Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 21, 1917, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1917.
What Every Woman
Should Know
Dr. Ferdinand King, Hew York
physician and medical author, tells phy
sicians that they should prescribe more
organic iron Nuxated Iron for their
patientsSays anaemia iron deficiency
-is the (reatesl curse to the health,
strength, vitality and beauty of the mod
ern American Woman. Sounds warn
ing against use of metallic iron which
maySnjure the teeth, corrode the stomach
and do far more harm than good; advises
use of only nuxated iron.
Watch for large article by Dr. Fer
dinand Kins, soon to anocar in this
paper, entitled "The Crying Need of
the Woman of Today is More Iron in
Her Blood." In this article -Dr. King
explains why the modern American
woman requires more iron than she
did 20 or 30 years ago and shows how
by taking simple luxated Iron weak,
nervous run-down women may in
crease their strength, vitality and en
durance 100 per cent in two weeks'
time in many instances.
Xuxated Iron, recommended above by Dr.
Kins, 1 for Mle by Sherman a MeConnell
Drug Stores and all food druggists on an
annotate guarantee of success and satisfac
tion or your money refunded.
STOP CATARRH! OPEN
NOSTRILS AMD HEAD
Says Cream Applied In Nostrils
Relieves Head-Colds at Once.
If your nostrils are clogged and
your head is stuffed and you can't
breathe freely because of a cold or
catarrh, just get a small bottle of
Ely's Cream Balm at any drug store.
Apply a little of this fragrant, anti
septic cream into your nostrils and
let it penetrate through every air pas
sage of your head, soothing and heal
ing the inflamed, swollen mucous
membrane and you get instant re
lief. -
Ahl how good it feels. Your nos
trils are open, your head is clear, no
more hawking, snuffling, blowing; no
more headache, dryness or struggling
for breath. Ely's Cream Balm is just
what sufferers from head colds and.
catarrh need. It's, a delight. Adv.
This Leaves the Skin
Free From Hairy Growths
(Toilet Talks)
' A simple method for coinpletely re
moving every trace of hair or fuzz is
here given. This is painless and usu
ally a single treatment will banish
even stubborn growths. To remove
hairs, make a thick paste with some
powdered delatone and water, spread
on hairy surface and after about 2
minutes rub off, wash the skin ami
the hairs are gone. This method will
Dandruff Surely
Destroys 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 is to dis
solve it, then you destroy it entirely.
To do this, get about four ounces of
ordinary liquid arvon; apply it 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 wilt 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. Ycu can get
liquid aryon at any drug store. It, is
inexpensive and four ounces is all you
will need, no matter how much dan
druff you have. This simple" remedy
never fails. Advertisement.
Brown Park
Mineral
Spring Baths
SET YOUR FEET FIRMLY
UPON THE HIGHWAY TO
HEALTH. They give you a
start and then if you take
care of your body and con
tinue taking the baths you
Will be permanently relieved.
T- Brown Park
Mineral Springs
, 2Sth and O Stt.. South Side
Phone South 879
DR. JOHN A. NIEMANN,
Osteopathic Physician, in Charge
--waniaar
BREAK-UP AlCQLD
1 TABLETS
I Nta a mid hi th. hmh
? the aalckeat wa t
lv Phone y if
LAND BANK BONDS
EAGERLY BOUGHT
Over $40,000 Worth AJready
Subscribed and Campaign
Not Yet Commenced. -
WILL CfLL IS MONET SOON
When ' the federal land bank of
Omaha gets read to issue bonds, as
provided by law, there wilt be plenty
to buy them, if the subscriptions al
ready filed with the bank hfre are
any indication..
"We have already subscriptions for
at least $40,000 of -these bonds," said
Secretary Odell. "We have been
authorized by Washington to give out
the information that the bonds will
bear interest at A'i per cent, and
there seem to be plenty of people
who want them. The fact that these
bonds are to be exempt from taxa
tion is going to make them a very
desirable investment.
One Fitm Takes Half.
"Through an underwriting agree
ment with eastern bond bouses it is
probable that some of the bonds may
be sold at a slight premium, but they
will still likely yield a VA per cent in'
terest for the first five years, and the
full A'i per cent after that.
"One underwriting concern in the
east has agreed to take one-half the
total first year bond issue of the
twelve banks. This will leave us the
other half of the issue ofxiur bank
here and from appearances now we
will have no trouble whatever in dis
posing of these locally.
"Only yesterday we got a subscrip
tion for $10,000 for these bonds. An
Iowa man, who is trustee for a large
cemetery over there, was also in re
cently and subscribed for $2,500 of the
bonds in behalf of the cemetery as
sociation. Yesterday we had an in
quiry from Los Angeles for some of
this paper. . In one day alone we got
a subscription for over $2,000 oi
these bonds."
Delay Loan Feature.
The time when loans can actually
be made at this bank in Omaha will
probably have to be postponed a
little beyond the date estimated by
the directors when they first came
here to organize. The directors have
rot yet held their second meeting,
which they intended to hold March 15
to shape out some details. President
liogan is still in Washington, where
he is detained by a conference of the
presidents of the twelve banks. It is
now likely that no loans can be made
before the middle of April.
No call has as yet gone out for
the money from the stock1 subscribers,
but every day vcjunteers are drop
ping into the office and paying up
their subscriptions. The formal call
will probably be made about April 1.
The federal government has noti
fied the local bank that the govern
ment's share of the money subscribed
for stock is ready and will be paid
in 20 per cent installments when
asked for by the directors.
Alleged Thief Who
Worked Before Cop
Under Heavy Bond
Ray L. Mathis, whose sworn state
ment that he saw Officer Askwith of
the morals squad in a drinking resort
after 8 p. m. caused that policeman's
return to the ranks and the reorKan
ization of the morals squad, got a
little more satisfaction Tuesday
morning, when Oran Trapp of Coun
cil Bluffs was held for district under
$750 bonds on the charge of helping
to rob Mathis of $27 Thursday night.
Fred Ritchie of Council Bluffs, who
drove the car which contained Mathis
and the four men who robbed him,
was exonerated of complicity in the
holdup and was released from police
custody, the robbers met Mathis in
Epstein's liquor dispensary and drove
with him to the Sixteenth street via
duct, where they relieved him of his
cash. Trapp's alleged partners are
still at large.
Former Watertown Officials
Sued for Missing Fwds
Watertown, S. D., March 20. Civil
actions were instituted today against
H. A. Wagner, former mayor of
Watertown; W. D. Towslee and John
H. Conley, former city treasurer;
their four bondsmen, and the bonds
men of A, M. Lane, former city audi
tor, to recover $12,798.86 of the
amount which is alleged to have been
embezzled from the municipal funds
by Lane. Lane is now serving a
term in the state penitentiary as the
result of his conviction on a criminal
charge growing out of the alleged
irregularities.
Four separate actions were begun,
one for $9,241.78 on the bond of W.
D. Towslee. It is alleged that the
former treasurer unlawfully signed
warrants which did not constitute a
claim against the city.
Sh-h! Kidney-Footed Cop
Slick City Hall Snooper
City-hall officials are discussing in
whispered tones the presence of a
mysterious man who is watching the
city automobiles which are parked on
Eighteenth street. This man is said
to be a private detective. He ij large
anil walks as if his feet hurt him. He
has been seen observing the cars as
they leave the city hall and was tak
ing notes. It is believed he is get
ting evidence to be used in connection
with a suit recently filed against the
city commissioners in connection with
the use of automobiles.
A woman with reddish hair and one
eye slightly defective also has been
seen loitering around the cify hall, as
if she did not nave any particular
thing to do except to watch.
Constipation and Indigestion.
These are twin evils. Persons suf
fering from indigestion are often
troubled with constipation. Mrs. Rob
ert Allison, Mattoon, III., writes that
when she first moved to Mattoon she
was a great sufferer from indigestion
and constipation. Food distressed
her and there was a feeling like a
heavy weight pressing on her stomach
and chest. She did not rest well at
night, and felt worn out a good part
of the time. One bottle of Chamber
lain s Tablets corrected this trouble
so that she has since felt like a dif
ferent person. Advertisement.
Alma Gluck Thinks Russian Czar
Will Not Be Off the Throne Long
Alma Gluck, celebrated song-bird,
who spent a few hours at the Fon
tenelle enroute to Sioux City, has no
faith in the permanence of the Rus
sian czar's abdication. Her husband,
the Russian violinist, Efrem Zimbal
ist, is a favorite of Marie Feodorovna,
the czaVs mother, by whose personal
act Zimbalist is immune from mili
tary service.
"It is a political mote to rouse the
people's patriotism and stimulate
their waning-enthusiasm to continue
the war," Miss Gluck believes. "Judg
ing by past experiences for instance,
that of the first Duma the leaders of
the revolution will be thrust into
prison or exiled to Siberia the day
after the war is ended, and the Ro
manoff dynasty restored to power,"
she exclaimed, with an expressive
shudder. 1
"Feodorovna calls my husband 'her
little Cossack.' His release from mili
tary service is in her writing on his
passport. She first heard him play
at Windsor pakce when she was vis
iting her sister, Alexandra. At that
lime she told him she would grant
any boon he asked of her, she was so
proud he was a Russian."
The beautiful singer played the do
mestic role to great advantage as she
sat in her room plying long knitting
needles deftly through gold-colored
yarn for a sweater, and speaking rap-.
t. .ously of her famous husband and
Maria Virginia, born to them not
long ago. "She is the sweetest, little
bud that ever blossomed" in the well
known mother's air which brooks no
exceptions. "I shall return to her
in New York in two weeks. I cannot
remain away from her long." f
Miss Gluck told how she coaxes
her husband to teach her. to play the
violin also. "He will not co it. He
says hejwould not subject any one
One Good Crop in
Western Nebraska
Pays for the Land
That a farm purchased in western
Nebraska can . be paid for within a
few years by the excess of crops pro
duced on the land is a report made by
R. A. Lovelace, assistant immigration
agent for the Burlington.
Mr. Lovelace recommends western
Nebraska as an ideal location for the
homeseeker. He points out that hun
dreds of farms were paid for with a
single crop 'in 1915 and 1916, and even
today lands are advertised in this ter
ritory for the first crop. "Of course,
this condition is unusual," says Mr.
Lovelace, "but it is a fact that a farm
can be paid for within a few years
by the excess of crops produced."
Mr. Lovelace reports that during
the week ending March 11 1,018 in
quiries for information regarding
farm lands along the western lines
of the Burlington came to his office.
Negress Teams With Male'
Companion in Holdup Work
Beware the Mrs. Raffles of the high
way! Monday night a stalwartly-builtne-gress
confronted Earl Carey, 2519
Corby street, on Fourteenth street
between Capitol avenue and Daven
port streets and flashed before him a
revolver, held in a hand that did
not quiver. While she covered him,
her male companion went through
his pockets and took j23.
Froo Piano or Vocal lessons
to Members oi Our
EASTER PIANO CIRCLE
A Club Offering Remarkable Savings on High Grade Pianos
S
Six Special Inducements to Members of the Easter Circle
1 A term of Musio Lesson free (Piano or Vocal).
, 2 A Bona Fide 25-Year Guarantee goes with every instrument.
3 Convenient Weekly or Monthly Payments to suit members.
4 A Pull Year's Trial, with the privilege of Exchange.
6 Larger Payments will, reduce the cost of the Piano.
6 We reserve the right voluntarily to cancel all remaining payments upon death of a member.
ACT NOW I NEVER BEFORE IN THE ANNALS OF MUSICAL HISTORY HAVE SUCH
WONDROUS PIANOS BEEN OFFERED ON SUCH AN EASY PAYMENT PLAN AND AT
PRICES SO LOW!
JOIN THE CIRCLE I IT SAVES YOU SCORES OF DOLLARS I -
$350 Schmoller & Mueller
Apartment Upright, only
$248.75
Terms $1.25 per week.
Let ns Impress on you that these are brand new Instru
ments, and we guarantee the price cannot be duplicated
anywhere in tne united States,
CALL OR
SCHMOLLER & MUELLER PIANO CO.
Headquarters for Steinway Pianos and Columbia Grafonolas. .
1311-13 FARNAM ST., OMAHA, NEB.
SCHMOLLER & MUELLER PIANO CO. " 1
Please send me Catalogue, also complete information regarding your Easter Piano
. Circle, and how to save $100 or more.- ' .
I NAME . ' ADDRESS '..
1 fi )
V
ma. Gluck
he loves to the torture' of learning
to play it."
The singer laughed at the popular
conception of artists and stage folk.
"My secretary and I sit in our room
sipping milk, knitting sweaters and
reading the Bible, which we find in
every hotel. A very tame life, yes?"
Of the twelve sweaters she has
already knitted Miss Gluck .seemed
more proud than over the greatest
ovation given her on account of her
wonderful voice.
Rancher Seeks Bride
Who-Can and Will Cook
Wanted A housekeeper who can
cook well, willingly and often.
Mrs. Rose Ohaus of the Board of
Public Welfare received from a
widower living on a ranch sixteen
miles from North Tlatte a letter in
which he expresses a desire for a
housekeeper whose dietetic tempera
ment conforms to the specifications
outlined.
He would require that his house
keeper should attend church every
Sunday, be good-tempered all of the
time and have a faculty for making
his home happy. He has a daughter
13 years of age and two grown sons.
He is able to provide a good home
and and he hints that he would
consider his housekeeper matrimoni
ally if she proves that she can "cook
well, willingly and often."
Commenting on this, Mrs. Ohaus
said: "Many homes are wrecked upon
the kitchen range."
Fifty Omaha Ad Men Attend
National Meet at St. Louis
Fifty members of the Omaha Ad
club are to be sent to St.' Louis this
summer to represent the Omaha or
ganization at the meeting of the Na
tional Association of Ad Clubs, to be
held-there June 3 to 7. The Ad. club
had Philo D. Clark, advertising man
ager of the Thomas D. Murphy com
pany of Red Oak, la , for the speaker
at this week's meeting. He spoke in
general of the value of advertising,
declaring that good advertising will
always get results.
JThree weeks ago we announced it already
scores of wide-awake people, alert to the possibilities
of real Economy, have become members of the Easter
Pianft Circle.
ThiB in-the Plan: 300 Piano Buyers, acting in a
body as one individual, take 300 Sweet-toned Schmol
ler & Mueller Pianos and Player Pianos. Each buyer
.secures the benefit of the wholesale transactiop at a
cost that will BaVe each member scores of Dollars.
$600 Schmoller & Mueller
Studio Grand, only
$488.75
Terms $2.50 per week. '
quality considered.
WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE.
ICE GOES OUT AND
D0ESN0 DAMAGE
Missouri Clear Below Nebraska
City and the Platte Around
Ashland.
STILL IS HOLDING ABOVE
The manner in which the ice in the
streams hereabouts is performing is
relieving railroad operating officials
of a lot of anxiety and if it continues
in a like manner a few days longer,
they assert there will be little possi
bility of damaging floods this spring.
Word comes to the railroad offices
that from a short distance above Ne
braska City to a point far below St.
J6seph, the ice in the Missouri river
has broken up and moved down
stream without doing any damage.
In the Missouri river above Ne
braska City, the ice still holds, but is
showing signs of disintegrating.
There arc quite extensive areas where
the ice has bulged up. cracked and is
starting to move. All along the
stream, the ice on the sides is cov
ered with water to a depth of from
a few inches to a foot or more.
Advices to railroad headquarters
are that the ice in the Platte has
broken in the vicinity of Ashland.
Great fields of ice, twenty to thirty
inches thick, have moved out of the
channel and generally have lodged on
sandbars, where it is expected it will
remain and melt unless within the
next few days high water from the
upper river comes along and floats it
off into the Missouri. ,
In the upper stretches of the Platte
the ice remains firm, and this is also
the case in the Elkhorn and the Loup.
West Enders Want to
, Swim in Elmwood Park
Friends of the bath, residing near
Elmwood park, petitioned the city
council to place a swimming; pool in
this park. Their argument is that if
swimming pools are good for the resi
dents of Riverview, Fontenelle and
other districts, then a pool would
benefit the Jilmwood park community.
These petitioners ask the commission
ers to disregard the assertions of
Dundee people that a swimming pool
in Elmwood park would be an un
desirable feature. The Recreation
board will consider the matter at its
next meeting. i
Newsie Stricken With
Appendicitis; Operation
While selling papers in front of the
Bee building Monday evening Eddie
,Bristow, 1152VS North Sixteenth
street, newsboy, was taken suddenly
sick and fell to the pavement. He was
rushed to St. Catherine's hospital,
where it was found that he was suffer
ing from a had case of appendicitis,
his sudden collapse being the result
of his appendix bursting. He was op
crated on immediately upon reaching
the hospital. Although in a critical
condition doctors say he has a good
chance to recover.
Aaron Duboff Drops Dead
In Front of His Own Store
Aaron Duboff, furniture dealer, fell
to the pavement in front of his store
at 2104 Cuming street Tuesday morn
ing and died in the store five minutes
later. Death was due to heart
disease. County Attorney Magncy
ordered the body to be moved to
Brailey & Dorrance undertaking par
lors. ,
Duboff was 52 years old and lived
at 717 North Twenty-eighth avenue.
He formerly lived in Lin col n.
$500 Schmoller & Mueller
Player Piano, only
$388.75
Terms $2.00 per week.
EXTRA SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO OET-OF-TOWN
PEOPLE who join our Easter Piano Circle.
Free Railroad Fare, Free Delivery.
Three Prominent
Collegians Join the
Officers' Reserve
Three Omaha young men are tak
ing examinations at f ort Omaha to
qualify for membership in the offi
cers' reserve corps, from which army
officers will be chosen in case of war.
' They are Attorneys Amos Thomas
and Anan R. Raymond, graduates of
the University of Nebraska and mem
bers of the University club, and
Mayer L. Colin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
L. M. Colin, 3871 Farnam street, a
graduate of Northwestern Military
academy.
Through Captain McKinley of the
army recruiting station the three
Omahans enrolled in the officers' re
serve corps. Tuesday morning they
took physical examinations. Wednes
day they will take mental examina
tions in military subjects.
Captain D. H. Bower and Lieu
tenant L. C. Davidson, U. S. A., and
Dr. Paul H. Ellis, lieutenant in the
medical reserve corps, comprise the
examining board at Fort Omaha.
If the three young men qualify, and
war should come, they would be eligi
ble to commissions in the regular or
volunteer army. Other Omahans are
expected to enroll soon and be exam
ined at Fort Omaha.
Soldier enlistments have been in
creased by the imminence of war.
Fourteen army recruits were sent
Monday to Fort Logan for training
and eight more recruits were ac
cepted Tuesday morning. Navy re
cruiting also has been stimulated.
.
Wireless Enthusiasts
Needed by Government
Wanted: Fifty amateur wireless ex
perts, to be army radio men and mili
tary censors, in case of war.
Lieutenant Waddell of the navy
recruiting station has received this
information from headquarters in
Washington, and Will try to enroll
Omaha wireless enthusiasts in that
branch, of the navy reserve.
Those who desire it will be given
special instruction at the Great Lakes
training station, to prepare them for
work as censors and code message
men in military service, should war
occur.
0. L. Salisbury, Pioneer
Barber, Dies at His Home
O. L. Salisbury, 51, manager of the
Her Grand barber shop, is dead fol
lowing a brief illness at his home, 508
South Twentieth street.
The funeral will be held Wednes
day afternoon at the Cole-McKay par
lors, in charge of the Masonic order.
Mr. Salisbury has been a resident
of Omaha for over thirty years, com
ing here from Rolling Prairie, Ind. He
is survived by his widow and one
daughter, Mrs. Frank L. Weinert, 521
South Twenty-first street, and one
brother, Frank. Burial will e in
Forest Lawn.
Watch the Moving Pea of
History at Washington
History is being written every minute at the
Nation's Capital World events of tremendous im
portance climax under your eyes there. No citizen
of America should neglect the opportunity to visit
Washington and, impossible, his family should
also be given this never-to-be-forgotten experience. '
The Baltimore ft Ohio la the natural route to Wash
ington. It is not only the ahortest route, but is the only
line running solid through all-steel trains via Washington
to Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York. It Is also the
only line operating drawing-room, compartment and
observation lounging library cars direct to Washington.
All through trains via Washington with liberal atop-over
privileges. ExcelUnt dining ear service on all trains.
Four all-steel trains from Chicago to the east
Ths Plttstwth-WuMnftoo-Ntw York Bxpnw 8U s.m.
Ths Wsshlnftoe Spsclsl - 10:43 a.m.
Ths WssklnttooNsw York Limited . - 5:43 p.m.
Ths VyssMnttoa-New York Night Ernrsss - 1M cm.
All trains Issve Qrtnd Centra! Statloe, Fifth Avsnue and Harrison -Street,
Chicago; 63rd Street Station, twontv-fiva uiiuulos atsr.
Tickets may be purchased at the City Ticket Ornce, ZM South
Clalk Street, at Orand Central Strtioo. and at all principal nolsls;
slso at 63rd Street StsUor .
C. C. ELRICK, Traveling Passenger Aaent,
1J Woodmen of the World Bide, Omaha, Nab.
Phone Douglas 967,
Baltimore & Ohio
"Our Pateengtn Art Out Cu$it"
rr itsr v
fir
ayy'l SO.OiHA.rSB .
"' :i ' 1 V - til,..
Most Modern and Sanitary Brewery in the West
family Trade Supplied by WM JETTER, Distributor,
2502 N St. ' Telephone Douglas 4231. South 863 or 868.
! Good Old Home-Mode
Family Cough Remedy
Much Heller lUair
Made Klad Easily an
Cheaply rreDana.
II you combined the curative proper
ties of every known "ready-made" cough
remedy, you would hardly have in them
all the curative power that lies in this
eimplo "home-made" cough syrup which
takes only a iew minutes to prepare.
Get from any druggist 2 ',4 ounces of
Pinex (60 cents worth), pour it into a
pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain
granulated sugar eyrup. The total cost
is about 64 cents and gives you a full
pint of really better cough lynipttu
you could buy ready-made for Cl.w.
Tastes pleasant and never spoils.
This I'incx and eugar syrup prepara
tion gets right at the cause of a cough
and gives almost immediate relief. It
loosens the phlegm, stops the nasty
throat tickle and heals the sore, irri
tated membranes that une the throat,
chest and bronchial tubes, so .gfiitlj
and easily that it is really astonishing.
A dav's use will usually overcome the
ordinary cough and for. bronchitis;
croup, 'whooping cough and bronchia,
asthma, there is nothing better.
Pinex is a most valuable concentrated
compound of genuine Norway pine ex
tract, combined with guaiaco! and has
been used for generations to break up
severe coughs. -
To avoid disappointment, be sure to
ask your druggist for ounces of
Pinex" with full directions, and dont
accent anything lse. A guarantee of
absolute satisfaction or money prompt
ly refunded, goes with this preparation,
lie Tinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Quick, Sure Results is the rea
son for the great gain made by
Bee Want Ads in 1916.
V