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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1918)
10 STREET RAILWAY OFFICIALS HEARD - BY LABOR BOARD i . , .. ' ' Real Point in Controversy Re fusal of Company, to Sign Contract, General Coun sel Webster Says. Washington; July 30. (Special Tel egram.) John Lee Webster, general counsel, and R. A. Leussler,, assistant general manager of the Omaha and Council Bluffs Street Railroad com- pany, were given opportunity today by William Howard Taft and Frank P. Walsh of the national war labor board to review the testimony taken recently before Examiners Swing and Ledwick in the case of certain em ployes and the Omaha Street Rail way company at Kansas City on July 17, 18 and 19. Mr. Webster, who did the talking for the company, was accorded most courteous treatment; . Mr. Taft fre quently interrupted the oral argument by asking counsel to amplify state ments made in support of the com pany's contention that it had been more than fair in its treatment of its employes, the whole question revolv ing around the company's failure to ' recognize the union, ' In Mr. Webster' opinion the real point ' in controversy between the anion, and the company was the re fusal of the company to sign the con ' tract with the union, which is not a Tjatter submitted to arbitration, - Mr. Webster stated that an increase of wages asked for by the union in its statement filed in. the case bears date of July 15, 1918, and its presen tation to the examiners was the first , notice the company had of the de mand for an increase; that it was not a demaad presented to the com ..'.v pany. ;.,.. Mr. Webster said the company was financially . unable to grant any in crease of wages; that its operating " expenses have already increased $933, 000 per year and that there will be under present conditions an annual deficit of $309,850 and to grant the increase of wages would create an annual deficit of $759,850, which would mean foreclosure of a mort gage oh the property and bankruptcy. 'It is expected a decision will be rendered in ' the case not later than Friday, - ' - ; , . . -i , Lawn Fete to Be Given "To Raise Fund for New PdshChurchinGty Members of Father ,Doud's parish .will give a lawn fete at the parochial residence, 2902 North ' Forty-fifth street.' Tuesday night, August 6,. for the purpose of raising a fund, tobe used in the establishment of anew parish in the northwest part of the v city. The, church will be. known as ' the Redemptorist order. A number of prominent Omaha Catholics have already contributed to '"'-the fund, and efforts are being made to have the Redemptorist order to establish a monastery here. Archbishop tiarty has become in terested in the project and gave en couragement and advice to the par , Jshioners. The work; of organizing the new parish is in charge of Rev. Father McKeown of St, Louis and Rev. F. L Urbanus,who have the ptans well under way. A temporary church is to be built immediately, to be replaced by a permanent structure after the war. The temporary church will be so constructed that J school work may also be conducted there. City Asked to Pay, Damages For Ruined Hat and Clothes Mrs, Nellie Black was walking on the sidewalk at Fifteenth and Harney streets on the afternoon of May 13. It proved a disastrous and unlucky day for her, ffor as she was passing a hydrant where a street sprinkling wasori. was filled the hose burst The stream of water from the bursted Hose , struck her with. such force she'wai rolled in the gutter and her clothes ruined. She preferred a claim for damages to the city coun- V cil for a suit worth $40, a pair of glasses worth .$20 and a bat worth . She naivety stated to council: "I hope this receives your favorable con , gidefatipn.?; Corp. Frederick D. McLeod - Die of Wounds in France Corp.' , Frederick D.1. McLeod of Schuyler, reported dead of wounds .in Tuesdays casualty list,-died June 16. He. was a member of the 34th com- - panv of marines. He enlisted last Aa gust He was soon advanced to the rank of corporal. Corporal McLeod Is a son of Mr, and Mrs. Donald McLeod of Schuyler Before enlisting in the marines he "I was assistant postmaster of Schuyler, Ao details of his death have been re ceived by his parents except that he died ot wounds received in action.i Concord Club Will Picnic at Carter Lake Thursday ' The Omaha Concord club will hold on Thursday a picnic dinner and dance at Carter Lake' club. All the commissioned officers in Omaha are invited to attend the dance . -at 8 o'clock. . The club members and their friends are requested to be on hand at 5 o'clock to take part in the games and swimming contests. The picnic dinner will be held at 7 o clock. Hold Funeral Services for I : . Miss Elizabeth Griffin I Funeral services for Miss Eliza fceth Griffin, who died Monday in a local hospital, will be held Wednesday moraine at 8:30 o'clock from the resi dence of her sister, Mrs. Champenoy, 1208 South Tenth street, to St Philo mena church. Interment will be in Holy Sepulchre cemetery: - ' . Besides her sister, she is survived hy two brothers, Thomas and Frank One Auto Stolen.. ' Only one automobile was stolen in the lasjr twenty-tour hours. it be longed to A: F. Rasp. 210 ' Keeline luildinz. and was stolen from the - corner of Seventeenth and Harney streets, . - Life Story of " (Copyright, 1111, 0. t. Artie ot artlln aketculng the carerr of Ir. Edward A. Homely . who ha been rr ftrd un a charge of hat ing bought the New York Kvenlnc Mall with money furnished by the German government and of hating used It for German propaganda.) a By FRANK STOCKBRIDCE. (Former Managing Editor of tha Evening Mall.) To a" newspaper man the most in teresting and the funniest things that happened during Dr. Rumely's con trol of the EveninK Mail were events involving the technique and practice of newspaper niakine. rather than the manifold manifestations of a point of view on his part that was anything but neutral. I shall try to resist as far as possible the inclination to burden' this narrative with tales of technical blunders and absurdities that would have wrecked the prop erty even as the M. Rumely company had been wrecked had it not been tor a constant, steady inflow of new capital. It was the same storv over, again, of an effort to impose a mass of new and untried ideas or ideas that were old and had been discarded by expe rienced newspaper men- on a busi ness that wasn't strontr enough to stand them. I think the books of the Mail and Express company will bear me out in the assertion that if Dr. Rumely had carried out his oft re peated threat to go to Germany, and had stayed there, for a year, the newspaper would have made a profit in 1916 instead of a loss of $150,000 or so. Just as in the management of the' Rumely company at l a Porte. "Dr. Rumely in the Evening Mail scattered new ideas right and left, demanding their instant execution, expecting im mediate resutts and deftly slipping the blame to others for their failure. Those who refused to be made the "goats" were promptly and bitterly accused of conspiracy to undermine his authority, of failure to "follow through" or of inability to do team work. And as in the Rumely com pany, the place was infested with a constant procession of "experts." Ap parently any one who could speak German and claimed to be an "ex pert" in any phase of the printing or publishing business could gain and hold the doctor's ear and get a trial for his scheme. Dream of Motion Picture Magazine. i The Evening Mail had for many years published an illustrated Satur day magazine supplement; it was, I believe, the originator of the Satur day supplement idea, so far as New York City is concerned, at least First came along a motion picture "ex- Eert",who persuaded the doctor that e could convert the Saturday maga zine into a motion picture weekly and make $100,000 a year with it He didn't that goes without, saying. Then a gentleman of Austrian birth I have forgotten the name, but the memory of his personality will linger long was introduced to Dr. Rumely as the "expert" who would put the Motion Picture Mail on its feet. He Paxtqn & Gallagher Spread Feast at Employes9 Picnic Long tables, . groaning beneath the weight of heaping, plates of good things,' cups of steaming coffee and white-clad negro , waiters to serve it doesn't sound much like a picnic, but that is what Pax ton & Gallagher provided tor more than 1,000 em ployes and their families at Krug park Tuesday, ..'