Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 31, 1910, Page 7

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 BEE: OMAHA THURSDAY by A delightfully smooth, mellow blend of fragrant, aromatic “Old Crop™ C TONE BROS., Des Moines, lowa. Millers of the famous Tame Bros. Spices. l _ OLD GOLDEN : Taste” offees. Try a pound. 25 cents at Grocers. BRIEF CITY NEWS Wave Root Print I Swoboda—Certified Public Accountant. Lighting Fiztures—i Co. Strictly Mome-Made Ples. [ler Grand Cafe onal Life Insurance Co—i#10 Charles E. Ady. General Agent, Omaha. | PLANS FOR STELZLE'S COMING CITT COUNCIL PIOCEEDIXCSI McGovern Raises Protest Over What He Says is Triekery. PAVING PETITION IS UNDER FIRE Councilman Says Property Jwaers Asked for Brick and Promoter Now Propeses to Give Them Asphalt Tastead. Counetlman MeGovern furnished the only tinge of interest at the meeting of the city souncil last evening, and Councilman Berka introduced the only ordinance at tracting any particular attention, provid- ing for a better quality of water. Mr. MaSovern raised his voice in protest when the clerk read a petition for asphalt | paving on Twenty-eighth avenue, from Chi- cago to Dodge. The Ninth ward council- man intimated that some promoter work- ing for a paving contractor had been guilty of sharp practice. “A petition was circulated and signed for brick paving,” said Mr. McGovern, that is what the property owners want. and what they are entitled to have, stnce they foot the bill. Yesterday, I am told. the promoter of this street said the pe- | titton for brick paving had been burned. If all the cirtumstances are as I understand them, that promoter is not an honest man. If promoters are to bs allowed to pursus | Five Thousand Workmen and Church- | men for Auditorium Meeting. | | THIS NUMBER EXPECTED SUNDAY to Dames—Nebraska lodge No. | 1 Koights of Pythtns, will give a dance at Myrtle hall this svening. Bvery dellar placed with the Savings and Loan Assn helps to earn an- other. 8I%- per cent per annum credited semi-annually. 108 Board of Trade. Ancther Viaduct Suit—Another suit against the city of Omaha in con- Bection with the proposed Dodge Street viaduet is filed in district court by George T. Morton, who estimates his injuries at $4,000. County Mas Ten Typhold Cacss—Ten | victims of typhold fever are now in the county howpital. this desease have been received at this institution recently at the rate of about one & dny. A considerable number have been discharged as cured. Oharged With Wife Beating—George H. Place will have a hearing in county court Thorsday on a charge of beating his wife, Margaret Place. The complamt is sworn to by J. H. Johnson, brother of Mrs. Place. The defendant alleges that his brother-in-law has caused whatever trouble there is in the family. Woman Wants Name Petition 1s flled In distric Olga Katherine Palm to h name changed to Brailey. The petition states that the plaintiff is 22 years of age “and has resided for many years as one of the tamily with friends who have been parents to her in all but name, and the petitioner s desirous of assuming the name of those who have reared and cared #op her since childhood.” Omaba in Canal Sone—"Qur re- gards to ail members of the Omaha fire department,” was the message on a post capd received Tuesday by Justice Ed Lesder fromy the Canal zone, The card was sent by Gus Shater, who was speaking for him- self and the other former Omaha firemen down in Panama—Olsen, Livingstone, Tan- ner, Peterson, O'Briep and Burmaster, ail ot dwhoin We fireden there. “‘We don'L fight"as many fires bere as we aid in Omaha,” writes Mr. Shater, “but thers Is axcitement of one kind and another. The Blasting shakes the dishes in the house to Femind you of war times." Enlarging General Dellvery Department ~The plans for the enlargement of the general delivery department of the Omaha postolfice have been compieted, and only await the approval of the supervising arehiteet of the Treasury department for the beginning of work. This contemplates the removai of the general delivery depart- ment to the north side of the main work room, just west of the present gemeral de- livery loeation. The new room will have six general delivery windows instead of two, a3 at present. The new room wifl be Sxd0 feet and will directly face the Capitol avenue entrance. The rooms now oceupled by the genera! deivery will be utilized as the office for the superintendent of city deftvery. eourt by The excruciating pains from corns or bunfons may be avoided by applying Cham- berlain's Liniment. braska Patients suffering from | her sur- | Union of Three Cities Are Co- Operat with the Chureh Forces to Make This Meeting = Huge Succesa. All indications point to & strong repre- sentation of laboring men and churchmen of Omaha, South Omaha and Council Blutts at the address of Charles Stelzle of New York at the Auditorium Sunday, April 3, at 13:90 p. m., under the auspices of the Young Men's Christian assoelation. The Central Labor union is co-operating earnestly in the plans and working through both the central body and the various unions in spreading announcements and | awakening interest for a large attendance of laboring men. The Omaha Musical association has granted Its members the privilege of ten- dering their services free on the occasion of Mr. Steizle's address and R.- Oisen, a leader, in musical circies, 48 providing an orchestra. A committes from the Young Men's Christian association presented the matter to the Omaha Musical association, and found a very willing and responsive sentiment there. The services of an or- chestra were tendered and Mr. Olsen agreed | to take the matter in charge. | Committees are at work among the | churches of the three citfes distributing an- | nouncements and awakening enthusiasm. | Deputations of men from the churches-ef Omaha and South Omaha gathered at the Young Men's Christian association last Sunday afternoon and promised to encour- age attendance of all men. “There ought to be an audience of 5,000 men to head Mr. Stelzlo Sunday after- noon,” said L. T. Crossman, religious sec- retary of the Young Men's Christian asso- clation. “Mr. Stelzle has been addressing audiences of 10000 and 1500 people and considering the high esteem in which he is heid by laboring men as well as the Im- portant position he holds in the church he §s certain to draw a lorge crowd.” The Sunday afternoon address is on “Church and Labor,” and is fres to all men. Mr. Steizle will speak Monday night at the Young Men's Christian association on “Workingmen and Their Conditions,” |and an admission of % cents will be | charged. This lecturs s illustrated with | views which Mr. Steizle took himself in | factories and cities of the United States. An address will be given by Mr. Stelsle | Monday noon to the Soctal Service club at the Young Men's Christian assoeiation. Mr. Stelsle is superintendent of the de- partment of labor and church of the Pres- | byterian church, a former machinist and | union man. Mets Famous Bock Beer on draught and In bottles on and after March 3. Absolutely the only genuine BOCK BEER brewed in Omaha. Order & case sent to your home. Prompt deitvery. 'Phone Douglas 189; Ind., 9. y ' Bee Want Ads produce results. ey NO DYSPEPSIA OR A little Diapepsin regulates bad / Stomachs in five minutes. { Every family here ought to keep some| Diapepsin in the house, as any one of you maey have an attack of Indigestion or Stomach trouble at any time, day or night. This harmless preparation will digest anything you est wnd overcome a dls-| tressed, out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. If your meais don't tempt you, or what little you do et seems to f1ll you or lays. 1tke & lump of lead In your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that is a sign of In- digestion. Ask your Pharmacist for a 50-cent case of' Pape’s Dispepsin and take a lttle just s soon as you can. There will be no sour UNDIGESTED FOOD risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heart- burn, fullness or heavy feeling In the Stomach, Nausea, Debilitating Headaches, | Dizziness or Intestinal griping. This | will all go. and besides there will be no |sour food left over in the stomach to {potson your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin {s & certain cure for |out-of-order stomachs, beeause it prevents and digests it just the same as If your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from ail stomach \misery s at any drug store, walting for you. These large S0-cent cases contaln more {than sufficient to cure almost any chronic case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other stomach trouble. OU’LL find such an endless variety of corset models in the Kabo line that your requirements will be met without or trouble of any kind. In the matter of style Kabo Corsets are first in , | phone placed at the dog pound for the con- fermentation and takes hold of your food | | this courss of thwarting the desires of the property awners, the sooner this courcil & halt the better. | Councilman Johnson said he agreed with | the views ot his colleague from the Ninth. and Prestdent Burmestsr said he beifeved | the matter should be thorpughly investi- gated. It was tacitly agreed that this | should be done Defore thé counecil takes final action, | For Real Pure Watur. | Judge Berka's ordinance is to provide for the preservation of the public heaith, to | prevent disease, to guard against epidentics and to fix a standard of purity for ail water brought into Omala In pipes or otherwise and offered for sale in any man- | ner. It provides that ail water must be free from any gas producing bacteria, colon | bacilll, or pathogenic bacteria. The num- | ber of bacteria must not exceed fifty per | cuble centtmeter, and all water o brought | in or s0ld must be clear and free from im- | purities. The heaith commissioner is to| have ample supervisory powers, and vio- | latiom of the ordinance is to be punished by forfeiture of $100 & day, while tmpure | water s turnished or sold after due notifl- | cation, and conviction of violation of the | provisions of the ordinance is to be pun- | ishable by fine and imprisonment. The |ordinance is to take effect twenty days after passage. It was refarred to the com- mittes of the whole. Auto for Tom F1y: Councilman Davis introduced a resolu- ton directing the city clerk to advertise for bids for a runabout autemobile for the use of the street commissioner, cost not to excsed $M, to be paid from the street grading fund. Council adopted the resolution. Mayor Dahiman was silowed $00 to pay his expenses while in attendance at the national convention to consider city plan- ning, to be held at Rochester, N, Y., May 2, S and & This convention is the outcome of the agitation which has been going on in the country the last few months, and some indications of which have been seen in Omaha. The water company notiffed the council that the. city of Omaha will be heid re- sponsible: for damags done at the store of Thompson & Belden because of the breaking of a hydrant last Friday. The communication was filed. Council killed the ordinance grant- ing certain rights to the Chichgo Great Western to lay tracks across Twentieth and Twenty-first streets by plaeing it on tile. Dodge Street Viaduet. - A favorable report from the committee on ralirosds and viaducts was adopted, ordering the Missourt Pacific to proceed with the bullding of the Dodge street via- duct. According to the terms of the or- dinance work should begth May 1 and the viaduct completed by September 1. A resolution was passed ordering a tele- venience of citizens owning dogs which may disappear during the chase of the dog catohers, beginning April L Bullding Inspector Withnell asked that the brick building at 1114 Douglas street be declared a nuisance because of its dilap- idated and dangerous condition. The build- ing is owned by Mrs. T. M. Humphrey of Rapid City, 8. D. The communication went to the committee of-the whole. INVOKES COURT TO FORCE RAHLROADS TO BUILD VIADUCT City Secures Order from Judge Sutton Ald of distriet courdt Has Deen sought |to make rallroads involved construct at | Thirtleth and Bancroft streets the viaduct ordered by the city council last June. An Iud-ml.uwuu—whyswmatmm mus should not issue was granted Wednes- day by Judge Sutton. The order s return. | able Monday. The respondents to the petition for the |writ are these railroads: Unlon Pacific, Chicago, Burlington & Quinecy, Chicago | Great Western, Mason City & Fort Dodge and the Omaha Grain Terminals company. The petition for the writ ssys that s resolution urging the viaduet was passed Ilmhmmdthn:un-uuumum was given the approval of the counctl. It is related that certified coples of the ordinance and af the city engineer's plans and specifications have been served on the roads, but that with the exception of the Union Pacifie they refuse to comply or to begin construetion. BIG PIANO PURCHASE Hayden Bros. Buy Stock of Hig Clan- clmmati Plase Factory—Smith & on Plane Stock Comes to Omaha. ! Through the Fifth Third National dank of Cincinnat! our buyer, Mr. Quinian, se- cured for cash the stock of Smith & Nizen, the well-known manufacturers. Foulards! Friday, the greatest sale of MARCH 31, 1910 Foulards! Foulards! To get rid of the blues Thursday, the last day of March, at 10 A. M., Kil- patrick’s will sell about 1,000 yards of Blue Foulards, the most popular of all colors and fabrics this season. Nearly every piece of foreign make, and there are several shades from the Copenhagen to navy—usually $1.00 per yard, Yours Thursday at 73c Yard There will be offered also at same price a few pieces of the much-wanted browns, helios and resedas. ’ EMBROIDERIES Omaha has yet seen. Never such elegant qualities— never such choice styles and colorings. Mark that down. Thos. Kilpatrick & Co. Thursday, March 31st Is Y. W. C. A. Membership Day. « You'll be told about it in our store. The women are anxious to lead all cities in membership. It's a'g'nod thing! Mighty good! Get on the roll of honor. This Marvelous Heal Relieves Suffering Sciatica, Lumbage, through poor circulation at some particular Apply the Vibrator to the spot and you &ad get roilet once. ises, Ringing in cansed by the thickening of the one dlsease—CONGESTION one cure- CIRCULATION When you hurt yourself rub your temples. Why? 1t rub the spot. When your head achesyon cause vibration is Nature's own remedy, Vibrator Disease and rubbing is Nature’s crude way of creating vibration and starting the blood to going. Disease is only another name for congestion. Where there is disease or pain there you will find the blood congested and stagnant. There can be no In a rich and steady stream. ain or disease where the red blood flows d circulation means good health, Con- circulation means disease and pain. T ambert Snyder VIBRATOR Is the greatest medical di 1t is capable of giving from 9, of the Twentieth Century. to 15,000 vibrations per minute—100 times more than is possible with the most ex; master of massage. It is a light, compact instrument, weighs twenty ounces, can be operated by yourself with one hand by moving the steel head over the rigid steel rod, and can b placed in contact with any part of the body. developed and concentrated,and with one minute’s e red blood rushing into the congested parts, re~ own remedy use sends t! moving all disease and pain. relieve the congestion the Ears, in most cases, are inner membrane through catarrh or colds. T cure this, vibration is the only thing, as it is the only way to reach the inmer sar dram and loosen up the hard wax or foreign matter, 50 sound may Trouble, te to the dru: m. ete., are caused by Constipation, the food not properly digesting: it lacks necessary saliva and gastric s, thus creating congestion in the stomach; forming gases, caus- Apply the Vibrator to the stomach: it the regulates the action and Ieval Stamping Co., Now Vork, Selling Agents It is Nature's If You Have Any of These Ailments You Need the Lambert Snyder Vibrator Gout, ete., are caused by uric acid in the blood iu the form of nrate of soda. art, gets stopped on its way through the system &ad, CUSIIUTALIZ, CILIES Daity This acid, Carpenters May Go on Strike Union Declares for Fifty Cents an Hour and it is Not Yet Ac- cepted by Bosses. A carpenter's strike is now threatening. At & meeting Tuesday night at Labor | Tempie the union carpenters declared for a minimum wage of # cents an hour. The minimum is now 4 cents an hour. The situation concerns beiween G0 and 700 carpenters in Omaba. They declars that unless their demand is miet that a strike will be called. A strike at this time would invoive delays in the construetion of & large number of new business houses and dwellings which are under way. The demand of the carpenters has heen submitted to the Builders' exchange, but nothing that approaches an agreement has been reached. The agreement Lytween | the builders and the carpenters is said to | expire on April 1. Beyond that date the | earpenters maintain that there is no obii- | sation to bind them. The' carpenters are | | | | erty Stroesser, business agent. MRS. CRONK IS AFFLICTED WITH NEURO-PSYCHASTHENIA r B Matter That is What Dr. Coul- ter Says is the with Her. Far from enthusiastic over the war of affidavits in the Cronk case, Judge Troup in distriet court, after listening to informal argument by attorneys, af- | allowing Mrs. | for suit money | directed that she permit George P.| firmed the Cronk payment and Cronk to recover his personal effects, which are in Mrs. Cronk's custody. Among the latest aftidavits filed is one in behalf of Mrs. Cronk, sworn to by Dr. F. E. Coulter, who declared that after an examination made Sunday, he is certain Mrs. Cronk is suffering from neuro-psychasthenia, or nervous prostra- tion. Mrs. that she had given orders that the prop- replevined from Council Bluffs should be returned in part to Mr. Cronk, but says that the replevin suit came in ahead Mr. Cronk in an affidavit tells of the return to the Durfee Furniture company of many articles, including the two vol- umes of “The Rise and Fall of the Con- federacy,” but he adds that “among the books retained by affiant, as belongin to him, is the book mentioned by the defeadant in her affidavit as having been given by this affiant to her. This is the copy of “Three Weeks” and Mr, Cropk declares he never did give it to Mrs. Cronk. court order of $100 Cronk makes affidavit againj s S { |How TO MAKE CiTY PRETTY| | Some Plans Are Progosed by Vieter Rosewater to Real Estate Exchange. “We would all like to have & city beau- tiful and we should try to develo o | 1 represented in the controversy by H.|A eity besutiful may not be cashed in | dollars and cents, put it is a paying In- | vestment nevertheless. | “One proposition which might now be considered is the development of the court house square, for it could be made into a beautiful park 160x264 feet and could be noted as a sort of court of honor for the city, facing as it does on some af.the best | buildings of Omahs. The new lghting | scheme which is being considered for the city could be made to focus on this park.” C. W. Craig, city engineer, asked the co- operation of the Real Estate exchange In & move toward securing a state highway commission for Nebraska. He asked the exchange to hear State Highway Commis- sioner Johnson when he speaks In Omaha, April & MORE STREET CARS ORDERED Traction Company to Put en Fifty Additional Pay-as-Yeu-Snter Equipment in Fall. The Omsha & Councl Blufts ~ Strest Railway company has ordered twenty-five fcan Car company of St. Louls and has also arranged to have twenty-five cars of the Hanscom park line changed to pay-as- you-enter cars. Thuse are all to be ready for use this fall befors time to take off the summer cars and put on the closed | cars. An experiment has been made in Omahs of changing some of the Hanscom park | When you h FREE! Miller, Stewar:! <2 Beaton 413-15-17 South 16th St. We Sc' the VULCAN Gas Ranges MADE IN THE Largest Whiskey Distillery In The World. “Bottled In Bond” Guaranteed by the U. S. Government 100 Proof This Whiskey is thoroughly filtered and carefully aged, giving it an exquisite flavor and an extremely delicate bouquet. Served in all First-Class Bars, Clubs and Cafes. Aloays Ask For It. CLARKE BROS. & CuG., Distillers. Peoria, [ To make bread, and the very best, Get Updike’'s Pride and give it a test, tried it you will Iike it fust fin You will not give it.up for any other n There's-ail kinds of flour in the markef for sale, Some good, some bad, and some very _ stale, When you have tried & sample of each, You will find that Updike's Pride cannot be beat. MRS J. T. DONAHEY, 2448 California. FREE! An Order on Her Groeer for a who malls us & verse of four to six lines (which we use for advertising) about “Pride of Omaha” Four.

Other pages from this issue: