 1 Sale Begins jPrsmptly Thursday Morning at 8, and You Cannot Afford to Miss It. Our Entire Stock Is Included Every Trimmed Hat to Go Every Untrimmed Hat Included NOT a single reservation. Every hat in stock TWTANY beautiful effects in Panamas, White regardless of what the former price may Hemps, White Milans, White Peanuts, have been. Hats trimmed with Ostrioh, Aigrette, Flowers, Ribbon, Ratine, Linen, Suk and "White Felt Hats. Threo big lots and priced to Panama and Maline. Three lots. Choice a t close immediately like this; $1, $5 and $5 49c 99c r 3.2 v Hnta ,HaUi This Flowers. Big Assortment at, Choice, Sc Fancy Wings and Sticknps at, Choice, 48c Orkin Bros. Your Home Store. Orkin Bros. -Your Home Store. THIS IS THE WAY THEY DO IT Fake 'Reformers Shun the Truth and Shame the Devil. NEW ASSAULT ON THE CHARTER CJmr'icr 'Writers Accused of Monkey ing with Stnte gtnndurd for Cream , .Tests Much Sur prised to Henr Tuer Did. One of the ,fak reform newspapers, whtctt hau Instructed Its scribes to "die Into tho homo rule charter and find some thins 'we can' fight 4t on publishes un der a Uncotn date. t:ne, an Inspired yarn about the "ateel-rlveted charier" In which the charter convention U credited wth "flirting" with Food Commissioner "liar man. (' The "story", charges tho chapter con vention with attempting to evade the state law regarding the percentage ol butter fat which shall bo In cream sold hero. Harman himself lets loose a fine flow of oratory In which he repeats hit oath ot office and grandiloquently as serts he'll enforce the state law to the letter, regardless of charters, etc. Members of the cnartr convention art surprised to learn that they changed butter fat standards. They understand that the city commission has under con sideration an ordinance whtch will, when paveed, If passed at all, provide for tests here" under the state standard. The etty commission has had this ordinance under consideration for some time. The charter aonventton never considered but ter fat or milk testing Standards. "That artlcte Is an example of the sincerity with which the fake reformers are fighting the home rule charter," said a member of the charter conven tion. "It may' be, pure misrepresentation oi tho part of the fake reform .organ. It looks like It Is. That Is the manner In which the fakers fight. But as to the food commissioner, It Is either a statement written without his knowledge or It written with his knowledge shows merely that ha doesn't know what he Is talking about. All ot which gives the great cam paign carried on by tho fake reformers against the home rule oharter an ap pearunco of great, tearless honesty,' doesn't UT" GEORGE MAGNER DIE? OF HEAT PROSTRATION Qeorgo Magner, brother of, W. E. Manger, 452S Capitol avenue, died yester day at fit Joseph's hospital as the result ot heat prostration. lie was stricken Tuesday evening and continually weakened until the end. A DniiKerqns Wound Is rendered antiseptic by .Bucklen'to Ar nica Bslve, the healing wonder for sores, burns, piles, eczema and salt rheum. So. For sate by Beaton Drug Co. Advertise, ment. Just Like a Woman Light Rain Falls in Some Parts of State Borne rain fell in Nebraska Tuesday night, according to reports to the rail roads, but It lacked much of being gen eral. .Fairly heavy showers were scat tered over Northwestern territory west of Long Pine and up along the Donesteel branch. On the Burlington there were numerous showers up through the Alli ance country, but none in other portions of the state. Railroad reports Indicate that in the western portion of the state and In the central and western parts of tho South Platte countty corn is begin ning to feel the effects of the hot and dry weather. Pastures Are rapidly dry ing up and feed for cattle and horses is said to be getting scair VT V IMMODEST f(. 4 tjrb.iss Horror's!', You couuyxfN Hint fit TO "WErtR. f 3KC35 NEVER SHU SUCH "N. ? ,V3 A TRAWfiPAREMT ( IHMODEST STYLES T CTf oTu " ) flW WELL NAtuHY MFEV. ) . J UKE THEY ( THAT'S 0U!?T T. COME ON ( 7 WFflR. feyW I MkP 1 IggwU HOME AND I PAVWJ afrflBi erT LmC OMAHA GRAIHJART ACTIVE On Dry Weather Reports Opens Two Cents Higher. NEW WHEAT RECEIPTS HEAVY nulls Have Their Own Wny on Corn nnd Oats, Pnshlno; Up the fu tures nnd Ilnylngr for De cember Delivery. Wednesday was another busy day on the Omaha a rain exchange, nearly 100 cars of new wheat having been on the market, considerable ot which was on tho open board. It was about the first day since new wheat has been coming that tho speculators had a chance to get quick aotlon on their money. Owing to reports of dry weather and high temperatures, wheat opened close to 2 cents above tho close of Tuesday, holding the advance all .through the ses sion, with a strong tendency to go higher. Duylng was spirited on September de livery, with the December option strong. Corn followed wheat, by soma this be ing said o bo due to sympathy and by others on account of the possibility of a short crop In some of tho heaviest pro ducing states. Tho oat market was strong on report!, of tho yield not being up to what had; been reported earlier In tho season, when Bruin men were talking bumper crop, drain men who havo watched tho market say that December oats are a. good buy and that the price Is bound to go higher. ECONOMIC LEAGUE TO LIST SPEAKERS INTHE GAS FIGHT Members of the Economic league Tuos-, day night decided on k clty-wldo speech triaktng campaign ot education for votor Against the proposed gas franchise Speakers are to be listed by tho secret tary and sent out to address improve ment club meetings find other gatherings Key to the Situation Bee Advertising. A WOMCAN'S WISDOM. Tho worried mother wakes up to hear her baby's heavy breathing tJftje routh perhaps the croup 01 whooping cough. She docs not want to send (or tho sootor when perhaps the troubla dos not amount to mucL. Finally the thinks of that medieal book her father gave hor, The Common Sense Medical Adviser, by U. V. Pleroe, M. D. She says "just the thing to find out what i the matter with the little dear." 'Two million households in this country own one and it's to be had for only 31o. in stamps 1,000 pages la splendid cloth binding. A good ismily adviser in any emergency. It is for ellhtr i. This it what many women write Dr. Pieroe in retpeot to hit ' Fsvorite Pretcription," a remedy which hss mtdo thousands of melancholy and mltersble women cheerful and happy, by curing the painful womanly disease wbioh undermine a woman't health and ttrength. "Mr dcalro Is to writo a few lines to let you know what your valuable medicine has done for Die?' writes Mbs. Mahqauet Zueueht, of 323 S. Bwitalon Street, Baltimore, Md. "Before the storck came to our house I was a very sick woman. I wrote you for advice which was kindly given and which made mo a different woman in a short time. After taking the first bottle of Favorito Prescription' I began Improving so that I hardly know I was In such a condition. I did my own housework washing and Ironing, cooking, sewing, and the worst of all nursod throe children who naa whooping cough. I hardlv knew of the advent ten mlnuUs before so easy was It The baby Is as fat as a butter-bal). Dr. Pierce's Favorite .Prescription It the boat medicine for any woman to take when In this condiuss. I recommend Is Mmi. ZmuwT ajto Iubb. to all my friends." Thursday, July 17th Hospe's Dollar Window Sale DON'T MISS IT A. HOSPE CO. - 1513 DoigSas St. 'JSr