Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 08, 1915, Page 7, Image 7

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    THK HKK: OMAHA. TUKKDAV. .1UXK s, m:,.
BRIEF CITY NEWS
Weeding Binge at dbolnTe.
stave JKxrt Ma n Now Beacon Press
ftadJate. rfleiency The ISO plate
llnner unrt at Bchliu hotel.
fnae Brides Xxpeot at leant one of
ur electric lamps. Burgees-Orsndrn Co.
To . Bepalr Ooaaty Boada rtecent
rains have done conalderable damage to
the county roadi. which the county com
mlssioner are arranging to repair.
Dr. fames V. Coaaony, Dentist, wishes
to announce the removal of hi offices
to 100-Al Brown block, 16th and Douglas
Wa. Formerly In City National bank.
ToAaye Complete Hone Program
classified aeetlon today, and appeare It
The Fee EXCLUSIVELY. Find out what
the various moving pleture tlieatera offer.
Bontfewesi Improvers Meet The
Southwest Improvement club will hold a
meeting Wednesday evening at I o'clock
at Twenty-fourth and Leavenworth
streets.
trfs.s Purse on Treia Kfn. w. O.
Pichei of Creaton, la, reports to the
Omaha police that while ahe in en
route Sunday between Grand Island and
thla city her purse, containing $86 and
three rings to the total value of 1V
were stolen.
teals Err from Oar "Ah Juat waa
noeln' around the dump, Jvdge, and Ah
found theae yeah alga," remarked Charles
Clark, Fifth and lieroe streets, charged
with removing three dosen fresh egg
from a produce car. The judge believed
Charlea prevaricated and the offender la
now languishing In the depths of the
county Jail. Ha will remain there a
month.
To Ctot Their Pay at Oneo Election
officials who presided at the various
voting precincts In the recent election
will be able to secure their warrants from
tha county for pay for aervlcea Imme
diately. The achool board hae notified
the county board that It will pay Its share
of the expense at once, thus enabling the
warrants to be drawn. Under the law it
Is necessary that payment shall be made
through the county treasurer.
Hotels at Panama
Exposition Do Not
Raise Their Prices
Tourists returning from the San Fran
cisco exposition assert they were sur
i prised to find that there had been no
I raise in rates in the leading hotels of
, 8aii Franclaco because of the exposi
tion. Even the big Talaco hotel,' which
, always enjoys auch a large patronage,
maintains the same ratea aa before, even
though it is continually forced to turn
away patrons. San Franclaco la now
making a boast of the way its leading
hotels are acting and say that the usual
record of hospitality established through
long years by the big coast city, will not
be broken, even though such an eaay
chance is offered by the throngs of tour
ists who are visiting the exposition.
MASONS RETURN FROM
TRIP THROUGH THE EAST
The subcommittee of three Masons who
went east to get Ideas for the architecture
of the new Maaonlc temple In Omaha at
Nineteenth and Douglas atreets, have re
turned, with a lot of Idea. Luclan Fet
tlngll!,. James Ho' gird and W. M. Robert
son constitute the subcommittee. They
have been visiting the Masonic temples In
Pittsburgh. Boston, Albany, Buffalo, De
troit, Toledo, Indianapolis, Chicago and
Milwaukee. They were favorably im
pressed with the plan of tha temples at
Indianapolis, Pittsburgh and Brooklyn,
aa tha temples at. these placea were the
newest and most up-to-date. Trie ' com
mittee expects to combine the best ideas
it haa gained In Ita report to the general
building committee. Thla report Is to be
made at the meeting Wednesday evening.
PEORIA AFTER THE NEXT
SHEET METAL CONVENTION
"I am glad you have finally taken in
fouth Omaha; you weto alwaya entitled
to that, at least, aa the cities were as
good aa one for years," aald C. W. Dull,
manager of the convention bureau of tha
Peoria Ansociation of Commerce, in
Omaha today. Mr. Dull came to Omaha
with the delegates to the National Con
vention of Sheet Metal Contractors, who
are going to Denver. He la with theae
lelegatea and will may with them
I throughout the three days' convention at
'i'enver in the hops of getting the next
national convention of thla body for
Peoria.
MAIL DRIVER BREAKS HIS
ANKLEJVHEN IT TURNS
Waldemar Bchaerrer. driver of one of
the poatofflce collection wagons, sus
tained a broken ankle when he stepped
from his wagon with a aack of mall and
his foot turned under his weight. Under
the new law governing employee of tha
poatofflce. he ran be off duty a year and
Htlll draw his pay If the accident was
xustalned in the performance of his
duties.
LYNCH LEASES BRANDEIS
FOR SUMMER ENGAGEMENT
Kdwerd Lynch, who haa well eatab
lished himself in Omaha, has leased the
BrendeU theater for the summer and will
open there on tha evening of Saturday,
Juno l. He haa engaged Mlsa lone
aloOraaa to be his leading woman, and
will surround himself with a company of
capable actors and present a number of
the strongest plays available.
A Mistake Mad sr Htm.
Don't wait for rheumatism to indicate
dieeafted kidneys. When you suffer
pa'ns aad aches by day and aleep dis
turbing bladder weakness by nigbt, feel
tired, nervous and rundown, tha kldneya
and Madder ahould be restored to
healthy, strong and regular action. It la
a ml take to postpone treatment. Foley
kidney pills put the kidneys In sound,
healthy condition and keep thorn active
and strong. Begin taking today. Uoe4
results follow tha first dose. Bold every
ahcra. Advertisement.
PUFFING OF DREAMY PIPE
HARD ON POOR CHINEE MAN
Wing 81 ng and Leo Quong, Chinamen,
arrested for smoking opium, were taken
lo charge by l'ntte4 Statea Deputy
Marshal Hase aad placed In the county
Jail In default of H OW bail each. They
will have preliminary hearings June 10
and 11, respectively.
"wla Blasts Ca Sciatica.
tfloan'g Liniment will help your
sciatica, Ut a Kc bottle now. It pen
etrates, kllla the pain, stops many ache
AU druf gists Advertisement.
DRUGGISTS AFTER
CUT PRICE SHOPS
Question of Slashing Prion on Pt
ent Medicine Comet Before the
Pharmaceutical Convention.
TOOK IN DEN SHOW LAST NIGHT
Whether or not $1 patent med
icine shall be sold any longer for
59 rents Is a question that is going
to agitate the Nebraska State Phar
maceutical association, whose 400
members and friends have already
begun to arrive In Omahe. and will
start their thirty-fourth annual meet
ing at Hotel Fontenells this morn
ing, continuing until Thursday noon.
There Isn't sny question with the drug
gists aa to whether proprietary articles
ahould be Bold at cut prices. They de
cided long ago that there ought not to
b any auch practice In their trade. The
question almply la: "How ahall we
atop It?"
By way of solution they will endorse
the Btevrna bill, a congreslonal act pro
posed In the last session and to be
brought up again at the next one. The
bill would make It lawful for manufac
turers of proprietary, trade-marked and
patented goods of all klnda to make a
binding contract fixing the retail price
of the goods, below which price they
could not lawfully be eotd.
"Monopoly!" "Trusts!" and "Restraint
of trade!" people may shout. "Oh, no,"
Mr. DruggUt says, "the (Havens bill is
an anti-monopoly meaaure, and will bene
fit the people aa well aa the dealers."'
Joseph Leyden White, for twenty-flva
eare the champion of price maintenance,
Waahlngton representative of tha na
tional retail druggists' organisation and
an officer of the American Fair Trade
league, la here to line up the state drug
gists In the rountry-wlde fight on .rice
cutting of branded merchandiae.
The vanguard of the druggists who
l.ave arrived will attend the Inaugural
ehow at tha Den tonight.
Collector North
Taxes Base Ball
Clubs as Circus
Congressman Frank Reavls of the First
Nebraska district haa taken exception to
a ruling by Revenue Collector North of
Omaha. Reavls learned that North taxed
the Omaha and Lincoln ball clubs as
"circuses'" and whacked them on that
basis to the extent of 100 bucks a year.
The other aix clubs In the Western are'
paying $10 a year to the government
Congressman Reavls haa written tha
following protest to Collector North:
"Mr. North, Internal Revenue Collector,
Omaha, Neb. Dear Sir: I am in receipt
of a protest over the action of your de
partment in collecting from the Lincoln
Baae Ball association under tha schedule
provided for a 'circus.' In this schedule
is Hated theaters, circuses and other
amusements, and I . am advised by cor
respondence with both the St. Joseph and
Bloux City Base Ball associations that
collection la made from them under the
heading of 'other amusements.' I do not
sea by what stretch of the imagination
your department aeea fit to class an
amusement association such as a base
ball association as a circus..
"I respectfully request that the depart
ment change its ruling in regard thereto,
and that there be returned to the Lincoln
Base Ball association the excess of money
collected over what would be due under
the head of 'other amusements.' Will you
kindly let me .know your disposition re-'
gardlng this, that I may govern myself
accordingly. Very truly yours.
"C. F. REAV1S."
One of Sunday's Men
: Talks Temperance to
Crowd at Y. M. C. A.
"If It is right to drink boose, why do
you not sk a blessing over It before you
drink It, m we do over our daily food?"
aaked Floyd Y. Mllos, posing aa a sec
ond Billy CMnday, from Dea Moines, in
a whirlwind talk to a house full of
men at the Youog Mod's Christian as
sociation rooms Sunday afternoon. This
Is a sample of his style of language:
"O, yes, I got mine, too. I didn't get
drunk over the bar, but I got mine in
the cluba and the swell dumps. And I
want to say to you, no matter whether
a man geta Ms boos In tha saloon or
In the swell clubs, he Is Just aa much of
a hog If he tanks up. If you want to
know my stand on the boos question.
I will aay that I would clow ard wreck
every drug a to re and bootlegging Joint
and other boose Joints. Then, too, I
would at a match to the whohc bunch
of booae and lot It go up In smoke."
Mr. Mllea made a number of addresses
In varloua churches of Omaha during
the day. He is one of these who "hit
the sawdust trait" in a Billy Sunday
reva! meeting in Dee Moines a year
or ao ago. Mr. Mtles is a professional
politician and at present city treasurer
of Des Molnea. He is aiao secretary of
the Preaa elub at Des Moinee, having
been formerly city editor of the Des
Moines Capital.
Austrian Battleship
Sinks Own Destroyer
ROME. Via Parls).-June 7.-A dis
patch to the Measagaro from Venice
says:
"During the bombardment of Pola by
an Italian dirigible balloon May M, the
Austrian warships anchored at the ar
senal moved Into positions where they
could avoid danger. While doing so. the
battleship Braberaog Frans Ferdinand,
m backing, erarhed into a destroyer,
tearing a large bole la the aide of the
amailer craft. , The deatroyer quickly
sank. Tha propellers and rudder of the
battleship were damaged."
Americans Deprived
Of Their Passports
BERLIN (via London), Jun The
passports of two Americas cltlscna living
at Dresden, Leon Raines and Karl Reck
naget. have been ordered revoked by the
American embaaay, on Instructions from
the fltate department at Washington.
The men, it is said, adversely erltlclaed
tha American government in the present
crisis and declared in a newspaper article
that they were ashamed of their citizenship.
PIONEER BUSINESS MAN WHO
DIED SUNDAY.
i 1 "
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J . i
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W
i f yA
HERMAN J. M0YER.
ANOTHER PIONEER
CALLEDBY DEATH
Resident of Omaha for Forty-Six
Years and Well Known Charity
Worker Paiset Away.
ILL ONLY SHORT WHILE
Herman J. Meyer, 74 years of age,
and a resident of Omaha for forty
six years, passed away yesterday
afternoon at the home of his daugh
ter, Mrs. C. A. Grimmell, 820 South
Twenty-ninth street. He had been
111 only a short time.
Herman Meyer Is the fourth mem
ber of the Douglas County Pioneers'
association to pass away within the
last few weeks.
Bora In Swltaerlaad.
Mr. Meyer was born In Aarburn.
Hwttxerland. July t, 1841. He came to
Omaha forty-alx years ago and nmrrte
Miss Margaretha Jacobaon, who died
September 20, 18M. Rev. Henry W. Kuhns
, performed the ceremony.
He was a bookbinder by trade and waa
formerly conected with the Omaha Ke
, publican, but later established himself In
his own business at 205-7 South Thtr
eenth street. He retired six yeara ago.
Two yeara ago Mr. Meyer went to
Europe to visit the place Of his birth, but
returned after a short stay.
, Ha waa known as a man of retiring dla
. position, but of generoua nature. Many
families In Omaha who were once In
' hard straits will remember him aa their
I benefactor. He waa also Identified witn
' the local ftwlsa society, and at one time
was leader of the Oerman Maennerchor.
Though Mr. Meyer never aspired to
public ' office, be took keen Interest in
public affairs.
He saw what he believed waa the first
dtess suit ever worn In Omaha. It
adorned the body of a full-blooded Win
nebago chieftain, who walked up Farnam
street In the early 70s. The Indian had
bought It and was walking, proud aa a
peacock, up the street.
The Family Sarvlvlagr.
Two sons and one daughter survive.
They are: Fred II. Meyer of Mont
gomery, Ala.; and Bam W. of Port 8L
Joaeph, Fla.; and Mra. c; A. Grimmell of
Omaha Three brothers are also living.
They are: Eugene, of Zurich, Switzer
land; Emil, of Portland, Ore., and Arthur,
of Plymouth, Ind. Three grandchildren
are Margaretha and Ruth of Omaha, and
Durltng Meyer of Montgomery, Ala.
Funeral arrangements have not yet
peen made. t
Odd Fellows and
Rebekahs' Memorial
Services Sunday
The Independent Order of Odd Fel
lows' lodge hall at Fourteenth and Dodge
atreets waa the scene of Impressive aerv
lcea ftunday in memory of deceased
members of the Odd Fellowa and Kebe
kana. The KounUe Memorial Lutheran
church choir aang and Rev. E. 11. Jenks
delivered the address.
Ruth No. 1 and Ivy No. M lodges gave
the Rebekah memorial . work. Deputy
Grand Master 8. K. Oreenleaf the scrolla
of the subordinate iodgea. tha encamp
ment and the cantona. Vocal numbers
were rendered by Mrs. J. I. Brlllbart,
Mra E. F. Brailey and Forres Dennis.
All Babies Destined
to Great Achievement
To b born Is to be great. For there
' Possibilities In every tiny human in-
' " Ana for Uus
,-Sf reason every on.
T1 .Vtr.,.1,1 ,...,
vHa s mhuwci aiuil
whatever la don. to
aid th. soother, to ro
llers Her or distresses
a iJ B B Si durln her l
VCA iU3Vla ths. will surely be
or marsea dsdcuc to
the child.
Among the sterling
m I ' m iiiwiii w-
x V f tVV 1 remedy known
XSri; . 1 as "Mother's FrieDd."
M ' I It Is what Is call.d as
I 1 embrocation. It is s
e ehdomlnal muscles, gently
rubbed a by your own hand guided
br your own mind. It makes the muscles
llaat, they cipand quit, naturally and Uta
effort upoa tbs nerves is such thai they ad
lust themselves to the process of etpaoalon
so that pain from this source la almost elimi
nated. Women who use -Mother's Friend'
refer to the absence of morning sickness, they
ore relieved of a great mauy minor dis
tresses, all apprehension disappears and those
peculiar nervuua "ftdarU" no longer disturk
I be sights. It is wtU named "Mother s
Jl ii botI today of any drug-
g st Then at once writ, for a most euUr.
umif sua instructive book for ail prospec
, live niotiiers. Address BradfWId sUsulator
Co.. 10 Lamar UMf Atlanta, (ia.
LJh.u ook espial us the physical actloa of
I 'Mother a Frlead." tells why it eoorree
8trer.ftb to the muscles and relieves undue
Stralu. It also couUins letters of cxuerieiw.
from many bsopy mothers. It is just
JUody Utile book as every woman will at
ST7Ji,?',l, h,t i"i always
wUUed lo read-plaia fads about herself.
Xhf& iitoti) "W ,
DR. JENKINS TALKS
TO THE GRADUATES
Bayi that Only Cure for Failure of
Ciriliiation it in l Deeper
Christianity.
TELLS THEM OF TEMPTATIONS
Dr. D. E. Jenkins, president of the
t'nlveraity of Omaha, preaching the
baccalaureate sermon before the uni
versity's graduating class, in St.
Mark's Lutheran church Sunday
morning, warned the graduates of
the pitfalls and temptations to doubt
and infidelity which particularly be
set those who have drunk at the
higher fountains of learning.
The graduating class wore caps and
gowna and marched into the church In a
body, together with the faculty. The
church waa beautifully decorated with
palms and cut flowers. Rev. Dr. Halsey,
dean of tha university, pronounced the in
vocation. Dr. Jenkins took aa his text John
vl: 7-e.
"Christ, in this chapter, speaks many
things which were not understood by hla
disciples," said Dr. Jenkins. "Ita had
repudiated a temporal kingship and im
mediately thereafter had offered Himself
aa the bread of life. Many who heard
these mysterious utterances 'walked no
more with Him' and it waa then that He
aaked of Ms disciples. 'Will ye also go
away?' to which Feter anawered In the
words of the test, 'Lord to whom shall
we got Thou hast the worda of eternal
Ufa. And we believe and are sure that
Thou art that Christ, the Bon of tha living
Ood.'
Feter Maa of Reaae.
"It wag a moment of decision for the
dlaclplea, such a moment aa comes to all
of us, when high and noble Instincts draw
us in one direction and material con
siderations in another. And whatever we
may think of the character of reter, he
certainly was a man of huge common
sense, of strong spirituality and of power
ful moral earneatneaa.
"Peter, In this answer, touched the
very vital point of Christian belief.
Where ahall we gor Christianity, it Is
true, haa its failures. But the only cure
for the failures of civilisation ia In a deeper
Christianising of civilisation. Nothing else
on earth can aatiafy tha spirit of mortal
man, take away his passions and greeds
and moral aluggishnesa. New scientific
opinions, Intellectual moods, propagnada
spring up every day, enjoy their little
vogue and aink Into oblivion. What
aclentlflo dictum or opinion can give vic
tory in a moral atruggfa?
To Meet Triitptettnns.
"Tou will meet temptations to depart
from the faith which you could not ex
.Excess
perience if you were lesa educated. There
will be subtle appeals to your reason,
the product of a unsplrltiial, unaanctlfled.
unsei vlreablr scholarship. Theae puny
egotists, putting forth some new scienti
fic or philosophic theory and aatlaftnd
with the product of their feeblo physl'-al
brains, fondly Imaalnc that tkxl has no
locks left that they can't unlock.
"Why, you can no more lay hold of
avirlttial truths with the physlclal brain
tban you can appreciate the beauty of
a picture by the science of mathematlca
or cn.loy the harmony of a great aonata
by studying the physics of sound.
"Itrtween Christ, the Son of Ood and
ltcilrcmer of tue word and m.thlnc there
not one Inch of mlildle troimil. Chris
tianity haa brought to the world Its high
est development and vlrtuea. To whom.
Indeed, shall e go other thnn to Christ?"
A number of graduatea of the teachers'
training course were also present at their
request to hear the baccalaureate sermon.
i Roumanians Are
In Turmoil Over
! Engaging in War
LONION. June . Reuter'a correspond
ent at Huckharest telearaphs that a
great demonstration waa held there today
In favor of Intervention by Roumanla In
the war In support of tha alllea About
.V.tt0 persons marched with flsga flying
and bugles sounding, to the Italian lega
tion, where apeactiea were delivered
eulugiatng Italy.
letter, partisans of Alexander Marghllo
man. the conservative leader, together
with socialists, organised a counter dem
onstration. At a meeting of the executive commit
tee of the conservative party tha atti
tude of M. Marghlloman tn favor of
Germany was dlaousaed. After a long
debate the majority condemned hla lead
ership of the party. M. Marghlloman
thereupon left the meeting, followed by
hla supporters.
A meeting of the whole party has been
oalled for tomorrow under the presidency
of Jean Iahovary, who represents the
wing of the party which is favorable to
the allies,
First Freight Boat
At Gulf from Lakes
NEW ORLEANS, June 7. -The steam
boat Steal City arrived here today from
La Bade, III., marking the beginning of
what la expected to be a regular freight
scrvlra by wster from the Great Lakes
to the gulf.
Bee Want Ada Produce Results.
MoTemeate of (moss Steamers.
Part
pen TON
pf.no
Arrived.
Bstlse.
.Honolulu
J. L. Laekeabseh
Xiw vohk at.
Lmits
.fjrW Nobby wl
Over 5,
We want to find and consult with any
"Nobby Tread" users who are not securing
excess mileage.
This wonderful anti-sldd tire properly
inflated is constantly giving enormous excess
mileages over and above its extraordinary
adjustment basis of 5,000 miles.
lTfl-k lWMT UTr Aaf. ?ja
l I HW7 II ncss 1
Thousands upon thousands of "Nobby
users are securing mileages of
O
O
000
1 0,000
12,000
Today through sheer merit alone, "Nobby Tread"
Tires are the largest selling high-grade anti-sldd tires
in the world.
Omaha Branch: United States Tire Company
OMAHA RUBBER CO., Agent, 1608 Harney Street
"NobbyTrtad" Tiret art told by Leading RtllabU Dealers. Do not accept iabttitate
United StatesTires
Msulel bw tha Larrest RuLke Comnanv In tha WorU
"7 lEmDlovintr
BRYAN INFLUENCE
WORKINGJN STATE
Report that Varioui Mean Are
Being- Taken to Line Up Demot
Against Hitchcock.
M0REHEAD MAY GET SUPPORT
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN. June T. (Special.) The lat
est Interesting rumor around the capital
of the state bi that Cecil Mathews, editor
of the rilverton Review. Is a randldnte
for the appointment of printing commis
sioner to takn the plnce recently vacated
by N. J. l.uHI. who has stepped Into the
poalmaatetHhlp at Wahoo.
The story goea that Mathewa haa lost
all hope that Mr. Bryan will appoint
him l.'nlted fttatea marshal for Nebraska
and will switch to the printing Job. In
connection with thla rumor goes the In
formation that a deal hns been fixe J up
whereby, If Governor Morehead appoints
Mathews tn the printing job, the support
of the Bryan crowd will go to the gov
ernor for the democratic nomination for
United States senator.
The rumor Is considered to have con
siderable foundation for the reason tbst
raprescntatlvra of the candidacy of Sena
tor Hitchcock are redoubling their efforts
to make sentiment In favor of the senior
senstor and throwing cold water en any
mention which may be made of the gov
ernor entering the race.
It la well known that Mathews haa
been boosting the Bryan at any and all
tlmea In and out of season, provocation
or no provocation, and, while deeply dis
appointed that the eerretary of state
cannot seem to see the marshalshlp for
the Blvorton man, he will be fairly well
aatlaried with the printing Job. In fact.
"My Kingdom for a Job" la said to he
the editorial anthem being sung by
Mathewa with variations according to
tha music needed to mako It affective.
Wheat Prices Here
Still On Toboggan
Even fot a Monday grain receipts were
heavy, there being 41 rare of wheat, lit
of oom and 17 of oata on sale. The
market waa Mill on the toboggan, the
deollne In wheat being 4 to t centa per
bushel.. The drop from 8aturday waa
attributed to the reports colng In in
dicating that ail over the grain belt con
ditions are pretty Hose to ideal.
On the Omaha market wheat sold at
tl.leffl.B per bushel, .the lowest price
since, esrly last fall.
Corn was.H to Itt cents off from Sat.
urday. prices ranging from ft to &
cents per bushel.
Oata were 1 cent lower, selling at til
464 cents per bushel..
0
3P "TO,
55.4S4 Men)
Mi
Miles
Miles
Miles
-u 'waw -.WW e--47.
a
One
Safe Home
Match
will light all four burner.
The stick is Urge sad
strong. The flame "takts
hold."
We do not exaggerate when we
say that you can get as much real
aervice from three 8afe Home
Matches as from five ordinary
matches.
Thay are non-poisonous, too.
For that reaeon alone they ahould
be in every home in America.
ftV. A II grocer J.
Jli tor mens fty
The Diamond Match
Company
Engravings
Electrotypes
Stereotypes
Designers
Retouchers
Photographers
All Under One Roof
i
les
Tread"
ik
89