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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1919)
"v. THE BEE: 6mAHA; THURSDAY, MAY 22, .1919. !- Cuban Red Cross Plans to . Care for French Orphans Paris, May 21. (Havas.) The Cuban minister of public instruction, acting for the Cuban Red Cross, has acquired the historic . estate of Epluches, in the department of the Seine-et-Oise, near Paris, which will ,i be turned into an orphanage for French children who lost their par entt during the war. The orphanage f will be supported by the Cuban Red ' Cross. THIN, FRAIL FOLKS NEED PHOSPHATE Nothing Llk Plain Bltro-Photphats to ' Put en Firm, Healthy Fleth and ta Increa Strang th, Vigor and Narva Fore. , .-' Judging from the countless preparations and treatments which are continually be . iug advertised for the purpose of making thin people fleshy, developing arms, neck . and bust, and replacing ugly hollows and - angles by the soft curved lines of health t and beauty, there are evidently thousands . of nan and women who keenly feel their t excessive thinness. , - Thinness and weakness are usually due 4 to starved nerves. Our bodies need more "J phosphate than is contained , In modern foods. Physicians elaim there is nothing r that will supply this deficiency so well as the organic phosphate known among drug-"-; gists as bitro-phosphate, which is inex pensive and is sold by Sherman V McCon I. nell in Omaha and most all druggists un . der a guarantee of satisfaction or money back. By feeding the nerves directly and ' by supplying the body cells with the neces ,'s sary phosphoric food elements, bitro phosphate quickly produces a welcome transformation in the appearance; the in- Jr areas In weight frequently being astonish y tag. This Increase in weight also carries with it a general improvement in the - health. Nervousness, sleeplessness And lack of energy, which nearly always ac company excessive thinness, soon disap- pear, dull eyes become bright, and pale ' cheeks glow with the bloom of perfect health. 'CAUTION: Although bitro-phosphate is unsurpassed for relieving nervousness, aleeplessneas and general weakness, it should not, owing to its remarkable flesh- growing properties, be used by anyone who ' does not desire to put on flesh. Adv. CHILD KILLED BY TRUCK : MOTHER IS FATALLY HURT Driver of Machine Held With out Bail by South Side Police; Run Down In ' Street. Albert, jr., 3 years old, 'was in stantly killed at 6 o'clock Tuesday evening, and his mother, Mrs. Al bert Kostal, Fiftieth and P streets, lies at the point of death at the St. Joseph hospital as the result of be ing struck by a grocery truck, -driven by Joe Snyder, at the intersection of Fiftieth andX streets. Snyder is being held without bail by South Side police officials pend ing an investigation into the acci dent by Deputy County Attorney Paul S. Steinwenter. Snyder is an employe of the Milder Grocery com pany, Twenty-fourth and N streets, and was operating their truck at the time of the accident. He lives at 1527 Drexel street. Boy Instantly Killed. Police rushed the injured woman and her son to the . hospital, where Dr. Edward Chalupka at tended them. The boy was round to have been instantly killed. Be sides a fractured shoulder and a broken leg the mother is thought to be , suffering from internal in juries. Hospital authorities refused to divulge the full extent of the mother's injuries. According to Snyder, who" is but 18 years old, and who was taken into custody immediately after the accident occurred, the injured wo man stepped directly in front of the machine. He stated that he was proceeding at a minimum rate of speed when she was struck. Mi's. Kostal, whose husband is em ployed at the Ford Motor company, was returning from the central por tion of town, where she had made several purchases. As she stepped from the Ralston interurban' car one of her three chil dren suddenly broke away. The mother, fearing for its safety, began to pursue the child. Snyder stated that it was at this time that the ac cident occurred. The mother was so engrossed in her child she failed to notice the approaching machine. Before he could apply the brakes he had struck both mother and child. The boy was instantly killed, his head being crushed. Enraged Farmers In Des Moines Demand Confessed Murderer Des Moines, May 21. Polk coun ty farmers, enraged at the brutal murder and assault of Mrs. Lizzie Coppock, 47 years of age, of Ankcny, near this city, gathered at the city jail last night and demand ed the person of Charles Walker of this city, who yesterday confessed to the Crime, which occurred more thaft a week ago. Two sons of the slain woman were in the crowd. Walker also confessed to one obher brutal assault upon a 15-year-old girl, which occurred in the vicinity of Des Moines recently. Night Chief of Police Kelley pre- j vailed upon the men to desist from their contemplated action and to go to their homes. Society Sells Doughnuts In Salvation Army Drive New York, May 21. New York's society leaders, after spending most of the night cooking doughnuts in Mrs. Vincent Astor's kitchen in her Fifth avenue home, peddled them up and down Broadway today as voluntary recruits in the Salvation Army's drive for a $13,000,000 fund. Wall street was early invaded and doughnuts at $1 apiece sold faster than oil stocks on the curb. - BOYS OF 89TH TO PARADE IN CITY EARLY NEXT WEEK Men Who Have Carried Glory of Nebraska to French Soil to Arrive In New York Thursday. Omaha and Nebraska soldiers of the 89th- division will parade on Far nam street early next week, accord ing to a telegram received from Sen ator Norris of Nebraska at the Chamber of Commerce yesterday morning. Two Nebraska units, the 356th infantry and the 341 st Machine Gun Ijattalion of the 89th division, com posed predominately of Omaha men, will stop off here and at Lincoln while on their way from the east coast to Camp Funston to be de mobilized. They will stay here for three hours. Will Land Today. The 89th lands at New York to day. Governor McKelvie telephoned the local Chamber of Commerce yes terday asking that preparations to welcome the boys will be made at once. The men will be interned in the New York district to be de loused for at least one day. They will then proceed at once with their commanders to Camp Funston, the two Nebraska cotingents stopping off on the way. Gould Dietz and Lysle I. Abbott of Omaha, in the absence of Robert Manley, commissioner of the Cham ber of Commerce, said that elabor ate preparations will be made at once. Governor Leaves for New York. Governor McKelvie left for New York yesterday to be present when the boys will be welcomed by a committee from home. Several Omahans are members of this committee. Nebraska senators have been working for the stopover for some time. Yesterday the War de partment informed Senator Norris of the new arrangement to allow Nebraska soldiers to parade here, and he, in turn, immediately notified the Chamber of Commerce. Former Detective Is Badly Beaten Up By . 3 Unidentified Men John Unger, a former Omaha city detective, now a farmer living near Benson, was badly beaten up late Tuesday afternoon by three uni dentified occupants of' a car with which he collided while on his way home from Omaha. The three 'nen escaped, coming towards Omaha. Unger's car . collided with the strangers' machine on the Keystone park road at 3:30 o'clock. An argu ment followed in which one of the men accused the former detective with stealing "his whisky." Unger denied the accusation and a fight started. One of the four drew a gun and held off D. C. Rotchford, Benson farmer, who was with Unger, while the others did the fighting. Unger reported the affair to Oma ha police. Bull Comes Out Second Best In Charge On Auto Medora, 111., May Zl. Turn up the lights and play a tune from Carmen's "II Travatore," for this is a tale of a bull who wanted to die to make a Spanish holiday. He saw the red light on an automobile driven ,at night by a party of Mexi cans and forthwith charged. Head down, his horns collided with the side of the car and nearly upset the frightened occupants. They es caped injury, however, and the bull with a badly battered butter snor ingly decamped into a field after it found its adversary was made of tin and not human flesh. Two Boys Fined On Charge Of Conspiring to Seal Cars James O'Neill was fined $200 and Fay Hatfield $100 by District Judge Redick on their pleas of guilty to the charge of conspiring to steal au tomobiles. The boys were arrested while trying to start a car in front of the Iirandeis theater the night of April 4, 1919. Hatfield was the principal witness at the trial of William Swan last wek in Judge Redick't Court, Swan was charged with being the third conspirator. The jury disagreed in his case. Hatfield has already served enough time in jail to pay for hia $100 fine and was set at liberty. 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