Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 13, 1901, Page 28

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20 (UEER INJUSCTION CASES Bymposium of Cdd Qhapters from Records of the Courts, RESTRAINING ORDERS ~ COME HANDY | Injanction Procecding as & Remedy | for the Numerous Troubles of Mankind=Hu h of Ine teresting Samples, The writ of Injunction is coming to be the legal panacea for all human woes of a social nature If the riatemen sarry a ring of hyperbole, recall all the queer things which you remember reading In the nawspapers about people Yave done with the ald of tha restraining orisr and the frequency wi'h which they hav: recourse to the expediont and it vill ho seen that the words contatn a zood deal of truth It the cases that come up in court were | 0 be classified and easn iooked at one at | a time from the viewpoint of the amuse ment seeker 1t would be found that injune tion sults furnish the most interest, he cause the circumstances of a proceeding of this kind are invarlaoly lively and often | are ludicrous to an oxtrems. There was an instance of the kind not verv long azo in this city which went the rounds of the press all over the country because of its unique situation. There were two families living together in a store bullding on Sherman avenue. One occupled t tore and rear rooms on the lower floor and owned the siruc To the other family was rented the entire upper story, with privil of water end | gas included. The rental was $15 a month | and, this being a low prica, there was an | agreement that the family on *“e upper | floor should expend A considerably sum in the way of improvements. The terms of | the verbal contract were carried out and | all went well for several months, when a | rupture camé. The owner of the building | wanted to raise the rent and the tenant | declined to pay more than he had bar- | gained. He was given the alternati paying $20 or moving and he refused to do elther. seems o In this extremity the store owner tried the expedient of turning off the water from the upstairs rooms. The temant hastened to the court to secure an injunction re- straining him from shutting off the water supply. It was this order of the court that gave rise to the story. In the middle of the night the store owner was awakened from peaceful slumber by an unusual o currence. He dreamed that he was among the Inhabitants of the earth during a second flood and that the second Noah had ex- cluded him and his family from the ark In vain they tried to escape the water by climbing to the housetop; the inunda- tion followed and just as the waves swept the man and his little ones into the depths he awoke The bed clothes were wringing wet and the celliug seemed to be pouring down water. Thé man clambored out of bed Instead of treading on a carpet when ho crossed the room he walked in pools ot fey cold water.” Then, as he lighted a match at the gas jet, the rays disclosed & scene of desolution and ruin. One of the water pipes leading above the ceiling to the upstairs apartments had burst for some upaccountable reason and the va- grant streams that issued from the rents in the pipe washed down huge patches of pluster, soaked the curtains and carpet and saturated every article of furniture in a radius of ten feet The man's first impulse was to rush down cellar and shut off the water. He started, matches Iu hand, but when he reached the bottom of the stairs it oc- curred to him that a violation of the court’s order under any circumstances wha would bring him Into contempt, nd what the penalty would be for such offense he could not guess. He had a vague idea that the consequences of run- ming counter to the dictums of the law would be vastly worse than the destruction wrought by the water, so he decided to take no step to stopping the flood until morning, when leave of the court could be obtained. It was 9 o'clock when the judge appeared at the court house next day and a stay to the injunction was granted. This man's respect for a re- straining order is without a parallel as far as the court records are concerned There are many queer Incidents in con. nection with injunction sults, but probably none is more unusual than the manner a well known attorney of this ety was com- pelled to take because of an injunction in a divorce sult to find means of ingress and egress at his own home. The attor- ney's wife secured an order preventing him from entering his dwelling between the hours of 7 o'clock in the morning and 8 o'clock at night, or from molesting mem- bers of the family in any way. He was allowed the privileges of his room at night, and that was all. The wife knew enough about law to feel sure that if she locked the doors the husband could not get to his room without disobeying the order in regard to wolesting her, so to discommode him as riach as possible the doors were locked. The attorney, being too shrewd to cross the will of the court in bothering his wife to open the doors, secured a ladder, and all the time pending a hearing on the divorce application, he went to and from his means of a ladder, ona ax to Money. Cases where men have been enjoined from removing money at their credit in the bank pending actlons at law, whero railroads have been restrained from tearing up or laying tracks and where husbands have been prevented from beatiug thelr wives during the interval before the hearing in divorco sults are commonplace, but there are numerous others which have the smack of novelty recurring. It was not a great while ago that two farmers, one & Seventh Day Adventist, who lived side by sido a few miles from the city, fell out over some trifiing matter and the one who A TONIC THAT MAKES STRONG NERVES, CURES DYSPEPSIA, Stomach Troubles AND INSOMNIA BLATZMALT ALL DRUGGIS1S. Prep. by Vai Blatz trewing Co., Milwaukee, constantly OMAHA BRANCH, 14:2 Douglas Tel. 1081, | paseing the house at times when the dust | | to obscure the surrounding scenery. The | boy enjoined from thus | capital advertise | rivals from imitation when his publication was less religlous than the other acquired | the habit of driving along the boundary line between the two farms, and, stopping Just beneath his neighbor's window, cursing the Adventist at the top of his voice with all the forcible words of his vocabulary This farmer's boy was accustomed to ride his horse at a gallop along the same road, wag inches deep, and the cloud that arose | from the animal's hoofs and was wafted | by the wind through the open windows ot the Adventist's dwelling was dense enough | Adventist vieited the court and had the | proceeding, but | the court held that the father could swear to his heart's content as long as he re mained on his own ground to do so, and the roadway was on his farm Men have been enjolned from speaking to their wives. An Omaba youth was once prevented by injunction from showing to others or making public a letter written to him by his sweetheart. A Farnam street photographer was prevented from placing on exhibition in his showcase on the strect | the photograph of a certain young woman | customer whose likeness made such a | nt that the photographer | placed the picture In the case notwith standing the young woman's most strenu- ous objections In the early days a civil engineer copy righted a map of Douglas county and then a few years later enjoined a rival firm from publishing a similar map. The at torneys of the rival shrewdly contended in court that In the very nature of things the rivers and creeks and farms and bridges must always have the same position and therefore that any man had a perfect right to make a map of them. By way of answer it was maintained that the civil engineer had been at great expense in making the actual surveys, while the defendant’s map was a servile imitatlon. The decision of corut was against the imitators. There is ting point In connec tion with the va of an injunction in protecting copyrights and that is that the law will not uphold one who secks to enjoin impugns the doctrines of the scriptures. This was brought out in a suit by a pub lisher, in whose book the existence of the Creator was denfed. Imitators were allowed to publish a similar work, as it was held that men who bring sult must come into court with clean hands. Restrains a Giddy Wite, The court records bear the memoranda of a restralning order secured by a man to preveat his wife from attending a bail with another man. It was obtained on a showing by the husband that the wife was endangering not only her good name but that of the family by her constant atten- tions to this man Among the old files there is another case of a wife who en- Joined her husband from contributing large sums to churches and charitable institu tions on the contention t he was weak- minded on this one subject A Judge no longer serving on the bench tells of a time when a circus was enjoined from pitching its tents on a certain lot by the mau who lived next door, a piece of spite work growing out of the refusal of the advance agent to rent a parcel of land belongiug to the relator. It was contended that the circus drew a crowd and was the cause of great noise. The court held that the drawing of a crowd was not sufficient cause for making a restraining order per- petual, but that the nolse was good ground. In the same connection is mentioned a case that holds ecord for oddity. It took place twely rs ago and as the Incident is remarkable only as a story the names of the people concerned are omitted, In the central part of the city was a church with a ponderous cupola and a huge bell that could be heard in the remotest dwell- ings. Next door lived a man who loved to sleep long on Sunday mornings. He ob- Jected strenuously to the clamor of the bells on the Sabbath, pleading that he had to work hard through the week and that he ought to be allowed to sleep on the only day he had to himself. He asked the church deacons to refrain from ringing the bell, but they declined to do so. Then the man who loved sleep more than the music from the belfry visited the courts and suc- ceeded .in having the court issue a per- manent fnjunction preventing the ringing of the bells in the morning. With a steady Increase in its production for the past 40 years, Cook's Imperial Extra Dry Champagne now takes the lead. Meccecccccscccccscscccocccced TABLE AND KITCHEN, % Practical Suggestions About Foodand the Preparations of It. H L e S e Rew Cereal. Cream Creamed Tomatoes on Slices Fried Mush Milk Biscult Coffee. LUNCH Potato Chowder. Tomato Sauce, Stewed Corn. e Veal Cutlets Brown Bread, DINNER. Vegetable Soup. Baked Potatoes 5 ped Tomato. alad. Brofled Steak. Squash SLAY K FAS LUNCH Cream of Tomato Soup | Macedon iches | Baked Apples. Cream, | | R lear Soup Teg of Mutton u la Venison Mashed White Pot Htitted Tomatose: | Sweet Pota Jquettes Lettuce Salad nch Dressing. Cream of Rice Pudding. Peach Compote Cerenl Cream Creamed Salt Fish Steamed Potatoes, Panned Tomatoes. read Coffee. NCT Corn Baked M \d_Cheese Th Mutton Beots, Cereal Coffee. R i Rolls. Sonp. White Fricassee of Chicken Plain Bolled Rice | anned Sweet Potatoes Stewed Onfons. Cauliflow Celery Salad Tuit Sauce Peach Cups Nuts a Within the last two years nuts have gained a well-deserved position in our dletary, and will be, it is predicted, more widely used as their good qualities become more generally appreciated. Nearly all the nuts contain large percent- ages of nitrogenous constituents and fats In the nut kernel there is very little waste; in fact, the nourishment is in a concentrated form, and for that reason nuts are best combiued or taken with other foods. They are especlally valued for their fine, meaty flavor, which is found in no other vegetable food product. Nut bouillon is now made with & flavor which has decelved experts, | who declared that meat must have been used in its preparation Congidering the percentage of nitrogenous material the price pald for nuts s com- paratively low. The cost of the nuts varles in different localities, the nuts which grow in certaln districts, of course, being cheaper iu these districts. It is not always the most expensive variety which furnishes the mest nutriment. In buying nuts the welght of the shells add much (o the cost; for THE OMAIHIA DAILY WHAT A LUGKY WOMAN PICKED UP. “I had inflammation of the internal organs and hemorrhage for three months 80 that I could not turn over in bed with- out help; and soreness of the abdomen, and also bladder trouble,” writes Mrs, Jennie Lee, of Lethridge, Alberta Dist., N. W. T, Canada. “In fact I was a com- plete wreck and the'local doctor’s medicine | would not stay on my stomach, so I had to stop taking it, and he told my husband I had to be kept quiet and he had but little hope for me. ‘} happened to pick up a paper with your advertisement in it, and [ thought that I would try your medicines. I have taken seven bottles of Favorite l’rnncl'it:liun.‘ six of ‘Golden Medical Dis- covery’ and three vials of ‘Pleasant Pel- lets,” and from the first day I commenced | with them I began to get better, and soon got as well as ever. 1 have told several ladies about your medicines and recom- mended them highly. I think that if T had not taken your medicines I would not have recovered. I cannot praige your med- icines too highly.” There is no alcokol in Favorite Pre- seription,” and it is absolutely free from opium, cocaine and every other narcotic. t is in the strictest sense a temperance med- icine, purely vegetable in its composition and cannot disagree with the weakest con- stitution. «HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH MARRIED " Plerce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. tlons which are Involved In matrimony and maternity and gives instruction and advice In plain English. Ty fi— 3 N | SN i“» ] 9 ’ 2 e Riping HURTS WoOMEN In a great many cases, because they are in a condition of womanly weakness which is aggravated by exercise. Exercise promotes the physical health. But for the woman there can be no sound physical health unless the womanly health is sound ; so inti- mate is the relation between local and general health and so absolute is the depend- ence of the woman's general health upon the womanly local health. When there is irregularity, or displacement, or female weakness, these conditions must first be re- moved before the general health can be established. The claim that weak women are made strong and sick women are made well by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a claim supported by the testimony of more than half a million women. Women to whom each month brought a week of misery, women who had suffered for years without relief; women whose vigor had been sapped by weakening drains; women frail of form, hollow of cheek and dull of eye; these are the women who stand up to testify “T have been made well and strong by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.” And this is but the barest statement of the truth. The grateful letters received from the women cured by the * Prescrip- tion ” disclose miseries which make the heart ache. They tell of years of suffering, of inefficient medical treatment, often treating the wrong disease. They