Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 30, 1910, Page 7

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BRIER CITY NEWS | @triotly Mome-Made Ples. [1-r Grand Cafe ational Life Ingurance Oo—1910, s E. Ady, General Agent, Omanha. to Denos-—Nebraska lodge 2o. ¥ of . Pythins, will #ive & Gance at Myrtle hall this evening. - il E N 4 k¢ . omllfiu‘lmnfllml counter a result of the lawsuit s §IL75. the B. J. Jobst Johnson-Rowé-Paige Chases Whisky— other intoxieants Whidh teok up the time of D, BMerson nearly all day he /finally got enough fire- storage tq hold on judgment and 065. The execution was made Simon Jung, Milwaukee liquor deador, aguinst Joseph Marushak, Willlam sty trom the wot the ‘stock on ' is Coming. TAKES WHOLE DAY T0 LOWER " FLAG ON_FARNAM SCHOOL Then Pole Climber Has Nearly te Bite it Off, 1t 1s Wrappea So Tighay. The boys of Farnam school are congratu- lating themselves that they set a mark for other ambitious youths when they nalled their banner to the top of the flagpole at Central school at 4 o*clock in the morning. At that creepy hour half a dozen of the Farnam puplls left their warm beds and hiked away over to the Dodge street edu- cational Institution. They put thelr flag where they wanted it without any great trouble, then went back to bed. So fast aia they make the fluunting banner that it re. quircd & whole day and the offorts of halt &, dozen pole climbers to remove ft, but the Farnam boys paid for the work Ilike lttle men. First a high school attache essayed to take down the Farnam flag. Foe falled by ten feet to reash the top of the pole. Then & city hall janitor with e reputation as a pole olimber was called in, but he could mot bring the flag down. As a last resort wsome of the Farnam school boys were called in and they bired a man who finaily took down the flag. “No wonder those fellows couldn't get . the flag down," sald the successful climber. “The high wind had wrapped it so tightly around that pole I almost had to bite it oft.” y Delivered promptly to your residence at same prices as formerly. Charles Stors, next door north of Stors Brewery. 'Phones ‘Webster 1260, Ind. B-126L v s o S S ' Thatoner for Camal Commistson. WASHINGTON, h 2.—Presiden ‘Taft today sent to the senate the followin, Bomination: Member 'of Isthmian Canal gemmisaion, Maurico ! H. Thatcher of Ken- LUNSBEN BLAMES DOCTORS Govermment Expert Says They Should Correet People on Typhoid. DUTY TO DISPEL THE IGNORANCE Marine Physician Inspects All Water Supplies and City Dumping Ground in Making ) vestigation Droad Dr. Ison L. Lumsden of the United States marine hospital service put in Mon- @ay afternoon traveling sbout the country Borth of Florence In company with Dr. Langfeld. In the city engineer's auto- moblle they covered the country for ten north, paying particular attention to e victnity of Kelly's lake and Mill creek. From this section thers is a considerable flowage of surface seepage into the river. Dr. Lumsden also visited the city dump- ing ground at Eleventh and Grant streets and took in the Florence and Burt street pumping stations and settling basins. HN investigation will continue along the broad- {est lines while he remains in and about Omaha, for his experience has taught him that water is but one element of the typhold prablem, albelt a very large one. Dr. Lumsden was asked about the “typhold fiy” demonstrations recently con- @uéted In the Distriet of Columbla. He sald that It Is now known the fly has more or less to do with the spread of typhold contagion. One strong point that is arousing in- terest in the subject is made by the state- ment of Surgical General Wyman, Dr. Lumsden's superior, typhold 1s & “national disgrace.” The dls- ease claims over 300 victims every year in the United States and holds fourth place on the mortality list. Dread 1t Like Cholera. In & recent report by Dr. Rosenau, bead of the department of preventive medicine and hygiene at Harvard university, he in- sists the people must be taught to dread typhold as they do cholera. With statement he couples the further assertion that the disease is as preventable as rall- road accidents, and that more is known about typhold and the means by which it is sproed than of almost any other disease. Dr. Lumsden in a recent public health re- port issued by the Marine Hospital ser- vice, used the following languag: “For much