-. , . ! the big store closed at 4:30 and the employes and their families piled into chartered street cars and into waiting automobiles and were taken immediately to the park, where the games Were to be held. Dan Geilus famed as a "game" snortsman. was in charge of the x athletic events, which i went off smoothly and amid shrieks of laughter. The only mishap was a bursted pillow in the pillow fight, which caused a miniature snow storm and a scattering of the audi ence. After the sports came the dinner. the real event. E. E. Kimberly as chairman of the refreshment com mittee, surely distinguished himself, CO. ASKS PERMIT TO ERECT PLANT Request Made Before City Council for Right to v Put Up Plant on Burlington at Thirty-eighth. ; Only, a small crowd, was present at ' the evening meeting of the city council Tuesday night and but two of these seemingly were interested in matters that came uo before the body. The Omaha . Packing company pe- tioned the council for a permit to erect a 'packing house, 40x60 facing on Thirty-eighth ' street and the Bur lington right-of-wav. - The company claims the structure will be modern in every way, a two story' brick, of a design improved by the federal inspection department . Bids for 100 ten-wire guards to be placed across ' the windows of the Girls' Detention hospital were opened, there being but one bidder who proposed to do the work for $340.64. . "I will not vote to convert that place into a prison and endanger the lives of the inmates by closing those windows in the, event of a fire," said Commissioner Butler. 4 The bids were referred to the su perintendent of police and sanitation for tabulation.-' ; Soft drink" licenses were refused Toe Bloom for the reason he had been convicted of selling intoxicating liquors, and John C Skomat. because Chief1 of Detectives Briggs recom mended that a license not be granted the latter. . ' V The -appointment of John S. Oiternich to succeed Albert Wcitzell OMAHA PACKING EDWARD A. RUM ELY Man Who Bought the New York Mail for the Kaiser a M Canada. Ik M. T. HtrelS Oa. Ail had made a great success with illus trated weeklies in Berlin and Munich! This "expert" made himself such a nuisance that one department head after another served notice on Dr. Kumely that either he would resign or the man from Vienna must keep tway from him. Finally the "expert" disclosed his great scheme for giving the Motion Picture Mail a million circulationhe would ornt the pho tograph of a nude woman on the front cover of every issue; that was the way they did it in Germany! Exit expert. Exit .also, after a while, the Motion Picture Mail. No body knows exactly how much money was lost on it. Everyone on whom Dr. Rumely tried to 'wish" the responsibility for its publication sidestepped with as much grace as possible in the circumstances. As near as I was ever able to make out ty a comparison and averaging of three totally different sets of figures, each purporting to represent the ac tual financial status of the weekly, it was not losing more than $1.500 ' a week, when it was discontinued. Effort to Print Good Newspaper. Leaving all question of German propaganda out of consideration for the moment, there was a decided and conscious effort from the beginning, on the part of those, charged with responsibility for the different de partments of the newspaper, to make it the best newspaper possible under the double handicap of the Doctor' meddling inefficiency and the stigma of pro-Germanism which had to be met and overcome at every turn. There was the best team work I have ever seen in any organization. Mr. Lambin, the first business man ager under the new regime, had re fused from the beginning to consider more than a three months' engage ment; he had committed himself to another concern before we found him. He brought in as his successor Mr. George H. Larke, an extremely able and efficient man for the place. The co-operation between Mr. Larke and his staff and.myself and my staff was continuous and complete. When the question was qne between the best interests of the paper and some ruinous- or impractical order from Dr. Rumely there was no question where our duty lay. Dr. Rumely was the nominal head of the organization, the by-laws providing that the vice-president should be the executive. We were both officers and directors of the company, however, nd on the books a large stock interest was held, not in Dr. Rumely's name, but in that of Walter Lyon. We did not know Walter Lyon I am not sure but, I met him once in Dr. Rumely'a rooms at the Manhattan and we did not know whether he represented himself or somebody else. At any rate as corporation directors our duty was to the stockholders first, to say nothing of our duty to our own reputations as newspaper men. I d not know how many times Dr. Rumely charged Mr. Larke and my self with "conspiring" against him. Not as many times, f am sure, us we saved him from costly mistakes or The outdoor dining room was lined with hungry spectators, who wished they might have worn the big red button which entitled the wearer to partake of the feast After the "eats" were finished, the crowd scattered to the various amusement centers, and the little ones were carried off to their homes, some of them crying to see more of "Charlie Chaplin" and the pup, who held the interest of the tiniest mem bers of the crowd. Winners in the athletic events were: Wheelbarrow Race! First, Joa Muncaster and Kred Wadum; aecond, John Rogera and Oena Grau; third, Barry Coberg and O. C. Debarr. i - . Three-legged Race: Flnt, F. R. Vander venter and William Qellui; aecond, C B. Fulger and 3. M. Slgler. , Nal Driving Contest: First, Mrs. Town send; aecond. Mrs. O. C Debarr. ' Tying and Needle Threading Contest: William Qellus and Frances Whitman; aec ond, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roaenohrlst. Pillow Fight: First, J. M. Btgler; sec ond, Leo Mella. Ladles' Ball Thowlng Contest: First, Miss Jacobson; second, Miss O'Keefe. as plumbing inspector was confirmed by council at Tuesday night's meet ing. Thomas Astelford and Tames Mur phy were appointed mechanical engi neers in the city hall at an annual salary of $1,800 each. A resolution was passed at the meeting of the city council Tuesday night, raising the salary of License Inspector, Mamuel Fried from $120 to $150 per month. Lt. W. S. Marriott Reaches ' France Safely, He Cables Lt. Wajter S. Marriot of the 525th Engineers has arrived overseas, ac cording to a message received from him by his parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Marriott, 1720 South Thirty-second Avenue. What Is Nuxated Iron? , i ' Physician Explain Say Public Ought to Know What They Are Taking Practical Advice . On What to Do to i Build Up Your Strength, Power and Endurance and Increase the Red Blood Corpuscles. Tha fact that Nuxated Iron is today be ing used by over three million people an nually and that so many physiona are prescribing ft a a tonic, strength and blood builder in weak, nervous, run-down condi tions has led to an investigation of its merit by designated physicians. and others whose reports should be of greatest imnartaaca to the publio generally. Among these is tha statement made by Dr. James Francis Sul livan, formerly physician of Bellevue Hos pital (Outdoor Dept). New York, and Westchester County Hospital, who says: "When one patient after another began aik Ins my opinion ot Nuxated Iron. I resolved to go thoroughly into the subject and find out for myself whether or not it possessed tha real value claimed by its manufacturers and attested to by so many prominent peo ple. This Is exactly what I believe every honest, conscientious physician should do before prescribing or lending hi endorse ment to any product whatsoever.'' If an ar ticle ia worthless we practitioners ought to be tb first to know of it and if ft is effi cacious we are in duty bound to recommend it for the welfare of onr patients. A atudy of the- composition of the Nuxated Iron formula ao impressed me with the therapev tie efficacy of the product that I imme diately tasted it in a number of obstinate cases. So quickly did It tneraaso the strength, energy and tndnrane of the oatiente to whom H waa administered that I- became firmly convinced of its remarkable vain as THE BEE: OMAHA," WEDNESDAY, JULY rights raserraS.)" blunders that would have made the paper ridiculous.1 Mr. Kauri man a Strong Auy. For a long time Mr. Larke and I had strong ally in S. Walter Kauff mann, the lawyer who represented the controlling interest in the Evening Mail. ,Mr. Kauffmann always re ferred to this interest as "my clients;" naturally, I never asked him who they were. His clients, however, were ap parently interested at first in putting the Evening Mail on a paying basis, and for a year or so, until he went to Germany in 1916, he not only backed iip every reasonable position taken by either Mr. Larke or myself in oppo sition to Dr. Rumely's desires, but apparently was in a position to en force his decisions upon Dr. Rumely. After his return from Germany his power in this respect seemed to have been curtailed; certainly he exercised far less control over the internal af fairs of the Evening Mail than he had formerly wielded. It may be gathered from the fore going that life on the Evening Mail was not exactly a bed of roses. It was.' not. And in the editorial end of the paper using the "term in its broad sense of including news, "fea tures" and all other reading matter the problem was further complicated by a very definite responsibility, first to America and American principles and, second, to the readers of the newspaper. With Dr. Rumely's con sent I had 'pledged the paper to the support of the president in his for eign policies. i (To Be Continued Tomorrow). ,. . , : r ' Daisy Tayson Asks Divorce from Husband for Cruelty Daisy Tayson has filed suit against George Tayson in the district court for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. The couole were married in Boone, la., July 28, 1898. They have six children.-Harry, aged 19; Arthur, 17; Eva, 14; Orville, 12;. Dorothy, 9. and Naomi, 2. What incidents arose to make tur bulent the current of their love are not stated. It is set forth in the com plaint, however, that during the last two years the defendant has acted in a most cruel manner toward the plain tiff and she desires a severance of the marriage vows. Observes Anniversary by ' , Filing Suit fcr Divorce - Freda C. Miller celebrated the fourth anniversary of her marriage in Denver, Colo., to Harold W. Miller, by filing in the district court on Tues day a suit for divorce. She alleges cruelty and failure to provide as cause for the action. - The plaintiff also acts forth in her complaint that the defendant has a habit of consorting with women of bad character, and in other ways caus ing serious infractions of Ws matri monial obligations. She asks for di vorce and for the restoration of her maiden name, Freda Wemmer. Negroes Called to . Leave for .Funston V s From District five The followine neero men ' have been called by local board No. 5 to entrain for Camp Funston August 5: Harry Macker. Robert Gardner. Nathaniel H. Perry. 8. P. Johnson. Oeorgs Turner. Orover C. Baker. Roscoa Miller. William T. Auter. Andrew Harold. James W. Brltton. John Rill. Zoroaster Hughes. George Osborne. Hayden Byera. William W. Bell. Ralph E. Grove. Wm. McKlnley Pier son. Alexander Davis. Bailey Sims. Iiaao Jackson, Richard A. Smith. Benjamin Slaughter. Sherman Burton. George Shackletord. Ersklne LUIard. Louis B. Parker. Louis Brown. Alphonao A. Agee. George B. Clark, Grant McClellan. Abram W. Parker. Wilbur H. Hightower. Isaao C Simon. Willie Wilson. Paul B. Fleming. John E. McKensle. Elmer Brooks. Lucius McMillan. Joseph M. Hunter. Henry S. Webster. Georga Washington. Everett Miner. Hurrel Greenway. Jeptha Moore. Revere Flynn. Ray E. Kellog. Jamea R. Bell. Albert L. Brown. William H. Johnson. 9. L. Washington, Georga Camper. Osa A. Campbell. Jesse Dancy. William Carthrum. William Birch. Levi Rose, Thomas Laird. Harrison Ball. Son Thornton. Roy E. Pellford. Harry W. Madison. Leonard Slaughter. Clifford Walls. O. Charles Newby, Fred Patton. Earl Ranson. William Steward. John W. Garner. Philip L. Coulter. Howard Rogers. Carl L. Frampton. Junius C. Pugh. Fred C. Hunter. James H. Oalnes. Hugh Hall. William Wooley. Ralph R. Jones. James B Martin. Frank H. Rawla. Albert W. Moore. Clinton J. Wallace. Lewis Jefferson. Albert Little. Daisy and Bonnie Find Law Here is Persistent at Least In again, out again, and the final residence of Daisy Dufton, ' Park hotel, and Bonnie Walters, 1103 South Fourteenth street, will rest with Po lice Judge Fitzgerald. Daisy and Bon nie were arrested Sunday. Monaay they were sentenced to the Detention home. Monday night they escaped. Later Monday night they were re captured by police at Twenty-second and Leavenworth streets. They, will appear in police court now. ' a tonic and blood builder. I have 'since taken ife mvself with excellent results. There are thousands of delicate, nervous, run-down folks who need Just such a preparation aa this but do not know what to take. There fore 1 have urgently susrested tha wide spread publication of the sworn statement