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v THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1915 5 Holh‘i:llg HNJSB SUAES FOR PART OF 'I\Zzw Homé Nox; Assurr'ie;l?or Poor 'T”r};l“ St_(’l’cl}m.&'t‘v I;n : ad Buras v FORTUNE SHE LOST Family Whose House Was Destroyed| Transit Guso Brics “Btar now¥sr The stoprase tn transit ca which | tha Na nal Tmplon The Soreness and Pain Are Gone In Mrs. Mary F. Gruber of Denver Tes- | Subscriptions continue to flow into The Bee office to build a home | o v o™ ™ o aing to co 3 From Al ':‘.'I‘,,'J':;. \.\,;"l:‘:!“:.‘m'“:l'l"' tifies She Paid $26,000 to Wil- | for Joseph Mecher, whose house a t Eleventh and Ogden streets built b ",‘,f‘ v‘ ‘m-:.:':‘:'. ‘l’» is pr . use ,f Nl ouly d5ek 1 ? i liam H. Brown and Wife | with the savings of years, was burned down two weeks ago before he | th the Interstate’ Cur e My | i BROWN DENIES THE CHARGES had insurance on it. Henry Pollack started the list a few days ago | oh W Bne B H ,,’::,‘f then tc - with $30. R. B. Condon of the Boyer & Van Kuran Lumber company n June 10 and th rt Mrs. Mary F. Gruber, aged 50 added an equal sum w‘v‘ ‘, ‘; :w”-‘”" 1 P years, ot Denver, formerly of Omaha Steve Toth and others arranged for a ball Saturday night, which Vehile a xtion in this case. Ae the :\lj“,‘ ,‘::“:l,\ ',‘,,i\,:.,',‘:‘:.\;hr‘,::::‘:I\';:fr‘}df‘:\it netted $80.60. This sum was turned over to Mr. Mecher at once, and :\:‘-" “, e ‘,“.:.l,»,‘« J \vu et ‘ with the result that she has been| With it and some material already donated he has started to rebuild. |* “_"v”"‘“" s v:.“\“\“.;‘y,‘.““h\”‘.‘ o making her living by scrubbing Louis Urim is drawing the plan s and helping Mr. Mecher person- |emi weeks hefore that date Phoghoiiriboy 08 floors, testified before District Judge | ally, The excavation has been made and the foundation is ready to ':y‘“ bbbl e b B RO R T —the Soap that does liam H. Brown of Omaha and Mrs Next Sunday forty carpenters will donate their services and the | i FATHER M’ Y | Cily M. Brown, his wife house is expected to rise with record speed 1[ BEFOF:AEMMEE'\‘NA(;“RAJOSSQ-EKTY mOSt Of your work for you' ’ . - It’s a time-saver to Omaha real estate and their two sons are living with Joe Suhada, a brother-in-law, at 3 e e TuaY S s a of Creighton university, will nddress th hased, it is alleged, in Mrs. Brown's e n univer addr the e, With Tonly received front vk | Lont And Ieand stresh "]“j"“"'“ society Wednesday evening at money—saver, a health—saver. /¥ 7\ :" The plaintiff declared she paid The fund previously acknowledged in The Bee was $90. Additional |aion ‘,,.“ The jore b galongh- Inadequacy of Our Present | money with the understanding that A ir Presor to be used in the manufacture and Subscriptions have come, making the total as follows; Edveation wiil b led by Barney Kula- | Use It n COOI or lukewarm | She was the first witness in the tria Pending the completion of their new home Mr. and Mrs. Mecher | of her equity & t in whicn she is seek ing to gain titl The Little Ones, as Well as Adults, Soon Learn ' ¢ the Wonders of * Benet sale of an “Antiseptic Wonder," a pat # ; s X g reviotsly acknowledged e L..8 90.00 Miss Anna £, the talepted young t S t f l_ t ‘ e e | S DS o he it Erovioutly u von | M Lo we wen sone Water—it’s a fuel-saver too. fall far, far short of having the germ SrTown said he was the Inventor 4 s % will give the musical numbers Fels & Co., Philadeiphia. estroying effect that should be po Gives ltemized Ace A friend ¥ s 1.00 [ oot b s bt o PO MR . t € In June, 1812, Mrs. Gruber said, she Sam Newman . 