Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 06, 1918, Page 12, Image 12

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    iHiii iitiJi: UMAHA, VLVESDAY, MARCH rj, 1918.
NEW DIVORCE
PLEA IS FILED
BY MRS. HALE
Allegations Against "Well
Known Blond" Omitted. and,
Charges of Cruelty and Ex
travagance Substituted.'
Dorothy T. Hale, who dismissed her
suit for divorce from Hugh W. Hale,
in which she charged he had become
fascinated with , Mrs. Blanche Max
well Rowe, last November, has filed
a new petition for divorce.
In the new petition the allegations
concerning, Mrs. Rowe are omitted
and alleged cruelty, violent and 'vi
cious temper and numerous assaults
and beatings; are made the grounds
for bringing the action.
She avers in this petition that he
is extravagant, lives beyond his means
as yardmaster for the Northwestern
railroad and has incurred indebted
ness to the payment of which she ha
contributed between $4,000 and $5,000
since., their marriage, besides buying
him many expensive presents. Hale
is 40 years old, she says.
Her first divorce suit was dismissed
just before Christmas, when a recon
ciliation was affected. Hale returned
to his wife. In that petition she
charged that Hale had become inter
ested and wanted to be constantly
in the company of a "well-known
Omaha blond woman," whose name
she did not want; to give the court
for fear of breaking, up the "other
woman's" happy home.
Filet Damage Suit.
The petition was filed in August. In
October Mrs. Hale filed a suit for
$25,000 damages against Mrs. Blanche
Maxwell Rowe, wife of Hale's friend,
alleging that Mrs. Rovn had beguiled
Hale "by protestations of love-and
flattery and by promises" into having
clandestine meetings with" her at the
, Rowe home and elsewhere.
Mrs. Hale declared Mrs. Rowe had
received Hale and entertained him at
her home in Rowe's absence and had
taken midnight anjo rides with him.
She said Hale had bought Mrs. Rowe
presents of candy, fruit and silk gar
ments and that Mrs. Rowe had mali
ciously planned to deprive hef of her
husband's love and affection.
She charged that she and her
daughter had been "deprived of the
necessities and luxuries oft life be--.
cause Hale ; was spending all'his
money and tome of hers on a promi
nent Omaha blond."
Shortly before Christmas, 1917, she
dismissed her first divorce action. The
dismissal of the divorce action auto
matically stopped action on Mrs.
Hale's alienation of affection damage
x suit against Mrs. Rowe. . -
Mrs, Rowe protested that she was
the innocent victim of a "jealous
. woman's suspicions" and' maintained
mere was noining improper in xne
friendship existing between herself
and Hale.
Smith Takes Count in
x Fray With His Landlady
II. Smith, teamster, rooming at 1624
Burt street, did not know exactly
. what struck his weary head until he
awoke in the police surgeon's head
quarters at the police station last
night. When told that his landlady,
T.J T : 11 1 1 J . 1 L
bowl, cut glass and butcher knives It
his cranium, Smith was not surprised
: in the least
"I knew I stopped something like
a lamp or a switch engine," Smith
soliloquized. ,.
Ted Turpin also suffered the loss
of several teeth and "her senses for a
temporary period. .' ,
t Officer Ryan arrived at the scene of
the fray at 1624 Burt street just as
the unlighted lamp sailed across the
front room at Smith's head and he
went down for the count. .
The two were booked on a charge
of being drunk and fighting.
Lieut. R. C. Byrne, 0".,$. N., '
Here on Way to Atlantic Port
Junior Lieutenant Raymond C
Byrne of the United 'States navy,
medical department, son of T. C,
Byrne, president of the Byrne-Hammer
Dry Goods company, is here
until Friday on his way to . Wash
ington, where he will receive specific
order to pnnrr fnr artiv
United States battleship at an At
lantic port
Since his enlistment last May in
the medical corps of the navy, Lieu-
' tenant Byrne has been-stationed in
San Francisco. He is a graduate of
Creighton Medical college. " '
He will leave Friday for his east
, em trip. !
' War Work Canvass Foard
jTo Meet Tuesday Night
Those who will canvass Omaha
with cards to learn for the State
Council tf Defense just how much
, and what kind of war work each and
every family has done to date will
meet at the Omaha Chamber of Com
merce Tuesday night at 8 o'clock for
further instructions.
The County Council of Defense has
already organized the work in half
the wards in the city down to pre
cincts and blocks and the other half
remain to be worked out at this meet-
Robert Houghton to Run .
For City Commissioner
Robert Houghton, Omaha brick
contractor, has his coming out party
as candidate for city commissioner
last night. Houghton, made his an
nouncement at a meeting held in the
rooms of the Junior Pioneer league,
in the Swedish auditorium. ,
He announced that he was not a
slate man and "my hobby is good
city government."
Houghton has lived in Omaha
about 30 years. r
.Woman Slightly Injured "
In Automobile Colision
r-Mrs. .Grace Hill, colored.' 3907
(.North Twenty-first street, riding in
'an automobile driven by Mrs. S. A.
Brag, colored, and Jiving at thesame
addrtfss, received several " cuts' about
the head when the automobile col
lided with another car, driven by G.
D. Sherman, 2411.' North Twenty
fourth street, last night at Twenty
fourth and Erskine streets. . (
T
TWO OFFICERS r
ARE KILLED AT
FT. JILL FIELD
Lawton, Okl.. March 4. Flight
Lieutenants Paul and Whitney from
the aerial schcl at Fort Sill, were
killed this afternoon, 10 miles north
ot the aviation field when the gaso
line tank on their aeroplane exploded
and the machine crashed to earth
from a great height. Initials and
home addresses of the two dead
aviators could not be obtained to
night. ' " . .
Officers at aviation headquarters
did not miss Paul and Whitney until
6 o'clock tonight, when machines
were checked in for the day, A
search was instituted and the wrecked
machine and its victims were located
late tonight in the farming district
northwest of Fort Sill.
Farmers living in the neighborhood
said apparently nothing was wrong
with the airplane up to the' moment
of the accident. Suddenly a loud re
port was heard by "persons watching
the fliers, and pieces of the machine
were seen flying in all directions. The
main part of the plane with its two
occupants then went into a nose dive,
striking the ground with such force
that it was completely demolished
and the two flight lieutenants' bodies
badly mangled.
. . i
Polish Papers Against
, Selling Lands tos Hebrews
The Hague, March 4. (Associated
Press.) The Jev.ish correspondent
bureau here reports that the anti
Semite agitation in the Pol'rh paj
is assuming form."which were form
erly possible only in reactionary
Russia." The agitation, it is stated,
it directed especially against the sale
of land t Jews. Newsj. .pers are
publishing the na.aes of those who
nave geen "guilty of Such a crime."
The bureai prints an exfact from
an article h the Lemberg Tage'k'.t
describinj as pit'able the plight of the,
Jews living at Belz in Gai.':ia. The
Jews, it :ays, a.- cbliged j live in
houses little better than ruins. One
of them collapsed during a storm on
January JJ, killing 10 persans.
The foo ticket system, i'. adds, is
another Ji.rcc of hardship ' to the
Jews. In some Galician towns a Jew
gets only 40 ounces of rye flour per
week while others get four pounds.
The same discrimination against
them is shown in the distribution of
coal and salt. , ' .
"If this wrong be not soon stopped,"
the paper declares, "the Jews will die
Of hunger." , ' ' '
Old Sixth Nebraska : v
Band to Camp Fonston
Camp Cody, N. M., March 4. (Spe
ciftl Telegram.) Iowa's Second in
fantry band, John Ellel, leader, com
poser of the Missouri waltz, goes
back to Camp Dddge, Des Moines
and the old Sixth Nebraska infantry
band, Frank, Webb, leader, will play
at Camp Funston. Since the organi
zation of the Thirty-fourth division
the bands have been attached to the
125th machine gun battalion and
109th. military police, respectively.
The old r-irst Iowa cavalry hand
went to Palo Alto, Cal., to Camp Fre
mont two necks ago.
Cornell Professor Says orrn UmriT rnn
U. S. Crop Be Very Short dLLU lMLMI rlM
IOWA FARMS TO
BE PLENTIFUL
Washington, March 4. G. F. Warr
ren, professor of farm management
at Cornell university testifying today
before the senate agriculture com-,
nutee investigating general food con
ditions declared food production in
the United States this year from pre
ent indications would be less than
three-fourths of normal.
Senator Wadsworth questioned a
statement by Charles Reid of Chi
cago, editor of a sheep raisers' paper,
that retail meat dealers who purchase
direct from producers were boycotted
by packers. Reid declared that with
the present prices of meat to the pro
ducers, many engaged in meat pro
duction would send their present sup
plies to market and then quit busi
ness. An over-abundance of meat vill
be on thej market in the next few
weeks, Reid saici, but indications are
that soon there would be a shortage.
Costa Rica Government
Holds 96 Revolutionists
Panama, March 4. Ninety-six
revolutionists on the Atlantic side of
Costa Rica, were arrested by, the
Costa Rican governmenUin suppres
sing the revolution led Dy Rogelio
Fernandez Guell, a pro-German news
paper editor, according to advices re
ceived by the confidcntal agent here
of the government of President Tino
co, of Costa Rica.
Aiv attack by revolutionary troops
on a ' passenger train in which four
persons were killed and 20 injured,
one an American, 'an incident of the
anti-government outbreak in Gosta
Rica last month, was related by Am
ericans arriving today aboard a
steamship from ; South American
ports. '
Belgian Would Rather See
Trousers Than Flag on Pole
Fargo, N. D., March 4. May Burke,
called by the government in its case
against Henry von Bank, a Belgian,
president of a school district in Cass
county, on trial it federal court,
charged with violation of the espio
nage act, testified today that von Bank
had told her that "he would rather
see a pair of old trousers flying from
the schoolhouse rthan the United
States flag" in a conversation she had
with him on December 15, last.
J. W. Riley, superintendent of Cass
county schools, alsd testified- that he
asked von Bank whether or not he
had made the statement about the
trousers, and that he said he'did.
Bread Prices Are Down 16
Per Cent, Says Labor Bureau
Washington, March 4. Retail bread
prices have fallen off 16 per cent since
last August. Figures made public to
day by the Department of Labor show
there was a steady increase in price
from 1913 until August. . .
Using the 5 cent loaf sold in 1913 as
a basis the average price of bread is
now 8.3 cents. The increase began in
1914 when bread rose to 5.8 cents. In
1915 it went as high as 6.4 and in 1916
the high point was reached in Novem
ber. The price of 7.5 reported than
fell off slightly until February, 1917,
when it again advanced. This con
tinued until the price of 9.1 was at
tained in August.
Your For tun Possible
From $30 Investment
Shrewd Investors Are Asking How
Since running our announcement in this paper the past few days we
have been-receiving a great many requests for our Gusher Oil Bulle-
tin, explaining our proposition in detail. Every mail the number of in
quiries is getting larger, andVe will no doubt have to greatly in
crease our office force in order to be able to promptly mail out our
bulletins. t
Orders Coming Inery Rapidly"
We have already started receiving quite a large number of orders
for tracts from people who have received our Bulletin, and after
studying our proposition over carefully, have decided to join us in
, the profits to be made In our development work. We believe that
nearly anyone with a little red blooded courage will buy at least one -,
quarter-acre tract, when they understand how our offer combines
safety of investment with reasonable possibilities of tremendous
profits.' , ' -
You Purchase Geologically Approved Oil Land
NOT OIL STOCK, but a full quarter acre of real oil land. Each ,
tract is now selling for $30.00. Warranty Deed with each tract. The
best geologists in the world, those of the U. S. government, say that
High Island has indications similar to the famous old Spindletop, '
northeast of our property, where wells came in at a reported pro-.
duction of 75,000 barrels of oil per day. .
' We Guarantee To Drill Two Big Wells : :
One to be drilled' on this wonderful prospective property, and one
on our positively proven lease in Famous Humble Gusher Oil Field,,
already surrounded by big wells, with oil positively proven to be on
our lease. : 1
50 of Prof its Goes to Tract Purchasers 4 .
Each tract purchaser shares proportionately in 50 of the profits
from the two wells we guarantee to drill, and also shares in the
same.ratio in the profits made from all other wells we may drill later
You Receive 10 Of Oil From Your Tract
If your tract, or tracts, is selected upon which to drill, you would
receive a royalty of 10 of all oil produced and saved in addition to
your pro rata profits. For instance, if we bring in a 2,000-barrel
on your tract at $2.00 per barrel, or S4.000 per day, your royalty
would be approximately $400.00 per day.
Our Humble Lease Protects Your Investment
We believe our Humble' lease alone should enable us to pay you
-nually on your investment, and when-we bring in oil on .
our High Island property, proving up these tracts, we believe every
0, ne of our purchasers will be able to make enormous profits by leas-
1. nff -1. " their holdings. One acre in Humble Field sold recently
- for $218,750.00 after oil was brought in. t
t Free Gusher Oil Bulletin
Send at once for our Bulletin, full of official maps, photographs and
U. S. government reports, covering oor plan in detaiVor, if you want
to be absolutely sure of not losing this opportunity, send in a remit-
1 tance immediately for the number of tracts you want We will then
mail you our Bulletin, and will cheerfully refund your money, if
- after a week's study, you are not positively satisfied with the invest-
ment. :,,.
The Officers of This 'Company Warrant Your ;
Entire Confidence V
Gulf Coast Development Company
740 First National Bank Bldf. Phon Tyler 398. Omaha, Ntb.
Northern Food Adminitrater
Says 200 Cars Have Been
Sent to Missouri Valley
by Minnesota. '
Minneapolis, Minn.. March 4.
Farmers of the northwest will get all
the seed wheat they need this spring,
at a reasonable price, Frank L. Carey,
head of the local office of the food
administration grain corporation, said
today.
More han 200 cars of seed wheat
already have been sent by the gov
ernment from Minneapolis to points
in Iowa, Michigan and Nebraska, Mr.
Carey said, while between 500,000 and
600,000 bushels of seed wheat is held
in reserve in, North and South Dakota
country elevators. The government
will see that this wheat gets to farm
ers who need it, at a price to exceed
only slightly the price fixed for wheat
on a commercial basis. -Recleaned
marquis spring wheat
for seed will be sold by the govern
ment for $2.30 per bushel, f. o. b.
Minneapolis, according to Mr. Carey.
While special varieties may be sold
through other sources as high as $3
or more per bushel, there should be
no locality unable to obtain sufficient
seed on the $2.30 level, he said.
THIS WOMAN HAD
SUFFERED SINCE
' SHE WAS A GIRL
Finds Relief After 30 Years
'Til Always Praise Tanlac,"
She Says.
"It certainly seems wonderful,
after trying almost every conceivable
medicine during the past thirty years,
that a few bottles of Fanlac should
(rive me that lontf hoped for relief,
but it has and I'll praise it as long
as I live." This interesting and re.
markable statement was made by
Mrs. Hester E. Napper, in an inter
view at her residence, 1020 South
Second street, Salt Lake City, re
cently. Mrs. Napper is the wife of a
valued employe of the National Bis
cuit company. . '
"Ever since I was a girl of 16,"
Mrs. Napper continued, "I have suf
fered from stomach trouble in the
form of gastritis, and "other compli
cations, which, as I grew older, kept
getting worse. Soon after meals my
stomach would fill with gas and
bloat me up causing almost unbear
able pain and a pressure around my
heart that almost cut off my breath.
I couldn't eat an apple or an orancra
without it making me almost death
ly sick, and milk was jugt like poi
son to me. I had no appetite at all,
could eat no meats of any kind, and
for years I simply suffered agony.
At times I -was almost prostrated
with headache and my nerves were
all shattered,..! was so nervous and
miserable I could get no rest day
or night and felt tired and worn
out all the time. Last fall my condi
tion became so serious that my fam
ily, was alarmed about me. I had given
up nearly all hopes of ever getting
relief and was really afraid I would
soon die unless I could get some
thing to help me. .
"About the first' of January I read
the testimonial of a party I know,
and who had gotten such wonderful
results from Tanlac that I decided
to try it myself. Well, if Tanlac had
failed me I don't know what I would
have done, as I think I had tried ev.
erything'else. But it hasn't failed
me, I'm, thankful to say. On the other
hand I feel just like a new person
since taking it I didn't feel much
benefit from the first bottle, but by
the time my second bottle was gone
I felt a general improvement My
appetite picked up and 'since that
time I have had no more pain or i
smothering snells. I have taken three
bottles now and can sleep all night
long, and that tired, worn-out, feel
ing has left me. I am not the least
bit nervous any more and my stom
ach is in such fine condition that I
can eat meats and anything else W
want wimour tne sngntest discom
fort from it. I find reai pleasure now
in Jiving, as I'm able to work and
since Tanlac has done so much for
me I feel like I ought to do what
I can to let others know about it"
Tanlac is sold in Omaha by Sher
man & McConnell Drug Company,
corner 16th and Dodge streets; Owl
Drug Co., 16th and Harney streets;
Harvard Pharmacy, 24th and Farnam
streets; Northeast corner 19th and
Farnam streets, and West End Phar
macy, 49th and Dodge streets, under
the personal direction of a special
Tanlac representative. Adv.
A Single Application
Banishes Every Hair
(The Modern Beauty)
Here is how any woman x:an easilg
and quickly remove objectionable,
hairy growths without nossible iniurv
to the skin: Make a paste with some
powdered delatone and water, apply
to hairy surface and after 2 or 3
minutes rub off, wash the skin and
the hairs are gone. This is a painless,
inexpensive method and, . excepting
where the growth is unusually thick,
a single application is enough. You
should, however, be careful to get
genuine delatone. Advertisement.
EVERYBODY STORE
Tuesday, March 5, 191ft
-STORE NEWS FOR WEDNESDAY-
-Phon Douglas 137
A Remarkable Clearaway Wednesday of
- BOOKS
Popular Fiction, Which Has Been Reduced to
JOHN
BARLEYCORN
, JACK LONDON
BOOKS of fiction from such authors as H. G. Wells, Jack
London, Myrtle Reed, Geo. McCutcheon, Robt. Chambers,
Marie Corelli, etc. Books that have become slightly scuffed
by display but otherwise perfect. We mention a few titles:
"Mother. Carey's Chickens"
Wiggins. ' .
.THIEF!
"Contrary Mary" Bailey. .
"Fisherman's Luck" Van
Dyke.
"Cowardice Court" Mc
Cutcheon. "Love Insurance" Biggers.
"Master's Violin" Reed.
"Old Rose and Silver"
, Reed.
"Wanted, A. Chaperon"
' Ford. . '
v "Garden Without Walls"
Dawson.
"We Are French" Davis.
"Sealed Valley" Footner.
"The Forest" White.
"Teeth of the Tiger" Le
blanc. "John Barley Corn" Lon
don. "Ailsa Paige" Chambers.
"ine Kaft" Dawson.
. Burgns-Nash Co. Third Floor
"The Rosary" Barclay.
"The Little Minister" Bar
rie. ,
"A Court of Inquiry" Rich
mond. "The Story of My Life"
Keller.
"The Doctor" Connor.
"Corporal Cameron" Con
nor. "The Prospector" Connor.
"The Cabin" White.
"World Set Free" H. G.
Wells. ' - --
"Man in a Lonely Land"
Bosher. ,
"How It Happened" Bosh
er. "Stop Thief "Moore.
"Jewels Story Book" Burn
ham. '
"Devil's Admiral" Moore.
"Andrew, The Glad"
Daviess.
"Arizona" Thomas.
"The Harbor" Poole.
World Set
FREE
H. C Well
THE
HARBOR!
8 V
FISTULA CURED
Kectal Diseases Cured, withouta severe vox-1
glcal operation. Ho Chloroform or Ethel
used Cure guaranteed. PAT WHEN CURED.
write for llmtrated book m Rectal DltMaea. with
name end testimonial ot more thin torn oromt
teoole who have hm nwmiiucitb mrA.
an, E. R. TARRY.- 240 Dee DIdg., Omaha, Neb.
4 . J
t
When Itching Stops
- Bell Telephone Service
Is for Uncle San
- Before Anyone Else
When war was declared the entire Bell Telephone System
including our equipment and our employees was placed at the service
of the government. . '
AH the great military bureaus, training camps, cantonments, navy
yards, munition plants, arsenals and warehouses hava )been connected
, by telephone.
The Bell System has organized and furnished to the government
fourteen complete battalions of trained telephone men who are either
constructing, maintaining and operating telephone lines for the forces
in France or. are in mobilization camps ready to embark. A great
number of our employees have also joined the national guard or other
military organizations or have been drafted. These thousands of
trained Workers cannot be readfly replaced. . ;
.The Bell telephone men now with the army in France, "recently
' completed the first all-American telephone system over-seas. Cable
dispatches to the press say that it is a great treat for the officers to use
an American-built telephone system after trying to talk on the lines
in use over there. r
With our working forces depleted, with the scarcity of equipment
growing greater and with telephone materials costing practically double
,what they did two years ago, our problems are becoming very serious.
When you use the telephone won't you please remember the diffl
cnlties under which we are furnishing service?
' -;;'- ' y. ;' : ' '
Won't ou help u to "do W bit" by not asking for additional
telephone equipment at this time and by making no unnecessary local
or long distance calls T '
There is one safe, dependable treatment
that relieves itching torture and skin irri
tation almost instantly and that cleanses
and soothes the skin.
Ask any druggist for a 35e or $1 bottle
of zemo and apply it as directed. Soon
you will find that irritations, pimples,
blackheads eczema, blotches, ringworm
and similar skin troubles will disappear.
A little zemo. the penetrating, satisfy.
tag liquid, is all that is Deeded, for- it
banishes most akin eruptions and makes
the akin soft smooth and healthy, , J
NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY
f
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