of tha composition of its formula ao that the publio may know what they are taking. Thia complete formula is now to bo found in newspapers throughout the country. It is composed Drincinally of ormnia iron in the form of iron peptonate of a special spe cific standard and glycerophsophate which ia one ol tna most costly tonic ingredients known. To th credit of the manufactur ers it may bo said that they use the moot expensive form of iron Dentanet. whereas by employing other makes they eonld have put th ssm quantity of actual iron in tha tablets at leas than one-fourth th cost and by using metallic iron they could hav re duced the cost to less than one-twelfth, but by thus cheapening the product they, would undoubtedly hav impaired its therapeutic efficacy. In my opinion a careful examina tion of this formula by any physician or pharmacist should convince him that Nux ated Iron ia' to be placed amone- the very highest elaaa and most strictly ethical prep arations known to medical science. It ex cels anyth'ng I have ever need for building up th system and increasing -th red blood orpnsclea thereby enriehin and fortifying the blood aarainst th ravaie of disease. AdvertUnMsa - I 81, 1918. ' GUNNER DEPEW -WILL SPEAK IN OMAHA SUNDAY American Lad Who Escaped r.rom uerman rrison uamp toTelltjf Experiences , - at Boyd Th3ater. Gunner Depew, dre'ssed in the uni form of thj French navy and carrying five wounds 'from his two years of fighting on land and sea and his three months in the German prison camps, is coming to this city to relate bis thrilling war experiences. He will speak at the Boyd theater Sunday night and admission will, be GUNNER DEPEW. free to all your only chance to spend anything will be to make a voluntary contribution to the Babies' Milk and Ice Fund of The Omaha Bee. Depew will accept nothing for his lectures, and his .xpenses are being paid by the Burgess-Nash company, while the Boyd management donates the house. Bring War Message. A modest, smiling American sailor lad, although enly 23 years of age" has gone through almost unbelievable experiences. His story is the most unique that has thus far come out of the battlefields of Europe. No man has seen more of German brutality, no man h. s suffered .more and come back to tell of it than Gunner Depew He tells his story in, the straightfor ward, simple language of a sailor lad. yet he brings with him a war message straight from the heart of the boys who are now facing the Huns over his ambition to defeat German propaganda in this country, he has published his war experiences in his book, "Gunner Depew," Yet this wiry little sailor lad, feeling that he still had a "bit" more to do, is hur rying from city to city speaking be fore crowded houses and imploring the "stay-at-homes" to back up the boys over there. Tells of Prison Camps. The gunner is ont of the few Americans who have lived to come back to tell us of the wretchedness and misery of German prison camps, especially that most infamous of all camps, Brandenburg; the Hell Hole of Genany." Fighting with the French Foreign Legion n Belgium in 1914 gunner on the trench battle ship Cassard fighting the Turks at the Dardenelles in the trenches at Guerre -wounded five times then Gallipoli winning the Croix de Guerre, captured by the German raider Moewe landed in Germany three months of starvation and tor ture in German prison camps and an interview with Ambassador Ger ard, are only a few of the thrilling experiences which Gunner Depew en dured. Without doubt Gunner Depew has R EAL ESTATE IS THE MOST PROFITABLE of all investments for the person who knows how. But an investor in real estate has to contend with the an noyance of caring for the property, tenants moving out without paying their rent, occasional vacancies, taxes and repairing, so that even though the ultimate results are good, real estate requires more care and is not as certain as a mortgage on the same property. Tor an all around safe, profitable, convenient investment year in and year out, few investments equal and none surpass Home Builder' GUARANTEED 6 $1.00 SHARES Your money in Home Builders ;s continuously invested in gilt-edgr mortgages on newly improved real estate. To can . invest any . amount any time, and convert your shares into cash on short notice without ex pense, worry or trouble. AMERICAN SECURITY CO., Fiscal Agents. Home Builders, Inc- OMAHA , NEBRASKA Assets Over $1,000,000.00 VII. Athletics Ye! ... . . . - Director-to-be, the best obtain able. Intercollegiate games. Bas ket ball, foot ball, base ball, track, tennis. MedaL trophy, letter, sweater awards. But the War I Albert W. Jefferis FOR( CONGRESS See card in all street cars until election day, Aug. 20. lf!2eMt'tav) 1-TheWjDDTarl.o,ri.l had a more varied . experience than any other American who has yet started out to help whip the Hun. There is nothing impersonal about his narrative. It is the plain, simple, naive talc of an American boy who has had 10 times his share, and who has seen and suffered enough for 10 ordinary men. You'll drink every word of it, and listen to most of it with a clenched fist for it will stir every drop of fighting blood in your veins. , Kewfiie Ball is Bill! for Lakeview Park this Evening The Tuesday "specials" at'J Lake view park have become a permanent fixture at this popular resort. The many events that have been planned and held this season for the pleasure of the park's patrons have been im mensely successful. v Tonight, at Lakeview, the special event for the dance palace is a kew pie ball. Kewpies will be given to the dancers as prizes. There is no contest on tap, for it happens this time that it is all luck and lots of fun. ' ' . Tomorrow .the Union Outfitting company Will hold their annual pic nic for their friends and customers. fJTAYDEN the cash store Buying for CashCuts Down the Cost of Living One-Fourth We Buy For CASH and Give 10 bars Swift's Pride or Diamond C Soap 38 24-lb. sack Rye Flour.. .$l..fiO Gallon cans Table Syrup. . .70 The best Domestic MaccaronI, Vermicilli or Spaghetti, per pkg . '....7Ke 16-oz. cans Condensed Milk. J Ot 6-oz. cans Condensed Milk, 5 Corn Flakes, pkg 81-3 Fancy Assorted Cookies, lb. J Squab Soup, per can 103 No. 1 can Pork and Beans. 6(3 Lux Washing Compound, per Pkg. ll 3 lbs. best Bulk Laundry Starch 25c EAT MORE DRIED FRUITS Nothing finer for Puddings, Pies, Sauce or Cake. Fancy Bvap. Apples, lb. 15 3-crown Muscatel Cooking Raisins, per lb 14c Cholca Mulr Peaches, lb. ........15c Fancy Seedless Raisins, lb. 15c Fancy Italian Prunes, lie, lS4c!5o OMAHA'S GREATEST TEA Our famous Golden Santos Coffee, the talk of Omaha, per lb ...0fl Fancy Harlcalbo Blend Coffee, per lb tSc Fancy Porte Rica Bland Coffee, per lb. ZSe OMAHA'S GREATEST VEGETABLE AND FRUIT MARKET, IS lbs. best New Potatoea to tha peck 40c Fancy, Sweet Sugar Corn, dos. ..15c I bunchea Graen Onlona So S bunches Fresh Beets. Carrots or Turnip 80 ;It Py-TRY HAYDEN frill QUBLITV FIRST ' g NOT HOW SOON ? .BUT . (joiv mw MDMDUALI i PROMPT CXPCRT 'DELIVERY Photo supplies exclusively ROrT. DEMPSTER CO. 1 EASTMAN KODAK CO. -180 FARNAM ST." BRANCH 506 S0.I5ST. ONE YEAR OF WAR BEATS FIFTY YEARS OF PEACE. The war has brought about in one year mora progressive national legisla tion than fifty years of peace. In another year the benefits will be still greater. These are the compensations for the sacrifice of life in the war for Democracy. Vot for N. P. Dodg for Congfia YOUR DUTY TO BE ATTRACTIVE Have Pretty Dark Hair T. r.rpnle" Hair Dressing is the original hair color restorer, and not a dye. Applying it "to ybnr hair and scalp revives the color glands of nature, and restores your hair to a beautiful dark shade or to its natural color. It is the only nair coior restorer it.., Tii nroHiinllv darken all vour gray or faded hair m this way. No matter BOW gray, premm-ureiy faded or lusterless your hair might be, "La Creole" Hair Dressing will make it beautifully dark, softxand lustrous. "La Creole" Hair Dressing rill rnf atoin th sc&ln. Wash Or rub off, and 'is easily applied by simply combing or Drusmng mrougn ine nair. Don't be misled into buying some cheap preparation. USE "LA CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING for gray or faded hair and retain the appearance of youth. Also used by gentlemen to impart an even dark color to their gray hair, beard or mustache. For Sale by Sherman & McConnell Drug Store, and all good drug stores everywhere. Mail orders from out of town customers filled promptly upon receipt of regular pries, . $1.20. "La Creole" Hair Dressing is sold on money-back guarantee. Adv, , New State Records Made In Automobile Races at Mitchell Mitchell, S. D., July 30. New