10 A fHE OMAHA SfNDAY BEE: AUGUST 3, 1913. CANVASSING NEEDS OF AUTO Cole Motor Company Sendi Experts on Extraordinary Trip. SUBJECT CAR TO HARD STRAINS Drive Machine Thronith Morn! FlaceR and Tnke N'otes of the Tlranlta and Data on PnrH that Mar He Broken. A Cole motor car from the Cole Motor Cr pomnanv'a eiurtnecrlng; department. arrived In Omaha yesterday on an engl- neerlnc tour from Indianapolis to the Parlflo coast In the car were Chief Kntrlneer Cliarlc 8. Crawford, Head Tester Lew Petljohn and Field Advertising; Manager H. C Bradfleld of the Cole Motor Car cotn- panr and -J. O. Turner, a Delso field service expert. Theso officials claim that they aro on an Investigation and en gineering trip such as was never before taken by an automobile. The trip Is be ing conducted by the Cole Motor Car company under the auspices of the engl neers of the Standariied Cole's roll of honor Tho Standarlzed Cole's roll of honor consists of the Tlmken Detroit Axlo and Hearing company, the North way Motor and Manufacturing company. Mayo Radiator company, Qcmmer Steer Inc Gear company, Detroit Steel Bprlngs company. Bplcer Universal Joints com pany, Firestone Tim and Demountable rim organisation, Dayton Knglneerln Ijabratorles company, manufacturers of the Delco electric lighting, starting and Ignition unit The tourists reported the White Pole route In fine shape and every hill gtven a severe test The oar they are touring In Is a six cylinder of the Coin series nine. It has been taken from the floor of the local salesroom In Indianapolis and Cole's chief engineer Is anxious to get a personal observation of conditions as he sees them 1ri the territory ho passes through. Engineer Crawford wants to Know the road conditions of the hilly parts of the west and witness tho per formance of his car In various altitudes. Head Tester Petttjohn Is also making observations so that he will be In a better position to finally Judge the automobiles that come to him. Carry Camping- Oetflt. The big slx-cyllnder Is heavily loaded. The party Is carrying with them a tent and a full camping outfit. They sleep out at night and prepare their own food. Chief Engineer Crawford says he Is giving the car he Is driving the most severe test possible. He is driving through the hardest places that ho finds and breaks everything he can break, tak Ing notes so that he can thoroughly diag nose every particular feature of tho car. Incidentally, Field Advertising Manager It C Bradfleld says that with tho com ing big announcement that the Cole Motor Car company will make In Engi neer Crawford's trip Will be one thai every man Interested In tho purchase of & motor car from the economical aa well as pleasure giving standpoint Is vitally Interested In. CADILLAC ANNOUNCEMENT AR0USESJEEN INTEREST The automobile world, always sus ceptible to changes and Innovations, has been put in tenter hooks by the pre liminary announcement of the Cadillac Motor Car company referring to certain progressiva developments' which will dis tinguish the 1U Cadillac, tho exact nature pt which will soon bo revealed. Those active tn tho Industryand lay men o84well are always keenly curious about contemplated motor car Improve ment and what they portend, but this In terest la whetted, to Its keenest edge when tho Cadillac announces a new series be? cause of tho position the company oc cupies In tho history and development 01 no motor car. The reason Is ob vious; conservatism has been couplod with foreslghtcdness. Henry M. Inland, advisory manager of tho Cadillac, the founder and guiding spirit of the con cern, la an extremely conservative man with hulf a century of experience In tho mechanical world, yet he haa been csJled the "youngest" man In tho automobile Industry today. In the affairs of the Cadillac, there has been a wholoaorae fear of the whim of the faddist, and tho merely temporary Innovations. Hut the oompony nevertheless, has from time to time played the role of pioneer and has Inaugurated soveral Important epochs In the development of the motor Ifar. One of these epochs Illustrates In an especially significant manner the reason for the public's attitude toward this company. It was two years ago that the Cadillac had the honor of beln first to Introduce an automatic electrical cranking and lighting Byestem. It was a revolution In efficiency and comfort. Aa there have been many other progressiva features first devel oped In this oar, the query is now nat urally yolced each year; "What will the Cadillac dor The Cadlllau company's conservatism haa not permitted It to make rash promise Therefore, when It declares that It la about to Inaugurate another new and progressive development, the automobile world, remembering past