Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 25, 1909, Page 43

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE OM AHA SUNDAY BEE: APRIL 20% DISCOUNT REMOVAL SALE STILL CONTINUES Our entire stock of men’s clothing and furnishing must be sold before we move to ovur new location. Just consider what a sale of odds and ends, but of complete! lines of this season’s goods. Our loss and | your opportunity. Drop in and talk it over. BOURKE’S, CLOTHES SHOP Standard Cuts Gasoline Price to Auto Dealers| | Some of the Latter Are Storing the | 0il in Anticipation of Heavy Traffic. After many years of waiting the Standard Oll company has made automobile owners a present of a reduction In the price of gasoline, but some dealers have not con- sidered it worth while to give their cus- tomers the benefit of it, even though they have sold them automobiles, according to H. B Fredrickson. The Standard Ofl company has been get- ting 14 cents per gallon for several years, but oome charitably Inclined dAirector | thought the increased demand ought to re- sult in a reduction In the price and numed 11 cents as the price of gasoline after a long and weary battie. Automoblle dealers have been selling gasoline dt thelr garages for 2 cents, and when the reduction was made some of the dealers marked it down to 15 cents per gallon. This leaves them a profit of 4 cents, about 1% cents, however, is lost in shrinkage and evaporation, still leaving the dealers 2% cents profit, which they make on fuel to run thelr machines. \ Dealers who get 20 cents per gallon for the gasoline are making a profit of 9 cents per gallon, as the Standard Ofl com- F.m' delivers it direet in fifty gallon lots lor $5.80, and many automoblle owners are putting: in large storage tanks holding fifty to 100 gallons that they might secure the lower price of 11 cents per gallon on the fuel to run thelr machines. WOMEN ARE OUT ON BAIL Pair of Alleged Procuresses Will Have Hearing Later Before Federal Omcer, . Luclenne Daubray, a French woman, who has been In custody of the federal authori, tles for several weeks on the charge of being In the country for immoral pur- poses, was released from jail Saturday morning on $5,00 bond, $1,50 of which was | cash Loulso Barvols, another French woman who was arrested several days ngo on the | same charge by the Immigraticn authori- tles, ‘was released from jall on $3,000 bond The hearing In the case of the two women| is set for May 17. The Daubray woman Is being held on the orders of the immigration authoritics at Washington with a view to her deporta- tion. Prior to this case she was arrested | for harbcring an allen nndesirable woma that means. 16th St. named Loufse De Pray, who is also under orders for deportation at Chicago. But vecent decision of the preme court holds that that paragraph the allen Immigration laws regarding hars boring this class of women s unconstitu- tional. TRAPS TO CATCH HOTEL MEN SELLING CUT RATE TICKETS Practice Has Become Common Since Scalping is Outlawed, Says & Clerk. “Sce that fellow that just went out the door?” sald Clerk Bennett of Grand, Saturday morning. ‘“He buy a cut rate ticket to Denver. the Ile wanted s0ld him one If we had. “We have applications of this kind a most every same way at all the hotels. “Since the ticket brokerage business has been knocked out parties are constantly trying to sell to or buy unused portions raliroad tickets of the hotels. hotel man by spotters. “One hotel clerk over i Des Moines got it put to him bad not long ago. He unwi tingly took a tjcket on deposit to sell, sup- on posing that the man offering It the square. Thet aftarnogn another fello came Into the ‘hotel and.abked dor just such a ticket, and the clerk, unaware of the law against ticket brokerage, sold the ticket to this party, The clerk was a rested the next day and had to put up fine of $60." It’s not| United States su- | Of course we did not have any and would not have day and I suppose it is the Sometimes the cases are genuine, but the majority of them are put up jobs to catch the unwary DOCTORS WAR ON CANCER| Progreéss of the Struggle for a Cura. tive Agent BRIGHT PROSPECTS FOR VICTIMS Harvard Medical Profeasor Claims Disease s Now Curable—Great Results Shown in Bay State Hospital, 1s cancer curable? The question was an- swered In the affirmative with the em- ph of confidence by Dr. J. G. Mumtord in a recent lecture at the medical school of Harvard university. In support of his assertion the doctor detailed the remark- able progress which has been made In checking the inroads of the dreaded dis- ease. Quoting In part from the Boston Herald's report of the lecture the doctor sald: “Progressive physiclans have always be- lieved and still belleve that under proper circumstances cancer may be cured. Lay- that cancers are Incurable—are The laymen are wrong. Twenty years ago cancers were not divided Into curable and incurable, but were spoken of as operable and Inoperable. By operable cancer we meant a cancer which could be cut out men have always belleved and still believe | hopeless. | Comprising our entire stock of Framed and Unframed Original Wat: Proof Etchings, French and German Oarbons, Fac Simile Water Colors, style and variety of original and reproduced Pictures, as well as 3.000 Salesmen’s Samples, purchased by Mr. Hospe al one-fifth of the importers’ and publishers’ wholesale price. Sale begins Monday, April 26th, 1909 The importance of making an early selection is ol*'rvious, as the best subjects always sell first, Post yourself on our great values. Here are some below. Watch our Display Windows. Lot'No. 1 on Our 3r d Floor 19¢, 49c, 78c, 98c, $1.98 Let No. 2 en Our 3rd Floor : Lot No. 3 on Qur Jrd Thousands and Thousands of Pictures HIGH CLASS PICTURES HAVE NEVER BEEN SOLD AT SUCH PRICES er Colors, Pastels, Steel Engravings, Rare Artist | Color Prints, Artotypes, Oil Paintings, and every Floor dition for framing, | safely; by inoperable cancer we meant a destroying life. Even those cancers which had been shown early and had not spread could be cured. About cancer teaching In my student days was that most cancers were regarded as | incurable. The early lip cancer, the cancer !of the nose, the skin, the face, the tip of the finger and the toe could be cured, yet breast and stomach were thought of as practically “Cancer was long-ago found to spread by the lymph channels, and to invade the neighboring lymph glands. In such spread- ing one may concelve the cancer cells straggling out In various directions away from the central cancer, In a way suggest- ing the straggling roots of a plant. As it | spreads there develops more slowly and regularly a circle of advancing cancer growth In all directions about the center, this circular following growth lagging far behind the tips of the spreading roots. It begins so small and obscure that it causes practically no Inconvenience; in the later stage 1t becomes a general disease, involv- ing afid appearing in distant regions of the body. “This last exuberant growth comes about Because particles of the cancer work thelr way In the blood stream and are deposited far away. A cell from a cancer In the hand, for example, may be carrled to the brain, 8o that the victim dies of secondary cancer of the brain. At the time that this .. | fatal wpread 1s going on, the blood Itself becomes degenerated; It ceases to perform normally its nutritive functions; the patient becomes pale, then waxy and wasted, tak- ing on that dreadfully sick and cadaver- ous look which most people associate with cancer. Remember that these general symptoms are late, final symptoms which occur when the patlent has passed far be- yond the possibility of cure. We must at- tack the cancer early, when the patient is well and strong, i we are to cure him. We can attack It early, and we can cure him. But the operation must be thorough and early. cancers hopeless u| ot er to of t- w Successful Operations. “Dr. Halsted of Baltimore was the first surgeon in this country practically and ef- fectively to demonstrate these facts. Con- vinced that a ecancer of a great organ like the breast can be dealt with on the same WANT TO MAKE SOME MONEY? |be curencnes ™ “ el cancer of (e iin Find Orack in Colpetser House an Contractor Will Pay You Hundred Dollars. Philip Kunz, buflder of the Mosher Col petzer residence at Thirty-elghth and Har- ney streets, says he will pay $100 to an, man who can find a crack In the work of the new residence, $20,000. The report was circulated that the costly house had settled by feason of being bul on filled ground and was in danger of top- 1s en- has not pling over. This, Mr. Kunz says, tirely erroneous, that the hous settled one-sixteenth of an inch, shows absolutely no signs of that brick- which cost “toppling in working out a method which In the last ten years has reduced | enormously the death rate from breast cancer. Twenty-five years ago less than 10 per cent of the victims lived three years after the operation. Halsted's report last year shower that 42 per cent of his cases survived the three years' limit. That is to say, nearly half the patients were cured. The other 58 per cent not cured were Im- mensely benefited; thelr lives were pro- longed and their sufferings were relloved, Other surgeons, working on the same lines as Hajsted, have had equally favorable re- sults. One reports 53 per cent of cures, another 5 per cent, still another 8, and y ! | o cures of cancer of the breast. When over and that It is just as well built and | °teT suréeons do not secure so high a as stable as any bullding in Omaha. A Bachelors Reflections. The casler a woman can fool the harder it is for him to find it out Tt makes a man feel pretty rich to think what If he didn't have a_family to support, The man who knows how to make good is the man who never knows resolution how to keep them. Next to being In soclety a woman can have the most joy buying the clothes she would need if she were.