Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 28, 1915, Page 3

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" lain's Tablets were the only thing that % Nebraska NO WOODEN INDIANS, STUDENT WHO STABBED ANOTHER IS FINED $100 BUT A WOODEN HEAD BROKEN BOW, Neb.'Aprll 27.=(Spe- | | clal.)~District court is in session this i | week with Judge B. O. Hostetler of | Kearney presiding. In the case of Jack . Senator Jack Grace of Harlan Re-| paninger. a business college student { who was charged with stabbing George | Ellingson, another student, several weeks |ago, a petition signed by the complain- ! ing withess, the college faculty and all | the atudents, was presented to Prosecu- tor Kelly, asking that:the charge of felony be dismissed and that of assault (From a Staff Correspondent.) and battery substituted. This was done LINCOLN, April 27.—(Special.)—-Senator ' 4nq Ballinger entered a plea of guilty to Jhck Grace of Harlan county, A member | tho jatter charge. Before passing 1pon of the last and preceding sénate, Was &|the case, the court gave the voung man caller at the state house this morning | some valuable advice and warned him &nd In a discussion of the statement made ! against allowing his temper to get be- | by Benator Laurle J. Quinby of Omaha|yond control. Ballinger . was fined $100 plies in This Fashion to Sen- ator Quinby. PLEASANTRIES AFTER SESSION that the senate had nineteen ‘‘wooden and costs. 1 Indians” in it at the last session the; Lucy Butler, the S-year-old girl who statesman from Harlan remarked, “I| was taken from her parents last week con’'t know about the wooden Indlans, |by County Judge Ford because of alleged but T know there was one woodenhead | Cruelty, has beén sent to the home for in the senate and he came from Omaha.” | dependant children at Lincoln. On account of death in'the family, the Grace Is Satiafied. case ot Corhett Ash, charged with forg- Spéaking of the work of the last sen- | ery, has been put over-to the end of | ate, the menator said he believed the|the week. Young .Ash recently waived | record of that body would stand up well |a preliminary hearing in coubty court with the work of other senates in the|and was bound over to district court. in rast o the sum of $1,000, ] ““Ome thing is sure,” sald Senator Grace, " “4f the state of Nebraska had had only wne body, there is hardly ‘an institution of the state but what would have bcen; MRS. WHEELER WIDOW OF | MEXICAN VETERAN, DEAD | crippled for funds to run ft or have been | o | compelled to sacrifice ita efficlency be-| STELIA, Neb., . April . 2.—(Special)- cause there would not have been funds to | Mrs. Malinda Wheeler, who died at| Barada thls week, had, béen a widow for | forty-five years. Her husband was a | soldier in the Mexican war and she was | the last surviving pensioner of that war M Richardson county, She was 77 years old. Mrs. Wheeler, whose maiden name was Buchanan, came from Kentucky to Mis- souri with her parents,’ where in 1554 she was married to Duke Wheeler. In 1858 they moved to tho farm near Barada in Richardson county, where sbe d'ed after reciding fifty-seven years on the same farm. Three of her five chidren survive. They are W. H. Wheeler of Barada, Laurence Wheeler of Falls city and Mrs. Daniel Riley of Dawson Tun it on & business basts. Senate Stood Firm. The senate stood up to the rack and voted for business efficlency in the tace of the fact that Its members knew that the house was making.a political play for no other purpose than to put the senate in the hole. We recognised the situstion and Instead of playing politics faced a eituation which we knew was put up to us for political effect and met it and solved it for the best interests of the state of Nebraska. If we did wrong we are willing to sand on the record we made." Kokl Backs the Recor Senator Kohl, president pro tem of the lor Konl president pro tam <f 7| WOOD RIVER MAN GIVEN and he, too, stands ready to back up lhe; JUDQMENT FOR “_500 work of the senate as a general thing. | He was one of the members who fought| . s the economy proposition of the house as| GRAND ’S‘{'L D, AP‘("““"'HT\"'H = being a sacrifice of efficiency and w--:(‘"‘l"h: ‘;;:“fl:‘ ::u;“ '" ':;'fi fu’:‘x e ded b . > rewarded by, seeing the houss members | oy i 10 Wooa . River ‘s judgment of | con to thel e o e e fmally virtuallY | 3400 for damages sustained in the fail- | manded by the sen-| ;.0 o an old telephone pole on which | ate in the appropriations. He the city had strung wires while ha was does not believe the senate was composed employed on the pole for the city, of “wooden Indians,’ and does not be-|\whalen in the accident, sustained in- lieve that there I8 anything in the record |juries which his physick testified l Nebraska : l | $7,500 for injuries received while alighting |in O'Neill at the time and the case was | Omaha of held & conference with the members. Mr. | Smith has been retained by the commis- | sion as special consul in the freight rate | cases. The conference was informal and nothing was given out for publication Rallroad Appenls Case. | The Illinols Central Rallroad company | had appealed to the supreme court from | & judgment secured in the Holt county district court by Ruth M. Morrison for from a train at Denison $16,000. She alleged that while alghting from | the train because of defective steps she was thrown backward and received per- manent injuries. The case was taken to the Holt. county court because of an at- tachment made pn property of the [1linols Central cempany which happened to be 1a. She sued for | tried there. Requisttton for Dudik. Requisition papers have been asked of the governor of Illinola for the return to Steve Dudlk, charged with grand larceny in having taken from Parell Hornbevey the sum of $88 in oney He is being held by the chief of police in Chicago and an officer let this morning to bring him back. Work on Postotfice Addition. Work began yesterday on the excava- Have Pur;e Blodd‘ HMood’s Sarsaparills Makes Pure, -ol,‘ Red Blood. | Your heart works night and day with- out a pause. It is the principal organ of the circulation of your blood. It ia of the utmost importance that it should do its work well The aquality and quantity of your blood have much to do with its action. If this fluld pure and abundant, your heart and other vi- al. organs act with more energy than when it {s defective in quality or de- ficlent in quantity. Hodd's Harsaparilla makes the blood pure and abundant. It is the one S\|d‘ rellable modicine, that has been wold | for forty years, for purifying the blood. There is no better blood remedy, ap- petizer, stomath tonic or nerve builder. Be sure your druggist sives You which would indicate that the senate|would always render him lass efficent #hould be abolished. for work. An unusually large number of s 1| witnesses were called In the case. LINDSAY FARMER LOSES $3,000 WORTH OF CATTLE LINDSAY. Neb., April 27.—(Special)— John Haney, a prominent stock raiser living about four miles northwest of hers, had the misfortune of having his cattle #et into the alfalfa yesterday, and so far, thirty-si% have ‘died with, e3me, of. the- others still ‘sick. The dead ones were stly” $year-old sterrs and aboit ready far markei. 4,000, Miss Sadie Conneliey and Miss Margaret Ducey were selected to teach the publie #chool for the ensuing year. The principal has not yet been elécted. Mr. Martin, the present principal, will not put in his ap- vlication, having decided to discontinue teaching. The parochjal school has just completed another:roam to accommodate the new spring beginners, which makes five rooms snd that many sisters teaching. Father Columban, the p is principal ERVINE E. PONT WILL st EDIT STANTON REGISTER ETANTON, Neb., April 27.—(8pecial)— The Stanton Register, which has been tdited for the last eighteen years by the | lafe Alfred Pont, will in théifuture be | «dited and managed by Ervine E. Pont, a rephew of the late editor and son of Jir. and Mra. Benjamin Pont of this place. The new editor is not a stranger to Stunton people, having learned the print- ing trade In the Register office at this place ahd graduated from the Stanton High school and the University of Ne- braska: He started the Robinson Herald over in I)wa. After several months he acld out this paper and started up an- other paper, the Millerton Radium, in the southern part of lowa, where he s now located. e will take possession of the Tegister late this week. The last two wecks the Register has been edited by Rev. J. F. Boucher and Harvey L. Nye. The loss will run close to Notes from Gage County. BEATRICE. Neb. April 27.—~(Special.)— The bueiness men of Wymere held a meeting Monday evening and organized A commercial club with a membership ot coventy-five Mayor Adam McMullen pre- ¢ided over the meeting and Jacob Hal- derman acted as secretary. The sum of £40) was ralsed for first expenses and a smimittee consisting of Julius Neumann, acob Halderman, C, P. Philbrick and George Stephenson was appointed to se- cure a location for the club, which in- tenids tp purchase a bullding at once and’] ecquip it with a reading room, bilard tables, ete . B. D. Harkrader, a resident of Beatrice since 1862, died suddenly at his home in this city Sunday of apoplexy, aged 74! He tad been engaged in the in- surance business here for the last twenty- two years and was one of the oldest Magons in the city Rev. N. P. Patterson will be installed as pastor of the First Presbyterian church licre Thursday evening. Rev. L. D. Young of Lincoln will preach the installation ermgn. and Dean R. Leland will preside | ver the meeting. Thomas McCrea of this city csught a twenty-two pound catfish in the Blue | iver here Monday. for vears Nebraska City Woman Drops Dead. NEBRASKA CITY, Neb, Aprll .- Special )—Mrs. Levi Goldsberry, while preparing breakfast yesterdsy morning for her son, sat down on & chair and fell to the floor. When picked up life was stinee. She leaves six grown children, o 5%, whom are residonts of Omaha Proper Treatment for Billousness, For o long thme Miss Lulu Skelton, Churehville, N. Y., was billous and had #ick headache end dizzy spells. Chamber- &ave her_permanent relief, - :ryvhe.rt.—Adveflhe-‘IL Obtainable Now that your Grocer can give you KRUMBLES —the question of the morning cereal is just about three times easier to solve. You and the family may want KRUMBLES every day. You may want to alternate with Kellogg’s Toasted Corn Flakes. yway, you'll like KRUMBLES —the first Wheat breakfast food with a distinctive flavor and sweetness of its own, the first that you don’t eat simply Hood's, for nothing else can_possibly | takes {ts place. Get It today.—Adver- tisement. An the sugar and cream. "KRUMBLES is wheat—all wheat—the whole of. the wheat, cooked, “krumbled” and delicately toasted. The idea is new—the method is new, original and exclusive with W, K. Kellogg, of Battle Creek. Try a saucerful of KRUMBLES, with cream or milk. See how new the flavor is—how pleasing—and how KRUMBLES tastes sweeter and sweeter the more you chew it! At your Grocer's—KRUMBLES in the Kellogg ‘“Waxtite” package — INESDAY Under the Motor Car Upkeep seph Shackelton Microscope By "Utillr'tyr T;lf"’ }915 Maxwell TOHAPTER \ no doubt I've got about it, to hustle, To do a good day's work is easy | enough for any automobile, MAXWELL 25" especially to make seven consecutive day is a stunt in itself Take my word for it But “" work total 1,000 miles in length | that you Beating It Some, Maybe. Mr. Klein asked my driver if I was showing my best speed. I a|don’t know whether he was seri- ous or not, but I felt a foot on my throttle and I jumped out like a shot, As [ said, the roads are hard and rough, but in less than a minute I was showing batter can never {nvent enough work or | han 45 on my speedometer. That isn't & racing clip exactly, but Il lay—stead touring lone ex- e o sy g Wp & mileage Iike | EUATADtee you'll never want to that for your MAXWELL—when | Fide any faster over those Toads you buy it. The trouble isn't In | & LACK, WErs SESIERCiV I8 vous covering the ground; it's in find- | (i E ‘“‘"“M“:l oay ‘T 'aid it ing the cause for covering it (because you can’t plways tell But I helped mattefs out by reg- of istering a round 152.5 miles. caourse, I took the road to do it. One man wanted to know about real, first-hand investigation, so I took him out With me, and while he was he was MAXWELL efflciency by finding out for himself, finding out for you, too. He was Mr. A. D. Klein, ger of the brick department whose offices are in Bank Building. Our trip toda: Lincoln High where Mr. the ay to Kleln called on last Sunday, and while they are little bit better, there is still a lot of chance for improvement. This afternoon we found the farmers out scraping the roads which, of course, helps, and 1 had a chance to throw off a littie of that sprin fever and show my heels. mana- of the Sunderland Bros.' Compady, State was out over the| Ashland, his customers for a short while, and then over the Highway again and on into Lincoln, where he again visited contracts and had dinner. I had been over these same roads 10 cents what somg constables will do) I do know that you can leave Lin- coln and be in Omaha in two hours and thirty minutes and not jar your teeth out, either Re- | member, 1 didn't say I did it; only that I know a MAXWELL can do it. Yesterday's Run, I made 162.5 milés on just a lit- tle less than 7% gallons of gas, which will figure about 20.5 miles per gallon., 1 haven't one cent sharged up against me for mechan- fcal trouble or tires, and only a pint of ofl so far. Ihadtohavea spark plug cleaned on Monday, and due to the bad roads and hard pulls I've had to ‘take uu water, as 1 told you.' Incidentally, I'm pretty proud of my starter. It hasn't falled yet: and :listen, a | it isn't going to, for {it's storing up current just as fast as it is being used In these last six days I've added 902.9 miles to my age, and I've used 453 gallons of g & ¢ Watch for my last ¢ morrow, — —————————————— | 1100 fOr the £X0,080 addition to Lincoln's it n the wet n becomes eover. L N b k postoffice building. Postmaster Frank ' flowed by t Antelope creek and the ¥ Brown dug up the first shovelful of dirt road desires to have Its tracks above the obraska Govoing ooty tomg . smoulh botweed | water marh. Presteeat Musese 6 ERATORS —————— | ShOVeIfuln 1o cuss the fellows who were the company savs If th matter ean bo ’ telling around that he had made an adjusted in a sstisfactory manner he has o w P S e L R e w7 ol | Hester of the democratic county commit phny that will finigh the bullding of the - { Omaha Lawyer Employed by Rail-|(ion on the new bullding to help out the 'cil has taken no action in the matter y y y | way Commission to Amist fn, | Broan Aows 1 the < compiien Licennes at Beatrice. They are built of hard wood which has been thoroughly he Rate Cases. v v e i i B BEATRICE, Neb, April 27.—~(Special i . : 1 I oy Attorney C. C. Flansburg of the Omaha. | Toeram - The ity commisatoners neta! [l S6asoned; they are built with special regar(;for ua;fl]tuy Lincoln & Beatrice Interurban rallroad , meetir his aftérnoon and ted \ jcal i 3 on. ecial ar- OONPERENCE HELD AT LINCOLN |uad ancther seance with the elly souncll | nqrme gk, i, tfieracon ond sranted ||f foatures and economioal ice consumption. & P - fof Lincoln vestorday in an effort to se- |suliabury, A. C. Freshman, Winfield 8 rangement in the Blizzard Refrigerator provides for a From a Staft Correspondent.) cure permission of the councll to allow |foien. Roy Drew and George Hreitie 2 . s H A LINCOLN, ApHl 5 —(Bpecial 1~ Attor- | the road an now lald alonk two Blocks | mer i e An, deorke mreitier. |}l continous combination of cold dry air so that food is kept ney Ed P. Smith of Omaka called on the | to stand above the grade established by |jjccpge to Georse Dreitier instead of Jo sweet and in perfect condition for an indefinite period. rallway commission this morning and | the ecity The grade established by the Blizzard Refrigerators are priced according to style and size from $7.50 to $32.50. There are no inside seams Blizzard Re - frigerators are interlinec with minera) wool. This in terlining is|™ considered by experts to be the best and most desirable packing fo: refrigeratin g purposes. frigerators and the sani- i pipe and other inside parts are easily re- fmoved so thay every corner Jis easy of ac- cess when cleaning. A splendid genuine Blizzard Refrigerator, constructed of a thoroughly well seasoned hard wood with rust-proof lining and interlinings of mineral wool. An economical and absolutely odorless refrigerator; our price $7.50 iou Ha_ke Your Own Terms At The Gentra See our beau- | We are the exclusive | See our beau- tiful three. agents for Utility Gas |tiful four- room home | Ranges; they are known room home outfit, every. | wherever gas is used as | outfits, every- thing com- | the most economical of | thing com. plete for $81 | all gas ranges. |plege, $110 Have The CENTRA L Figurs On Your Furniture Bil -NTRA 17TH AND HOWARD SIS Join the “Comfort Clan® of women who know the Gas Range is the “Housewife’s Greatest Helper.” You are all invited — you who have no Gas Ranges and you who have them— to come and help us make Gas Range Week a big event. Tempting displays, interest- ing information about the new ideas in the Gas Range cookery. Meet Mrs. Neighbor some morning or afterneon and bring along all your friends. Thisis the week. A Gas Range makes the life. So get yours. 10 per cent discount off our Standard Cabinet Gas Range bought this week. Usual easy terms | OMAHA GAS co. 1509 Howard St. Douglas

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