per formances, is on the qui vlve to know Jutt what these statements portend. Hooray! Baby To Rule the House Mo Leaser Do Women Fear The Great U of All Human Bleating. It Is a Joy and comfort to know that thot tnnch-talktd-et palas and other dis tresses that aro said to precede child-bear-log may easily be avoided. No woman need tear the slightest discomfort If the will fortify herself with the well-known and time-honored remedy, "Mother's Friend." This Is a most grateful, penetrating, ex tcrnal application that at once softens anil makes pliant tie abdominal muscles sad ligaments. They naturally 'expand without the slightest strain, and thus apt only banish all tendency to nervous; twitching pells, but taere Is aa entlr freedom from nausea, discomfort, sleeplessness and dread that so often leave their Impress upon the babe. The occados Is therefore one of tin. bannaX!. joyful aatltipctloa, and too much stress can not be laid upon the remarkable Influence which a mother's happy, pre-natal disposition has opon the health and for tunes of the generation to come. Mother Friend Is recommended only for the relief and comfort of. expectant mothers, thousands of whom have used and recom Bend it. You will find it oa sale at all drug stores at $1.00 a bottle. Write to-dy to the Ursdfleld BjftaIator Co., ISO Lamar Bids., Atlanta, Ca., fur a most Instructive book oa arctic si ail subjects, aether WA. Barnum & Bailey Circus Comes to Omaha This Week "Hold your horse?, the elephants are coming." The giddiest, gayest, grandest, gyrat ing, glamorous and glittering galaxy of tho whole wide, wonderful world Is trek king this way and will spread Its acres of tents here on next Wednesday, if one doesn't Infer from this that reference Is made to tho Darnum A Hallo' Greatest Show on Earth, the publicity man will regard the case aa hopeless. Of course all this isn't news to the kid die, for every blessed one of them has kept tabs on the flaming boards and al ready the lending topic of conversation In the average home is the coming of the circus and Its street parade. Tho tlme-honoril custom haa always been to refer to each successive year's circus as "bigger and better than ever," but Ihephrn-f - that this year's Ilarnura & Dotlcy circus hesitates to use lu uehput .. It adequately describes th a sonson'a en tertainment More curs are required to transfer the show, more tentnirn Is u1. more area' required to accommodate tho show than ever before. In fact, the cir cus has reached a point where It Is the despair of many of the smaller railroads and taxes their facilities to the limit, for clghty-flve cars aro needed to transport the gtgantlo canvas (vagrant from town to town. There's material enough in this vear circus to make half a dozen circuses of the old school, in place of the stereo typed "grand entree." with wlilph Mr. cuBes havo been content to open the!: program for many years, the Barnum & IisJIey entertainment Is Inaugurated by the splendid spectacle entitled "Cleo patro," a wordless play based upon the story of . Egypt's ancient nuwn. Th story Is effectively pantomimed and there is a cast of 1.200 persons, Including i ballet of dancing elrls trained bv Ottakrr Itartlk of tho Metropolitan Opera house In New York City. The costumes and Properties am his torically correct and the entire Innova tion Is the most stupendous thing ever attempted under canvas. Eugenie. Bllbon Portrays the "Sorceress of thn Nll." while Camllle Fortune, a pantomlmlst of merit, enacts the role of Antony. Johannes Joefraon'a company of Ice landic Eladlators are consnlcunu imv. comers to the Barnum & Bailey tent. A base ball gome between elephant players WILL TEACHWOOD GARYING Omaha Manual Training Teachers Are Greatly Interested. NEW YORK TEACHER IS COMING. Mlsa Helen Thompson Talka of Karl von nydlnffsrvnrd and Develop ment of Wood Ctirvlntf In Public Schools. Miss Helen L. Thompson, supervisor ot manual training In the Omaha schools, believes wood-carving comes properly within tho scope of the publlo schools. Teachers of manual training are so In terested that they have secured Karl von Ttydlngsvard ot New York City to teach a four weeks' course in wood carving, beginning Monday, August 4. Ot Mr. Ilydlngsvard and wood-carving Miss Thompson says: "This Is the age of the specialist, and one who lntomla malting a serious study ot any branch of art naturally looks about and asks himself, 'Whore can I beit get what I wantr "Many of the eastern cities Include wood-carving In their public school cur riculum, and Omaha, as usual, wishing to keep abreast ot the times, teaches this subject In Its manual training depart ment "Our manual training teachers are so Interested In' this branch ot their work that they have engaged Karl von Ry dlngsvard ot New York City to tome to Omaha for n. four weeks' course, which begins Monday, August 4. . Only One of Its Kind. The Voa Rydlngsvard School ot Art Wood-Carving has tho distinction of be ing the oply one in tho country devoted exclusively to thla art. with its accom panying study of design and hl.torla ornament. ' "Its founder, Karl von Rydlngsvard, is a descendant of the old Swedish noble lamiue. one of the most cherished possessions- now hanging In his New York studio Is a sword used by one ot his an cestors In fighting against 1'oter the Great In Russia. He received his train ing In the technical school of Stockholm, and nfter having worked at the bench long enough to acquire n complete mas tery ot all branches of the art, came to this country and began to teach. The widespread and continually Increasing In terest In thts art at the present time Is largely due to his effort. Ills small pri vate classes soon grew Into a school In which a large proportion ot tho best teachers In this country have recetved tholr training. lie has Introduced his system In the teachers' college of Co lumbia university. Rhode Island School of Design, Boys' Institute of Boston, New York School of Ethical Culture. Manchea. ter Institute of Arts and Sciences and many private schools. The professor's work Is well known having been exhlbted at the National Sculptor's society, the Architectural league, the National Society ot Crafts men In New York and the best exhibitions elsewhere Klii Gunuar'a Fleet, "His commissions are usually exe cuted at his summer studio at Brunswick. Me. One of these was three large ob long panels for Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cur tlss James' yacht, which is the largest ever built They are placed on tho walls of the salon. The art critic of the New York Herald of July 11, wis. has this to say of them. 'One represents King Ounrars' fleet This Is a splendid work, the movement of the ships being rep resented lit a manner most spirited. "'King Ounnar, as the last of the Volumes, and with whom the race ex pired, rather than wait Its extinction through his death In old age, summoned his men and with all his ships set sail from Rlkvlo on the coast of Iceland. Neither be, his men, nor his ships were ever seen galn. In the Norse ceremony on tee death of a Viking the body was taken out to sea and burned on tho ship tn which aa leader the Viking had traversed the deep. "'King d tin rum's fleet was an adapta tion of the ancient ceremony to an en tire race. Aa a yacht decoration this panel and Its companion panels are superb. Their beauty Is enhanced by a rleze of ships, also carved In wood and irunnlng above the panels.' "Many physicians have come to realise the benefit of wood earring In the treat ment of nervous pa tl cats and Br. I Pierce Clark, narva soecUlUU baa ur- FEATURES OF THE BARNUM & BAILEY SHOW. Is another surprise. A troupe ot Jlu )Itu experts perform amazing feats. Tho managertn hns been enlarged and the exhibit of human freaks, eliminated Ing the last year had all his patients under Prof, von Ilydingsvard's train ing with what he considered very marked benefit, both bodily and men tally." Echoes of the Ante-Room-Gossip of the Various Lodges Brotherhood of American Yeomen. Omaha Homestead No. 1404 of the Brotherhood of American Yeoman held a well attended meeting Wednesday even ing. This homestead will glvo a picnic at Elmwood park next Sunday afternoon nt 2 o'clock. Alt Yeoman members are Invited to uttend and bring a full lunch basket with them, Ice cream will be furnished by the Homestead committee. Ladles of the Mncenbees. Uniformed hive No. 83, Ladles of the Maccabees, will glvo a picnic nt KruR park Wednesday afternoon and evening. Krnteritnl llilnn of A merlon. Banner lodge No. 11, Fraternal Union of America, will hold open meeting Thurs day evening at Woodman hall. A short program and an Interesting, tnlk by Dr. Claud Mnson, who has recently come from Slam with a number of fine curios After the program a lunch will be served and the rest o't the evening will be spent In danclpg. Mondamln lodge No. Ill haa rented the spacious and splendidly equipped hull In Odd Fellows' building at Fourteenth and Dodge streets and will meet there begin ning this week every Wednesday evening. United Rpanlsh Wnr Veterans, fcee Forby camp of the United Spanish War Veterans meets In camp hall. An cient Order United Workmen temple, Fourteenth and Dodge streets, Tuesday evening. Important business and muster In of recruits. General Henry W. Lawton ladles' auxiliary to Leo Forby camp of the United Spanish War Veterans will hold a meeting at tho home of Mrs. Fred Fero, (56 North Twenty-seventh street, Thurs day afternoon. Woodmen of the World. nE'w'?"' n Welcome Grove Woodmen circle enjoyed a pleasant evening Thursday at Twenty-fourth and Parker streets, Schiller camp. No. l, will picnic at the German Home, South Thirteenth street. Labor day. Captain Jasperson of Druid camp do- ".1'.e. 't.1? u ,n MaJr John T. Yates' taff at the national encampment at Put-In-Hay. Benson camp degree team and staff, Captain Todd in command, aro at the na tional encampment at Put-In-Bay. Miss Ella M. Kennedy, private secre tary for City Manager John Kennedy, Is WsssMsssBsssyii jjrjjilsv JHLw4. Dreadnought Moline M-40 A New Series It will be a pleasure for ua to anow 70a th splendid saw Mrtes ot the oar of unfailing servlee. Xt posaeesea no radical ohaaats, no wrtrled tasas, but haa btn refined and beautified without tb sacrifice of &y of It" a tardiness and dependability. Yon shoal a see It, Moline Automobile Co. 2421 Farnam St., Omaha a few years ago, has been restored, to the Joy of every true circus lover. A street parade vllf inaugurate the gala day. enjoying her annual vacation In Wyo ming. II. J. Zimmerman of South Omaha camp, No. 211, Is tn tho Omaha Gen eral hospital for'trcutment. Joa Brown, one of Omaha's famous catchers, will organize a ball team for Schiller camp. No. 904, to play Frank O. Speer's ball team from South Omaha camp, No. 11, on Labor day at the German Hbme. George S. Kennedy's Shamrock ball team of South Omaha plucked a pair of plums by winning two games at Fort Omaha last Sunday. Lithuanian camp, No, 444, meet Thursday ovcnlng at New Bottlers' hall Thirty-sixth and 3 Btreets, South Omaha, to arrange for their summer outing. Kosclcuso camp, No. 852, meet Mon day at Koslcusco hall. Twenty-seventh and J streets, at 8 p. m. Edward Foster, the genial clerk of Druid camp, No. 4, has returned from his annual outing. Ouy Furness, clerk of Omaha Seymour camp, is at Put-In-Bay with tho cham pion degree team. Deputy SlmomlBon ot Albion, Neb., la visiting In the city. State Manager Edward Walsh of Alpha unip, Is having splendid success out In .ne country. The executive council of the supreme forest. Woodmen Circle, composed of tho loiiowing oliicers; supreme guardian. Mrs, Emma 11. Manchester, Omaha; su preme adviser, Mrs. Emma F. Campbell, i'ort Huron. Mich,; supreme banker, Mrs. Ida. M. Kelly. Davenport, la,; supremo clerk, Miss Dora Alexander, Omaha; board of supreme managers, Mrs. Mary E. La llocca chairman). St. Paul: Mrs. .uary uayior, un Antonio, Tex,; Mrs, ausie iu, urison, aiuskokcc uma. ; airs, tladassah II. Johnson. Columbus. O.: Mrs. Ettle Rogers, Little Rock, Ark.; supreme pnysician. ur, imaries Jtv mown, umanu. 'and supreme attorney, A. 11. Burnett, uiuana, aro in session in tno woodmen ot ine World building. The Persistent and Judicious Use ot Newspaper Advertising is the Road to Business Success. T&U4HWST OP ALL; IT stanm ALt Tests, rr wx rv veu t n "The Car of Un failing Service" D. ML Beal, Mgr. LACK4JMC RED ON PREVENTIVE MEDICINE: Report Hade by Committee of State Medical Association. PUBLIC 18 ASKED TO ASSIST Conditions Sncli nu Call for the Co operation of All Agencies, to the End thnt Good Mny nennlt. The committee on publicity for th N. broska State Medical association has prepared a report of much lnterst nn the topic of "Preventive Medicine," from wnien the following condensation has been prepared: "At Its annual meeting In Lincoln In May, 1913, and In lino with a movainent that Is world wide, the Nebraska State Medical association appointed a commit tee for tho prevention of communtcaDle disease and other purpeses. vThls was upon the recommendation of Dr. A. O. Nesblt of Tekamoli, its president rho cotnmittee.organlzed at Fremont the fol lowing July. Plans were discussed for tho promotion of preventive medicine in Nebraska. Plinlntmentn In Knch County. "In a letter to county societies It was urged that one or more active members be appointed In each community, who In co-operation with Influential citizens shall plan an educational campaign best suited to the locality. It Is -aimed to explain to the laity the causes ot disease as far as possible and methods of prevention and to show how valuable an advisor an educated physician may become to the Individual and the family. How Illness may be prevented and life prolonged. How by watchfulness over the child 'be foro and during school life a vigorous growth and development may be main tained and many defects avoided or rem edied. Public addresses are planned nt Institutions of learning and before as semblies of all kinds. Co-operation ts desired with church and press and Inter change of Ideas and methods with neigh boring towns. With the national asso ciation as loader It is hoped that every Nebraska physician may do his share at home. "The report of school Inspection at, West Point, Nob., shows the need of all this effort to be a general one common to this country and Europe. Ot S47 chil dren two-thirds had some defect, one fourth had one, one-fourthhad two, one tenth had three. In ninety-seven vision was Imperfect; in ninety-nine, tonsils enlarged; In twenty-four, hearing poor; sixty-six needed dentistry, seventy-three had nasal obstruction, twenty-eight ade noids, twenty-five other defects. Common to All Communities. "These conditions, which we now real ize to .be common to every community, call for our most thoughtful attention. In every town and city parents have a right to know what may bo dono to aid In securing to their child the most effi cient physical condition possible. Lan caster county has had three years ot profitable experience. A dozen other RCH Cester Coatrol lie-Xach Wheel Basa Lcft-haad Drive Extra Larfa Tiros THERE is extra power, extra strength, and extra" size in the R-G-H at $900. Unit for unit it is the best popular priced car built. Extra large and specially heat treated chrome nickel transmis sion gears connect a wonderfully powerful and eco nomical long stroke motor with the rear axle. And like every other R-C-H unit, the rear axle is of the very latest and most Dractical design. It gives maximum power with the minimum waste because it has the minimum friction. There is no rumbling ; no humming; no balking in its co-operation with the other power units. So it is with the R-G-H from the motor through the transmission to the rear axle. It is the most thoroughly built car in the world. The R-G-H English body is extra large, com modious and comfortable. The long wheel base adds more comfort in easy riding qualities; so do the big tires and the big springs. To buy a car of the R-C-H size, comfort, strength, powerauality and quietness elsewhere, you must See us today. Let us arrange a demonstration. Lininger Implement Co. 6th and Pacific Sts., Omaha. Telephone 109 R-C-H Corporation, Detroit. Mich. communities are doing good work, some 'ore and some since the efforts of this committee. Most school authorities In our state are enthusiastic In the movement, our superintendent of public Instruction Included. The press, women's clubs and kindred organizations are ready to co operate. From a lack ot appreciation of conditions, no doubt, our last legislature fatted to enact a law for medical Inspec tion of schools, though a bill was sup ported by thla committee and the stand ing committee in the State Association on Publlo Health. Success will no doubt follow when the IaltyTjecome informed of the facts. "Tho establishment of a lectureship on public health has proven a great success In many of our states. "D. C. BRANT, President "JOSEPH M. AIKIN, Secretary." Rnthrle flenches Toklo. TOKIO, Aug. 2.-The now Amerlenn nmbasrador to Japan, Qeorgo W. Guthrie of Pittsburgh, arrived hero today. He was met nt Yokohama' by the staff of the Nut for Ranges The stove lid it burns under won't smudge ladies' fingers The woman who buys "Zeigler" coal at $6.50 a ton now, saves not only 50c a ton, but also insures a winter of cleanliness for her fingers, for "Zeigler" is sootless. Imagine a sootless, intensely hot, clink- erless and almost smokeless coal and you've got "Zeigler" in a nutshelL It's the favorite of so many Omaha households that sometimes we question whether it is necessary to advertise it at all. But then we want to keep passing the good word along "Zeigler always Zeigler." t (Genuine Scranton Anthracite my also be bought at summer prices now Tele . phono Tyler 1754 $QOO f. o. h. Detroit Stewart Speedometer ' English Type Body Botch Magneto Long Stroke Motor Bore: 3tf in., Stroke, S la. embassy, by Thomas Sammons, American consul general, and by n committee ot the American Asiatic association, who escorted him to Toklo. GIRL'S APRON CATCHES IN GASOLINE ENGINE SIOUX FALLS, S. D., Aug. Spe cial.) Her apron catching In the wheels of a gasoline engine, the 16-year-old daughter of Mrs. Schmidt, living near the village of Epiphany, had a narrow escape from being 'crushed to death. Al though she escaped with her life, she was seriously Injured. The girl hod gone after a pall ot water and was waiting while a gasoline engine pumped It for her, when her apron blew Into the ma chine. She was drawn Into Iho engine and In a few moments would have been killed hnd not persons nearby gone to her assistance. Her arms and body were badly cut and bruised. Key to the Situation Bee Advertising. , Lump for Furnaco 210 So. ,17th St. Brandois Theater Electric Lights or Prctt-O-Lite Systess1 Jiffy Curtains Rnssiaa Green Finish