Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 16, 1910, Page 3

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(HICAGO COURT SAVES PLAY ‘.idzv Scanlan Restrains Police from Preventing Show. AGERS GETS WARM rianger Sy ' WAR OF MAN. of the is John Cort Says ination Kinw & Heate , and Mare Kinw Snys Very Well, Telexram.) 15.~(Special Emily,” the to the t of with aused the police ter closed, recelved today and will continue You Anything Declare an fnjanction gr an, and the failure any o to court of life Have th to run as anted b of th present t Judg siace when the Monday have case v toda the testim club officers and other Judge Scanlan was invited both sides to The tmanagement ot at least thr gest Hun'r&tl days « day, annoMiced that the week and thereaftc ordey orai wome I polic tators w heard by Atend a forma of the t performances on the big Mon con on pe ater, assured a week before how will tinue next The restraining &n ex-purte hearing Mty or giving it an heard. Adolph Marks, Woods, producer of it, and after securing the cfty for the the prescnce of sons (rom wecing Marks declared in that ft depicted situations wiich should be avoided In real life and that Mr Wood4 is under contract to exhibit forty-tive consccutive weeks and pay $10 should it Likely. at the opportunity to be for Al. H engineered granted notit wa without nKg atte the it pla threu lete ened to sue through ring per ance Mr clevating loss ocea the the e poilce perfor the formar as it 0 revent the prevent the court ym. stopping royalt pelice £ ‘ruce Not NEW YORK, 'May 15—(Special gram.)~The national tneatrical war the Klaw and Erlanger syndicate lined up on one side and the Cort-Cahn-Wells-Shu- bert coalition on the other has passed be- yond the possibility of a trucs, although John Cort, head of the new Natlonal Theatergoers’ Association of America, has acked for audlences before the Producing Managers' association. For the present Dboth sides are busily engaged In attempt- ing to weaken cach other by depleting the camp of the enemy and from the north- vext, the scene of active conflict, has 3 )—nterm for a time in the south. ‘Jake" Wells, the newly elected presi dent of the Nev Independent Southern Managers' assoclation, sent a telegram John Cort saying he would arrive in New York before next Tuesday from Atlanta, Ga., bringing glad tidings of the sunder ing of the theatrical bonds of the routh According to the adherents of the syndi- cate, Mr. Wells hae assumed a role dictatorship in the south which he cannot very well carry out. The Klaw and langer followers declare that Wells no positlon to turn over the independent southern Leith circult to the independents. Lefth houses located in Richmond, Norfolk, Roanoke and Lynchburg, vaude- ville, while Mr. sltuation In hand In Atlanta. Klaw and . Evlanger have announced that they will bulld a new play house there to be opened next fall. Benjamin Stevens, of the Klaw and Erlanger forces, Is in Atlanta arranging for the new house. From at- 1a Mr, Stevens will go to Macon, where the syndicate threatens to open & new (heater, ' Syndicate Cluims Contr tatements have been given out by the “syndicate” that it is in control in Nash- ville and Mobile, although Mr. Wells has a plan 1o untold to the national “indepen- dents” Which will, he says, oust the “syn dicate” from its southern power. A great deal of oppesition developed to the plan to have John Cort confer with th National Association § Theatrical Produc: ing Managers, some evidently fearing that Mr. Cort, acting on behalf of the “Indepen- dents,” would enter 1ito some sort of agre:- ment which would work a nardship on the one-night managers and the weaker mem vers of the new national assoclation of “independents.” According to Cort fear Is groundless. Today M. Cort “This action docs not mean that ‘independents’ have receded from the posi- tion orlginally taken. We shall insist upon strict freedom and no interference in the way of the ‘syndicate’ will he tolerated. It Is our object' that all the theaters in tho United State all bo Veopt opem w kil attractions notwithstanding the ownership or affillations of the mana gers. The dominancy of Klaw & Hrianger has ben cnded. A meeting has vanged for next week, All that national theater assoe to present is it to the National Producing soclation to decide wiiether ‘. With free men or ot L Y of Pr uce . The hoard of directors National Assoctation of Producing Managers fs made up of Henry B Charles H. Yale, Toseph Bigoks, William A yady, Henry Mare Klaw Jdles Murray Connor, 13, For- Fester, Harry D. Parker and Holl Of (hése, Klaw, Brogks and sent the “syndicate,” ate s presumed Lody. The *indepcndents” ¢ Jld 1,200 theat resenting the follow jng cireults: The Nortawestern T assoctation of Mortana, ldatio, Washi Oregon, Utah, Ariz New Mexico, gornla and Evitish Cclumbla; W nipe clreuit, pper and ¢ of Michigan, vington & Kindt circuit ley & Z euit, L theaters, Hathaway e of states named th e following eftles Vi san Tele- with s In are said the bookings by been ar- the tion wishes and | new ners' ts side of the case Man they want Tuc of the Harris, Sam W Toner Avaze o s Coolc Harr although the be a i repre- director t0 strictly neutral im to atrical Cal s Win- al 1ron the ¢ Her- the Crawford, Phll ung eclecult, J. J. Coleman's cir- Jake Wells and Heury L the Moss Rels L th circult and the New I Julius Cahin. In addition ese circuits extend th and states: Butte Los Angele Dakota, South rand Forks, Wiscone Minneapolis, Joseph, To Tennes Ok- Orleans, ma Ars cu \amberldin, De Give 0. T gland clreu sugh Spe Kane, Tacoma Sal Lake, Den 1hakota, Mar Fargo Minne peka noe. lahoma, toria Seat- IPrancise N w rih toba mipes Mich St ¥ Texas, Lincoly Wichita, i1 Paso, Kentucky Louisiana, Misslssippi, Mabile Jamestowr gan, ul, sota, Duluth, Arkansas \dlan New SEE MY MOTORCYCLES d get my prices before you buy. 8. M. WILLIAMSON, 17 8. Main St. Council Bluffs. MONEY TO LOAN Private Money Property F. J. SCHNORR, 518 Broadwey, Councll Bluffs, Ia o Loan on City of | Wells, admittedly, has the | now | 5, Pennsylvama, West Virginia and New Kinw enid Not tod Alnrme Mr. Klav We have no fea s movement ed ves in us against the goods in t [ far and beyond the talk ‘ort announced today tha Wisconsin and and de independ milar action managers all ing stage [ the theatrical Michigan had agers of et at Milwaukee clded join the ranks of the ents.”” According to Mr, Cort taken by theatrical is b the United States to T OMAMA'S INTER IN THE WAR Menn Hetter Times for the Lo hent interest in the alleged “war" of present sense rather When Manager Burgess of the was asked about the situation | he said the only effect it might have would be to sond to this city more of the stroms | attractions and for a longer time. Klaw & | be from the neces attractions for the smaller be able to take better For example, when engaged at the Brandels, business at each per- she was cut out of one night in a (hat Lincoln might have the attrac- Maude Adams booked of sk for short stays in Omaha, Kan- Denver and other western citi that she might get into a numbe maller towns whose theaters have gone into the Shubert combination. skinuer Is another of the stars who | oagnt 1o Omaha he managers is in a will relieved king 1 will thus the la Janis Erlanger | sity ot be playing to capacity ormar tion | New ¥ sas City was out in order (of the no Otls has now been taken putting in over by Shuberts time at the Cort the theat combimation | with the In the future these stars will parmitted to stay longer at | the first class theaters in the larger citles The Shuberts are generally understood to | have a lease on the Boyd theater, to take hold when the Burgess & Woodward lease | expires 1911, This will bring Omaha | directly into the conflict. When the pres- | ent season opened the | to book their attractions since named the Gayety. | panies were n June at the Burwood everal fine com. sent on, during the of the season, but it soon became apparent that the managers did not have enough at- | tractions to keep the house open, and the | contract between the Shuberts and Messrs. Johnson & Bilz was canceled. This shuts | th huberts out of Omaha until they can | secure the Boyd theater. {Marshalltown Saloons Reopen | | Announce it is Insufficient—Big Legal Battle Probable. MARSALLTOWN, la, May 15.—(Spe- cial Telegram.)—When thelr attorneys who spent ten days checking the revocation pe- | tition announced that the petition was in- sufficlent, all saloons of city reopened this | afternoon. The opening is the signal for a fight. Anti-saloon attorneys de- clare there are any number of rcasons not based on saloons petition of consent cir- culated ten years ago on which they can be closed hy injunction aside from the | petition. Revocation proceedings by in- Junction will be begun at once. | SUNDAY SCHOOL WORK AT LOGAN | | Program of Harrivon Céunty Conven- ® tion Thix Weoks LOGAN, Ia., May 15.—(Spegjal.)—Program of the forty-first annual dn¥ention ot the Havrison County Sunday School association {10 he held at Logan in the Methodist 115 and 19, 1s as follows: : | Devational exercises, L. D. Willett Authentieity of the Bibie," Rev. Kreners Kev, 1. McK. ‘The H 8; address, Stuart; address,” Dr the Sunday Lible lissons, Literature school,” W, D. with biography, Rev. M, M. Cabie; “Teaching and_ Preach in the Sunday School,” K otter; ‘rimary Teachers and Teach- |ing,” Miss Pauilne Hills; address, Dr. Ed- win 1. Starbuck, subject, 'eaching Chil- « n Versus Teaching the Bible sionary Work,"” Thomas P. Nuge: day School In the Rural Districts,” Mrs, IH. R. Coulthard and Mrs. G. H. Long- man; “How to Create General Interest in Sunday School Work, Rev. J. A. Howard; nday School and Every Day Boy,” Mrs, A. B. Hosbrook; “Religious Education,” Prof. W. J. Scely. Devotional song serv- ices, Rev D. Davis, Rev. J. N, Carey and Rev A. Boner Armstrong; uistory and W E | LoGAN, lowing hers Blected ut Log: a., May 14.—(Special.) been elected as the Logan schools: Charles S. intendent; Mary E. Riee, B. Gardncr, mathematies; Bajley; language musie and art, Mabel Lighter; manual training, Paul Dietric s: Bertha Caldwell, first; Helen Allen, second; Elenor Miliman, third; Minnic fourth; nn fifth; Ada sixth; vl seventh; Tomlinson, cighth, The fol teachers of Cobb, super principal; Mary English, Bmily corge Sumpter; have Acrea, Jarnhart, Pearl Rogers Jalner, Sues MASON With fort for Blg Alimon:, CITY, la, May 15 thousands of dollars to briug com- to their homes, Mrs. Charles Kasicke has brought suit against her husband de- | manding $60,000 alimony and a divorce, She alleges that on several occasions her hus- band has attempted to kill her in various ways. They are residents of Harding county, nd ke owns 90) acres of land ~(Special.). v acre, beside much other Man COLLINS, being | ana Struck by la., May struck Ly a carricd thirty the pilot this place, Rapids hospital Train Dies. 15.—(Special.)—After fast Milwaukee train miles Madrid, la.. A. W. Hannahs, aged dled today in a Cedar Hannahs was struck while driving & team across a highway crossing o'clock this morning led and the vehl o near Both were was demolished. Colling, about 2 Lorses K o Old I'eo, VINTON Ington Knox le Flgure in Romance, . la, May 1.—(Speclal.)—Well- Towns, aged 52, and Mrs. Emily E. aged 15, were marriel in the court house here this morning by Justice H. C dryant. They the oldest couple who wedded in the county. They were man and wife, but were divorced | Both married again, and Mrs. Brown's husband died and Towns was divorced from his wite formerly Call for Rev, James Rayburn, MARSHALLTOWN, la, May 1 (Special)-—-A formal call was extended (o Rev. James Rayburn, formerly of Omaha, who has becn supplying here for the past year, by the First Presbyterian church of this city today. w Everyboay Wan Everybody desires §0o0® health, which '8 | impossible uniess the kidneys are sound and | healthy taken ap the first indication of any irreg- ularity, and a serious lliness may be averted. Foley's Kidney Remedy will re- store your kidueys and bladder to their normal state and activity, For sale by all | druggists. will play but one night in Omaha because he | Shuberts arranged | 1y part | Attorneys Check Over Petition and | church, Wednesday and Thursday, May | lawin starbuck; “Froblem in | THE (TALES OF GRANT AND (ROUR John 8. Collins Tells of These Two in \ His Book of the Plains. | |KNEW U. S, GRANT VERY WELL BI | Father of J. & Collins Responsible for Grant Being Pressed Into for the Civil War. Servie John 8B who died in Omaha Fri day, did considerable literary work during | his lifetime, book ‘Across the Plains in ‘61, presents two fascinating | sketches of two distinguished characters | who illumine the pages of American his | tory | One of these is General ( LL [ the Indian fighter, and the other eral Ulysses 8. Grant In fact, had is not been for the elder Colling, the father of the author, it is a grave question whether Grant would ever have been known to the world at large, despite the destiny which shapes the end of all mankind, It is a fact that the warm friendship which ex- | isted between the Collins and the Grant| families was responsible for bringing into the light of public notice the retiring and modest Grant, was known to few people in Galena, while In the wild scramble for fat commissions In the serv- fce by the politicians at the outbreak of the war, Grant remained in the back- ground overlooked and forgotten by even the few friends who knew him, excepting Collins. In referring to General Crook In his book, Mr. Collins recalls the personal friendship which existed between him and Creok and | | he recounts the names of three scouts who | played a prominent part in the campalgn directed by General (‘rook against the In- dlans. One of the Buffalo BIl. he other two although not so widely kinown were men' whose daring and knowl- | edge of the plains and the Indlans made | their services equally valuable. These men were Baptiste Garnler, better known at “Little Bat" and Frank Gi Lit- tle Bat, who took & prominent part in the battle of Wounded Knee, was killed by a saloon keeper at Crawford. Grouard was | until recently recently, a scout at Pine| Ridge. Little Bat had a record of hu\—‘ g killed elghty-three bears. His ability i following a trail cribed by the | {author as simply marvelous. He would | trail an animal over the hardest country | with sometimes only a turned pebble to uide him. ins In his .. Crook I8 Gen- who scouts s puard is Two Fathers P In 1841, Eli A, Collins, auth and Jess¢ K. Grant, eral Grant, opened at Galena, 11, the first leather and saddlery store west of Buffalo. Jesze R. Grant operated a small tannery at Bethel, O,, and tanned the hides bougnt |at Galena. They were shipped from point to the other by stern wheel ers. Chics was then a settlement com- prised of old Fort Dearborn, a fur trading| point, and a few bulldings. Galena, by comparison, was a metropolis, and the sup- plies from St. Louis were shipped there. The only rival of the bustling place was| Dubuque. Hides and pig lead were the art feles of trade in the river commerce be- tween Galena and St. Lo Bach “pig was branded at the end with a letter indi- cating the ownership, and it was, with the | hides, one of the principal commodities dealt in by Collins & Co. Grant withdrew from the firm In 1853 and opened an opposi- tlon store, placing his brother, Simpson Grant, in charge. In 1560 U. S. Grant went to work In the store. ; Travel between Galema and Buffalo in those days was by stage and it. was a| courageous man who would attempt the tedlous trip for the purpose of replenishing | stock. When the purchaser started out he, | usually carried a carpet bag full of coin | for other mechants and looked after their | ‘llmllnx for them. The trip from Uu”«lh% | | | riners, father of the tather of Gen- one steam- | | to New York was by the cars. So Important an event as the arrival of | the stage twice a weck caused suspend business for the time Stage robbers were unknown i those | and the valuable baggage of the | was thrown carelessly in one of the for- ward boots of the stage. tage was 23 cents for each letter and an eastern news- paper several weeks old seld for price. the story being. day tourist o | | | i It was no uncommon thing in those | days to see shot bags of silver coin lean- ing against the outside, and holdups were unknown. system of Galena was “Swanzey,” a negro slave, nwned In Missourl, who drove a two. wheeled dray carrying three water barrels | from which he supplied the stores with a bucket of river water for 15 cents per weeck and earned from $1 to $2 per store Robberies The water day. | | i Lively on Pay Day. | t of importance loggers were pald off at the up the river with logs | Each reccived his yo | 3300 to $400, in u author says, did not town over to the ditference. They “The first (h'ng was feit hat, flannel red-topped boots [ town began to | tax on whisky the price, As tne tilled |up and the fighting began the merchante | { began to put up thelr shutters to save the | | Window Stones flew a | ana the aim of the boozy e indication of where th | to strike Tom O Lear town mar press hiy constables into servic in every idle man on the arrest the ringleaders. ‘They |up and put in the calabo | otten fillea 1o overtlowing the | Owners of river, the the Letween § steamboa wag prir | to #400 per | richly walked on The evel as when { end of a trip the sawmili wages, from The the turn the keys of the inen. But this it just tog out" trouse; After a square move. There d 3 cents for to lumy, mayor, made no the same. In a new belt -and mea!, the was took o hirt, s, no sallon men got wa on a a was soon as Zlas: thick as hail tapult gave no missiles were going the hal, would | 1d swear reet to help were rounded | wilch was packet author says, Louls and t captain was a king lines which lived all the St, Paul. A and the pilot was from §300 one of these rutfled shire | plied | way “Whe pilot’s pay month and bedecked men with down the gungplank and stey shore, the earth trembled. When rival lines, in the seramble for pas- | began to cut rates it was c travel than to stay at heme. S |a few of the sidelights which | to Galena's metropolitan life | General Grant bezan his b { there. Today it 1s, surroun on every side. Galena's | steamboat power with | linots Centrul, the [ own One of General € when | steamboat | sengers eapey {10 at when in siness d by 1 glory the ilroads ended as a| Arvival of the ! first railraad into toe | an i ing war, Eli | full-blooded Seneca lof the tatf offiee 8. i'arker, Indlan and then He by superintendent of rament he bLuilt | iz | s dur the eivil wax a | chief Six Natlons profes- | | sion an engineer. | construction for |the postoffice for Galens in 1557-38. He immensely popular and was invited ) all the public as well as the socla) fanc- tions of the town. The autho spent many wi Interesting | clety of the engineer At n the gov | was | S4¥s he tay in (ne a fine Who was aiot] oley's Kidney Remedy should be jand loved to hunt. Willam 8, Rowley was | Waterman |also on Grant's siaff and {a chief of staff, war and later a a | ‘Giant's first visit to Gaicna was made in NS, when he was touiing the upper Mis- | John me iis ding atiorn A Rawlirs, tary of | of Gu bev le | | | known | cally opposed to the views entertained by | When Grant was elected president he wroto | a personal letter in which he said that ho| | Contract Let to Thompson-Starret! | by {club has | B | Nobe, OMAHA, MONDAY., MAY 1 STREET CAR STRIRES TRMN| 1010 sissippl. The steamer ran aground and the took advantage of the opportu three miles to the of the | father, B. A. Colll The gen- | eral's first war horse was sent to General Motorman Runs Down Dodge Street ). E. Smith, a friend of General Grant, and | Hill at Full Speed. ts bones now rest somewhoere on the hills,”" which S did not general o walk author hom of Galena. | very "€ |FIVE PERSONS BADLY INJURED as he was make up the city Galena v him and unobtru he did not make s fast. Ile was so little known that the merchants refused to run a family supply account with him. It a well fact that Thomas Gilton, a grocer of the place, declined to send a barrel of flour to his home unless the order wa accompanied with cash. E. A. Collins gus anteed the bill and the flour was sent After this incident, says tho author, Ruarantee was necessary Grant drove a span of black ponfes and frequently spent Sunday at the home of E. A. Collins with his family. He visited | @ Collins store nearly every day and was | almost always smoking. When the war of | the rebellion broke politicians were | especlally anxious to get a commission from captaincy up and go to front. E. B. Washbura, a republican congressman from the northern part of the state tieularly active. In this hurry and scramble | The street the name of Grant was never mentioned. |to the eity The author, on leaving the store one noon |10 Omahs with his father, . A. Colling, met Wash- | completely lemolish the front burn. There was a wide difference In|'he sirect and to k the politics between the two men, but it did not{the freight car next the ne, laden with | prevent the elder Colling from addressing |meat, and throw it off the track Washburn nor from calling his attention| When this sWung off it c Yo COHATE - 16 auids [ next one with it “Washburn, you and your political frends | The train In all your activity In calling meetings, | \2% moving ralsing troops and appointing offic time and dently are not aware of a man in fesycleq, fuety midst that has been cducated the gov- | ernment and served under Zach Taylor in| the Mexican war and that he know thing about practical warfare.” “Who s this man?' was asked by Washburn “Ulysses 8 live life ve 1t quiet ne and acquaintanc nasenger Unable to Toside Awalt Do Thing ", May Crash, to Avert Mansen Die. between Relt L follo a collision Saturday A frelght train fifth and Dodge injured on the Lid 18 the ing were A . Hanse internally: miay firta J. B. Lucas, conductor, 262 teenth street, fracture of left bivis es Rev. A street, b | Delia C | bruse Sergeant brufse Th motormun, 01 Blondo, no¥i ankle and W Fort iises dlahan, ell Clark, 34 North fir out | street the Rickerts, 2010 ¥ treot collision occuried K 18 returning from frel train wa offeet of Nision 1030 o' cloc was par-! but i car The the ¢ was to part of car side of car arried the aceording to Conduetor Flint at was at th it had six miies hour pulled g foet after th before , evie vour | by in Three There were three [ car, of | Happy Hollow elub. tion | ¢ until th veached the ratl speed 1s ¥ Car. the employes mxengers PUssEng il hill above After IS ot ne. two trav orty s the que usual [street was Grant, whom you all pase|spproachi on the street every day and do not know," was the reply of Collins. t is Discovered, | ) Washburn promised to look him up and |crcased when they saw the 1 at the next meeting for the enlisting freight train approaching thc troops, Grant was called out of the audienze [instant later the crash came and they found and invited to the platform. At the themselves flung off of the meeting Grant was appointed to the' The motorman apy position of drill master of newly-recrutted |car when he men. This was the beginning of Grant's|he was found lving on the st career in the war of the rebellion and ft| The street car was swung was astonishing, says the author, to notc |around by the force of the impact the_alacrity with which hundreds of people | Hansen was carried to a shanty suddenly came to know the man whoso|tracks where he received first fllustrious carcer is Interwoven with Amer-|from Dr. F. M. Whitman, who accompanicd | ican history. \ to the Wise Memorial hospital. Dr.| During the war Grant tendered Collins{ Whitman said he had sustained bruises on | numerous positions, although he was politi- | the abdomen and other parts of the body, | but that he would not be able to say | | definitely until morning whether the in-| ! Juries, would prove fatal or not. The con- | duetor was taken to the statio h was attended to by Police St .l Harris, Loveland and Standeven and after- | wards taken home. The injurles to the passengers were not such to require attendance, this poir g night reduce wn the the but nill at a of the | high rate nge car came ¢ The alarm " speed. of th r cross An the scd ntly collisie jumped off (h \ Inevitable, a saw the s| ot | completely | on the treatment Grant, but he would accept none of them where had promised to make Washburn s geons 7 of war, but that Collins could man for the second office. cretary | name the | as medical Pompeian Room at the Brandeis Rev. Me. Clark Talks. Rev. Mr. Clark said he was sitting in | the middle of the car when it struck the | train. “‘They never s “but seemed to be in duetor usually gets out to clear, but he neither did car slow down. The next perienced was the collision. 1 was pitched | {off my seat when the car struck. My | right arm is bruised.” ‘ Conductor Luc: the only thing he | remembered was walking to the door of the | car and then finding himself lying in the | street. He had been inside the car, he said, looking after the tickets and had started to walk to the vestibule. One of the passengers, it is stuted, sald that shortly before the accident he had | seen the conductor talking to the motorman, | but Lucas denied this. swed down,” he said hurry. The e If the way Is | this nor did the | thing we 1 Company for Ornate Refresh- ment Room in Subway. ex- A “Pompeian” room, to cost $75,000, is to | be bullt in connection with the Brandels theater in the subway running between thy Boston store and the theater Saturday afternoon the contract for its construction! the Thompson-Starrett company, gen- eral contractors for the theater, 'wis signed. The Pompeian room Is to be compleied | in seventy-five days, and will be thr open to the public Ak-Sar-Ben week September. The ornamental design for the estabiish | . | ment is unusually elaborate and rien. A| GHURCH CLUB TO HAVE DINNER | remarkable range of harmonie colors is to { be employed. A lotus design is [ consplcuous feature. A fountain of marble playing a cascade of water colored by a play of colored elec trie lights, will form the center of the color scheme. | CONCERT RECEIPTS ARE BIG | Me s said n | in| i to be at Paston | 7T M | | « Annunl Meeting Will Begl | Hotel Wednesdny Next —=Bixhop Thomax to Chureh club will ption and dinner Wednesday evening, lock Following the adresses will made. club and their wives will ption preceding the di The list of speech includes these Frederick D, vner fhe Education Boy: ! Davls “The Clarkson Mem- Its Past, Its Present and to B “The hold 1 at De- | | The Nebraska annual meeting, the Paxton hotel ginning at 7 ¢ tion of offic Members of the | take part in a r Tec elec- be telssohn Cholr Appreciation for Plans for Next Season. ner Rev. of Our Frederick H Lospital | What it Hoy Charles L sionary Movement Willlam A. Haberstro “What Laymen are numerous ap ) | . | Doing in the Church Today plications for membversuip, all of which | pi pey lal S be considered before Mr. Thomas J. |, (R O T “The Kelly leaves for a summer abroad. e B Today choir will hold its next rehearsal at Lythe Phvt:* assembly room of the Edward P = institute, on Monday evening. ““ough Reu EX-CANADIANS TO CELEBRATE | babe as to an | Empire Day the the Annual Ban Omahr, mmittee of the Canadia several meetings duri last week is perfecting arrang for the annual banquet of the as usual, will held May All banquets, not, and would be who would The Mendelssohn cholr wishes to publicly express its gratitude to the newspapers and | public for the splendid support given its tirst concert on Tuesday evening last at th Brandeis theater. The receipts of this con cert were 31,400, and laid for some elaborate I'he secretary has Mis Laymen's plans are now being work next year secured Thomas, D Signiticance a . of Interpreted wiil s g (o of the Creightor You ean Bive Cham s edy as confidently to mdult. in for | Date et Set g lowa’s Great Million Dollar iHote! The cxccutive e held and | Proprietor Chamberlain Hotel Says That the Neal Three Day Drink Habit Cure Is Exactly the Right Treatment, “To Whom It May Concern fan Slyp in January last a f B ‘Avg took t club, which be Empire da ex-Canadians whether ave welcomed at members the chairman, Dn glad to hear from like to attend. R any ne marvelous change v man ctions ppear eneral in demonstrates mine persons g feeling and physical T his healt cure the n Dendly Fright sufferers from lung Dr New e $1.00. Possesses this Lveal they learn help them Drug trouble Discovery For tin will b Kiog's cure is exactly the right W, I nberlain tr BROWN Hotel ' that hypoder and sale Proprietar 1 is an Internal Beaton Co. atment Exercines. 14.—(8pe High Se CRESTON, la class of twenty-s young graduate from the school May 2. The annual festivities begi day, Ma with the an or quet to the seniors, a High building. Thursday the class day exercises will be held, conslsting of class day songs, addres of welcome, mer club, drama, “A Busines ting." edy cast In three acts Mrs. Briggs of the Poultry Yard The class will give the program, those appearing on being the ones who ranked class. They are glven in the as fo'lows: Plebe West, Margaret Ball, Ada Mae Russell, Dorothy Davis gardener and Flo class roll of others Esther Broang, enevieve Griffin, Elosle ol dose May ven drop effe in home. s glven I no mic injections of the drink institute or that habit In the No Cure, No | mo which every friend or family a a perfect cure | people will three d at the Friday 1es It ing s the moral duty man, his relative, ance owes to himself, to call, write or nhone to the Neal Institute today for free ¢ guaranteed Bond and contract all patients as to the permana booklet referenc to prominent men, ! the cure, fina nel of the com The 0. B drink acquaint- 2 ban schoo evening d society ples of giten .to of the banks and rits of $pooks Meet entltled cy cur relative to the I comm wcinl standing and | Address the an Neal Cure 15 Moines, 1 Des lowa aven ce Sbaub, cor. encement highest in the order of rank Burns, H - . Harriet X Sty The | are: cectl Bissett,| FOOD FOR . Tieak an nervous mes work and youthbul siset Cook, Herman Dunlap, Jobn| work or mental® exertion should ‘tans Bessle Jeffrey, Hulda K. Kientop, GHAY'S NERVE FOOD PILLS. They will . | wamin n@;] Nwl.\u-(;‘ walter Scurr, Ruth M. [ ***'"g1 pex; 3 voxes 82.50 vy man, Nellie Still, Iva Tucker, Ela Cox. 16th and Dodge Streets. ! OWL DRUG COBMPANY, | motto is “Digilate nastrum fun " This class flower. the red rose and the class Sce Bee May 17 program st Institute erguson R .TVeak anz mervous mes Hazel Burns, Ilie Coogle, | ) S zle. | NERVES KOne Ax w FeaUlL UE Uven E, Lahmann, Ola Moon, Florence H. | Wake you cat und slveh und be o wes M | SEEEMAN & MCCONNLLL DRUG co, and Clara Wray, The class | 1Cth aud Marues Ets. Lmaha, Wem slors, scarlet and black | $100 Clamberiuin’s Cough Rewmedy, | ot its | hota to offer in then | mote | greater | Bear o N0 D CSEALED BOXE BY GROCERS EVERYWRERE! A, D. S, DIGESTIVE TABLETS CORRECT STOMAGH TROUBLES 1t you infortunate who have trouble with et xet means thelr that intere in well arn ing by by but iy magical Wy sterion any patent b ticine or ‘discov a wble, sensible treatment pted and approved National Assoclation pharmacists who manu A the | ndicate purposes of public the of D. 8 eading eat N the A Druggist wnizatiof f th wory in which not alon o v bhenefit h parations gainst experience tollet ibsolute ¢ drugs and whiskey Mgestive in a i P protect remedies and but n t-formin, A. D, 8 Tablets rest the nerves of the stomach (particularly notl \ cases of ner and invigorate healthy action; they of the thereby assisting nature and neutralize fermen: invariably ass thiz they and relle GEORGE GHUNBOK, JR. they | \ minister who lives only a few doors | from my one of my best cus- tomers for this preparation. He had been suffering with his stomach for years when him on the A. D. B, Table tells me that he Is never trou- glves all the credit to the heat the stomach and bring digestive they lons a flulds store s secretion expel that dyspeptic—by the aches and of fullness more thin, Ao well gases I started almost now he and s ha he drive the they doing pains in the . and he out even do a few have one doctor who u them ¢ not hesitate to recommend them to his patients. If a man has & plain case of indigestion I tell him to try the A. . S Tablets but If he has other come plications 1 send Fim to a physiclan.” at A. . 8. drug store. Look for this can D, 8. Digestive Tablets stomach what they ful after r ow do they with no harm 19, Qow s no medicine is made with more more general this, and next prescription there dependable care, greater experience behind good physician’s nothing more knowledge, it han any You BN get A If you require any that it your protection. A. Grunbok,. Jr., Ave., Brooklyn, “A Tablets proven the indigestion I have ever had in other household rem bears an A, D, S label, That's at D, i rd Digestive remedy for my store say t s have best Schaefer's Cut Price and Lougias chaefer's Cut North 16th Street. Schaefer's Cut Price Drug Stores, North 24th Street, South Omaha Schaefer's Cut Price Drug Stor treet, South Omaha. Heaton Drug Co., 15th and Farnim, H. 8. King, 24th and Farnam Haincs Drug Co., 1610 Farnam. Bell Drug Co., 1216 Farnam, S Drug Stores, 1ith | Walnut Hill Pharmacy, 40th and Cuming. Saratoga Drug Co., 24th and Ames Ave. J. H. Merchant, 16th and Howard. Jno. J. Freytag, 1914 North 24th Street. The Crissey Pharmacy, 24th and Lak: Johnson Drug Co., 2ith and SpaulMing. S, A. Beranek, 1402 South 16th Street. Chas. 1. Lothrop, 1324 North 24th Streat. H. L. Pribbernow, 1324 North 24th Street, Forest & Fenton Drug Co., 3th and Q. Streets, South Omaha. Bell Drug Co., Florence, Neb. Price Drug Stores, OME APRIL TRAIN RECORDS OF THE BURLINGTON FROM CHICAGO TO OMAHA ‘amous Burlington ifast Mail No. 7, in service 26 years from Chicago to Omaha and scheduled at 4014 miles an hour for the distance of 494 miles, to Council Bluffs T'ransfer, arriving there absolutely on time every day during April. Burlington No. 3 Chicago-Omaha-Denver Express likewise arrived on time every day in April, Burlington Chicago-Omaha Electric Lighted Special No. 5 arrived on time 25 days during April. The total time lost during the month was 42 minutes, or an aver- age loss of one and four-tenths minutes per day. Such train operation {ells the story of Burlington track, power, equipment and organization, CHICAGO TRAINS AT 7:iI5A. M. 4:20P.M. 6:30P. M. TICKET OFFICE, (502 Farnam St., Omal “Gas Service” Never Too Late To Learn:— Are you in doubt about any point in the operation of your gas range? If you are, and will send for our demonstrator, she will promptly call and answer all questions. &he can tell you how to roast a turkey to a turn and preserve all the rich juices, how to bake flaky pastry and malte a perfect pudding. There are many little hints on regulating the heat of the ovens, placing of the oven racks and short cuts to a perfect result that she can suggest to you, This service is, of course, absolutely free. Omaha Gas Company DRINK AND OPIUM of imitations e gent Keeley treatm THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, 35 the craving trength 1o every and sclentific course of treat. ity for liguor organ, and bulld Proven efficaclous by 0 yea than 550.000 patients, Beware imi t ate unly th und Cass Streets, OLIAKA, WE which remove or nece

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