Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1919)
BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAY' 14, 1919. ClaSp Growth depend upon htir culture, fk I and hair culture begins I M with scalp cleanliness, li'lll orowtti stops and bald ness begins when the scalp and hair are not cleansed regularly and thoroughly and in the right manner. If VOUt hair it dull, oilv Ivfl or dry and brittle, use QUINEGG v Chckipoo Quinefg will allow the tiny oil glands to release just the right amount of oil to keep your hair soft, silky, healthy and vigorous. Large Bottle 50c "BiFalrWilbYoiirKilr." II hM fr'-l vaiail IIIMIWHinaMa IwU I IIM1I!!III1!I!IIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIII!III f If your own druggist does not have Quinegg Shampoo, you will find it on sale and recommended by Sherman MeConnell Drug Store, Beaton Drug Co., and Merrttt Drue Co. I Hairs Will Vanish After This Treatment (Toilet Helps) You can keep your skin free from hair or fuzz by the occasional use of plain delatone and in ujng it you need have no fear of marring or in juring the skin. A thick paste is made by mixing some of the pow dered delatone with water. Then spread on the hairs and after 2 or 3 minutes rub off, wash the skin and all traces of hair have vanished. Be careful, however, ' to get real delatone. Adv. FIREMAN HAD NARROW ESCAPE y HEDECLARES Acute ' Indigestion Came L Near Ending His Life ; Tanlac Overcomes Troubles. . "A little less than two years ago, when I first began taking Tanlac,?' said J.-Sv Pence of 53 North Cham bers street, Galesburg, while in the Hoover-Lott drug store recently, "I onlv weighed one hundred and twenty-five pounds and was one of the sickest men you ever saw; but now I tip the beam at one hundred and eighty pounds and never have an ache or pain." Mr. Pence is a well known C. B. & Q. fireman and has been railroading for eighteen years. - His statement regarding Tanlac. while indeed re- markable, is by no means unusual, as many hundreds have testified to having used this medicine with the same wonderful results. "Something like fourteen years ago," he continued- "my stomach got out of order and I started down hill. I first lost my appetite and got to where nothing wpuld tempt me to want to eat. Then I got to the place where I never dared eat any thing except the very lightest of foods and even this would cause al most unbearable cramping pains in my stomachj and lots of times the gas would shove up around my heart and smother me so I would have to lie down for several hours. , When I got to where I couldn't eat any of the most nourishing foods, I went down hill in a hurry, and got so I couldn't hold out to work all day. You just don't know how heavy a shovel of coal was to me; it was just all I could do to get it into the firebox and I tell you I was almost a hervous and physical wreck. I hadn't had a real night's sleep in seven or eight years, and when I was at my worst, there were weeks at a time when I coulrtn't close my eyes in sleep at all. "One day after I had been com pelled to quit my job on account of my condition, I started up town, and when I reached the corner where the Bank of Galesburg stands I felt awfully queer. Spots came before my eyes, a chill came over me and then all I remember was the side walk looked like it was coming up an a. I fell to the ground. I had taken a sudden spell of acute in digestion and nervous exhaustion and I hardly escaped with my life. They took me to the hospital where I stayed for four weeks and when I got home I lived on nothing but soups for weeks. I was nothing but skin and bones and nothing helped me a particle, and my wife had been told I would never get well. While in this shape, a good C. B. & Q. engineer friend of mine came to see me and pleaded with me to try Tan lac, saying it would bring me out of the rut like it had him. Well, I had 'em to get me a bottle, and I shall always believe I owe my life to this great medicine. I had not finished my second bottle until I was up and around. I soon wanted something substantial to eat, and now I am sound and well, eat just anything and am working every day in the week, so I must sny Tanlac is won derful" Tanlac is sold in Omaha by all Sherman &j MeConnell Drug Com pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy and West End Pharmacy. Also For rest and Meaney Drug Company in South Omaha and the leading drug gist in each city and town through out the state of Nebraska. Adv. Bee Want Ads pay big profits to the people who read them. COLONEL MACRAE DINNER GUEST OF OMAHA RANKERS Back From Overseas, Bluffs Doctor Details Experiences in Hospital. Caring for the Wounded. The Bankers' club of Omaha had as its guest of honor at a dinner last night Col. Donald Macrae 'of Coun cil Bluffs, commander of Mobile Hospital No. 1. He returned from France at the head of his hospital 'unit a week ago. The "dinner was served in the ori ental room of the Blackstone hotel. Officials of banks in Omaha, Coun cil Bluffs, Benson and Florence were there. It was one of the regular meetings of the club and was desig nated "Lincoln night." The following bankers from Lin coln were present: W. B. Ryons, George W. Woods, E. Ei Emmett,. Carl Weil, M. W. Folsom and L. B. Howev. " Former Senator Millard, president of the Omaha National bank, pre sided. Colonel Macrae was the only speaker. He appeared in full over seas uniform. He told the story of his experiences at the front, where he said many wonderful cures re sulted from the up-to-date surgical methods and hygienic regulations. "In the 22 weeks our hospital unit was in active service we operated on about 7,000 men," said Colonel Mac rae. "Surgeons worked in relays. Each team worked usually 12 hours, with one-half hour off in which to eat. When necessary, as during a great battle like Chateau-Thierry and the Argonne forest, we worked 48 hours without sleep or rest." Federal Land Bank of Omaha Sets Record for Four Months This Year . The Federal Land bank of Omaha during" February, March and April, according to President Hogan, loaned more than $11,000,000, estab lishing a record. A stock dividend of 6 per cent per annum was declared. Twenty-five per cent of the net earnings to date were placed to a reserve account. According to Mr. Hogan the vol ume of business done by the bank at present assures another 6 per cent dividend for 1919. More than 7,700 farmers are now members of the 362 National Farm Loan associations in Iowa, Nebras kaSouth Dakota and Wyoming. Io wa has 128 associations. It is stated by Mr. Hogan that it is now possible for nearly every farmer in the four states comprising the Eighth federal land bank district to obtain a loan through a local asso ciation already organized in his com munity. Ask That 39th and Farnam Be Restricted District The city clerk has received a pe tition from property owners who ask that the neighborhood of Thirty ninth and Farnam streets be de clared a restricted residence dis trict, according to the provisions of a law which gives the city council authority to designate restricted areast The prospective erection of a hospital at Thirty-ninth and Far nam streets prompted the petition. Body of Man Killed by Train Is Identified by Relatives The body of the man who was killed by a Union Pacific train six miles west of Lane cutoff yesterday afternoon has been identified as that of Henry Cornelius, who lived near Blair, Neb. His parents and several brothers and sisters live on a farm near Blair. The body was brought to Omaha. Relatives ar rived here yesterday. Brief City News lighting Fltree Bargees -Granden Co. Bare Root Print It Beacon Press. Burglary Ins. Wheeler & Welpton . King Ak Issues Call Positions will be assigned the working erew of the Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben at the den Wednesday evening. All mem bers desirous of a Job in 181 show should be on band at 8 o'clock. Sue for Personal Injuries Richard Price haa filed suit in district court against the Anderson company for $10,000 for Injuries which he says he sustained when he fell down an elevator shaft in the building at 1116 Farnam street, November 6, 1818. City Not Liable For Bill The city . legal department has decided that the city is not liable for a hos pital bill of $85 Incurred by Private Charles Coleman, shot by Detective Knudtson, March 19. Coleman sent the bill to the city council in the form of a claim. Catches Four Coyotes Four young coyotes have been received by Gus Miller of the juvenile court from a farmer who caught them near Millard. ' The farmer wants Mr. Miller to sell them and give the proceeds to charity. The ani mals are 6 weeks old and "cute." , Remove 180 Gall Stones Mrs. Bertha Diedrlch of North Platte was brought to Omaha yesterday, and at St. Joseph hospital submitted to an operation that resulted in the re moval of 180 gall stones, some of them three-quarters of an inch In diameter. She is getting along very nicely. - Suit Against Three Men The American Investors' corporation has tiled suit in district court asking $20,000 each from W. A. McWhor ter, J. Masse and Charles 1 Dundy, alleging this sum to be due from transactions in promotion of the Berg company, a potash concern, which was merged later Into the American Investors corporation. Bradley to Chicago Superin tendent W. W. Bradley of the Humane society will go to Chicago Sunday to attend a regional cniid welfare conference under the aus pices of the Federal Children's bureau. Miss Julia mtnrop is neaa of the bureau. Ten sociological ex perts from other countries will attend the conference, which will be held on Monday and Tuesday. Americanism One of Features of Meeting of Veterans of Late War "It was a great: demonstration of genuine Americanism," was ' the sentiment expressed by Colonel Maher, Allan Tukey and T. J. Mc Guire, when they returned from St Louis, where they attended a caucus of the American Legion, an orga nization of veterans of the war., The Omaha delegates stated that Lt. Col. Theodore Rooievelt went away a bigger man than when he first entered the caucus. For more than an hour 1,048 delegates cheered Roosevelt and insisted that he ac cept the presidency of the legion; but he steadfastly refused. The Omaha men stated that the St. Louis meeting did not have an ounce of selfishness; that generals nominated privates and privates told generals to sit down when the occasion seemed to warrant such commands. Delegates were from every state except the Carolinas. No effort will be made to make the organization permanent until a national conven tion shall be called next November in Minneapolis, when it is believed most of the overseas men will have returned. Nebraska will be en titled to four delegates at large and one additional delegate for every 1,000 members, at the Minneapolis meeting. ' . Good Fellowship Body of C. of C. Visits SoutfiSide The good fellowship committee of the Chamber of Commerce dined at the Omaha Live Stock exchange Monday afternoon. , Will H. Wood, president of the exchange, presided at the luncheon. Addresses were delivered by J. W. Gamble, Robert Manley, Everett Buckingham and Bruce McCulloch. Music was furnished by the Cham ber of Commerce drum corps. Co-Operation Capital and Surplus Over $2,000,000 mm. Mil fit i The interests of the business man and the banker are mutual The success of either depends in a large measure, on the co operation of both. The steady, healthy growth of this bank is, we believe, the result of our attempts to .co - operate whole-heartedly with our patrons. That they, too, have profited by this policy can, we believe, be verified in a great many instances. ' The Omaha National Bank vt . s-a larnmn at Kmrnn-toAntn ALLEGED MEMBER OF LIQUOR RING FINED JN COURT Implement Dealer's Arrest Follows Investigation After Arrival of Car of Whisky In City. , The conviction in police court yes yesterday of Arthur Parsons, implement dealer, 3401 Burt street, for illegal possession and trans portation of liquor, coupled with the arrest of his 15-year-old son. Jack, and Walter Dunovitch, 4402 L street, last night, is the first of a series of arrests of members of what is believed to be an influential syndi cate of bootleggers. Parsons was fined $100 each ' on charges of illegal possession and transportation of liquor. ' The arrests grew out of an inves tigation by state agents following the alleged unloading of a carload of liquor on the South Side the night of March 7. The whisky was shipped here and unloaded under the direction of the largest bootleg ging syndicate in operation in the state, according to State Agent Sam- ardick. . ) Rickenbacker to Be Guest of Chiefs of Ak-Sar-Ben When Captain R ichenbacker comes here next Monday for his lecture at the Auditorium on his air adventures on the western front, he will be the guest of the Ak-Sar-Ben board of governors. The board has planned a trip out to the new Ak-sar-Ben grounds. It was here on the old mile trock that "Eddie" won his first automobile race. He gained greater fame in July, 1914, when he won a real victory on the Sioux City track. Three speeding events followed this in 1915 and in 1916 were added three championship victories the Metropolitan, N. Y.; the Tacoma and Los Angeles. Since his super lative achievements in the air he has often remarked that his early training and experience was an ex cellent foundation for his work as an air fighter. His lecture, in which he will tell his air experiences, his combats and adventures while fight ing the Huns, will be augmented with moving pictures and slides of himself in action. Seats are now on sale at Bea ton's, Barklow Bros, cigar store, Sixteenth and Farnam and Omaha Automobile club. JTV", Bowen's Value-Civlng Stora. ffr Not Stop, Look and BUY BOWENS GUARANTEED Listen runnnm But rlAtVA Stop, Look and Consider how much mora economical It li to buy Bowen's Guaranteed Fur niture. Before you refurnish your home this Spring, come to Bowen's and walk through our many floora and see for your self how economical it is to elect from our stock. Every thing that is new and good in Home Furnishings will be found here. Bowen Refrigerators At Bowen Prices Mean a Saving in both money and ice. Besides these two features, they are won derful food eonservera as they are constructed of carefully selected woods, thoroughly kiln dried, and built on seientifie principles. All are heavily lined, and guaranteed. If you want a good refrigerator, then come to Bowen's. As the warm days approach, more and more will you find the need of a refrigerator. It is better to get ' one now than to wait for several weeks to elapse, and after much food has been wasted. The I I Thermo-Cell, Blizzard and Gurney Refrigerators will prove of a rl00 value to you at all thnea. and they are not at all exnentive. Refrigerators priced at 0 Kfi 10 SY Y)T $17.75, $29.50 and up Ice Boxes Constructed and finished in a L manner to give long and useful J ervice. rricea at $U.50, $5.75 and $8 Ctnfcffln0rJ (Q tern Howard, Between 15th and 16th Sta, I fj DUWM' W 1 3 WttTtfD r 1 fC0RE THROAT XV or Tonsilitis, gargle itsa SVJJ with warm salt water, then apply 7 VICKSVAP0R1 BODYGUARD" ZQK60. m mm, W.20 BDBGESS Nash EVERYBODY STORE" Tuesday, May 13, 1919- -STORE NEWS FOR WEDNESDAY- -Phone Doug. 2100 We Announce for Wednesday Another f Group of Those Smart Which Were the Cause of Such Active Selling Last Saturday at .00 rjk (r 7 C LEVER! Is the word that best expresses the styles of these new gingham dresses. The materials are the very best quality of gingham, in pretty new plaids and charming new color combinations. The frocks are so different and so attractive as to style and decorative detail that but a glance at the display established the desire that not one but several should be added to one's ward- . robe. i - As to description suffice to say that every style feature with those little touches of daintiness and individuality is represented including the barrel effect skirt with surplus crossed sash; organdjr em broidery shawl collar and cuffs with vestee of tucked organdy; pipings, tiny pearl buttons, deep bias frills; bustle effect skirts, long tunic, etc. You'll enjoy viewing them, and the values are very un common. , ' . Burgesa-Nash Co. Second Floor , Extraordinary Clearaway of Women's Good PUMPSaidOXFOED In the Downstairs Store Wednesday A CLEARAWAY of all odd pairs and short lines that have accumulated in our Downstairs Store. They're taken from our regular stock; not factory seconds or shopworn footwear, but eood and serviceable, and offered at tremendous price reductions. Included are: Women's tan calf pumps, with mili tary heels. Women's patent pumps, with mili tary heels. Women's gun metal pumps, with military heels. Women's black kid Colonial pumps, high heels. Women's black kid oxfords, high heels. CHOICE PAIR Burgess-Naah Co. Downstairs Store Women's patent oxfords, with high heels. Women's plain black kid pumps, high heels. ' Women's black kid two-button strap pumps, high heels. Women's gun metal oxfords, mili tary heels. Women's black kid oxfords, mili tary heels. Lawn and Garden Tools, Paints, Etc. Garden Hose, 17c Foot Molded garden hose, . plain or corrugated, -inch size, fully g u a ran teed, complete with coupling, per foot, 17c. Hose Reels, $1.39 Hardwood hose reels, well made, holds 100 feet of hose, $1.39. Hose Nozzle, 65c Justrite hose nozzle, made of solid brass, can be adjusted to throw stream or spray, 65c. Lawn Sprinkler, 89c Fountain lawn sprinkler, throws fine even spray, made of polished brass, 89c. Window Boxe? Wood window boxes, made of heavy lumber, painted green 18-inch size at 39c. 24-inch size at 59c. 30-inch size at 69c 3 6-inch size at 79c. Grass Catchers, 59c , Canvas grass catchers, adjust able to fit several sizes of mow ers, 59c. Paints, Varnishes, Etc t'atton s 8 u n proof paints for inside or out side use, good range of colors, $4.15. Old English RlAIYFlTl 'loo wax, iLTS ,i Pound can, 45c. Empire floor varnish, dries overnight, quart can, 98c. Screen enamel, pint can, 39c. Sapolin aluminum glaze, used for radiators, gas stoves, etc., can, 23c. Sapolin white enamel, porce lain finish, pint can, 59c. Sapolin varnish, for all kinds of woodwork, large can, 23c. Burgess-Nasb Co. Y Garden Hoes, 95c Pagoma brand, forged steel blades, bronze fin ish, best quality handle, 95c. Weeding Hoes, 39c " Combination weeding hoe and rake, special, 39c. Poultry Netting, lc Galvanized wire, 2-inch mesh, in rolls of 150 running feet, 1 to 6 feet high, square foot, lc. Curtain Stretchers, $1.98 Basswoocf frame, adjustable to several sizes, movable pins, 6x12 size, $1.98. Downstair Store Lawn Mowers Ak-Sar-Ben lawn mowers, 8 inch wheel, three cutting blades, machine screen adjustment; best low priced mower in the market; 14-inch size, $4.45 . . Dundee - ball bearing lawn mower, 9-inch wheel, four cut ting blades; one of the easiest running mowers on the market; 16-inch size, $7.45. Clothes Props, 19c Clothes line props, 8-foot size, 19c. Garbage Cans, $1.69. Galvanized iron garbage cans, with tight-fitting galvanized iron cover, 6-gallon size, $1.69.