Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 13, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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    Omalians Tried
At Fremont on
Liquor Charge
Police Testify They Caught
Woman in Act of Selling
Booze in Hotel Prison
ers Plead Not Guilty.
Fremont, Neb., April (Special
Telegram.) Charged with the trans
portation and possession of liquor
and bootlegging, Ray Cooley and
pretty Birdie Ctidona, both of Oma
,h, were on trial Way in district
ourt, pleading not guilty to the
allegations made by police that an
agent purchased booze from the
woman the night of March 6, when
the couple were caught in the room
of a local hotel.
Ol'ficeres testified that the girl was
selling liquor to the plain clothes
man when they entered to make the
arrest. She was scantily clothed, they
said, while Cooley slept through the
entire disturbance, the victim of his
own wares. A suitcase containing
nine quarts of liquor is alleged to
have been found in the room and
Was one of the eNhibits in the court
room today.
The couple, with Ted Savinsky,
arrived from Omaha early in the
tveninsr of March 6 and parked in
front of a local hotel. An officer no
ticed the porter struggling : with a
suspicious-looking suitcase while
Cooley carried a similar load. In
vestigation followed and later in the
night the officers, sent the agent to
the room with marked money to
- buv the liquor, for which he .gave
$15 a quart, according to police. .
As the officers entered the room,
il is alleged, the Cudon.i Voman
crumpled the money in her hand and
tried to throw it 'under the bureau.
After Cooley ' was awakened from
his "deep dream of peace," the entire
party was escorted to jail,' where
they remained for a' few days until
'bail Was furnished.' The car was held
- by the county' authorities. Evidently
Cooky's main fight in tfic present
proceedings it to maintain that thi
ear was not -used to transport the
liquor. ,' ..
. Burglars Loot 3 Downtown
. Clothing Stores in Night
Burglars unfastened 'the iron shut
ters, cut. the screen and. broke "the
glass irt a window at the '. Shirley
clothes shop, 109 South Sixteenth
street, Monday night add stole trav
eling bags, shirts, suits and other, ar
ticles of clothing worth $400. accord-
wg ro ponce reports.
Burglars pried open the door of a
f. show case in front of the store of B.
Pred, 1523 Douglas street, and stole
two women's dresses. No estimate
v has yet been made of the loot Se
( eured by thieves who ransacked the
I Mew York sample store, 206 North
I Sixteenth street.
t Workmen's tools, from overalls to
$ paste, were reported Stolen from the
f ; home of Mrs. M. Engler, 113 North
Fifty-fourth . street, where . Orchard
& Wilhclin mechanics are at work.
; "Jiggs" and "Maggie" Frolic ;
1 ' ' For Ad-Scll Cluh Members
"J'Xea'" and "Maggie" of.,"Bring-
v nig. Up Father fame, stepped from
Itheir daily positions in-The' Bee's
.feature page of comics Monday eve
'ning and frolicked in true George
- McManus style, for the members of
; jthe Advertising Selling league at
' She Hotel Fontenellc, as ti stimulant
Tto the membership drive now in
'progress.
.-."Dinty" Moore and "Dugan"
were also there, as was the ''Duke of
' 'Marmalade" and great igo.bs o
corned beef and cabbage. True
: identity of the antickers was kept
secret Home J. Buckley of ' Chi
cago spoke on "The Cash Value of
t Direct, Mail Selling."
;"Wymore Firm Sues Basket
I Store Company of Omaha
I Wymore, "'Neb.,' April 12.''
j. (Special.) Suit has been -filed in
h district court by the Julius Neumann
i company of Wymore against the
Basket Stores company,, an Omaha
. corporation with a large" number of
- branrh establishments, to collect a
balance of $1,415.37 and 7 per-cent
' interest from February 1, 1919, on a
' note alleged to have been given as
part payment for a stock ot goods-.
The store was closed Saturday by
I Sheriff Emery who will take an in
f ventory of stock The store has been
managed by O. W. Smith, of Omaha.
. Bill to Pave Fort Crook
. fooad Is Killed in House
.'-Lincoln, April 12. (Special.)
N t A bill appropriating $300,000 for
py county -line to the Fort Crook
garrison was miiea in tne lower
.'house today.
, An attempt will oe made to in
clude the appropriation in the gen
eral appropriation now before .- the
' senate.
j Prices of Summer and Fall
Furs Increase Sharply
i New York, " April 12.-Increased
' prices for Russian .sable, Canadian
Marten, Baum , Marten and other
? furs for summer and early fallusc
were noted at the opening session of
t, the sixth annual spring fur sale to
il day. The increases ranged from IS
- to 35 per cent over the January sale,
"'ii Take Corn Until April 15.
c-HThe date far formers in Douglas
fcounty to douate jcom to the Near
;' Fast Kelief ' has been extended ,to
; ;Apnl 15, Ji. u. Maxweiu .county j
iigent announces. Any iuahtitjr;frorq
one bushel up, is acceptable, he
1 States. Farmers are asked to deliver
$he corn or money gifts to their I
cal elevator.
, . r I , , . r I
Canadian Teachers Strike,4'.
;i Edmonton 'Alberts,? 'April 12.-
Edmonton High , school - " teachdrs
went on strike today after the schoSl
Aboard announced that teachers'
representatives would not be .allow
i ed to attend board meetings. The
, teachers tiaVe been urgjng .salay ifx--reaseSf.;
", C.v . ."'. -' --"
Spending Week in Capital
", Washington, D. C, April 12.
i (Special Telegram.) C W. Scho-
bert and wife of Papillion, who are
returning from a -winter spent, -in
Jacksonville, Fla., are in Washing
ton for a week, enroute to their west
ern home. '
Burglar Captured .
After Knife Battle
fl H. E HiGglS'-
This is H. E. Harris, 21, who says
he is a native, of Ottumwa, Id.,,,and
an ex-con'vict, captured after a
bloody knife battle while attempting
to rob the home of Hayward
Vowter, negro. 1716 North Twenty
eighth street Sunday night.
Harris confessed to Chief of De
tectives Van Deusen that he was
responsible for 12 Omaha burglaries
and a number in Kansas City.
1,266 Ex-Yanks of State
Given Scholarships
A total of 1,266 scholarships to
Nebraska ex-service men is the
record of the Y. M. C. A. educational
service, just closed according to 3
report of Col. E. tlliott, state secre
tary. The cost was $65,000, $58,200
appropriated by the National 'War
Work Council and $7,000 in 'free
scholarships, by the Omaha and
Lincoln associations.
Two hundred were given to first
class universities like Harvard and
Columbia and the state university;
others to correspondence, business,
technical and automobile schools.
This work was begun in Novem
bcr'1919. The last grants were made
in March but students may claim on
these scholarships untU June 30. It
was the means of keeping' many in
school who would otherwise have
had Tio opportunity to continue their
training, according, to Colonel El
liott. -
High School rpT Girls to
Entertain at Conference
Beatrice, Ne.,. April 12. (Special)
The Beatrice .'High school Y.' W.
C. A.. Student fclub will be. hostesses
to all High school girls of the coun
ty Saturday, vAptil 30, at the first
Gage county vocational conference.
The need 6f z; vocation and voca
tional traininlg Will be presented by
men and- worae,n engaged in the
different? trades a"nd professions, who
will talk on training required, qualifi
cations, anjl salaries. The program
will comrflcit'ce at 10 and last all day.
A cafeteria! lunch will be served at
noon.
Head of Honey Producers f
Will Talk to Beekeepers
., II. C, Cook, president of the Doug
las County. Honey Producers' asso
ciation vAll give a talk on modern
beekeeping Friday at 1:30 p. m., at
the farm and apiary of John Burg
schat, 1 1-4 miles northeast of the
Ponca. schoolhQuse in Florencevpre
cinct. Anybne. intfrested in beekeep
ing may attend. E. G. Maxwell,
county agent, has charge of trans
portation. '
Nonpartisans Announce
State Organization Drive
Lincoln, April 12. A drive by ths
Nonpartisan league to organize. pre-j
cinct and county committees in the
state was announced tonight by Jesse
R. Johnson and J. D. Ream, re
spectively state manager and chair
man of the state committee. it A- C.
Townley, national president, it was
said, will address the committee
meetings. ' - . -; ; ; "
Fruit and Crops Badly x
Damaged by Heavy Frost
. West Point, Neb., April 12. (Spe
cial.) Heavy frosts of the past week
have done great damage in this vicin
ity. Oats, especially early sown,
have been hurt by the cold weather.
Fruit has been almost destroyed
and 10 per cent of the early potato
crop was frozen.
ADVERTISEMENT.
Ey
e Specialist and Medical Author
Report on Wonderful Remedy
Say It Strengthens Eyesight 50 in One Week's iTime in Many Instances
Ntw York. Dr. Smith, a well known eya
specialist, and Dr. Judkins, a Massa
chusetts physician and medical author,
make the following reports after a thorough
test of a popular remedy for the eyes:
Says ' Dr. Smith : "When my attention
was first called to it I was inclined to be
skeptical. But it ia a rale of mine to give
every new treatment a chance to prove its
value. Having- specialised in eye work for
many years I feel qualified to express an
intelligent opinion on remedies . for the
eyes. Since this one has created such a sen
sation I welcomed the opportunity, to test
it. I besran to use it in my practice a little
over a year ago and I am frank to ssy that
some of the results I have accomplished
withr Bon-Opto not. only astonish myself,
bnt also .other, physicians with whom . I
have. talVad about it, and J advise ''every
thoughtful physician to give Bon-Opto the
same careful trial I have and there ia no
doubt in my mind that he will come to
the conclusion I have, that it opens the
door for the cure of many eye troubles
which hav heretofore been difficult to
eppe, with. I have had individuals who
had worn; glasses for years tell me they
has dispensed with them through the uo
of Bon-Opto. In my own practice I have
seen it- strengthen the eyesight hiore than
60 per cent in one week's time. ' I have
also used it with surprising results in eases
of work-itramed eyes, pink eye. inflamed
lids, catarrhal conjunctivae, smarting,
painful, aching, itching eyes, eyes weak
ened . i rem colds. . smoket aun, dust and
wind. . watery eyea, blurred vision, and. in
fact, many other conditions too numerous
to mention in this report. A new and
striking case that has just been brought
to my attention ia that of a girl 12 years
old. Two prominent eye specialists, after
a thorough examination, deeided. according
to -her father, that in order to save, the
sight of her right eye, the left must be re
moved. While awaitinc an opportunity for
the operation and still undecided as to iU
wurtoui, her father wa told It would do
no httrm to use Bon-Opto. In less than
three doyi a marked improvement waa
Farmer Members
Of House Delve
Into Tax Bill
Senator Aulerson Defends
' Centralization of Taxation
Power as Only Method of
Discovering Intangibles.
Lincoln, April 12. (Special Tele
gram.) Farmer. members of the
lower house spent four hours last
night endeavoring' to reach an un
derstanding concerning the nature
of the interior of Senate File 65, the
taxation bill, which is arousing such
a storm over the state.
Representative H. L. Webster of
Burt, acting chairman, declared all
the farmers wanted was information
on which to base an opinion witb
an understanding of a special ses
sion in the fall to devise a tax bill.
Tonight found him expressing the
following thought:
"Wewant to pull off our coats
and jump into it and do the best
we can right here, right now."
Senator C. B. Anderson of Lan
caster, the guiding spirit in the taxa
tion bill, was invited by the farmers
to act as spokesman. He defended
centralization of taxation power and
reassessment power as the only
methods of outtine a proper pro
pelling machine behind local asses
sors to dig out the intangibles.
Statistics on the intangiDie anu
real nrooertv taxes naid by large
mercantile companies in Omaha and
Lincoln to show the need of a law
that will draw more intangibles out
were distributed among the farmers.
These statistics were prepared by.
W. H. Osborne, state tax commis
sioner. .
Representative Barbour of Scotts-
bluff suggested that in order to in
sure the 'ferreting out ot intan
gibles, an amendment should be
dooted forcing owners of intang
ibles to get them stamped in April,
each yfar. or the person against
whom the intangible was held would
not be responsible for payment, ji .
Omahan Taken to Ord, Neb.,
To Answer Charges by Girl
William S. Geib, 3122 Chicago
street, was taken to Ord, Neb., yes
terday by Sheriff Round to answer a
charge preferred : by 17-year-old
Georgia Benson of that place. Geib
was arrested Monday by Deputy
Sheriff Quackenbush at 'Thirty-sec
ond and Davenport streets where he
was working.
It is alleged that he met t(ie girl
while he was employed on a pav'ing
job in Ord last summer. She is now
m the Salvation Army home here.
Tot Drops Matches on Hot
Stove Dies From Burns
Madison, Neb., April 12. (Spe
cial.) While his parents were milk
ing Sunday evening . Thomas Olins
son, 3, climbed on a highchair,
dropped a box of matches on the
stove and was burned to death in
the flames which consumed his
clothing. Funeral service? .. were
held this morning at-' St. Leonard
church.
Ericksen and Chambers, Neb.,
Citizens Urge Branch Railway
Nearly 100 residents of Ericksoa
and Chambers, Neb., attended an in
terstate railway hearing' in federal
curt yesterday on a proposed branch
railroad line from Erickion to
Chambers, 36 miles. i
Residents of both towns are en
deavoring to compel' the Burlington
to construct the line. ; ;
Residents of Beatrice ' ; , i
Observe Golden Wedding
Beatrice, Neb., April lil-M Spe
cial) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hent--ges,
pioneer residents of this; city,
celebrated their golden wedding at
their home in the presence of their
children, grandchildren, and great
grandchildren. They were born in
Luxemburg, Germany. j-.
Beatrice High School to
Graduate Largest Class
Beatrice Neb., April 12, (Spe
cial.) The largest class in the his
tory o the Beatrice Jtigh school
will be graduated . this year when
approximately 100 students will re
ceive : diplomas, according to Prin
cipal 'Julius Gilbert. (
ADVERTISEMENT.
l o Strengthen isvesi
noticed. At the end .of av week the inflam
mation had almost disappeared, and at the
end of six weeks the "eye was pronounced
saved. Just think what the saving of that
eye means to this little girlt Another case
is that of a lady: fl 5 years old. She came
to me with dull vision and extreme in
flammation of the' lids and the -conjunctiva
was almost raw. After two weeks' use
of Bon-Opto the lids were absolutely "nor
mal and her eyes are as bright as many"
a giri of .16."
Dr. Judkins. ' Massachusetts . physician
and medical author, formerly chief of clinics
in- the Union General Hospital, Boston,
Mass., and formerly house surgeon at the
New England Eye and Ear Infirmary of
Portland, Maine, -says:
-"I have found oculists too prone to
operate and opticians too willing to pre
scribe glasses, while neglecting the simple
formulas which form the basis of Bon
Opto, which in my opinion, is a remark
able remedy for the cure and prevention
of many eye disorders. Its success in de
veloping and strengthening the eyesight
.will soon, make eye-glasses old-fashioned
and the use of Bon-Opto as common as
that of the- tooth brush.: I am thoroughly
convinced from my experience with Bon
Opto that it will strengthen the eyesight
at least 60 per cent in one week's time in
many instances." '
Victims of eye strain and other eya weak
nesses and many who wear glasses will be
glad to know that according to Dra. Smith
and Judkins there is real hope and help
for them.. Many whose eyes were failing
say they have, had their eyes, restored by
this remarkable remedy and many who
once wore glasses say they have la'd them
aside.- One man says aften using it: . 1
"I waa almost blind. Could not see lo
read at alL Now I can read everything
without any glasses and my eyes do not
hurt any more. At night they would pain
dreadfully. Now they feel ftne all the
time. It was like a miracle to me." A lady
who used it says: "The atmosphere se?mcd
hazy with or without glasses, but after
using this prescription for IS days evexy-
THE BEE: OMAHA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1921.
'Check Artists' Change
Pleas to Guilty After
Few Months in Jail
Fremont, Neb., April 12. (Special
Telegram.) Two ''check artists" de
cided to plead guilty after spending
several months in the local jail, ex
pecting to plead not guilty.
Marion E. Lunn, with several
aliases, was arrested last November
when he forged the name of O. A.
McFarlin, a farmer and former em
ployer, to a check in payment for
clothing in a local store. When taken
to jail he admitted ' his crime and
gave a. heart-rending story of a
starvine family in South Dokota
waiting for help from their unem
ployed father and husband. He
changed his mind later and preferred
to plead not guilty.
J. E. Ellman of Detroit. Mich.,
gave a check for $150 to a tire com
pany here, equipped a touring car
with the tires and . then departed
for . parts unknown, after he had
gained the confidence of several bus
iness men. The. check came back
marked "insufficient funds." Erll
man was brought back from Denver
a few months later and placed in
jail.
Evidently discouraged by the rec
ord of County Attorney J. C. Cook,
who has not lost a conviction in
the past twq terms of court, the men
pleaded -guilty today. .Lunn got
from one to 20 years and Ellman
was fined $250, .
Counterfeiter Used Boys
To Pass Notes He Raised
The first conviction in the round
up of counterfeiters by secret serv
ice operatives ' in the middle west
was obtained Monday when Thomas
Olmare was convicted at Sioux
Falls, S. D.
George Smith, assistant to Dave
Dickinson, secret service agent in
Omaha, was r a principal witness
against Olmare. . ,
Olmare employed young boys to
cass the counterfeit notes after he
had raised them artistically from
denominations of $1 to $10.
Gage County to Send Six
Cars of Corn for Relief
Beatrice, Neb.. April .(Spe
cialsDirector F. C. Crocker; who
is in charge of the gift corn for relief
in Europe, states that approximately
six cars or 6,000 bushels, will be
shipped from Gage county to Omaha
Wednesday or Thursday of this
week. One "car will be loaded at
Holmesville, ont at Krider, two at
Beatrice and probably two at Adams.
The women of the church at " Vir
ginia raised $32 Sunday which was
turned over Jo the relief fund.
ADVERTISEMENT.
A MAN IS JUST AS YOUNG AND
STRONG AS HIS BLOOD
No man can fight the battles of '
t 'ill
me ana noia nis own ii nisDiooa
is not pure, for rich, red blood
is what strength 13 based upon.
.When you see a strong, vigorous
man, who never knows when he
is licked, you may wager thalj
such a man has coursing through
his veins rich, jed blood. Many
people have thin; pale blood.
They are weak, tire easily, be
come discouraged quickly, and
sometimes feel like giving up the
struggle. Such 'folks need Dr.
Pierce'! Golden Medical Discov
ery, which is sold by druggists
in liquid or tablet form.
It is made up of Bloqd root,
Oregon Grape root, Queen's root.
Stone root, Cherry Bark, without
alcohol, and made into both li
quid and tablets. This blood
tonic was first put out .by Dr.'
Pierce in , ready-to-use: form,
Tho' over 50 years old, over one
million bottles were sold last year.
Send' 10 cents to Dr. Pierce's
Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.,
for a trial package of the tablets,
ADVERTISEMENT.
thing seems clear. I can read even fine
print "without glasses." Another who used
it says i "I was bothered with eyestrain,
caused by overworked, tired eyes which
induced fierce headaches. I have worn
glasses for several years, both for distance
and close work, and without them I could
not read' my own name on an envelope or
the typewriting on the machine before me.
I can do both how nnd have' discarded my
longidistance'TtlnKses' altogether; "T 'can
count the fluttering rn the trees
across the street now, which for several
years have looked like a dim green blur to
me. I cannot express my joy at what it
has done for nvs."
It is believed that thousands who wear
glasses can now discard them in t reason
able time and multitudes more will be able
to strengthen their eyes so as to be spared
the ' trouble and expense of ever getting
glasses. Eye troubles of many descriptions
may be wonderfully benefited in this easy
manner. Go to any drug store and get a
bottle of Bon-Onto tablets. Dissolve one
tablet in a fourth of a glass of water and
use from two to four times a day. You
should notice your eyee-elenr up percept
ibly right from the start end inflammation
and redness will quickly disappear. If
your eyes bother you. even a littie. it is
your duty to take stena to save them now
before it is too late. Many hopelessly blind
might have saved their eight if they had
eared for their eyes in' time.
XOTE! Another prominent physician to whom the
abort srtirle wte submitted. sld: "Tes. the Bon
Opto prescription is truly a wonderful ere rem Mr.
Its constituent Insredlentt ire veil known to emi
nent ere specialists and wtdelr prescribed by them.
I h&re used It rerv successfully in my own vv
Moe on pstienu wboss eras were strain Ml thrash
orerwork or misfit ( lasses. It la ens of the very
few prr rations I feel should be Kent m hand
tor reimlar use In almott-rary. family.:' Boo -Opto-referred
to a bore, is not a patent medicine or a
.Arret remedy.- It is an ethical preparation, the
formula beine printed on the package. The Manu
facturers eumrantee it to strengthen eresiaht 50 per
cent in on. week's time in man. instances or re
fund the moner. Tt is dispensed under auaranty
Kr til sood drtiisJi In this cltr inelndine the
Bnsraua a VcCooneU and the Melcbsr Btoie.
gnt
Nebraska Solons
Still . Wrestling
With Patronage
Delegation Has Held Three
Sessions to Read Endorse
mcnts of Candidates for
Federal Jobs.
By E. C. SNYDER.
Washington Correspondent, Omaha Bee.
Washington, April 12. (Special
Telegram.) Owing, to the inability
of the house to complete its organ
ization before 3 o'clock, the meeting
of the Nebraska delegation, sched
uled for that hour, was postponed
until . Tuesday. Whether the dele
gation will meet this morning is
problematical, but it is generally
agreed that a session will be held
Tuesday afternoon if Congressman
Reavis is, able to attend.
Mr. Reavis and members of the
joint committee on reorganization
have an engagement with the presi
dent tomorrow afternoon to talk over
the scope the committee should cover
in its recommendations looking'to the
consolidation of bureaus and the
elimination of overlapping in depart
mental activities. .
The Nebraska delegation has held
three sessions in the last few days, the
entire time being taken up with the
reading of endorsemcnts of individ
uals for various federal jobs. They
first looked up recommendatitons for
collector of internal revenue and
then, without passing on the merits
of the aspirants, they began reading
the endorsements of promlrent c'ti
zens for the several candidates -for
United States attorney. '
Some quiet sport was indulged in
when it was ascertained that a prom
inent Lincoln republican had en
dorsed two candidates for United
States attomey and failed to explain
just why he had given his recom
mendation to both.
When the delegation meets 'again
it will complete the 'reading of the
endorsements for candidates for
5 ' .. ' ' . . linn
Fee
'II'
1 i
The Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway.
Company, operating the present toll bridge :
across the Missouri river between Omaha arid
Council Bluffs, addresses, through this me
dium, a few statements of fact to the voters of
Omaha on the proposition of voting bondsfor ;
a so-called "free" bridge between thetwocities;
lWhoW ants theuFree" Bridget
The' proposal to build a so-called' "free"
bridge certainly cannot be said to have
originated in either a public necessity or
popular demand. It originated with the
. statement by somebody that the bridge
between Omaha and Council Bluffs was
the orily toll bridge on the Lincoln Highway:-
The argument is advanced that un
less, a so-called "free" bridge is con
structed here tourists might go by some
other route, i Like many other arguments
made byyover-enthusiastic promoters this
-one is both false and foolish. The jtwo
"principal streams crossed by the Lincoln
Highway are : the Mississippi and the
Missouri. It crosses the Mississippi at
Clinton OVER A TOLL BRIDGE just
as it crosses the Missouri at Omaha over
i a tojl bridge. v
r What decides the' automobile tourist in
his choice of routes' is Good Roads, not
"free" bridges. He is Accustomed to pay
ing. toll, not only for crossing bridges,
'.but in 'many Eastern , states for driving
over highways. Such travelers care noth
ing for the small j sums they contribute
towards, the upkeep of bridges or even
roads. They would much rather pay toll
to drive over good hard-surfaced roads
than to travel free through mud.
Another argument advanced by the
"free" bridge- advocates is that persons
of small means who work' in Omaha
could acquire cheap , homes in the bot-
. torn lands on the Iowa;side of the river.
If this were true it would' certainly be no
" advantage to Omaha.;; The: fact is, how
ever, that these-persons Tof small means
I, .
United States attorney and then go
on to , prohibition commissioner,
leavY.tr; 'the matter of t'-jC n arshal
ship to the last.
Congressman Jcfferis was honored
by being designated by Clerk l'age,
who prevded ov; the hotise until .li.;
elecli- n, of speaker, as one- of 'the
four tellers to,canvassvthe vote on
speaker, the . democratic miuqrity
'V. ' ".
Solons Again Vote Down , ,
Supreme Cpuri Commission
Lincoln, April 12-(Special)VFor
the 4th-tmie.'.tht . Nebraska , itate
legislature .separated: the supreme
court commission from j its $37,500
biennial job when the-lower house,
by a vote of 48 to" 41? refused today
to reconsider House Roll No. 624,
a bill to re-create the supreme court
commission.
.This bill was killed twice in the
state senate, revived and introduced
JE-iLG
Grandma
she will tell you
thai the food that
has nourished ::
three generations
of babies is-)
EAGLE BRAND
Condensed Milk
iPiii
Cuticura Soap
Will Help You
Clear Your Skin
1 1
Bridge
WATCH FOR FURTHER
into the lower house after lawyer
members petitioned the governor
to throw his strength behind the bill'
A message from the governor re
sulted urging the recreation of the
commission. It was then killed in
the house and (the motion to. recon
sider was oii today ,
An" agricultural c6ngre4s along
scientific lines is planned for-Portu
gal this year.,'
J . . ... .L.
ADVEBTISKMEM'
If Ruptared
Apply it to Any Rupture, Old
' or Recent, Large or Small
,, and You ar, on the
. Road -That, 'Has
. , .Convinced,
it. Thousand.
Sent Free to Prove This
Anyone ruptured, man, woman or child,
hould write at once to W. S. Rice. 676
Main St., Adams. N. Y.. for a tree trial of
hi wonderful Rtimulatimr application. JuM.
rput it on the rupture and (he muaolei be-
em to tighten; tney begin to bind together
so that the opening elosea naturally and
the need of eupport or trust or appliance
is then done away witb. Don't neglect to
send for this fr?e trial. Even if your rup
ture doesn't bother yoir what 1s the use of
wearing supports all your life? . Why suf
fer this nuisance T Why run the risk of
gangrene and such dangers from a small
and innocent little rupture, the kind that
has thrown thousands on the operating ta
ble? A host of men and women are daily
running such risk just because their rup
tures do not hurt nor ptevent them from
getting around. Write at once for this
free trial, as it is certainly a wonderful
thing and has aided in the cure of rup
tures that were as big as a man's two fists.
Try and write at once, using the coupon
below.
Free for Rupture
W. S. Rice. Inc., . ,
676 Main St., Adams, N. Y.
You may send me entirely free a
Sample Treatment ot your stimulating
application for Rupture.
- : v -Name
AddreSt
State . ... .
Try
This
Free
do not ride to work'in-automobiles and
as they can now cross the bridge on foot
for two cents per day and do not chpose."
to build homes on the Council Bluffs sidei
of the river it is not likely that they would ;
do so' even if they could walk across the 1
- bridge without paying any toll. r 1
' ' "
It is also argued that the Omaha retailer-
would be benefited by a "free" bridge.
Let's see what the facts are: The great
majority of Council Bluffs shoppers-corn-
ing to Omaha ride on the street cars and
not in automobiles. A "free" bridge would '
not reduce street car fares, between the V
two cities, but on the contrary would nec- ' ' .
essarily Increase them because the rev
enue from street car fares without the
bridge tolls is insufficient to meet oper
ating expenses, taxes and "interest on
bonds. Therefore, the construction of a
so-called "free" bridge would INJURE
and not benefit the Omaha retail mer
chant. ; . '
Who then wants a "free" bridge? Possi
bly the owners of" land on the river bot- '
toms across from Omaha who expect to
reap large profits by inducing Omaha''
people to move across the., riven And
possibly the fellow who owns nothing but
an automobile and who would like to joy-J
ride across the river without expense to
himself :' .. .'. , ' v - ' : ;'" y' "i
Mr. Taxpayer do. you want to Tote to in- .
crease your taxes to pay interest on bonds
and the cost of maintenance and care of
a "free" bridge in order to help the real
estate speculator or the joy-rider?
"FREE" BRIDGE FACTS
AnVMTISKMKNT.
Spring Time Advice
. For Tired Mothers
Mothers who are tired and run
down by the strain of family cares
can rebuild strength and regain nor- i
mal health by taking Father John's I
Medicine which is all Dure, whole
some nourishment The i food .ele-i4
ments which this old-whioned pre- ,
8cription contains are to prepared
that they are quickly taVen up by
a system weakened .and run down.
There is no false stimulation in
Father John's Medicine, .it is pure,
wholesome nourishment, Guaran
teed free from alcohol or dangerous
drugs. " ; ' ' '''" "
ALL PURE
, FOOD
CRIATCST
m
opy 1UILDIR.
NO DRfrdS
KinsiOS
(TABLETS or GRANULES)
Oil INDIGESTION
Take dry on tongue or
with hot or cold water.
QUICK RELIEF!
Prise, 25-50-75
madc ey sjcarr own ,
MAKERS OF '
SCOTT'S EMULSION
.
A Bee Want Ad Wilf Work
Wonders
Facts
rf.
fc