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THE TW E: OMAHA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER b, BRIEF CITY NEWS Wedding Rinws—MAholm, Jeweler. Tindquist, Tallor—i00 Paxton Blk Mave Moot Prizt 18— Now vencon Press Masda Lamps, 2850—Burgess-Granden| Preight Mouses Close Today—All of| the local freight houses will be closed this afterncon on account of the floral parade, Mardis Gets Nospital Comtract—The contract for the addition to St Cather- ine's hospital has been let to the J. C. Mardis Construction company. “Today's Compmets wovie Program® slassified section today, and appears in The Bee EXCLURIVELY, Find out what | Mhe various moving picture theaters offer. | To Light City for 04d Fellows—At the request of 8 K. Greenleaf, the city couy- cofl agreed to maintain the special street ¢ Uluminations on the evenings of Octobe: 18, 19 and 20 in honor of the grand lodwe | meeting of the Odd Fellows Tenk Manufacturers Coming—Bo- | tween 100 and 150 delegates are expected | to attend the meeting here of the Na- | ( tional Assoclation of Galvanized Tank Manufacturers October 11 and 12 The bureau of publicity has sent out some 200 invitations to prospective delegates. Go to Prison Congress—En route to their natlonal convention In San Fran- claco some seventy-five delegates to the American Prison congress went through Omaha over the Burlington, occupying | four cars on one of the regular traina. | They remained in Omaha ten minutes. BHchoes of Dewey Notel Fire—Mark Hemenway, & farmer, is suing Jonn D, Creighton, who was owner of the Dewey hotel when it burned February 25, 1914, for $20,000 damages for injuries alleged recelved as @ result of the fire. He| charges that the hotel did not have ade- quate fire escapes. Civil Service Exams—Examination for civil service appointments wili be held | | 10 CUT 00T NOISE | ON CONCERT NIGHT Governor Black Promises Zome of Quiet Around Auditorium for the Symphony Orchestra, PROGRAM OF MUCH EXCELLENCE Innumerable suggestions both in person and by mail have come to the retailers committee in charge of the Charity Concert course, whose first concert will be the Boston Symphony | orchestra, at the Auditorfum on next Thursday evening, in regard to abat- ifng the noises on the carnival ‘groundu during the program. | Mr. Charles E. Black, chairman of | the entertainment committee of Ak-' Sar-Ben, has arranged for absolute | quiet as far as disturbing elements on | the carnival grounds are concerned, | and in an Interview yesterday stated most emphatically that those in attendance at the concert will not be disturbed in the least from out- side sources, Boston Symphony Program. The program which Br. Karl Muck has arranged for the concert to be given Thursday evening, October 7, by the Bos- ton Symphony Orchestra 1s one of un- usual charm, one which contains many sivles. The composers represented are Beethoven, Wagner, Rimsky-Korsakoff, | Bizet and Liszt, wherein one sees two of the greatest masters of Germany. the| greatest technical master of Russia, the man who in some respects may be re- { TO LAY CORNERSTONE OF ibe laid. | Butlér and Hiimmel - Have Spat in the City Council Hall City Commissioners Hummel and Butler engaged in another bloodless battle dur Ing & meeting of the oty council commit- | tee of the whole. | “You're Just peeved,” sald Hummel. | “I am not peeved. I just want things run in a businesslike way," retorted Butler | “You're not the whole city commission, nor you can't be bigger than any other commiseloner,” was the next broadside from the Hummel trenches. “Well, I'm golng to see that things are done according to law,” waa the counter | blow. | ‘You are butting Into other depart- ments. T don’'t butt Into your department, ! do 1 “That's what we are here for, to butt into each other's