—New York Pres: a man percentage as these, it Is because people, often poor and Ignorant, postpone an opera- tion until the favorable moment nearly passed. ‘ancers of the tongue has They are not always recognized early; they progress rapldly and return promptly. Ten years ago, operations saved scarcely 2 pe cent of the patie: Five years ago at the s, | Massachusetts General hospltal we have World’s Dirpensary Medical Association, R.V, Pierce, M. D., Pres., Buffalo, N Woman Experimenting with is foolish, and often ’s True Friend new and untried medicines dangerous. 1t would take a medicine more than fort{)ycars, to prove itself so universally good as Dr. scription. an’s favorite medicin ing and invigorating and giving them the 1erce’s Favorite Pre- uring all that time it has been wom- e—a restorative tonic, uplift- the nervous and discouraged final touch of perfect health, Women use Dr. Plerce’s Favorite Prescription In preference to all other advocated medicines for it contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs—is not acvthing like advertised, secret, or patent medicines—uoes not claim to be able to do impossible things. THE ONE REMEDY for women devised by a regularly graduated physician of vast experience in woman's allments, and adapted to her deli- cate organism. THE ONE REMEDY good enough that its makers are not afraid to print its every ingredient on its outside wrapper. You can’t afford to allow yourself to be over- persuaded into accepting any secret nostrum as a substitute for this honest square-deal non-secret medicine. altemgl to cheat you shoul Don’t do it. be rebuked and avoided. Doctors it. No honest druggist will in this way. He wfio does re- scribe Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription for their worst cases because and know its ingred they know what it contains ients to be of the very best, It’s well now and then to gently cleanse out bowel germs that breed weakness, cause foul breath, loss of appetite, dizzi- ness and headache. els sweet and clean. their purity, goodness, and Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets keep bow- Recommended by druggists because of cancer which could not be cut out without | Yet the shocking fact | one the astonishing figure of S0 per cent | and jaws aro| among the most fearsome forms of cancer. | | pains of operations have to a large extent Contalning both large and small unframed Artotypes, plain and hand colored, gravures and Engravings in Landscapes and Figure pieces. While the edges of this lot are slightly €olled the pictures are in perfect con- This lot is worth from $1.50 to $4.00 each and will positively be sold during this sale at 19¢ Cents each Containing both large and small unframed Watercolors, Fac Simile Watercolors, Photo- gravures, Oil Color Prints and Engravings. Some very choice. Slightly soiled on the mountings, the pictures being in perfect con- ditton. ‘This lot is worth from $2.00 to $8.00 each and will positively be sold during this sale at 49c Cents each Photo- | L —————— M Lot No. 4 on Our 3rd Floor Lot No. 5 on Our 3rd Floor | Lot No. 6 on Our 3rd Floor Containing both large and small unframed cholce French American and choice Prints. for less than $2.60 each, many of them worth $7.00, $8.00 and $9.00. good for framing as any purchase. The entire lot will be placed on sale at 78¢ Cents Each Carbons, German Carbons, Photographs, Btchings These pictures never seil original as can They are just pictures you FRAMED PICTURES Containing both large and small | unframed genuine original Water- | colors, Historical Imported Oleo- | graphs, Original Pastels, large site choice figure pleces and Land scapes. Some of the pictures are very rare. The great majority of them are extremely desirable sub- jects. They rangé In price from $2.00 to $10.00, and will grace any home. Price during this sale, only | 98 Cents each Rare Artist Proof Etchings Contalning very choice large Steel Engravings, Venetian hand colored Photographs, Etchings in Figure pleces, Landzmeen and Ma- rines. These plctures could not be pur- chased in the regular way at less than from $4.00 to $20.00 each. Offered during this sale at $1.98 each Contalns the very cream of the pictures such as comprise lots Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. A collection such as you will find in the best houses in the land, which we will place on sale at one-third of the wholesale price. This lot ranges In price from $3 to $60 each, and will positively be sold during this sale from $1 to $20. A genuine reduction of 66% Per Cent Original Water Colors Original Oil Paintings Our Entire Second Fioor bas been re-hung with very cholce framed pictures in the very latest frames and very choicest subjects in absolutely perfect condition to be vlaced on your walls. These pictures range trom $1.00 to $200 eag During this sale we positive disecount of 334 Per Cent on every framed picture in the house. in price 1 give a The Entire Stock of our Ist Floor Art Department also on Sale FRAMING Our $5,000 stock of rare Artist proof Etchings, ranging in price from $4 to $90 positively the greatest stock of this class of rare plctures In the entire United States. Many of them positively cannot be duplicated. During this sale we will give a genuine discount of Ome-half off, thus a $4.00 picture wil sell for $2.00, a $20 picture will be $10, or a $90 plcture wil sell for $45. All Pictures Delivered F;::e of Charge A. HOSPE CO, 1513 Douglas Street Our $6,000 stock of Original Watercolors by such famous Artists as English, Weber, Aarous, Lamasure, Schnulty and many other world famous Americang and European Artists ranging in price from $5.00 by good American Artists to Watercolor masterpieces by world famous Artists up as high a8 $1765.00 each. On this rare as- sortment we will give a discount of 25 Per Cent This stock is worth fully $9,000 and comprises the famous Gol- ling’s collections of Western Scenes, Beautiful Rothery Roses, Lemere’s well known flower pieces and scores of other Ofl Paintings that sell from $10 to $200 each. On this rare assortment we will give during this sale a money sav- ing discount of 33} Per Cent ART STORE Our stock of frames and mould- ing is unsurpdesed by any stock west of Chicago. Our regular prices are noted at the cheapest in Omaha. They are all chosen with extreme care by a man with 35 years practical experfence in fine picture framing. Some of our workmen have been with us 25 years and are positively the best in the business. The best grade of work only. In this Department we will also give a genuine dis- count of 25 Per Cent. Plenty of Clerks Omaha, Neb. ralsed our percentage of cures from 2 to about 16 per cent, while later statistics col- lected from other sources show 40 per cent of cures. Cancer of the Stomach, “In cancer of the stomach, by the old- fashioned methods, none of the patients re- covered. SIx years ago we were able to collect statistics showing £ per cent of ) ts well after threq years, while t statistics have shown 25, 30 per cent cured after this lapse As stomach cancer can rarely bo former methads until it 1s past the operative. stage, surgeons have met this difficulty by the exploratory operation, which consists of examining the stomach through a small incision. The| | operation Is far less grave than the opera- | tion for chronic appendiecitis. “Cancer 1s incurable anly If you make It | 0 by delay. It Is readily curable if under- | taken by a properly qualified surgeon. ana even of time, determined by give up all hope of finding a panacea for cancer. Remedies Other Than the Knife. YA few other than been found to have a splendid work in this field has b the great radlum rays. have apparently, proved even maore effectual than the radium method, . because of the expense of radium, is not yet very practical. None of the other remedies brought forward, from the electrie current to molasses, have as yet been found reliable. “Rhis contest from belng futile. apathy | ben stimulated anew, for great numbers of persons are cured by means already at our disposs in my own profession come to realize has already been done. closing the knife, words as to remedies The X-rays have tain value, and en done Hoston: and selze the favorable which is the earl possible moment hospitals of brighter, Xorays, but the for cancer will be found." An Excusable Jump. At this phunt with cancer is We have disappear. very far | seen the o Hope has The ex-president leaped fully feet and landed In a gcoka bush. They ran to him from all sides “Were you frightened?” tated head man, ‘Frightencd, and despair othing!' o8s. and by such mcans an increasing —Cleveland Plain Dealer. | Patients come too late to the surgeon partly because they are ignorant. The early symptoms of cancer are trifling. A slight persistent sore on the tongue or Iip; |a painless lump in the breast; an occa- sional slight hemmorhage from one of the ody’s orifices; a slight persistent dyspep- which does not yleld to treatment— are the symptoms of early cancer. symptoms do not at once cause ill- health, or exhaustion; they are seldom painful. Why then should the patient think | them worth troubling about? It is because ! they do not disappear after a little care but continue week after k and month after month. Such symptoms must not b: neglected. Another imoprtant factor is the patlent’s age. Cancers rarely occur before the age of 3. They are not common be- fore 4. Cancers in the young are mor serlous than In the old. Those of us who are In the middle perfod of life must not neglect apparently trifling. but persistent sores, swellings and bleedings. Crusade Against the Disease. “A common cause for the patient's delay in seeking advice s terror and false mod- esty. Then the patlent dreads an opera- tlon. Although the operation on advanced cancer is a grievous and often a terridle | ordeal, an operation on early cancer Is fre quently trifling. Many will say, 'Ob, yes that's your business; you do ths ¢ rating. nd we are the ones who suffer. Buch a retort is unworthy an educated person, and s ungenerous toward & humsne and thoughtful curgeon. In thess days of ex- pert aseptic surgery, morcover, the old such These been abolished. There Is not more pain than can be controlled easily by drugs, and I feel justified in telling you earnestly and sinc@rely that the dread of an operation is often a grossly exaggerated dread. It should meanwhile be rememberad *hat the number of physiclans 18 small who are qualified definitely, finally & always to pronounce singly on the nature of a given tumor. “Today the prevalence of cancer Is keenly recognized, and the crusade for ity extirpa- tion ranks second only to the e¢r de for the extirpation of tuberculosis. Numerous commissions arc Investigating aud agitating the matter; and we have a Harva:d com misslon whese work has been widely ree g nized. As a result some things, are reason- ably certaln. For some forms of malignant tumors certain (ndividuals are immune; and such immunity s so widely distributed, so that many after being infected with cances recover spontaneously. While the theory of the germ origin of cancer has not been proved, much light has been thrown or. the active gentleness. v . e/ nature of many forms of tumors. Let me here say that if experiments on animals were abolished by law, we should have to proportion will be cured as the public a ritical moment the Nyassa ele- alsed its massive head and shrilly | venteen inquired the agl- | river. Shipper roared the terror | ‘1 thought it was an auto- 1 |LANE TESTIFIES AT ST. LOUIS wha Bear In mind al- | Union Pacific Freight Agent Witness ways that there is a time In the develop- ment of every cancer when that cancer is moment, The outlook for the future grows Increasingly and though the goal is not yet In slght the time ls near when a true panagea | in Rate Case that is On Appenl. Charley Lane, frelght agent of the Union | Pacific, returned Saturday morning from £t. Louls, where he had been as an expert witness In the Southwestern rate case [ which is being tried on appeal from the finding of the Interftate Commerce mission, in the appellate court Sanborn. W. D. McHugh has c litigation for the allied railroads. The rallroads increased rates on cattle 3 cents per 100 pounds from the southwest, | including Denver, Cheyenne and east of the took the matter before the Interstate Comme »mmission, where | the rates were reduced practically to the | former figures | com- of Judge ge of the BULLETIN No. 3 HE new long Nemo mod- els make a stout figure fashionably slender and a slight form really sylph-like, They produce extreme re- duction of back and hips with absolute comfort and hygienic safety, because abdomen and internal organs are firmly sup- ported from underneath. No other corsét can produce extreme reduction without extreme discomfort—and extreme danger. Nemo No. 405 is the great- est corset success of the age, For slender, medium or stout figures, in sizes from 19 up— $4.00. And No.320 is another great favorite—$83.00, Self-Reducing Corsets IN TWELVE MODELS A Fit For Every Stout Figure $3.00, $4.00, $5 and $10 In Good Stores Everywhere KOPS BROS.. Mauufacturers, NEW YORK «_I'SELF-REDUCING ‘E" L

Other pages from this issue: