Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 5, 1916, Page 4

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0. 8. COMES INTACT ' THROUGH BIG YEAR | Unprecedented Achievements Are| rded, with Billion Bushels of Wheat to Back Them. | NEW PRESIDENT OF THE OMAHA BUILDERS' EXCHANGE. BEE. O THE OMAHA BUSINESS " SHOWS BIG GAIN E. V. Parrish Finds Omaha Thirty- Third in Population and Six- teenth in Business Done. JANU MAHA, WEDNESDAY 456 per cent; real estate transfers, 1% per cent, and actual value of assessable prop- erty, 111 per oemt. Following Is the table of comparative business in 1808 and 1915: 3 Population Bank clear! | Bank deposits ... | Factory output | Wholesaling ... Live stock roi Grain receipts ARY 5, 1916, MERCURY SOARS T0 SUMMER MARK Reaches Fifty-Four by Noonm and Many People Discard Their Overcoats hour of 7 a. m. It registered 54 at noon and 69 at 2 o'clock. And 1t was the fourth day of the supposedly frigid month of January. As though Sunday and Monday weren't warm enough, still more of a heat wave swept down from the northwest. The temperature in Omaha was nineteen de- grees warmer than on Monday morning In Valentine it rose twenty-six degrees, in St. Paul thirty-four degrees and in tance of fifty miles back, during the { early morning, it was misty and driszling, but beyond that area, temperatures ran high. At Hastings, Beatrice, Crote and other places in the central section of the state, temperatures were from 50 to 80 degrees above zero, Twenty degrees above mero was the coldest reading in the state. This was up in the sandhills. The raliroads report zero temperature in Wyoming, but clear and calm about everywhere along the eastern slope of —— | 9 : e | on o s oF % PROSPER | GAINS SINCE 1903 ENORMOUS |boyioffice repis i OO0 gl gt AR Y Chicago elghtsen degrees in the same| the mountain —_— | No. bidg. permita | "Up in Prince Albert, Canada, it was MASON FINED FOR alue ", MviAe” sinilued fonamsitally intact Omaba I8 the thirty-third city In bl v RN R | 22 dcgrees below ero. But, who cares STRIKING DOWN A WOMAN from the greatest crisis In the world's size in the United States and six- rop. 106,845 The well kiown thermometer at the | how cold it is in Priece Albert Canada? Mistory,” says Dun's review of the year's | foundation than ever before. Since many months were regufred for full adjust- ment to the exoraordinary conditions created by the war, for a considerable period recovery from depression was necessarily gradual and checkered, but of late the barometer of progress has risen | e — business of Omaha, and comparing them with the business of other cities. The population had to be estimated, as | there has been no census taken for five welghing all the figures of the year's| in the Mediterranean. 1t was 31 fect long and of 3810 tons gross. Don’t Suffer Needlessly An eminent physician sistes that fully %% of all diseases have their origin in stomach troubles, #o If you suffer from Ayspepsia, indigestion, bad breath, beleh- | the rallréads, pé teenth in volume of business done. weath It is to be colder tonight and mueh trade of the country, “this country has - ship f OF . DUFGRUT YORNEAY ° WaS | iser Wedneoday here Taylor Mason, %8 North Twenty-fifth \Mith characteristio courage and fortitude | This 18 a statement made by E. V. : A s Bheris almost stricken with heart fallure Warm in State. street, was fined $35 and costs in police ‘met“and overcome th t perploxi LONDON, Jan, 3.—~The British steam : ' 254 trylng mm;k‘ 'm':::“m'"::“' s | ’Pnrrl-h. manager of the Commercial | LONCON, SR%, S8 Deen sunk. The|when it was called upon to register| It 18 pretty close to summer conditions | court for striking and knocking down b . A . onrd club’s bureau of publicity, after |8t Oswald was In the service of the| out In Nebraska, according to reports to| Mrs. P, Perkins, 1710 North Twenty-fifth established “teelf upon a more solid | British_government and presumably sunk | 44 degrees above zero at the early Along the river for a Als-|street. Mrs. Perkins is in delicate health. Watch tomorrow evening’s edition of this ; with a continuity and rapidity seldom, if | years, Counting South Omaha an@ Dun-|jng" sour -tom-cnl uncnmtorn:h lm-l» | J ] ever, squaled. Indeed, In sOme respects | dee, consolidated into Greater Omaha | iIng of fullness after eating, sleepless- l G § nothing In history parallels the recent | . | 1ess than a year Ao, by using the census | Ness OF tired fesiing, yol showid DEOTEL | paper. n course °-f pl’eparafion. reatest § phendmena! éxpansion in national activi- | fisurss of five yedrs ago and adding only | {ng the funotions that nature intended ’ ’ ties, wnd 1t 18 significant of the existing the mormal increase in population for the | Delay often resuits in & rapid undermin- Cl Sal Qf M and Y g M state of the public mind that the advance period of five years, the present popula- l;'r‘,fi :‘ m:vr::l‘xll?- ;’f":x.'r:.l‘lh".‘l‘llllt‘:::\'n‘p earance a e en S Oun en s 1s regarded as more than ephemeral. tion was estimated at T8.312: Wheneves the stomach can take care of | Clothin B i Thursda M i t 8:00 Unprecedented Achievements. Another table of figures was then oo food and properly distribute nourishment | © ns Y ormin al . fled 16 show thi wih of Omah to all ta of the body—a healthy oon- ‘ Even the most cursory survey of the ot e £t » 3 dition {n sure to result. Stomach suffer- 0' l k § commereial world brings to light & num: business and population in a period of | ars ahould avold harsh purgatives, whioh CIOCK. R ¥ ber of achlevements wholly lacking in| the Inst twelve years. Twelve years was | gonerally serve to -l_’rlvnlt' the trouble, 3 ) h the. Bebia ' of and promptiy give TABLERS STOM: precedent. As a matter of fact. it has | chosen as. the basis of comparison be- | X0 PRUR AR L trial ' Being abso- [ S Sotonn 1h¢ Suttam $o Sl oF S | eause_the first records of any rellability [ lutely free from harmful and habit ] were kept twelve years ago. This was | forming drugs and contalning the best high records as something natural and quite to be expected, while In several instances actual performances are out- stripping the most enthusiastic predic- tions. All the traditional indices of pros- perity are present: during October, for the first time in the annals of the coun- try, output of pig Iron reached 3,000,000 tons; export trade, due largely, but not wholly, to the magnitude and urgency of war demands, continues of unmatched proportions; bank clearings have touched figures never attained and rallroad earn- | ings show a remarkable enhancement of the earming power of the common car- riers, with some leading systems report- ing maximum revenues. Moreover, con- vincing evidence of the broadening con- sumptive demands In many directions is | foupd In the rise In Dun's Index number 1 of * wholesale commodity prices to the highedt level tn several decades, while the statistics of commercial fallures re- flect a notable recovery from the strains apparént during the early months of the year. RAY GOULD. known acid neutralizer, combined with ure, soothing, strengthening and he: ng ingredients acientifically combin thelr_action while mild, cannot help ing_beneficial to any stomach sufferer. TABLER'S BTOMACH TABLETS are s0ld on & positive guarantee of satisfac- tion of your money refunded by all re- liable drugglsts. 1f your druggist should happen to be out of them, he will gladiy 5ol the year 148 Show Immense Gain The table shows that since then bank clearings have Increased 1il per cent; bank deposits, 183 per cent; manufactur- ing, 87 per cent; wholesaling, 149 per cent; postoffice receipts, 193 per cent; bullding, 23 per cent; value of bullding permits, Proposed' New Hotel Will Not Be Built The proposed new hotel building f6r the northeast corner of Sixteenth and Douglas streets, 1s. not to be bulit. P. H. Philbin, owner of the Bohlits hotel, who obtained an option on the property at Sixteenth and Douglas from John [ Kennedy, owner, with a view to building & blg hotel there, hag allowed the time of the option to expire without conclud- ing the lease. Mr. Kennedy has renewnd the leases of the present tenants of the building for another year. BUY HOSE AND MOTORS FOR FIRE DEPARTMENT The city council directed the city clerk to advertise for 10000 reet of fire hose and one or more pleces of motor appar- atus for the fire department. This ex- penditure will be made out of the special levy authorized for fire department equip- ment. them for you-—Advertisement L ALY IWMIHHMIIMIIIIMMMIIIINIIMIHI | 3 | Blllion Bushels of Wheat. l With the exception of the cotton iIn- ; dustry, the last year, the review says, ‘was the most suocessful in agriculture in the history of the country. For the Tt s VOTe il ti?lrlt “'were broken. e vaes 0 70 ot roerord W-!tlh f)a l:ld iine” R N g TR e o AT (e g ::‘l-" :wm -.