1.00 | such as carbolic ac ) first met Brown, being introduced to him Y E h 4 - A o a e hy Steve oth S0.60 iry and other such dangerous pol by her son, Charles Gruber, at the office Ball arranged by Steve T ire_extremely unsafe and should of the Omaha Lightning Rod and s« for children as |trical company on Twelfth street, in Total and whether used | Omaha. Their business relations termi uld | she fled from Ottawa, 1il, to Colorado, | were able to return to their If¥ing rooms | ra- | following alleged advice by Brown that after the firemen put out the fire. | immediate buy & bottle at |8he was in danger of prosecution by the Inch and o Half of Rain your drug store 50c and $1.00 sizes, | United States government. Dburing the| A full-grown May shower visited the | Let us send yo ir “Benetol” trial od. she paid Brown| city, during the night. Colnel Welsh of . interval, ted, she paid I S L ant | about g2 follows | the weather department reports 164 8 no PIANOS OF FAME AT SHORT PRICES Only once in a great many years is an opportunity offered the public to secure World- that you and your family y make of this marvelous p ooth cream. The trial be had from dealer June, $40 for drugs wche ; June, 1912-$35 for trip to Washington 1 s of rain ghtning and wind aroused many citf Electrical Storm Visits Omaha, Driv- ot lARaENE: 10 cents for lysis of drugs. zens about midnight. The storm clouds 4 . . e { vour l.,an .,f”y.( f ] June, 1912-%420 pald to Mrs. Brown tor| ing Families from Homes Dur- | kathered carly i the evening and ap Famed Pianos at the prices we are quoting during the last week of our May Clearing Sale, he Benetol Company, ' enetol | muliding, Minneapolis, Minn | patent rights i ing the Night. peared rather ominous for a while, par- || and if you fail to take advantage of it, you are not treating yourself or your home squarely. July, 1912-$2,000 for promotion purposes. | ticularly In the southwest, | (4] Septembe 1912-$2,000 to get patent The moisture benefited growing vego- | Think of it! 5 Co TR nd 1 PR treieall Wt S M INGH AND A HALF OF RAIN | tation and was welcomed by omanans |l no - of it! The leading makes of the world taken from the best homes throughout | o Py, Tl Phetimsy September 3. $2300 for patent in Canada. | s it mun greeted cany risers who ve- || Nebraska—homes that preferred Pianola Pianos. All Planos thoroughly overhauled — Nortn Toth St | October 1, %00 patd at Princeton, 1L, | Four tamilies living in a boarding Strred themselves to nots the freshened | § some not used a year—and now you can buy them at about one-third of their original cost. for installing plant at Aberdeen, 5. D) appearance of lawns and flower beds. house managed by Mrs. Frances Fol October 3, $2500 for building at Aber- | deen IRIUBLSRTRtIROUR SREOUN AR I RAIN KEEPS UP PRICES ON ovember 15, $3.500 for uwum-nuny‘nhxh street, were routed out at THE LOCAL GRAIN MARKET proceedings in Aberdeen 2 a. m. and driven out in the rain Here Are Some Fresh Bargains That Have Been Brought to the Front for This Week’s Selling. Read Carefully and Wisely: i PPN 8275 ler Upright ¢ o 5 | #5350 Knabe Upright .... ’ ‘Ih-‘enlflulr‘ f-.df.:-w for interior ™| when lightning struck the roof of | pian the war news could not counter- we & Son Upright ‘ 8326 nr‘fl[nrd"l'[l‘:"gln ve Ve [N Ay peTEan the building and started a fire. act the effect of the heavy rains that verett Upright .. ... $300 Schmoller & Muellor Upright s | Went to Aberdeen. | The » department extinguished |were general over the winter wheat belt rbe Upright $400 Steger & Sons Upright ..... | Everybody Now BuysDia= || iy january.” saia Mre, Gruber, “1 sent L bl of the central west and wheat on the o prigh : nger Upright .. ... Steger & Sons Uprigh | #1000 Chickering Grand | $800 Steger & Sons Grand monds for Wedding and || my son to Aherdeen and founa that Mr. | the blaze before much damage had | aha market closed at $L40G1.45%, un- Graduation Gifts on Credit || Brown had not built any plant there and | been done. Considerable excitement | janged from Monday. There was a good Steinway Upright . . . oY/ $1100 Bteinway Grand ... : | had nothing to show for the money ! had | prevailed for a few minutes, demand and @ goodly portions of the $2756 Marshall & Wendall Upright $800 A. B, Chase Grand . . | given him. He had promised that I| g ¥, Myers, wife and