Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 2, 1910, Page 5

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THE CITY COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS | utie‘ss ewenty-smcond wrn Bova strees. | BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY ¥ DEATILCALLS A CENTENARIAY | t&binl Shally, Oldest Omaha Woman,. Dies in Convent. | BORN IN NORTHERN IRELAND | | the work to be done at once. Council passed an ordinance prn\lflln" that hereafter 1 frult and vegetables stands on sidewalks must be elevated at least two feet Revised Counell Committees. President Brucker tendered a revised list | ot councll committees, as noted in The Bee, putting Schroeder on the judiclary, making Kugel chairman of paving and sewcrage committee and Davis chalrman | | of sidewalks and crosswalks. Counclimen Bridges protested that the | ehatrman had no right to change the com- The Buriin drous | mittees after their first presentation: to woman in | tion of principles gained and disapproval | o ° HEIOE OB TRTTON has asked the city | council. He called for an opinion from | | of method used | councll to vacate all the streets and alleys | the city attorney on the matter, but on mo- [ | | Our Letter Box Comtributons on Timely Subjects, Mot Bxoseding Two Wundred Words, Are Invited from Our Readers. “Best After All” Children Like It- Grownups Like It- For breakfast /] every day it means health and strength Railroads Present Several Matters of Real Public Interest. Modern Patrintism. BLAIR, Neb. May 0.—To the Editor of The Be: The military | Serves Official Notice of Intention to display in memorlal exercises today, sug gested the idea that if all military, dis- play was eliminated, we would ba start ing at the bottom round of the ladder of | pence, the proper place to start. We | show our approval and apprecla- | BURLINGTON ASKS MORE STREETS Known to Have Lived in Omaha Last | Decades—Many Ciroum- stances of Her Life Not D! covered by Nuns, rect New Frelght Depot ey nt Elghth Property. would sina . Shall the oldest Omalia, died Vesterday at the con the Good Shepherd. She was at years old when death claimed her, Her exact age is uncertain, as W many of the elreumstan I that she was & centeriarian is pretty established. Miss Shally has no known rel- atives surviving her. She came to Omaha twonty years ago and lived with a family whose name has been forgotten by resi- dents of the eonvent, and with this tamily lived as & sort of dependent, half member Eliminate all military and suggestion | (0™ the east side of Eighth street, be- | tion of Burmester the council confirmed of military display at the Fourth of July | \¥e¢n the south line of Jackson street and | (hg rearranged committees, Bridges alone colebration and you will have & mame|the south line of Farnam. G. W. Holdrege, | yoting no Fourth of July and a peaceful celebration. In the communication, urged that the com- The council sustained a veto from the Celebrate the principle gained and not the | P"Y NOW OWns a majority of all the prop- | mayor of the occupation tax on bill post- method used, whereby we gained it. erty In the district abutting on the streets |y companies. The mayor says the ordi- We as a nation are foremost in advo-| "4 Alleys in question, and that the vaca- | ;4500 14 faulty and a new one must be cating arbitration as the proper method | o0 I8 reuired becaute of a big frelght | ueg, which he will sign to settle controversies, ih”\“" the Burlington proposes to erect on City Attorney Burnam reported, in re- Then let us avold all unnecessary mili- | ° 28t #lde of Eighth street between Jack- | ;5,00 'ty @ request from the council that 3 son and Farnam. The communication was [ tpolt® 1 % TR F, (A0 OO e “the tary display and we will have taken the | o oo © HRLC T : first great step toward the disarmament to the committee on street Im-|y505)000 of waterworks bonds voted In provements. aseh 4 of the famlly; half domestic, In spite of the | 5¢ thg various nations. Militery display | " fact that she was % years of age. To the | ytamps approval of methods used in| A: H: Mohler and G. W. Holdrege, rep-| "y ity attorney also notified the coun- convent she came, o littlo bowed fIgure | past by nations to settle controversles. ||/ |"E the Union Pacific and the Bur-| . "yp,'the police department i not en- of wririkled visage, four years ago. It instills warfara sentiment into the | 60N rallroads, requested the couneil to) . "vy “any of the money received Scraps of ihformation regarding the old | youth of our nation, but men oannot |'S' the city engineer make an examination |\ Lo ibrokers and junk - dealers for | e eaeventh street viaduct, With & VIew | | censes. The city attorney also holds that woman were guthered by the nuns at odd | guccessfully change their methods sud- |, making regulations for traffl th times. Thay learned from her that she was | denly. atlons for traffic over the 5 orAs 6 B § bridge. 1t Is set out in the communication | 3 the bullding inspector 18 of the opinion | born In Ulster colinty, Ireland, the parish It is pertinent and consistent In advo- | " 5 the livery stable at 1114 Douglas street can of Mflaugh, and that she had been & ser- | cating arbitration or peaceful method of | \Pat At present the tratfic is too heavy for | repaired and put in & safe condition vant in the home of Bishop Carr of Aus-[military or suggestion of military '”!_‘lha structure, and that action should be $iss e will 1he INVILIE &, Iwaalt td 008 | taken to protect agains: accident. The [the cIty - tralla when that prelate was born In|play, at Memorlal and, Fourth of July - . s | | demn the bullding and order it torn down. Ireland. Fince Bishop' Carr is now an old | exercises, thereby Instilling into the | °tter Of the railroad managers was sent | . | b sity | A permit will be issued for the necessary man, about 80, and Miss Shally sald she | youth of our land, peaceful methods and :hp;'r‘:‘ SR SR Eyh OYSLESLN T | was a girl of 22 when he saw the light, | sentiment. If we belleve . o i 2 | . iraby. eatat- v o the past con-| " Gouncliman Bridges introduced, and coun- Question of Water Parity. | the age of Miss Shally is thereby estab- | troversies could hava been sattied by| - Oty Bastotiolcplit LARMIME . epbited lished as & 1 100 years at the time | peaceful methods Instead of as they were, | !l PA8sed. & resolution directing the city at- 5 ttle over of her deat She must have ben born five or seven years before the cannon of Waterloo sounded. . Assuming the earller date, Thomas Jefferson was then president of the United States. Miss Shally's last years wero such as are characterfstic ‘of the very aged. She was only slightly, deat and her sight was not werfously - tmpaired. Occasional periods of by warfare, then it is our duty to elimi- | nate military display and show our dis- approval of methods used. We have in mind a celebration of this nature; the principle largely and not the method of it would not detract any from our patrie- tism by eliminating military display at occasions of this nature. Instead it| would aad to our patriotism, as the sights | ot military display suggests to the mind | torney to report as to whether the Mason City & Fort Dodge Rallroad company has forfeited alleys in the vicinity of Nineteenth and Mason streets. The resolution cites the eonditions wnder which the vacation was made by the eity and asserts the raliroad | has ignored all demands for fulfiliment of | its agreement to erect at Nineteenth and Mason streets a steel structure equal to the Sixteenth street viaduot, its right to vacated streets and | It the rights ac- | that the water now being furnished is not up to the standard required by the Berka ordinance. The committee of the whole will consider what steps shall be taken to bring the water up to standard & Councllman McGovern Introduced a res- olution, which was referred to the park board, directing Rome Miller to trim the trees on his property on the boulevard s that vehicles can drive under them. Every, body laughed, and President Berryman of ‘;’"::’Z’,'"m:':fifl’;'k:%"fg s 2} o o ;:;m"xr“::'::,‘;:“& broihy ;’_’,‘r":,':;’:}"'; quired by the road are not forfeit, the|the Park board looked surprised and doubt- But she was fan from being demented|won the great principle in. controversy, |tlorney Ia to advise councll what steps ful PRI AR T e and sheretained untfl theiend a lively inter-| 1 am convinced that disarmament of |2F® necessary to enforce the bullding ot the| The council by resolution ratified the est in affairs which came Immediately to her | nations will only come through tne slow | Viaduct. action of Treasurer Furay In awarding to notice. Her thoughts generally reverted |process of eltmination of military dis-| Under a resolution introduced by Coun-|Connor & Kahler of New York $5000 of .40 her young days in ireland and events|play, There will be no harm done and|c!lman McGovern, the Belt Line rallway |park bonds. #Phich then lodmed Tmportant to her. The | a great deal of g0od will be accomplished \ ‘h’(h of, Bishop Carr was one of these. A |and the first great step will be taken in \ [devout Catholfc, to have known a future|the United States of America towards @ Lishop when he was & worrying Infant|effective peaceful methods of settiing all seemed quite wonderful to her. International controversies. Visitors to the convent saw her A. L. ANDERSZON. times and priests yisjting the Institution generally chatted with Her, but these did not learsi fhuch more \about Miss Shaily than has been told. It i& not known by them or ab-the convent whether she had| been in the United States before she cam | an old woman of 80 even then, to Omaha. But it Is altogether, unlikely that a woman | would haye croseed the Atlantic at this age. Probably ‘she was.in Amerlca for many yeats before 18%. i He funeral will be held today at 10| .. m., fromthe convent to Holy Sepulcher cemetery. IT MAKES DIFFERENCE WHAT HAND IS AT HELM Colored Muasiclans Play on Street Car for One |Cand@ietor, hut Not for! Another. AWOMAN'S ) some Are They Fixing a Ringerfor Erdman? Peculiar Stunt Pulled Off by Con- viet's Lawyer in the Vicinity of Dennison Home, People In the vicinity of the Dennison house, which was the scene. of the at- tempted dynamite outrage, witnessed a pecullar incldent this morning when Attor- ney John O. Yelser made his appearance there preceded by a reporter for the after- noon yellow, and accompanied by a man carrying a suitcase made up to be a dead- ringer for his cllent, Erdman, the conviet, siw | who Is being held for trial. Mr. Yelwer's | companion was clad in the.same kind of. a gray sult, walked lame In the same log and resembled In face as much as possible the man In jall. Quite by accident Den- uison and a companion bumped right into the newcomers, and the ruse, if it was one, | to mix up the witnesses who Had identified Erdman as the man previously prowling around, was spolled. The lawyer and the | | newspaper reporter each gave flimsy ex- cuses for being there and hurried away, desired some relle ‘from the monotony ¢hile the nelghbors satisfled thelr curl- ang the bang started to play. The "‘“""!r«‘uv" e neighbo h cur clans, thinking that the laborer was worthy of his hire, started to make a collection aqiime e e wewis w0l Young High School Orators Named colored musfElans who yesterday arrived in Omaha from Kansas City wers | lodged n the clty jafl at night with thefr twd mandolins and aiguitar on the charge | of begging and theld arrest, If their tale , shows the difference in taste of troley car corductbrs. The. trlo boarded & car south of Vinton strget with their orphean equipment “Play up boys,” said the conductor, who it ‘allows the body heat to escape. Apply the same principle to summer under. wear, RIGHT=1910 WA SHBURN CROSBY +Time’s Flight Turned Backward’ SAGE AND SULPHUR Made Her Look Twenty Years Younger '. READ MRS. WERRICK'S SWORN STATUIE“\ ‘Sl Nancy A. Herrick, being duly sworn, deposes and says: When 1 was a girl, I had a head of heavy, long, dark brown hair which was the envy of my schoolmates, and which aftracted the atten- tion and remarks of strangers. As I grew older, my hair com- menced to come out, just a little at fest, but gradually more and more, and then began to turn gray. 1 was induced by the many good reports I had heard of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy to try a bottle. My hair was quite thin and gray when I began using Sage and Sulphur, and you can imagine my satis- faction when I found that it was fast coming back to its natural condition, being thicker, darker and more glossy than it had been for a long time. I continued to use Sage and Sulphur, and my hair is now as heavy, dark and smooth as when I was a girl of | sixteen. It is now four years since I commenced using Sage and | Sulphur, and my hair is still in splendid conditiony’, . = came with enjoyment at' the innovation, and all vt ‘merrily unpll Vinton street came and With 4t & cham§é of the man at the wheel. A mew king fook| eharge (who knew not Jodeph, or rather dlf not approve of the metheds of the/musiclans, and to show his depreciation of ‘théir methods, he had cofloquy at Leavenworth street with a man in bluc—and ‘mandolins and gultar were #ogh silent and -their owners In the pollce statian. pos F. L. HALLER TALKS OF MEXICO Trayeler Republic to South Tel of Spenés and Tucldents Observed . in Ding’ Lana. Wear open-work " Porosknit" . which lets your body breathe. . il Srare or New Yorx Its soft, ventilated fabric quickly o fy 3 : CHRNTE S Anh absorbs and evaporates hot per- ‘ spiration. "Porosknit" Union Suits fit without a wrinkle. Cut from special union suit pattems. Never pull open between buttons. Elastic, yet shape-retaining. " Porosknit," whether in two- piece or union style, always keeps you in cool comfort. Try it. Rocuestm, N, ¥, Four Girls and Two Boys Named for Commenocement Exercises at Orpheum. Six students were offiolally announced | vesterday as having been appointed orators | at the commencement exerclses of the Omaha High school at the Orpheum thea- [ter June 1. There are twelve youns | | women and men in charge of the entire program, \ . | Those who will speak at the commence- | Veank L. Haller Melivered an interest. | ment are: Richard Barnes, Nellie Elgutter, ad storeopticon lecture on Mexico last | Marle Gordon, Stuart Gould, Irma H. Gross night “fn fRg: crypty of Trinity cathedral. | and Ruth Sheldon. This commencement is Mr. Halle® vgcently’ returned from a trip |@ record for the high school In respect to | to the republic and brought back with |the size of the graduating class. There are | him & number of of typleal Mexi- (256 students In the class, 160 girls and | m scenes. HE explained the water works | ninety-five boys. eystom And showed a number of pletures | of mative. carsiers w1t huge water sacks | KNIGHTS ANNUAL MAY DANCE BRILLIANT SOCIAL AFFAIR upon, their’ backs. Party Postponed One Mr.. Haller explained that corn chief article of dlot,among the natly Last Night in Board of plo and told of the government breaking up @:corn trust, which was formed during a famiine He said that although may be behind the times in ANy ways It knowp hew to'handle the trust question Ho had on exhibition a number of curios gathefed during his visit, can hat, Evening Held Order's Hall in Trade Buflding. N Ny Pudiic,, Preserve Your Youth and Beauty by Using sAGEr"SULPHuURr HAI R REMEDY . It Is Pure, Safe And Reliable It Is Not Sticky, Oily Or Greasy ' It Is An Elegant, Refreshing Dressing 500. 250. It Makes The Hair Soft And Glossy i ot o ol o It Quickly Removes Dandruff Buy from your regular dealer It Restores Faded A v ‘ 4 5 nd Gray Hair To Natural Colo: | omnities ind the attair was sostponed | New Mlustrated Booklet Free i It Stops Hair Falling And Makes The Hair Grow o : It Will Make You Look Years Younger pretty and bore the sign of the order. | 60 Washington Strect, Assterdam, N. Y. PRICE AT ALL DRUGGISTS WYETH |JUDGE ROASTS WIFE BEATER | e . 'CHEMICAL 50c. and $1 Livimesetmresert. COMPANY A BOTTLE to Send Mim to the We WIII Send You A Large 74 Cortlandt St. FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED Mexico The annual May party of Omaha council, Knights of Columbug, was held last night including a Mexi- | In Knights of Colwmbus hall, Board of | Trade building. The hall had been elab- orately decorated with palms and potted plants and the large gas chandelier in the | Thirteenth addition o factory. §1 00, | center of the hall was ‘used to llluminate Chavies Fanning, &5-7 South Fifteenth, al- | the room. | ations, L0 J. 1. Brandels & (Soas. | A large number of the Fourth degree | " Travery 115-19 South Arty-fifth MACR 49 Oggheptra, of apartments, $§5.00: R len, | Seven pleces furnished the musie and there darean, frame, .50, | R 1€); | were elghtecn dances on the program. The | e ason. Frame 3 300: . B | committeo in charge of the entertalnment 1514 Manderson, frame, 83,60 consisted of Dr. L. B. Bushman, John A. | Leary, James Hanley, F. C. Thomas and | J. M. Hogan. | The party was originally blanned for the | swening of Memorial day, but a request | m the local post of the Grand Army of | o Republlc not to hold & dance on Mon- Union Suits Any style garment For Men For Boys $1.00 50c. Bullding Permit Q Smith-Lockwood , company members present. Shirts and Drawers Any style—per garment For Men For Boys Dr.Graves Unequaled ° “I wish I could sentence you to the peni- | tentiary," announced Police Judge Altstadt | to a prisoner Wednesday morning. The prisoner was J. €. Miller, charged with Intoxication and abuse of his family. Actording to the testimony, Miller had set upon his wife and beaten her. He was sentenced to thirty days in- Jail Penitentiary, Express Prepaid. NEW YORK, N. Y. BY SBHERMAN & McCONNELL DRUG CO. AND OWL DRUG CO. A Bloody. Atfair 1s lung hemorrhage. Step it, and cure weak 3 3 % I it s S .y ok, oughs asd; colda. withs Dr; King's Your daughter may be per- | Cultivate the habit of nows- by Beaton ,.:,’,'. :: and 4L8. - For . sale mitted, safely, to read The Bee. paper 1eading in your children, No exaggerated aceounts of crime, but take care that the paper l no flith, no scandal, no dime educates—and does not demor- No woman need blush when readiag The Bee; It is barred from no home. This makés it the most powerful influence In selling goods through advertising. Persistent Ad ™ Retur TIGUARS- 2N o Beed. W B novel sensations; but all the news. alize.

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