THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. JANUARY 19. 1917. MRS. BRANDEIS AND DAUGHTER IN OMAHA Stop Here Enroute to Cali fornia, Where Son is to Be Married This Month. RECEIVE AT FONTENELLE Mrs. Arthur D. Brandeis and her daughter, Miss Leola Brandeis, ar rived in Omaha yesterday to spend a few days, enroute to San Francisco, with her son, Ervine John Brandeis, whose marriage to Miss Madeline Frank will take place Sunday, Jan uary 28. The Brandciscs are at the Fontenelle, where they will receive their Omaha friends Sunday after noon and evening, leaving Monday or i uesday tor the west. Both Mrs. Brandeis ami Miss Bran deis were delighted with the fine new hotel whose erection was largely nrO' moted by the Brandeis interests, and with the many improvements in the business district in the few years of tneir absence in New York. "We are pleased to be here again with our friends, although this first visit since my husband s death is han for me to bear," said Mrs. Brandeis, Greeted by Old Employes. Mrs. Brandeis tried hard to control her emotions as they entered the store and were greeted by old em ployes, but broke down completely when greeted by Ueorge Brandeis, She retired to the private offices until her composure was regained. Walking from the hotel to the Brandeis stores, Mrs. Brandeis noticed a burly driver lashing his team of horses up the slippery Douglas street hill. The wagon was piled high with bricks and the horses were unable to move it. Mrs. Brandeis, stopped. "How do you expect those poor horses to pull that load. You haven't them snow shod ! she -protested. "Aw, whaddayu know about it,' came from the drink-laden driver along with a stream of mild invective, to say the least. Regretting her inability to make her protest effectual, Mrs. Brandeis continued on her way, undisturbed by the How ot language directed at her. . Walter Cohn Best Man. With his mother's coining, young Mr. Brandeis gave out further details of his wedding, which is to be sol emmzed at the home of the bride parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Frank, 2555 Webster street, at 6 o'clock of the afternoon of January 28. Walter Cohn of Omaha, cousin of Mr. Brandeis, who accompanied him west last year when Mr. Brandeis plighted his troth, will be best man Miss Leola, his sister, and Miss Aileen Frank, the bride's sister, and two of her intimate friends will be the attendants. Mr. Brandeis will ship his car west and will tour southern California with his bride for several weeks after the wedding. Then they go to White Sul phur Springs, W. Va., for the season there, returning to Omaha the first of April, when they will be at the Black- stone. Mrs. Brandeis and her daughter will remain in California for some time after the wedding for -the benefit of Mrs. Brandeis health, tnroute east. they will stop in Omaha again. Veteran Soldier And Cattleman is Called by Death Tohn Goodheart. 78 years of age pioneer Omaha cattleman and civil war veteran, died at his home at 23 PTorth Iwemy-httn street as tne re sult of tumor. Mr. Goodheart had lived in Omaha twenty-six years and for a long time he was engaged in business at Twenty-fourth and Cum ing streets. Mr. Goodheart Is survived by his widow, three daughters, Mrs. A. J Waltemire of Omaha, Mrs. J. A Snyder of Garrison, Neb., and Mrs muuia A in, uii ubiiiiigiiaiii. tr (tan., and one son, Henry L. Goodheart, of Umaha. The funeral will be held this af ternoon at 2:30 o'clock from Crosby's chapel and interment will be in Forest .Lawn cemetery. Bottlers Convene Here For Annual Discussion The men who are bottlers of drinks, particularly soda pop bottlers, are to hold their annual convention in Omaha. January 24 and 25. This is the convention of the Nebraska Bot- ters' association. W. W. Tatum of Lincoln is president and Frank I Ringer of Lincoln is secretary. Some important matters were taken up last year, especially with reference to the negligence shown by some dealers in returning cases ot empty bottles, An effort was then made to come to some agreement whereby an extra charge could be made for the cases and bottles, this money to be re funded when the cases and bottles were returned. The convention was well attended last year and a large attendance is expected this year. Welch Blames Injury to Weak Ankle and Low Shoe John W. Welch, owner of a string of dairy lunches, in answering the $10,250 damage suit brought by Mat tie L. Parrish, wife of E. V. Parrish, manager of the bureau of publicity of the Commercial club, retorts that if she sustained any injuries when she walked into the restaurant at 1408 Farnam street on the morning of June 30, 1915, it was because she wore a low-cut, high-heeled shoes and 'lad a weak ankle. Mrs. Parrish alleges that she per manently injured one of her ankles when she slipped and fell on a wet loor, John Branipan V'siting His Old Omaha Friends John Branigan, former Omaha' boy ' and a member of the crack .Battery C company of the First Illinois regi ment, commonly known as the "mil '.iouaire company," which recently re turned to Oicago from the border, arrived in the city to visit with a number of his former friends. Bran igan took an active part in college activities while i ttending the Univer sity of Nebraska. MEETING OLD FRIENDS IN OMAHA Mrs. A. D. Brandeis ind her daughter Leola stop here while enroute to wedding of i. L. Ervine Brandeis at San FrancUco. CLERGYMAN'S WIFE GETS HER DIVORCE j5.'" 1 Rev. H. K. P. Cornish rfeglecU Family Larder to Save Souls, She Charges in Testimo"y. FAMILY FIRST, SAYS JUDGE MRS. A. D. BRANDEIS. MISS LEOLA BRANDEIS. One Wallop and a Kick Ends Bliss Of Wedded Life Never since they were married thirty-three years ago have Mr. and Mrs. Carl Philbcrt, 1703 South Eigh teenth street, been separated for more than a week at a time. Now, how- even, a condition exists- which will keep them apart for thirty days. Mr. Philbert is in jail. For the greater "part of the thirty- three years of their married life the Philberts have been happy, but for the last week, according to the aged wife's testimony in police court, her husband s conduct toward her has been such that she found his arrest her only relief. Last Thursday night he blackened her eye, she avers, and a week later he kicked and beat her again. Then, she said, she decided to swear out the warrant "Thirty-three years," Judge Fitz gerald muttered as lie meditated aloud. Mrs. Philbert easncd. She thnutrht mis was ncr ageo nusDana s sentence. She was relieved when the judge fixed it at thirty days. Say Dairyman Exceeds Limit In the Number of His Cows Counsel for Peter Peterson, dairy man at 3306 Vinton street, is arguing class legislation in the appeal case being heard before Judge Sears to determine whether Peterson has a right to keen more than one cow in the close built-up portion of the city. There is a city ordinance, passed in 1914, which says in which oortions of the city dairies may be conducted. The Vinton street place is not in one of these. City Prosecutor McGuire as serts. - Peterson, whom the citv dairv in spector declares has repeatedly been notified that he is violating a city ordinance at his present location, was arrested and fined in police court. He appealed the case to the district court. Mr. McGuire told the court that Peterson has kept as many as fifty cows, whereas one should be the limit. While she admitted that her debo nair preacher-husband, the Rev. Har old K. P. Cornish, pastoi of the Inter denominational church, Souil. Side was rather a n!ce ornament tu have about the house, being an accom plished musician, brilliant dramatic reader and warner of others a. to the pitfalls ot society. Jessie Griftin ( or nisli, forme.- Yineland IN. J.) society woman, who was granted a decree in Judge Day's court, insisted that lit- was practically worthless as u pro vidcr. Judge Day upset precedent in his own court when he freed Mrs. Cornish fron. her .undesirable soul-saving spouse. It was the first decree he had ever granted to a clcrgyma; 's wife and the initial time lie has ever had occasion to censor the conduct jf a husband supposed to minister np the spiritual needs ot otners, out wno, according to the wife's testimony failed to properly minister to the wants ot his own family larder. Whirlwind Courtship. A unique phase of Judge Day's de cision when he gave the former east em woman her freedom from the western "skv-oilot, whom she mar rird less than a year ago after a whirl wind courtship, was that in case a oreacher is unable to support his lam ilv. when he could swell his income by other lines of work but refuses to do so, the wife should have a divorce. "A preacher as well as any other man should look alter his family first and society afterward," Judge Dav remarked. I he welfare ot preacher's family should be his first thought that of society is second ary. The preacher's wife, who is in the forties, testified that she met the Rev. Harold K. P. Lorrtish while she was tisiting in Omaha. She had lately come from the exclusive colony in the New Jersey town. The Omaha preacher, who could twang the lyre of melody and inspire with flowery oratorical readings, ap pealed to the eastern woman, she told the court. She said she believed him to be a first-class preacher of the gospel, siilhciently able to keep the family exchequer at high tide, as well as to pilot the members wf his congregation through the tangled for ests of modern-day temptations. The sixty-mile an hour courtship of only a month's duration resulted in the sounding of the wedding tocsin at Lincoln on February 2, 1916. And then well, Mrs. Cornish related that her preacher-man didn't seem to have been properly tutored in the art of getting the com. she declared that he was smart yea, brilliant and was a bear along musical and dramatic lines, but somehow or other didn't "bring home the bacon." Asked Her for Money, It was not long, Mrs. Cornish told Judge Day, before the Rev. Harold K. i'. began asking her for money. "I realized that sometimes a profes sional man has a hard time getting started, so T advanced him sums of money at different times. Once he fairly begged me for money to buy an automobile said he need it in his business. I gave him what he asked for. Altogether I gave him about $3,500 in six months." The judge remarked at this junc ture that if someone kept drawing on him at that rate they would break him in less than that time. Mrs. Cornished sued for divorce October 30. . Frances Lane Awarded to Her Father by the Court Frances Lane, 8 years old. bone of contention in a bitter legal fight waged the last few days before Judge Trgup of the district court, will go to the father, Fred O. Lane, an Omaha contractor. The child was kidnaped last week by Andrew Brothers of La Platte, Neb., and hurried out of Omaha in an automobile. Later she was brought into court on a habeas corpus action by the father. Both KlHl.it 9nnarfl 1 rnit.f ...tU 1... ,4-: of lawyers and witnesses by the score. jnuge iroup in awarding the cus tody of the child to the Omahan ruled that the Paptflion county court, which granted a decree of adoption to the uncle some time ago, had no jurisdic tion. The little Lane crirt Iiva1 in no- uncle's home for several years up un til last May. Her mother, who is dead, was a sister of Brothers' wife. The father in Omaha has married again. The child, the cynosure of all eyes in a rrnwHpH rmirt rnnm ...I.-- i future was decided by Judge Troup. am not seem to understand what it was all about as her father clasped her to his breast at the dramatic mo ment when the final Hpricuin made. Relatives on both sides burst into tears. SMOCONGJIOBAaX) F you paid for things accord in to the pleas ure they gave, tobacco an' books would cost a lot mo' than diamonds. JITST fill a pipe with VELVET drawin the cool. mild smoke that's so fragrant and rich that Bufwfaat s the use trying to describe a taste? Take our word for VELVET long enough to try a pipeful You won't need I to take anybody's word' after that A It i fc. IB 3 Today Is Your Big Chance Tomorrow May Be Too Late X X H In 196 Omaha sold over $25,000,000 worth of automobiles. All but about $300, 000 of this amount of money went to eastern manufacturers. . tl There is manufactured right here in Omaha, by the Douglas Motors Corporation, Inc., the Drummond Car. The best car built in the United States for anything ap proaching the price. fl This car is built by the same organization that for thirty-two years built wagons and buggies here in Omaha. If There is no other business in the whole world that has shown as great amount of profit in the same length of time as the automobile business has. U We give herewith what an investment of $1,000 in nine different companies has produced in a very short space of time. $1,000 invested in Chalmers Motor Company has returned in 8 years $86,658 $1,000 invested in Chandler Motor Car Company has returned in 3 years 35,000 $1,000 invested in Enger Motor Car Company has returned in 5 years 17,006 $1,000 invested in Federal Motor Truck Company has re- . turned in 7 years 78,782 $1,000 invested in Ford Motor Company of Canada has re- ' i turned in 11 years. , 434,178 ' $1,000 invested in H. H. Franklin Mfg. Co. has returned in 9 years 15,813 . $1,000 invested in Hupp Motor Car Company has returned in. 7 years , 191,200 ' $1,000 invested in Paige-Detroit Motor Car Company has re- . turned in 6 years 24,042 $1,000 invested in Reo Motor Car Company has returned in 11 years 56,462 " Authority Motor Slock. 4th Edition, PuMUhoa ay 3l.tl.rj A Co., Nov York. 1 ' HERE IS THE DRUMMOND CAR Our cars are built in three styles, all eight-cylinder. HERE ARE THE REASONS WHY THE DOUGLAS MOTORS CORPORATION, INC., SHOULD PAY BIG DIVIDENDS. 1. Omaha is one of the best distributing points for automobiles in the United States. 2. We build one of the best cars built in the United States. 3. It is a western car built for western people by western people managed by western people. 4. Our factory. management and our financial management is the best, in either east or west, to be found in the United States. " The Douglas Motors Corporation is incorporated for $1,000,000. 10,000 shares par value $100 per share all common stock. This company has no bonds, no preferred stock, no mortgages and not one cent of indebtedness. v The stock of this company is selling very rapidly. You can buy it to day at $100 per share, its par value and if you do not buy today the chances are you will pay $125 or $150 per share, or more. Get in on the ground floor and make money more money than can be made in any other line of legitimate business. REFERENCE THE STATE BANK OF OMAHA. , Fill out and mail today, before it is too late, either the Cash Coupon or the Information Coupon. Cash Coupon Information Coupon The Douglas Motor Corporation, Inc., Tho DougUi Motorn Corporation, Inc., 1 106-7 Woodmen of tho World Bld(., 1 106-7 Woodmon of tho World Bid.. Omaha, Nab. Omaha, Nob. I hereby subscribe for shares Please send mc full particulars re- of capital stock of the Douglas Motors Kurding the Douglas Motors Corpora Corporation, Inc., at its par value, $100 tioni lnc' I? satisfied that the invest- per share, and enclose dollars, merit is good I might invest full payment. dollars. , Mail stock certificate to the following This coupon obligates me in no way name and address: whatsoever to buy stock. . Name Name Street street City or Town City or Town State state ttrJ " 1 Vs-' 81 i , f YQ Tho Drummond Clovar Loaf w