Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 01, 1918, Page 5, Image 5

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    the ' bee - Omaha, Friday, November i, 1918.
REPORTS-SHOW
HOW CAMPAIGN
FUNDJS SPENT
Treasurers of Various Political
Parties and Candidates File
Statements of Expense
irj Capital City.
Washington, Oct 31. (Special
Telegram) Political committees of
varioiisenatorial and house candi
dates are making their returns of ex
penses incurred during the pre-election
period as provided by law
Both republican and democratic na
tional committees have shown the
contributions received. The demo
cratic report shows the funds have
been sent to Arthur F. Mullen.
The republican national commit
tee has made no return as fb the
money that committee has sent toV
.Nebraska for the same purpose.
The democratic congressional
committee has made no return as
tc the money that, committee has
sent to Nebraska for the same pur
pose, i
The democratic x congressional
committee has sent $500 to H. D.
LanJTs of Seward for organization
, work.
Senatorial Campaign.
Ex-Governor Morehead, demo
cratic senatorial candidate in his re
port to the secretary of the senate
states he has received no campaign
contributions Whatsoever but his
paid the Morehead senatorial com
mittee $180 for advertising purposes
and incidentals.
Senator Norris also has received
tfo campaign contributions. He
, 'pent less than $500 for postage and
. traveling expenses and paid ao as-
lessment of $500 to the Nebraska
republican state central committee.
The returns from the congression
al districts is filed with the clerk
of the house are as follows:
First District Frank A. Peterson.
$233M; C F. Reavis, $110.
Second District C. O. Lobeck.
1209; A. VV. Jefferis. $1,186.86.
Thir'd District D. V. Stephens,
' , none; R. E. Evans $12.50
Fourth District-Vw H. Smith,
$53479; M. O. McLaughin, $799.30.
Fifth District A. C. Shallenberg
er, $48.80; W. E. Andrews, $246.01.
Sixth District C. W. Pool, 284.
29; M. P. Kinkaid, $362.30.
The national republican congres
sional committee sent, $1,000 to
each of the following republican
candidates for the lower house of
congress: C. F. Reavis, A. W. Jef
feris, R. E. Evans; M. O. McLaughin-and
W. E. Andrews. -
Judge Kinkaid desired no finan
cial help at the hands of the con
gressional committee.
American
Casualty List
The following Nebraskans and
lowans are named in the casualty
list given out by the government for
Friday morning, November 1:
KILLED IN ACTION.
Basil B. Blevins; nest of kin, C.
L. Blevins, Humeston, la.
Louis E. Odell; next of kin, H. P.
Timberlake, Bedford, la.
DIED OF VOUNDS.
Remmer H. Voss: next of kin.
Henry J. Voss, Carleton. Neb.
WOUNDED, DEGREE UNDE
TERMINED. Lorn Watkins; next of kin, Mrs.
Cora Watkins, Oskaloosa. Ia.
WOUNDED SLIGHTLY.
corp. Claude Tnsworth; next ot
kin, Mrs. Daisy C. Titswcrtb, 181
North Eighteenth street, Otoiaha,
Neb.
Slogan Contest Ends;
x 353 Are Participants;
Winners Known Sunday
The
which
Bee's
prizes
"slogan contest," in
will be awarded for
the best boost Omaha slogans suit
able for use as a banner line on the
first page of The Bee, has proven
one of the most popular of its kind
ever conducted.
The competition has closed with
responses from 353 different per
sons, many ol them sending tn sev
eral suggestions, which will bring
the number of slogans submitted
well over 1,000. From the answers
the 50 best will be taken out to be
in turn submitted .to C C. George,
president of the Chamber of Com
merce, without disclosing the iden
tity cf the contestant, for his judg
ment on them. -
Mr. George will select the win
ners, picking the best for the firt
prize of $5.00, and the next best 10
each to receive a good boolc
The Sunday Bee of November 3
will announce the winners with the
slogans they have presented. In
the meantime, The Bee -ishes to
thank the many contestants lor the
great interest they have shown in
the boniest.
Seattle Puts on Real
"Quarantine for the "Flu"
Seattle, Oct 31. The most dras
tic quarantine, order ever exper
ienced iu Seattlfc was in effect today
under instructions issued last night
by Mayor Ole Hanson, on advice of
the city health' department, as a
means of curbing the epidemic of
Spanish influenza. The order closes
all stores except food and drug
stores at J p. m. Office buildings
also are affected. On Friday stores
and office buildings will be per
mitted to open from 10 to 3 only
and Saturday they will be closed
all day. Decision will be reached
Saturday whether permanent clos
in" will be ordered uirtil the epi
demic is brought under control.
rtun Bundesra Power
1 Still in Saddle, Says Cecil
London, Oct. 31. Via Montreal
Replying to a question in the House
of Commons today, Lord Robert
Cecil, assistant foreign secretary,
asserted that there was no evidence
that the powers of the German
Bundesrat system had in any way
been" modified. The German secre
taries of state were appointed by the
emperor. Lord Robert added, and
presumably were liable to dismissal
by him. It might therefore be as
sumed that the so-called - German
wardabinet did not correspond con
stitutionally with the allied war cab
inets. - ,
The following Nebraskans "and
lowans are named in the casualty
list given out by the government for
Thursday afternoon. October 31:
WOUNDED. SEVERELY.
John R. Ogburn; next of kin, Wil
liam Ogburn, Monroe, Ia.
Norris Briggs; next of kin, Mrs.
Alice G. Briggs. Des Moines, Ia.
Dowd W. Brown; next of kin, S.
C. Brown, Centerville, Ia.
John A. -Carlson; next of kin,
Ernest P. Klauser, Akron, Ia.
Lewis P. Milne; next of kin,
George Milne, Greeley, Neb.
Henry Cyrus Wing; next of kin,
Mrs. Emma Wing, Maquoketa, Ia.
WOUNDED. DEGREE UNDE
TERMINED. Corp. Blaine M. Allen; next of
kin, Mrs. Katherine G. Allen. Lin
coln, Neb. -
Christian ' Farm'; next of kin,
Peter Ci Farni. Nevada. Ia.
LoranD. Galloway; next of kin,
Mrs. C. O. Galloway, Comstock,
Neb. .
Chester Jensen; next of kin, Chris
Jensen, Concord, Neb.
William L. Johnson; next of kin,
Luis Johnson, Bettendorf, Ia.
John A.- O'Sullivan; next of kin.
Frank Coleman, Prosser, Neb.
John W. Schleisman; next of kin,
Adams Schleisman, Linderdale, Ia.
Henry B. Steinkruger; next of j
kin, William Steinkruger, Franklin,
Neb.
The following ca"snalties are re
ported by the commanding general
of the American expeditionary
forces: Killed in action, 17; died of
wounds, 5; died of disease,9; wound
ed, degree undetermined, 182;
wounded slightly, 110. Total. 323.
Killed in Action.
I,t. Albert E. Baesl, Lagrange, O.
Wagoner Charles Afa Cradle, Piedmont,
Mo. i
Herbert Baldwin, Rosevllle, Ark.
- John Ball. Jr., Franklin. N. J.
John Daly, Houston, Tex.
August U. Elder, lrryvtlle. Mo.
!anlel Joseph Jilesklll. Morrlstown, N J.
Mechlin Moore, East Palestine, O.
Ira L. Satterfield,. Bruce, N. C.
George W. Allen, Washington, O.
Basil B. Blevins. Humeston, Ia. '
, Ernest J. Kles. Gilt Edge, Mont.
Etherage Meece, Hall, Ky.
Louis E. Odell, Bedford, Ia.
Edward F. Reutter, Jersey City, N. J.
Walter Rollins, Ashbord, Ala.
Died of Wounds.
Lt. Donald U. McMillan. Detroit, Mich.
Armand Marshfleld, West Mansfield, O.
Paul Felix Kordus. Milwaukee, Wis.
William H. Netcher, Trenton, Utah,
Remmer H. Voss. Carleton, Neb.