department when we #ee things going wrong.” ! “Well, don't butt into my department.’” | will.” | “You won't" will." “You won't™ The trouble was over the failure of the Recreation board, of which Commissioner Hummel is chairman, to send in the names of a few employes for confirma- tion by the city council. i FIRST PREBYTERIAN SOON Within a week or two, the eornerstone of the new First Presbyterlan church, Thirty-fourth and Farnam streets, will | It will mark another step in | the growth of the city and its churches. A committes, consisting of the pastor, Rev. 1915, W7 QUALITY Y 'MADE IN OMAHA \ /4 AN BOOST OMAHA While Celebrating Ak-Sar-Ben Talk, Use and Serve Omaha-Made Goods This Week While Your Guests Are in Town K-SAR-BEN is a festivity set aside each year for honoring Ne- braska activities. AK-SAR-BEN recalls to and impresses upon our minds the wonderful progress of Nebraska's industrial enterprises. OMAHA is the heart of Nebraska’s manufacturing industry. Omaha manufacturers furnish a close and profitable market for Nebraska’s raw products; they employ thousands of Nebraska laborers; money spent with them is kept at home for the benefit of other Nebraska industries. Fdwin Hart Jenks, and the chureh | treasurer, H. A. Doud, is now arranging | the detalls for the cornerstone laying and trylng to select a sultable date. A large copper box has already been partly filled | at the Omaha federal building Novemuer | B87ded as the greatest talent of French 2, 8 and 4 Among the occupations for | Music and Hungary's greatest genlue which examinations will be given are| Beethoven is represented by his sym- physiological chemist, aeronautical engi-|Phony in A major, No. 7, the work which neer, electiical draftsman, engineer, plumber and mechanic, assistant in fish investigations, Inspectors or ordnance and of timber, marine draftsman, plysical loboratorian and assistant in dry land arborculture Information as to Rooms for Visitors to Be Given Free So many out-of-town visitors are ready here or coming soon to attend the Ak-Sar-Ben festivities that all Omaha hotels will be crowded throughout the week and many extra rooms in private | houses will be needed for the throng. Ak-Bar-Ben's free information bureau at Fifteenth and Harney streets already has & list of 40 rooms, and will give service without charge in locating the vitisors in comfortable rooms near tho carnival while they are here. Omahans having rooms for rent that are not yet listed at the Information bu- reau are urged to list them at once, so the buueau may have ample accommoda- tions for the crowds. The bureau phone number is Douglas 8312 ) Here is One Woman Who Can Drive Nai Miss Bertha Lichnovsky, clerk in the Recreation board office in the city hall, has demonstrated her ability to drive nails without smashing her fingers or breaking one of the commandments. While putting away for the winter a lot of summer play apparatus it was necessary to drive some nalls. Superin- tendent English was busy moving his household effects to a new location, so she set herself to the task and drove the nails as straight as a skilled car- penter. Secretary Carlson of Commissioner Hummel's office and Assistant Park Su- perintendent Redman watched the young woman with interest. They offered to assist, but she refused their aid. Mich Lichnovsky says she can handle i @ saw and sees no reason why a woman should not know how to drive a nail or saw a board. ) Ak-Sar-Ben Balloon is On Display Again' After belng damaged by the wind last week, the Ak-Sar-Ben dirigible balloon at the carnival grounds has been repaired and is again Inflated and on exhibiton there. It is one of the free attractions. Governors Gould Dietz and Randall K. Brown purchased it at an army sale. Balloonist Huntley s scheduled to make duily ascensions with his spherical gas bag-and stage an seriel hombardment of the city If weather conditions are favor- able, he will go up every afternoon at 4 o'clock. “Kareless” Kennedy's sensational slide for life will occure every evening at 9 o'clock. With gasoline flames leaping from his asbestos clothing, he will siide from the top of the City National bank bulding over the King's Highway to the 8avoy hotel, while hanging from a thin wire by & rubber bit gripped between his teeth. DEACON BREWSTER D!ES AT HOME IN IRVINGTON . — IRVINGTON, Neb.,, Oct. 4. 8, C. Brewster, ploneer of this state and actively identified with the Congrega- tional church, died at the age of 83, fol- lowing a stroke of paralysis. He was born In New York state and at the age of 19 went to California, return- ) ing to his native state and later deciding ' to settle in Nebraska. He arrived here in & wagon during 188 In 1862 he was married to Sarah Taylord, daughter of the Rev. Taylord, pioneer Congregation- alist of this state. As member of the state legislature in the early days he drove to Lincoln in & wagon. Mrs. Brewster and four childre ) Mrs. G. T. Noyce of Crete, Neb.; Mrs Carl & Hibbard of Omaha, Clarence Brewster of Benson and Ernest Brewster of Oklahoma, are the surviving members of the family. Funeral services will be held at the Congregational church Tuesday at 2:0. Burlal will n Mount Hape cemetery, HAS OPERATION THAT HE MAY GO TO ANNAPOLIS After being appointed to Annapolis by Congreasman Shallenberger and coming to Omaha for physcal examination, ) Allan D. Blackledge of Red Cloud found that he would pot be physical y eligible \ to the national navy school without sub- mitting to & minor operation. He de- cided to bave the operation performed in order to enter the academy. al- | | Wagner once called the dance The first sketches of this symphony were made probably before | 1811, or even 1810. The composition was begun in the spring of 1512 and the work | publjshed In 1816. The first performance of the symphony was in Vienna la the large hall of the university December 8, 1813. In had an enormous success. Wagner on Beethoven, In his “The Art Work of the Future,” Richard Wagner sald of this symphony: “To give his tone-shapes that same compactness, that directy cognlsable and physically sure stability, which he witnessed with such blessed solace 'n Nature's own phenomena—this was the soul of the joyous impulse which created | for us that glorious work, the Symphony 'in A-major. All tumult, all yearning and storming of the heart, become here the blissful insolence of joy, which snatches us away with bacchanallan might and bears us through the roomy space ot nature, through all the streams and seas {of lite, shouting In glad self-consclous- ness as we tread throughout the uni- verse the daring measures of this human sphere-dance. - This symphony Is the apotheosis of dance itself; it s dance in its highest aspect, as it were the loftiest |deea of bodily motion incorporated in |an ideal mould of tone.” Other Great Numbers, The Wagner number will be the bril- llant and diamatic overture of his earllor | opera, “The Flying Dutchman.” Rimsky- | { Korsakoff's “Caprice on Spanish Themea' '1s & most remarkable orchestral tour de force in which the Russian, despite nis antecedents and his national tralts, re- produces most wonderfully the atmos- | phere of the dance halls of Seville, Blzet Is represented by the firat suite from the exquisite music he wrote for Daudet's play, “L'Arlesienpe,” while the | | final number on the program, “Les Pre- ludes,” {s the finest of Liszt's symphonic poems. Rules for Autos During the Parades Captain of Police Michael Dempsey an. in vogue during the Ak-Sar-Ben parades. |this afternoon and Wednesday night. Motorists and occupants of all convey- ances take notice: On Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets from Douglas to Harney cars will not ve parked in the middle of tne street, as |usual, but will line the curb, and face |toward Farnam. Ths ruse will also hoid forth on Nineteenth street north of Far- nam. South of Farnam on Nineteenin the street will be kept open. be countenanced during either parade. At 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, every vehicle on the llne of march will he {forced to enter the nearest cross street. Cars that have no occupants and are found untenanted on the line of marcn will be moved by officials into the cross | streets, regardiess of the whereabouts of the owner. “If these rules are ovvserved,” sa'd Captain Dempsey, “a great deal of trou- {ble will be avoided, and owners: will aot be forced to spend time in searching for their machines, buggies or wsgons | the parade has past.” | | Coughs and Colds Dangerous. Den't wait, take Dr. King's New Dis- COVEry now. It will help your cough and soothe the lungs. Goc. All drug- giste.—Advert.sement. MAYOR URGES BUSINESS MEN TO CLOSE TUESDAY Mayor James C. Dahlman has issued & proclamation urging the business men of Omaha to close thelr establishments for & part of this afterncon so that their employes may view the Ak-Sar-Ben floral parade. The proclamation is as follows: Wednesday, September @, there entered within our borders his most Royal High- ness King Ak-Sar-Ben the Tweuty First. Tuesday, October 6, s the day of futomobile parade. When the king's sub- ec of the flower klnfdom. and as cit.zens of the City of Om: we should show our appreciation of the' efforts put forth for our entertainment, by dispen-ing with business on the aiternoon ot ‘ctober 8 Therefore, James C. Da will {of the city of ity 8o hemsiy it enteoy suggest, that the busincss men of Omaha, close thelr places of business for at least a portion of the afternoon on Tu October 5, that their employes m.;":’l:);l the parade. Women May Be Stroug. and enjoy life whether in the home or business world if they can keep at bay those allments peculiar to their sex. If ham's Vegetable Compound, that simple remedy, made from roots and herbs, goes [to the root of the trouble and overcomes such symptoms as backache, headache, |nervousness, and firritability, they would be healthier, happler and stronger. 144 |you suffer from any form of female ills {why dom't you try it? It will pay you Im do so=Advertisement. “the apotheosis of | nounces the following ruies that will be | No parking along the line of march will | the |¥ perade in all the gorgeousness | |every woman realized how Lydia E. Pink- | with papers and records, and will bl; iplaced within the cornerstone at part of |the ceremony. | BIGGEST THING OF KIND IN OMAHA Local People Rushed Through- out Saturday and Monday to Obtain Premier Preparation, Demand for Tanlac Already| Great—Ingredients come From Remote Countries. The demand in Omaha for Tanlae, the | | new preparation that ls accomplishing | such surprising results in so many in- stances of stomach, kidney and catarr- hal troubles in the larger cities, is al- ready great and is steadlly increasing. All day Saturday, as well as Monday, a contlnuous stream of people viaited ! the Sherman & McConnell Drug com- pany's store, Sixteenth and Dodge streets, to inquire about the medicine, to see how the preparation was distributed, and to | learn just what Tanlac actually looks like. Many had their minds all made up and simply said: “I want Tanlac.” The | beginning of the introduction of Tanlac | was therefore the biggest thing of the | kind ever before seen in Omaha. | In this connection, the Sherman & Mc- Connell Drug Company said: “We have secured the exclusive sale and distribution of Tanlac in Omaha and, judging from the reports which have ! preceded