state records for the mile and half mile . were hung up at the professional au tomobile races held at Hitchcock park tSiis afternoon. Purses amount ing to "nearly $3,000. were divided among the winners. Driving Sun Ray Roamer, R. B. Lampkin was first , in the state championship race, his official time being 1:11 4-5. Lampkin won two challenge races from Frank Boyd, the millionaire oil king of Tulsa, Okla., who entered a Packard. In the first heat of two miles Lampkin's time was 2:45 and in the second 2:43. Frank Allen, driving a Hudson, won the five-mile, free-for-all race; time, 7:11. . Henderson, driving his 290-horse-pnwer Fiat submarine, won from Lampkin, piloting the 300-horsepower American Jubo Benz, in a one-mile exhibition race. 'Henderson's time for the second half, mile was 33 3-5 seconds, within 1 1-5 seconds of the world's dirt track record for that distance. 9$ -jlW Our Customers the Benefit, 22-oz. jar Pure Fruit Pre- serves 28c 22-oz. jar Pure Apple Butter 28c 22-oz. jar Pure Mincemeat. SSOc 6 lbs. Barley or Corn Flour.38c 8 lbs. best White or Yellow Cornmeal 38c 4 lbs. best Rolled White - Breakfast Oatmeal 23c 4 lbs. Choice Japan Rlce...38c Ripe Olives, per can 10c Vinegar, for pickling, gal.. 307 Oil Sardines, per can 7c Pickles, assorted kinds, per bottle 10c Advo Jell, for dessert, pkg.lOt Jello, for dessert, pkg 11c Fancy Bartlett Pears, lb, Wc Fancy Mulr Park Aprtcota, lb.....5e' Fancy No. 1- English Walnuts, lb. SOc Fancy No. 1 Soft Shell Almonds lb 30e Fresh Roasted Peanuts, lb JOc AND COFFEE MARKET. I Mocha and Java Blend, azcellsnteup quality, very aromatio flavor, per lb., 35c., lbs. for S1.00 , Cholca Basket Fired or Sun Dried Japan Tea, per lb. ...3Sc The Best Tea Sittings, per lb. ...SOc Breakfast Cocoa, per lb Wc New Cabbage, per lb .....Sc Fancy Rips Tomatoes, lb IViD Fancy Bead Lettuce, per bead..lHe 3 atalka Fresh Celery 10c 3 large Cucumbers 10c Fancy Wax and Green Beans, lb. ?c LARGE JUICY LEMONS, dos... 30c 'S FIRST-It Pays ; FARMER MILLER SAYS HE BECAME1 UNFIT FOR WORK . Knees So Stiff With the Rheu matism He Could Hard- . , ly Follow thw Plow. "My first bottle of Tanlac did mt so much good that I got one for my son and gave another to a friend of his, and now I've come in to get one more for myself," said David A Miller, a well-known farmer, living near Fort Calhoun, while in Sher man & McConnell's drug 'store one day recently. "For the past three years," he continued, "I have been afflicted with rheumatism and other troubles, and, although I tried medicine after medicine and had expert advice, nothing did me a bit of good. Long ago my appetite failed, and I got so that everything I forced down would sour on my stomach and fill me up with gas till I was miserable for hours afterwards. My kidneys give me no end of trouble. My head ached like it would split and I suf fered from such terrible neuralgic pains that I couldn't half sleep at night My knees were so stiff and sore with rheumatism that it was all I could do to follow the plow and I was so awfully (run-down that I fell off fifteen pounds in weight. I was in such a dreadful condition all over that for two weeks on a stretch I couldn't do a lick of work and was not fit for a things "I read "so much in the 'papers about Tanlac that I decided to take -a chance, and what it has don for me almost surpasses belief. Why, my appetite is so great that I am hungry all the time and eat like a horse. Everything agrees with me and I don't have a bit of trouble with gas or indigestion. My kidneys don't bother me like they did before; every bit of that rheumatism is gone out of my system and I can work hard all day on -my farm, and when I go to bed I sleep like a log all night I am gaining in weight every day and, in fact, my whole system -seemato be made over by this won derful Tanlac. I am telling every body about the way it has straight- ened me out, for I know it is the best medicine there is." Tanlac is sold in Omaha by Sher man & McConnell Drug Co., corner 16th and Dodge streets; 16th and Harney streets; Owl Drug Co., 16th and Farnam streets; Harvard Phar- " macy, 24th and Farnam streets north east corner 19th and Farnam streets; West End Pharmacy, 49th and Dodge v streets,, under the personal direction of a special Tanlac. representative, and in South Omaha by. Forrest t Meany .Drug Coi Adv. . '