Died of Disease. '
Capt. Charles Fendlojr, Tate, G. '
Sergt. Albert H. Davis, Glro O.
' Corp. 'Michael Daly, Andover, Conn.
William Baker, Register, Ga.
Clove R. Cranford;- Clever, Mo.
Floyd Ingram. Amerlcus, Ga.
Kmll y. Kasper, Chicago, 111.
Nazzareno Ticconl. Italy.
Edward Wright. Jacksonville. N. C.
GREAT BILLS
FRAMED UP AT
MOVIE HOUSE
Motion Picture Theaters , to
Observe Lifting of Flu
Ban y Putting on
Special Films.
Omaha's motion picture fans are
to be given a tfteat in the opening
announced after the four-weeks ban
on the theaters. Every one of the
downtown houses has a choice of
fering tor its patrons.
At the Rialto is being brought
back D. W.' Griffith's "The Great
Love." which had a most successful
run here early in September and
which many people were unable to
see. At the Strand will be Con
stance Talmadge in her late far-
ceuse success, bauce for The
Goose."
"Hearts of the World" is the of
fering at the Brandeis, starting a
nine-day run with the matinee show.
At the Empress there will be a
vaudeville bill and Edith Storey in
"The Demon," Saturday and George
Walsh in "On the Jump" the first
half of next week. The Sun will
present J. Warren Kerrigan, finish
ing "A Prisoner of the Pines" on
Saturday with June Elvidge in "The
Lynch Dismissed from
Army tmdJBoard Looks
for . His, Questionnaire
Assistant United States District
Attorney Saxton received a telegram
from the commandant at Camp
Dodge Thursday mornjng saying
that John C Lynch would be dis
missed from military service im
mediately. Conditions around ex
emption board No. 4, where Lynch
was inducted into the service, and
where the storm clouds gathered
thickest when United States Attor
ney Allen started the fire works,
are almost down to normal.
Tony Minardi, clerk, whose resig
nation was accepted as a result of
the Lynch affair, was off the job,
and a still hunt is being conducted
for the questionnaire that Lynch
was supposed to have filed with the
board.
Chief Cleric Southard said he was
not positive that Lynch had ever
filed a questionnaire, but at the time
of his induction he had stated that
he was in class A 1. The mystery
now is, how did Lynch get into class
A 1, and, .if he did, where is the
questionnaire?
ZEEBRUOOE TO
OSTEND IS ONE
BSGjORTRES
Flags Fly- in Ostend as on i
Fete Day,'but Destruction
to Buildings Is Appall
ing; Take Metals.
Appearance of Evil" on Sunday and
Monday The Muse "tkeater will
open up with Tom Moore in his
comedy drama, "Just for Tonight."
All of the' suburban houses of
Omaha have booked star plays for
their opeping and 'for Sunday and
the opening of the theaters prom
ises to be a revel for fans of photoplays.
By Associated Press.
Belgian Army Headquarters in
Flanders, Oct. 31. (Bv Asso
ciated Press.) The roro from
Ostend to ZeebrugRe, which the
Germans recently held, is one con
tinuous fortress, with many guns
silhouetted agains the sky. The
number of guns increases as the
fortified line nears Zeebrugge.
The' town of Blankenberghe, be-,
tween" Zeebrugge and Ostend, is
virtually undamaged but deserted.
All the buildings, have been stripped
of copper and iron,
Ostend, from a distance, looks
exactly as on fefe days in times of
peace. Flags are hanging from
every window and the city is deco
rated gaily. Signs of ruin and
damage, however? become apparent
as soon as the city is entered. Ost
end has suffered mifch. The Casino
is desolate and empty and the walls
Czecho-S!aVs Cut
Railroad Between
Vienna and Berlin
Paris, Oct. 31. Communication
between Agram and Fiume, and
Budapest and Vienna has been
totally interrupted. The Czecho
slovaks have cut the railroad be
tween Berlin and Vienna near Bod
enbach and German trains can only
go as far as Schnadaac according to
a Zurich dispatch to the JonraL
The military governor of Fiume
recently advised the Hungarian gov
ernment that he was without ma
terial and munitions and iinablelo
defend the city. He received orders
to hand over the administration to
the Croatia! national council, which
he did immediately.
