Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 02, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1920.
4 "
i "
R. M. Switzler Is
Re-Elected Omaha
Red Cross Chief
10,000 Omahans Renew Sub
scriptions In Society 1 Ne
s liraskans lo Handle Drive
for Destitute Children.
R. M. Switzler was re-elected
cliairmafi of the Omaha chapter of
the American Red Cross by a unani
mous vote of Vic executive commit
tee in annual meeting yesterday.
Election of vice chairman, secretary
and treasurer was postponed until
final report ofjhe recent Tiivitation
campaign is made. Mr. Switzler an
nounced 10,000 Omah.-.ns renewed
their subscriptions in the fourth roll
call.
Opens December 19.
Walter Davidson, mai.ager of the
central division of the American
Red Cross, appointed Mr. Switzler
one cf the four Red Cross represen
tatives in Nebraska to serve on the
A'ebraska state committee in connection-with
the joint drive" for $32,
000,000 for destitute children of
. Europe yesterday. This drive opens
December 19. under the leadership
of Herbert Hoover.
Joint Drive.
Frank V. Judson of Omaha, V.
E. Hardy of Lincoln, and Wood
ruff Ball of Valentine are the other
members of this committee from
Nebraska.
Other - organizations working in
co-operation on this joint drive are
the American Relief administration,
American Friclids Service commit
tee, Joint Distribution committee,
Knights of Columbus. Y, W. C. A..
and Federal Council of Churches of
Christ.
New York Messengers '
Robbed of $467,000
In Liberty Bonds
'.New York, Dec 1. Four
bandits held tin two messen
gers of the Manhattan brokerage
firm of Keen. Taylor &. Co., m
Brooklvn this afternoon, seized a
Eackage said to; contain $467,000 in
.ibertv bonds, fired a fusillade of
shots and escaped.
Three of the bandits thrust revol
vers in the messengers' faces, while
the fourth snatched the package.
Then, entering an automobile stand-
nig at thei curb, they drove away.
The abandoned machine was iound
later on the outskirts of the city.
,' The bonds in denomination of
?5 00 and $10,000 were being carried
to Igoe Brothers,-a hardware firm,
in exchange for securities of .smaller
denominations. - All :, but ! $60,000
worth of the sucurities were said to
ie negotiable. .
The cotton industry will be spe
cially encouraged "by a agricultural
station to be established in northern
Peru.
I V KRTISKM EXT
DIAMOND DYES
Any Woman can Dye now
Each package of "Diamond Dyes'
contains directions so simple that
any woman can diamond-dye any
old, faded garments, draperies, cover
ings, everything, whether wool, silk,
linen, cotton or mixed goods, a new,
rich, fadeless color.
Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other
Jdnd then perfect results are guar
anteed even if you have never dyed
"before. Druggist will show .you
Diamond .Dyes Color Card.
ADVERTISEMENT
li iti iTi itm Ti if i ill iT
rTTTTTTVi
A Stubborn Cough
Loosens "Right Up
This home-made inedr In a wB
des. for quick molla. Easily
ana cneapif saeae.
i
Here is a home-made syrup which
; millions of people have found to be
-.. the most dependable means of break
- ioff VP stubborn coughs. It is cheap
and simple, but very prompt in ae
5 tion, Under its healing, soothing in
f fluenee, chest soreness goes, phlegm
a loosens, breathing becomes easier,
I tickling in throat stops and you ret
S good night's restful sleep. The
I usual throat and chest colds are con
' "tjuered by it in 24 hours or less.
Nothing better for bronchitis, hoarse
. ness, croup, throat tickle, bronchial
; asthma or winter coughs.
; To make this splendid conch syrup,
pour 2Vi ounces of Pines into a pint
J bottle and fill the bottle with plain
I granulated sugar syrup and shake
I .thoroughly. If you prefer use clari
i lied molasses, honey, or corn syrup,
! instead of sugar syrup. Either war,
you get a full pint a family supply
of much better cough syrup than
I tou could buy ready-made for three
5 times the money. 'Keeps perfectly
and children love its pleasant taste.
. , Pines is a special and highly con
s eentrated compound of genuine Nor-
way pine extract, known the world
I over for its prompt healing effect
j upon the membranes.
i - To avoid disappointment ask your
I druggist for "2'3 ounces of Pines"
with full directions, and don't accept
'-anyming eise. viiiaranicea to give
'" absolute satisfaction or money
- promptly refunded, TUe Pjaei Co.,
-Tt. Wayne, Ind,
Girls Hobo
"-1 - -
Bessie Thompson, 16, and Ethel Quinn,. 19, two pretty Percyville,
Ky., girls, were arrested in the freight yards in Chicago on their arrival
there from Kentucky in a "sidedoor" Pullman. They said they wanted to
see the bright lights of Chicago and not having the necessary fare had
decided to hop freight, riding on the rods under a box car. They are
being held awaiting the arrival of their respective fathers, who will take
the girls back home.
Cop to Get Medal
For Checkmating
Biff Arson Plot
Patrolman Tregliato Receive
First Award Under New
Police Plan and Purse
i From' Merchants.
Patrolman Joe Trcglia is to be
decorated.
He has already been cited for
meritorious service -by Chief of Po
lice Eberstein.
He is also in line lor a fat purse
from grateful business men.
Officer Treglia is. responsible for
thwarting the arson plot in th-i
Italian-American restaurant, 120
South Fifteenth '.street, early Mon
(layjnqrniiig wlftn he snuffed out a
lighted !: fuse attached to pans of
gasolirii ; and kerosene sufficient to
cause ..an t explosion ', which . would
wreck the Cheighton block"'-' ,
To Provide Medals.
Officer Treglia is to be, decorated
with the first medal issued under
the proposition now being crystal
ized by Police Commissioner-Ringer
and Al Scott of hei Scott Tent
and Awning company.
This proposition wilt provide for
the awarding of medals to mem
bers of the Omaha police depart
ment who distinguish themselves by
exceptional deeds of bravery.
Business men in the neighbor
hood of this restauraair whose
places of business were threatened
by the nipped explosion, are mak
ing up a cash purss to be presented
to Officer Treglia as a token of their
esteem and appreciation for his
prompt action.
K. C. Head Tells
Of Trip Abroad
Supreme Knight Flaherty Re
counts. C. Pilgrimage In
Europe to Omaha Chapter.
James A. Flaherty, supreme grand
knight of the Knights of Columbus,
described the pilgrimage of 239
knights into France and Italy short
ly after the war to the local chap
ter of the order in the club rooms
Tuesday night. :
The sight of 239 American knights
receiving holy commnnion"from the
hands of Pope Benedict in Rome
would touch a heart of stone, he de
clared. He told of the dedication of
a memorial in Metz to the famous
Lafayet, objection to which had
been made, he said, because Lafay
ette was a Mason.
"This fact was known," he said,
"but the memorial was not dedi
cated because Lafayette was a Cath
olic or a Mason, but because he as
a patriot." At the Ceremonies Mr.
flaherty presented Marshal Foch
with a steel batoiv in' behalf of the
Knights of Columbus.
Recluse Left Estate ..
Valued at $74,278
Albert Jt Seaman, Oir.aha re
cluse and eccentric, who died Feb
ruary 27, left an estate valued at
$74,278, according to a finallnven
tory filed in county court yesterday
by D. W. Merrow, attorney.
- Of this sum, $16,095 is real estate
and $59,183.10 is personal property
of the most 'gilt edged" kind, in
cluding principally large deposits in
all the building and lean associations
of the city and several banks and
also Liberty bonds and other se
curities. Inheritance taxes payable
to the county on the estate will be
about $750.
i
Only One Survivor of Crash
' Between Motor and Train
The death of Mrs. Edna C.
Hansen, Modale, la. Tuesday in
the Edmundsen hospital in Council
Bluffs, leaves George Thompson,
still a patient in the hospital, the
only survivor of five passengers in
the automobile he was driving
which was struck by a Northwestern
passenger.train at a grade crossing
driving 1
near Modale Friday. Mrs. Jennie
Ross and Mrs." Carl Long were
killed instantly. Mrs. Emma Lee
died soon after being taken to the
Bluffs bosoitaL
to Chicago
Wilson Agrees
To fee Mediator
For Armenians
Proposal From L'eague of Na
tions to End Trouble by
Mediation Favored by
i President.
t'liit'Hffo Tribune-Omaha Bee Xeaned Wire.
Washington, Dec. 1. President
Wilson has accepted the request of
the council'of the league of nations
to proffer mediation to end "the hor
rors of; Armenia."
The president, in replying, to the
telegram, from M. . Paul Hymans,
president of the .council of ' the
league, urging him to use his good
offices in the struggle between, the'
Armenians and the -Turkish nation
alists, said he .would:. proposehis
personal mediation' through- :some
one he might designate' to 'unde
take the task. -"- - ;f '''
President Wilson pointed out in
his reply that he had lib authority
to employ the military forces of the
United States in any project of relief
for Armenia; that he could offer no fi
nancial relief without Authority of
congress, which is not now in session
and that he could not forecast what
congress might do. He pointed out
that the senate of the United States
had declined to accept a mandate
for Armenia, but that "this country
has repeatedly declared its solicitude
for the fate and welfare of the Ar
menian people, and that "he was will
ing and anxious to do whatever he
could to relieve the tragic situation
in the oppressed country.
After calling attention to his lim
itations in the matter, 4he president
said:
"I am willing, however, upon as
surances of the moral and diplomatic
support of the principal powers, and
m a spirit ot sympathetic response
to the request of t'ie council of the
league of nations, to use my good
offices and to proffer my personal
mediation through a representative
whom I may designate, to end the
hostilities now being waged against
the Armenian people,- and to bring
peace and accord to the contending
parties, relying upon the council of
the league of nations to- suggest to
me the avenues through which my
proffer should be conveyed, and the
parties to whom it should be adr
dressed."
-The president's proposal, which
went forward to President Hymans
today, calls for reply befcre any
thing further can be done by Mr.
Wilson.
Ranks of Unemployed
.Growing in Chicago
t'hlcar Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire.
Chicago, Dec. 1. Unemployment
is increasing in Chicago, but the
number of idle persons is no greater
than it was at the corresponding
period id 1914, according to a survey
of-the Federal Reserve bank.
In the face of the thousands of
idle men, stands out the fact that
more than $150,000,000 in building
projects are being held ap .-because of
the high cost of materials, ihe high
cost of labor and the endless juris
dictional disputes that make the
erection of any building a haaHous
enterprise.
"NIn the steel and iron manufactur
ing districts in South Chicago and
Gary, the labor scarcity is at an
end and-long lines ot men 'are at
the -, gates tvery morningi seekiiyJ
employment. ..
William HaWls Given:
Judgment for $87,779
Los Angeles, Dec. 1. William S.
Hart, motion picture actor, was
granted judgment for $87,779 .against
Thomas H. Ince, film producer, in a
decision handed down by Judge
Lewis R. Workc, of the Los Angeles
county superior court.
Hart brought suit for profits he
alleged wer his under a contract
made in June 1917.
Hart's attorney said the judgment
meant that his client would obtain
"acruing profits estimated at $750,
000." i .'-. - . -
Student Aviator Killed
When Flying Boat Falls
Pensacola. Flal Dec. 1. James R.
Spencer of Virginia, chief machinist's
mate at the naval air--station here,
was killed when" a flying boat in
which he was flying felt mtr the bay
from an altitude of 1,000 feet. Spencer
was a student pilot and had been in
the aviation service since the out
break of til
Business Outlook
Is Good, Declares
Wholesaler Here
No Excuse for Low Spirits,
Avers .M. E. Smith & Co.
Official Better Labor
Conditions Coming.
Your dollar will buy more
cheer up!
For the last three years almost
everyone has been hoping for lower
prices. V
'Now that they ha.ve come, there is
no reason for not being glad.
The best minds of the nation
worked for two years to prevent
overinflation of currency and credit
and now that the nation, approaches
something like sane conditions there
is -no excuse for low spirits.
That Ss the way one of the leading
business men of Omaha, C W. Russell-,
vice president of M. E. Smith
& Co., dealers in wholesale dry
goods and garment manufacturers,
looks at the present condition.
Business Is Good.
"Everybody ought to be glad that
we are so nearly across the stream,"
said Mr. Russell yesterday. "It looks
like we have about touched the shore
on the other side. I believe we are
very rapidly approaching the time of
easier money and better labor condi
tions, with more production per cap
ita. Speculative demand has disap
peared, overexpansion has gone and
the end of the stringency is in sight.
"To get down to brass tacks,
wherever prices have been reduced
in accordance with the break in the
primary markets, business is good.
My best information on this comes
from our retail customers scattered
throughout the west. Where busi
ness is poor, it is found that the mer
chants have not reconciled them
selves to taking a loss and followed
the price recessions. All the adver
tising in the world will not help
move goods that have not been
marked on the new scale. ,
Going to Normal.
"American business will come out
of this readjustment with its capital
unimpaired and nothing sacrificed
except great temporary profits. ThisV
is a great big, rich country, witn
the people industrious, and after all
thrifty. They're educated in busi
ness an will meet with courage
the nev requirements. There is no
suffering' here except mental.
"It's' just a case ofMhe tempera
ture going down to normal and the
fevered pulse beating more regular
ly. The nation is leaving off its
joy-ride anL settling down to busi
ness. The dollar now has greater
purchasing power than for a long
time.
Prices Have Dropped.
"No particular stress need be felt
in getting ourselves adjusted to this.
The sober, sensible way to look at
it is that if a dollar will buy more.
we simply cannot expect such high
prices for the things we have to sell.
"I feel absolutely sure that com
modities in this avalanche of price
declines have , gone in some cases
too low, below the cost of produc
tion, and when the normal demand,
which always follows a period of
this kind sets in, some things will
go up."
Farmer Hard Hit.
Mr. Russell observed that the
farmer is harder hit than men in
other lines, but that even in his case
the trouble, was only over-abundance,
which is far from being as
hard a condition as a shortage.
"While America has a surplus,
Eurte is destitute," he said. "People
who are not familiar with the mis-
rv abroad are not reallv capable ot
understanding their own good fortune.-
The greatest failure of Amer
ican business men is that they nave
not met this terrible condition Dy
extending credit to Europe to buy
our surplus and tide itself through
the winter."
Receiver Appointed for
Standard Ship Company
New York, Dec. 1. Theodore J.
Keane . was appointed federal re
seiver in equity for the Standard
Steamship company, Inc., of this
city, on application of the Carter
and Weekcs Stevedoring company
of West Virginia.
The Stevedoring company entered
a claim of $32,000. Liabilities of the
steamship company were placed at
$657,258. Assets were not estimated
but were said to include vessels
bought from the government, on
which payment had not been com
pleted, j
ADVERTISEMENT
MEAT CAUSE OF
KIDNEY TROUBLE
Take Salts to flush Kidneys if
Back hurts or Bladder
bothers. ' -
If you must have your meat every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys
with salts occasionally, says a noted
authority who tells .us. that meat
forms uric acid which almost para
lyzes the kidneys in their effort xto
expel jt from the blood. They be
came sluggish and weaken, then yon
suffer with a dull misery in the
kidney region, sharp pains in the
back or sick headache, - dizziness,
your stomach sours, tongue is coat
ed, and when the weather is bad
yfi have rheumatic twinges. The
urine gets cloudy,. fuN of sediment,
the channels often get sore" and' ir
ritated, obliging you to seek relief
two or three times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to clease the kidneys and flush oft
the body's urinous waste get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar
macy here; take a tablespoonful in
a glass of water before breakfast
for a few days and your kidneys
will then : act fine. . This famous
salts is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon juice,, combined with
lithia, and has been used for gen
erations to flush and stimulate slug
gish kidneys, also to neutralize the
acids in urine, so it no longer irri
tates, thus ending bladder weakness.
..Jad, Salts is inexpensive; cannot
injure, and makes a delightful
jEJirVf if-cnt lithia-water drink, ,
Woman Shot by Man Wants
To Live for Sake of Her Boy
Young Mother in Hospital Following Shooting in
Cabaret Struggles Against Death So
She May Care for Child.
A smile crossed the pale, drawn
countenance of Mrs. Dixon Wed
dington, pretty young mother who
was seriously wounded in the
Monarch Garden cabaret Monday
night, when she was informed yes
terday that her little son, Clarence,
is in good care.
H-he must always be well cared
for," she whispered faintly. "I must
get well and care for him myself."
Mrs. Weddington writhed for a
moment in pain, but the light of
mother love continued to shine from
her eyes.
Lives Only For Boy.
"I-I have lived only for Clarence,"
she continued. "He h only 6 years
old and knows nothing of the world.
I tried to shield him from its sordid
ness. "He must never know that' his
mother was shot and in that terri
ble place. Yes, I was going to take
him back to Oskaloosa, where he
could go to school and grow up in
the right kind of company. I only
consented to go to the cabaret that
evening because I planned to leave
it all behind the next day.
Threatened Before.
"Why did William Barr shoot me?
Well, he was simply jealous. He
was trying to make jne live with
him. He had threatened to shoot
me a month before, but I didn't be
lieve he would.
"When I saw him come into the
garden it was terrible. He had a
terrible expression on his face and
his eyes were staring. I knew he
would try to kill me, and in that
brief instant before he fired the first
shot I prayed something would
happen.
"I wanted to live, mostly because
2,000 Haitians
Bandit Victims, i
U. S. Officer Says
Lieutenant Colonel Hoker
Tells' of Outrages Against
Peaceful Citizens and
American Marines.
By The Axocliilei! l'ri'si.
Port Au Erfiice, Haiti, Dec. 1.
The naval court inquiry investigat
ing the actions of American ma
rines, concluded its hearings in Haiti
today with the examination of Lieut
Col. Hooker of the gendarmerie;
who testied to the belief that 2,000
peaceful Haitians had been killed
by bandits in the last few years. He.
declared that from March, 1919, to
October, 1919, large farming and.
settlement areas were completely
wiped out by bandits,
Colonelv Hooker gave a startling
idea of the methods- of theoutlaws,
citihg nearly a.dozfn cases to show
how marines and gendarmR cap
tured by bandits were mutilated.
Two marines were burned to
1
What Counts?
It isn't the fact that you have joined the
church that counts, but it is the changed
life and striving to do better that makes
the difference.
It isn't the promise that you have made
'that counts, but it is the .keeping 6f that
promise to yourself and others that really
makes the "difference.
You have . promised yourself for a long
time that sometime in the dim future you
would have the thing that you want so
badly music in the home. Christmas is
coming. Why not keep this promise to
yourself and family and fill this long felt
want? '
V
The Oaltford Plan Makes Owning Easy.
New Piancf f? Jl frVirir Genuine
$395 fl JAslrUiiU Vocalions,
and up. MOsriC Co. $110 and 'up.
. 1807 Farnam St., Omaha.
Oak Dining Tables
and Chairs at About
Half Price Saturday
Union Outfitting Co.
Biggest Values in Dining
JRoom Furniture Omaha
Has Known in Years.
Saturday, the Union Outfitting
Company has planned to offer
immense stocks of Dining Tables
and Chairs in their 'Stock Re
ducing' Sale that will set up new
records for value-giving.
The individual pieces in plain
or quartered oak represent the
highest skill in furniture crafts
manship. The tables are exten
sion types with plain, plank or
quartered oak tops.
.For over a quarter of a cen
tury, thrifty homemakers have
always made it a point to visit
the Union Outfitting Company
FIRST and this sale is merely
one of many money-saving pos
sibilities at this Ilomefurnishing
Institution, where, as always,
you make your own terms.
Advertisement.
of Clarence, and a little because of
myself. A picture of the comforta
ble home of my parents back in Os
kaloosa flashed before me and I re
alized what I had been missing for
so many years.
"Then he pulled out the revolver:
I put up my arm and tried to push
it away. ; He fired the revolver
was almost against .me. I could
smell the powder; it was sickening.
He fired again and everything went
black."
Mrs. Weddington closed her eyes,
then smiled faintly again.
"But I'll get well for Clarence's
sake," she murmered huskily.
No Interest in Suicide.
She took no apparent interest in
the fact that Barr had shot and
killed himself immediately after fir
ing the two shots at her.
She clutched at a telegram that
contained a message from her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Reins of
Oskaloosa, informing her they were
coming to Omaha yesterday.
"They will take care of Clarence.
When I'm well I'll go back to OsW
loosa , and help them," she gaspe(l
faintly.
Lure of Bright Lights.
When she became stronger Mrs.
Weddington explained she had been
divorced from her husband in Ar
kansas in 1918. She had left her home
town to co on the stage several
vears airo. she said. She .explained
how the lure of the bright lights
had pulled "her. from her small-town
homer how she had struggled to
secure horiesMvork here during the
oast months.
The body of Barr probably will be
taken back to Oskaloosa today by
his parjcnts. Mr. and Mrs.'C. r. Barr,
There: "will -be no inquest. r
, - i
death after torture. Colonel Hooker
asserted. The records, . he said,
showed that thirty - two gendarme
officers were killed
Dorcas Williams, sergeant of ma
rines accused if killing Gamier Jean
last year, entered emphatical denial
of guilt. He declared Jean's house
was midway between the bandits
and gendarmes during a battle at
Maissade, and said that hearing that
Jean was intimate with the maraud
ers, he summoned him. He testi
fied that Jean appeared wijh a towel
around his neck and a blanket about
his; stomach, showing he had been
wounded. Williams asserted Jean
was in his office while he (Williams)
was patrolling and that he learned
upon his return Jean was dead.
Admiral Henry T. Mayo, presi
dent of the court, announced the
hearings would be resumed in
Washington.
German Grand Opera Will
Be Sung at N. Y. Theater
-'New 'York, Dec. 1. A season of
grand and light opera" in German
will be opened on Christmas after
noon in the Manhattan opera house,
Mrs. Oscar Hammerstein, its man
ager, announced here today. This
will be the first opera to be sung in
the German language in this coun
try' since the United States" entered
the5 War. '
A. HOSPE CO.
PIANOS
TUNED AND
REPAIRED
AU Work Guaranteed
IBIS Doug la St. Tel. Doug. IBS
Grow Your Hair
BET THIS FREE
If rea hare inaintt, or if roar hair It fillta
out, or if yon hv t baM (pot, you should
know that legion of pwaona biro oTereom
these trouble through a genuine Indiana'
recipe, which will be mailed you free with a
proof box of the wenderf oily efleacioaa olnt
tent, Kotalko, If you send only II) cts. (silver
or stamps) to pay the cost of this notice, to
al i. Brittiiev BZ-301. Stitiia f.. New Ysrk
ADVERTISEMENT
666 will break, a Cold, Fever
and Grippe quicker than any
thing we know, preventing
pneumonia. '
BEE WANT ADS
Will Get You in or
Out ot Business in
a Hurry.
1 rp-uJ
Mexico Will Not
Ask Admission
To World League
Invitation Will Be Considered
If Extended, President-Elect
Qbregon Says; Reconstruc
tion Greatest Problem.
By The Associated I're.s.
Mexico City, Dec. 1. "Mexico
will not ask admission to the league
of nations, but should an invitation
to membership be extended by the
league, it would be given considera
tion." This declaration was made by
Gen Alvaro Obregon, president-elect
of the republic, in au interview with
The Associated Press, during which
lie "discussed various problems that
will demand his attention when he
assumes the presidency at midnight
tonight.
General Obregon said he was cer
tain that the provisional government
under President De La Huerta had
not requested such membership and
it was the intention of his govern
Then
It IS
Warning! Unless you sec; the name "Bayer" on tablets,
you are not s getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by
physicians for 21 years and proved safe by millions.
Accept"" only tn "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin," which contains proper directions for Colds,, Headache
Pain, Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis; Lumbago.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents Larger packages.
Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of M onoacetlcaeleeter of SallcrlloMid
Refrigeration
and Meat
In less than an hour after an
animal is dispatched in a Swift &
Company pacidnplant, it is hanging -up
as mtfat in a room brought by
refrigerating machinery to a tem
perature just above freezing.
From that time until it is in youi
own ice box within two to three
weeks it is kept at the same tem
perature; first in the coolers at our..
packing plants; next on our refrig
erator cars, more than 6,000 of which
are constantly moving to market
with their perishable cargoes; then
in our refrigerator rooms at our
branch selling houses then ia your
dealer's ice box, and last in your owa
Only for ,the few minutes while
it is being put into the refrigerator
cars at our packing plants, or taken
out of them at our branch houses,
or whisked to your retailer .in our
trucks, is it exposed to any- change
of temperature.
Without a skilled use of this sys
tem of cooling, made possible by
modern science, you could not get
fresh meat, prepared under most
sanitary conditions, except at greater
expense unless you happened to
live so near live stock raising centers
that your needs could be supplied
from live stock raised near-by.
If tha foregoing raises any question in
the mind of the reader, we will endeavor
to answer it, upon request.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
Omaha Local Branch, 13th and Leavenworth Sts,
A. W. Gross, Manager
Packing Plant South Omaha
O. W. Waller, Manager
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ment to continue this policy of aloof
ness, his attitude being that Mexico
in making overtures or membership
in the league, would engage in a hu
miliating act entirely inconsistent
with its traditionaKnational pride.
'One of Mexico's greatest prob
lems at present ft of labor," General
Obregon said, "t am positive that
radicalism is not so widespread that
it constitutes a menace to the peace
of Mexico. However, I do recognize
that the workers have a right to
fight for the betterment of their con
ditions and my government will lend
all possible aid to secure such better
ment, if the workers act within the
law and order."
c Witness Describes
Destruction of Hadji
Constantinople, Dec. I (By The
Associated Press.1) An rye witness
survivor from Hadji, Asia Minor,
describing the Turkish ' bombard
ment of that place, says it set tire
to the town, 'and the 365 who
escapes stumbled over the bodies
cf the defenders through blazinp
streets. During the last days o:
the siege the inhabitants ate don
keys and Jogs, finally cats, rats and
mice. When the refugees arrived
at Adana the French took charge of
them.
Genuine
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