Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 12, 1909, Page 2

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T'HE BEE PHONES REAUN ALL DEPTS—Ind Newest in Silk Gloves The Seé:Our Sixteenth Street Windows, Visitors 10 our (love department can see the perfocr tion of glove making expressed in the famous ‘‘Kayser’ Silk Gloves, The material, workmanship, design and color- ings are the best that good taste and sound judgment in a fashion sense esnld accomplish. Kayser's Embrotd- ered S11k Gloves in black, white, pink and light blue, per pair, $3.25. Kayser's Short 8ilk Gloves In black, white and coiors, per pair, BOc, 75¢ and $1.00. Kayaer's Long stk G Iio ves in lbhfi white and colorsé- ) $1.50 .pgelnl Sale of fim Brussels Net Cur- tans Oontinues. $6.50 White Net Ourfalns—at, pair $7.60 White Imported Net Ourtains—at, pair. $5.00.° White Imported Net Cuftalns—at, pair. . $7.00 White Imported Net‘Cuirtains—at, pair. $10.00 White Imported Net Curtains—at, pair. $16.000 White Imported Brussels Net Curtains—at, pair..$9.25 See Howard Street Window. PR —————— ‘Wash Trimming. Cash’s Coventry Trimmings, for trinffging wash dressee, shirt walstd, etc., guaranteed washable colors. These trimmings come white = ground, embroldered in blue, red,; white and pink, In widths from 3% to 2 inches wide. Imported Brussels -$2.48 Bruseels -$3.98 Brussels $4.98 Brussels -$3.29 Brussels -$5.48 Continued for One Week More Nemo Week" has oatgrown its original six days—one week isn’t long enough for such an im- portant _educational event. So ‘Nemo Week’* will be continued until May 15. , Corleh in the Nemo American Shape” ized in b evaty and ~hnve fashion-cen America as udn the correct, contour for fuhlon- of 1909, Nemo Corsets for every figure— stout, slender and medium. Perfect style and fashionable slenderness combiried with the utmost comfort and absolute hygienic safety. 'ome and see all the new Nemos during ‘Nemo Week."” To know all about Nemo Corsets is a duty every woman owes to herseif. with tiffs ‘were those of discrimination against them for the benefit of favored grain com- panies. The Interstate commission order was that the elevation allowance should be paid the plaintiffs by March 1, 1906 The Union Pacific Railroad company has resisted the payment of these elevation allowances to the plaintiffs and hence the sults to compel the railroad company to obey the order of the Interstate Commerce commissiof, MORE BALLOON EXPERIMENTS Destruction of Gas Bag at Jackson Far from Discouraging, HAPPENED ONCE 1IN ITALY Colonel Glaasford Says Explosion Was and Other Balloons Are Coming to Continue Work at Signal School. Earling Does Everything but Talk in Omaha President of Milwaukee Might Be Termed “Strenuous” as Well as “The Silent.” The destruction of the United States sig- nal service balloon No. 12, at Jackson, Mon- day evening, after the successful flight of Captein Chandler and Lieutenant Ware, will Gepasion only a_temporary suspension in- the balloon experiment work at Fort Omaha. Another balloon is now enroute from- Fort Myer, Va. for Fort Omaha, and the balloon experiments will be re- sutned at an early date. The accident to the Chandler and Ware balleon Monday evening, is the first of.its kind happening {n the United States, and could only happen when the balloon is near the earth. The fall of the aeronauts wa# ‘for only a very short distance, and none of the delicAte instruments were in- jured ““An ‘accident of a similar character hap- peried in ltaly a few years ago,” sald Col- onel. Glassford, commandant at Fort Om- aha, “with much more Wisastrous results, but with no fatalities, as [ remember. While such an accident is unusual, it is lkely to oceur under like circumstances as Mr. Earling's prevailed with the Fort Omaha balloon. | tached to the regular Milwaukee trafh. The ascension of Captain, Chandler and | On-alighting from the train the party Lieutenant Ware was a complete success, | took occasion to Inspect the new Union Pa- and the destruction of the balloon was | cific dining car which was made from top simply an unpreventable incident.” to bottam in the Union Pacific shops at While the hydrogen gas generating | Omaha. They all pronounced it a marvel plant at Fort Omaha is in excellent work- | Of beauty and construction and Mr. Mc- Ing order, the big gas tank is not working | Kenna wondered that some of satisfactorily and has not yet been ac-| work was done in Omaha, cepted from the maufacturers. The gas with which balloon No. 12 was inflated | coast line,’ Monday, was forced Into the balloon di- | have already sent the first rectly from the gas generators in the hy-| all the way through, but drogen plant room. It requires from | ime before we are ready for passenger tweniy-four to thirty hours to Inflate as|business and then we will be right after large a halloon -as No, 12. some of the through business from Puget Captain Chandier and. Lieutenant Ware | Sound." succeeded In making a number of photo- | Mr. B s ¢ e AT e iition fiigst Man | no o Teiing seld Be fad asquind the day, all of which will be -reproduced for title of “Earling the silent,” and for that a record of thelr trip, and many of which es, we built the coast extension during the hard times and we built it on time and for that we are proud of ourselves. said E. J. Barling, president of the Mil- waukee, who arrived in Omaha Tuesday L afternoon, looked over the city, jan informal banquet at the Omaha club | and lett at 10:40 for Kansas City. | Accompanying Mr. Barling were W. J Underwood, general manager of the Mil- waukee at Chicago, E. W. McKenna, sec- ond vice president In charge of operation; | E. Lass engineer of maintenance of way, and W. F. Foster, superintendent of the lowa lines. The party was traveling sald Mr. Barling. “In fact, matertal we car reason did not like to talk about any fu- ture plans of his road F. A. Nash, general wastern agent of the THREE GRAIN COMPANY SUITS |pviiee met the sary at e ndered them I will be furnished the press for publication. I station an in- AGAINST ROADS WEDNESDAY | formal banquet at the Omaha club. The | | other guests were A | dant ‘ane general Pacific; E. P | M. Morsman, w L. Mohler, manager of Beck, W. H. Bucholz, E Luther Drake, F. 8. Cowglll, Wattles and Eugene Duval vice presi- Unfted Siated Ctivnis Conrt Wil Hear the Union Action to Compel Union Pacific to Pay Ele lon Charges. The suits of the Updike Grain company —_ for $6,142.10, the Nebraska & lowa arain | WOOL VALUES TEND UPWARD company for 82,600.74 wnd the Crowell Lum- ber and Grain company for $88.2 for earned elevation charges against the Unlon Pacific Rallroad company will be brought Up.- fo trial in the -Unjted States circuit aurt: Wednesday rxdrning The suits are brought on the basis of the jrder of the kterstate Commerce commis- slon at its hearing in this matter in 1508 ranting these respective allowances for elevation charges on the same basis that similar allowances were granted by the ! wools have filled up local bins, which for | Urlon Pacific without contest to the Omaha | yeaks have been empty of old stock. New Elevate tomgany. and 1tie Transmississpbl | wyoming in original bags is held at % to and other grain companies. The compiaint | . ; 4 sgainak the fatiroad company by the plain- | o b :’"‘:.".'.‘::‘“: Quated at*19 and The Mid-West Life |G New Wyoming in Original Bags Quoted at Twenty-Three to Twenty-Five Cents, BOSTON, Mass., May 1l.—Local wool | values still tend upward, in keeping with the advance in London and the west. Deal ngs in the Boston market are confined to territory, but the conditfons in the west are closely followed. Fwirly heavy receipts | Nevada, Utah, Arizona and Wyoming | Posto*ce Appointments, WASHINGTON, May 1l.—(Special gram.) — Postmasters appointed | Morse-Jonnson Willam Andrews | vice J. C. Horty, removed. Sputh Dakota | McClure, Lyman county Willard A Welsher vice E. O. Randall, resigned. Rural carriers appointed '¥ice President Columbus, route 5, John R ....,Becretary | John Schmoker, substitute 3 [ mreasurer | route 4, Willlam H. Miller, Modical Director | S. Marsh, substitute ... MotUAry | August Tauke, carrier Sup’t of Ageuts stitute; Grundy Center. Haren, carrier; Tillle | West Branch, route 1, Edward W. Clem- Lasuse all the w i :::‘f;uf parti- | ents, carrier, Maggie M. Clements, substi- ipatin non-par nk insurance. 3 v|Pv‘ o gty D‘l" Mg ""_{l‘:n‘ nrlou;{e:‘ ‘.(I:;:m m.brn.mer, carrier: ticipating policies-, beginning with the " o, Sehaiel- payment of the thind mlum Local Treasury Statement. agents wanted In e Y town In Nebraska. | wASHINGTON, May 11 - | ment of the treasury balance jeral fund, exclusive of the reserve. shows: Gold coin and jom, 465,585, gold certificates, $S8875,900, avall- able cash balance, §120,080,650 ccunty Brock lowa, carrier; oarrier: Crisco, Joseph Haren, 'p. state- n the gen- old Lincoln, Neb, attended | in | private car which was at- | the finer | ““We will soon be dolng business on that | 1 |ROW OVER ABDUL'S MONEY it will be some | Nebraska, | Dyersville, route 19, | Barney Tauke, sub- | route 2 John E. | substitute; | iBOYLES IN PRISON - GARB | Whitla Kidnapers Are Hustled at | Once to Penitentiary. |FORKER STORY IS DISCREDITED feations & ment of Boyle Im- Unefe in Abdue- Be Dropped, Clearly Unt PITTSBURG, Pa citing and wearing incidents of yester- day, Mrs. James Boyle had a good night's rest in the Western penitentiary last night and awoke-today much refreshed. She fs in goud spirits and has regained much of her old-ttime vivadity. Her arrival at the penitentiary after the hour for retiring and she was given only a night dress, while #11 her other clothing and ornaments were taken from her. | awoke this raorning to find only the prison garh ia her cell Marching in line with thé other prisoners, Mrs. Boyle smiled as she.went to her first prison breakfast and ate hdartily. She was given permission by the cushions and other fancy work for cell and materfals were promised her if she | cared to do so. It will be determined today | after a physical examination what charac- ter of work she will be given. Probably }ghn will be placed either in the kitchen or in the sewing room Boyle slept well last night.also. He ate | heartily for breakfast and’ submitted grace- fully to the barber, who cropped his hair closely. Bertillion photographs and me: urements of the pair will be made today. From all reports that have been recelved | here it is not belleved any action will be taken following the statement of Boyle last night. The Mercer county officials ., May 11 ast night was ter probably will be allowed to drop and | be forgotten Tornado Victim Takes Her Life Mrs. McKernahan of Bellevue Sets Fire to Clothing and House, Her Injuries Proving Fatal. Mrs! Mdrgaret McKernahan of Bellevue, who was a tornado victim just a year ago and was mentally deranged by her physical Jnjuries and the los of her home, at- tempted suicide Monday by setting fire to her clothes. She died of her burns Tuesday morning after suffering agony for hours. First Mrs. wrecked by McKernahan's home was the terrific clycone that struck the college and town of Bellevue on May |12 of last year. While running from the {flylng debris she was then struck in the head and was at first reported dead. Al- though she survived, her reason was greatly fmpaired by the trouble and she had been closely cared for since that time by her children, a son of 22 years and a daughter of 16 Recently Mrs, McKernahan had living with her daughter, the away from home. While the daughter | was out of the house Monday afternnon ! Mrs. McKernahan went out into the road and set her clothing ablaze. Before she could be reached and saved she was fright- | fully burned and the efforts of Dr. Betts were unavalling to prevent her death. YORK CAPTURED BY VETERANS * (Continued from First Page.) been son being ndling the memories dimmed by age. Each member of the following commit- tees are doing all they can to assist in | making this encampment and reunion the most pleasant and enjoyable: G. A. R. Local Committe | Commander John Lett, C | Alberts, R. B. Cutler, M M. Deitrick Members of the | mittee—E. B Christian, B McCloud The York Commercial club rooms are open at all hours and hundreds will be | entertained by members of the York Com- | mercial club, who are taking an active in- | terest in making every visitor welcome. | Many noted Grand Army men, orators and musicians will participate, and nearly ev- ery hour, from today until May 13, there will be something doing. | | | Ky Reisinger, alrman, H. W Robbins and H. Commerofal Club Com- Woods, president, - A. B F. Marshal, jr., and C. A. Schefket Pasha at Outs with Mintstry About Disposition of Funds. CONBTANTINOPLE, May 11.