Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 16, 1915, Page 5, Image 5

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    Tiffi BEE: OMAHA, T111TKS1UY, SElTEMBElt lf. 1915.
8UHHG ITCHING
H2EHA ON HAND
cpt Gettini Worse. Could Not
Put Hand in Water (or Six
Months. In Three Weeks
ealedWcuticura
soap and ointment
I "I bad a breaking out on my hand last
fall end I tried eTerytblng tbt I could
'think of, bat It kept letting wane. It u
called enema, I m rlvtm
a salv. which heeled It for
while but It broke oat
again. Just one pimple
broke out on my band first
and It Itched and burned
so badly I could hardly
stand H. I could not pot
my hande tn water fur aboat
stx months. I was oVaag
gny work with one hand all that time.
"I Mad an advertisement of Cuticwre
Soap and Ointment and I derided to giva
rhem a trlaL The Cutkura Soap and
Ointment healed It In three weeka"
(Waned) Mrs. Atk-e Creed. R. R. He. S.
Warm Otvto, Mo., Jan. 20, 1919.
Sample Each Free by Mall
With 83-p. Bka Book on request, Ad
4re poet-oard Cwtieara. Dap. T, Baa.
tan." Bold throughout the world.
NEW WOMAN GOLF
CHAMPION Mrs. C. II.
Vanderbeck of the Phila
delphia Cricket club, who
won the woman's national
golf championship on the
links of the Onwentsia
Golf club.
! OMAHA IS TO HAYE
A BUTTER MARKET
Being Largest Producer of Batter in
the World Cole Says it it En
titled to Fix the Price.
TO START OUT ON IT AT ONCE
ptiwiiM i mi fit m jnmmita.mmmMmBSl
i
1 V.tj
a '
TODAYS BEAUTY HI UTS
To whiten and beautify the com
plexion permanently we have found
bo better preparation than a lotion
niade by dissolving four ounces of
kpurmax In a half pint of hot water,
then adding two teaspoonfuls glycer
ine. This removes any pimples, shiny,
muddy or aallow appearance, and
Will make anyone's skin clear, smooth
nd velvety. It does not show or rub
aft like powder; In fact. It seem a
part of the skin; and for removing
tan and freckles Is unequaled.
It Is necessary to shampoo mort
frequently In the warmer weather be
cause of excessive dust and the fact
that the head perspires more and is
usually more exposed to the weather.
l"he easiest to use and quickest dry
pig shampoo that we can recommend
io our readers can be prepared very
cheaply by dissolving a teaspoonful
fit canthrox, obtained from your drug
gist, in a cup of hot water. This
fubbed Into the scalp creates a thick
lather, soothing and cooling In Its
Action, as well as very beneficial to
ecalp and hair. After rinsing, the
calp ia fresh and clean, while the
hair dries quickly and evenly, de
veloping a bright luster and a soft
fluffinesa that makes It seem very
heavy. Advertisement.
9
1 1
I ti
i
v
jr ww " j v .v.
., j o
"Omaha must have a butter mar
ket, and the way to make a butter
market is to make it. You can talk
about It from now until doomsday
and nothing but talk will be the re
sult. To make a market you have
pot to make it," asserted David Cole,
president of the David Cole Creamery
company.
"For years," continued Mr. Cole, "we
talked about an Omaha train market,
but all we did waa to talk, Finally, ten
years ajro. Mr. Stlckney, then president
of the Chicago Great Western, came
alone and pointed out the way. What
he did waa to get the men together, and
before the meeting broke the Omaha
irraln market waa born. The same thin
must be done In order to make a butter
market here.
"A little more than ten rears ago, with
this rtty tight In the center of the rich
est (rain producing- country In the world,
Omaha waa not handling a bushel of
grain for anything except home con
sumption. Now we stand third among
tho grain markets of the world, and a
pretty ck'ea Fecund, with every Indica
tion that we will rise Into that place
before the end of another five years.
t.arrest Batter Making ( enter.