four small child- | sales were to millers. Rocelots wore 2§ $300 Wagner Upright s b ev e 0esve #0000 Weber Grand . . ) | sbould receive one-half the profits from fyen made a hurried exit from upsts cars RE KABLE TERMS—80 DAYS' TRIAL TO ANY RESPONSIBLE FAMILY, | the business, and I relied on his wrom-| o "0p ¢i5 Rurt atreet at 3 a. m., upon| The com market was up %@L cent, the FREE STOOL, FREE SCARF. FREE LIFE INSURANCE. | 1ses.” ¥ gt sales belng made at around 70 to T2% . " ‘ 4 . o e ise discovery that a broom factory below We are also exclusive representatives for the celebrated Steinway, Weber, Steger & Sons, Hardman, Emerson, McPhail, Lindeman & Sons and Schmoller & Mueller Pianos and Aeolian Planola Planos. ord of B3 years of honest Plano merchandising is the powerful guarantee that dtands back of | “He wanted more,” was the reply al- cents. There were 24 carloads on the { ways made by Mrs, Gruber to attorneys’ | Was ablaze, lightning having struck the market. | questions regarding her conversations |Place. The damage was nommnal. The| Oats were 1 cent up, selling at 4G50 | with Brown. “He was always in a hurry,” | 0ccupants were soaked by the rain, but| cents, with receipts of 7 cars. Stick This On Your Spindle ¢ ring old Loftis ¥ fer mounting, 1 lant Dia. mond. ... $5 & Month, W THE KEYNOTE OF SUCCESS OF THIS HOUSE IS “QUALITY." Schmoller & Mueller Piano Company 1311.13 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB, ESTABLISHED 1859, Mrs, Gruber has a suit pending 'n Den- | ver in which she alleges she lost the re- | mainder of her $47,000 inheritance in an | other business transaction. She said sho | haa been earning & living in Denver by scrubbing floors and doing other labor. She is plainly dressed. She has been | twice married, her first husband Maving { secured a divorce from her in Illinois, Hste iaiere || according to her testimony. tne onyz cen- || Brown's defense is a denial that he re- r e pendant, || cefved the amounts named by Mrs. Gru- i 1111/ 760—Men's Ring, Flat Belcher, half engraved | 1k solld gold, A G | plete with ber, with the exception of $460, which o450 & Month, | $1.50 a Month. || Brown asserts was paid to him for doing | work for her. | A deposition of Hert C. Wiley, an at- | torney of Ottawa, 1l in which the ate torney testified that he knew that Mrs | Gruber had inherited $47,000 from the es- tate of her late father, Bowen Gill, a | farmer of the vicinity of Ottawa, who | died in 1909, was read in court. 247 PN Swontn 1062-TWrst Watch—Case and Bracelet, are both fine solid gold. Lever set full nickel || i i e 0 $24.78 [ gy Cupid Has Hard | ) Opea Daily Till 8 P. M. s:'f".'.’: 1"_1,?".3( Tlme Landing IOW& Phone Doug. 1444 and our salesman will call AT LOW PRICES ‘Cost Reduced —Quality Maintained Compare With Plain Tread Casing Prices Of Other Standard Makes 3:x30 - 12.20 4:x34 - 27.30 A Nurse says: . 4 x33 - 20.00 4:x36 - 28.70 “I have been a trained nurse for some fifteen years, 4 x34 - 20.% 5 x37 s 33 .90 and like many nurses, drank strong coffee. About two years ago I had to call a halt. I missed my coffee until some one remembered Postum, which ['Mnve st et inee, rocommendiag i 15 many Fisk quality tires never gave more universal satisfaction of my patients.” o e than they are giving today. . TIS!E mnona. Pair, but Succeeds | oF P CREDIT JEWELERS | 1, (ok soveral secret service agents of | BROS & CO. {88400 8, leth Bt | (he United States government, the ma- o chinery of the Department of Justice, the | ¥ I police of St. Joseph and other cities and finally United States Deputy Marshal Jiaze and Justice of the Peace Leeder of Omaha to help win Cupid in an excep- tionally aifficult marriage. But the little lad with the arrows was victorions Dan was engaged in his favorite pas- C, time of £hooting arrows into hearts over in Fort Dodge, In., some time ago. He sTnP ITGH'NG pierced the heart of Miss Agnes Doyle, { and the corresponding arrow he shot into | Tt is a fact that the moment Resinol | the manly bosom of Archie Armstrong. Ointment touches itghing skins, the| The young god hadn't inquired ebout itching stops and healing begins. With | ). yeligious beliefs of the pair. He just | the ald of inol ‘Boap, it almost al-| 0 o H LT e sultable for each ways clears away all ce of eczema ring. worm, pimples, or simitar torment. [other. o ] A Teacher Says: : . . ihe: unmlsile ssuption uibian, Weving{ S SPRISECHOM, pthine, SEV PRENG Sk ARREICD . o) oy THE FISK NON-SKID is the only real non-skid which And the best of it is you n hesitate to use Resinol Soap and Resi-| Cupid is used to this sort of trouble nol Ointment. There is nothing in them | pirgt thing stern parents knew thely to injure the tenderest surf Res! dr.ughter had disappeared and Arms‘rong is a doctor's prescription whieh for | | twenty years has b used by careful “'_‘ also gone. physicians for kinds of skin af Then the government was called on and ans 3 skin af- | | fections. They prescribe Resinol freely, | ite thousands of arms reached ou’ and knowing that its soothing, healing ac-|located the pair. Finally Armstrong was | member. 1 have been teaching school for sixteen years, and became more and more nervous., | could not sleep. After reading some of your lit- erature | decided to try Postum, I have been using it about thirty days; my nerves have improved; 1 have no headache; sleep peacefully, and am able to do my school work better.” can be boughtatthe Low Prices. Fists Tives For Sale By A#l Dealers THE Fi1sKk RUBBER COMPANY e \ t edi " 80 wf on is brought about by medication s arrested in St. Joseph, and technicall bland and gentle as to be suited to the | chyrged with violation of the Mann act A Doctor says: of N.Y. nost dalloats o dre “';‘.‘ “'1 ":"‘ However, stern parents, seeing there Olntment (800 snd 800 And @ eiats| ¥a® Do other way, thet Den Cup'd bad “I often find it necessary to prohibit the use of Chicopee Falls, Mass. S Svertinstng | struck the hearts fair and square with coffee for my patients, and have advised the use of is arrows, capitulated, and they were C—————————————————— Postum with good results to the nervous system | marriea the and digestive apparatus. 2210 Farnam Street and, let us hope will “live happily ever after Locked in Fruit Car Seven Days | Seven days' ride in | was the w Hend car ¢ Un When the time comes that you want to get rid of coffee troubles, quit coffee and use POSTUM the pure food-drink. ar of oranges sual experience of Henry son, who was discovered when a A Spineless Ambition that begins and ends with a soft bed and a full stomach will never boost a man tosuccess. Get out alifornia fruit was opened in the n Pacific freight yards. Henderson is 19 years of & survived the ter ing locked for a wee in a refrigerator car. The only Made of wheat, roasted with a bit of wholesome youth had on t trip was that wh ie found Inside nola Postum is entirely free from the coffee-drug, 3 \ 1304 ;I“‘O‘}lvl:l:wzlid' ited ';.I."l‘ ‘,‘.]-“A:m“ll“im‘;: :nuh’ :.mml A :'“'""‘”"v or vl“_:l “1 H-'xl |::||'1-v||'u'l H\AIIM]::U'«w_ A Of the nice SmOOth I‘ut and let people know Whatyou Douglas 5037 hearty mea at the Windsor hotel. He istered as from Pittsburgh, where he ald his parents live. He said he was Easy for Baby n his way home and had seen emough the zolden west 5 USE ! There w hance for Henderson teo { Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup |5:0..c" i 205 v i A SPLENDID REGULATOR RS . PURELY VEGETABLE -NOT NARCOTIG | Boosters are good for. Hustle—bang away at something big. [ Read the chances to get ahead in The Bee's “Help Wanted’' Columns, Both Postum Cereal—which has to be boiled—and Instant Postum—made in the cup instantly—are delicious, nourishing, and cost_about the same per cup. “There’s a Reason” for POSTUM —s0ld by Grocers everywhere, Make Teetinng | Telephone Tyler 1000 S—=—=—-===THE OMAHA BEE— l Everybody Reads Bee Want Ads ant Ads ave mest Bu.mu.l