Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 16, 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)

RRNILE PRODUCTION HOWN IN PICTURES. ies Used to Show How Baby Se- i es Its Milk—University Ex- | pert in Charge. | afternoon to Magdelinia Dueholm | Mathieson s 82 yei ol o 8 PIOCTURED n is 82 years of age and has eon an employe In tha city hall for - twenty-four successive years. He Is at tion plctures, showing methods of pragent fn the license department in the teing and distributing milk, were | ciry clerk's office at the Baby Health show yesterday | 1y, bride gave her age as “over 18" 0on by courtesy of the Alamito { whon the license was obtained ary Dafry company. Charles ¥ Mathieson went over to the court house r, president of the company, and | Tycsday afternoen without saying a Harriat 8. MacMurphy, hostess at | \org to any of his friends. He oblained plant, were the speakers. The Ala- | 41,4 jjcense and a few moments later tho is aleo conducting an exhibit of ified milk foods for bables at the v show, with ‘Merton Wright, bac logist of the University of Wisdonsin harge. he afterrioon’ program was in charge | th soclal science department of the aha Woman's club. Mrs. D. G. Craig- hostessea. Tonight there will be a public health ass meeting at the exhibit, with Mrs. . C. Bumney presiding. The speakers vill be Mayor J. C. Dahiman, Health ommissioner R. W, Connell, Henry W unn, chief of police: Dr. H. M. Mc- anahan and Colofel J. M. Banister, nited States army medical corps, re- Slred. U5 Mrs. Draper Smith, Mrs. James Rich- Brdson, Miss Edna Wilson and Miss Helen Avery of the Young Women's Christian pssociation and Mrs., Stephen Davies and Mrs, Charles A Goss of the Association Jof Collegiate Alumnae will be hostesses. , This Suit Breaks ; . All Records for Causes of Action It is estimated that 1f each of the causes of action in a suit filed in federal | court Wednesday were to be_triéd separ- ately the suit would require about three years to try. ‘The plaintiff is the Nye-Schneider-Fow- ler company of Fremont and the defend- ‘Y ant s the Chicago & Northwestern Rail- i‘ way company. ¥ The plaintiff cites that since February , 1912, it has shipped over the defendant rallroad 691 cars of grain and that a quantity of grain has been lost in transit from each car. Damages are asked in the sum of $5,640.23. \ Seven closely typewritten pages are covered with the dates of shipment of each car, number of car, name of rall- road owning car, amount of grain miss- jng from car, and so on. No other suit involving nearly so many causes of action has been filed in the federal court here within recollection of the oldest employe. j | \ Moorhead to Keep | Open Until the Clock ‘ Hits Five Saturday ! ~ Eleotlon Commissioner - Moprhead an- nounces that his office will be open until 5.p. .m. Saturday for receipt of filings. ‘The eleventh-hour rush is now on and & considerable movement is expected in'the direction of the court house during the next few days. Saturday will be the last day for filings. ."!'; The election commissioner says he feels § that § o'clock will be late enough to keep % his office open, but intimated that should o any belated patriot wish to file between 3 6 and 12 p. m. on the closing day his filing would not be refused. Saturday also will be the last day for the April primaries for registration of new voters who have just taken out their papers. The last day of general registra- tion and revision for the April primary will be on April 8, or ten days before the ry, as prescribed by law, * Bull Moosers Are ' Invading City Hall The city hall is the center of consid- erable political activity these days. The democratic donkey does not haye the place all to himself, mot much. The “bull moose” breaks into these sacred precincts now and then and gives the municipal building the appearance of a political menagerie. W. J. Broatch and Dennis Cunningham were seen in conference with R.. B. Howell in the city water office. The meeting of this triumvirate of moosers P was sald to have been in the interests of Mr. Howell's bull moose machina- tions, When Mr. Howell emerged from the meeting a city hall habitue asked, “Are you passing out cigars these days ! “Oh, .no, we are: just saving souls, that's all,” replied the admiral of the water plant, ' TOURIST FINDS RELIABLE INFORMATION ON ROADS On @ cross-country tour from Chicago i Omaha, the Automobile club in this city is the only one where he found re- Hable and authentic road reperts, B. B. in the tourists’ ledger at club headquar- ters tn the Hotel Fontenelle. Mr. Andel- sons home s in Chicago. Road conditions in Illinols and eastern lowa were characterized by Mr. Andel- son as “terrible.”” Along many highways, | " he sald, the mud was so deep that even farmers could not get through with their horses and wagens. | ‘ The Chigago motorist will tour to Sloux City from here, and from that point to Neligh and North Platte. % APE MAN STOPS SOLOMON ] FROM. COMMITTING SUICIDE A. J. Bolomow., who is held at the county Jail awaiting a hearing by the #rand jury, tried to commit sufoide in his cell late Tuesday aftérnoon by cut- ting his throat with a razor which he 5 had stolen from the barber at the jail, £ Solomon was thwarted in his attempt, { howgver, by Arthur Hauser, the famous } “ape man,” who leaped upon him, caus- ing the razor to slip from his throat { and cutting the artery in his right wrist. i #ne man was taken to the county hos- 4 pital, where his wounds were dressed, | STEALS TWENTY DOLLARS, 1S FINED TWENTY-FIVE L. Rosler, 219 North Twelfth street, | charged with the robbery of 32 from J, P. Larson, Minden, Neb., was araigned * in police court and fined $25 and costs THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1916. Oldest City Hall Employe Surprises |(QULD STOP HALF Friends and Weds at the Age of 82| . - (p BIBY DRATHS John Mathieson, the oldest employe in " Dr. F. 8. Clarke Gives Some Practi- ‘T health department of any city Is in direct proportion to the infant mortal ity of that city,” he declared Shonld Prevent Diseases. To prevent diseases in bables s bet ter than to oure them after they have them, We should begin at the very foun dation and do all in our power to make 1 ::::-:-" baby can't be expected to resist ADo]lar-Meal For ke m Teatin mer waby. hey teea them| Five Cents. The most tos much and tos frequently.” | expensive foods are quite Clarke K U often entirely lacking in food value, They do not huild the city hall both in point of years and continues service, was wed Tuesda marriage serviee was performed b County Judge Crawford. Mathieson appeared for work five min. utes late vesterday and when an ex planation was demanded by his fellow omployes, who never before heard of bim beinz late, he confessed Mathieson 14 one of the oldest Danlsl d presided with Mesdames J. H. Du- | pioneers of Omaha. The other night he | t, J. C. Dahlman, F. W. (‘nrmlrhnnl.l sttended the forty-sixth amnual gmags B. Towle and Elmer Thomas acting | querade ball of the Danish Brotherhéod. He has atténded every one of the fofty- six without a miss They newly wedded couple will liye a 208 South Tenth street. Mr. Mathleson has been married twice vears ago. y Y | | b v JOUIN 2eASETRN0T Petors, the firet vontug® Being (fy-ctre Visiting Nurses Plan Campaign to Fight Tuberculosis The tubercular situation in Omaha and how to meet it was discussed at the board meeting of the Visiting Nurse assoctation yesterday. The percentage of tuber cular cases is much larger than it should be, according to Miss Bess Randall the superintendent, and the assoclation will exert every effort to meet the situation. The tent for tubercular ‘patients which was at the county hospital last year has been moved to the South Side, where a mother and her two little daughters, aged 2 and 7, all of them’ suffering from the lung trouble, are being housed. For the first time since its organization the Visiting Nurse association has been instrumental in securing admittance of its patients to state institutions. Ome in- sane woman was taken to the Lincoln asylum, accompanied by a nurse; another woman was admitted to the Kearney Consumptives' hospital, while her three children were taken to the Riverview Home, and a 9-month-old baby, also con- sumptive, is being cared for at the county hospital During the last month 91 calls were made on 28 patients. Twenty-eight were maternity cases. Thieves Get Small Amount from Safe Which is Unlocked The following thefts have been reported to the police within the last twenty-four hours: 2 J. B, Mason, 61 Paxton block, was yisited by thieves, who stole $17 from the safe, which was unlocked. S o _Kloak, 1913 F. ;a8 that his room en y a Jk thief, who stolé .an overcomt con- . Paul Bogard, engineer at the Sacred Heart convent, Thirty-sixth and Burt streets, reports the theft of tools and a gold watch. X H. X. Anderson, 1915 California street, is minus clothes and §%, as is Elmer Boyer, Nineteenth and Davenport streets. Dr. H. L. Karr, 482 Brandeis bullding, was robbed of dental gold to the value of §10. All these robberies occurred after en- trance had been gained to the.above numbers by unlocking the door. SALE OF MARKET STALLS YIELDS MORE THIS YEAR |- The annual sale of stalls at, the city mearket place yielded $i93. The sale last year netted $587. Three cholce 'stalls were sold to the Omaha Fruit Growers assoclation for §300. The highest price pald by a market gar- ‘dener for one stall was $42. . Thirty-two stalls were sold by Market Master Killlan. “Bob’s" Fe_e Graft Tuesday’s pooketing of half of the re- ceipts gave him $33 in addition to his | | 84,000 a year salary. | Applicat'ns 24 papers at $1 at#4 | Date 4 | Mareh 3 [ Mareh 0 March 1 | March 3 March 3 | March 1 | March 1 | March [ | March 1 | Mlarch 0 March B Fleven davs in March,.292 ® 3 YESTERDAY ........ . b4 .’”--m Get a Z-cont bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour g little into your hand and. rub well into the scalp with| the finger tips. By morning most, 1t not all, of this awful scurt will have dis- eppeared. Two or three applications will destroy every bit of dandruff; stop cal Advice to Mothers on the |the bables healthy—and the result wm‘Retail Credit Men | Care ‘of Infants. NEED MORE HEALTH INSPECTION | serve their bables' lives; it {8 not because If the people of the United States spent | neglect |as on baby welfare work as they |do on the prevention of hog cholera the lyes of more bables would be saved, Dr. {on the subject Tiiness in Children." | the morning lectures which are being de- livered by Omaha doctors in connection | with the "Baby Health Week' program, | a1l babies born die in their first year and | that half of these deaths are preventable, | plants, expect them to be slck most of | hrng some 350 delogates to Omaha | He deplored the fact that, in his opinion, | the amount of money spant on the health | enough air. The baby should be taken { department, mot only here. but in prac- | out in the alr every day almost from the {tioally every city m the United States, | date of birth. Leave your house windows Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. You won't | |4s greatly inadequate to the needs of the | open; the fresh air is the best thing In suffer long. 25c. All druggists.—Adver imuscle or supply energy. Measured by the cost of most foods, a breakfast or i ion| luncheon of Shredded Thell‘ QODVCDUOHE Wheat with milk and cream The National Association of Retan | \#8 Worth a dollar—and the | be better men and women An 1l baby is handicapped as in no —— . o Miers 0 50 Thew eone| | S6lo0t Ominha Tor of lack of affection 1t is ignorance and One of the greatest evils is that most bables are pampered too much The American mother bundles her BADY | (pqq on 1n 4o hold: its eoting P by i - : e ot heavy | Credit Men fs to hold its next meeting cost is not over five cents. v up in virtually yarc A yards of heaAv¥ |, Omaha in August of this year. Notlce N ¥. 8. Clarke told an audience of Omaha | clothes—and takes the child out for an| .. just been recelved by the bureau of Two Biscuits will mpplyan mothers in a lecture at the Boyd theater | ‘alring.’ O | the mgth | publicity of the Commercial club from needed ‘How We Can. Prevent In bundling up their children mothers | S. L. Giiffllan of Minneapolls, chairman | . A for & Tt was the third of | think they are looking out for the best|of the board of directors. E. V. barrish | half day’s work or play. Interests of their health; s a matter of | of tue bureau of publicity and J. W | fact, they are only doing them harm Metealfe, secretary of the Associated ¥ Retailers of Omaha, have been working Dr. Clarke nsserted that one-fourth of Bables Need More Alr, for some weeks to secure thia conven- “When you raise bables like hothouss i, for Omaha. It s expected it will Do Something for Your Colds | the time. Modern day bables don't get | At the first sign of a cough or cold take “ | the world for the little fellow. A “hot- | tissment | Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. scalp itching and falling hair.—Advertise- ment. Ohilo, Child Gets Sick, Cross, Feverish if Constipated Look at tongue! Then give fruit laxative for stom- ach, liver, bowels. “‘Qalifornia. Syrup of Figs’ Mother! Your child fsn't naturally cross and peevish. See if tongue 18 coated; this ia & sure sign the Jittle stomach, liver and bowels need a cleansing at once, ‘When _ listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad throat sore, doesn't eat, sléep or act naturally, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, remember, a gentle liver and bowel cleansing should always be the first” treatment given. ‘Nothing equals lifornta Syrup of Before you buy a farm tractor— it behooves you to skin your eyes and approach the matter with exceeding wariness. The business of making small, low-priced tractors is young. But it’s popular. More than a hundred concerns have taken out tractor patents in the last two years. The infant tractor industry today resembles the infant automobile industry of a few years ago. Some manufac- turers have rushed into it blindly. Some tractors will do the work and some will not. Some farmers will suffer. A man who has no ax to grind has been investigating the whole tractor situation. He has learned a gomfileal that you can profitably learn before you loosen up on your tractor money. He tells what he learned in a series of articles—The Tractor—and the first appears today in Tre COUNTRY GENTLEMAN Also in this issue: Andelson declared when he registered | EIGHT SCARLET FEVER c‘sEs ARE REPOBTED #igs” for children's il)s; give a teaspoon- o tul, and fn a few hours all the foul oo selowing. buw Cames ol #ouret| 0¥ e ‘e 1004 formenting. fo0d = oy ) which is clogged in the bowels passes Antonina Pastelio, 1911 Dqsr:..l out of the system, and you have a well Bvelyn Mullen, 418 North Seventeenth. |and playful child again. All children love Harold n, 3216 South Fourth. e A p i R Mildred Buettgenbeck, 1341 South Twen- | side’” cleansing. Directions for bables, O rer” Byrnes, 208 Mason. rviridagingt o e e Keep It handy In your home, A little E at Less Meat given today saves a sick child tomorrow, ut get the genuine. Ask y: And Take Salts | s=eiou o Clina s of LN e 1A s made ¥ . the “California Fig Syrup Company.” If Kidneys Hurt|"—— — Says a tablespoonful of Saltsf s & 3 finshes Kidneys, stopping || ] - %, “8pecially in , Babiense. springtime when TR |l therigor of winter has Meat forms Uric Acid, wlnchi Wwd that the tomic ; excites Kidneys and weak- qualum of ens Bladder. Bating meat regularly eventually pro- duces kidney trouble in some form or | other,- saye-a well-known authority, be- || |cause the uric acid in meat excites the Kidneys, they pecome overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress,” part{eularly backache and mis- ery' in- the Kidnéy region; rheumatic twir, ;o8 sevére headaches, acld stomach, constipation, torpid ilver, sleeplessness, bladder and urfnary: irritation. f The moment your back hurts or kid- || | neys aren't acting right, or it bladder bothers you, get about four ounces of | Jad Salts from cny gbod pharmacy; take | a tablespoonful 1h & glass of water before | breakfast for a few days and your kid-| neys will then act fine. 'This' famous || salts is niade from the acid of grapes and | lemon juice, combined with Jithia and has | been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal | | activity; also to neutralize the acids in || the urine so it no longer irritates, thus |} ending bladder disorders. ! Jad Saltd cannot injure anyone; makes | | & delighttul effervescent lithia-water | drink whiéh millons of men and women | take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean; thus avoiding scrious kidney disease—Adveftisement. || THE BEZR YOU LIKE are particularly bene- ) Better have a Phone Douglas 1889. Save coupons and get premium. LUXUS MERCANTILE COMPANY Déstributors. A Fruitman-Shepherd An account of a personally conducted visit to the farm of David K. Bell, with whom tak- ing first prizes for pears and sheep has become a habit. Pigs that Cost Less A discussion of hog breeding from the dollars-and-cents viewpoint—and it certainly makes a difference whether a newborn pig costs fifty cents or five dollars. Underdrainage of Farm Land A practical, authoritative talk on the classification of soils and the manner of laying out a system of tile drains. Corn in the Classroom In which it appears that a farm-bred boy can go to the right kind of a school and learn a whole lot about making corn raising more profitable. Stabilizing Farm Credits Suddenly the country has awakened to the fact that something has happened in Congress having to do with rural credits. hat? And more, including Builqinf a Lath House; Eco- nomical Road Building; The Campines, by Judge % H. Card; Building a Workbench; Curing Pea-Vine Hay; A Start with Sheep; Treatment of Al- kali Land; The Cow on Test; What is New in Embroidery; A Reel for the Clothesline; Dried Fish Dishes, etc., and The Regular Farm and Home Departments out to-day

Other pages from this issue: