Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 09, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1921.
Pershing Urges
Armament Limit
Before Women
Steps Already Taken for In
ternational Reductioq in De
fense Expenditures, Gen
eral Tells Voters' League.
Lincoln, June 8. (Special Tele
gram.) Speaking here last night be
fore the state convention of the Ne
braska League of Women Voters on
limited armament Gen .John Persh
ing said: "
"I believe some plan should be
devised to limit the large expendi
tures countries are making since the
war. One nation cannot disarm, or
limit very largely its disarmament
unless all do so. It would be folly
for America alone to lay down its
arms and say it would spend no
more for armaments.
"I am authorized by the president
to say that steps already have been
taken through diplomatic channels
to get things started with a view
of limiting defense. I think public
opinion is back of President Hard
ing." Solons . Speak.
At the night meeting, Representa
tive J. Reid Green of Lincoln 'and
Senator George B. Hastings ;' of
Grant spoke on legislative ' proce
dure, following a stirring report by
Mrs. H. H. Wheeler of Lincoln,
legislative chairman for the league.
One hundred members of the or
ganization were guests at a charm
ing tea served this afternoon by Mrs.
W. E. Hardy at her home in Calvert
Place.
Pledges of $100. each, to the league
were made by Dr. Jennie Calif a3
and Mrs. R. Beecher Howell of
Omaha Howell of Omaha. Mrs. C,
T. Kountz, Mrs. Draper Smith,
Mrs. H. C. Sumney and Mrs. H. J.
Bailey are other Omaha women why
also made pledges. .
The entire slate of the nominat
ing committee was elected at the
meeting this afternoon. Officers
are as follows:
President, Mrs. C G. Ryan of
Grand Island; first vice president,
Mrs. E. D. Healy of Bloomfield; sec
ond vice president, Mrs. J. Senning of
Lincoln; third vice ' president, Mrs.
Charles Dietrich of Hastings; secre
tary, Miss May Gund of Lincoln:
treasurer, Mrs. Ward E. Shafer of
Omaha; and the following directors:
First Congressional district, Mrs. E.
F. Pettis of Lincoln;, Second district,
Mrs. H. J. Bailey of Omaha. Third
district, Mrs. Louise Ornsby Thomp
son of Central City; Fourth district,
Mrs. J. E. Vance of-Milford; Fifth
district, Mrs. A. H. Brooks rjf Hast
ings; Sixth district, Mrs. C H. Rock
well of Valentine. ' -
Chiropractors of State
To Meet Here Next-Week
The annual convention of the Ne
braska Chiropractic association will
be held in Omaha June 12 to 14.
Headquarters will be at the Castle
hotel. ;
Sunday afternoon the visitors will
be taken for a ride about the city.
At, night there will be a banquet, at
which Dr. J. C. Lawrence will be
toastmaster. Other speakers will be
Dr. A. W. Schwietert, Dr. C. R. Aer
ni, Dr. L. N. Carpenter arid Dr.' Ma
bel Palmer. " - ;
Monday the convention' will
called to order by the president, Dr.
J.i C. Lawrence. Mayor James O
Dahlman will deliver the address, of
welcome. In the evening there will
be; a banquet.
Farmers' Union Creamery -Holds
Annual Meeting
Superior, Neb-, June 8. (Special.)
The annual meeting of the . Farm
ers Union Creamery company was
held here with about 00 delegates in
attendance from as far east as
Beatrice and as far west as McCdok,
and the north tier of counties in
Kansas from Republic to Rawlins
county was represented. . This is
now the largest co-operative cream
ery in Nebraska, and employ's " 65
people in the plant and stations. ," It
has churned almost 1,000,000 -pounds
of butter since January 1. It has a daily
capacity of 16,000 pounds of butter.
An addition is being built to house
the buttermilk condensing plant.
i - " i 1
Packer Workmen Hold Mass,
Meet on Requested Pay Cut
At a mass meeting of the Amalga
mated Meat Cutters and Butcher
Workmen of America in Union hall,'
Twenty-fifth and M streets, Tuesday
night, membet of the Omaha chap
ter were instructed to await order
from national headquarters before
making anymove to combat an ad
ditional S-cent an hour cut in ' wages
for all hourly workers asked by the
"Big Five" packers in a petition fijed
before Judge Alschuler, arbitrator.
The present scale for common, labor
is. 45 cents an hour. The proposed
S-cent cut would take effect June 19.
One of Original Builders
I Of D. & R. G. Road pies
Colorado Springs, June 8. Dr. Wil
liam A. Bell, who, with Gen. William
J Palmer built the Denver & Rio
Grande railroad, died Monday at his
' home in Pendell Bletchinley Surrey,
England, according . to" word tele
phone here today by :W. J. Bell of
Denver. Mr. Bell, who was 80 years
old was one of the founders in 1879
of the Colorado Coal and Iron com
pany, which later became trie pres
ent Colorado Fuel and Iron company.
Request for Extradition.
Of Connelly Is Denied
Fargo, N. D., June 8. The United
States extradition commission to
. day denied request of the Dominion
of Canada for the return of William
Connelly, alias J. E. Burns' of Oma
ha, charged with forgery and bur
glary. The extradition commissioner
held that the evidence was not suffi
cient for identification of the pris
oner. .
Bond Issue Carries
Nelight, Neb., June 8. (Special
Telegram.) Five thousand dollar
bond election to give the city addi
tional wells for the water plant
carried by 161 majority. Only nine
votes were cast against the bonds.
" i. . Visiting at Capital
Washington, D. C, June 8. (Spe
cial Telegram.) G. L. Kennedy and
daughter of Auburn, Neb., are visit
ing friends in the nationafc'apitaU-
State Convention of
Women Voters Ends
. Lincoln, June 8. (Special.) The
second annual convention of the Ne
braska League of Women Voters
closed here this noon following the
aHnntlnn nf rf solutions, lookini? to-
.ward limitation 'of armament in the
world and endorsing the program ot
the national league on the subject of
disarmament.
Discussion on the subject was led
by Mrs. Frank Babcock of Hastings.
Other resolutions were introduced by
Mrs. Draper Smith on child welfare,
n, Tfnntp PnlJfac nn social hvcine.
and Mrs. H. 'H. Wheeler on legisla
tion. Utner speakers oi me morning
wr. Vfi-e f (1 Kuan nf flranrl Is
land, president-elect; -Miss , Anna
Kramph ot North i'latte, Mrs. irene
Buell af Ashland and Miss Gladys
Shamp of Omaha.
Printers Settle 44-Hour
Week Strike at Sioux City
Sioux City, la,, June 8. Printers
employed in Sioux City have been
granted a new scale of wages. Print
ers in job shops will receive $37.50
for a 44-hour week. The settlement
of the job printers'-scale ends a
strike which has been in torce a
week.
The rfewspaper printers will re
ceive $44 for night work and $41 for
day work. The scale is effective for
one year. The new scale is an ad
vance over the old.
Woman Killed, Four Injured
When Automobile Skids
Sioux Falls. S. D.. June 8. Miss
Bertha Anderson, 23 years old, was
killed, her uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Anderson, Mrs. Ander
son's mother, and Peter Coris, all of
this' city, were injured last night
when an automobile in which they
were riding skidded and overturned
on the Dell Rapids highway, 10 miles
from here.
Physicians fear the elderly Mrs.
Anderson suffered internal injuries
which may prove fatal.
Sunday Base Ball Carries
In Referendum at Sutton
Sutton, Neb., June 8. (Special.)
In a hotly contested election in
which almost twice the normal vote
was cast, Sunday base ball carried
by a majority of 76. The antis had i
induced the county supervisors to
refuse to permit Sunday base ball
in Clay county, the fans of Sutton
appealed to the referendum.
ADVERTISEMENT.
I Helps make rich, red blood
and revitalize weak nerves
YOU MAY BE A BETTER
MAN AT 45, THAN
THE YOUTH OF 25
If you keep your blood rich in
iron to give you plenty of "stay
there"strength and endurance.
In an account of a severe mountain
climbing test, a New York news
paper states that 20 per cent of these
who accomplished the feat were 44
years and over. It is therefore
shown that you may be a better
man at 45 than the husky stripling of 25
if you take care of yourself and keep your
blood filled with iron. Prize fighters, wrest
lers and athletes have learned the value of
plenty of plain, coarse foods in their train
ing, as such a diet helps supply their blood
with iron. Nature put plenty of iron in the
husks of grain and the peels of vegetables
to enrich your blood, but modern methods
of cookery throw all these things away
hence the alarming increase in recent years
in Anaemia iron starvation of the blood,
with its devitalizing weakness, nervous
ness tnd other attendant ills. If you are
not strong and well, if you lack bodily and
mental vigor, do not wait until you go all
to pieces and collapse in a state of nerv
ous prostration or until in your weakened
condition you contract some serious dis
ease, but take some organic iron like
NUXATED -IRON at. once to help enrich
your blood and revitalize your wornout ex
hausted nerves. Organic Nuxated Iron is
like the iron in your blood and like the
iron in spinach, lentils and apples. It
will not injure the teeth nor disturb the
stomach. You can even eat it if you
Wish. It often increases your bodily and
mental vigor in two weeks time. Your
money will be refunded by the manufac
turers -if you do not obtain satisfactory
results. Beware of substitutes. Look for
the word "Nuxated on every package and
the letters N. L 'on every tablet. At all
druggists.
-BOWEN'S
Bo wen's
Mattress Sale
Saturday an
Unusual Event
On Saturday morning;
500 guaranteed Mat
tresses will be placed.
' on special sale at prices '
that will eclipseall pre-
vious events in unpar-
alleled Value-Giving" ,
. ADVEBT1SEMENT. '
For Itching Eczema,
Old Sores and Piles
i "l guarantee my ointment," says Peter
ion of Buffalo, "to cure eczema; to stop
the itching at once- and any reliable drug
gist will cheerfully refund your money
if PETERSON'S OINTMENT doesn't do
everything) I say it will do."
William A. Carley of Franklin, N. Y., is
surely a wise man. ' He writes: "I used
PETERSON'S OINTMENT on- a little boy
suffering terribly with eczema. It did the
work."
Then there, is Alex Louttel, a brave fire
man of Buffalo, who is glad to write as
follows: "I had an old sore on my leg
for many years. The best doctors failed.
PETERSON'S OINTMENT entirely healed
the sore quickly." And from over in Can
ada comes a letter from A. Blockeby, stat
ing: "The best thing I ever hit for itching
Piles is PKTERSON'S OINTMENT." A big
box for SO cents. Mail orders filled by
Peterson Ointment Co.. Inc., Buffalo, N. Y.
Sherman It McComi'tll Drua Co- will 'ply
you.
Masons Delay
On Proposal to
Buy Hospital
Committee of Seven Named to
Investigate Fenger Hospital
And Report Back Next
Year.
A resolution to purchase Fenger
hospital, Twenty-sixth street and
Dewey avenue, was offered on the
floor of the Nebraska Grand Lodge
of Masons at the morning Session in
the Masonic temple. ' The resolution
caused so much comment vthat the
entire morning was taken up in de
bate. v
The proposition finally was placed
in the hands of a committee of seven
for investigation. The committee
will report back to the next grand
lodge a year hence. .
The original resolution provided
for the investigation of the hospital
property by a committee of five with
power to act, and if satisfactory to
purchase it. In his annual address
before the grand lodge' Tuesday
Grand Master Fradenburg broached
the proposition of a state hospital
for Masons and had mentioned the
purchase price as being approxi
mately $450,000. "
In yesterday's debate because
of the vagueness of the price, the
present litigation and other circum
stances which would have to, be
cleared up before a purchase could
be effected, the original resolution
was amended, adding two more to
the investigating committee and call
ing for a report a year from now.
Bee 'want ads are boosters.
Be
There is an old adage, "It is only the live fish
that swims upstream." Applied to the Help Your
self Club Campaign, we could easily transpose it
to read "It' is only the live member who will be
able to swjm tlujoug the sea of votes to a capital
award." There remains but three weeks of the
campaign and every day yes, and every hour
either brings you closer or puts you further from'
the desired valuable awards. You members who.
have done well in the past periods of the campaign
must realize that this is your critical time and that
you will have to work hard to hold your advantage.
Go after big subscriptions. Take shorter
ones if you must, but try first for the long one.
, Look over your receipts and get your friends, who
in the early part of the campaign gave you short
term subscriptions, to give you a second payment
and thus extend the time of their subscription.
The second payment plan is a rapid way of se
curing votes. Mark all such remittances "Second
- payment." -. ' :;: -.' ' ' ''';";'''
If,-when you last saw some of your friends,
- they were' taking another paper and did hot want
,two at one time, go back at them, and: tell them
' 50,000 ExtVa Votes for each $25.00 in subscriptions and 2,000 Extra .Votes for each dollar
over $25.00. This offer is open only from June 6th until June 18th. It is positively the only re
maining extra vote of fer which will be made.
List of Awards . '
. rl$700i)0 HOME, First Capital Award.
1- $4,440.00 Cadillac Automobile.
. ; 1 $100.00 Conservative B. & h. Deposit.'
9 $1J15jOO Maxwell Automobiles.
$$200.00 B. & L. Deposits.
9$100j00 B. & L. Deposits.
Total number of awards, 30.
Ten' per cent cash commission to all non
icinners if they turn in $50.00 or more.
Omaha a Village When
He Was Here Before
Twelve Districts Unite
to Conduct One High School
Big Springs, Neb., June 8. (Spe
cial.) Big Springs voted $7,500 to
conduct the consolidated high school
next year. J. H.i M enter, G. W,
Snyder and Cal McClung were elect
ed members of the board. School
district No. 28 was joined in with
the 11 other districts, making. 12 dis
tricts forming one high school dis
trict and embracing more than one
third of Deuel county.
v.
r-
' vT
Iff ' )
-'s " , g
1 gvP-g-Wtte )
Help Yourself Club
First Capital Award
0'
Th $7,800.00 Martin-Built Home at No. 2578 Titus Ave.
is a beautiful 5-room Bungalow, with every modern conven
ience living room, dining room,, two bedrooms, kitchen and
bath; full basement, cemented floor, furnace, gaa and
electric light. - "v ',
It' just the kind of house that can be made into a real
home and the kitchen facilities, especially, are such a will
appeal to the housewife at the last word in labor-saving
devices.
EXTRA VOTE OFFER
Bisliop Tuttle
Visits Omaha
" After 54 Years
Presiding Bishop of Protestant
Episcopal Church Guest at
Happy Hollow Club To
Speak at Trinity.
Fifty-four years ago Bishop Dan
iel Sylvester Tuttle, now presiding
bishop of the Protestant Episcopal
church, came through Omaha on his
way to Denver where he was to take
charge of missionary work in the
"wild west." Bishop Tuttle came
to Omaha from Chicago, then North
Platte and from North Platte rode
a work train into Denver.
Yesterday Bishop Tuttle, old in
years of service for his church, ar
rived in Omaha from St. Louis. His
arrival was much different than the
previous one. He rode in a comfort
able Pullman car and instead of wad
ing through muddy village streets he
was met at the Union station and
taken to the home of H. W. Yates,
3120 Davenport street, in an auto
mobile.
Bishop Tuttle remained at the
Yates home all day where he re
ceived callers and church workers
of Omaha. At noon he was the
guest at a luncheon given at Happy
Hollow club. Last night therer was
a meeting at Trinity cathedral and
the bishop delivered an address.
The meeting was followed by an
informal reception to the bishop.
Bishop Tuttle is on his way to
Denver, where he will consecrate in
St. Johns cathedral the Rev. Pred
fMtWAfil)i
2BOOVH0ML :
I mt OrUUMBU ::
I wuiiouu cum
you are in the up-and-running class and have them
give you a subscription to The Bee, the best paper
in Nebraska, the delivery of The Bee to com
mence when their present subscription to the other
paper expires. Mark such subscriptions on your
remittance sheet "Future Subscription.'
Do you get excited or wistful or just plain
determined when you think of the exceptional
value of the awards for which you are working?
The plain determined is the proper attitude of
mind the one which will help you. It is well
to keep in mind that you are working for some
thing which is of real value, that many of the
awards are worth several thousand dollars. Nat
urally it means a great deal to the members to
secure one, but the best frame of mind for success
is just a willingness to work hard for it. You
have just as good an opportunity as any other
member and in any event you will be well reward
ed for your work. But, whatever you do, put up
a real fight during these last three weeks of the
campaign and make it a desperate fight to the
finish. . The other members will have to do the
same and it will be; no easier for them than it is
for you. - , - --V' ; .;
Membership Entry Blank
The Omaha Bee Help Yourself Club
5,000 VOTES
i ,
nominate
(Mr., Mrs.
Street No
City ...
As a member of The
Signed .
Address
This nomination blank will count for ,000 votes if sent to tht
manager of the H. Y. S. Club. Only one blank will count for a
member. Fill out this blank with your name or the name of your
I favorite and tend it to The Bee. The name of the person making
lthe nomination will not be divulged.
Ingley asN bishop coadjutor of the
diocese of Colorado.
Iowa Farm Credit Company
Files Corporation Papers
Ottumwa, la., June 8. Articles of
incorporation were to be filed today
in Des Moines for the Iowa Farm
Credits corporation, a $5,000,000
company made up of leading bank
ers and farmers of Iowa with.L. A.
Andrew of Ottumwa as president.
The company will start business
immediately with $1,000,000 of its
capital paid in.
ADVERTISEMENT.
"TIZ" GLADDENS
SORE, TIRED FEET
No puffed-up, burning, ten
der, aching feet no corns
or callouses.
"Tiz" makes sore, burning, tired
teet tairly dance with delight. Awav
go the aches and pains, the corns,
callouses, busters, bunions and chil
blains.
"Tiz' draws out the acids and
poisons that puff up your feet. No
matter how hard you work, how
long you dance, how far you walk,
or how long you" remain on your
feet, "Tiz" brings restful foot com
fort. Iiz is magical, grand, won
derful for tired, aching, swollen,
smarting feet. Ah I how comfort
able, how happy you feel. Your fest
just tingle tor joy; shoes never hurt
or seem tight.
Get a box of "Tiz" now from any
druggist or department store. End
foor torture forever wear smaller
shoes, keep your feet fresh, sweet
and happy. Just think 1 a whole
year's foot comfort for a few cents.
Sat.......;......;'
.121
or Miss)
.'....Disk No-
Stete.......
Help Yourself Club
Omaha Man Injured When
Cable Breaks at Dig Springs
Big Springs, Neb., June 8. (Spe
cial.) M. V. Campfield, assisting W.
B. Linch in putting lightning rods
jMiiiiiiii!iiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiifiiMiiii':i.n..ii ATLANTIC 3000 iniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiwwmininiiiiiiiniummiij
I SIXTEENTH AND
Fireless
Cookery
FIRELESS COOKERY eliminates the wasted heat so un
pleasant in the kitchen in summer. It saves a great deal
of time, it permits you to leave the house while the food
is cooking, it saves food and gas and makes possible the pur
chase of cheaper cuts of meat by more accurate cookery. All
these things will be demonstrated by Mrs. C. L. Gould, Do
mestic Science Expert, who will also show you a hundred
and one ways of making your fireless cooker pay real divi
dends, in time and money saved, comfort and convenience.
"Domestic Science Fireless Cookers" are sold in one, two and
three-well sizes.
Refreshments will be served to all attending the demon
stration. You can see Mrs. Gould make ice cream and cake in the same
two-well cooker at the same time.
Term 10 Down, 10 Per Month
Fireless Cookers Downstairs' Dept.
Your Refrigerator
Should Be a Herrkk Because -
it means Sanitary Dry Air
Refrigeration at a mini
mum ice cost. -
60-lb. Herrick Refriger
ator, white enamel
lined ....... .40.00
75-lb. Herrick Refriger
ator, white enamel
lined ....... .48.00
100-lb. Herrick Refriger
ator, white enamel
lined 60.00
115-lb. Herrick Refriger
ator, spruce lined,
at... 52.00
130-lb. Herrick Refriger
ator, spruce lined,
at 65.00
Other Refrigerators In
Open Top Styles, from
New Shipment
Grass Furniture
Our own importation, direct from China.
Ideal for Porch, Sunroom and all round the
house use. "
24-Inch
Grass Table:
Woven and trimmed to match
Rockers and chairs above.
$15.00
Smaller Similar fiCA
Table, - lJ.OU
.150 Child's Chairs and Rockers
In same design as larger sizes, extra special
" values at 4.85
fiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiKiiiiiMiii ORCHARD &
Write your name and address below
mail to -Loring Park Sanitorium
and receive Diet List and Menus
FREE. ,
Name ........ i . ...
Street . ,.
City... O.b:
SHU
Pi
FistMffl -
A miM .-r.lm af
A care guaranteed In ever ease accepted for treatment, and no money is to be paid aatit
cured. Write for book oa Rectal Diseases, with names and testimonials of more taaa.
1.000 prominent people who have been permanently cured. - A
DR. E. R. TARRY Sanatorium. Tatars Trusl Bid. (Bee Bid.) Omaha. Wa U - t.
on the garage of the Phelps Motor
company here, fell off the roof about
16 feet to sidewalk when a cable
broke. Campfield broke his wrist
and suffered other injuries. His
home is in Omaha.
HOWARD STREETS. :
Dernonstratedby
Expert this week
i
9
9
3
9
1
17.75
J
i
9
S
Rocker
. As Illustrated
; .Natural Grass, relieved with
geometric figures and
striping.
13.50
Chairs to 1 C(
- match, 1 Ci.DKf
i r
9 .
9
;
5 i
9
Rocker
As illustrated, large roll
seat type, natural grass
trimmed in green,
at 16.50
Chair to match. .15.00
Other Grass Chairs and
Rockers, 14.50,
16.00 and 17.50.
Settes to match. .24.50
WILHELM CO. iwr
MIII!IIIIIIIISIII!,J
FREE Complete Diet List and
Menu Schedules with Table of Food
Values snd full instructions, recently
compiled and based on seven years
of experience snd success in the
treatment of Oiabetes at Lortnf
Par k Ssnitorium.
' Tfieie will bt distributed fret
white tfiey bit. postal prepaid. .
' PKixitjOMa4Jnu,aUotwnu. '
tORINC FARC SANATORIUM ,
IMS Htrfnoe Place
Phot Atlantic 1)44 Mirwai :im
Pay .when Cwrea
treatment that enrva Pila. Fistula and otfee
3
i
i 9
9
1 -
Grass,
9 i
a --
m .
Rectal Diseases in a short time, without a severe "rgieal ea
oration. No Chloroform. Ether sr ether eeneral aneetiietie osee).
- , ..... '