Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 2, 1916, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

OMAHA, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1916 11 ) \pf | NEW ADVERTISING MANAGER AT | ] r |Building Pe mi : e o rverad o b e o cond M Di l;l~ Go Th6 “AgWtorh Nole UM | iy i p 3 lgg %él;gEAlé)SEEANT g T !l’(r)fi{lYAgN%}S{llPr? [;rEHR[‘iL - Sllil()ngI(]‘;l%llt: (Fain | NONPAREILS TO STAGE ag:)m];)efaénglelafieetie:g FEBRUARY 1S BUSY MONTH BIG ATHLETIC CARNIVAL FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS | During February the bullding Mayor Dahlman left yesterday for - - tions were SR80, as against The Nonparell tug-of-war team defeated st 1 ih to attend the National Defense . " S asal Ashnetons ShndlE: ta esday | Bt Loulh te ¢ o efense | Registrar of Deeds Harry Pearce pointe Little Lad Did Not Fear Sickness, | Small Proportion of Vessels Plying |the correeponding month last [ . Fvitny meniny | Conference of mayors, which will be held | out & prosperous condition in the vicinity i but Wanted His School Rec- Between Amerioa and Europe | “eioi: ror the first two months of | the Nonparells will stage thelr first ath- | I TdAY and Saturday. The mayor 8/of Omaha In his report for February | Menaced 11918 28 The new First Nattonal bank | let's earntval The prostam will consiat of | ® Member of & committee of eleven| During tne short month just passed 1 ord Kept Clean. [ o : ot 2 D et o by & double | AMerican mayors who signed the call |there were 0 deeds fiied, 1,08 Instru - | ‘ ““r““" T e A [ et ome g reia eamn. \Woodimen | fr the conferance. John T. Yates |menta of all descriptions, and receipts MAY HAVE SPECIAL RULING | ‘MOST OF THEM ARE UNARMED |total u s S8 e, Non Wi | Thomas 1. Nolan, General George Har-|totaled $1.48. Total consideration of | — MENT BNRANG | 2 : oL 1 ®.. ries, John A. Rine and C. W, Hull will | deeds amounted to $1,215,76.73. Last vear One of the tragedies of a boy's life was NEW YORK. Mar. 1—only «|/MPROVEMENT BONDS ARE furnish the other. There will Be wrestiing am will |18ave today for the eonference |the total consideration for February enacted in all of its terribleneas Tuesday {small proportion of the shipping oL FOR A PREMIUN | O e iy Seoin Cornellus Vanderbilt, chalrman of the |amounted to only $5%9,543.08 | | - ew York Defense committee of 1,000 - mfternoon at the Mason actiool. During iving. Batwee: | e rankid New York 1 committee of 1 the regular examination of the children |Plving between American and BUro- | o\ ouncll awarded o Remick, | Read Hea Want Adv for Profit. Use | Wil address the conference on Friday| It takes but a minute of time to save by & school nurse one of the boys of the pean ports—a fleet of armed Itallan |yoages & Co. of Mew York $20,00 sewer, | (hem for results and Saturday. Ie will lead the discus-|doliara when you read The Bee Want Ad " . v merchantmen—appears to be men- |$0,00 park and $3%,00 street Improve - slon Saturday morning, when the army | eolumns. seventh B class was discovered to have : | A A bad headache and elight fever. Offi- aced by the new Teutonic submarine |ment bonds, running twenty years and | GRAIN RECEIPTS LIGHT will be considerod — cially he was “sick,” and, according to policy which goes Into effect at mid- | P*aring 4 per cent interest. The pre AND PRICES MOVE UP | Th'* evening Mayor Dahiman wil at- | MISSOURI RIVER NOT \ N \ | 5 r {mium offered by the successful bidder tend an executive mesting of the eleven o4 g Bl i night | waw $16,15.08 for the entire lot of bonds | mayors who signed the call, this on OPEN FOR NAVIGATION and not allowed to return until he pre- | bbl, Britich aad Pach ships that Bave Grain receipts on the Omaha market to be held in the office of Mayer Kiel| sented a certificate of good health from | a phystctan. (arrived here and at other Atiantic | AGED WOMAN BADLY HURT |1 lnt and srics vo 1 cont per bushel| o &1 o | n'how fras froim 154 Ohe narbe i WON *' The boy was Charles Rees. Up to “ml | ports during the last year have car- | BY FALL ON PAVEMENT/| \heat receipts were twenty-eight car SPECIAL INDOOR GOLF not begin operation between Omaha and tragic hour he had not been absent or | {ried no guns. Seven Itallan ships | . londs and sales were made at 8 centa to Decatur for some weeks, it in sald, be ;nrdy this school year. He was striving | vith naval guns mounted on their ; “‘“"":"“"d“:"':""' ""“: had ‘_“-”"5“‘ $.08 % “"""5""‘ l‘""“‘ :"‘j‘:"""" ::“ g ‘MATC”‘ EN{DS IN A TlE\ ‘;::v-n vh--‘:vw :-l 11"1 ”\'-' ;Hmlm:,- “-l ot one o . B ot enteenth and Sahler streets, slipped and | cars of corn, and it sl¢ o 81 centa special competition for women play-| Decatur, The Ada Belle o ‘"r\‘:: -:\s :‘:H':P:'lf"":'.:l"::::n;rh‘:n(:’::] |after decks, and manned by trained |,y " ") pavement at Forty SRttt and | per bastielc THAR Wers BUL S8’ Gkrh 'of | ads onty: W, Nel &t MY |‘|nrk‘n”\npdnnr‘ e Tore ot Chh Baet T rlveruh: ] the close of each school year. He scored {crews from the Italian navy, have | pjne streets and broke her left hip. She| ats. and they sold at 8% to 41 cents per | golf course Tuesday. Mrs, Allen Parmer | twean Omaha and Decatur last summer 3 & perfect attendance record last school been plying between New York and | was taken to the county hospital, where 1shel and Mre. Howard Goodrich tied for first | are atill In winter dock at Decatur. \ year, and was well on the way this year. | Mediterranean ports since the first N When the nurse brought the boy into Principal _hristiancy's office his chief of the year, and one, similarly armed, ut in ort Arthur, Tex. r concern was not of nis condition, but of 4 ,"n_ “" s l‘ : t A T s [ his attendance record. The nurse asked A & ve r-l her Ttallan lners in '. : the principal it absence under such cir- | CHARLES KOETHEN York trade are understood to have been ‘ cumstances would mar the boy's record, | —— . | measurea for armament to be placed on end the prineipal reluctantly replied: “An their next arrival at home ports. Of the 4 | P ioms o ek -t Versatlle Ad Man {latter, the steamship San Glovanni salled brakt Aowh a6E Aeled: SNt betore the at noon today for Naples and Genoa. nirse Jand -peisiolfal. It was mare than Gomes from Ea,St to | The San Giovanni carries only freight on his little heart could stand. | "h; mx; LT & 1t may be that a special ruling may be B d ] s | ench an ritial passenger ships i obtained for this case, but the principal | ranaels tores |from New York now at sea and due to A is doubtful. In any Gvent, it was real pass through the war zone are as follows: tragedy for Charles Rees. French line steamship Lafayetto, Feb Charles Koethen, who has just been \ 2 2 B yIts ister shi) | appointed advertising manager for the |TUATY 26 for Bordeaux = D | | ————— ; Stebben Of Omaha | Brandeis stores, hails from Greater New :h’_";"‘::" February 3§ for the same port: | Yor! i . | steamships Cretic, February 20, York, coming here from Abraham &} . "o o0 verpool, and Tuscan, ' . . | lees Testlmony in <;“‘lr:‘u;l 'lhn\'flr‘n'-alull dspartwient wtory 18| T OE08 0L laesaw. Mo usa Weib A Wdehen began his career in the |$6°n On any of these ships when they Reg&l’d tO the U- P- advertising field more than sixteen years | 1oparted. nor any reported to the col- ago and attained marked success both |'éctor of the port. TOPEKA, Kan. March 1.—Finanelal |in advertising agency and in department | Mustn’t Book Passemgers. Watters concerning the Unlon Pacific rafl- | store work. He has been with the Royal [ PITTSBURGH. March 1—Inatructions way were reviewed today in the hearing | Baking Powder company, Jules P. Storm, |have been received by the Pittaburgh before the Kansas Public Utllitles com-|Charles Austin Bates, Tobias Bros. agents of the White Star steamship line mission, in which railroads in Kansas| For many years he was the official |not to book any passengers for the White are askinz for an Increase to 3 cents a|press agent of the Sphinx club, one of | Star liners Lapland, Baltie and Adriatic ¥ infle tn the intrastate passenger rate.|the largest mowepaper mdvertising clubs | Which eafl from New York betwen March 8. C. Stebben of Omaha, assistant to the | in the world, and his work in this lino |§ and 29, Unlon Pacific “auditor, testified that the|was widely quoted. The notice advises agents to endeavor rg1d had paid 10 per cent dividends on| My Koethen is a well known figurs in |to Influence persons contemplating voy~ & common stock in eleven of ‘tha | New York and metropolitan advertising |a8es to Europe to take passage on Ameri- thirteen vears. In 1814, he sald, the div-|oiroles, both for his diversified work and |can line boats. No reason for the aotion idends dropped to § per cent. It was|goCo on e T LTy is known here. brought out that in addition to paying Durl eriod of more than eleven 10 per cent dividends the Unfon Pacific| -urns & Period ©F W v had in thirteen years, 1902 to 1915, added |7°®"S Mr. Kosthen was associated with U_Boats SOW Mlnes 950,000,000 to ita surplus. the late Justin McCarthy in the adver- s 7 o " tising office of Abraham & Straus aa 0 D l T Tnion Taitc wug mvested money | 008, 08, 8 Mmoo | Off Dover, Declare including the Oregon Short Line, Oregon | the death of Justin MoCarthy the man- | Maloia Survivors & Washington Navigation company, New | 88ership passed to him. ] York Central and Illinois Central, A| The Abraham & Straus advertising hes | —_— summary of the annual repoft of the|Often been looked upon as a model of | [ONDON, Mar. 1—That German sub- Unfon Pacific submitted by Mr. Stebben |department store work, but Mr. Koethen | marines have been sowing mines off showed 10 per cent dividends for all but|promises that when things get running | Dover was the bellef expressed,today by iwo years, 8 per cent for those years;|smoothly for him in Omaha thers will be [ Ralph Foster of Kansas and other sur- $5,000000 added to the surplus; special [no better advertising anywhere than that | vivors of the Maloja disaster, including dividend of $74,000,000 in 1814. A state-|which will be shown in the Brandels ads. | some of the officers of the ship. ment of the operating revenues, expenses| “This is my first trip Into the great| The fact that a number of disasters| and taxes for the railroad for thirteen|west, and I like it," he said. “Little old | have occurred in the neighborhood of vears was read at the hearing. 'The New York is all right, but it seemed to | Dover during the last two Sundays is s statement showed that the net operating |me I had never expanded my lungs prop- | considered in some quarters in London as ). revenue for 1902, after paying taxes, was|erly and had a good breath of real free- possible evidence that German subma- $11,96261201. For 1915 it was $19,000,42954 [ aom till T struck the rolling prairies of | rines, knowing that a number of boats Net operating revenues in 1915 were $1,- |tne west'" clear for forelgn ports Saturdays, have 067,661.68 larger than in 1902, an increase PR taken advantage of that faot to creep of approximately 64 per dent. The hear- in as near the coast as possible in the Tile drainage~ will it pay you? Every good farmer knows that tile drainage restores wet land. But quite a number of farmers have proved that it also benefits land that’s dry and hard. They say it brings larger yields—yields that are uniform from year to year. It pays others. But will it pay on your farm? What’s the theory? Does it work? Can you tell beforehand a;:Proximately what underdrain- ing will cost? Is it a sound investment or is it a gamble? These are some of the things you want to know before you sink money in the ground—and they’re some of the things told you by a man who knows what he’s talking about, in Drains to Fight Wetness and Drought, today in 3 ing will be resumed tomorrow with Mr. Dundee Youngsters night time and discharge cargoes of ex- i Stebben on the stand. The hearing prob- plosives. o ably will it k. In the opinion of Mr. Foster, lifeboats |, | sevewmiae; Make Perfect Soore | in e coimion ot ur, roner, trerdee The COUNTRY Yost Announces the | In School Attendance mines e ihe siipe aimost invariadiy insufficiently drilled for quick action and Purchase of MOre | me puns ana tesshers ot the axth | the boats cannot be lowered when a ship grade of the Dundes school on February | heels over on its sife as the Maloja did. Telephone Property 1 began a “perfect attendance campalgn.” | Mr. Foster had a thrilling experience. Thoss who have this perfect record for | He was afloat in the icy water and om the last month are: upturned boats-an hour before he was MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Mar. 1.