Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 20, 1916, Page 5, Image 5

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    THKlBEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1916.
Briej City News
Haw Boot Prlat It New Beacon Press.
Lirhtlaf Fiitarea Burceaa-Granilen Co.
Pioneers to Picnic The Douglas
county pioneers, will hold their second
midsummer basnet picnic at nans'
com park Saturday.
Wants Corner Llhl The South
Side Improvement club has requested
the city commissioners to brighten up
a few of the dark corners ot the
south Bide.
City Mission Telephone calls are
received dally at the City Mission
asking (or workers. The homeless girl
will And at the big building on Twelfth
and Pacific streets, menus, a room ana
good position.
Royal Arcanum Prise Night Thurs.
day evening has been set aside as
prise night By union r-acinc council
Xo. 1069, Royal Arcanum, which will
meet at crouse nan, sixteenth street
and Capitol avenue.
Calvin Inspects Lines President
Calvin of the Union Pacific is back
irom an inspection tour of the Ne
braska lines. This was the first time
that he had been over all the branch
lines since becoming head of the rail
road system.
Two Autolsts Fined Grant ReV'
berg, 4264 Wirt street, arrested on a
charge of speeding, was arraigned be-
lore the ponce magistrate ana nnea
5 and coats. M. W. German violated
the traffic regulations and was fined
JZ.60 and costs.
Fins Fireplace Goods Sunderland.
Benny Still a Soldier Benny
Thomas, "the boy who never had a
chance," wno waa given the cnoice or
Nerving with the troops at the Mexican
border or spending several montns De
hind the bars, Is "making good," ac
cording to letters and postcards re
ceived by Paul F. Bteinwlnder of the
county attorney's staff nnd District
Judge Sears. Benny is with Company
D, the Fourth Nebraska, and writes
regularly to those responsible for his
parol.
Nebraska Hotel
Men Will Gather in
Omaha Thursday
A crowd of good fellows and up-
to-the-minute business men are going
to get together in Omaha Thursday
and Friday. Those are the dates as
sumed for the meeting ot the e
braska Hotel association, and more
than 200 men are expected to attend
the convention and help to solve the
problem of becoming better hosts to
a wealthier and more populous Ne
braska. Omaha's hotel men, those genial
landlords whom we have always with
us, are going to chaperone the party,
Their idea of superintending a con
vention is set forth in a proclamation
reading:
"The town is yours on September
21 and 22. You will not be permitted
to pay for a thing if the Omaha hotel
men see you lirst.
The program of entertainment In
cludes "round table" talks, auto rides.
theater parties, banquets, dinners and
smokers. Pleasures, however, must
mingle with simon-pure business dur
ing the two days, fresent problems,
like hotel rates, hotel help and the
relation of food prices to the business,
will be treated in papers to be read
bv members.
R. D. McFaddan, Wellington Inn,
is president' or ttiestate association
and I. A. Medlar of Omaha is its sec
retary-treasurer. P. E. Philbtn is
chairman of the arbitration commit
tee. Hope to Improve
Young Boy's Morals
By an Operation
' The surgeon's scalpel will be
brought into ,play at the request of
juvenile authorities to improve the
morals and brighten the future of a
boy, when Glen Gibson, a sturdy
youth of 17, will go on the operating
table for the removal of adenoids
and tonsils. Gibson was sentenced
to serve ninety days in the county
jail when he appeared in police court
on a vagrancy charge growing out
of his association with undesirable
companions. After being confined in
the county bastile his case was inves
tigated by Probation Officer Miller
and Juvenile Judge Leslie.
Conferences with a doctor re
sulted in the decision to give the
youth a fresh start by removal of
obstructions that have deterred his
intellectual progress since he was a
tot. Gibson; large for his age, has
agreed to the operation rather than
serving the time in jail. After his
recovery he will be placed in the cus
tody and care of a friendly farmer.
Selma Nagle Settles Claim
For the Death of Husband
Selma Nagle, the girl-widow of
Thomas C. Nagle, who was killed by
a Burlington passenger train, has
been given $900 by the railway com
pany and her claim for damages set
tled out of court. The settlement
as authorized by County Judge Craw
ford provides for the payment of fun
eral expenses by the company, $900
to be paid the widow by the Burling
ton and the payment of $1,000 by a
railway relief association ol which the
husband was a member. The couple
were married April 1, the bride being
17 and the groom 29. A posthumous
child is mentioned in the settlement.
West Leavenworth Objects
To Ice Plant Located There
The city council received a protest
irom property owners who object to
liie operation of an ice plant at 3877
Leavenworth street. The superintend
ent of police was directed to investi
gate and act upon his best judgment.
Dysentery in Alabama.
"My little 4-year-old boy had a se
vere attack of dysentery. We gave
him Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy and believe it
saved his life," says VVm. H. Strib
x ling, Carbon Hill, Ala. Obtainable
everywhere. Advertisement.
How You Can Remove
Every Trace of Hair
(Toilet Talks)
A stiff paste made with some pow
dered dclatone and water and spread
on a hairy surface about 2 minutes
will, when removed, take every trace
nt hair wilh it. The skin should
I hen be washed to free it from the
remaining dclatone. No harm can re
sult from this treatment, but be stlre
it is dclatone you get and you will
not be disappointed. Advertisement.
The Housewife's Answer
BOTH PARENTS CLAIM
BODY ASTHEIR SON
Was the Boy Killed by a Train
Floyd Adair or Spencer
Morgan?
X-RAY PHOTO MAY DECIDE
Is the boy killed at Dawson, Kan.,
late Sunday night Floyd Adair, 15,
son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Adair of
South Omaha, or is he the son of
B. F. Morgan of Kansas City? Par
ents of both lads claim the body as
their missing offspring. Police, doc
tors and coroners are trying by every
method to effect a .positive identifi
cation. The Adair family of South Omaha
was preparing to bury the body
yesterday when Mr. Morgan viewed
the corpse and pronounced it his dead
son, Spencer, who left home Friday
night. The grandmother of the Adair
boy thereupon expressed willingness
to take a most solemn oath that the
boy was her beloved grandson.
Buckshot in Teeth.
tr Snnrer offerer! as nroof the
statement that Undertaker F. F. Kin
sey of Dawson, who handled the body
shortly after the fatality, found buck
shot in the dead lad's teeth. The
Kansas City parent said the finding
of the buckshot was proof positive
that the body was that of spencer,
his son.
So positive are both parents that
the corpse is their son that authori
ties sought some other ' means of
identification than those already of
fered. My son once had his right arm
broken," said Mr. Morgan.
My son once had his lelt arm
broken," said Mr. Adair.
Yesterday an X-ray was used on
the body to find traces of the fracture.
Dr. Tyler will make the report on the
finding.
Indigestion Had Breath Sour Stomach.
It you BU(f or . any of theae take a dose
of Dr. King's New Life Pills tonight. Only
35a All druggists. Advertisement.
light hearted
Orjr
Uiavana
TOM
MOORE
CIGAR
tXmna filltd.)
TEN CENTS
ROTHENBERG SCHLOSS. Distributor..
Kansas City, Missouri.
Omaha Branch; 1715 Douglas Street.
tat
N I
Will Drive Her Car Into
City Hall on Wednesday
Miss Claire Rochester will drive
her Roadaplane up the city hall steps
at 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon to
deliver a letter from Mayor Mitchel of
New York to Mayor Dahlman of
Omaha. Miss Rochester and her as
sistants are collecting funds to illu
minate the Statue of Liberty in New
York harbor.
Auto Club Announces .
One Thousand Members
Omaha's Automobile club now
boasts of more than a thousand mem
bers. Assistant Secretary S. .
Smythe joyfully announces that five
new owners ot autos voluntarily en
rolled in the last twenty-four hours,
thus boosting the membership to
l.OOi
Tell your mother
Resinol
will heal your skin
"If she will wash those tore, itchy
places twice a day with Resinol soap
and hot water, and then put on a little
Resinol Ointment, I am sure the trouble
will soon disappear." i
That is good advice. Patches of erup
tion may not be anything serious at first,
but they cause so much discomfort and
to often develop into eczema, or other
severe ailment, that it pays to use tite
Resinol treatment right away.
Retlnnl Ointment and Raalnol Soap ham baen
prescribed by oflyaidani for many yeara, and contain
nothing which coold poaaibly injure the teademu
akin. Soldbyall dmgfieta.' For free tampleoi each,
write to Dept. 4.R., Reitnot, Baltimore, aid.
If you are
interested
in purity first
KG
BAKING
POWDER
is what you
should always
use.
There are many
other reasons
why but try a
can and see for
yourself.
DAYS OF CHIVALRY
RIGHT IHNEBRASKA
Women Are Honored in Nearly
Every County In the Great
Oornhusker State.
NAMES PUT IN BIO BOOK
By A. R. CROH.
The days of chivalry, we are told,
are dead.
They are. We know it and wc are
glad of it. Sir Roderick Norn d'Un
Chien Castle-Chateau no longer ritles
up and do,... the country in his nobby
spring suit of sheet iron, seeking out
the person who dares to deny that his
lady Amwosa de Beaulieu is the most
beautiful woman in all the world, and
altogether beautiful.
Sir Roderick Nom d'Un Chien Castle-Chateau
sometimes married his
lady and she lived unhappily ever
afterward until such time as Sir Rod
erick very chivalrously had her
strangled or suffocated or beheaded.
That kind of chivalry is dead and
we are glad that the late Don Quix
ote dc la Mancha was unable to re
vive it.
Tia Different Now.
There is another kind of chivalry
that is alive today. Men don't ride
about in armor breathing "s'death and
s'blood." They practice their chiv
alry differently. They buy their
wives and daughters automobiles and
talking machines and silks and satins
and chocolates. They build them
fine homes and take them to Califor
nia and Europe, and everything.
That's better than sitting in a
tower, while some boob in armor
went about making a fool of himself
n your name, isn't it, madam?
Nebraska , bears the unmistakable
mark of being A No. 1, XXXXX and
a yard wide in this fine modem chiv
alry. The Proof.
"The proof!" you demand. "Tin
proof!" Well, if you need any proof, we
have it right here in the postal guide
Forty-nine towns and cilits in Ne
braska bear the names of the dear
creatures forty-nine count 'em..
When Nebraska's chivalrous sons
named their towns, they seem to
have sought to honor their wives,
daughters, sweethearts.
"An accident," you skepticiie, "a
mere accident."
All right, then. How many Ne
braska towns arc named after men, do
you think?
A beggarly eiyht Abie, Arthur,
Donald, Henry, Herman, Irwin, Max
and Orlando.
But look at the girls! Dante had
his Beatrice. So has Nebraska, down
in Gage county. Longfellow sang of
Hiawatha. Nebraska has a Hiawa
tha, in Dundv countv. England had
I..- t.'i:nKd,i. ,i ai'.VA..-:n cA un.
! ' 1 ,.. ! I !'
icurasKa in iicrry aim i raycr coun
ties. In Sand Hills, Too.
Cherry county has also an Ethel
and a Fern. Custer county delights
in the presence of Merna, Lillian and
Doris. And 'Holt county, the most
chivalrous of all, has its Amelia,
Martha, Josie and Inez.
Beautiful Venus is in Knox county
and modest Violet in Pawnee. Blush
ing Aurora abides in Hamilton coun
ty and fair Blanche in Chase. While,
here in Douglas county we have our
Florence.
No wonder the one-time great
American desert now "blossoms like
the rose!" Half a hundred thriving
towns and cities immortalized sweetly
by the names of fair women I
Rose and Rosalie.
Vclnia, Stella and Virginia are in
Garden, Richardson and Gage coun
ties. Bertha, Marian and Pauline are
in Keith, Redwillow and Adams coun
ties. Rose and Rosalie are found in
Rock and Thurston counties.
And here is the roster of the other
girl-named towns, with the counties
Quality
OUT OF $56,000,000 JUST
$250,000 IS SPENT IN FINAL
TESTS TO MAKE DOUBLY
SURE YOUR CHALMERS
IS RIGHT-DEAD RIGHT
Thin $56,000,000 run" on the 3400 r. p. m. Chalmers has not stam
peded the Chalmers factory.
Quite the contrary. The cars are coming out of there so fine, so exact,
so thoroughly tested, that all we have to do now when we take them oft the
freight cars is to pour in oil, gas and water, run them a few miles, and
deliver. ,
There's an excellent reason for this condition. The Chalmers Company
has a young army of eagle-eyed inspectors who take great pride in finding
a fault in a car when it comes out of the plant
This costs just $250,000 a year in cold cash just one quarter of a mil
lion dollars a year to M catch the little things."
I firmly believe thai most factories would let "go by" nine cars out of
ten that the Chalmers inspectors waylay.
It sounds like a lot of money, but when a company maintains the slogan
of ''Quality First" and bases a $56,000,000 business on the quality idea,
then it becomes quite clear.
I firmly believe that three times $250,000 is returned to the cash drawer
of the Chalmers Company every year through such a policy.
It certainly makes selling a Chalmers car anything but a difficult matter.
And that accounts for the "run" on the car. For "run" it surely is.
I am handling from three to. five times as many Chalmers can as this
territory ever absorbed before.
Last November the Chalmers Dealers bought $22,000,000 worth of 3400
r. p. m. Chalmers in forty minutes.
These Cars were all made and delivered before summer rolled around.
Then 10,000 more were added. These were taken up during the
summer months.
Now 20,000 more are coming through.
That means that this model will be continued without change in design
into next season.
It also means a $56,000,000 business. Which is twice more than the most
optimistic Chalmers executive ever dared dream.
The quality in the car is the answer.
Drive one a mile, and you won't be able to get your monogram painted
on the doors quick enough.
R. W. Craig, Inc.
1512-14 Farnam Street
Phone Douglas 7888
in which they are situated: Alda, Hall:
Alma. Harlan; Almeria, Loup; Edith,
Blaine; Elsie, Perkins; Llva, Grant;
Elyria Valley; Krina, Garfield;
Esther, Dawes: Fora, Arthur;
Frances, Wheeler; Gracie, Loup; Hel
vcy. Jefferson; Malinda, Sioux;
Juniata, Adams: Lulu, Sheridan;
Loina, Butler; Lena, Arthur; Mary,
Brown; Nora, Nucolls; Orella, Sioux;
Vesta, Johnson; Wauneta, Chase.
Isn't that a dainty dish to set be
fore the king?
Orators Can't Have
Monopoly of Street
Elmer E. Thomas, representing the
anti-saloon people, and G. C. Porter,
socialist candidate for congress, asked
the city council to set aside Douglas
street between Fifteenth and Six
teenth streets from 8 to 10 p. m. as a
quiet zone wherein a public forum
may be held without disturbance
from automobiles and other mundane
mechanism.
The city dads will not set aside
this street as a zone, but Superin
tendent Kugel of the police depart
ment will endeavor to divert traffic
as a "safety first" proposition, unless
he should be enjoined by some of
the business interests of that block.
Major Warner, Formerly
Of This City, is Dead
Major George Warner, aged 70, a
past commander of Mt. Calvary Com
mandcry No. 1 of the Knights Temp
lar and a prominent citizen of Omaha
twelve years ago, is dead at New
York. Word of his death reached
here Monday night.
Major Warner left Omaha to be
assistant adjutant at Battle Mountain
sanitarium, a soldiers' home, at Hot
Springs, S. D. His health failed him
two months ago and he went direct
ly to New York for special treatment.
His convalescence waa retarded one
week ago when he fell on a side
walk and broke his hip bone.
The funeral will be held Thursday.
First
Dandruff Soon
Ruins The Hair
Girls if you want plenty of thick,
beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all
means get rid of dandruff, for it will
starve your hair and ruin it if you
don't.
It doesn't do much good to try to
brush or wash it out. The only sure
way to get rid of dandruff it to dis
solve it, then you destroy it entirely.
To do this, get about four ounces of
ordinary liquid arvon; apply ft at
night when retiring; use enough to
moisten the scalp and rub it in gently
with the finger tips.
By morning, most if not all, of
your dandruff will be gone, and three
or four more applications will com
pletely dissolve and entirely destroy
every single sign and trace of it.
You will find, too, that all itching
and digging of the scalp will stop,
and your hair will look and feel a
hundred times better. You can get
liquid arvon at any drug store. It Is
inexpensive and four ounces is all
you need, no matter how much dan
druff you have. This simple remedy
never fails. Advertisement.
NUXATED IRON
trie natea atrencth of
delicate, nervous, ran
dom, people if 00 par
cent in ten dnya in
many inttancea,
forfeit If It falts as pav
full explanation In lars
Hide aoon to appear to
th la paper.
Ask your doctor
doei
druerlet about It.
Sherman aV MeOonnell Drue fltorea ilwin
carry It in stock. ,
Bell-ans
Absolutely Remove!
Indigestion. Onepackage
-proves it 25c.tfIl druggists.
Omaha