Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 20, 1915, Page 7

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f,,\ = BRIEF CITY NEWS Rave Root Print It—Now Beacon Press Burgess.Granden Oo. Lighting fixtures ‘“Today's Complete Movie Program’ classified section today, and appears in The Bee EXCLUSIVELY. Find out what the various moving picture theaters offer. Figures Olaims Against County— County Clerk Dewey is preparing a list of claims against Douglas county to be pald next August. The total will amount to about $200,000 Joha R. Lynch to gressman John R Bt. John's African Methodist Episcopal church, Eighteenth and Webster streets, Tuesday evening. Thirty-six New Olab Members— Thirty-six new active members have been secured for the Commercial club since the organization of the membership commit- tee a month ago. A Baving of Time foi both customer and yourself when your office is con. veniently located. The Bee Bullding— “the bullding that Is always new'— makes this saving sure. Held to Distriet Court—Clyde Worth, charged with breaking and entering a etorehouse at 106 South Fourteenth street was bound over to the district court, with bonds fixed at $750. The State Bank of Omaha pays 4 Per cent on time deposits, 3 per cent on eavings accounts. All deposits in this bank are protected by the depositors' Guarantee fund of the state of Nebraska. Funeral of John M. Spangard—The funeral of John M. Spangard will be held this afternoon at 2 o'clock from the family residence at Twenty-fourth and Reed streets. Omaha lodge No. 2, In- dependent Order of Odd Fellows, will have charge of the funeral services at the grave, Milwankee Ballasting Double Track— The Milwaukee has résumed ballasting ita new double track line across lowa working a dozen or more trains and crews, The gravel is Along the company lines in Illinois. It i expected to have the whole of the lowa line ballasted by July 1 Weise Homy Robbed—Tue J H Welse home, 5103 Cass street, was visited by thieves Sunday night who carried away jewelry valued at $25. Mrs. M Wooley of the Lafayette apartments re- ports to the authorities that burglars gained entrance through an open window tc her apartments and took jewelry to the value of $35. Club Lunch Makes Profit—The res- taurant, billlard rooms and cigar coun ters of the Commereial club have actually made a little profit for the club, the first three months of this year. This is un- ustial, as ordinarily the restaurant is oper. ated at a loss. The change is attributed to the greatly Incremsed attendance at the noonday luncheons Tom S. Xelly Out Again—Tom S Kelly, secretary emeritus of the Rotary Speak—Fx-Con- club and & well known insurance man, is again able to be around the city, after | undergoing an operation. His doctor warns him to work half tima for a whils, but Kelly was s0 busy recelving the grectings of his friends Monday morning that he had ne chance to work at all. Weedle Broken in Mis Arm-—John Col- lina of St. Joseph was arraigned in police court on a charge of vagrancy and was sentenced to thirty days In the county Jafl. Collinse was & former dope fiend, he declared, but has not used any drug since March 1. He sald he wanted to get homé to have his arm looked after, as three hypodermic néedies had been broken off in the flesh. He will be ex- amined by local physicians and treated it the latter statoemcnt broves eorrect:-His arm appeared to be in & bad eondition. : Water Board Makes Slight Cut in the" Omaha Water Rate The )1omg promised water rate reduc- tion is at last here. At a special meet- ing the Water hoard yestorday made an alleged reduction of the ‘maximum water rate from 23% cents per thousand gallons, with 5 per cent off it paid within ten Gpys of date of bill, to a flat rate of 21 cents. The effect_ of this means a reduction of about 1 cent per thousand gallons. In his resolution Manager Howell re- ferrcd to this as the “fifth reduction under. municipal ownership.” After executing this difficult plece of work, the board took d trip to the Wal- nut Hill station to look over proposed improvemeuts. U. P. to Put Stories of Lives of Former Officials in Record At 480 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, in the law Ilibrary of the Union Pacitic building will be held a public meeting at wiigh Myron L. Learned will reud a paper on the “Life and Service or the Late Andrew J. Poppleton,” a former general solicitor for the Union Pacific. The paper that Mr. Learned ds will beeome_one of the files of the Union Pa~ cific legal department At some date not yet determined Edson Rich will read a paper on the “Life and Services of the Late Judge Kelly,” and subsequentl Wright of Coun {l Bluffs will read a similar paper rela- George S ive to the late John L. Baldwin Couph, Dr. King's New Discovery will ste a Adver: vour ccugl. The first dose hely for children. 50c. All druggists tisement PRE”AR!NG FOR COMING OF REV, BILLY SUNDAY In preparstion for the coming of Billy Sunday te Omaha next fall, the terisl union was addressed at the Young Men's Christian assoclation thls after- | noon by Rev. Finis ldleman, D. D.. of Des Moines. He ls pastor of the Central Christian church- of that city, and his congregation recelved more of the re- vival's “trail-hitters” than any other during the Billy Sunday mpaign at Des Moines recently Taking Care o- tw No parent would careless of the ohlidren. Joe A. Roz- marin, Clarkson, Neb., uses Foley's Honey and Tar for his two children for croup, coughs ahd cdlds. ' He says, are never without Foley's Honey and Tar in the holise.”” A distressing cough. sleep- less nights, and raw, inflamed throat lead te a run-down condition in which the child is not sbie to resist contagious or infectious aiseases. Foley's Honey and Children. conaclously be Tar is truly bealing and prompt in action | croup and colds, Bold It relleves coughs, whooping cough. Advertsement. everywhere — Lynch will speak at | rauféd from pits | Minis- | ‘We | 'FORT SCHOOL ADDS GARDENING COURSE | Expert Instructs the Lads in Stak- | | ing Out and Plowing—Other Schools Organizing. {TO LEARN TO CAN VEGETABLES Fort vocational school for boys | has | added truck gardening to its ;rurrivulnm. and more than half of | the sixty students of the school have enrolled for the new course. They will have a common garden 25x100 feet in size, raiging early and late | corn, tomatoes and other table veg- | etables all summer, besides having | individual gardens in the School Garden club contests. E. E. Dale, the garden expert, employed I’u instructor in the city-wide gardening club movement among boys and girls of |the schools, started the Fort garden by |dirscting the plowing and staking off of the ground during the morning. He and | | Principal Bd Gepson of the school will |Instruct the boys regularly. The school has beeri teaching printing, fron mould- | ing and wood working for ¢ its vocational department Organ the Schools, Organization of garden clubs among boys and girls was continued during the afternoon at several schools by Mr. Dale and Secretary R. 8. Flower of the Young Men's Christian assoctation. Dale will oversee the work throughout the sum- mey and glve practical instruction and | personal attention at every garden started by any boy or girl helonging to | the club. About 20 are alréady en- | rolled Later an agent of the Department of | Agriculture will come to teach the chil- dren how to can the produce they do | no.' sell to pdrents or nelghbors. | Exhibitions of early and late bles raised by ine youngsters will be heid during the summer, and the season { will close with the awarding of valuable prizes in the contests for quality and quantity of garden truck grown and the | |showing mado from the gardens by the | youthtu) city tarmers some time In vegeta- BEE: APR 1 Evmprnss_Wili Mové Back to Old Stand Wilfred Ledoux press Theater THE OMAHA, TUKSDAY, i’féfiéhés -Snrmon His Father Read Fifty Years Ago president of the Em ympany, has arrived from Winnipeg to mianage the thoater rarlly a An impressive observation of the fiftieth anniversary of tempo Abrawam Lincoln's death Frank Harris has re courred Sunday in the Plymouth Con- |#igned to affiliated With the gregational churel Broadway Star Featu Film mpany The pastor of the shurch, Rev. ¥. W.|At Minnearolis, President Ledoux says Leavitt, preached the same sormon that [{DAt a successor has not yet been deter his father pr ity yoars ago mined upon, but that one will be an His father was Rev. \Willlam Leavitt |hOunced soon and in 1886 he had a urch in Booth He also nnounces that the Kmpress Bay Harbor, Me. On the first Sunday | Wil move back to ita original location on Ias street Ixteentl stre between Fifteenth and Sunday, as the owing the hand of the death Lincoln by the | William | extensive assassin, Re BeSt | renovating and redecorating | there will be finished by that time | BREEN TO ADDRESS REAL ESTATE MEN WEDNESDAY Leavitt preached this Rev. Mr, Leavitt had the written manu seript of the which his father preached and he read it to his congre gation, It was & stirring sermon in which Christian forbearance scught ermon sermon almost to | find voice, while the human mind awelt | jonn Paul Breen, fatiier of the Annexa- on the decd which nad been done At |tion bill watch was last we gned by Washington | the governor, will address the Real Estate Abraham