-'l. “was entirely | Try this! Hair gets beantiful, : i o e i 1 geps| AT dad thick in \ :r“; time hampered trading to quite an |, > 1If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and Is radiant with life; has an Incomparable softness and is flufty and lustrous, try Dahderine, Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it immediately dle- solves every particlé of dandeuff; you cannot have nice, heavy, healthy hair it you have dandruff, This destructive seurf robs the hair of its lustre, i #trength and its very life, and If not over- come it produces & feverishness and itch- ing of the sealp; the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the halr falls qut fast, If your halr has been neglected and 18 thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too olly, Ret a 2-cent bottle of Knowlton's Dan- derine at any drug store or toilet counter; apply a little an directed ana ten minutes after you will say this was the best in- vestment you ever made. We sincerely believe, regardless of everything else advertised, that if you desire soft, lustrous, beautiful halr and lots of it—mo dandruff-no itching scalp and no more falling hair—you must use Knowlton's Dapferine. If eventually— why not now?—Adyertisement. Monetary Conditfons, ‘Touching monetary conditions, the re- view says: “During another epochal fted SERIES 17 FOUR it *845 SIX FIFTY HORSE POWER $1050 | SEVEN-PASSENGER In announcing the new SERIES 17 Studebaker Cars, Studebaker for the year, the States has made unprecedented 1 toward a position of international K , mot only in ¢ommerce, but ‘also in finance. Though economic eveats way, i b " that. those outbreak of the great this country is con- ts of 1915, unlike of 1914, wete al- constructive aide. a year in which having fully recov- shock and stralns of the over a wider “that Yollowed the " In 80 far as the ldst twelve months presented iy i RHEUMATISM GUIUUEREB fifth time in its history, conclusively proves its ability to produce high class | Pl Iron Output (tonw) 1l6.... 2MON At songer rheumation with o cars at moderate prices. weakeping baths, or in e_usual ments recomm rheumatism, ' 'L Shut your eyes aad sy ‘‘lmpossible,’’ but put me 1o the test. 91,660,000 867,901,000 $1,614,944,000 . L674.619,000 § 300,181,000 Plenty of Cars in 5 « Sight to Move the “Grain to Market While there is stilt n shortage of cars for earrying grain, it is not as acute as | it whs a couple of weeks ago. According ' 10 the railroad frelght men, large numbers of cars that contained goods for export 1 4nd were held on sidings In cities and towns along the Atantic coast have becn | Unlomded and have come back into the | #ervice. These cars are being shunted as apidly as possible into the graln pro- ducing territory to be loaded for market ! The mild winter has relieved the car | conjestion proposition during the last | month, Heretofore, during cold winters, J Jarge numbers of freight cars have been impressed into the coal carrying business, 7 g“m with the bins of the dealers all 4 and no heavy demand for fuel, these have been turned back into the trade. As & result, this has added Bxports, 11 months, me.. Imports, 11 months, :;Ii 14 < Qommefelal Defaults, 1915... 3 1914 Incorporating a series of refinements in the general design, these cars stand supreme as the QUALITY cars of the season—typical exemplars of the highest development of automobile production by one of the world’s = ablest and most highly organized manufacturing institutions. E Greatly increased volume coupled with Studebaker’s unexcelled manu- facturing facilities and experience in designing and manufacturing motor cars of the highest quality have e-abled us to offer these new Series 17 models at attractively low prices. PR GAS I But it has long been axiomatic in the industry that Studebaker QUAL- ITY is never to be measured by Studebaker PRICE—and the new SERIES 17 cars are only to be considered on standards of quality applying to cars for which you are willing to pay much higher prices—as the highest achieve- ments of this GREAT manufacturing institution that for 64 years has held the esteem of the world as a QUALITY manufacturer. E TR OSSR 11 We urge every man who expects to buy a car, no matter at what price, to see the new SERIES 17 models before he decides. More than 3,000 of the Studebaker Dealers are prepared to give demonstrations NOW, over heard ur mose) nd ot 1 ot me brove without expense 1o you s Badtumg of cars t i i Lat me wend you '|Iilfll‘ cha & trial treat. "‘,:"‘_ wkadn Sl w4 bang GG M ‘E;.flffl““‘."f.“..“.'if‘,fl..'.l g g milrpad and grain men are anticipating | = o send me your name and the test reatment J - * movement of grain rrom now on. | will be st you &t .Nll: .::l.l sond you thie, | They assert that y of the whea! o South Bend, Ind. Detroit, Mich. Walkerville, Ont. 1 sending wrice fo il \hes ior this ntage of R. WILSON AUTOMOBILE CO. 2556-2560 FARNAM STREET ANTED! A M. Weddar, Furn ture = a

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