of the popular ignorance re- mardifig the etymology of the disease and for the too frequent adoption by the public of a fatalistic view in regard to ita re- currence, the medical profession is largely responaible. It should be considered a duty incumbent upon physicians, and upon health officers particularly, to embraocs every opportunity to prevent or correct these erroneous views and to convey to the layman such knowledge as will be useful In the prevention of disease and death.” Dr. Wyman's department of the govern- ment service holds that typhoid fever 1s contagious, or directly transmissible from the sick to the healthy, and s also Infec- tious, or indirectly transmissible from the sick to the heaithy. To prevent Indirect transmission, health officers can do much by caretully safeguarding the water sup- ply, milk supply and the general food sup- ply. Mets Famouy Bock Beer on draught and In bottles on and after March 2. BOCK BEER brewed In Omaha. Order a case sent to your home. Prompt dellvery. ‘Phone Douglas 119; Ind., 2119, 3 Chief Asked to Resign. WATERLOO, Tla, March 2. —(Special) ~Because of his activity in the city eleo- tion, Chief of Polics E. A. Leighton, a former guard at the Anamosa prison, was asked to resign by Mayor R. A. Doty. Doty I8 seeking re-election and he saw the chief tieing banners bearing the name of T. J. Martin for mayor to a rig designed to t | bring voters to the polls. A. E. Huston, former deputy wsheritf of Des Moines county, a elty detective for two years, was named by Mayor Doty as acting chief. A woman who is sick and sufferin; V a medicine which has the record ofg egetable Compound, is to blame for condition, , and won't at least Lydia E. Pinkham’s own wretched There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous g remedy, rty years Read wh: Camden, g J.—“Ttis with nial fe Pinkham’s h?du- oth&- nnf{erhg. pound had the publish dfl;at if Lydia E. virtue to help these women it will \other woman who is suffering from the same trouble E. Pinkham’s Vw& cures to its which was produced from roots and herbs over ago by a woman to relieve woman’s suffering. at these women say: Gleum that X m‘mhun?; to avail m 1 are genuine, is it not fair Pinkham’s Vi le Com- an that the spread of | this | Absolutely the only genutne THE BEE: OMAHA WEDNFESDAY, The quick lunch room s & peculiarly dis- tinotlve American institution. It is the creature and the symboi of that hustle and hurry which has enabled the American business man to do ten times as, much work in a decade as can be done by all his forelgn competitors together. It s also the omen and augury of the certain dyspeptic death to which Americans are consigned, individually and eollectively, by vegetarians, Fletchorites, physiclans and Englisbmen. Furthermore, the quick luneh room is generally, sometimes with justice, accuscd of being the great mart in which tood adulterators turn into gold the hon- est hunger of innocent men, without re- gard for the future security of those hon- est and innocent stomechs. Unfortunately it has become the fashion to decry the quick lunch room as an un- mixed evil, whea, on the showing of facts, Americans should be as prosd of it of any other distinctive red-white- and-blue eagle feaiher grown entirely on home soil. True, it is an lastitution which could not exist in any oser country. But that fs dGe rather to the superiority of America than to the Inferiority of the quick lunch room. Despite the high cost of living in Amer- toa, despite the food trusts and the cold storage combines, despite high wages and general prosperity, the Amerlcan quick lunch room offers better foed for the money, quantity and quality both con- sidered, than can be obtained anywhers eise on earth. The Ameridn restaurant may be inferfor to those of Burope, and it certainly 18 higher priced, but the quick luneh roem stands unexcelled in its fieid. In Boston the quick lunch purveyor may succeed only by virtue of his excelient beans and ple. In New York the fame of £00d “Deef and” will spread even farther | than the odor of the cabbage so succinetly indicated by that word ‘and.” In Baltimore and Weshington the successful lunch room must provide Maryland biscuits fit for epi- cures, and good milk wherewith to wash them down. In Charleston the lunch room is impossible, for the people dine at 3 o'clock in the afternocen, for the good and sufficient reason that Queen Anne had her principal meal at that hour. In Atlenta, where the mpirit of hustle is at high tide, the lunchroom cooks have combined the cullnary economy of Athens and Sparta with the kitchen prodigality of the oid south. The lunch comes quickly, but there is hot bread on the side. Chioago took a German bakery end ex- panded it into & system of quick lunch- rooms capable of feeding 5,000 peopie be- tween 1330 and 12:35, catering to all tastes and all nationalities. Farther west the lunch counter is high and the customer perches himself on a very Eiffel tower of & stool, but the prices come down. Texmas towns know the taste of real chill con- carne and the delicious odor of genuine tamales. The Pacific coast cities atford all the kinds of lunchrooms that the whole country boasts, for the Pucific coast cities are each one the whole of the United States in epltome. Responsive, therefore, to local traditions of taste, and differing In detalls, the quick lunch room is nevertheless much the same in every part of the country. Every one of them cluima to serve unsurpassed coffee, every one makes ple the chief article of diet and every one furnishes toothpicks ad libitum. It may be a huge room in which & thousands people sit at marble-topped ta- bles plled high with paper napkins, served quickly and smartly by uniformed girl wait- ers. It may be an artificially lghted base- ment, where each customer gathers plate, knife and fork and then passes in proces- sion before the roast to be served, later computing his own bill and paying it as he passes the mountain of toothpicks. Or it may be a tiled hall filled with big chairs, one arm of which is expanded into an ei- bow table, from which coffee and ple, bls- cults and milk, may be taken in comfort and comparative leisure. But whatever the system, whatever he menu, whatever the ervice, ten minutes Is a long time to eat | and 2 cents 1s not at all & small check. Perhaps the factory-made ples are bad for our digestion, but Dr. Wiley is doing much to cure that. Perhaps the strong coffee is bad for our nerves, but it is better than adulterated whiskey. Perhaps the ten minutes !sn't long enough for a Some Things You Want to Know Quick Lunch Rooms. decent meal, but thers is the reflection that idle men don’t have to rush. Perhaps the American quick lunch room will be im- proved In many ways as it already has been improved, but it will never take needed lessons from Europe The Euglishman regales himeelf in the morning with a good breakfast of bacon and eggs and coffee. At the luncheon hour, supposing him to be possessod of a fairiy decent job, he repalrs to a chop house for his midday meal. If he 15 fn a hurry and has only & half hour, he will find a buffet bar, where he may have a cut froi the joint and his pint of bitter ale. A placard tells him that the joint from 12 to 1 is beof, from 1 to 2 is mutton, and he may regulate his luncheon hour according to bis taste. With the meat Is served bolled potatoes and bolled cabbage, alwa bofl and always potatoes and cabbage. Any terference with this arrangement of vege tables probably would be regarded as an attack on the constitution If the Englishman can possibtly afford it, he will take an hour. Then he will go | to o grill room and have u chop, flanked with bolled potatoes and cabbage, washed down with & pint of “bitters.” But In any | event he wiil take three to six times as| long at his lunch as does the American, he will cat three or four times ss much, and he will drink alcohol In the middle of the day, when the American will drink coffee. At 4 o'clock, when the American is thinking of home and dinner, the English- man repalrs to & tea-room. The London tea-room s not uniike & certain type of American quick lunch room In arrange- | ment. But there the likeness ends. A delib- erate waitress condescending to take an order, the customer composes himself to read or smoke. Tea and cakes Dbelng served eventually, and consumed In a half | hour or an hour, the afternoon sacr: is over. But there 8 no hurry. The continental Buropeans take even moro time than the Bnglish at their meals, and are even more greatly shocked by the | American system of swallowing a “sinker” and & cup of coffee on the run. The Frenchman and the Italian, breakfast, less make an orderly institution of midday and ovening meals, which precludes the pu—‘ sibllity of hurry. The German is different. Upon arising he takes coffes and rolls, In the middle of the forencon he has his second breakfast of sandwiches and boer. At noon, or shortly after, he has his din. | Der, and after dinner he has & nap. Then | he has afternoon coffee and cakes. He ro- turna to work and comes home to a late supper at 8 or 9 o'clook. The stern requirements of businees in & prosperous nation are such that this lelsurely native-German system is being overturned. Many people cannot afford to 80 home in the daylime. 8o it is that the German cafes and restaurants are al ways tull. Many have found it impossi- ble to walt on the slow service of the cafes, and these have had recourse to g certain form of the American.quick lunch room. The stranger in a German industrial city in search of & quick meal may walk down the street uatll he secs the American coat of arms emblazoned on & window. Let him turn in there. It is sure to be an “Automat.” There one puts a coin in the slot and is automatioally served with cold sandwiches, with hot dishes, with sweets, with tea or coffee, with béet or wine, with almost anything. The aufdmat was born in New York, but it nevéf'made a great success In' Amerfoa. It ‘Was'exported to Germany, and there it ha4’ flourished like & green bay tree. It appears that the Ger- mane have an idea that Americans never eat except the food and drink be seryed by a slot machine. But the crowning glory of the quick lunch room as an American institution is its democracy. The Wall street banker and the Wall street newsboy regulariy eat “beef and” at the same place. A cabinet minister in Washington does not disdain the Maryland biscuits and milk served over the same counter where all his thou- sands of underlings take their midday re- freshment. With all its faults, lunch room is an American mstitution of which we ought not to be ashamed. By FREDRIOK J. MASKTN. Tomorrow—Archasologioal Besearch. ament | BREWERY LICENSE CASES ON Come Up on Appeal to District Court from Excise Board. ANTI-SALOONISTS DENY COMPACT Thomas and Leidy Say They Made No Agreement to Let All the Cuses Stand or Fall by This Test. Argument is on before Judges Troup and Day in district court as to whether certaln appeals in brewery licenses cases from the decision of the Board of Fire aud Police | Commissioners shall go to trial or be dis- | missed. | Late In December the Anti-Saloon league filed protests with the board against the granting of liquor licenses to the brewerles and brewery agents of Omaha. The one | case appealed to district court immediately was heard by Judge Estelle and decided in | favor of the Mets Brewing company. The | Anti-Saloon league took this case te the | supreme court where it is now pending. | The Board of Fire and Police Commis- | sloners : rated licenses to all the app lcants immediately afterwards. The Anti-Saloon league then filed ap- peals to district court {n these other cases, besides that of the Mets company, the easo of which, narrated, had already been heard. Then J. P. Breen, attorney for the Storz company, filed & motion to dismiss tpc | appeal i this case and later filed similar motions in behalf of the otber breweries | and brewery agéhcles. It s this motion which is now before the dauble court. Judges Day and Troup are sitting together because each has some f the suits on his docket. Mr. Breen contends that the appeais were not filed until January 24, two weeks after the granting of the licenses on January 19, and he argues that the court is without jurisdiction because the supreme court, he avers, has ruled that such appeals must be perfected within ten days. Another ground is that an agreement was entered into at & hearing before the exclse board that an appeal should be taken in the Metz case and thet the other licenses should stand or fall with this onc. That such an agreement was entered into is deuled by attorneys for the Antl-Saloon league, and affidavits on this have been made by Elmer E. Thomas and Rev. J. M. Leidy. Argument by Mr. Breen and L. D. Holmes will last for some hours. } | Death Instead - of Joy End of Tour from Italy Husband and Father Dies Few Min- utes After Loved Omes Arrive, Barely Recognizing Daughter. After dreary weeks of travel with joyous expectancy of greeting their father and husband, Mrs. Frank Crisel and little daughter arrived in Omaha to find that their loved one was on the verge of death and an hour after they entered the sick room the end came. 5 Frank Crizcl, an Italian, came to Omaha after saving enough money to pay the passage of his wife and littie daughter, sent for them. A few weeks ago the man became ill with typhold fever ard hovering for days between life and death in his room at 208 North Tenth street, | bravely fighting for a chance to see his | dear ones. The wife and daughter sped on | thelr journey across the country after reaghing New York with eager hearts and | the one thought that soon they would see | the man they loved. No word had been given to the wife that her husband was il and when she reached the room fn which he lay delirious the shock was greater than she could bear and with a wild cry of anguish she fainted. While | the Wowan lay in a faint and just before | death claimed its prey, the man became ational for an instant, recognized his lt- | tle girl and then died. | The funeral will be held this afternoon and interment will be made in Holy | Sepulcher cemetery. COMMERCIAL CLUB IN BANK? It May Decide to Take Part of Three | Floors in the New Sky- scraper. Most of the time of the executive com-] mittee of the Commercial club s con- sumed nowadays in working out the prob- lem of a new home for the club. At the Jmeeting Wednesday a proposition was placed before the club, at the request of the executive committee, for three floors of the new City National bank. These floors were part of the sixteenth floor, all of the fifteenth and part of the fourteenth floors. The bullders have now reached theso floors and the directors of the bank wanted an answer in order that the floors f Inured in & Five might be laid out to suit the club If the proposition was accepted. ‘Domm substitute for Chamber- lain's Cough Remedy. It has no equal. six months ago from his native land and | tay | iForgets Her Name Getting License |George Grew Calls His Bride-to-Be | Mary, When She Was | Susie Cole. “George, George, how could you forget This is too bad.” This In effect was the disappolnted ex pression of Susie Cole, engaged to marry George T. Grew, 59 years of age, who | house Tuesday to marry Mary Cole | “Why Georme, that's wrong; it should be 5 exclaimed the surprised bride-to- be when shown the license “I want another paper,” sald Grew later |in the day when he appeared at the court | house. “1 was confused and sald Mary Cole. It should be Susie Cole." Another permit was issued and Grew's spirits brightened perceptibly as he went on his way. Grew is a motorman for the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Rallway company and has been with that company for thirty years. BIG PIANO PURCHASE Hayden Bros. Buy Steck of B cinnatl Plano Factory—s Nixon P! oek C to Omaha. Through the Fifth Third National bank of Cincinnatti our buyer, Mr. Quinlan, se- cured for cash the stock of Smith & Nixon, the well-known manufacturers. The Smith & Nixon planos are known the world over for their beautiful tone quality and general all round depepdabliity, rank- ing among the first and best. In fact, scores of the most prominent artists have given the Smith & Nizon plancs thelr preference and use them exclusively. We know thet in bringing the stock to | Omaha and offering it at the prices which | the cash purchase makes possible, 'we are offering plano buyers of this seotion bar- g2in opportunities which have not been equaled in many years. It will pay you to come hundreds of miles to attend this sale. Watch dally papers for date of sale and prices. HAYDEN BROS. Mets Famous Bock Beer on draught and In bottles on and after March 3. Absolutely the only genufne BOCK BEER brewed in Omaha. Order a my name on the day before our wedding? | IESILLLE SENDS MAN T0 PEN |Sentences William F. Murphy After | Several Escape That Fate. CRIMINAL IS MUCH SURPRISED | Expected to Follow Lucky Course of Those Whe Were Parcled or Sent to the ty RLIN | Whitam F. Murphy, convicted from the person, went to the state penl | secured a marriage license at the court|tentiary Tuesday & surprised and pained | man. He was surprised and pained be |cause he expected to share the fortune of several other convicted men who had been | paroled or sent to the county jail. The first man accused of a felony to | tace Jydge Estelle when he had succcedod | Judge Sutton tn court room No. 1 was M. C Howard. Howard pleaded gullty to forgery and was paroled. | The next offenders were two Austriane, Joseph Caza and Joseph Sayrock. accused of chopping open the head of a fellow countryman. These worthies pleaded |gullty to plan assault and received jall sentences of thirty da ch. The next criminal case was that of Wil- dam C. Hearn, charged with breaking and entering. He pleaded gulity and was paroled. Austin Elliot, up for forgery, like- Wwise confessed guilt and was paroled. John Laurence admitted guilt on a breaking and entering charge and got sixty days in jail. S8am Garrison, on a stmilar charge, re- cslved thirty days. Willlam Carnaby, a forger, was paroled, and the case next In order was that of John Austin for breaking and entering. Thirty days in county jafl was his portion. Confeases, No Sentemece. Curtls Holden, indicted for assault with Intent to commit great bodlly injury, pleaded guilty to plain assault. Sentence Wwas suspended. Another breaking and entering case, that of Charles Willlams, followed. Thirty days In county jail like the others. This brings the record down to Monday of this week, when Murphy, whom the police say is an old time crook, got & penitentiary sentonce. So did Géorge Rose whom Judge Estello sent to the penitentiary for & year and six months. Rose s the negro who swore free Ben Woregth, accused of being an_accomplice In a bur@lary. This same day Clement Tragey, pal of Spencer Willlams, recelved six months in Jail for breaking and entering. These are three other charges against Tracey. Before Murphy and Rose, tho court sent case sent to your home. Prompt delivery. | ’Phone Douglas 119; Ind., 2119, two men to the penitentiary. In their cases Miller, Stewart & Beaton 413-15-17 South 16th St. We Sell the VULCAN Gas Ranges of Marsh Hamilton, &nd the other Ledse Scott, a colored highway robber. To the latter Judge Estelle sald ho regretted he could not parole him, but the offense aid not come upder the parole law. Capt. S the Duirs Eye. This world famoud rffle wiot the champlonshfp record of Yo “ne hoidy Aeront 1n 10 consecutive shots, 13 livine Tl Recently Interviewed, he have suffered a long titge wifh It bladder trouble and haye used severs known kidney medicines, alt of wh'ch give me no relief untll I started takinz Foley's Kidney Pills. Before I used Foley's Kid- mey Pllls I was subjected to vevero back- ache and pains in my kidnevs, with sup- pression and sometimes & cloudy volding. ‘While upon arising In the morning I would get dQull headaches. Now I bave taken three bottles of Foley's Kidney Pills and feel 100 per cent better. I am never both- ered with my kidneys or bladder and once more feel llke my own self. AL this I ows solely to Foley's Kidney Pills and alwavs recommend them to my féllow sufferers.” Sold by all druggists. ng Permit Edmund J. Snyder, 3180 Meredith avenne, frame, $2,000; Auvgust Kringsbrugge, 3015 Larimors stsect. frame, §1.60; Sophia Arratis, 2700 South Thirtieth street, frama, the statute compelled it. One of these was Jim Philips, murderer $1,050; Johnson laundry, 2117 Cuming street, brick addition, $2,000; Jz"hn H. Schults, 1433 Lothrop street, frame, $2,600. Coast where its use has N D200, 25X Ghirardelli’s is the original and genuine Ground Chocolate, unrivalled for purity, deliciousness, smoothness and strength. Ghirardelli's Ground Chocolate is the most popular Chocolate preparation on the Pacific been steadily increasing for nearly forty years D. Ghirardelli Co. SAN FRANCISCO Since 1852 Flicks! Free! Your grocer will 'give you Free of Charge a package of the daintiest of all confections Ghirardelli's Flicks with every purchase of one pound of Ghirardelli GROUND CHOCOLATE Invest your rent money instead of spending it and Young man buy real estate You are probably spending a portion of your salary every month for some things that are not necessary, some things youn could get along without and at the same time your advantage. Buy a piece of real estate on easy terms—live on it or rent it to a good tenant. The rent you receive will just about take care of the monthly payments—in a few have not missed a dollar you pu Look in Thursday’s Bee for extra estate, for sale on easy terms. Thursday is home day. years you own the property put the money to t into it. good bargains in real

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