Lincoln's place In the hearts of the people of the north was very large at that time even and many be the heat and passion of the moment that the masassination had been ordered by the leaders of the Confederacy The congregation Sunduy, viewing the act from a aistance of fifty years and in the light of the social and commercial bonds which now unite north and south, could see that the act, foul though it was, perhaps was for the best, as seem- Ing calamities always arc, said the pastor, to those who love God. U. S. Grant post, Grand Republic, was present in a body Apartments, flats, hoases and cottages can be rented quickly and cheaply by a Bee “For Rent' Ad. WANTS DIVORCE BECAUSE WIFE ALWAYS NAGGED HIM | exchange Wednesday noon on the of consolidation slisved in Standard Remedy For Many Homes Indigestion and constipation are two conditions closely related and the cause of much physical suf- fering. The tendency to anpetite is general, people suffer at some time or an- other from rebellion of the over taxed organs or digestion and ellm ination. A simple, pleasantly effe tive remedy that will quickly re lieve the congestion of polsonous waste and restore regularity, {s the Army of the indulge %o that one's most combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, sold in drug Mrs. Touisa Ford nagged at him, testi- stores under the name of Dr. Cald- fied William A. Fom, a cohtractor, in & well's 8yrup Pepsin. This Ix a mild, ple; digestant, oplates or ant laxative-tonle and absolutely free from narcotic drugs and has been the standard household rem- trial of his divorce suit before District Judge Fedick “My wite con nually scolded me about various thinge and accused me of as-| 3 o4y 4 countiess homes for many cociating with other women, asserted | yvears. A free trial bottle can be Mr. Ford obtained by writing to Dr. W, It Mra Ford in a -petition usks | '§ Caidwell, 452 Washington 8t. Mon- meparate maintenance and charges her husband with misconduct and cruelty. ticello, 111 | | [ [ | S S DI 15 TR - *“The Road to KRUMBLES” In Four Parts PART 2 B i E S K R U M B a E S K R U M B L E S K R U M =! L E S K R v iR TO-MORROW £ benefits | IL 20, 1915. — Store Hours: 8:30 A. M.to 6 P. M. Saturdays Till 9 P, M. o BURGESS-NASH COMPANY. "EVERYBODY'S STORE" STORE NEWS FOR TUESDAY, Don’t Fail to‘;S_gg the Working Model of th_g Panama Canal on Exhibition on 4th Floor F\ SRY phase of the Canal Zone is shown in miniature— hills and valleys—lakes and rivers-—dams and locks, topographically corvect. Be sure to see this eighth won- der of the world—it's free, Every detail of this wonderful enginecring feat is fully explained-you see for your- self the boats going through the channels, the locks, the lakes and rivers, Lectures Daily Every Half Hour From 10 A. M. to 5P. M. Important Announcement! Monday, April 19, 1915, Phone Dougl 7. () make Omaha the *‘City Beautiful’”’ seems to be the spirit of everyone. In our sale of Rose burhes last Saturday, when over 10,000 were sold before noon, we found even so great a number far less than the demand. We therefore have been fortunate in contracting for another large quantity which will go on sale Thursday. The sale will include AMERICAN BEAUTIES, PINK AND WHITE KILLARNEYS, Locaily grown, hardy plants with foliage. ; 10c Each or $1.00 Per Dozen Advanee orders taken. Phone Douglas 137, Ask for S, Johnson or Mr. Mern Tuesday in the" Burges;-Nash Basement Salesroom Untrimmed HATS That Were $1.98 to $2.98 at 49c¢C THERE is a great variety of styles and shapes from which to choose, including hemps and Milan hemps, Black and ev- ery favored new shade, Untrimmed hats that were $1.98 to $2.98 in one great lot, in- cluding a shape to suit every fancy and offered at this very low price of 49¢ each. Then There Are Four Groups of Flowers ming your hats. Flowers, formerly to !l;::xf-l:‘:}‘f:rxarly bo W lsc ‘ Burgess.Nash OCo—Basement. | Nmesssnas Burgess-Nash Co.—Everybody's Store—16th and Flowors of all kinds and colors, just what you need for trim- A9¢; choice, at ......... sc WE TRIM HATS FREE Have Confidence If all the people stop buying every- thing, there will be no business—no market for goods, crops or services. If half the people stop buying everything, business will be cut in half and everybody suffer. If all the people buy one half their cus- tomary purchases, business slumps to half. If all the people postpone for thirty days buying half their needs the country’s prosper- ity drops one half for that length of time. Buy now the things you will need soon and you'll help speed up the wheels of in- dustry, commerce, farming and labor. uy-it-Now

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