Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1916)
THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1916. Druggist's Customers Always Satisfied With . This Kidney Remedy For twenty ran I have enjoyed a eplen did sale m Dr. Kllraer'a Swamp-Root anS mr cuetomera art perfectly tatlifled witb the reeults obtained from Hi an In the dle . for which it l recommended end they always1 I peek favorably retarding It In catarrh or Inflammation of the bladder and rhaumatiim It haa boas vary aueeeaeful ae eordlnr to tba reporta we bava received, from thoao.who bava need It and obulned aatle factory reiulti. I believe it ia a valuable remedy for tba ailmenta yov mention and do not heeitst to recommend it for inch eon. dltione. ' Vary truly yovre, 8. H. HOBB. , Victory Pharmacy, Dec. eta, )16. San Joee, Calif, I Latter to Dr. KUmar Co., Blngkamtaa, N. Y. Prm Wkil Iwimp Ret Will Di For Ton : Sand tan cents to Dr. Kltmer 4 Co., Bint' hemton. N. V., for t temple site bottle. It will convince anyone. You will alio receive a booklet of valuable information, tellinc ' about the kidneyi and bladder. When writ ing, bo euro and mention Tbt Omaka Dally ' Bee. Regular ficty-eent and one-dollar liie bottlee for sale at all drug atom, HEAD STUFFED FROM -CATARRH OR A COLD Sara Cream Applied in Nostril. Opens Air Puuufn Right Up. Briej City News l H ,1 1 I MMIIM.M.f ).;,. J.aiii ii.A no waiting. Your , clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe (reely. No more hawking, snuffing, blowing, head ache, dryuciss. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. .- Get a small bpttle of Elys' Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a' little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream .in your nostrils, It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and reief comes instantly. It's just fine. - Don't stay stuffed, up with a cold or nasty - catarrh. Advertisement. Combing Won't Rid , Hair Of Dandruff ' The only sure ay to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retir ing; usrenough to moisten the scalp and ruB it in gently with the (inger tips. ,' - - - Do this tonight, and by morning, most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more ap plications will comnletelv dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. ; You will find, too, that alt itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your 'hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. , ; You can get .Jiquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work. Adv, Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25cat all druggists. MlllllflllHHMIHIMHtHHll(lllMlll(Mi 1 FOR . 1 MILADY'S : i TOILET ; ? W kowo t,.a4- IL q ... joik I.I4U.O tilings a s aha most appreciates. i All the best grades of Faca I and Talcum Powders, Toilet i Waters, Perfumes, Cold Cream, ? etc. We have your favorite I I uno. wiM in waay and let us i serve you. 7 1 r if 16th and Howard Sts. I s Phone Douglae 846. iwiiiiiiiilitiiniliiliiltniirilHlKlHi iiliilitiNliiiiiaiiiiiani! MILLARD HOTEL L. RENTFROW, Prep. Comfortable, fully equipped rooms, $1.00' a day and up. Quick Service Lunch Boom, the ; ; - best in the city, . . Music with Meals. : -Table el'Hote Dinner, 35c," 13TH AND DOUGLAS, OMAHA. Persistence is the W cardinal virtue in a d v e r Using; no matter how good advertising may be- in other re spects, is must be run frequently and constantly to be really successful. riatlaum Weddl.g lage Hdh.lra. Rava ataoa Print Ik Now Beaeon preaa. - Ugbtlat Ftitnreo Burgeae-Oranden Co. Hard 1 Times Party Pansy camp, No. 10, Royal Neighbors of America, will give a hard time card party at the iiweaiah auditorium, Friday eve' nlng. , finrm for Being Struck by Auto toward Benvenuto naa rnea suit ior ll.ooo lunatei asalnat Detlef for in juries alleged to have been suffered when he was struck by an automobile ariven oy tne latter. Photoplay Exhibitors Incorporst nooeri r. weasels, Harry a- ivywr ana oesn T. Patty are tne orticera ana directors of the National Association of Photoplay Exhibitors, which has filed articles of Incorporation with the uuumy uierii. y Feed for Birds Boy scouts, under direction of superintendent Hngllan of the beard of recreation, have started to install 250 suet feeding stations in trees of the parks. The suet recep tacles are constructed In a manner which precludes a bird gorging It' self. , - First Operation In New Hospital Mra W. W. Cole, wife of the manager of the Krug theater was operated upon yesterday at the new Ford hos pital, Twenty-fifth and Fnrnam streets. This is the first ease to be taken to the hospital, which Is rapidly nearlng completion. -Fine Fireplace Goods Sunderland. Miller Goes East Rome Miller will leave in the next few days for the na tional congress of hotel men to be held In New York, November 14 and 85. He Is chairman of the organisa tion. While in New York he will also take in the New .York exposition of hotels. His wife will leave at the same time for their winter home in Los Angeles, Cal.. for the winter, where Mr. Miller will Join her after tne con vention. , : rarer'! Comer, Sith and Lake. Web. lit, Howard Urges Men ' To Put Cold Storage Up to Hitchcock Jerry Howard told the members of the Carpenters' union last night to ap peal to Senator Hitchcock to help them in their fight against the high cost of living. He was speaking at a meeting in Labor Temple and he had detailed the result of his own efforts before a democratic legislature. A resolution he directed against the packing house interests was met with a number of sworn statements of meat In storage which he told the carpenters he did not think told the whole story. 1 1 "Petition Senator Hitchcock to get through congress a bill demanding that the cold storage houses be emp tied in this country. Only by a nation al' act can you get relief, he declared. Representative-elect Howard then showed the carpenters petitions that had been submitted to the last legis lature, in which he sat, signed by rail road men, requesting that his bill de manding semi-monthly pay for them be defeated. He declared it his belief that the 7,300 men who signed the papers did so because they did not feel free to refuse.' He promised the Barbers' union last night also to introduce a bill re quiring Sunday closing of shops. Three Generations Now Represented in' , Omaha Woman's Club : With the' admission of Miss Edna Birss to membership in the Omaha Woman's dub, to which her mother, Mrs. F. J. Birss, and her grand mother, Mrs. Esther Allen, already belong, three generations will now be represented in the Woman's club. Co-operation of mothers and daugh ters will be urged at a meeting espe cially arranged for Thursday of this week. I Miss Esther Johnson of the juven ile court and a member of the club's civics committee, presented the plan of personal supervision of needy tammes at Monday s meeting, as out lined by her committee. She empha sized the importance of the home in character building and the necessity of keeping it intact instead of break ing vp homes and scattering the chil dren where bad conditions exist. Judson Freeman, national boy scout commissioner, talked on the aims of scouting. The club endorsed the movement, Murgia to Succeed -, General Trpvino El Paso, Tex., Nov. : 13. Gen. Francisco Murgia is to succeed Gen. Jacinto B. Trevino as commander of the northeastern military zone as soon as he arrives in Chihuahua City from the south with his reorganized division. Gen. Murgia is a general of division and is of equal rank with Gen. Trevino, who, it is understood, has asked to be relieved of his com mand in. Chihuahua for personal rea sons. --v No reason is given for Gen. Tre vino's transfer, but it is understood that the - failure to overcome tne growing Villa movement more promptly is responsible for the change in commanders at Chihuahua City. - ' - - German Civilians . ; WillJeCalled On Amsterdam, Nov. 13. (Via Lon don.) The Telegraaf quotes German newspapers to the effect that an ex traordinary sitting of the Reichstag is to be convoked, supposedly to pass a bill calling up all tit civilians for "service in the interest of the father land.'' The newspaper says it is not intended to extend the' age limit for military service. , Legislation Is Necessary Before 'Bone Dry Law' Fact Salem, ' Ore., Nov, 13. Oregon's absolute prohibition "Bone Dry" amendment will not become effective until the state legislature provides the necessary legislative machinery for Ijj operation, according to an opinion rendered here i today by Attorney Qrenral Cmnrot. t p. ...... The legislature meets in January. The amendment, which was ratified at Tuesday's election, bars all ship- Mary Gray Peck Talks to' Women On Movie Censors "People who have no concern about how the poorer class lives have no right to criticise the amusements of the poor class," Miss Mary Gray Peck told the Woman's club members Mon day in rlefene n h pkMn rlaca tt fniovies, "If we attempt to refine the movies according to our cultured standards, the people will again re sort to physical pleasures and a social calamity will come to pass." Miss Peck, a member of the national com mittee, was brought to Omaha by the educational committee, to help in a campaign for better films for children. This campaign was recommended by Mrs. E. M. Syfert, the president, in her annual address. ' Volunteer censorship committees, made up of public spirited citizens who will look out for the interests of both the public and exhibitor are the only kind of censors Miss Peck would tolerate, Politically appointed censor ship is arbitrary and un-American, he asserts. v Films of advtnturt, comedy and education provide the ideal children's program, she sait Dr. Palmer Kindley, Nebraska di rector for the American Society for the Control of Cancer, spoke. "Ra dium and X-ray, much vaunted cures tor cancer, are only successful in cases of superficial cancer. Neither ever effects a cure in case of deep seated cancer. Early diagnosis and early removal are the cures," said Dr. rmdley. , ; PleadGuiltyWith , Seventeen Attorneys V In Court for Them Davenport, la., Nov. 14. John W, Brown, J. W Reeves and Harold Ward pleaded guilty in the district rntirr tnrlav 1. ..... : . court today to having cnnnlr.l tr. Kuiinrtlr W U a...... -rZl.' - .. ... . ncttiiia, an synigoy county farmer, out of $10,000. Seven. .j MM, v4u,vw, seven teen lawyers appeared in court to de tend th inn uri., i i being members of a gang which has swindled Iowa, Illinois and Missouri farmers out of more than $100,000 on fraudulent land An rt.- . HV.I, mu iaac none races. Sentence will be pronounced on Persistence Is the Cardinal Virtue in Advertising. ment of liquor into Oregon. The Greatest fmU Sale on Record An unusual amount of "rent ing and exchanging business, combined with the issuing of new catalogues by nearly all the piano-makers whose instru ments we represent, make it Absolutely Necessary . for us to dispose of nearly one hundred pianos, falling under the classes known Style New Pianos," "Slightly I Used Pianos" and "Second-hand I nanoi' beveral salesrooms are filled with the pianos Included in this sale, and each and every instrument has been marked at . ... y Very Decided Reduction It is well to remember! that all these pianos are fully guar anteed, -and that many of the lightly used class would pass for entirely new. Also note that -the styles sold at clearing sale prices because of being dropped from new catalogues are, with out exception, modern and handsome, and, while not the equal of the latest 1918 style casings shown by us, are equal and even superior to the usual upright designs exhibited else where. , ;. We quote herewith a few ex amplesbut a visit of inspec tion will alone give a prospec tive purchaser an adequate idea of the saving he can make) by availing himself of this oppor tunity, - ; ( ,. $600 Great Union Square ' ' Grand, good condition, . I so $300 Conover Upright good practice piano .,...$ 65 f 500 Chickering A Sons - , Upright, fair tone 1 75 $400 Decker t Sons Up right, good tone., . . .. .$ fg $350 Lester Upright, aTeal , bargain .5115 $825 Mueller Upright, ex- eellenttone. tj2S $350 Foster Upright, good condition tl JS $400 Everett Upright, re- markable value. ...... .$150 $400 Steger 4 Son Upright , colonial style $235 $1,000 Chickering & Sons Grand, a snap at $175 $1,200 SUinway Parlor Grand, real bargain .... $575 $500 Gerhard t Player Piano, 88-note,,.,,,,,jJ5 Several Baby Grand Pianos, In handsome cases, at specie fgures. -. - r . , Many other pianos present ing equally remarkable values. A modern Stool and Scarf Included with every piano. Easy monthly terms of pay. ment may be arranged. -: As the above prices apply only te the stock, we cannot un. dertake to duplicate any of the instruments at these unusual prices. Prompt attention is therefore necessary. ' v EUn0J, ?LUKht now be held until Christmas Eve with out charge, when desired. Schmol!er& Mueller Piino Co. 1311-13 Faraam St., Omaha. "CHRISTMAS SHIP" : FOR THE SYRIANS Collier Oteiar Will Sail With Airl for tha War Ruff or. ! era There. V OVER $400,000 COLLECTED Washington, Nov. 14. Final ar rangementt for sending the collier Caeser, the "Chrutmas ship" with supplies for war sufferers in Syria, were completed today at conferences between Secretary or State Lansing, Assistant Secretary Phillips, Secrt tary oT the Navy Daniels, Director Ernest P, Bicknell of the Red Cross and former Ambassador Henry Mor genthau, and members of the Armen . ,, , lam and Syrian relief committee of New York. The collier will arrive in New Ybrk about December 14, and is expected to sail about the 20th, due to reach Beirut, Syria, about a month later. The Caeser will carry consider ably less cargo than originally esti mated, It was said at first that it would be able to take about 4,000 torn, but it developt that it maxi mum will be about 2,500, Attempt! were made to secure a more com modious boat but none wn available. Over $400,000 hat been collected as a remit of the war relief daya Octo ber 21 and 22, set apart by President Wilion for the tutfrrert in Armenia and Syria, Money is still coming in and it is, possible the total will pass the half million mark. Only $250,000 was needed to till the Caesar, The Ceasar'a supplies will go en tirely to the Syrians who are auffer ing under requuition d food by the Turks", blockade by sea, car shortage by land and destruction of foods by a terrible locust plague, "Y" to Raise Funds For Omahans Who Work in Far East A campaign for $2,000 has been started by the Young Men's Chris tian association for the aid of Omaha men who are now engaged in doing association work in the far east. The three men, who , were sent from the local association are Ralph Leake, now at Koo Chow, China; VV. W. Lockwood, at Shanghai, China, and Walter Mayer at Manila. Three hun dred dollars was raised Monday. The campaign will continue for two weeks. Robert Smith, Dr. J, S. Leavitt, David Cole, William Wentworth, K I. Stokea, Sam D. Hoff, L. G, Grit fiths, Dr. C. F, Edwards, Ellsworth Woodcock, H. C. Forby, R. Ridel and Bud . Kearns have been selected as the committee for raising the money. German Torpedo Boats Shell Russ Baltic Port Berlin, Nov, 14. (Via Lond" German torpedo forces on Friday night entered the Gulf of tiniaiw and effectively shelled the Russian naval base at Baltic port, at short range, according to an official state ment issued today by the German ad miralty. . Baltic port is near the entrance to the Gulf of Finland, thirty-eight miles west of the Russian naval station of Reval. The port is the terminus of the Baltic railroad. Petroarsd, Nov, 13. (Via London.) An official statement issued here to day says that a majority of German vessels which took part Friday in a bombardment In the Gulf of Finland were sunk. ! " .' lkinini.ri.seevottrC6ld. Few of ua reallia the denser of eouana ana aolde, don't take the nek, Take Dr. Klns'a New Discovery. , Ouaranteod, , All truislata.wAdvertlaenient.' , BURGESS-flASH GOilPAtlY. EVERYBODY STORE Tuesday, November II, 1016, STORE NEWS FOR WEDNESDAY Phone D. 137. Wednesday The Last Day of the "SUGAR PLUPf Hospitality Weelt Bids Fair to Be the Banner Day of This Unique Merchandising Occasion OERE'S 1 x the "Sugar Plum" we have provided for you Wednesday with a purchase of mer chandise . amounting to $5.00 or "more. Choice of "Fruit of 'the Loom" "Lonsdale" or "Hope" Bleached Muslins ttOU know that thee CI itandard musluti .itt 1.-1 ..... are sailing reguiariy over the counter at Ha to ' l3o the yard. Wednes- WITH A PURCHASE OF $6.00 OR day, with purchase of $5 MORE or more, 10 yards for 25o. 1025' Announcing for Wednesday ' A Clearaway of Our Entire Collection ot TAILORED . SUITS At Prices That Have Been ' Reduced a Third and Even More T'S an occasion that, demands your immediate atttention Our entire collection of distinctive suits every one fully up to the Burgess-Nash standard of stvle. workmanshin and mialitv all nfffired you Deginmng w eanesaay ai prices mat nave been greatly reduced. I THE STYLES. 1 Are the season's newest and most favored. Some trimmed with Hudson seal, mole, squirrel, chinchilla or mink. THE MATERIALS. Include such choice weaves as wool velours, velvets, broadcloths, checked velonr, winter diagonals. Suits That were to $26, 16.75 Suits That were to $36, $19.75 FIVE GROUPS: Suits That were to $50, $29.75 BvrvNi-Naih Co.--rnd Floor, THE COLORS. Are the most favored, including navy, burgundy, brown and green, also black. i 1 Suits That were to $76, $39.50 Suits That were io $160,- $69.50 Extra Special r Women's SUITS in Downstairs Store That Were Intended to Sell $1 O ttti to $25.00, Wednesday . . . . 1 .OU THE surplus Of a big manufacturer who has turned all his attention to making coats, and willingly accepted the sacrifice. , THE STYLES, The season's very latest, some plain, others trimmed with braids, fur or plush collars. THE MATERIALS. Ae broadcloths, serges, gabardines and poplins, all satin lined THE COLORS. Navy,, brown, green, and burgundy, also black and white check. Hnrfeee'Naell C. (town-Metre Store. DOWNY BLANKETS FOR THESE COLD NIGHTS THE cold, colder, coldest nights may be converted into cumfy, warm, sleepful nights bv using our warm, warmer1 warmest blankets as coverings no weight, just warmth. Featuring in blankets the BEACON, ST. MARY, DOESETS BUH NASGO AND REDMAN, well-known brands. - ' , . . buk- BTgew-Wwih Co. Dorni-Htn.ni Star. ;Burges-Nash Co. Everybody's Store 16th and Harney;