Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 06, 1918, Page 4, Image 4

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THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, . .NOVEMBER 6. 1918.
STATE BOARD
OPPOSES RAISE
j IN RAIL RATES
Government Suggestion of 80
Per Cent Boost Does Not
: Meet With Favor. of
? Nebraska Officers.
'" 1
J Frcm a Staff Correspondent.
Lincoln, Nov. 5. (Special.) A
'raise in freight-rates, amounting to
'.about 80 per cent on an average, is
proposed by Secretary W. G. Mc-
jilAdoo in a communication sent to
'the state railway commission. Mr.
tMcAdoo is of the opinion that there
should be a more uniform rate in
i sections where conditions are sub
stantially identical.
"The state railway commission
..fails to see much in the proposi
tion of Mr. McAdoo and comes
jjback with a long communication,
, ijwhich ends as follows:
I "The general unsettled condition
of the freight rates in eastern Jrunk
tline territory and in the State of
Nebraska in particular, and the ex
ceedingly abnormal business condi
t ?tions at the present time, leads us
' to the conclusion that this is fiot an
opportune time to make radical
i changes in the class freight sched
ules, and we would therefore be op
j posed to an attempt at this time,
to standardize class rates for the
jwhole western territory."
Boy Who Dies at Sea Buried
t With Full Military Honors
Rushville, Neb., Nov. 5. (Special)
jjThefirst Rushville boy to die in the
service was buried here today. Emil
lPfisterer, only son of Mr. and Mrs.
Adolph Pfisterer, died at sea and
i the body was brought from New
ifVork, arriving today,
g Funeral services were conducted
-ty Father Nepper who preached the
"sermon from the porch of the par
jionage as the church was too small
JJto accommodate the crowd.
'. h Home guards furnished an escort
land the deceased was given the
, honors of a military funeral.
j This is the first interment in the
New Catholic cemetery east of town.
i Beatrice Boy Slightly
I Wounded in Battle
Beatrice, Neb., Nov. 5. (Special.)
Mr. and Mrs. James Langdale re
ceived a letter from their son,
Christopher, who is with the Amer
. i i
The Bee's
Free Shoe Fund
To Buy Shoes
For Shoeless Children
Every day sees a few of Omaha's
needy kiddies supplied with good
new shoes from The Bee's shoe
fund, and every day sees the con
tributions come in that are to
keep the work going as long as
there are any needy children to
supply.
All kinds of people send in
money to the fund. "The Colonel's
lady and Judy O'Grady" are both
glad to be of assistance, for suf
fering childhood appeals to every
one, Previously acknowledged. .$493.25
All Night Poker club 3.00
Anton Jensen, Winside,
Neb 5.00
A Friend, Ravenna, Neb. ... 2.00
Phil Harlan, Beaver City,
Neb 5.00
A Friend, Riverton Neb... 1.00
W. A. Piel 5.00
T. J. Hansen, Grand Island,
Neb 2.00
Mrs. J. R. N 5.00
ican troops, stating that he was
wounded in the left hand in going
over the top in the St. Miheil sal
ient. He is in a hospital recovering
from his wounds, and says that he
is afraid the war will be1 over before
he gets out.
Vaclav Rezabek of Wilber is ly
ing dangerously wounded in a local
hospital as the result of his mother,
Mrs. Joseph Rezabek, playfully
pointing a shotgun at him, which
she did not know was loaded, and
pulling the trigger. The charge
tore through his right side piercing
the lung.
Tecumseh Boy Is Kil!3d
In Action on Battle Front
Tecumseh, Neb., Nov. 5. (Spe
cial) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Little
have just received word that their
son, George Little, was killed ii. ac
tion in France on September 26.
George Little was a volunteer in the
army-, having gone to training camp
at Deming, N. M.. with the old Com
pany C, Fifth Nebraska regiment
of Beatrice. His age was.23 years.
Micheal Davey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Feter H. Davey of Tecumseh,
died at South Bend, Ind., last night.
He went there in September and
had entered Notre Dame university,
taking the student military training
course. Mr. Davey was a victim of
pneumonia, following influenza. He
was aged but It years. The body
will bebrought home for burial.