—The | jogephine Burroughs, otte Todd, rescued by a trawler. Northwestern Telephone Bxchange com- | Colleen ¥oy, Aanv:;:; Aberorombie, R s 1 pany of Minneapolls, in & deal involving | Pauline Johnson, natte Beall, F h W-l S k P nore than $1000,000, has purchased tho |Frette Lesile '~ Dorothy BeeSle, renc ill pea Dhes of the Northern Telephone company | uvid McGahey, ' Charles Clavton, il . . in. N rtin, anche Hamilton, U M S I Xorts, DNBS ab# & nepotitig o |forafianin. - - BERCNSies pon Mail Seizures another line that extends from Nortn (LooMaseey, g Dakota into Montans, according to an- |Tgis Smalley, Harold Powsll, S nouncement here today by President C. E. | Marjorie Pancoast, Ronald Rockwell, | LoNDON, Mar. 1.—The Anglo-French - > | 4 Yost of Omaha. Gordon Pray, Brelyn Sigler, answer to the protest of the United = 0 : F. P. Stoltze, Minneapolia lumberman, |Leona For, . Miriam Wil ENAS RS RIS s 08 R0 TR | “m. and Victor Noble, Minot, S. D. were |Hagel Snyder, George Youl transit between America and Europe will | principal stockholders of the Northern | The fofiowing were not tardy, aithough | he delivered in the immediate future, ac- | 1 L Telephone company and are sald to have |compelled by sickness to be absent: cording to official announcement tonight. | A received 360,000 for their holdings. Trene Haselton, Richard Koch, The reply will take the form of & Joseph McMardin, Lgon Ray, Teachers Win Vistory [Hordie ot | s il v o Fresh Air for Farm Animals A Cheap Water System : P30 ———“‘L—"‘A CE i ool g e harwpolty g Sanitation is the keynote of modern A modification of the farm home In Fight to Organize | pUNDEE ro%é's‘ gfivggbfl% O | Washington. “An- identcal memorendum farm-building construction, and fresh water system worked out by the I R e R S TO REGIS WRRLINE B Sther IR oyt air is the keynote of sanitation. This Government. It can be made and {cachers won & victory In thelr campaten | Residents of Dundee who wish to vots| TERMS OF THE CONTEST [ is an article for the farmer who be- installed for from ten to twenty-five for organization of unions when the state | will be "1Vey| an opportunity to register AT CENTRAL HIGH GIVEN Iieves in helping his ]ivestock to keep doum. B supreme court today declined to dism! | Saturday when Blection Commissioner : | i a Cleveland case Involving the question | Moorhead will have a rnr:-eI oll ele'r’kl d‘:ed e“\':;: ‘A‘l:::w‘r!;nll::;h;{y‘.r;‘{ :l::;rly ;::y hefllthy. It tells how to phn a venti- v A "v.'w;:::" legal right to affiliate with labor ;-;:ntl-:::; ln(( ht‘:n“;trem:: IM:"“‘:;‘ tor |18 in charge of - the Daughters of tha 1 llting system. And Don,t Miss The sult was instituted nearly two|Dundee folks to register, but mow that|American Revolution essay contest, an- | vears ago’by a Cleveland taxpayer to|they are a part of Greater Omaha thev"‘"""‘:“’h”"‘ ‘]“e "u'm" on ‘un origin of | compel Superintendent J. M. H. Frederick | must get their names on the books |r\"h“clh "a pupl] -‘wllL»‘lwm- \:lHI be limited to reinstate six teachers whom he had |they would vote at the coming primaries “,: ‘"l :";.“vl: ne "l' u"mmllm in llsmissed on order of the Board of Edu-| or at the regular election. jihe ote Aving a population of over this week’s installment of Diana of The Lure of the Land the Moorland, the story by Louis cation after they had been active in the g Yy T i lt's high time Uomebody Wnl'ned Tr.cy; the l.t”' .dditi(’l‘.to A Glme srganization of a grade teachers' club. | COUNTY ASSESSOR SAYS | — back-to-the-landers that there are un- and a Gamble, about lmplepent HITCHCOCK AND LANSING HE HAS FOUND CUSTOMER s 1! scrupulous land dealers ; that farming dealers, their credits and creditors; Meam== " \ONFER ON POLISH RELIEF | UPon the trait or scase errit, pias G“ Rld of is not a romance, but a business; that On the Road of Progress, by Herbert o O e . a business farmer doesn’t put all his Quick ; A Stove-Heated Hotbed ; The ] WASHINGTON, Mar. 1—Polish reliet { Merritt has a habit of fllling his dis Pll's a' "nm' capital into land, and doesn’t over- Buff Ofpinl'on-. by JUdge W. H. sans wore 0e' ghict o1 & sentwenes | ey winders Vi amtnee o st | ¢ e PRV RN equip. The Country Gentleman says Card; Tomatoes in Cool Climates; ¥ Semator Hitchcock of Nebraska. Ger- |lection of dogs. -:lrh :::-;;r:; to X;Pu.m':*:&n;‘ufim’ this and more. How to Balance a Ration for Farm TR o it e S dourmart |14 b 0, T AR e Swiok s GRtan id of Ceonniagns States to relleve destitution in Poland |tomer,” declared Mr. Counsman, put- 4 from Operation. . . orty-Dollar Cottonsee eal; ing I o LN s e et | T e ekt e Rlectrip Kighta from Wafer 19 9hook ¢ Sea. kow Sores Kavay. Power ; : And the regular farm The ‘‘water power’’ is a stream six inches wide, that fills a six-inch pipe and home departments ¢ e T, S e, " [VOTERS WHO HAVE CHANGED Pty : Don't even think of an operatios Plockade lines. Senator Hitchcock indi- | RESIDENCE MUST REGISTER | piies: Remember what the oid ity cated after leaving the department that | | doctor said: Any part of the body out if the British reply was favorable he | SNy s Song forever. One or twoap- ) “ .| plications of Pyramid Pile Treatusent would {ntroduce a bill proposing a con- | Flection Commissioner Moorhead an-| Rug%iyiy Oy FFTARNe, Eie Trestment i : gressional appropriation to ajd the relfet | nounces that it will be necossary for all| n @ romarkably short Sime. the. sem: only three inches deep at low water. camtalin who have changed their addresses sinc gested veins are reduced to normal and ‘m- last election to heve such addresses| JOU Will soon be all right again. Try | this remarkable Tre ment. id every- changed on the registration books. He| where at drug sto Send for a free | says that there are about 2,000 who have | !rial package end prove beyond ques- CONNOLLEY IS AGAIN HEAD But he hitched it up to a dynamo and Pt it does the trick. He tells how, and OF SOUTHEAST IMPROVERS | so chansed, and that they should lose no| SoB i 18 the right treatment for your gives costs. — time in getting the records straight if ® pile truss. B ; The dove of peace fluttered over what | th®Y desire to vote |* sor siie Tres tria {canrment. Thon you . " : predicted would be a tempestuous - an got the reguiar package for 8 age o pring rasnions 3 ) ~I|::'“;:ll“:1ln":‘le Southeast Improvement | MISSING IOWA GIRL enother necdiess minute. Write now, % P h s No wild s0sne of carnase desscrated the IS FOUND IN OMAHA Free Package Coupon page for the farm mother —t | flagwtones of the Bancroft achool base: — duiigia. P home dressmaker. A number of ment. Naught but little words of kind- | Through the efforts of the Omaha policc l?nmm Drug Company, 580 Pyra- A s 2 g4 were heard emanating from the |department Alma Hill, who had beer | | Zi Blds. Marshall, Mich, Windly attractive, simple patterns illustrated f oy fnembers as they peacefully re-elected Dr. | missing from her home In Glenwood, Tn. | | Kreatisent ot ohce by mail FREE, and described. | T James Connolley as president, E. E, Clos- | for the last five months, was located in plain wrapper, so 1 can prove its sox ecretary . taans. | Oimabs ' Posnda) o . * splendid results. 5 rer. Patrick nanimously | home. Her mother is dying and her ap | ) chosen vice president, as were Messrs. |peal (0 see her daughter prompted : | Clcason and Oliver only vote by |c¢ zen of Glenwood to make a specl Street 3 ballot was taken for the office of presi- | trip to Omaha to help the pol n dent search

Other pages from this issue: