Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 17, 1916, NEWS SECTION, Page 2, Image 2

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 17. 1916.
!
.GERMANS ADMIT v.
REYERSE IN FRANCE
A . . -
- - I . v -
Berlin War Office Says Three
Towns on Somme Front Are
Taken by British Troops.
iJOMBLES IS HOLDING OUT
Berlin. Sent IS. (Via . London-
Berlin official.) After severe4 fighting
on the somme Iront yesterday, says
today's German official statement, the
German troops were forced back
through the' villages of Courcelette,
; Martinpuch and Flers. The town of
Combles, the statement' adds, was
held by the Germans in the face of
strong British attacks.
; British Gains Substantial.
London, Sept. 16. As a result of
their offensive north of the Somme.
- begun yesterday morning -along the
six-mile front from north of Combles
- to '' beyond the Pozieres-Bapaume
road, the British are holding the vil
lages of Courcelette, Martinpuch and
Flers, the war office announced this
afternoon. f . ,
Kini George sent the following
message today to General Sir,.Dpu
las Haig, the 'British commander In
France: :- ' . '
'."I congratulate you'i and my . brave
troops on the brilliarit success just
achieved. I have never doubted that
vu. nicie victory win .ultimately
crown our efforts, and the splendid
results of the fighting yesterday con-
jiiujcu inis view. 7 . i
, - Counter Attacks Repulsed. '
Pari c.n 1 r:. .
.. -.., ubm ... uumiiau luuilicr
attacks were made oft the French
ones ootn norm and south. of.4he
nmm lacf nitfh Tli... .... .......
somme last nighc They .w'eie unstick
office-announced1 to-
euessful. the war ft
day. The assaults wer ttcljvered to
iner east 01 ciery,;ou tne north bank
.of. the river and east of Berny, to the
.south of the .stream, below Perronne.
During yesterday's fighting, today's
bulletin states, the French took 400
, prisoners. In a single trench the bodies-
of eighty-six dead Germans were
picked up.
flevoe and McMullen
' Speak at Pawnee City
. Pawnee City, Sept. 16. (Special.)
One of the most successful political
rallies in the history of this county
was held last night, when several of
the state and local candidates were
present The principal speakers of the
evening were Robert. W. Devoe, re
publican candidate for attorney gen
eral and A. McMullen, candidate for
state senator from Gage and Pawnee
counties. Senators Shumwav and
Reynolds, state candidates, also made
snore addresses.
county chairman
meeting. The talk
was especially interesting and took
well with the audience. The party
left for Tecumseh this morningVhere
iney spoKei nis evening.
fifteen Want to Catty,
Mail Out if JJeemer
At Point, Neb., Sept: 16.i($pe
cial) Fifteen candidates havfc just
taken the postoffice civil service ex
aesmation at West Point for the po
sition of rural mail carrier at Beemer.
This is the largest clsss of applicants
that has yet appeared at any previous
examination of this character at West
Point The route vacant at Beemer
is considered to be one of the most
desirable in the county, hence the
large number of candidates. William
Smith was the former carrier.
:anaiaates, also made
C, A, Schappel,
n, preside fat, the
Ik of Mr, McMullen
Twenty-Four fines';
Paid in the Police
Court by Dealers
Dairy and Milk Inspector Bossie't
the following convictions of milk
dealers:
Nam and Dairy. FIdm Paid.
CCornnr. Uin uill 4? tn
. V, Johnson, Halna t?.0
S. J. Nalaan, Conaumcra' , J7.M
C Bpaniard, Brancard..,..,,,...,.., J7.B0
W. Andtrann V.,-Binr t ift
Card Norgard, Union Sanitary No. i!. S?!bo
Rwanaan A Andaraen, Horaa Shot) Laka 37.60
itnwn m uarsen, biita I7.ft0
A. M. Andararn, Foraat Lawn 87. S
R. Norairard, Union Dairy company... 17.10
avnua Knurtaen, Walnut Hill
A. M. Chrlatnan. Intvr-atata
Ohramer tk Pelentan, Underwood
Patar Petaraan, Twin City
Patar Petaraan, Twin City
M. C. Horcnaan, Twin City
A, Nalderbarf, Korth Omaha Farm.
L, P. Jen ten. Parity Datry
John Chrlatanian. Eala No. 1
"otala , lee a. 00
Ten cases still pending. In addition
to the above fines, $330 in fines were
suspended.'
Herman Seizes Grapes
, j Because Under Weight
i . rrom a bub corraapondAnt,.. ,
i Lincoln. ' Sent- I'6. (SoeciaU In.
jpectors pf, the state pure food depart
ment -nave seized uu baskets ot
grapes in possession of Omaha fruit
jtten, so notice was received by Com
missioner tlarman this morning. 1 he
confiscation was made because the
baskets did not correspond to the law
as regards the number of pounds in
eacn one,
It is generally understood that
each basket should weigh eight
pounds, but in this case the number
of pounds did not show on the bas
ket The national law requires brand
ing ot baskets.
Commissioner Hsrman has notified
wholesalers to obey the law.. It is
said that the law is being evaded bv
fruit men in -Council Bluffs who art
shipping grapes to Nebraska points.
Commissioner' Harman has filed
charges in district court at Nebraska
City against Robert Nix, agent of the
S. L. Collins Oil comoanv. for refusal
to allow inspection of coal oil in tanks
of the company.
Custer County Fair
Has Large Exhibits
Broken Bow. Neb.. Stot. lAfSne.
cial.) -The Custer county fair was
brought to a close Friday night after
four davs of stood attendance. The
agricultural displays this year were
particularly good, while the live stock
exhibit was up to the average. Avia
tor Fred Hoover of Chicago was able
to make only two flisrhts durins the
week. On the second, day he started
up in the face of a strong wind and
the machine dropped to the arround
and broke a propeller. The aviator,
wbo was not injur' wasunable to
get another propeller here before the
ciose 01 me lair. Among ine state
notables who attended the fair here
this week were Justice Fawcett of the
supreme court, ex-State Treasurer
Walter .George, .Associate Justice.
Barnes of the supreme court and State
.Treasurer Hall. , ,
Veterinarian Says Anthrax ?
" " ' Condition Very Serious
(From a S)UII Corrttpondtnt.
Lincoln, , Sept 16. (Special.) A
telephone message to his office this
morning sent by. State Veterinarian
Dr. Anderson1, Conveyed the informa
tion that he had found several very
severe cases of anthrax in cattle ;ar
Madison and that steps 'were being
taken to quarantine and otherwise try
to stamp out Ithe disease. o sj
Women Readers Are Waiting
For The Bee s New Department
Miss Iraa Gross Will Write on
Domestic Science and Eco
nomics of Housekeep
ing: for The Bee.
; Dr. Bradbury a Safe Dentist
( There is Not a Man or Woman in America
That Does Not Need Good Teeth
Twenty-seven years the Dental business
hns taught us to keep up with the procession
of problems and given us the sense to avoid
pitfalls and obstacles, one after the other.
We look far ahead to new opportunities
and to the way and means of realizing it is
essential in the growth and progress that
brings Dental success.
Our office iaa short-cut to the finest Dental
work without the pain. '
We wish that you knew as much about your
teeth and gum as we can tell you.
" EXAMINATION 13 FREE
Specialist in Cum Disease. .
Gold or Porcelain Crowns, from $5.00 up.
. Sand for Booklet on Unusual Dentistry.
DR. BRADBURY, Dentist
17 Years in Omaha.
21-21 Woodman of the World Building. Phone D 1758.
1 4th nasi Farnam Stt., Omaha. Hoursi S to 6j Sundays. 10 to 12.
No Home U Complete Without a
Columbia Grafonola
. , '." The World's Greatest
' v Phonograph. . .
This Grafonola Outfit,
choice of mahogany, walnut
or oak, only
$116.50
including 20 selections' (ten
10-inch double disc records),4
and this late model Grafon-'
ola equipped with individual
record racks and ejector. .
, Terms $6.00 per Month.'
If unable to .call, phone
Douglas 1623 and we will
send one of these outfits to
your- home on approval.
Other styles $15 to $350.
' Free concerts eviery hour.
Schmoller & Mueller
. Piano Co.
1311-13 Farnam Street
Ratal! uJ WlaUuk rl.triknt.
for Nebraska, i Iowa . and -Soatb
Housewives who read The Bee sre
all agog with interest in the an
nouncement of the new home eco
nomics department of the Woman's
section, to be in charge of Miss Irma
H. Gross of the Central Hgli school
domestic science faculty. 'vherever
progressive housekeepers congregate,
they are discussinsr this latest feature
of the up-to-date woman's page of
The Bee, and the initial appearance of
the new depaKment is ragerly
awaited. ''
The special training and fitness of.
Miss Gross to conduct such a depart
ment is a tact commented en by all
who knew this efficient young wom
an. Miss Gross is an Omaha prod
uct, an honor graduate of Central
high schoof, after which she took the
domestic science course at the Uni
versity of Chicago. Much of her
training here was- received under
Sophonisba Breckenridge, a woman
of national fame, and Marion Talbot,
whose textbooks are recognized as
among the best written on home eco
nomics subjects. Miss Gross supple
mented her own study by teaching
domestic science at the -University
Settlement, headed by Miss Mary Mc
Dowell. She has been rnnnirteri with
the local high school classes since her
return to Omaha.
Miss Gross is not the type of do
mestic science instructor who believes
that the modern woman is woefully
ignorant of housekcenins mnhnt
and that her mother, before her, was
equally unacquainted with sanitation,
food chemistry, food values and the
like.
Easier methods are what urnmn
need a systematizing of all their la
bor," says Miss Gross. "Women to-
0 Mi
DEMOS ARE MAKING
DEMAND ON CLERKS
Five Per Cent Assessment
Sight on All the State
House Employes.
in
GREAT ROAR IS GOING UP
day are doing their housework in the
most difficult manner, whereas their
household duties could be made in
finitely lighter." But the statement
that modern- women know nothing of
how to cook and manage their homes
is one that Miss Gross will not coun
tenance. Household administration,' the study
of expenditures, dietetics and nutri
tion are onlv a few nf thm tnhi.f
which Miss Gross will discuss in con
nection with her cookery topics. "
(From a surf Correipondvnt.)
Lincoln, Sept 16. (Special.) State
house employes, or at least some of
them, are facing a 5 per cent assess
ment for democratic campaign pur
poses, according to reliable rumors
emanating from those who are ob
jecting to so high an appreciation of
their services by the powers that be.
Officials of the departments do not
care to talk very much about the high
handed methods being used to make
them loosen ud. Some of them do not
object to paying a 10 per cent assess
ment on their own salaries, but they
say tnat they win not sand tor a 3
per cent assessment on the clerks
workng under them.
Republican state officials, which in
clude the state superintendent,, land
commissioner and the railway com
mission, emphatically stated to The
Bee that there had been ho assess
ment in their offices and there wouh
be none. , :
Some of the state officers, who
have understood that the 5 per cent
assessment will have to come, declare
that if the order comes they will ad
vise their employes not to pay it. It
is probable, however, that they will
stand for half that and, not grumble
very much.
On a 5 per cent basis deputies will
have to pay $90; bookkeepers, $75;
clerks from $50 to $60, and stenog
raphers, $42. There are half a dozen
democratic deputies in the state house
with assistants who draw a like sal
ary, which will make a total sum, if
all pay the 5 per cent, of $450. There
are the same number of bookkeepers
who will donate $450; about twenty
clerks who will cough up about $1,000
to $1,200; an army of stenographers
who at least should be able to donate
$1,000 more,' while there are several
$1,200 clerks "who should be able to
help out about $800 more: this snouid
enable the democrats to hold up the
employes for about $4,000 in an ef
fort to keep the democratic machine
well oilea.
State Fair Receipts
Over Hundred Thousand
- - (?rom a Staff Corrtpondent
Lincoln. Sept. 16. (Special.) Ac
cording to the monthly bulletin being
sent out by the State Board of Agri
culture the state fair receipts for the
1916 exposition were $101,679.58, de
rived from the following sources:
Admtnloiu , S6S.4S4.3S
Auto lull J, 066. 00
Conization! 17,0 1 4. tt
Grand aland aod bleacher 1I.1SS.10
Mlauellanooua t.tii. S4
Spaed 1,117.00
Stalla and pena 1,871. Oft I
State appropriation S.0SS.M
That Nebraska is one of the leading
swine-producing states was exempli
fied, ihe showing numbered about
1,700 head, even in the face' of the
threatened railroad strike. Some ex
hibitors failed to come because rail
road agents at home stations could
not predict the certainty of a return
of the stock. Those who came re
ported a land office business in sales
made.
Murder Suspect Is r
y' Arrested at Beatrice
Beatrice, Neb., Sept. 16. (Special)
Fred Aldergoot, suspected of being
the man wanted at. Stockton, Kans.J
for the murder of Louis Banks on.
August 23, last, was arrested here last
night by Chief Hayden. He answers
the description of the murderer and
the sheriff of Brooks county will ar
rive in the city Sunday to see if he j
can identify the fellow.
Beemer to Vote on School Bonds.
West Point, Neb., Sept. 16. (Spe
cial.) An election will be held at the
town of Beemer, in this county, on
October 7 on the Question of voting:
bonds to the amount pf $24,000 for
the erection of a new high school
building. Much local interest is beine
aroused over the question.
R, W, Craig Tells ,
-...OfReceatlisit to
: Chalmers Factory
R. W. Craig, the Chalmers dis
tributor, recently spent a week at the
Chalmers factory in Detroit and re
turned home with a lot of new ideas
and a lot of added enthusiasm. In
speaking of his visit Mr. Craig said:
"I wu verv deenlv imoressed with the
appropriateness of Mr. Chalmers' slo
gan, "Quality first." In every de
partment o tne tactory, quancy is
the watch-word and every mechanic
with whom I came in contact dis
played a great pride in doing his job
well. They all love Mr. Chalmers for
his fairness and his democratic per
sonality. Mr. Chalmers is constantly
striving to make better men. of his
emoloves. so that thev will be worth
more to themselves and to the or
ganization. Various schools are con
ducted at the factory in which every
employe is urged to participate, with
out cost to him. To some of the
classes Mr. 'Chalmers gives his per
sonal supervision. It is small wonder
that the Chalmers organization is
one of the strongest in the automobile
industry. The one great feature at
the Chalmers factory that impressed
me most was the thorough system of
inspection. . , ,
' ' Persistent Advertising of Anything
That Is Really Worth-While Never
rails, . ;,.
; The Studios of ,
The Colvin Piano
v i School
ISO J Farnam St.,
Announce
beginning of
Fall Term :
' Monday
Sept. 18, 1916
. Phone D. 6811.
- """ 7 -" ri 1 ' 1
I : 1
'
11 . .
Emphasizing the Style
' ' Supremacy of This Store
A Showing of Authentic
Fashions in Apparel
Millinery and
Dress Accessories
Tomorrow and Tuesday we invite the public to
view our formal displays of autumn millinery,
apparel and dress requisites.
Style in dress is an essential part of the joy of liv
ing. It creates and imparts pleasure, fosters mu
tual esteem, reinforces personality, reveals char
acter and influences standards by its silent ex
ample. Style is at its best when it pleasingly en
hances individualitywhile it conforms to the
most worthy of current customs. .
Our cumulative experience in meeting the de'-' '
mands of a refined clientel has given this store
a distinctive position of style supremacy.
Millinery, Original and Charming
Apparel oj Distinction for ;
Well Dressed Women.
Luxurious Silks, Velvets, Furs,
Blouses, Gloves, Hosiery, Neckwear
, , -for Autumn and Winter.
Id
TKOMP50N-BUDEN 6GO.
The Fashion Gerorfte HiddleWes- -
. Established I88&
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