show the modest women shrinking from the horror of questionings, examinations and local treatments, and enduring a growing agony rather than submit to an ordeal offensive to her sense of decency and revolting to her modesty. Then some chance pamphlet or the word of a friend has directed attention to the cures of womanly diseases by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. The treatment is begun and health is soon restored. Many sick and ailing women take advantage of the offer of free consultation by letter with Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. This offer, open to all ailing women, puts at their service the leading specialist in the treatment and cure of female diseases, to- gether with the associate advice of his staff of nearly a score of physicians, and this absolutely without charge or fee. All correspondence strictly private and confidential. Address: Dr. R. V. PIERCE, Burraro, N. Y. A MOTHER’S TROUBLES TAKEN AWAY. “I have been the mother of five children, two of which were premature births, and my health was very poor ever since until the present time,” writes Mrs. A, W, Corn- well, of 810 F Street, Washington, D. C. “Had uterine trouble for six or seven years, I took local treatment and different medicines, but they only gave me tempo- rary relief. Had palpitation of heart, weak | stomach, and all sorts of aches and pains. I was advised by friends to try Dr. Pierce’s medicine. In October, 1898, I began tak- ing it and felt better after,taking a few loses. Have taken seven bottles of ¢ Fa- vorite Prescription,’ two bottles of ¢Golden Medical Discovery,” three vials of Doctor Pierce’s Pellets, and two of his ¢ Compound | Kxtract of Smart-Weed.” In August, 1899, I gave birth to a strong baby boy. Was | in labor only a short time. N’ow my gen- eral health is good and I feel stronger and better in every way than I have felt for years. I shall always feel that I owe my “| KNOW THAT THEY SAVED | My LIFE.” [ «T was so weak I did not have breath to walk across my room,” writes Miss Isabell Miller, of New Providence, Calloway Co., Ky. “My periods occurred too often and the hemorrhage would be prolonged and the loss of blood very excessive. I also had fainting fits, I did not gain strength from one monthly period to another; was weak and nervous all the time. as con- fined to my bed for three months. 'The doctor thought at first I had consumption, after this he said it was liver disease, and then he told me he did not know what was the cause of my trouble, and told me I would never be any better. I lived in this way from sixteen years old to twenty- three. ~ Then I was advised by a kind friend to try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- seription, which I did, and before I had taken two bottles of it I could work all day. I took in all six bottles of the ‘Ta- | vorite Prescription’ and about five vials of Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. T used no other medi- | y cine. I have never had a return of this | good health to you and your valuable reme- trouble since, and never can praise Doctor | die I thank God for this ¢ Favorite Pre- Pierce’s medicines enough, for I know that | seription’ (woman’s friend), and as for the they saved life.” Pellets, I wowdd not be without them, as B they have benefited me more than any pill I ever took.” Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are espe- cially suited to woman’s use. They should always be used in connection with the *“ Pre- seription” whenever a laxative is needed. A WOMAN’S ADVICE TO0 WOMEN. “] feel that it is only my duty to send ou a statement of my case,” writes Mrs. ary E. Wilcox, Emo (Rainy River), Al- oma Co., Ont. “I suffered untold misery or many years with uterine trouble, until I commenced taking Dr. Picrce’s good medicine and used the local treatment as advised. T took two bottles of ¢Favorite Prescription’ and two of ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’” I also sent for one box of your ¢ Antiseptic and Healing Suppositories.” I have only used two, and that was two months ago. Have not had to use any since, but I shall keep them in the house. I would advise every woman who suffers from ulceration of the uterus and piles to use Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is the best medicine in the world. Also write to Dr. Pierce for his advice. T have felt better in these past seven months than I bave for years. Every month I used to have to go to bed and have hot poultices and take laudanum to emse the pain. 1 don’t go to bed now, nor do I take lsuda- num. Every spring I used to be troubled with piles, but I did not have any trouble of that kind this spring. I keep Doctor Pierce’s Compound Extract of Smart-Weed in the house. It is a wonderful medicine. “You may publish this if you please, so that other suffering women may bene- fited as I have been. Many thanks for your kindness.” Sometimes a_dealer for the sake of a larger profit will offer another preparation as “just as good as Dr. Pierce's.” There is nothing just as good as Dr. Pierce’s Favor- ite Prescription; nothing that will so surely make weak women strong, sick women well. That problem comes the mearest to final and full solution in Dcc ~r It teaches women how to preserve their health. It discusses the grave gue..- This great work, containing 1008 large pages and 700 illustrations, Is sent FREE on receipt of stamps to pay expense of malling only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for mailing, If the book is desired bound in cloth, or 21 cents for the book In paper covers. that reason those with the lighter shells may be cheaper. A product of American agriculture is the | p peanut, or goober pe It s sometimes winter use called; the latter name s perhaps the more ' nut s correct, as it 1 not, botanically speaking, form a nut, but is more like a pea. However, as |were const it is popularly considered a nut, it seems |houschold fitting to discuss it here. The United States is #ald to produe annually 4,000,000 bushels ip, of peanuts. The nutritive value of the pea nut is high, and as it {5 5o cheap it seem strange that more housekeepers do not take advantage of the many deliciou; tlons which can Le made experiments Lave been mad army in whict peanut flour larger pla long been in use combina- | hinations are from it. Some in the German | tread bas been made from Peanut olls better if cooke have been made RS an ;..m.-].r uwl!u orc raid to :).‘ fair titute d with good results in salads liable, Pure and Healthful Foods Will o o Some of m:h‘.t:\ml\l be made from onfectimery. | Be Accepted for These Columns, peanut cookies, peanut salads, Fhe butternue and biack walput have | sandwiches made with peanut butt many warm friends, and the former makes a ( Sandlss; souse and other. preps delicious foundation for ice cream. Both s . almost too various to mention |of these nuts contaln large quantities of | A nut which has long been used in Ger- | il and are considered rather hard to digest i many is the sweet almond, with which | The hazelnut is the American filbert; it is | ALL OTHER every good cook s familiar. The pe bland favor of this nut 1s most highly praised by the Germans, who use it in all their pastry cooking, sometimes in soup and in many desserts and candles almond | cake paste is used. The salted almonds which have been so long used on our tables may have been somewhat superscded by the | browned, unsalted almon: hich are most delicate. Unfortunately almonds are usu ally quite cxpensive in thi In Spain and southern France chestnuts | salad iking long countr AN ex contains more digestible nourishment than the finest Beef r Breakfast, Luncheon, or Supper, it is unequalled, Joid at all grocery stores—order it next time. tea, ¥ PUI ot 1ot unts of chestnuts arc ints, ground into meal In the United States the chest coming into prominence as a food; rly French dishes made of chestnuts | ally considered indigestible, bul neverthe- red beyond the re but as Frengh ch grown cheaper and are now obt nded. Chestnut stuffin palatable purees little kuown. Che much used in eandy when The hickory nut Is a great favorite | in New England, where it is much used in | It to mince ples an; and hickory nuts | I know of ma the cocoanut, but how many are aware that llent goup is prepared fro pulp with the cocoanut milk? Address : Dr. R. V. PIERCE, M’dfl, N. Y. v year large | walnut 15 an old friend and 1mproves any 5 gathered by the | dish where it may be used. English wal- 1 stored for | nuts with cut-up eelery hearts and salt are | & new relish; almost any nut could be verved in this way. Brazil nuts are very oily, usu- For Morning, Noon and Night. s are highly prized as a dessert nut tnuts have | As nuts a concentrated form of food nable in all | it would be better not to serve them after is more ex-|a heavy dinner, as Is the custom now. for turkeys has | lere, but some of the more auces and other com nuts are ¥ causo ach of most their use > ! Pure Food a most delicious flavor pe- It is not expensive and ncooked, they m None but Advertising of Thoroughly Re- © o 4400 aaca000 making and makes a combined SUBSTITUTES FOR LARD OR BUTTER FOR COOKING ? | HAVE FAILED J Y o BECAUSE OF THE ODOR ) AND TASTE the W GIVEN THE The English ” . FOOD IN WHICH THEY ARE USED. Live well and be well while you live. w | Not a plq!{‘harsh,sr d grain - but an appetizing, delicious food tor bid, strong men and little babies. .o BATTLE CREEK SANITARIUM FOOD CO., s BATTLE CREEK, MICH. BTN with other | kes a piquant addition a candy ma for it yea ways of preparing e e B s 4 ABOUT BEER If you are willing to test our state- ou can quickly settle the beer i you bet- other are ® 4 + . + ‘ . based on facts. You'll get wise in a minute after the first trial. Our beer + ‘ . ’ . . . + o GETTELMAN'S NATURAL PROCESS BEER Made by THE A. GETTELMAN BREWING CO, OF MILWAUKEE And IORT, Mana Lranch, 624-20 South loth Street Telephone 1124 Omaha g - . PRY At Drugdists e and Dealers can bo used 4 drop has 4 ! § | | { essssssssssrssesss sty I Glaastone Agents, Omaha,

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