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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1916)
THE REE? - OMATTA,- RATUIWAY, FEBRUARY. 3, 1.010.. -. - I 1 V- J? TWO BOYS LOSE THEIR FEET Mn. J. H. Tan Cleve of Dei Moinei Gets Word of Her Son't Plight. r. SWINE GROWERS HEETJH OI.IAHA National Gatherinj of Ho; Hen From All OTer United State, to Hold Annual Show Here. TEN THOUSAND"" IN PRIZES. Th National wn Orowrfa- aaaoela- llnn. nrjranlaM In Chlrajro roiitl fll T Motna. wer In a hnapttalat Omtha COMPANION ALSO IN TROUBLE fPmm a fluff Corraivnnnt.) PEW MOINES, la.. Fh. .-(Hartal TrtfTm. Wort i rlr4 todar hy Mr. J. IT. VanCVv that hr con, Her man, and Clifford MrConahiio. alao of hold He annual ahow and eonrmtlon in Omaha thin full. The a-t flatca hava not own dotertnlnod. hot th motln will prohnbly ha Iho wwk Immodlatolr following tha Ak-flnr-Bn ftlrlMa. The ahow will bo hM In the horo bama at the I'nlon etorkyarte and from t.r to . of the beat bred and highest priced ahow and atorlt hoaa In the world wilt be on exhibition. Prliea to b attributed will aKrrRate 10.0n0. The hoae to be exhibited at the atmoal ahow of the National Swine Orowera aa eorlatlon are expected from practically evrry atata In the union, and one ot the chlof purpoaea of the ahow will be to detrtntiatrata what haa been dona and what caji be dona In tha ho growlnr In duntry ff men will apply' practical meth od. Omki Fntar fcw Plaee. That Omaha la to he the future home of tha National Bwlne Orowera' aaoocla tlon artd that the annuel ahowa will he held here, waa determined yeaterday when Preeldnnt W. M. McFaddon of Chi racs find a number of local men got to gether at tha Hotel Caatle and agreed upon the frellmlnry plana, the detalta for which will be worked out later. Speaking of the chow that la to be held and what It will mean for Omaha, Irea-Ident- McFadden eaJd: "The annual ahowa of the National Bwlne Orowera' association to be held In Omaha will continue to grow In Impor tance year after year. At the ahow to be beld.thia coming fall wa wltl have 3,200 to l.0" exhlblta, showing tha beat hoga In the world. ' We will have growera and breedera here from every hog raising atate In tha union. "The aum of money, tlO.ooo, hung up for prlrp, la the greatent ever offered, at. any how except a, world'a fair.- It la aboul three tlmea greater than the auma offnred aa prliea at atata falra on tha earn clasaea of exhlblta. , t'anaty la atkemlaatle. "Our ahow will bo held In tha horae harna at Bouth Omaha, and after look ing them over, I am convinced that for tha purpose there la no better building In tha country, j 'We have canvaesed tha altuatlon and find that hog ralaera all over tha country are enthuRiaetio over tha ahow and tha location. They regard Omaha aa central, right In the heart of the hog and oorn country, and full of live wlree to help to make the ahow a grand cucoees. '.The ahow will not only be an exhibi tion of fine hoga, but It will demonstrate what can ba dona by men who hava gone Into the industry, following practical methods. "The money for tha jwUss haa been provided for and there l nothing that can prevent tha ahow from being a great euceeaa." i y Francisco Villa Is I Keported Located PASO. Tex., Fab, 4 -Francisco VUla waa located today near Tula, .about fifty mllee eaat of Oallego, according to ieneral Gavlra, commandant at Juarea. General Gavlra dispatched 100 man to relnorc thoaa aent out - yeatarday towarda Boajue Bonlto, and kid In tha capture or extermination of tha Villa band. A large force of band It a attacked a small da fKcto government . garrtaon at Moctezuma, on tha main Una of tha Mexi can Central railway, about 100 mllee aouth of El roao, lata today, according to aW vices received here. Tha garrison waa compelled to retire, before tha assault, it waa aad. ' Advices from Chihuahua stated . that when Villa held up the southbound Mexican Central train last Monday and killed General Ornelaa, he searched tha train for tha purpose of finding and killing Americans. where suraeons found It necessary to amputate the feet ' of both" bora. They boat their way from Tee Moines to Omaha on a frelnht train and as a re stilt of exposure both boys froae their feet. They were ' taken form a train at Omaha and rushed to a hneplta'l. but It waa too lata to avoid amputation. ltowrfl aad ttryaaj : laTllei. Theodore Itooeevelt haa been Invlled by the Greater ra Molnea committee to apeak in Pea Moines while on his apeak. In tour of the central weet, which he plana to begin Boon. Becretary Ralph Bolton, In an Invitation forwarded Booae elt, urged him to ba tha gueet of the committee at a dinner and to apeak at tha Coliseum afterward. Tha committee expecta to later Invite William Jennlnga Bryan to address a public gathering here. Colonel Rnoaevelt recently atatod that ha la contemplating a visit through the weat. Arreate Cat Pews, Arresta In the eight largeat formerly wet cltloa of Iowa were reduced BO per cent during January, the first month of effective prohibition, according to flgurea received here. Cedar Rapids reported forty-three arresta in January thla year aa against 102 In January, 118; Waterloo had seventy-two arrests, aa against a monthly average of 300 In IMS. Council Bluffa reports eeventy-eeven arresta thla paat month aa compared with 148 In Jan uary, 1716. Dlaeaaaea Dairying. Iowa's butter output could easily be In creased four-fold W. B. Barney, aUte dairy commlaaloner, told tha ahort -course students at Ames, In an address made there today on "The Future of Dairy ing In Iowa." If every county In tha state produced aa much butter aa Bremer HEW BUILDINGS FOR CITY SCHOOLS Board Committee Decides to Adriie Immediate Sale of Half ' Million Bonds. COMMERCE HIGH IN PROSPECT At the regular meeting of tha Donrd of Education neit Monday evening the building and grounds committee will recommend immedi ate sale of $500,000 achool bonds, being the unsold half of an Issue of 11,000,000 authorised by the voters last spring. The first half waa sold last summer. At a meeting of the committee yesterday afternoon It was decided to recommend the early commence ment ot the building program out lined at the time the bond proposi tion was submitted. It la proposed to enlarge and remodel Central achool on Dodge atreet to accom modate the High Hchool of Commerce, making tha remodeled Institution ade quate for 1,000 students. Thla plan con templates moving the Fort School for Boys to the present High School of Com merce on Leavenworth atreet and en larging tha vocatloual features of the boya' achool. With the High School of Commerce lo cated on tha present Central achool site It would ba possible to utilise certain de partments of Central High achool for the convenience of tha commercial students, for tnatanoe. household art. Tha new building program decided on yesterday Includes new achoola for Park, Clifton Hill, Druid Hill and Henry W. Tatea altes; also addltlona te Lincoln and Franklin achoola and completion of the four-room unit at the Bancroft alta to a regulation alxteen-room building, t Tentative plans for Park and Clifton Hill achoola call for bulldlnga having alx teen claaa rooma and kindergarten, man ual training and aasembly rooms. Druid Hill site will be Improved with a building of twelve "class rooms and ad i Three Millions of Russ Fall in War JiOXDON, Keb. 4. The Rusalana them selves calculate their casualties thua far at S,oro,ono and say l.ono.OOO German and Austrian prisoners have been sent to the Interior of Rusnla. according to a Copen hagen dlfpatch to the Kxcharvge Tale, graph company. The Copenhagen corre spondent apparently drew his Information from the American Red Croes detach, ment. which has been . aervlng many montha at the Russian front, and which, he says, sailed from Bergen' yesterday for New Tork; ' The dispatch says the members of th detachment described the hospltala of Russia aa admirable In work and -equipment ;' It la eeld'Rnsala no longer needs foreign assistance In hospital work, although many physicians from other countries are atlll at the front. i . -. ,!. county tha butter output of tha state I dltlonal departmental rooma. North Pacific Slope j Getting Out of Snow f EATTL.H. . Wash.. Feb. 4. -"The ' big iw." grtha storm fhat haa held tha northwest in Hs'grlp for four days prob eBJy will be 4lcaltiiaWd for yeara to coma, a over tonight and Clearing aklea gave prpmiKc of enabling the region to dig Hsrlf out. Thousands of laborers were at erk in all oet'Uun restoring wire com munication and cleaning atreet car and rxliroad tracts. ' Tha storm waa moving tjtard. f'oiHand. Out, afmr being Isolated for almost twenty-four houra, waa again' In touch with the world through tha repair f telephone and telegraph wires. . Transcontinental ' railroad hoped to clear their tracks tomorrow, in tha mean time sending no more trains Into the mountains. . WHOLESALE GROCERY c HOUSE AT NORFOLK NORFOLK. Neb., Feb. 4.-(Spacial Tel egramsWork on a tawne brick build ing to be used aa a wholesale grocery (houe, .will atau In Norfolk In a ahort time. Individuals members of the. Nor folk Commercial club bar organised a Norfolk Development company and will be the owners of the building. Nash brothers of Minneapolis, after looking about for a location to establish a branch house, decided on Norfolk., The deal was 'closed with the development company at Minneapolis, Thursday, Threat tw Stvthe. rortT WOHT1I, Tex, Feb. t-Mne buiKired clerka in TekMS A Pacjfio of fia over the sstem are threatening to 'rk tomorrow, boraus of a dispute t'h the officials over recognition of tic uniun. Jetk Hvllrf Kaad. VHII-ADEI-FHIA. Feb. 4The local loimniitrat of the Amurloan Jewish relief 4 ..tiuniit.. wi nweiing today reported liist I had b-en pledged In tha cam I'aniu to rl funds la Oils city. What (hllra Xee New. im aptoa of tha beat cars mothers can glva iam thla weather brlnga atcknesa to, many children. Safe, reliable family tuedicinra ara In demand. Mrs. T. Neur--uer. ta Ciaire, Wis., wrttaa: ' FeWy-a Jiom y and Tar cured my boy of a aevere atta k or croup after otber remedies bad failed. I recommend it to everyone, aa wa know from our eapertenca that tt la a. wonderful remedy fo euugha, colds. roup and whooping cough." It atopa tha a-ou-h-tHat hang on and weaken after the UxH'-pe. 4ld everywhere. Adver-U4.-uieut, - would be worth 1134.211. 185. or four tlmea It a present worth, ha aald. And If tha methods now In use by tha beat dairymen were followed tt would be aaty to add fifty pounds to tha average production of each cow of Bremer county and on that baala the atate of Iowa would pro duce each year 532.901. SM pounds of but ter, worth at W cents a pound .159.780. 4D0.IK). Commissioner Barney aald that the future of Iowa as a dairy atate de penda on tha proper development of the entire atata along progressiva lines. He showed by statistics that dairying la on tha Incteaaa In tha state and southern Iowa la doing mora dairying than here tofore. . Choose Teachera' Baoka. Tha reading material for tha year for tho teaohera of tha atata waa selected yeatarday. at a meeting of tha board of directors of ths Iowa State Teachera Blading circle. All of the booka ara by Iowa authors except one. Tha booka se lected weraFlva Mesaagea to Teachera." Mrs. A- B. Fu,nK , Pea, Molnea: "Tha Brown Mouse,". Herbert Quick, formerly f Mnux CUv. how with "the Curtis Pub. llahlng company of Philadelphia; "The High School," Prof. John Stout, CorneM oollega. MU Vernon; "Sural Education," PlckardJ 'The Brown Mouee," by Her bert 3"Vk. which deale with tha prob lem of rural education, la being filmed and will be exhibited In motion plcturea within a few montha. Tha membere of tha board ara State Superintendent A. M Deyoa of Dea Molnea, Kate aaaunc, Anareoaau John n. Blacks. Sac City; Myrtla Dunggant, Charlton; C. J. Boyd. Osage; M. K. Howell, Clarion, ano n. Rosa Parker. M. U nown. tary and manager. Falalom Oala. . Nlnety-ona of the nnety-nlne counties of Iowa which hava been officially given out by tha state ceasue department ahow o. gain In population over 110 of 1M.MT. Tha toUl population f theea nlnatyina counties la t,V.m. as s gainst 271.715 In Sis counllea were given out today, gain of theea nlnety-ona countlea over 191 ia about T per cant. With only eight mora counties remaining to ba officially certified ta ths lnd:eatlona ara that the total population of tha atata will ba fully per cent greater than that of 10.; The six countlea given out today followi Fay ette. SS.KT. as agalnat , In mo? Her riaon. 21KT. as agalnat J; Humboldt. 1I.01S, aa against 1J.1M; Jones, W.14S. aa aaalnst 11.050; Koaauth. aa agalnat tl.m; Montgomery. X7.7, as agalnat !, 04. Oelweln In Fayette county now ahowa a population of 1.137: Mleeourl Valley, In Harrison county. ,76t; i Humboldt, In Humboldt county, S.ftMf Anamoaa, In Jonea county. 1.83; Algona, In Koaauth county. S.581; lied Oak, In Montgomery county. 6.601. law BlachlUte. Saya Tharae. In an opening atatement made at the rata hearing In tha federal building yea- terday, at which Interior Tow cltlea are trying, to get ratea on aa equality with tha Mississippi river vtt!.;, and the Iowa cities oo' tha 'river are trying to get-a rate aa low aa that of St louts. Clifford O. Thome, chairman of tha Iowa Ball road commtaalon, declared that tha rall roada have blacklisted Iowa. Chicago alona haa manufattared products five tlmea thoaa of Iowa, and St. Laula, with a population leaa than one-third Sa large aa that of Iowa, annually turns out prod ucts w hich total In value mora than thoaa o( all tha Iowa cltlea put 'together. SHIP BUILDING COMPANY WILL RAISE MEN'S PAY PHILADELPHIA, Feb. .-Announcement waa made today that an advance of 10 per rent In the hourly wage rates will ba made In tha pay of tha employes ot tho yard a, ehope and foandrlea of tha Cramp Ship Building company and tha I. P. Morrta company, a subsidiary. Tha Increase In w a ires will become ef fective February is aad will benefit nearly 6,000 employee. Four new claaa rooma and auditorium will be added to Franklin achool. In Its completed fom, Bancroft achool will have alxteen claaa rooma, kindergar ten and manual training departmenta and assembly hall. Tha new Clifton Hill school will be at Forty-fifth and Maple atreeta, ., It ia expected tho committee will be ready Monday evening to report favor ably en a new achool for tha Field club district, tha location probably to be at Thirty-sixth and Walnut atreeta and tha building to be an eight-room structure. Hiram; Johnson on , Minnesota Ballot ST. PAtn Minn., Feb. 4. The name of O) vera or Hiram W. Johnson of Cali fornia waa filed with the secretary of lata late today aa a candidate for th" progressiva nomination for president In the March 14 primary election. Flllnx time for this election, aa far aa presiden tial candidates are concerned, ended to day. Thoaa for whom filings hava been made, besldeaa Governor' Johnson, are: Democratic, Woodrow Wilson; repub licans. Albert B. Cummins, Henry D. E tabrook end William Grant Webster, and prohibitionist, William Sulscr and Eu gene N. Foaa. , a regiment of Canadlana in tho battle of ' Kt Tit I I.h In nnrfrl haxtllv Amfttwd a fire brigade Of membera of the house and attendanta and fo'ixht" the flame with tinea of hoee In the corrldora, but could make no headway. The blase spread so fast that when the Ottawa flra de partment arrived the building waa doomed. Aid waa eummonded from Mon treal, but aa a special train laden with fire apparatua and a compaay 4f fire-ment-waS .leaving that city about' mldj night, the call waa countermanded. The (all. central tower of 'the Parliam entary building fell at 1:) a. rn., today and at about the same time three or four men -were crashed beneath the fairing roof 'of one of the wlnaa.' By o'clock the flames were rolling through -the senate building, but the firemen believed the library would be saved. '. ' 'The parliament building Included a cen tral building with two wings, in all 470 feet In length, with a tower 230 feet high and library building In the rear. Many valuable aculpturea. paintings and decora tlpna. adorned tta rooma and corrldora It w,aa erected In 116. of cream-colored sandstone, on a bluff rising 1M feet above the Ottawa river. . Library Balldlaa; la aved. One of th most stubborn fights of the whole fire wa that made' to save the library building, which la on of ths most beautiful on the continent, and the fight was successful. While th fir burned the passage from the reading room tip to the walla of the library, Ita progress waa stayed there. Na damage was done rr the building, but considerable loea to the books, particularly those which were In the basement, was cauaed by water. The fir Waa under control about 6 o'clock, though several ktreama were still being played on the Interior. Morning did not reveal any casualties other than those rep6rted last night. Mm.' Bray and Mme. Morln, whs- were -caught and suffocated . In . a . room, and the. three men Who are thought to ba burled under fifteen feet Of debris, com pri the list.. They , were, caught, when a turret at the north aide Of th building fell. Mr. Loggle. who waa reported miss ing, I now believed to have escaped. As yet ths debfla where ths three men are believed to be burled, haa not been re moved. '..' The fire atarted In the reading room of the House' of Commons. Colonel Sher wood says there Is absolutely no ground for rumor that th fir was of Incendiary origin. "It Varied" right under the no sf k policeman." he added. . ' The fire spread with amailnaj rapidity, but this may be explained by the con tentes of the room, such as paper and. light tablca. " " Th report of a warning having been received from Providence two weeks igo Is officially denied. The central part of trie main building,-" Including the chambers of both ths Com-, mons and Senate, wa destroyed, but the front and end walla are apparently lh good shape, though 'experts will have to determine the atructurkl damage; Botlv he east and west enda of tha building, are little damaged, with the exception if the roof a and top floors. The towers were completely ruined, tha auperatfuCt. -ure falling with a craah, though tha maaonry still stands. , v r ANNUAL v. Feb fnary Bargain Eweil The Biggest Price Concessions of the Whole Year on Odd Lots of High Grade Apparel Man Dies After Losing Both Legs Tom Heomahos, a Greek section hand. n year of age, died Thursday from a shock, following an accident In th Union Pacific yards, when both hla leg wer cut off by a train. : The. man waa working with others, when h waa ran down and hurt. H was taken' to St. Joaeph'a hospital aad atteided by. Dra. E. J. Vpdegraff and J. F. IfySe.Tha ahock and loaa of blood caused hla death Shortly afterwards, be (pre he-could glv a coherent statement of ta happening. Coroner Crosby took charge of the body and will hold an In due.- Heomahos, roomed at (13 South Sixth- street. : '. -, i J Lepers Escape from Isolation Hospital IXXI ANGELES. Cel.. 'Feb. a -Two lepers, Perto and Carro M.'Glaterma, es caped early today from' the- lioS County Isolation hospital after-severely beating two trusties, also lepers who. wer on guard duty. Sheriff John C. Cllne de tailed a paae of deputlca to. search for tha men and also telephoned to the au thorities In nearby places to keep a look. ou (or them. , AD CLUB TO BOOST. FOR i "IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE" Af the. meeting of, the executive com mittee of tha Omaha Ad club Thursday noon; ths , club's stamp, of 'approval was placed on th "It Pay to Advertise" show that la coming to tha Brandels theater In th near future. ,' It had been reported that' the "It Paya to Advertise" company waa carrying John Butler aa lta star performer and latet ascertained that ha would not b wltH tha performera booked tor th Omaha ahow. "A wire came back from Bullet to tho affect that tho booking agency has four "It Paya to Advertise" com panies on tha road and that tha man who playa tha atar part In tha organi sation coming her ta th best of any ot them. , ELGIN COMMUNITY CLUB HOLDS BOOSTER BANQUET EIjGIN, Web., Feb. 4. 48rrlal. Elftn Community club gav a banquet tonight at Elgin opera house at which Ira Wolf waa toaatraaater. - Tha following respoata to toaat war Svens "Our- enaamuntty Taeuty-ft-re Tear Ago." George N. Seymour; "Our Com munity Friend." John O. Hadda; CW lonimumty rreaMenV . M. Johnson. "Our Community Farmer Joaepn j. fchulta; fnity,'' Jasnea J, TraJnur: "Our rVmmuntty ldaai." Karl W. O. Htller. r'h. D. Da mm as Febrawrr IS. PETltOfiRAD fvta I-ondoni. Feb, . Tha Kovo Vremya aeys It haa learned from a rthatl eour e tliat tba Duuia Mill taaacmbla rwbriMiry 18. t FAILS TO EXTINGUISH FIRE WITH -DISHWATER When Mra. Fred Walker, 4510 North Twenty-fourth street, discovered amok coming from tha baaement of her homo last night, ah rushed downstairs with a pan of dishwater . and attempted to put out th flames. l . ' - It waa too much for her, however, and she had to; call th fir department. which extlngulahed th bias before tha flamea spread to tha- main part of the house. The . flra atarted from burning aoot falling out of tho chimney onto a pile of kindling, after tha cover ot th handhol In th baa of th chimney had CANADIAN HOUSE OF PARLIAMENT IS DESTROYED BY FIRE (Continued from Pag One.) ' of Quebec, and Mm. Morln, wlfis if Loula Morln of Beauce, Que. The men whose bodlea ara atlll burled In the debris ara Alphonse De Jardlns, a Do minion policeman; Alphonse Des Jardlns, 1 his unoie, and employe of the bullldng, and Robert Fanning, a waiter. i Among thoaa reported missing la B. B. ' Law. a member of Parliament for Tar- i mouth, N. B. Mr. Law la understood to : hava been at the house at tha time the flra broke out and haa not been seen sine. He waa alona In th city and tha management of tha hotel where he i waa stopping aald he left there last night to go to tha house and that every effort to traca him alnoa had failed. J. B. La plant, assistant clerk of tha com mon, la alao among those reported miss-in. Liberal Whip ta Safe. It waa atatod laat night that Frederick F. Pardee, th chief liberal whip In the House of Commons, also waa missing. but It waa subsequently learned that he went to Samla, Ont., yesterday morning and that ha could not have returned be fore th fire. Tha financial loaa la difficult to estU mate, but th contenta of the' building wer of great value. At an early hour today It waa believed that tha parliamen tary library In a rear wing had been saved. While the fir waa burning sol dier carried out many of lta SQA.SOO vol umes. ' ' Tha, parliament building was rated as one of tha finest' Gothic' structures on thla continent. It covered four acrea on Parliament Hill. Several persona who were btimed or otherwise hurt In fleeing through the corridors before tha swift rush of th flamea. or In escaping from th win dows, are In hospitals today. One of thos moat severely injured Is Martin Burrell, mlnlater ot agriculture, who waa burned about th head; , Dr. MBohael Clark, member for Bad Doer, Buffered burna about tha hands. . Sir Robert Bor den, th Canadian premier, escaped without Injury, Kxploaloa Preceded Fir. Tha origin of tha fir can ba determined only by an investigation, which It la wnderatood will begin aa aoon aa possible. Tha, fire started In th reading room 'of th Houae of Commona and Colonel Oeorge Bradbury, a number of th house from Manitoba; Mayor Medrlo Martin of Vbntreal and Constable Helmer, wlio wer atandlng at tha entrance of the library, agree that It waa preceded b an explosion which blew open tha door of tho library and knocked down per sona standing near. They aay they be lieve .the explosioa. waa. cauaed by bomb op Infernal machtae. .. ... v i In tha reading room were thouaande of loose paper. . among . which tha flamea leaped with almoat amaslng rapidity, moke rolled In denaa volume out through tha doors and Into the chamber of tha House of . Commons,' wher that boe waa. alt ling. With tha apreading af th alarm membera of tha House of Commona, spectator In th gallery and attendaata fled In panic for window, doors or fir escapee. So swift waa th ruah of tha flamea that many narrowly ear a pad.' Blava Bread a Rapidly. Colonel' John Currie,' who - commanded RIGHT REV. J. J. LAWLER APPOINTED BISHOP OF LEAD ST. PAUL. Fb. ilUght Rev. J. J. lAwlrv of th archdlocea of tha St. Paul, vicar general of tha archdlocea and pastor of th St Paul cathedral, haa been appointed bishop of the Lead. S. IX, to succeed Bishop Joseph F. Busck. trans ferred to 8L Cloud. Minn., laat March. MRS. KILPATRICK'S ESTATE VALUEJ) ATHALF MILLION Aa Inventory of th astato of tha lata lira .Thomas KC Patrick, fll.d In county court, ahow a total valuation ot t&t&.tta xeltaxtv f th ha wropaaty. It hi ehterty in stocks aad bands and la left ta a daughter. Mm. Flore no K. Mlxtor f Violin, lit NEARLY WILD WITH n K ITCH nr. Ha Ihui SCsabargi. BALTIMORE. Md.. Feb. 4. The Penn sylvania, whlih thre week ao lifted Ita embargo on grain ,rta through Halttmore, haa leaued a new embargo, on all grain exports throug-h thla port, ef f . the tudy. Kirilit ivngt'slion ia given aa th rtanon. Eczftma. From Hands to Elbows On Mass. Could Not Put Hands in Water. Could Not Sleep. HEALED BYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT "My daughter wa poieooed by sari and It turned into erawea aad trotn her hande to her albows was oo ana of red, boralag, Itching erupMooa n, tagan with a rasa which waa f uca a burning ItcbJng narur aha at ttnjea abe waa nearly wild. For weeks ahe oowkl act put her haada In waw and aba could o atoop, "She sufrered mtaoaary fur several waaha a4 I SrWd wrtncmg toweia out of hot watar aad poMaag a iwbbar bae from bar. but waaatt hatped. Tha Doctor aM t try Cartteur Soaa aad Olnanaana. I OM aatd th tatxstns ao4 bwraaaa; Mt feav, aa4 I aavd Ibor baaaa ag CXittoar Ttarkaaw with tha CwKksara Sua seat ab waa PieMty healed." (Signed) Mr. Ma ben, rest Ktiwa Ave., cucag. HL, Oca, aa, ItlS. Sample Each Free by Rlatl With aa-a. Bkia Book aa reua Aa dross post-card TuU,a. Dwc. T, a." Sold tbrvughout th world. All Womfm'i Coat that wr fermsrlj $18.75, $25.00, $29.50, including a fw , handsome style in Plush $0.75 88 Women's Coats in Rich Wool Mixtures, formerly up to $17.50 $3.95 20 Skating Coats in High-Grade Wool Ma terials, formerly up to $12.50 $3.05 38 Women's Warm Wool Coats, nerw mind what the price was, it is now $1.00 80 Women's Waists, in good, clean new stock, formerly up to $10.00 $5.00 80 Women's Waists, every one highly desir able, values to $6.50.... $2.05 Women'! Waists, usually worth to $4.50, now ; $1.05 75 Women's Silk Dresses, including many new styles with extra full skirts. .$12.75 35 Women's Silk Dresses, including new etyles $8.75 Maxator Underwear, for every member of your family, at prices to make purchasing ) very profitable. . ' ' y - ' i 40 Girls' Coats, well made in handsome mix- ' tures and plain colors, values .to $7.50. , ; at $2.t5 30 Girls' Coats, in Zibelines and Mixture-, values to $12.50 .$3.05. Middy Blouses, just a little mussed, regular . $1.00 and $1.50 values, now 69 J Girls' Dresses, formerly to $5.75.... $2.05 ' Girls' Dresses, formerly to $9.75, .. .$4.25 75 Children's Coats, 2 to 7 years, Chinchillas, Zibelines and Corduroys, values up to ' $8.50 $2.65 Children's Bonnets and Hats, of Velvet or Corduroy .HALT PRICE Children's Purs, Ermine, Thibet and Brook Mink, formerly to$5.75... . . .$2.05 Children's Bath Robes, 2 to 6 years, values up to $1.50. ........................ 89 ' Plannel Rompers, $1 .00 values ........ 80 i Jersey Drawer laggings, were $2.25, now - at 5g Children's Wool Sweaters, small sizes only, $1.00 values : ........ ..50 Infants' and Children's Soiled Dresses, greatly reduced. Women's Dress Boots $5.00 and $6.00 val , ues $2.05 Women's and Misses' Dress Boots $1.50 and $4.00 values..;,;... .........$2.45 Misses' Tan Button Boots Former $3.50 values . . j .v..:..,:.;...... .$1.05 Boys', and Youths' Shoes $3.25 and $3.75 kinds, now... $1.05 and $2.45 No Approvals, Charges or Exchanges 'letjrr sggggEBiaargaaan KTB take great pleasure in announcing to the ' V V public the establishment of a new service for Omaha, Council Bluffs and surrounding territory. " : To old friends and acquaintances, this, no doubt, . will ? be interesting news. Accept our assurance that. "our . - chief aim at all times is to please. We have, therefore, - arranged for the distribution of the world renowned te ffifi; MILWAUKEE Orders for this splendid product will receive prompt and courteous attention. We therefore ' take the liber-' ' T, ty to solicit your valued patronage at this time. As prompt delivery is our chief aim, we suggest that all order be mailed or phoned to us sufficiently in advance, to insure such delivery. Re memberdelay ia costly and unsatisfactory. Go to your nearest phone now. We are right on the jump filling orders in regular rotation. WHO IS NEXT? Information of any nature will be cheerfully furnished. mi oil o 2567-9 Leavenworth Street Phone-Doug. 876 OMAHA, NEBR.