. : ,.
nave Deen riddled witn sneu nre.
The maritime station is a complete
wreck. Manv houses have crumbled
to the ground and most of the
bridges in the town have been destroyed.
The fact that not all the bridges
were blown up by the Germans is
commented upon bv military visitors j
to ustena. An aiaerman oi tne
city explained that the German
general staff had given orders to
'destroy all the bridges. However,
the German noncommissioned offi
cers detailed fo the work of de
struction, he added, fell easy vic
tims to persuasive 100 or 200-mark
bills.
FRENCH PAPER
-ASKS COMPLETE
HUN GUARANTEE
Suggests Program for Armis
tice that Would Leave Hun
Helpless During Peace
Negotiations.
Paris, Oct. 31. In an editorial
discuslmg armistice terms, L'ln-
formation suggests the following
conditions:
"Internationalization of the Bas
phorus and the Dardanelles. A
"The occupation or enemy ports
on the Adriatic.
"The surrender of Austrian war
ships. '
"The right to use Austro-Hun-garian
railway lines,
v "The evacuation of Alsace-Lor
raine and territories wrongly occu
pied in the east and west
"Tlfc surrender of arms, muni
tions and submarines.
"Theoccupation ot fortresses and
bridges along thehine and of
Luxembourg and Essen.
"The occupation of Kiel and
Hamburg.
"The removal of mines from ter
ritorial waters.
"The delivery, as a preliminary
compensation for damages, of part
of the enemy merchant marine.
"The cessation of manufacturing
for war purposes."
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DEVON IH IN,
Ja wask mmssk. tm
ARROW
COLLARS
CLUETT FEAROW CXUsJCTXCrrirY.
DEPENDABLE
TAILORING
15121, Dodg St.
George W. Berge
For AttornejrGeneral
Vote for Him
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eJTcUs eLL7 JL7
1OTY
FLU ORDER ENDS
AT
mIDNIGH
T
Business Needs Educated Men and Women as Never Before
r- . ;
' . I
To keep the machinery of war well oiled Uncle Sam must have thousands of trained young men and women for all depart
ments. Our troops, properly equipped and fed now, will hasten the end of the war.
THERE ARE GOOD, PAYING POSITIONS IN BIG BUSINESS AND WITH UNCLE SAM, AWAITING TRAINED
YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN ANp
When We Start to Clear Up the Wreckage of the Vjfar
2Sw
Theaters to Give Patrons Fill After
Long Period of Inactivity.
The tired business man and all the rest
of Omaha may take their fill ot theaters
Saturday. The ban cluing theaters,
schools and churches, will ba lifted to
night "just as the clock strikes 12," and
Saturday will be a busy day. Ask your
self: ARE YOU SANITARY?
IF NOT, WHY NOT?
Bt able to go in stoy crowd without dan
ger. Some were behind before and died.
You be first at last. Use Rains' First Aid
Antiseptic Tablets and live,
DISEASE ia mostly contracted through
the openings of the body, .as the mouth,
nose, urethal, vaginal passage, cuts,
wounds, etc. .most common place of
lodgment and breeding of germs ia the
space located at the back of the 'nose, near
the tonsils, where the mouth, throat, nose
and ear have a common outlet. This space
is a regular Hotbed for the breeding of
Germs of Disease. Therefore, KEEP
THESE CLEAN with RAINS' FIRST AID
ANTISEPTIC TABLETS, a trustworthy
non-poisonous Antiseptic Tablet, to be
made into a solution of strength desired.
Dissolve tablet ia glass hot water,
or. oil vaseline, use as gargle, douche,
wash, or surgical dressing. Unexcelled v-
Tooth Wash.
Tends to prevent contraction and spread
of such infectious and other diseases as I .a
Grippev Tonsilitis. Pneumonia. Ktteumatism, j
Cold in the Head, Fevers, Meningitis. lnv
fantile Paralysis. Hay Fever, Pyorrhoea,
etc. Used as a Douche in the nose, it pro
motes free breathing at oce and clears
the head.
WOMEN! WHY SUFFER? Thousands
of women are today suffering from female
weakness because they are either too poor
or too timid to see a vdoetor. To such
these Antiseptic Tablets made into a solu
tion with hot water and used as an injec- .
tion, doucfie or spray will serve a useful
purpose. In Catarrh, Leucorrhoea and
other conditions involving hypersecretions
from mucous surfaces it is most beneficial. ,
RAINS' FIRST AID ANTISEPTIC TAB
LETS are an alkaline tablet of a recog- 1
nised formula above criticism on the part
of any physician, no matter what his
standing. 60e bottle month's supply.
Four cents' worth of Rains' First Aid
Antiseptic Tablets will make same quanti
ty of an antiseptic solution that you have
been in the habit of paying SO cents for
and on which the druggist would make 100
per cent 'more profits. Therefore beware
of unscrupulous druggists and other who
would sell you expensive and perhaps ae-H
liquid preparations instead of Rains', First
Aid Antiseptic Tablets.
KEEP A CLEAR HEAD Indispensable
to Singers, Actors nd Public Speaker.
Conscientious Physicians, Dentists.
Army Officer. Superintendents of Pub
lic Schools, Teachers, Mothers, Father;
and others, who are anxious to frevent the
spread of disease will take pleasure in
using and recommending
Business
usvness
A hitify and
Education
H. B. Boyles, Pres.
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Will Be the Highest Priced Type of Skill on the Market
AMERICAN BUSINESS
has arisen to its opportunity during this critical period. It has attained a head
way of speed in production, operation and distribution which will never be lost.
To meet the demand for this increased pace set by the gigantic strides of war
pressure there will be a constantly increasing need of minds trained to handle
big problems in a big way' The young man and the young woman of today
stands at the threshhold of the theater of great adventures in the business of
tomorrow, it is your chance to take your place lh the new world which will
arise Aladdin-like tomorrow, alfd which needs your aid today. ,
BOYLES COLLEGE
jii ni 1 1 1 i I. 11 i j 1
has met the call for war workers with its full strength and
, hundreds of its students are meeting the Hun today under ser
'vice with the United States i Government and others with the
nation's business firms. y
COMMERCIAL COURSES FOR YOUR SELECTION.
Business Course
Private Secretarial Course
Complete Commercial Course
Civil Service Branches v '
Shorthand and Typewriting
Stenotype Course
Telegraphy Course
Comptometer Course
Penmanship Course
Preparatory and English
Branches.
Here
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ARE YOU GOING TO GRASP IT?
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SCHOOL RE-OPENS MONDAY
NOVEMBER 4 BOTH DAY AND NIGHT.
RAINS'
(First Aid Antiseptic Tablets
Non-PffisSSois-Niui-lrriUting
Thermomenter Dops to 22
Degrees Above in O'Neill
The railroad announce the re
turn of winterish weather out in the ;
ftate. This morning temperatures
ranped all the wa from 22 ahove
in O'Neill to 45 above in the south
ern portion of the state.
Wednesday night tain and snow
wa general. In many parts of the
central portion of the state snow
fell to a deoth of one-half to an inch.
Elsewhere, except a!ong the Mis-K For sal by drajrsrists or maid parcel
soon river tal'ey. tfere was a dm- 4 reT-tvrJe ZJlT.'
, " " r ,l - t, j tie. By Prrjidrvs Vtvi. Storey c Burxesi-
ling rain most pi tue night. VtaK Oohfc-A4n -.
BRUCE DRUG CO, ,
R!CHARDSON DRUG CO,
OMAHA DISTRIBUTORS.
OMAHA, NEBRASKA
18th and Harney Sts. Douglas 1565.
V
H. B. BOYLES
President.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA
Merriam Block. Phone 576.
LI
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