the preparation from other cit- fes, where Tanlac Is now In large de. ! | mand, we feel that we have been, indeed, fortunate in securing the agency for this medicine. | | | “The policy of our store, which la well known to everyone, has always been one | of liberal conservatiem. We first belleve in investigating a preparation, and If it | is a meritorious one. to lend our encoul- agement to its exploitation. The best is ' just good enough. | “Tanlac, while & new preparation, | comes to us with a reputation of real merit. Leading druggists In the ecities | where the medicine has been introduced, state that the sale of Tanlac has been | unprecedented. | ‘“The Taylor-lsaacs Drug Company of | Loutsville, Ky., recently sold thirty thou- | | sand bottles of Tanlac within a perfod uf | ninety days. When it is considered that | the demand Is confined to one prepara- | tlon such a sale must be due to one | thing—merit.” John A. Bornhauser, who is in Omaha | directing the Introduction of Tanlac, | satd: “It is just as we expected. No ons i should be surprised by the tremendous demand for Tanlac after it is taken into consideration that the ingredients, or me- dicinal elements, which make Tanlac, come from many remote sections of the earth, such as the Alps, Appenines, Py-, rennees, Russian Asia, Europe, Jamalea, | Brazil, West Indies, Persia, Indla, Eng- |1and, France, Germany, Mexico, Colum- | bia and Peru. “In our principal laboratory, under the | efficlent direction of Joseph Trimbach, & native German chemist, these medici- nal herbe, barks, roots and flowers are assembled in the rough and painstaking- ly developed so as to obtain that high standard of eficlency shown by the uni- form preparation Tanlac. “In rilized bottles made expressly | for the purpose, Tanlac is placed, labeled |and cartoned. The preparation Is in- apected again, and then packed for ship- ment to points over the world where the | demand requires. Tanlac’'s sucess will grow steadily greater.’—Advertisement. | Valuable Discovery in Com >lexion B autifier Because of ita pecullar power of ab- sorption, also because it serves every emoilient purpose, ordinary mercolized | wax is perhaps the most vallable com- | plexion beautifier discovered wituin re-| cent years. If one usce this she nceds no tollet” cieam. Some use powder a&fier- ward, but this Is not necessary. This rule for applying mercolized wax has | been found very satisfactory: Wash the , face with warm water, drying lightly. Before thoroughly dry, anoint the face | with the wax, but don't rub it in. The | favorite way s to use before retiring, aliowing it to remain on all night and washing it off in the morning with warm water. All druggists have this wax in | original ‘one-ounce packages. | For the removal of a wrinkled ur flabby condition there's nothing better than to bathe the face in & solution made by dis solving 1 ounce powdered saxolite in 3 pint_witch hazel. Beneficial resuits ulej | quickly noticeable.—Advertisement, In what way CAN Nebraskans boost for their state and themselves to a better advantage than by boosting for Omaha-Made goods. This week, while your out-in-the-state guests are here, bring home to them the importance of Omaha’s factories. talk, use and serve Omaha-Made goods. Send your guests home with an apprecxatlon of Omaha manufacturing industries. And then they, too, will boost for our home enterprises. KEEP THIS LIST FOR FUTURE REFERENCE T @ SuATE BAG MANUFACTURERS BEMIS-OMANA BAG Jackson Sts., Douglas 1. BOILER MAKERS o‘o&' 1ith and BOTTLERS oa'lfin.‘om. ©0, 615 No. 11th -x.o'vr.uuux mm. ©0., 1808 Webster bt., Dougias 7398, BOXES—PACKING 0..:'" BOX CO., East Omaha, Web. meu-o'nuo u&t‘-m Fibre venwi Douglas 11 BREWERS STORS BREWING ©O., 1818 rredt - e Shorman MEIE BREWING 0O ves. ABZE BRRWING 0O, 6tk and Les XRUG '“'fl 0., Xrag and Boulevard, g’l& e BREWING CO., 30th and ¥ Bts. (Bouth 8). WILLOW SPRINGS BREWING 24 and Mickory Ill-.”l'uh. u‘:" BRICK MANUFACTURERS EYDRAULIC PRESS BRI W. 0. W. Bidg., Dougias 0‘ bis o BUTCHERS' and PACKERS' TOOLS o. I. mn & ©O0. 1610 Capitol Ave., CAS(X) ‘ul LINY AND CHICK FEED, CORN MEAL, ETC. CABCO_MILLIN Bte. rhonas: Dous CEMENT BLOCK MANUFACTURERS °"‘vf'o§:a§'n Ave. and fl.“ o CONFECTIONERY D.nz."o:lm CO., 80111 Douglas Bt ‘?.l:.l%t & DmQ CO. 1816-18 COUOCHES AND MATTRESSES COFFEE, TEA AND SPICES 'fiu.‘lu:«&lil‘fl. ©CO., 113 8o, 11th B8, CRACKER MANUFACTURERS m-u&u.v‘lz! ©O., cl‘“& Ave., 18th CREAMERY COMPANIES FAIRMONT CREAMERY 00, 1 any Jones Bts. Douglas 1401, o WATLRLOO COREAMLAY ©0. 1017 Roward Bt. Dougias 1400, COMMISSION, PRODUCE, ETC, KIRCEBRAUN & A Moward st., ml:lo. o o DISTILLERS ILER & CO. SRS RPN EPTIRE: ELEOTRIO OCOMPANIES OMAMA ELEUTRIC WaR o, U. ¥ Bidg., MI‘I":I" R ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES AND LIGHTING FIXTURES IU‘O.“-DM”II 511 Mow. ard Bt ZTyler 68l 5 303 ENGRAVERS—ELECTROTYPERS BAKER BROS. ENGRAVING CO. 1008 Roward Bt., 2588, EN VFM)PE MANUFACTURERS URKLEY I“m. oo, lltl Bt., Douglas €1 0 FIXTURES ’ OMANA 414-16-18 So. FLOUR MILLS & _SUPFLY e Bt.. Dougias 3734. m. e ©0.. 1513 Shermas FUR"ACES 2 RS R IR \—m You need have no fear that Omaha-Made goods will not make good—they WILL. Omahans are a particular people—Oma- ha-Made goods are manu- factured especially to satisfy that desire for the best. And then, Omaha- Made goods cost less— no excessive freight rates are added to their selling price. You may depend upon it that Omaha-Made goods of the same quality will cost you less—or that for the same money you will secure better quality. When you buy Omaha- Made goods, the reputa- tion and financial respon- sibility of your own home people guarantees to you the BEST QUALITY and the GREATEST POSSI- SIBLE SATISFACTION. Omaha manufacturers can supply any ordinary want. Perhaps you do not realize how compre- hensive this industry is. Note the two columns of different factories and the goods they make. Practically every desire you have can be supplied by these firms. Clip out the list. Useit for a refer- ence—and the next time ycu order manufactured products of any descrip- tion Look over this list, see if you can’t buy Oma- ha-Made goods from Omaha retailers and keep your money at home and at work. Be loyal to your city— KEEP THIS LIST FOR FUTURE REFERENCE FOUNDRIES—Casting and Sash Weights. OMANA Jackson St. FUR GOODS .A 2L UR 'I'TI l&“'ll »t., &l‘ by o GAS OCOMPANIES %wmuflwm HATS L ¥, 1381 ORUSLEIE g enT. 100 Sevwne ICE DEALERS mmmumm:u. 294 Clucago S%., pELIL S & ICE MACHINES l.m ICE MACKINE CO. 19th and lokolas Bts.. Dourias 1861, LAUNDRIES ion i Bougias Sees. oo LT VI EIMBALL LA X 00, 1507.00-11 Jackson Bt., Dol s, PURITAN LAUN Rarney 1 FOUNDRY cmm v Douglas 8438, LEAD WORKS ey aous Onboe "oviies Son LODGE SUPPLIES * Dongias (4T 90+ 1111 Farsem B MACARONI SKINNER MANUY, Toih and Jeskeon wes. B7ier Toan " MONUMENTS LOR % 3 mn & CO., 1708 Oumiag Wb, MIRRORS and ART GLASS WINDOWS MUDLAND v 'L‘b.l. - '#.l" ©0., lita PLANING MILL €O, Groand ¥ "I f A T loor Bee Bldg. Deug- PRINTERS—BOOK AND JOB COBREY & .An Douxiag NEIE, 1407 Rarney 84, SADDIMRY ." :.A:H ~°0.. 31317 South 19k STARCH MANUFACTURERS DEFIANCE STARCH 00. 2560 Cuming Bt., Dougias 170, BERUM MANUFACTURERS %‘i 3335 L St Seuth B S TANKS, CULVERTS, GRAIN BINS, AND OIL DRUMS I‘g XA & IOWA STEEL . s 1 Bpruce Bt. Webster TENTS AND AWNINGS ESTIINANS N 8RR ANTRE CRAVATS, BELTS, PURSES, POCKET BOOKS and SLS DERS SMITH, LOCKWOOD MFra, South 13th St. Douglas €38) TIN CANS AND SHEET ML‘TAL GORDON LAWLESS 00. Doige Ba. Donsias sen = in omd WOOD WORKS OMANA WOOD DN ¢ Marcy Bt., DO":.‘?M ® Oh ¥ WHOLESALE GROCERIES A“°= L) Dmm 701-11 mouth W».-l