"The smne can be done In establishing
and making a butter market hire. We
are located In the renter of tha greatest
croum producing area In the world.
Omaha la the largest butter manufactur
ing center on the face of the globe, and
its dairy products go to every corner of
the earth, yet we creamery men alt
around and let Rlgtn, a little town over
tn Illinois, fix the prica that we shall
lay for our cream and the prloea at
which we must sell our butter.
I'or one. I am tired of the methods,
rtri propose to take steps to make a but
ter market here. Take Elgin, for exam
pie. The creameries there do not mske
to txeeed 200 tuba of butter dally during
their busiest aeaaon,; not a carload, for a
car Holds 8U0 tubs. Hvery Saturday after
noon, from Kin In, we are told what we
must pay for cream dally until the fol
lowing Katurday, and at the same time
we are told at what prices we must sell
butter to tha trade, regardless of the
fact that any one of the Omaha cream
eries In one day will make more butter
than the entire weekly output of the
Rlgln plant
Mast Make Trice Here.
"I am through with tha Klgln plan
and propose to get out and take the
necessary steps for starting an Omaha
butter market If we will work together
In fire years wa can make Omaha the
greatest butter market tn tha world. Wa
manufacture the product here and here
we must tlx the soiling prloa for tho
country Instead of hsvtng It done ever
In an Interior town In Illinois.
"My plana rontemplate not only a but
ter, but a produce and poultry market.
Produce arid poultry go hand in hand
with the butter trade, and endless quan
tities of these commodities are rained In
Omaha territory. This being true, there
Is no reseon why Omaha should not be
the msrket town. I am In for It and
within the next few days will call a
meeting of creamery , commission and
oth.T business men to put the proposl.
tton upon Its feet. ft
"Huch a market as I have spoken of
would bring hundreds of thousands of
dollars to Omaha, money that now goes
elsewhere. It would bring hundreds of
buyers here and add to the Importance
of the city In many ways."
USES GIRL TO S0LIO1T CASH
the car with the petition. Upon
Ing I -a Matte they were put off tha train
by the conductor, and tha incident at tha
Burlington aiatlon occurred upon thr
Woman Traveling Oat of Omaha j return to Omaha. It was also laaraed
With STen-Year-01d Put ithst the asms performance had been en
acted on tna return irvp.
Under Arreit
MAKES EFFORT TO ESCAPE
Directum I Makes a
New Record for Mile
SYTtACraK. N. v., Sept. 15.-Itrectum
I, rhsmplon pacing stallion, established
a new world's record of l:Mnt for a mile
paced without a wtndshleld at the New
York State fair here this afternoon. In
so doing he lowered his own record
of I.
Another world's record wss lowered
when Ckptaln David fhaw of Cleveland
drove Peter Mo In l:OfiVi, a new amateur
mark for a mile track.
Mrs. Katie Meed of iPenver. Co'o..
hobbled Into the Kurllngton station on
crutches with her little T-year-old gtrl
by her side, and a woeful expression on
her countenance. The youngster went
among the people In the depot with a pe
tition, asking that help be given "a poor
crippled widow and her little child." Tha
folka began to dig, when Joe Mlk, depot
officer, not liking the expression of the
woman's face, started to question her.
flhe excused herself for a moment and
with her JIUle girt hobbled In to tha wom
en's waiting room.
Twenty minutes later Joe asked tha
colored maid to go tn and bring tha
pair out. it waa learned from an occu
pant of the room that both crippled
mother and child had left by meana of
a window, which la exuctly five feet above
tha floor.
Two hours later, at Plxteenth and Far
nam streets, officer Harry Ulmer ar
rested Mrs. Keed, who wss under tha In
fluence of liquor, h asserts, and waa
chewing tobacco. The little tot was alao
brought to the station.
t'non lnvestlgat.cn It ws learned that
early in the morning, mother and child
had left Omaha on a train for I'latts
mouth. The mother sent the tot through
At police headquarters mother aad ekUd
were put In the matron's room, whara
Mrs. Iteed cut the screens from two win
dows In an attsmpt to eacaj. Matron
Gibbons discovered tha effort In time, aad
the pair separated with rauoh difficulty ;
the daughter being taken to tha detention
home.
liter a well dressed young fellow ap
peared at the Jail and attempted to se
cure the woman's release, asserting ha
was her husband.
A "For Pais" ad will turn second -hand
furniture Into cash.
Cummins to Speak
at Farm Congress
Penstor Albert B. Cummins ef Iowa,
has been secured as a speaker en the
program at the National Farm congress,
which will be held In Omaha, beginning
September !. Managwr IB. V. Parrtah of
tha bureau of publicity baa juat succeeded
In getting tha Iowa atatesmaa to earn
for tha big convention.
Governor Oeorge W. Clark of Iowa, has
appointed If delegates to the congress
from his state, and similar delegations
from other states are expected te swell
the attendance figures wall mte tha
thousands.
Omaha High Has
Two Open Dates
Efforts are being made by tho athletlo
board at Central High school to bring
two hltrh school elevens here October 23
and November 25. South High has al
ready spoken for the Thanksgiving game,
but nothing has been done so far toward
'closing a contract. The opening game
will probably be with Creighton High,
October 2. Omaha will go to Des Molnoa
to play Kant Ics Moines, October 18, and
to York, October 90. Lincoln High plays
hero November 8. Omaha goes to North
Matte, November 13. Sioux City will
come here November 30. When games
have been scheduled for October and
November 26 it will give Omaha six
games at hlmo and three away.
Practice was held yesterday In spite
of the rain. The men were divided Into
two aquads, old men and rookies. They
practiced catching pasaes and punts. The
practice was concluded with caJeethentlos
and a run around tha field.
A Remedy
For All Pain
The efficiency of any drag" say Dr. O.P.
3Ubbin, "it known to us by the results we
pbtala ironi Its use. It we are able to con
trol pr4a and disease by means of any pre-xtarat-a.
we certainly are warranted In Its
me. One o( tho prlnolpal aymptoms of all
diseases Is pain, and this Is what tha ps'.lsnt
most often applies to us lor, t. a. lur jtblng
to relieve his pain. If wo ean arrest this
firomptly, the patient la most liable to trust
n us for tbe other remedies which will effect
a permanent oure. One remedy which I
have used largely In my practice la Antl-
kamnla Tablets. Many and varisd are thskf
Uses. I have put them to the test on many
occasions, and have never beaa dlsaDDolnt-
ail. I found them esnenlsLlv vSklusble lot I
headaches of malarial origin, whsre quinine i nerai
was being taken. They appear to prevent Trotting. 1:14 class, purse 21,000: Aubrey
tbe bad after-effeote of the quinine. Antl- j o owned by Fraink Butler, Trenton,
kamnla Tablets are also excellent for tha , first; Lord Duke, Bchlnstock Bros.,
headaches from Improper dlgsstlon; also . WeBt Polm Nebi, jond; Heir Reaper,
for headaches of a neuraleio origin, and as- K , warren. Shelton, Neb., third; David
peclallyforwomenauhjecttopalnsatcertaln f - u A k ttt Jnanb m
limes. Two A ntl-karanla Tablets give J'"ok: Cl kvni. fcU Joseph. Mo.,
prompt rsllef, and Ina short time the patient f",,'tn' ,.1Kiy
isabie to ho aDouc as usual." xnesa tablets J -". t. -.m-
SWEET AUBREY CAPTURES
SECON DJNJTOPEKA TROT
TOPEJKA, Kan,, Sept A Special Tl
e gram. One of the features of today's
races at the Toneka fair waa tha work
of Sweet Aubrey, a t-year-old trotter,
owned bv Dr. C. C. Hall of Omaha. The
colt finished a game second in both
heats of the 2-year-old race, using Dexter
Bymn. an Illinois colt, te tha limit In
both nests. Tha Illinois oolt took the
scoond and deciding; heat by a scant
neck.' Following axe today's money wln-
aisv be obtained stall druggists. Ask for
k-K Tablets. They are also unexcelled lor
headaches, neuralgia and all pains.
Everybody Who
Earns Money
Should create a sur
plus fund, and thus pro
vide against accident,
sickness and old age. The
best means to this end
is the savings bank.
Open an account now
and you'll not regret it.
l'Hcliis:. free-for-sll. puree n,x: Hal
McKinney, owned by O. N. Clark, WsJto
fleld, Kan., first: Haron Hal, W. K. F.
rase. Marl In. Tex., second; Bam, C. EX
CVldebuTg. Sandwich, III., third.
Time: 2:U; 2:0H; 2:HV4.
Trotting, 3-year-olds, purso, 2600: Dex
ter Svmn, owned by C. O. chamberlain,
Mnttoon, ill., first; Sweot Aubrey, Dr.
C. C. Hall, Omaha, Neb., second; Wln
imtonia, A. A. Alexander, Tope a, Kan.,
i third.
I Time: 2:18Vl; 2:18.
Kansas Derby, one mile, running, purse
U'-'tf. Won by Kennon, r reixe seconn,
Wat third. Time, 1:48.
An
Jt
Accounts.
4 on Time Deposits.
Rheumatism
A Home Cure Given by One Who Had It
la Uk -vrtaff of IBM I wu tWrk4 by
Muawulavr aVotl Infliuimatory HbtMm Ubb. 1
uffarvcl w only tho who hare it kmow, for
rer threat) rrs. 1 trio rmmm&r aftr ra
xJt, and doctor aftar doctor, fcrut gjura re
lief aa I roltMl wma only temporary.
Filially. I fountl a rataady that curad turn
ooiupltly. and It haat avr returned. 1
fear aiTn It to a urn bar wha vera terrlaly
fcflictad and 'o ba4i1rjVn with Raoauia
tlam, and It affactad a oura In vary oaaa.
I want avary anftarar from any form of
ifeumjtl trotibla to try thla-mu-ralou aaal
laf powar. Vou't and a cant; limply mall
yofjr mama and ad4raa and I will aal It
tra to try- Arur you aara osad It and It ivta
pnnk Itaaif to ba that I'Mif-liki kd for mana
f aartng yamr RhwrnatUro, yoa niay ai n4 torn
arica at It, and dollar, but, undarataad, I da
mot want your otoocy unlvaa you ar- a- r lastly
aa,t1af1d to aand It. Im't thai fair? Why
auffar aay lonr when poaHtva r!1 la hm
affarad yoa frar Doa t dalay. Vv U today.
alArli H. JaotiBoa, No. 411 0, Goxuay. hid..
ttyraxuaa, K. T.
MC0SE BROWN IS SOLD
- TO ST. LOUIS NATIONALS
TOPHKA, Kan.. Kept. 15. Moose
Brown, an outfielder, has leen sold by
tha local Western league club to the St.
Douis National league club, according
to an anouncment here today. John
Savage, owner of the Topeka dub, said
that Brown was sold conditions 11 y, but
declined to make public the details of the
deal.
M'VEY AND tANGFORD
WILL FIGHT AT DENVER
DENVER, Colo., Bept. B. Sam McVey
and Bam Lang-ford, nagro heavyweights,
have been matched to fight twenty
rounds here on September 20.
Any Wcman Can Now
Have Pretty Curly Hair
(Feminine World.)
Who'd have thought so .imple
ts applying ordinary liquid s
aould convert atralght half Into such
pretty curly locks la a single alahtl The
mis a scovrry Is surely
one who
entitled to
lislns vnr at ih.nk.
ail we ned do U U wet a brush with this
Noi
harmless
through tha
liquid at
sn tna tisir. a
find It has dried
Uair, and In tha morning we
dried in lost tha .w.t..
waves and ourla.
It's good news. Indeed, that we eaa
now dispensa with th deruutlva wsyin
tongs foreverl Tha curllnesa ts ma much
more natural looking -where the liquid
eilmenne Is used, and certainly one's
"crowning glory" appvars softer, gloMsler
mid more beautiful. When It is sj esy
to secure a few ounces of this from the
iirugsTiat which will keep the hair la curt
for --k-there's no reason now for any
i n liutt'ng up with strsight. strsgHly,
or scoixhed, dead-looking hair. Adver-tisineiiL
Raeesi Geaeya. Fair.
OENFJVA. Nob., Sept. lfi8peclal Tel
egram.) tummary for the races Wednes
day at tha Fllmore county fair now In
session hero:
Bneclal pace :
Fnrmooo b. m. (Ramey) 1
Luxor, jr., b. g. (Arnold) 2
IKTed Hill. b. a (Wajrner) 2
1'ollv Dew, b. m. (Bunxer) 4
Marcus IVry, br. g. (Harris) t
John M. Todd, br. s. (Perkins)
Time. til- 3:2m. 2:2f.
Trotting. 2:27 class:
Bsrbra Wllirus. h. m. (Perkins) up 1 1 1
Iwors b. m. iVronuin) up 2 2 2
I.ulu Todd. b. m. (Morse) up 2 2 4
Todd Woleey, br s. Klorner) up... 4 4 1
Time, 2-mV 2:?9. 2 M4.
Five furlong 1sh:
J.adv Hymes (EwiruT) up. first; Concha
(floori) up, second; Barney McCoy
(isrartt) up, inira.
Time. H.
There ia a splendid exhibit of all stock
and farm products as well as manufac
tured and fancywork, art and school
work. Tha threatening weather held tha
attendance low for the first day. The
fair board banquet tonight waa given to
over !06 out-of-town guests.
Mtlllgan defeated Belvldere, T to 0.
Prairie Park W aist.
Tha Pratrle Park Whist club com
menced the season's play Monday evening
with five teams. Scores follow:
BAST AND WEfeT PLAYERS.
Kilts and Martin plus llsi
Cook and MoTsnn . plus
Manning and Bruce., plua
acsnnell and Trurfeltoes.....anlnua
Abbott and Nelson minus lilts
NORTH AND HOUTH PLATER).
.plus
Barton and Reynolds.
gtebbtns snd Lister.
on)ey and Iwls ...
Keynes and King...
Buck and Woods....
plus
...plus
.minus
.minus
Krr. It llaaay for Rheaasatlsns.
Don't suffer and try to wear out your
rheumatism. Sloan's Liniment goes right
to the spot, kills the pain. 2oc, All drug
gists. Advertisement.
erne
(&y theTiouse tfJCuppenheimed
F a distinguished
;roup of Kuppen-
leimer Models this
season, one of the most en
gaging is the BEAUFORT
a young men's style with
the shapely lines of the
current mode.
The coat has three buttons, but
it is worn open to the third, which
fastens in the usual way or with
a link button while the waistcoat
has the new fold military collar.
ai t
Yoiinr? men
" A."
a. esat arf V war 01 aa srf V. .'.:
UIC glUVTlllg
more critical
as to the source of
their fashions.
They have more
regard every day for
correct style and show
a decided tendency to
rely on the broad guarantee
of the Kuppenheimer Label.
The House of Kuppenheimer
supplies young men's styles to the
best metropolitan trade. The values
are as right as the clothes.
Prices-$20 to $40
ivuppsahsimer Clothes are sold by a reprs
ean ta tire store in nearly every Metropolitaa
eater ot the United States and Canada.
Year ssmi 01 a post card will briof yoa
our Book of Fashions.
THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER
CHICAGO
Csssrs, I'M. Ta sTwsTiwi
f--e ' , 'V
; ; G&brjb i
There are other
striking features in the Blake, "Biltmore," "Wayne," Suffolk,
Forward and Chester models.
Sold only in Omaha by the