Schuyler Swain is
Fined for Sending
, Obscene Mail Matter
Adolph Dworak, wealthy young
man from Schuyler, Neb., pleaded
guilty in United States court Tues
day afternoon, on the charge of
having sent unmailabh matter
through the mail. Dworak in Au
gust, 1917, sent an obscene letter
to a young lady at Lincoln, Neb.,
and was later indicted by the grand
jury. About the time the indict
ment was returned he joined the
army, but was later discharged on
account of physical disability.
After a so.'ourn in California he
returned to Schuyler and last week
married a handsome young lady of
that town. The young couple start
ed on their honeymoon, stopping at
an Omaha hotel, where federal of
ficials located them and ruthlessly
marched the handsome young ben
edict to the county jail, in spite of
the sobing and pleading of the bride.
Judge Woodrough after lecturing
Dwoorak on the seriousness of the
charge fined the defendant $5.00,
telling him not to think over "what
ttw as, but what it might have been."
The young wife appeared in court,
and when the agony was over, they
left arm in arm, a badly scared, but
much relieved brfde and groom.
North Platte Pioneer
Celebrates Ninety
Second Birthday
North Platte, Neb., Nov. 5.V-(Spe-cial
Telegram.) Charles B. Mc
Donald, a pioneer resident, cele
brated his 92nd birthday last
week. Hee was born near Mor
ristown, Tenn.; came to Nebraska
in 1855, to Cottonwood Springs in
1860, and to this city in 1872. He
has been a leading banker here ,for
40 years and still takes an active
part in his business and public af
fairs. He is the father of W. H.
McDonald, who was the first white
child born in Lincoln county; Mrs.
William Reynolds, James B. Mc
Donald of Omaha, and grandfather
of Charles M. Reynolds of Omaha,
who married Miss Irene Neville, sis
ter of the governor.
Norfolk Postmaster Dead;
Son Not Expected to Live
Norfolk, Neb., Nov. 5. (Special
Telegram.) Lloyd Nelson, son ot
Postmaster Nelson who died Mon
day night, is very low in a local hos
pital with pneumonia. Arrange
ments for the Nelson funeral have
not been made.
PETROGRAD IS x
DESERTED AND
STARVING CITY
Horses Drop Dead on Streets
and People Eat Carcasses;
Reds More Autocratic
Than Czar.
New York, Nov. 5. Norman
Armour of Chicago, a secretary at
tached to the one time American
embassy at Petrograd. and who ac
companied the embassy to Moscow
and then to Vologda, reached here
today on his way to Washington
with reports for the Department of
State. He came by the wa"y of Fin
land. "Petrograd,' he said, "was a de
serted and starving city when I left.
You notice a horse standing in a
street hitched to a public cab. In
another minute the horse has
dropped dead of starvation. You
pass that way again in an hour and
the people have cut the dead animal
to pieces and carried it away for
food. The bolsheviki are more auto
cratic than the czar and his officers
ever dared be, and conditions in
Russia this v inter will be beyond
description."
With Mr. Armour came Dr. Wil
liam C. Huntington, commercial at
tache of the American embassy in
Russia, and Felix Willoughby Smith,
the American consul at Tiflis.
Influenza Breaks Out in
State Hospital at Norfolk
Norfolk, Neb., Nov. 5. (Special
Telegram.) An epidemic of influ
enza has broken out in the State
Hospital for Insane here. Forty
patients are isolated and three pa
tients and one attendant have died
since Saturday. The epidemic in
the city is about holding its own.
Watertown Store Burns.
Kearney,-Neb., Nov. 5. (Special
Telegram.) The general store and
postoffice at Watertown, on the
Kearney and Black Hills line, were
burned early today. The loss will
reach $15,000.
This is the only store at Water
t -wn.
Cuba Recognizes Czechs.
Havana, Nov. 5. The Cuban gov
ernment has recognized the bellig
erency of the Czecho-Slovaks. A
presidential decree to this effect was
published in the official gazette today.
If
si r
TKereAre
A Thous and Ways
fco help the Government
not only during the war
but immediately after
the war.
Household Economy Is One
Take the sugar subject
for instance:
For a table
drink select
the one re
quiring the
least sugar
WASTE OF SUGAR
THE following bulletin was among
the most forceful and effective
bits of conservation propaganda at
the New York Food Show last month.
It was put out by the National Sugar
Refining Company of New Jersey:
"Save the waste! N
"One hundred million cups coffee used
daily in United States.
"Seventy million cups tea used daily
in United States. -,
"One hundred and seventy million
cups tea and coffee.
If even an average of half a tea
spoonful of sugar per cup is left undis
solved at the bottom of cups of tea and
coffee the waste would be 1,700,000
pounds of sugar daily.
"Stir your sugar until it dissolves.
It's estimated that one-third to one-half
of all sugars used in homes is used in
tea and coffee. Think it over how is it
in your home? Isn't there a chance for
saving?"
From New York Times
Sunday, September 29. 1918.
iMT
P0SH1M
Tastes like excellent coffee
Postum Needs Less Sugar
"There's a Reason"
i in im r-; j:ii.iiL j ! im i im wim'iiw iniimn iiiiiMjiHi'y yi
I ;
AWARD HERO
MEDALS
Distinguished service crosses
have been awarded by General
Pershing to the following officers
and men for acts of extraordinary
heroism:
Maj. Carl Supatz; First Lt.
Karl G. Tayne, Belmont, Mass.;
First Lieut. Cecil G. Sellers. Mem
phis Tenn.; First Lieut. Bradley J.
Gaylord, Buffalo. N. Y.; First Lieut.
Charles R. Dolive. Chicago, 111.;
First Lieut. J. Dickinson Este.
FRENCH TROOPS
FORGE HUN BACK
AT MM POINTS
General Advance Follows Ac
tivities'Upon Oise and Aisne;
vGermans Are Fleeing in
the Guise Sector.
Paris, Nov. 5. French successes
have compelled the Germans to
make new withdrawals at several
points along the front, according to
the war office statement today. Be
tween the Oise and the Aisne the
French have advanced about one
mile on a five-mile front.
The French First army resumed
the attack this morning -and. is mak
ing progress.
French troops continue success
fully to pursue the Germans in the
region of Guise, northeast of which
they have taken the village of Ber-gues-Sur-Sambre.
Between Sissonne and Chateau
Porcien, on a front of more than
fifteen miles, the French have pene
trated the Hunding line of the Ger
mans. The French are making a
general advance from east of St.
Quentin le Petit to the outskirts. of
Herpy.
Chicago Railways Open
Joint Ticket Offices
ChiVao-o. Nov. 5. More than 2.000
railroad tickets were sold, it was
stated tnHav. as the result of the
first day's business of the consoli
dated ticket orhce established by tne
TIniteH States railwav administra
tion, opened to the public yesterday.
The othce is in two parts, one nana-lino-
the railroads east and south and
the other the western business.
Fourteen lines are represented in
thp past-south office and eieht in
the western. There are 163 em
ployes in the double office. Man
icror rinrk of the east-south office
stated today he expected to do a
business of $10,000,000 annually, and
L. H. McCormick, manager of the
western office said he estimated that
he-would take in at least ?8,UUU,UUU.
Many Face Famine as
Food Ship Turns Back
Seattle, Wash., Nov. 5. Closing
of navigation on the Kuskokwim
river; Alaska, made the little power
schooner Ruby lose its race to carry
the winter's supplies to the miners
and prospectors in the Kuskokwim
district. Advices today from Sew
ard said the Ruby turned back there,
where her cargo will be discharged
prior to the vessel's sailing south. A
mcnth ago the Ruby tried to reach
the Kuskokwim but was forced back
to Seward, battered and leaking, as
a result of heavy gales in the gulf
of Alaska.
Nearly a thousand whites and na
tives in the Kuskokwim district face
the prospect of a hard winter with
scanty supplies.
Italians Take 150,000
Prisoners in Trentino
Washington, Nov. 5. An official
dispatch from Rome today , telling
results of the vfinal Austrian defeat
cava in the armv of the Trentine
alone, over 150,000 prisoners fell in
to the hands ot.tne Italians.
Vow 5Trent the chief
city of the Trentino, was entered at
3:15 o clock Sunday anernoon uy
Italian cavalry, Alpini and artillery,
according to a semi-official note is
tnAiv crivirnr details of the
swift advance of the First army on
that city. More than zu.uuu aus
the commander of
the 50th, Scheutzen, division, were
captured. the itanan nag was
u.'ctol nver thp rastle of Buon Gon-
ziglio amid enthusiastic outbursts
of the population.
Kaiser Gives Flock
of Imperial Palaces
for Use as Hospitals
London, Nov. 5. Emperor Wil
liam has ordered that 60 imperial
palaces, including the famous
Palace of Sans Souci, be converted
into hospitals and recreation
homes for invalids, according to
a Copenhagen dispatch to the Ex
change Telegraphcompany.
Italy Honors Gorgas.
Washington, Nov. 5. Maj.-Gen.
William C. Gorgas has been made a
grand officer of the Order of the
? T-,1,r iii rproerntion Ot
irown ui im'j v .
his services in military sanitation.
The Weather
73
62
62
.00
Compart, "'"m. Mil.
Highest yesterdRy.. 68 V)
Lowest yeteraay "
Mean temperature.. 6
l-reeipiiauon ...... -.... rtnar,
Temperature ana viwo
tures from the normal:
MnmiRl temDerature "
Kxoess for the day........ "
Total excess elnce March 1
Normal precipitation
. ,v,ji Hnv 05 Inch
Total rainfall since March 1..1J.03 nchei
Deficiency since Marcn l " " 1 L
Deficiency for cor. period, 1917. 6.S0 nches
Deficiency for cor. period. 1916.13.20 Inches
A Reports From Stations at 1 P. M.
Station and State Temp. High- Rain-
ihr. 7 d. m. est. iau.
Cheyenne, snowlns; ....38
Davenport, clear 64
Des Moines, pt cldy..62
Dodge City, cloudy.... 62
Lander, snowing 26
North Platte, clear... 62
Omaha cloudy 68
Vueblo, clear 64
Rald City, clear 38
Salt Lake City, cloudy. 38
Santa Fe, clear 62
Sheridan, snowing ,...2
Gl,,w Cltv rlmirlv. . . .R4
"1 lnuicaws iraca ox precipuauun.
li A, WELSH, Meteorolef lsU
est.
60
2
68
68
38
68
68
70
60
40
68
12
61
RUSSIAN REDS
GET IN LINE FOR
PEACEPARLEY
Bolshiviki Send Note Asking
Allies to Open Negotiations
for Ending of Hos
tilities. London, Nov. 5. The bolshevik
government of Russia, as reported
from Petrograd, has handed the neu
tral ministers a note for transmis
sion to the entente nations asking
for the opening of peace negotia
tions in order that hostilities be
tween the allies and the soviet gov
ernment may be ended, says an
Exchange Telegraph dispatch from
Copenhagen.
The note asks the allies to decide
upon the time and place, for the
holding of the negotiations. '
FLU EPIDEMIC
SPREADING OVER
CIVILIZED WORLD
Germ Eludes Bacteriofogists
and Health Authorities
Are Baffled.
The Influenza epidemic continues
unabated. Its ravages are not con
fined to this city or state or even to
the United States, and cable reports
indicate that it is rapidjy spreading
over the civilized world. It has baf
fled medical skill to an unusual ex
tent and has claimed more victims
perhaps than any other epidemic in
a score of years. The germ has elud
ed the Bacteriologists and medical
men now agree that the best cure is
prevention.
The surest prevention i3 to build
up the bodily powers of resistance
and to get the system in the best
physical condition possible. It is
now universally agreed that it is
possible to perfect the powers of re
sistance of the human system so
that it can throw off almost any in
fection not excepting Spanish in
fluenza. It has been discovered that per
sons who are weak and rundown are
the earliest victims, and if you find
yourself tired or weak and losing
flesh, or if you are in a generally
rundown condition and below your
normal weight, this warning should
be heeded promptly.
If you are in this condition noth
ing on earth will build you up and
strengthen you like Tanlac, which
contains the most powerful tonic
properties known to science. As a
reconstructive tonic and system
builder it is without an equal and
contains the very elements needed
by the system to give you fighting
strength to ward off the Influenza
s;erm. This is a statement of facts
and is supported by the recognized
authorities and reference works, in-
i-"ri;nT tM United States Dispensa
tory and the Kncyclopoeda Bnttan
nica and leading textbooks used in
the school of medicine. This state
ment is further proven by the fact
that millions of persons who have
actually taken Tanlac have testi
fied to its extraordinary merit as a
medicine, ana by the fact that Tan
lac is today having the greatest sale
of any tonic on the American mar
ket, over Eleven Million bottles hav
ing been sold within the past three
years.
Tanlac is also the ideal strength
ening tonic for persons who are suf
fering from the after-effects of In
fluenza, Grippe or Bronchial trou
bles and hundreds of thousands are
using it daily with the most gratify
ing results.
In connection with the Tanlac
treatment "it is necessary to keep
the bowels open by taking Tanlac
Laxative Tablets, samples of which
are included with every bottle of
Tanlac. 1
Tanlac is sold in Omaha by all
Sherman & McConnell Drug Com
pany's stores.. Harvard Pharmacy
and West End Pharmacy under the
personal direction of a special Tan
lac representative. Also Forrest
and Meany Drug Company in South
Omaha and the leading druggist in
each city and town throughout the
state of Nebraska. Adv.
.SILVER
JUBILEE!
Will you help letnt? t
"How would you advise
me to observe my 25th
anniversary as an Ear Spe
cialist?" wat the question
Specialist Sproule asked
some of his friends. Their
answer was unanimously
"Giveaway a certain num
ber, of. your treatments for
Head Nolne., ire.-
After careful consideration, the Swlallst hai
decided to do this, and lie wants every suffer
er from Head Noises to help him celebrate by
ending for a Fre Treatment.
Just 25 years aeo. lie heron ruriin this trouble
and he has kept right on doing; It for quarter
)f s century. Hundreds and hundreds of people
who never thought to bt free front those) Incea-
unt. terrlhltj noises have aeeured a blessed Quiet
ness by the use or uts treatment.
Moreover, everv Head Noises sufferer's heart
confirms the medical truth that his trouble Is
only ton surely a red lantern of warning to tell
of coming Deafness. Whether the ear-sounds are
constant er occasional whether the hearing la
still acute or Impaired to a greater nr leas extent.
Deafness will come. What more pitiful affliction t
To he starving1 for love, ret unable to hear a word
or sympstny. shut out rrom friends ana compan
lonshln to be only a burden and annoyance to
others! ,
, FREE
HEAD NOISES
TREATMENT
To Mlanrata hli Silver Jubilee. Specialist
Sprouts efferi free trtatmsnt (or i short time, to
ivtry Head Noises auflarer who reads thus Uses.
He docs thia In response to the requests of peo
ple Just like you, ivlin suffered from Head Noises
tnd approaching Deafness, and who have been
entirely cured by his treatment.
Don't mlas this Silver opportunity. Just alt
down and write a note to 8iciallst Hproulo ssklng
'or a "Jubilee Free Treatment," or write "Jubilee
rree ireatnient on a posi rsru, iau yimr iuu
name and address, and tin treatment will come
to you as quickly as the malls can bring It.
Ynu ran then tee this Method for yourself. It
won't cost you a cent. Don't delay and don't hesi
tate. Get In line to have a Jubilee yourself hv
getting rid of those terrible noises. Think how
happy you would be to bt free from them I
Wrltt right NOW. Send for a Jubilee Free Head
Noltet Treatment and share In the JubUee.
Dealntss Specialist Sproult.
tit Trad BuUilM. Boitop, Matt. "
"Flu" Germ Grabs at Your
Throat! Stop the Cough Quick!
Throat Inflammation One of the Symptoms of Influenza.
Stop It Quick With Soothing, Powerful "Ulypto Ointment"
"Spanish Influent" has many
gymptomi, and couch la on of
them. It la one of the moat dan
rerous. The "flu" gem la taken
in through the mouth and nose, and
rushet for the throat and then the
luntrsl From the throat it may ttet
to the lungs over night: then it is
a f iuht for life. Remember thia. a
local inflammation-reducina; treat
ment ia as necessary and impera
tive at an internal one.
Get after that throat inflamma
tion as fast as. you can move.
"Ulypto Ointment" is the thing: it
has a very powerful effect on in
flammations and congestions. It
Itives blessed relief. It soothes won
derfully. It never blisters. It con
tains no mustardy odor or mustard
ingredient. Even ita odor ia tooth
ing. On application will prove ita
power. It has the same result on
inflammations and congestions in
chest culds. earache. headache,
neuralgia, back-paint, head colds,
nose-stoppage, watery eyes, meet
ing, rheumatism, ttiff muscles or
joints. You might wake up tomor
row morning and straining for air,
learn that the "flu" germ is in riot
ous possession of your lungs. Use
"Ulypto Ointment" now; look at
the facts in the face; take no
chances.
"Ulypto Ointment" Is sold at all
drug Ktores at 2Ro and fiOc a jar,
or sent on receipt of price by the
MacMiilan Chemical Co., Falls City,
Neb.
For Sal and Recomraended in Omaha by Sherman & McConnell's 8
Store, Merritt Drug Co., Beaton Drug Co., Dundee Pharmacy, Green's
Pharmacy.
UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION
W. G. McADOO, Director General of Railroad
PLEASE SAVE YOUR OWN TIME
' And help prevent congestion at ticket office by buying
INTERCHANGEABLE SCRIP B0rKS
Good for bearer or any number of person on all pattenger
train of all railroads under Federal Control.
On sale at all ticket offices
INQUIRE AT CONSOLIDATED TICKET OFFICE
1416 Dodge Street. Phone Douglas 1684.
Is This Your Bill?
a
"The Sins of the Flesh" are punished in this
world not in the next.
Disease is not an accident, nor is it sent
by Providence. It is Nature's punishment
for the breaking of her laws.
Hemorrhoids, for example, occasion an
infinite degree of discomfort, suffering and
misery. So does a fissure or a fistula.
But such punishments are meted out to
those wh6 sinagainst Nature in two ways,
by neglecting to maintain regular, easy,
thorough evacuation of the bowels who
form the bad habit of constipation, or what
is a worse habit, the taking of pills, castor
oil, purgative mineral waters, 4 '.Its, etc., with
the mistaken idea of overcoming constipation
by forcing the boweJs,to move unnaturally.
But the Nujol Treatment for Constipation
prevents such sins ot the flesh, or mitigates
the punishment therefor. .
Nujol helps to re-establish easy, regular,
thorough evacuation of the bowels.
Nujol is not a drug, does not act like any
drug.
Nujol is absolutely harmless.
Nujol keeps the waste matter soft, moist,
and'feasily voided.
Nujol is not absorbed, does not affect the
body acts as a mechanical lubricant, which
can be used for any length of time.
Get Nujol from your druggist. Take
Nujol according to directions.
Nujol Laboratories
y STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY)
, 58 Broadwiy, New York
Vnrflift0 2 NUJOL is sold only in
, n urmng . sealed bottles beari
Nujol Trade Mark. Insist on NUJOL. You
may tuffer from substitutes.
rrs :
Whenever you sense a sick
headache, or feel a bilious
attack coming on, ward it
off by the timely use of
BEECHflM'S
PILLS.
Lavawt SaJ of An 7 MacBclna In tk World.
Sold antTwaar. I Boa, 10c, 29.
Bee Want Ads Are the Best Bus
iness Boosters, - " !
uticuraiSoap
-uu winiment ror
Skin Troubles
MiTriE
s t IVER
I PIUS.
TOR HtADACWE.
FOR BILIOUSNESS!
FOR COXSHMTIOXJ
FORCONPUXHXt