—A differ- tence of opinion has arisen between Schef- ket Pasha, commander of the constitution- alist army that entered Constantinople April 24, and the present cabinet | Bchefkat Pasha is of the opinion ‘!)w cash found In the imperial palace of Yildiz after the expuision of Abdul Hamid should be used to pay the expenses of his army, whtle the ministers want the turned into the treasury. | funds in question now amount $5.00,00 in cash and in ,curities. Schefkat Pasha tage In the controversy, inasmuch as the money 1s in the possession of the military and has been deposited in the War office. A medical commission, with & large quan- | tity of medical supplies for the relief of \ the suffering, left here today for Adana Djeved Bey, former governor general of | the Adana villayet, arrived here with the !uh'nl of explaining to th | interior the origin and cay | conflicts in his territory been dismissed from office Improvement at Adana. ADANA, Asiatic Turkey. Mav local authorities have ordered a money The to almost marketable se- has one advan national minister of the of the race Djeved Bey has house to FOoOD And Other Vermincides PETERMAN'S DISCOVERY — Kille bed bugs and their 3 instantly. Twostyles L lauid,” to inject ato cracks by the spout on the can; “Paste’ to be painted on uyl;ulr\\u‘m nm ear and kills eve (hl' travelsover it. rx preventive. PETERMAN'S ROACH FOOD kills roachies, ‘water bugs and beetle of all kind. PETERMAN'S RAT-MOUSE FOOD s so obnoxious to rats that they leave the prem- ises forever. Non-poisonous—tiie rats don't die. No dead ratain the walls. Standard for #3 years. Be sure it's Peterman's WILLIAM PETERMAN INC. NEW YORK After the ex- | She | matron to rnake | discredit the statement and the whole mat- | that | 11.—~The | WEI l houss search with the object of recovering and restoring the loot taken from Armen- lans during the recent disorders A ‘The American missionary rellef commit- tee announces It has hand enough | nurses to care for the present number of | sick and wounded. | The local mille have resumed grinding | ana the mportation of flour 1s no longer neceasary on Lost Prince is Found in Ohio| | Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, | Who Disappeared Nineteen Years Ago, Common Laborer. CHICAGO, May 11.—The Journal today devotes its entire front page to the elab- oration of an unequivocal statement that it has discovered “the lost John Orth," otherwise Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, prince of the house of Hapsburg, who disappeared nineteen years ago after marrying Ludmilli Stubel, an opera singer. Briefly sketched, the Journal story says: “John Orth” was discovered at Paines- ville, 0., working as a machinist at $15 per week. Previously he had followed this oc- cupation at Grand Rapids, Mich, and Cleveland, O. His reason for making his | identity known at this time, the Journal states, was due to his advancing age and | his desire that he might be burled in | Austria Johann Salvator, asc the alleged archduke has always been known since he loft the | court at Vienna, was married in London | and he and his wife afterwards salled for | South America in the Santa Marguerita, a | schooner which he had chartered. It has always been belleved that the arcRduke| lost his life when the schooner sank off the coast of Chill. According to the story | of the Painesville machinist, he and his| beautifu) wife were not aboard the ship They went ashore at Cusavand, a small | port on the R De La Plata It was | planned that they should meet the ship at | Valparaiso, but the eraft sank enroute | The romantic couple drifted all over the | world, finally taking up a plantation on | the island of Martinque. In the Mount | Pelee catastrophe his wife and their two children were killed. Salvator, according to the journal story, was rescued and came to the United States. Veterans Return Confederate Flags | CHANGES AT FIELD CLUB Many Betterments Are Made for Sea. son of 1908, Ohio Representatives and Delehtion of O0ld Soldiers on Way to South, CINCINNATI, 0., May 11.—Nine veterans of the civil war, two of them official rep- resentatives of the state of Ohio, left last night for Selma, Ala., to return with proper cerempny the confederate flags cap- tured by the Fourth Ohlo cavalry on the battleflel near that town. Those in the party were Chalrman John A. Pitts of this city and Major W. W. Shoemaker of Day- ton, O., appointed by the last legislature to arrange for the return of the colors and the followlng . volunteer commissioners: Captain Thomas H. Osborn, M. H. Rich- ardeon, W. H. Hehdy, James I Quinton and L. C. Brangamp of this city; Joseph A. Goddard of Muncie, Ind., and T. C.|the grounds Lindsay of Dayton, O, | changed almost beyond recognition The Hags belouged to ‘the rifle scouts| The first noticeable change is that Which were a 'Dart’of General Forrest's|unsightly carriage and automobile stalls command. { have been removed and where once stood —_—— | that ungainly structure is now grass and DEATH RECORD flower beds. The caddy house has been | moved into the north tract, nearer the tee Captain James Murray, of the first hole and FREMONT, Neb. May 11.—Captain | Club house by a teiephone. This will keep James Murray, a resident of this county | the crowd of caddies y from the club for forty years and at one ttme prominent | house and will make much more room. In democratic circles, dled at his home,| Instead of the crowded Q@ancing pavillon in this clty yesterday of general debility | the members will find a pavillon greatly at the age of 77. He was a natlve of Mi- | enlarged, in fact nearly double in waukee, Wis., and previous to his re- | This has been accomplished by lengt moval to Nebraska a school teacher. He |the pavilion, and building a stand for the served during the civil war as captain fn | Orchestra in the middle of the north side |a Wisconsin iInfantry regiment for .three 0f the pavilion. The kitchen and dining years and was for two terms a member of | '00M Space has been doubled by the the Wisconsin legislature. He came to | Changes. Nebraska about forty vears ago and iater| While the putting and fairgreens served two terms as county judge of | verdant they are showing a want of rain, Dodge county. He was a charter memper | and Wa the golf expert, has a large and past commander of McPherson post of | force of men repaiting the water pipes ail the Grand Army and a very active mem- ber of St. Patrick's shurch. He leaves one over the grounds, the pipes having bursted at the joints because of freesing. New son, Mark Murray of Pender and daughters. flower beds and gravel walks have been Wilsos Reynolds. laid out and a place provided for automo- FREMONT, Neb., May 11—(Special,) | biles under the dancing pavilion The golf course has been improved and Wilson Reynolds, one of the best known |made a little more difficult by the addition citizens of this city for the last tifty years, | Five of these bunk- died last evening at the age of 83 He the fifteenth hole enjoyed good health and the full 5 are three bunkers. sion of his mental powers until within a | with one at the side of No. 6. few daye of his death. A native of New | Hole No. 15 Is known as the York state, he came to Fremont in 187 and and 1s what 14 known as | invested quite extensively in land 1D bk “bnicars anti-slavery man, he allled himself with! playver with the the republican party at ita orgunisation | firgt hunker at | and took an active part in the party man- 4o in @ direct agement. He is survived by two sons, B. |, ® (T :(yke'\"om' and Cassius Reynolds of this |, gy aignt line. and for the man with the the third bunker | tong artve | 146 yards in a direct line between the Juck- and gr s 9 “me | aavantag | the officers known in the south as “the|'N® 00 straight up and down | tmmortal 80," who, us prisoners of way | CURker sodded angle of 4 { were placed under the confederate fire on | long bunker ‘along the.side of |an island near Charleston by the union (9. No. 38 aa head worided {army as a measure of | COURSE IS NOW MORE DIFFICULT Nine der Ba U New Bunkers Put In Will Ren- e with Bogey Still More en for Some Golfers to Negotiate. When the members of the Omaha Field {ciub visit that popular outdoor club for | the first time at the opening Baturday, | they will see many changes and all for the | better. around the club house is a are three of nine new bunkers, ias | ers placed around posees- [ and fn front of No wre “dog-leg’ ‘enechelon.” 5. The cross the will not A second | hole A strong are placed in ser short drive may 106 yards, but for the hole yards, a lttle he line Captain Jackson Kirkman. WASHINGTON, May 1l.—Captain son Kirkman, formerly a Mississippi and well known confederate At a hospital here today tee n. thus glving the long driver the been char | [ | bunkers have | unker to a i5 degrees. the at an course |JUDGE CRACKS A LAWYER Estelle Comes the Phe retaliation Peter Eag KEARNEY, Neb., May ‘}u.l- prosperous far | miles north of town, dropped dead Sunday morning. He started coughing and seemed | to be choking. He called for help, but fore he could reach the bottom of the stairs ln expired |ola. He | brothers. ~(8peca p Back at Burbank in ving four x Cuse with Keen Retort. Judge Estelle overruled a motion Tuesday morning to dismiss Frank Phelps' 1o h's wife's suit for divorce because Phelps has it is charged, pald temporary to Mrs. Phelps. Burbank, representing Mrs. Phelps, was displeased by the ruling and told the court that “you are assuming responsibility for this poor being without means I'll assume all the volved,” declared the but To have thrown o leages a |court had sald, “w mak health detault one, a kind legal | against which there is nowadays the great- est prejudice among all thinking lawyers and judges, and it s held that in every sort of sult where one side is not repre- sented @ state officer ought to be appointed to appear. So that if this motion shoula be sustained 1 would permit the defendant to come in and be heard when the { comes to action.” a per answer Deceaséd leaves two having never funeral was Monaay Mrs. was sisters and been married afternoc | June Millignn, | BEATRIC. Neb., May 11 | Mrs. Jane Milligan, aged 1“" ol@ resident of Wymore, commiite clde last night by drinking carbolic Bhe was found in an unconscious c |and a physiclan was summoned, | was unable to revive her. She | tamily of seven echiidren. 1l assigned as the ! Alfred A. Pecock. ST. PAUL, Minn, May 1L.—Alfréd A. Pe | cock, proprietor and manager of the Ryan hotel, died here last night, aged 62 ears thré The alimon, m B. G ecal.) woman responsibllity dryly answer. in- court Phelps the suld of years. | Will of F. Marion Crawford. | SORRENTO. May 11.—The . will of Marion Crawfdrd, ‘the American novelist who dled here April 9, expresses the desire that his yacht and the villa Baint 'Agnello | be s0ld and .that {he (estators l-‘d: lie buried in the Bunt 'Agnello ¢emeter: ——ee Cut in Crade OIL PITTSBURG, May 1l.—Another cut of §| cents a barrel in all grades of crude oll | was announced, here today by the Stand- ard Ol compary. This makes the second reduction in thé price withi & week. ——ee. | vitz against John Quick Action for Your Money—You get | juries received by thai by Using The Bee advertising column Merovits's Sult A « d in rt for Two Weeks. Rudo Acha The $,000 dan case of Rudolf Mero- Achatz for personal in- the plaintiff in an as | 1§10 DOUGLAS STREE T The general outside appearance of | the | s connected with the | size. | ing | nearer in | 1s placed at | ed from | the case a| procedure | cause | |TURK SUES HIS ASSAILANT | sault made upon him by the defendant ml 1510 DOUGLAS STREET ORKH Beautiful Tailored Suits $25 and $39.50 Values On Sale at $19.50 =n1 $25.00 With a tremendous stoek of high class suits on our hands we are forced to make these radical reductions in order to strictly adhere to our policy of hever carry- ing over a single garment from one season to another. There are several hundred suits to choose from in this grand collection. Every one is a stylish new model, per fectly tailored and made of finest all wool materials, in z)all colors and sizes. } :$25.00, $27.50 AND 329‘75“ $32.50, $35.00 AND $39.50 TAILORED S8UITS “ TAILORED SUITS REDUCED TO REDUCED TO the latter's rooming house on North Six- teenth street last winter has beeh con- tipued in the United States circult court | for two weeks. The case was set for trial | Tuesday morning. It gets into the federal { courts on the question of diverse citizen- | ship. Merovits, being a subject of the | sultan of Turkey. Merovita received a bad cut in the hand during the alleged assault from a knife, the wound »ping into | & permanent injury. | SCARLET FEVER IS NOT EPIDEMIC, SAYS PHYSICIAN | Rumor of Scourge Denied by Health Commissioner and Other Doctors. A-UIEIENT!. A R T A BOYD’S TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY NIGHT, CHARLES FROEMAN PRESENTS ETHEL BARRYMORE In Mor Latest Comedy Sucoes “LADY FREDERICK'' mflll—mo to 83. All llunnnl Eangagement of T2 WOODWARD STOCK~CO. EVA LANG and ALBERT MORRISON Week Starting Sunday Matinee, May 16, THE ROSE OF THE RANCHO Beats Now Selling. deve Rumors’ of ‘a scarlet fever epldemic in | Omaha are entircly unfounded, according to Health Commissioner R. W. Connell and other physicians. Park school ‘was dismissed Monday noon to - allow . health <officers to fumigate the building as a precautionary measure. | Special care is being exercised by parents and teachers to prévent the spread of the disease | Clauds Arnese, 13 years of agei died of M‘hrh‘( fever Monday at his home, 2813 Woolworth avenue. The case was a severe | one, according to the attending physiclan, | who has another case of the disease In the same nelghborhood. Because of the lad's ideath, the Park school authorities took the precautionary steps Another death, possibly not due directly to the fever, but following a recovery from it and supposedly due to the health | and condition of the child after having a | @evere attack, was that of Charles N. John- son, 7 years of age, who lived at 8223 North Twenty-sixth street. His death™occurred | Monday and the funeral is to take place Wednesday afternoon. There are three | other ehildren slck with fever In the Johnson homs. THE MUSICAL FESTIVAL WILL O AT BOYD'S THEATHR col Friday Matines 2:80 ¥. 8 PROGRAM <) Bass Soli—(n) Caesars Lament; {(b) Requiem; (c¢) Povere Marinar; (d)’ Pin- land Love Bong, Mr. Middleton, Harp Solo—"Autuinn,” Mr. Willlamey Contralto Soli—(a) Madrigal; (b) Nur wer die Sehnsucht Kennt; (¢) Im Kahn (d) The Young Nun, Miss Plumb. d Cello Soli—(a) Dadication; (b) ceuse; (¢) Minuet, Mr. Fischet, Violin Soll—(a) Romanza; (b) Canson etta; (c) Butterfly, Mr. Czerwonky Boprano Soll—"A Cycle of Life" () Prelude; (b) Spring; (¢) Summer, Miss Ormsby FRIDAY, MAY 14th, AT 8:15 P. M, Concert The Minneapolis Symphony and The Oratorlo Soclety PROGRAM ‘Le Carneval Bass Solo—Frologue to Symphony Pathetique. Soprano Solo—Aria from opera “Louise Miss Ormsby Capriccio Espagnole. Cello Solo Symphonic Variations Rhapsodie Hongroise No. 2. with o inal harp cadenza by Henry J. Willtams, Cantata “Hiawatha's Wedding Feast.’ Ber- Orchestra Overture Romai agifncc scarlet Southern Baptists to Meet, LOUISVILLE, Ky. May 11—-To ralse more than their share of $1,400,000,000 for the evangelization of all the heathen and to increase the endowment of the Southern Baptist Theological seminary at TLouls- ville $1,000,000, are some of the projects which will engage the convertion of the Baptists of the south, whose hiennial con vention begins In Loulsville with a ban quet tonight. Some of the most notable men in the south wilk be present MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMSHIPS, Port. Arrived Satled. NEW YORK -Mingelaha NEW YORK Oretle NEW YORK NEW YORK ... BOUTHAMPTON DOVER. ... | CHERBOURG CHERBOU GIBRALTA | FIUME GLASGOW QUEENSTOWN L1V LIy 'r. LT DE 9-Mrs. Fiske in S8alvation 3 -22-8hubert’s Co, The Blue Mous: THREE NIGHT8-Commencl ynday, May 17, with Wedpesday Matifiee “A DIvine Comedy of the Slums* Harrison Grey Biske Presents Mrs. Fiske and the Manhattan Company In i“Salvation Nell” by BDWARD | BHELDO: 8¢ Louls Vaderiand Gromser Kurfurst K. Wilhelm 11 Finland Pres. Grant. AUDI TOR 1UM.... ELECTRICAL SHOW EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING ALL THIS WEEK Music By Miss Mehaffey of Cincinnati, Vocalist, Assisted By GREEN'S BAND Admission, Adults, Ils, Mu;. 180 BASE BALL OMAHA vs. WICHITA |MAY 12, 13, 14 and 15 FRIDAY, AY 14, LADIES' DAY GAM CALLED 3:43, .Slavonia. Caledonja QUEEN NAPLES OHRISTIANSAND U not only cures toothache instan! pe A Swell AR ply and save many & dentist bill There are tmitations. Bee (hat you get Dent's Toothaehe Gum, Atall druggists 16 cents, or by mall. €. §. DENT & CO., 57 Larned 8t.. Detrolt, Mich. PHONE, (Y3 v 4\ IO\ By ADVANCED VAUDEVILLE Closing Week of the Season, Daily Matin ry Night, 8116 ctrified 1 Review, Ollle Young & Brothers, Goldsmith and Hoppe, Frobel & Ruge, Andy Rice, Tsuda, Sursall & Razall, Kinodrome. Prices-—10c, 850 and 50c. PLATE DINNERS —AT— Bhe CALUMET Touch the right spet. AFTER SEBING | Ethel Barrymore AT BOYD'S ! 'u will desive an After Theater Dinner st Hanson s Cafe Reserve your table immedistely As there are but fow left. “When 7en bus Geld Medal Fioms be sure it 15 Washburn-Orosby’s Gold edal Flour. This is important.

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