Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 04, 1919, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, 'JUNE 4, 1919.
i LEMON JUICE
!' FOR FRECKLES
I Girls! Make beauty lotion for j
r a few cents Try it! :
t e f Sm.h.......'-.... m
Squeeze the juice of two lemons
into' a bottle containing three ounces
of orchard white, shake well, and
you have a quarter pint of the best
freckle and tan lotion, and complex
ion beautif ier, at very, very small
cost - "
Your grocer has the lemons and
any drug store or toilet counter will
supply tjiree ounces of orchard "white
for a few cents. Massage this sweet
ly, fragrant lotion into-, the face,
neck, arms-and hands each day and
see how freckles and blemishes dis.
appear and how clear,.sof b and rosy
white the skin becomes. Yes ! It is
harmless and never irritates. Adv.
THE FIRST
OF JUNE '
The vacation time of
many people of Omaha
and Nebraska is but a
few days away. Prob
ably your clothes are
all ready now.
, Make your plans for a
good time complete by
taking proper care of
these clothes in a
wardrobe trunk the
Oshkosh the leader
in its class.
Priced $45 and Up.
Omaha Trunk
Factory
1209 Farnam.
Doug. 480. i
7
V
EURALGIA
or He ad at he
Rub the iorehead
and templet with
ICICSVAPORI
"YOUR BODYGUARD" -30
MASONS HONOR
VETERANS OF
AMERICA WARS
Vice President Louis Berka of
Omaha Presides at Dinner
In Honor of Visiting
'Guests.
- . . - :
Master Masons from all parts of
the state, attending the session of
the grand lodge here, listened to ad
dress of welcome by. Charles H.
Markey, Nebraska lodge No. 1.
Masons attending the grand lodge
and men who served in the civil,
Spanish-American and world war
were given a reception by the mem
bers. The standard was borne by
Past Master John A. Ehrhardt, who
served in the 52nd Illinois infantry
during the Civil war.
The flag was loudly cheered and
the standard bearer, Comrade Ehr
hardt, was compelled to respond to
a tribut to the Civil war veterans,
the Spanish warf survivors and the
participants in the world war that
iiad been made by Mr. Markey. .
After the morning session the vis
iting members were entertained at
dinner as the guests of the Veteran
Masons' association. The president,
J. W. Cain, of Falls City, was ab
sent, being in California, and Louis
Berka, of Omaha, vice-president,
presided at the dinner. The wel
coming address was made by James
R. Cain, son of the president, and
addresses relating to past, future
and present status of Free Masonry
were made by Frederick Temple,
past grand master, and Ambrose C.
Epperson, grand master.
Mexican Charges
Policemen Entered
Home Without Warrant
Eulalio Martinez a Mexican, has
brought an action for $829.38 in mu
nicipal court against Robert A.
Heller and Anton Francl of the
nolice deoartment. alleeine that
these officers unlawfully entered
his premises at 901 Capitol avenue
on May 14.
The bill of particulars to which
Martinez has sworn relates that
these policemen entered his home
without warrant or other process of
'law; that they took various articles
of apparel valued at $27.38 and that
they have failed and refused to re
turn these goods, notwithstanding
the fact he was discharged in police
court. .
Ice Dealers Attempt to
Justify Sharp Advance In
Price to the Consumer
feoost of 10 Cents Per Hundred Pounds Is Declared to
Be Result of "Increased Cost of Labor, Hay, Oats,
Gasoline, Clothes, Meat and Other Commodities."
Retail ice dealers endeavor to
justify their advance in the price of
ice from SO to 60 cents per hun
dred pounds, with a reduction to
those who are able to buy coupon
books, by referring to the increased
cost of labor, hay, oats, gasoline,
clothes, ' meat and other commodi
ties and articles.
The only 54-cent ice is that which
is bought by consumers who are
able to buy the coupon books and
pay for them on the terms prescrib
ed by the dealers. To many people
who are not able to buy the books
the price is 60 cents per hundred
pounds.
This 20 per cent increase went
into effect Monday and'wassimul
taneous with all retail dealers. In
the face of this increase, the munici
pal ice stations are selling ice for
30 cents per hundred, or 50 pounds
(or IS cents, which is half the price
being demanded by private dealers.
General Manager R. B. Howell
of the Metropolitan Water district
stated that the South Omaha Ice
company and the G. F. Howell Ice
company obtain ice at the Muny
plant at the rate of $5 per ton. They
deliver this to householders at 60
cents per hundred, less the discount
to holders of coupon books.
"In the face of everything it is
only fair that the price of ice should
be advanced," said F. P. Loomis,
president of the Omaha Ice and
Cold Storage company.
Municipal Plant Busy.
The municipal plant is able to de
liver the ice to 17 "jitney stations"
and keep attendants at these sta
tions and sell ice at a rate of 30
cents. Ton lots may be obtained
at the plant platform at the rate of
.i per ton, which is 25 cents per
hundred, and the plant trucks de
liver ice to butchers at the rate of
jfl cents per hundred with a min
imum of 1.200 pounds to a delivery.
The new household rate of private
dealers figures $12 per ton, except
to those who can buy coupon books,
in which cases a discount is allowed
for payment before the tenth of the
month.
Does Not Have Figures.
Asked for figures on his increased
expenses for labor, given as one
reason for the advance, Mr. Loomis
said he did not have them. His
1 1 jt
m mmw
HM D llll If Hi
M l I S AS I II f A, M
AIM! llll V V rZZVSSSSi A KSA W VI Jill M
IIIIXMI I I -ill I itf III
IIILNI llll
Mill! HIM !
i J I M ici 101110 rim: ri 1 71 r I flci : 1 1 C rcl llll 111 III
I r 1 s-ir v a 1 - - .,1 -, - - 1 111171 I
- 8
You smack your lips over it, be- f
f cause you like its taste, its quali-
ty, its genuine gratification. It
8 satisfies thirst.
Nobody has ever been able to f&
U successfully imitate it, because its 1 M
11 quality is indeliblv registered in ill
the taste of the American public. m
" fOlf J ' Demand the genuine by full name
Jloftj nicknames encourage substitution. n
' A llfL " THE COCA-COLA CO. l
' ( ATLANTA. GA. j
y 1 in ' y
II U 'II llr II II lllllll II lllinu I U Umiwr II III Uu III
M :1 1 I ' ' III MIDI
s ir N 1 1 if,. wim mu 4
MINI III Uif ."H.W.S"2KMi J ".I ... FT III ir 11 III
1 iM Eiwljo? Ill
II a Ml 111: llll llf 41 III
company maintains two plants
where ice is manufactured. Coupon
books are sold for 800, 1,000 and
2,000 pounds each. F. R. Mockler is
vice president of the Omaha Ice and
Cold Storage company.
W. R. Wood, vice president and
general manager of the People's Ice
and Cold Storage company, asserted
that it is not fair to compare prices
of municipal ice with prices charged
by retailers who deliver to homes.
"Anybody may come to our plant
and obtain ice for 35 cents per hun
dred," said Mr. Wood. "You will
probably appreciate that during the
last three or four years the advance
in the price of .ice has been less than
of almost any other necessary com
modity. The cost of production has
more than doubled during the last
five years. We have bought 10,000
tons of ice in Minneapolis for deliv
ery here this month and in July and
August, to protect Omaha people
against a shortage which exists."
No Specific Details.
Mr. Wood did not offer any spe
cific details to support the advance
'in ice. L. E. Patterson of Chicago
is president of his company. E. L.
Von Behren is secretary-treasurer.
W. B. Etchison, head of the Etch
ison Ice Co., stated that he buys his
ice from the People's Ice and Cold
Storage Co., and that the price to
him has been increased from $4 to
$5 per ton.
"I am paying $45 per ton for hay
and 80 cents per bushel for oats and
I am paying nine men each $.10 per
week," he said. "I don't see how
I can get out of raising the price of
ice."
W. F. Poff, owner of the City Ice
company's plant, stated that he be
lieved the law of supply and de
mand controlled the price of ice.
"Ice is going up for the same rea
son that the farmer is charging $45
a ton for his hay," he said. "Our
operating costs are increasing. We
have been paying truck men $100 a
month and we are going to raise
them to $30 per week. There is a
great demand for ice in towns near
Omaha. There are enough plants
here to supply the local trade. The
scarcity of ice seems to be general
throughout the United States. We
are charging 30 cents per hundred
for ice at the plant and $6 to $7 per
ton for ice we sell to butchers in
wholesale quantities."
WILSON ORDERS
SHIP MADE READY
TO SAIL FOR U. S.
Liner Put In Readiness to
Leave On Twelve Hours'
Notice After Midnight, ' I
Thursday. i
i
Brest, June 3. The liner George j
Washington, in which President
Wilson has three times crossed the i
Atlantic, has been ordered to be j
ready to. sail on 12 hours' notice at
any time after midnight, June 5.
The Mount Vernon, with 6.000 1
regulars from the Sixth division,
under command of Maj. Gen. Wal
ter H. Gordon, sailed this morning
for New York. The Siboney and
the Orizaba, each carrying 4,000 men
of the 81st division, sailed last night
for Newport News.
Robbers Fail to Get
Million-Dollar Haul
By Being Day Late
Chicago, June 3. One million ten
thousand dollars in currency was
missed by 24 hours when thieves
lowered a 300-pound steel safe from
the fifth floor of the army head
quarters building down the fire es
cape early Sunday morning, it be
came known today. Valuable pa
pers were in the safe, but the
amount of money contained is not
revealed.
The government sent a check for
51,000,000 to pay off soldiers being
mustered out at Camp Grant and
one for $10,000 to pay off Chicago
and Fort Sheridan employes. The
checks were received on Friday
morning, a holiday, but Camp
Grant needed money and the big
ciieck was cashed by the Federal
Reserve bank. The smaller check
was not cashed until Saturday.
igfotuer Oil ompamny
Month of Brides Bids
Fair to Break Records
In Marriage Licenses
June, the month of flowers and
especially orange blossoms, began
j with a record-breaking pace in the
i Douglas county marriage license
bureau. License Clerk Stubbendorf
says he can feel his "Cupid's" wings
! sprouting and his right hand is all
cramped up from writing out the
specifications of the blushing brides
and nervous grooms who present
themselves in a waiting line before
his sanctum.
On Monday, the first June day
when the bureau was open, it did a
record business of 18 licenses. At
one time six persons were waiting
for licenses.
The number of licenses issued in
! June at the local bureau for the last
seven years is as follows: 1912, 283;
1913, 323: 1914, 304: 1915, 270: 1916,
331; 1917, 315; 1918, 280.
Boston k
Garter
Quality
First!
Fanning Starts Job Before
He Is Awarded Contract
When the city council yesterday
prescribed brick as the material to be
laid on Eleventh street, Jones to
Leavenworth streets, a surprise was
sprung in the form of a statement
thst Charles Fanning, contractor, al
ready had laid the concrete base in
anticipation of being awarded the
contract. It happened that his brick
bid was low. Commissioner Towl
explained that the property owners
wanted brick and that Fanning was
willing to take a chance by starting
the work ahad of action by the
council. The mayor and commis
sioners all voted to award Fanning
the brick contract.
The Heavens in June
By WILLIAM F. RIGGE
. On the 22d at 5:54 a. m. the sun
reaches its highest north and enters
the sign of Cancer, the Crab. Then
astronomical summer begins, and
the day has its greatest length, 15
hours, 4 minutes. This length, how
ever, varies less than a quarter of an
hour the whole month. The earliest
sunrise, 5:53 occurs from the 10th
to the 21st, and the latest sunset,
8:59, from the 28 to the first of next
month.
Jupiter, Venus and Saturn are
still our evening stars. On the 15th
they set respectively at 10:42 p. m.,
11:53 p. m. and 12:32 a. m.
The moon is in conjunction with
Jupiter and Venus on the 1st, with
"Saturn on the 3d, and with Jupiter
on the 28th. On the 26th there is a
conjunction of Jupiter and Mercury,
which may be hard to see in the twi
SUN.
Hsnoonl Set.
6 5
6 66
5 65
I S6S
5 SSI
6 64!
B 64
6 64
5 64
6 63
S 63
5 r,3
5 53
5 63
6 63
6 63
6 SS
5 5.1
6 63
5 63
6 53
& 54
5 64
; 64
5 54
I 64
5 56
5 66
6 65
6 5
5 6
6 6?
1.3119.
1.22(8.
1.22)8.
1.22lS
1.22(l.
1.2218.
1.2218.
1.2318.
1.2318.
1.23'S.
1.2318.
1.2318.
1.24 8.
1.24
1.24
1.24
1.24
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.26
tl
1.2618.
1.2 8,
1.26 8.
1.26 8
1.2l8,
1.2718,
1.2718.
1.2718
1.3718
1.28 8.
im.
JUNE.
MOON.
I RlB.ISc'thl Bet.
48
47
48
41
60
51
52
52
53
53
63
64
54
65'
55
66
56:
57
57
67
67
SI
68 23
68:24
58125.
68 26-68I27-59188.
6 2
69 30
511 1
58 2-
Son.
Mon. ;
Tu.
Wed.
Thij. f.
Frt.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tu.
Wed.
Thur.
Fri. f.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu. '
Fri.
Sat. I.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
,Fri. n.
Sat.
Run.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
I 271 4.36,11.45
10 26 6.28 Mliin
11 81
12.36
1.36
2.8
1.34
4.34
S.32
8.29
.17
7.03
7.46
8.29
9.1
9.55
10.40
11.26
7.26Mldn
I 8.16
fn.!9.05
9.60
110.30
II. 06
III. 37
jMldn
12 us
12 17
1 07
1 39
2 16
2 66
1 44
4 40
6 43
641
8 03
9 13
10 18
111 23
12.14
1 03
1 53
43
3 32
4 21
6 08
5 56
12 21
12 64
1 23
1 48
2 16
2 43
1 11
3 44
4 20
5 04
6 50
42
7 39
8 79
9 42
10 46
11 51
6 43(12.68
7 32
8 23
9 17
10 14
11 15
12.18
1.201
2.28
3.16
4.07
4.65
1.41
3.07
3.18'
4.28
5.40
6.50
7.56
8.63
9.S9
10.19
10.53
11 It
11.41
"TIZ" FOR SORE,
TIRED FEET AH!
Tiz" i grand for aching,
swollen, tender, calloused
feet or corns."
"TIZ' make $f&?W
my feet S??l?
gmeJctV ,
Ow Final Message
To Yom!
We recently placerj. our wonderful proposition before you for your earnest con
sideration. The response has been even better than we anticipated. We really have
a wonderful opportunity for you. If you as stockholders could only visit this field
and see for yourself, you would certainly congratulate us upon our lucky and valu
able holdings. And you would consider yourself lucky to be on the gi-ound floor of
such a proposition. Our 15-acre lease was bought before the M. & P. Burk well
gushed within a very short distance of our lease. The acreage, alone is worth prac
tically as much as our capitalization by this time. We feel confident that we cannot
miss a big gusher. When we get it this stock can't be bought for ten times its present
par value. We know because we see it being done almost every day in this wonder
field of Burkburnett.
Our subscriptions have been heavy and our books are almost ready to be closed.
We still have, however, a limited amount of this stock to be sold at par. We know
that just as soon as it is sold out it will go at a premium. Buy today and receive the
profit which we feel is sure to come.
WE TOLD YOU BEFORE OF THE TEXAS CHIEF WHICH
CAME IN A BIG GUSHER WITHIN HOLLERING DISTANCE
OF OUR LEASE. M. & P. BURK STOCK IS NOW SELLING
TEN FOR ONE.
Remember our own townspeople are buying very fast and quick action on your
part is necessary. Mail or wire your reservation in today. $10 share par today.
rHigSitoiw il ompaijiiy
Date
Hightower Oil Co.,
Wichita Falls, Texas.
Gentlemen: Please reserve me shares
of Hightower stock at par $10 per share. Capi
tal $110,000, fully paid and non-assessable. En
closed find. in full payment for same
Name
Address -.
In case of over-subscription your money will
be returned.
References:
Any Bank in
Wichita Falls,
Texas
Electri
Ah! what relief. No more tired
feet; no more burning feet; no more
swollen, aching, tender, sweaty feet.
No more soreness in corns, callouses,
bunions.
No matter what ails your feet or
what under the sun you've tried
without getting relief, just use
"Tiz." "Tiz" is the only remedy
that draws out all the poisonous
exudations which puff up the feet.
"Tiz" cures your foot trouble so
you'll never limp or draw up your
face in pain. Your shoes won't seem
tight and your feet will never, never
hurt or get sore or swollen. Think of
it. no more foot misery, no more
agony from corns, callouses or bun
ions.
Get a 25-cent box at any drug
store or department store and get
instant relief. Wear smaller shoes.
Just once try "Tiz." Get a whole
year's foot comfort for only 25
cents. Think of it. Adv.
The Greater
Bower? Store
. . - i .-
OFFERS
5,000 PAIRS LACE
CURTAINS
At Values Unheard of
Saturday, June 7th,
(One Day Only)
Samples of these Curtains
will be on display in our win
dows for the entire week.
Come, you will get wonderful
values.
It's an introductory offer
you should avail yourself of,
as it gives you a chance to
buy and drape new curtains at
every window in your house.
Lace Curtains from 30c a
Pair to $10 a Pair
Actual values from two
t to three times the price asked.
r if in'
Mi ll -
Howard, Between 15th and 16th Ste.
' BOWCHS C
Lighten your labor;
do the work faster
and far better and
then they are much
more economical, as
you can do the aver
age wash at a cost of
15c Per Month
The working parts of the Clarinda are
enclosed, eliminating all danger in operating.
The tub is made of the best grade of
cypress cedar and well-banded. The wringer
attached is a three-way reversible, allowing of
the wringing of clothes while the washer is in
operation.
SPECIAL TERMS toR A SHORT TIME
Special Free Demonstration by Factory Expert
At Our Electrical Shop Retail.
ass
vYOUR ELECTRIC SERVICE COMPANY
'hones:
Tyler Three Ond Hundred
So. Three
DR. ALLWINE
DENTAL SPECIALIST
Will limit practice to best methods
of Extraction, and Plate. Crown and
Bridge Work.
Diseased Teeth Poor Health.
411 Sccaritiea Bldf . Phone Doug. 6M3.
FISTULA CURED
Rectal Diseases Cured without a severe aurglcal
operation. No Chloroform or Ether used. Cur
guaranteed. PAY WHEN CURED. Write tor Illus
trated book on Rectal Diseases, with names and
testimonials of more than 1.000 prominent people
who have been permanently cured.
DR. E. R. TARRY, 240 Bee Bldg., Oma Neb, -
-I.
3