r TIIF, UBB: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OOTOBEU 27, 1915. m b of COUNCIL ASKS FOR , COURT TRANSCRIPT Hold that Letter from Tolice Judfa i. Not Sufficient in Lid Lift ing Case. MAT GO TO DISTRICT COURT When tha city council received from Police Judge Foster a letter conveying information of the police court conviction of J. D. -Graham and J. T. Ford, 1208 Farnam street, on charges under the liquor laws, Mayor Dahlman said, "I have never seen a paloon license revoked on a little let ter from a two-by-four police Judge. Let him send us his transcript of the case." City Attorney Bine advised the council he was not ready to give an opinion upon the sufficiency of the communication of the police Judge. Judge Foster will be asked to and the council a transcript the case not later than Thursday morning. Saloon Httll Open. The council agreed to allow the saloon to remain open pending the determination of the cases In district court. Attorney Ritchie, for the saloon men, said he ex pected to get a hearing before Judge "ingllsh Thursday morning. Mr. Ritchie characterised the police court hearing of October as a "kan garoo court." He said the original list of eighteen jurors, from whom six finally were selected, were all prohibitionists, and he added that one of the Jury served as an usher at the Tabernacle. Ho maintained that the letter from the po lice JudKe to the council did not consti tute sufficient evidence to warrant revo cation of the license 1 the council. The attorney for Granam and Ford further contended that tne charges against his clients were not sustained at the police court hearing. Because the city commissioners are all friends of his, was the reason given by Attorney Ritchie why he did not start Injunction proceedings to restrain the council from revoking this license before the case shall have been heard In dis trict court. Trail Hitters Are Reconciled and Suit is Dismissed "Hilly" Sunday's Influence In instilling happiness lntj trail hitters Is again re flected In divorce court records at the court house. Ell Tharp sued hW wife. Sarah B. Tharp, for divorce less than ten days ago. Then they both hit the sawdust trail at the "Tab" and were reconciled. Now Tharp has decided he doesn't want a di vorce and the couple have gone to living together agnin at SSI. North Sixteenth street, with their five minor children. "God Is with us." says Tharp, "and He will make our home a happy one again." Harry O. Palmer, attorney for Thsrp In the suit for divorce, is now arrang ing to withdraw the esse from Judge Redlok's docket. Sarah Tharp, l-year-old daughter. Is the girl who recently confessed thst she had tried to kill her father. She and the other children, Leonard, lb; Ray. u; i Roy. 12. and Nettle, years of age, all hit the trail at the Tabernacle, with their parents, during the last week of the "Billy" Sunday revival. WANT KEN NELLY WILLSET ASIDE Relatives of Late Mn. Elizabeth Kennelly Who Received Nothing File Objections. "JACK" DINZEN IS SOLE HEIR Michigan Alumni to Have Banquet Here Saturday The building and endowment of a 11,000,000 club house, for Michigan men in Ann Arbor, the seat of the University of Michigan, Is absorbing the attention and energy of Mlchiganders the country over this month, and a local committee, with R. C. Peters as chairman. Is In charge of the campaign among alumni rcaendent In Nebraska. More than 200 committees are engaged In the project, with an aver age of ten alumni on each committee working among Michigan's 36,000 alumni, and a total of 11,000,000 is to be raised by their efforts In a single month. Saturday evening the Michigan alumni of the Missouri valley will hold their annual banquet at the University club at 6:30 p. in. This Is also the union banquet, held In all the large cities of the country at this time, winding up the campaign for funds for tho club house. Dean Henry M. Bates of the law school at Ann Arbor will ba the guest of honor. Lysle I. Abbott will be toastmeetcr. Date is Set for Eleventh Annual Omaha Auto Show The eleventh annual Omaha Automo Mlo show will be held at the Omaha Auditorium February 21 to 28, Inclusive. This was a decision made at a meeting of the stockholdera of the ahow associa tion at a meeting at the Commercial club at noon. Clarke G. Powell will continue as man ager. The following board of directors was elected: J. T. Stewart, George Relm, Guy U Smith, C. V. Gould and Clarke G. Powell. The board of directors elected Stewart, president; Smith, vice president, and Powell, secretary treas urer. , Four new firms were admitted to mem bership in the show association. They are the McShane Motor company, the Jones-Opper company, the Met company and the Franklin Motor Car company. Supreme Officer of Knights of Pythias to Visit Nebraska Hon. Brigham S Young, supreme chan cellor of the order of Knights of Phythlas, will visit Nebraska this week. He will visit Lincoln lodge Wednesday, Hastings Thursday and Omaha Friday. Grand Chanellor George W. Merdlth of Ashland will -accompany the supreme chancellor on his visit through Nebraska. A re ception will be held to all knighta at yoom A Mensnsw. noiei irom o 10 u o'clock Friday. The special meeting for the honored guest will be held at Ne braska lodge No. 1, Fifteenth and Doug las streets, at 8 o'clock sharp. All the lodges of westren Iowa and north snd eastern Nebraska h ave been officially notified and invited to attend this special meeting. All knights will be expected to be at the hall at T:45. Refreshments will be nerved after the meeting. These ar rangements are by order of the chan cellor commander, A. A. Taylor. TAILORING FIRM SUES BLACK BECAUSE OF FIRE An echo If the disastrous fire that de stroyed the Board of Trade building last winter Is now being heard In a trial be fore a Jury In Judge Troup's district court. ' Charles E. Black, men's haberdasher and governor of Ak-Sar-Ben, Is being sued by the McCarthy-Wilson Tailoring company for $1,500. Black had given his check for that amount to the tailoring company tn payment for the lease of the company's storeroom In the Board of Trade building. ' When the fire destroyed the building the next day Black stopped payment on the check. The . company aeeks to re cover the amount. Black contending that he la not liable because the company was j unable to and has not delivered the lease snd storeroom. Kicks on Paying $3,000 for Water to Mix Concrete Three thousand dollars for water with which to mix his concreae is more than Mr. Hodgln of the Hodgln Construction company expects to pay In the construc tion of the new assembling plant for the Ford Automobile company. He Insists that the Metropolitan Water district Is asking him an exorbitant price for the water he was using In mixing his concrete for the plant; and he refuses to pay it. He wag before the city coun cil to make a complaint. Relief or no relief from the council, however, he has fixed Mi own fences for any emergency, and Is soon to tell the Water district to keep Its old water. He has finished one well already on the site of the new Ford plant, and It Is furnish ing an excellent supply of Water. He Is about to begin the construction of another well to furnish still more water. Mf. Hodgln estimated that at the rato the Wster hoard was charging him, his water for the concrete work would cost him $3,000. He says he can dig wells much cheaper than that. 4 nelif Xiit Walk with Hkrimallim, A satisfied patient writes: "Sloan's Liniment cured my rheumatism, am grateful, I can now walk without pain." Only 25c.' All druggivts. Advertisement. Bankers Begin to Arrive for Their State Convention President Jesse C. McNIsh of the Ne braska Bankers' association arrived la Omaha from Wlsner yesterday to be on the ground a day before tha opening of the sessions of the convention of that association today at the Hotel Fon-tenelle. Other bankers are beginning to arrive this afternoon. With President McNIsh on the ground, the officers of the associa tion are alt here, as the rest of them live in Omaha. By this evening it Is ex pected that at least 100 delegates will be here, and Secretary Hughes la to have a desk at headquarters at' the Fontenelle to register those who desire to register early. The executive council Is to hold a ses sion this evening at 8:30 at the Fontenelle, to attend to some of the final details of the convention. The regular session of the association Is to open at 1:30 Wednesday afternoon In the convention hall of the Fontenelle. Society Girls Will Welcome Suf f Envoy from San Francisco Miss Ludle Bacon, Miss Frances Hoch- stetler and Miss Eugenia Patterson have Invited a number of young society girls to go out In their cars Thursday mqrn Ing to meet the Incoming suffrage dele gation, which Is carrying resolutions to Washington from the San Francisco Women Voters' convention. Mrs. F. D. Wead will take a party In her car. The cars will meet at the Fontenelle hotel at 11 o'clock and from there will go out on the road to Lincoln to meet the suffrage envoy and bring them to the courthouse at noon, where they will be welcomed by the mayor. Mrs. E. M. Fairfield, chairman of the City Central Suffrage committee, will in troduce Sara Bard Field, the leader of the delegation, who will make an address. LADY GREGORY AT THE BRANDEIS ON THURSDAY Lady Gregory who will speak at the Brandels theater, Thursday' afternoon at 4 o'clock, Is making her third tour In this country. This season, she will make a transcontlnenal tour thus spreading throughout the United States the Ideas for a national theater for which she and William Butler Yeats have become world famous. It was In 1S that Lady Gregory Joined Mr. Yeats tn establishing a national thea ter that should stand for the beat there la In Irish drama. Her life-long know Vedge of the Irish, her Insight and sym pathetic humor, especially fitted her to reach the Ideal she had set, and the suc cess of the movement is today known the world over. Previous to her active work for the Nat ional theater. Lady Gregory had pub lished a number of books. Interpreting the sentiment, loyalty, romance and tra ditions of the Irish people. NOSE CLOGGED FROM A COLD OR CATARRH Apply Cream la Nostrils Te Opea Up Air Passage. That the late Mrs. Elizabeth Ken-! nelly, widow of John Kennelly, who once owned much land along the river bottoms between the two bridges, was of unsound mind and the victim of undue Influence when she made her will Is alleged In objec tions filed in probate court. John J. Plneen was made the sole heir and executor by the will. Other relntives are Mrs. Elizabeth M. Graham, wife of Georee Graham, the bll player; Mrs. Marie Camp, both granddaughters; May Estelle Hairy and Wtt.l.un Hairy, minors, who sure great-grandchildren. They petition that the will be set alle and an adnilnlstrntnr of the estnto be appointed by the court. The cxtato was originally - worth over lioo.wn, but Is al leged to have dwindled since the death of John Kennelly and wife. When Mrs. Kennelly died, she directed that "Jack" Pinccn, whom she made her sole heir, should exercise "fatherly care" over the other relatives, but that he should be under no lennl obligation. George Shields is guardian ad litem of the minor children. The application to probate the will, to which some of the heirs object, will be heard by Judge Crawford Monday. Introduce Law to Prevent Auctions in Retail Center A proposed ordinance seeking to pre vent auction saws n the immediate renter of the city Is to be Introduced In tho city council, perhaps next Monday. At the re quest of the Associated Retailers of Omaha such an ordinance Is being drawn by City Attorney Harry Kleharty. Ho U using the present ordinance of the city of Minneapolis r.s a guide. A copy of thle was furnished him by the secretary of the Associated Retailers. The saltation for such an ordlnanon grows out of the fact that so many fake auctions are constantly put on wherever a vacant room may be rented for a time by a fakir who Is here for a week or a month, and who stick red and yellow prstera acioss the front lulvrrtiMng a bankrupt sale, where no bankruptcy htis taken place. Thnt so many bankrupt posters In the business section of the city are especially bad advertising for the city, particularly when they are flaunted before the eyes of strangers who do not know the facts, I one contention mud" by the retailers. Toe Minneapolis ordinance creates a business district, within the limits of which no auction may be held. In Pcnver there Is no ordinance, but the council has agreed with the retailers not to grant licenses for auction within a given district. l or a apralne Annie. If you will get a bottle of Chamber lain's I.lnlment and observe the directions given therewith faithfully, you will re cover in much loss time than In usually required. Obtainable everywhere. All druggists. Advertisement. Boys and Girls Sell Old Papers to Get Money for Pictures Boys and girls of Park school realised $V1 from the snlo of 1.1,608 pounds of old mnpaslnes and papers collected by them. The school was divided Into the. Ma roons and Whites, the former winning by collecting .?70 pounds, as against 6,235 tnunds by their rival. Tha proceeds will lm used for purchase of pictures and Vlctmla records. Security League Keeps Up Activity; Invites Stimson The executive committee of the Omaha branch of the National Security league held Its first meeting at the Commercial club yesterday with General Harries pre siding, and twenty n"..'ners present. Na tional Field Agent Brewster made a re port of the progress of the movement and the work he had been doing In different cities during the six weeks since he was last here. He Is to go to Lincoln for a meeting there, which Is to organize a local branch at the capital city. It was agreed that the Omaha branch would continue to recruit Its membership still further, hold a publlo meeting In the near future to draw attention to the need of a preparedness program. General Harries has been In communication with former Secretary of War Stimson In an effort to secure him for such a meeting In Omaha. W.H, Smith Inquest Will Be This Morning The Inquest Into the recent murder of W. II. Smith. Woodmen of the World cashier, has been set by County Attorney Magney for this morning at 9 o'clock, at Coroner Crosby's office. Although the murder occurred October 16, ten days baa been allowed to elapse In order that all clue might be run down and complete evidence arranged for the Investigation. Miss Grace Slater, the young stenog rapher whom Smith was accompanying home when he was shot, was the only witness of the shooting, and she will be the chief person to be examined. Dandruff Goes! Hair Gets Thick, Wavy, Beautiful Save your hair! Double its beauty in a few moments. . Try this! . Hair stops coming out and every particle of dandruff disappears. Try aa-you will, after an application of Pandcrlne, you tannot tint a slnl trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, Ifut what will please you moht will b. after a few neek'a use, when you aeo new hair, fine and downy, at first yes but really new hair si-owing all over the scalp. A little Danderlne Immediately doublet the beauty of your hair. NO difference huw dull, faded, brittle and scraggy. Just moisten a cloth with Danderlne and careful!y draw It through your hair, tak ing one small strand at a time. Tha effect Is immediate and amazing your hair will be light, Huffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an Incomparable lustre, softness and lux uriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderlne from any drug vtore or toilet counter, and rrove that your hair Is as pretty and soft as any that It haa been neglected or injured by careless treat mentthat's all. Danderlne la to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roou. Invigorates and strengthens them. Its exhilarating, stimulating- and life-pro-duclrg properties cause the hair to grow long, ttrong and beautiful. Advertisement. Ah! What relief! Tour clogged nostrils open right up, the air passages of your head are clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, mucous dis charge, headache, dryness no struggling for breath at night, your cold or catarrh la gone. Don't stay stuffed up! Get a email bot tle of Ely's Cream Balm from your drug gist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, anttaeptlc cream in your nostrils, let it penetrste through every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollen, In flamed mucous membrsne, giving you In stant relief. FJly's Cream Balm Is Just what every colli and catarrh sufferer has been seeking. It's Jait si lendld. Advertisement. To Quickly Remove Ugly Hairs From Face (Beauty Notes.) Beauty-destroying halm are soon ban ished from the skin with the aid of a delatone paste, made by mixing- some water with a little plain powdered de a- tone. This is spread upon the hairy sur face for 1 or I mlnuters, then rubbed off and the skin washed to remove the re n.a'nlng delatone. This almple treatment banlshe every trace of hair and leavea the skin without a blemish. Caution should be used to be certain that it la delatone you buy. Advertisement WHEN AWAY FROM HOME The Deo is The Paper yo ask fori it yea alaa te be abaeat snore tfcaa a few days, have The Be maiu te yew. seven nmmem What's the DIFFERENCE? V. a Mftny a man iSdoJer the 1916 SdttohiT.tMJ2.? Why doe. markeu What IS the ? What e3rtra Z. car cost fart. do you get? .ffiS2- H your. and- m ssss MM l Pour-Cylinder Models T Ha Cog. T-nmini , a ass KMSta-HuM,. . , BSO I aadsa-K 4tmr. c H( Commercial Cars fWIDelfeetyCar . . . IflTI P Cr . ... ISO StattaaWe., .... g7g Six-Cylinder Models TrU, C, T-PMmew . flOSO ""il-MeHW . , 1000 Li-IUdMH,WMMM . uM I ISO , T hwiiii . . , 1250 W.Q.M. Detras) It b the ONLY car ever offered In America or Europe that haa decreased Its price and at tha same time so GREATLY INCREASED its quality. You know how prices have been reduced in many cases. In this Forty Horse Power Srudebskef FOUR, nothing has been reduced but the price. That has been decreased from $985 to (883. But It has been INCREASED tn wheetbase from 108 to 112 Inches. It haa been INCREASED in capacity from Five to SEVEN passengers. It has been INCREASED In motor from 3U to S Jt-inch bore x 5 Inch stroke. It has been INCREASED in tires from 33 x 4 to 34 1 4 Goodrich. The upholstery is the finest grade of genuine, hand-buffed, stralghr-greln. em.ilased leather oa the market. The body-nnlshlng operations have been INCREASED from 20 to 25 in number The steenng-knuckle la forged of chrome-vanadium steel, and high-grade alloy steels have been lavishly used throughout the car. The motor bearings have been made oversue. The radiator, gas passages, propeller shaft, rear axle housing have been increased in iU. . Wherever a change la materials was made BETTER matoriala were used. And for performance, for long-time service. Tor economy of operation and for durability with a STUDEBAKER SOUTH BEND, IND. DETROIT, MICH, WALKtRVIUE. OUT. : E. R. WILSON AUTOM OBILE CO., Studebaker Factory Branch Bldg. 25th Are. and Farnam St Hops pmt M: On hop quality depends beer flavor ffit ' ii iYi VS. ' : i 1 Those remarkable qualities of Budweiser and Michelob which distinguish them aa being superior to other beers are their daliciously refreshing, never varying taste and exquisite bouquet due to the exclusive use of the very best Saazar (Bohemian) Hope. And there's no danger of our supply of these vitally important hops failing. For years it has been an established rule to keep on hand a two-year in advance aupply. During the summer of 1914 our president, while on his annual hop buying trip abroad, selected and purchased 775.000 pounds (1 550 bales) of the choicest Saazar Hops and was fortunate in having them snipped to this country before the embargo was rigidly enforced in March, this year. Add this to the 500,000 pounds on hand and you'll see how secure is our position. This foresight enables us to give to our millions of friends txaetty tha sama beer, flavored with txactlu tha same Kope that have helped to make Budtotimr quality and MlJflob goodness known and liked the world over. Our supply is sufficient to last at Least until the closing days of I9I7. Anheuser-Busch St. Louis, u. s. A. rk 1WW-L.e J -1- ,j M ouJ ti Hue u. ifi.WiSr.il Hrar-Ul