Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 31, 1916, Page 11

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THE BEE: OMAMA, FRIDAY, MARCH HAMPERED [N USEOF | 'WRECK VICTIMS ARE [ROBBERS LOOT MAIL |17 &% 5 &5 Youth Says He Stole HEXICAN RAILWAYS| CHOPPED TO PIECES| TRAIN IN LOUISIANA s in i Thines Just for Fun Lloyd Wallace, age 12 years, a son of Clan Gordon League. 1t takes but a minute of time to wa : P | Handicap W N 182 172 154 488 N Supplies to Pershing's Men Can Be | SOBSIR BURNS "‘_ - % 14 18 4 |Engineer of Twentieth Century Lim- | They Bind and Gag Two Clerks nml [ dottars when you read The Bes Want Ad W. H. Wallace, who resides at 4110 1da Sent Only as Commercial Freight | 5 L d, Tol oMNbRA amflh = ited Gives Horrible Details Escape with Two Pouches of | columna ':"‘"' - '"'”':'"' :"“ turned over to tislo 1% 88k IENBR | | the juvenfle officer late yestarday eves Under New Deal |““‘yy“”. X & ',‘3""",','",, | of D\faster | Registered Mail Fined for Quitting Work, n;n:‘ m..y:h L -.-u:r Ty,.,:,, the house - uchars 4 e Cre . | . | GLASGOW, March %.~Twenty-two mu- | °f Oscar Shuits, 7 North Forty-second | U. 8. MUST KEEP HANDS OFF | on 165 46| Y hitiock "5 CLOSE SHAVE FOR HIS FIREMAN | PULL IT OFF NEAR SHREVEPORT | nition workers who were concarned in the | street, and removing a watch and thres H — Totals . .88 562 1094 | Kent | 7a-bad | | | "committee, were tined #6 each foday for | o, One Of the rins he dropped as . SAN ANTONIO, Tex., March 3.— | Bl AN e Sater | Totals ReRhus | TOLEDO, March 30.—Charles C.| SHREVEPORT, Ia., March 30 Jitting Work in’ violation of the muni b Ottt ibagbeada e dhorion i L0 General Funston had not received | Kent 1% 8 WESTERN Handicap Robertson, engineer of the Twentieth | Robbers hoarded a Texas & Pacific e \ official notification late today that | jovdon 2 Bachman .14 a1 o1 Century Limited, which crashed into [ mail train, No. 28, at the station here - I3 Basatrom 3 \CCOUNTING 1 he was at liberty to ship supplies | Durran 1 Zedn Tet. 24 two sections of a passenger train on | early this morning as the train was 3 aloons 15 Zadina \ ¥ 1at. 2d. 8d Tot VLTIV IV IV IV ITY VY VY Iy throughk Juarez to Casas Grandes, but Jam 2 L':':":;g N e & the New York Central rallway after | pulling out. They entered the mail | § " /\‘ Tot « e 108 ; 68 151 2 4 "V orders already issued to the commis- | TOU® ..o f% Handicap §| Conslgmey 11157 10 they had already collided near Am- | car, hound and gagged two mall A sary department were such that mo [ .~ s W% Totals .. e e . herst, O., early today, gave the fol- | clerks and took from the car two Best 22-k Gold Crowns delay was expected. It was sald that Graham 12 138 16 4 D18, Fl. woials 7% T 7o aws |1OWINK story of the wreck, concerning | pouches of registored mail. They left ) White Crowns 3 within a few hours the stores whieh | \; rt 161 162 104 417 lLanders 12 p himeelf and his fireman, W A. [ the traln at Shreveport Junction cTaggn h Hislon 15 1% 1 a3 Lowrey [l AUDITING Bridge Work, per Tooth the quartermaster's department had o o 44 Bowcker 142 140 448) 18t 2d Manns | about two miles from the station been akeummlating at Bl Paso, could | Totale M3 W7 734 202 Straw w8 14 14 | Noland, .10 B ‘How Manna and 1 escaped from | —_ ——— Bost Plates, $5, $6 and $10 bo billed g pointa along the North- | T S| wowis 7 e | G our enine, neither of us can tenl. | France Expecting S iy western;! once the official sanction | S0U0E B Telephone Leagne. | Daird % ®i| “When our engine hit the Ruffalo| A Silver Fillings, 50c - 2 110 WIRE CHIEPS | conch of No. 8. which had been thrown H g f T o \ was given. e -2 1at. 2d. 3d.Tot. | Totala . GBI IR o our track, It bow “,(v:-mur‘x:: 01 dfl 0 our ISt‘S U ARE PEEVED The position taken by the advance | Falconer ... 151 163 Hutt M1 12 M ONSTRUCTION fo W h) ) | Backatt 3% 1% 158 424 lst. 2d. 3d.Tot. | tance, completly rev 1 and turned thn w.-‘ " Cl nS N forces of General Pershing made | rrotals 02 641 2143 | Lunden 13 172 1% 42 Lamborn .00 W 4136 | over. 1t fell on the fireman's side and ar 0ses Swallow ’f If YOII Cfl’l t Swa"ow Spu’ N some new routing of supplies neces- ENBTALLNS ot et | e I | Boskey W it )it 1% [#o arforded me better oportunity to es ’ \ sary and Carranza’ sslo Berry 10 12 120 88| Totals .. 54 6% 133 1728 |Straw 107 1% 13 402 | cape. How Mann cscaped fs unexplain- [ (Correspondence of The Asaociated Press.) et thsciiin® N y” d_ ]" REER'S DOFINCON (0] BEkton 1B I8 19 364 TRAFFIC, | |Btraw .c..o1%0 18 1'% | able, and a wonder. Our locomotive, a[ PARIS, March 17.-A committes of Maybe you are peaved and A use the railroad for the transporta- | David™™ [in {E B 8 77w saToy Handicas heap of shattered Junk. was hardly|French hotelkeepers that has recently | § | don’t know what about. I'll \ tion of supplies was welcomed as & | Phyjiips 22 16 179 68| Johnson 11 Totals 237 | recognizable. Paasengers on our train |COMe into existence. estimates that bet two bits it's your teeth relief even although bearing the - o T encaped injuries other than siight bumps | 100000 Americans will come to France You can’t afford to have a é handicap of the conditions, “ship as |The troops at the front require 100,000 ! and brulses. Five of the elght Pullman [!MMediately after the war to viait the :‘;{‘“l""‘"“' f"°"""'h""'“ '1‘7 'y commercial freight.” pounds of forage and food daily and this | cars were thrown from radls and ~\Vw~: \l\} mr.. ‘:‘r’:\‘v‘ :;~I.‘...y..- !;ynu " ey :“:ln;um:‘:; )‘:‘Tp;:'); does not include the requirements of the more or leas wrecked. It was so dark [CUNINE the hos o norts of mug It had h:c':"““:z:\“;'""‘ w soldlers guarding the lines of communi- | that rescus work was difficult e """""'\: s 1" finer than a fiddle. . n_realized for several days he 4 that a broad highway should be lald down that Aome other method than that of | OV OF 0 BT 00 O ming very ait- | literally ehopped to mieces Detacned | A10RE the front from Dixmude to Belfort, et us talk the matter of your teeth over with you. Al ‘ mn\'(x supplies 'm» mn!fl(r;‘ lru;:: h‘\"or ficult and expensive and is far from be e arms and Jegs and hasds and heada were |0 P m!d 'nu»‘ Holy n.m;L ‘mm LY work guaranteed ten years. See our Price List and compare S a sandy route of more than miles # - o o fly =y SLEEWE A bEY P : voe plenty of good hotels at intervals, simp! o % would have-to be secured unless the ex- | pr AT ST A SeE of the fluld | fyyeqtigation Shows Two Separate |strewn about the debris of crambled cars | R T #UT0 PSR ™ QLRI MO ‘ it with prices you have paid for work elsewhere, E pedition were to be placed in jeopardy. |geroplanes and the amount needed in- Sets of Alleged Grafters Colleot |eries o survivors who searched for | *Sht¥ t0 100 rooms and an abundant sup. [y We Give Mileage for 50 Miles on Out-of-Town Oontract. General Funston had walted anxiously |creases steadily Money from Joints. | missing relatives or companions, were |P!Y Of baths. Another suggestion is the for $10.00 or More. for almost a week for the granting of his| WASHINGTON, March 80.—One of the | ey | worse than the agonising screams of the ""”";H"" "h! -""lvullr"u:-;{ Irn||n~ ‘rvm q Office Hours: 8:80 to 6; Wednesdays and Saturdays to 8 p. request and meanwhile the forces com-|army's most serfous problems in hunt- wounded and dying. The feeble attempts | MUK from the channel to Beifort in which : . manded by General Pershing were mov. |tng Villa was soived today when Gen-| TROMPSON BAOKERS IN ON LA egrhem Rl el HRKE of Riyeey| e tOUHItY SIOEM 1tve ANC Wuen. WAIS |8 T e ing further and further into the Interior [eral Carranza granted the renewed re- | |tew ianterns were pitiable bafore day- |theY Are sishtseeins and gapldly placing themselves beyond|quest of the State department for per- | CHICAGO, March $0.—After for- | oo, NIt FUE Byl headions |, Meantime the committes of hotelkeepers | § MCKENNEY, De“tlst ‘B | {4 )i ( . g 2 a pr 5 W 4 5 3 b trains as at least a supplementary sery The complete ahsence of any definite p news of the pursuit of Villa has ca 1 notable slackening of interest in th chase as far as the border is concerned It is practicall epted here that t andit has eluded his pursuers, at Jeast »r the present and that no clash be tween the Villistas and American troops an be expected in the immediate fu. Motor trucks take thirty-one hours to o#fiach Casas Grandes under the most | able conditions, allowing only three | for halts and rests e roads mbus, however, have been P by the constant heay v trouble and” trucks are not arry more that a 2%0-pound load reach of the driver's of the quartermast- er's motor trucks, Disappointment of the staff officers at headquarters was unconcealed, however. They had expeoted the de facto govern- ment of Mexico to give unqualified con- sent to the use of the Northwestern. The permission to ship supplies as commer- cial freight consighments to some one not girectly connected with the army, and fail- re to give the American army the right o supervise the transportation of its own 'supplies- was regarded as inadequate. Manner of Distribution. The first shipment of supplies will be sent from Juarez to Casas Grandes and from there distributed by motor and wagon trains to the detachments that are beating the tralls a hundred and fifty miles to the south. It had been hoped by Geperal Tunston and his staff tbat Carranza would not impose conditions, in which cise rolling stock from the American. side would be moved to the tracks of the Northwestern and American rajlroad men would man the trains and American guards would serve - as guards for the traths, This plan, “however, has been spoiled by the conditional permission of Carranza. Offi- cers were frank in the expression of their fears that shipments made . under the ordinary rules of traffic would be lost or dangerously delayed between Juarez and points cf destination. It Was pointed out that the track of the railroads is in bad shape; that the mamagement would have @ifficulty in obtaining équipment. General Persbing reported. early to- day the _ positions of the advanced columns, But the mew positions were not revealed. “Villa, he sald, had been re ported lagt 1 the Santa Maria valley, where he ‘was said to be among friends, who were making it difficult for the scouts to learn anything regarding his movements. - Will Leave Today. EL PASO, Tex., March 20.—The first train bearing supplies to General Persh- ing's troops at the front will probably leave Juarez Some time tomorrow. Im mediately on recelpt of the news from Washington that General Carranza had permifted the use of the Northwestern rallroad for the transportation of sup- Splies, Tinal preparations were rushed by the quartermastér department for the forwarding of forage, "food ~sun plies and gasoline. The limitations impoeed by General Carranza, confining shipments of goods sent to concerns in-Mexico, who have contracts with' the expeditionary force caused some disappointment among army ofticers. It w teared that these restrictions coupled with the fact that mflitary guard could not accom pany the trains might seriously hamper the transmission of an adequate stream of supplies. Lines in Bad Wi The Northwestern lines between here and Casas Grandes, near which town General Pershing has established his principal base in Mexico, are admittedly in a bad way. Almost all the bridges which spanned the numerous arroyos, or gulches, between the two have been burned by the bands of brigands who have roved through this country during the last two years. These bridges have not been repaired but temporary tracks have been lald on im provised roadbeds in the gulches them selves, These tracks cannot stand any heavy traffic and make the progress of the trains slow The equipment of the roads is also poor, maqst-of the cars being in need of re- ira, - At the best of times a train leav- Juares took elght to ten hours to pegotiate the 168 miles to Casas Grandes “At present members of the quartermas- ter staff belleve the trip will not be made in less than twenty-two to twenty five hours. towns Means Some Improvement. Thia, _however, will bs a considerable improvement over the time made by the motor ~ fruck tralns operating from Columbus Permission for the full use of the Northwestern railroad would mean that -the border base of General Pershing’s expedition would be shifted from Columbus to El Paso. This step, however, will not be taken under the present olrcumstances and in any event it Is planned to continue the motor truck mission to use the Mexican Northwest- ern rallroad General Carranza received the request ington before dark. It was contalned in a briet message from James L. Rodgers, speclal agent of the United States at Queretaro, saying the head of the de facto- government agreed to the com- mercial use of the line. Officlals here assumed he would be equally prompt In notifying his officers on the border and that General Funston might begin ship- ment. tomorrow Roosevelt Wants Eight Capital Ships For Navy This Year| WASHINGTON, lech 80.—Appropria- tions by congress for elght new capital ships this year, double the number pro- posed by the administration’s five-year navy program, was recommended by As- sistant Seoretary Roosevelt today in con- cluding his testimony before the house naval committee. Secretary Danlels will appear tomorrow as the last witness to be heard before the committee begins drafting the bill. His examination is ex- pected to require several day: Mr. Roosevelt explained that the recom- mendation for eight ships immediately represented his personal views and 'not those of the department. = - Emphasizing the need for battle cruisers the aseistant secretary sald dreéadnaughts had won the principal victories in Europe without firing a shot by keeping the scas clear of the enemy fleet. He cxpressed bellef that there was a poseibility of the United States being in- volved in war even after a FEuropean peace Forty Thousand Dollars for Lot on Harney Street| A $40,000 sale of & s vacant lot on Haney | street was made yesterday afternoon. Elmer 8. Redick sold the lot at the north- | west corner of Twentieth and Harney | streets to Gertrude M. Mattson. George & Co., negotiated the sale. Nothing is an- nounced as to what the purchaser intends to do with the corner, except that she purchased it for an investment. The con- sideration was $40,000, The sale came just in time to hold in balance the competition that Harney and Doviglas streets are carrying on for fa- vor just at present. There are i.arney street boosters and there are Douglas street boosters; and for the last year or two the two streets have been balancing each other nicely In the mafter of big real estate sales and new developments WEIGHT MEN NEEDED BY HIGH SCHOOL CREW Coach Mulligan is trying few welght men for the track team this year. All of the veteran welght men were lost last year by graduation. Jesse Patty, John Crowley, Harold Grove and Wilber Fullaway seem the most likely men along to develop a this line. “Chuck” Morearty, track- captain, has inserted ““Turk” Logan into his newly |formed relay team instead of Dwight Danforth, when it was found that the latter could not do his best work on the 220-yard run Howard Turner, a freshman, is showing good form in the high jump. FIREMAN SHUTT SUSTAINS INJURIES ON NEW FIRE TRUCK Theodore Shutt, city fireman, sustained serfous injuries about the knees and el bows as the result of an accident happen |ing as the company was trying out a new fire truck at Nineteenth and St. Mary's The axle in the rear of the machine gave | way while the truck was going at a & rate of speed, releasing the rear wh on the left side and throwing the man tc the pavement. The city ambulance was calied and Dr Kulakofsky attended the injured who was taken to his home. It is expe mar that he will ver | [MID-TERM EXAMS UNDER ' WAY OF CENTRAL HIGH Midterm examinations now in prog {ress at Central high. They will con |tinue untll Friday. Next week will be pring vacation | Collex Hurns, PLAINVILLE. Tex.. March cre iate today destroyed the p Methodist co belongings ted & win Farm Connors Out this morning; his answer was in Wash- | ty-eight hours' investigation on the part of the state's attorney’s office into the alleged collection of money |for “protection” of North Side re- | sorts, the operations of two inde- pendent groups of collectors have been disclosed, according to Acting State's Attorney Michael F. Sullivan While making an investigation of the first group, sald to be headed by John Labow, a waiter at the city in- firmary, and Abe Shapiro, a former | bondsman, the state’s attorney's in- vestigators claim to have found evi- dence of the second organization, said to be operated on a much larger | scale, and involving several saloom- keepers and politicians. | According to the evidence said to |be in the hands of the state's at- torney, the collections of the larger group were for the benefit of poli- ticlans who had aided in financing the campaign of Mayor William Hale Thompson. Fourteen Rourkes Now at Beatrice to Train for Season BEATRICE, Neb., March 9.—(Special | Telegram.)—Pitcher Krause reported for duty at Rourke camp today. The total number now here is fourteen. . Although the day was windy, the boys put in a good day's work at Athletic park. Ma: ager May of the Paddock hotel has in- stalled private quarters for the Rourke tribe in the hotel A schedule for exhibition games for next week and the week following will probably be arranged tomorrow by ‘'Pa Rourke and Marty Krug. | Thieves made a raid on Pa's camp yesterday and stole three gloves valued | at $13. He has put officers on the trall of the purloiners of the base ball goods and expects to recover the property soon WISNER TRIMS COLERIDGE IN TRIAL FOR REESE TROPHY WISNER, Neb, March 30, —(Special Telegram.) — The, Coleridge ten-man team shot the Wilner team a 100-target race today for the Charles Reese trophy. The Coleridge club was organized in January this year and has over 13 members more than any club in the state. Wisner is the oldest in the state and has held this trophy five times now in succession, winning from Coleridge by 137 targets. It was one of the fin- est shoots ever held on the local grounds The following are the scores of the teams: WISNER H Strickler 6w Reets a1 0. Nagle %M. Thompson.... & P, glbertus 88/ L. Thiemek % Sieverson 92/ K. Morse 5 Whalen....... § 2 E. Sasse.......... 8 Total sl COLERIDGE O'Connor T, O'Connor 6 0 Connor B. Frantz 82 A. Linkhart K. Frost ] H. iagedorn I Moht il P. Clarence 1 V. Crosswait Total 57 Others who shot at 100 targets are T, Lemmil MG, Carter Y SEmith 671 Riley | A Knack B8 W Fethn A. Kenyon 92 The shoot was managed by George | carter |Pitcher Reynolds Signs With Denver and many of them were entirely without clothing. Most of those killed had been destroyed as they slept in the Pullman cars. Few attempts at identification were made.” M’KELVIE IS TENDERED BANQUET AT SUPERIOR SUPERIOR, V-h March 30.—(Special Telegram.)—8. R. McKelvie, candidate for governor at the primaries on the repub. lican ticket, In winding up his out-state campalgn here tonight, addressed a gath. erlng of republican business mon who tendered him an informal banquet at a local hotel Mr. McKelvie refused to concede that in the election of an executive of the state the question of wet or dry was the only issve. He drew more particular at tention to the desirability of having in office A man who was not only dry In sontiment and conviction. but who fa- vored conservation of the resources of the state. SCHMOLLER & MUELLER CONTEST WINNERS PICKED Prizes have been awarded in the Schmoller & Mueller George Washington publieity contest by the three judges, G. 8. Johnson, Mel Uhl, ir, and G. W. Preston. ‘The three principal winners were Mra, H. E. Brown, 220 Graham ave- nue, Council Bluffs, a Schmoller & Muel- ler piano; second prize to Mrs. C. A. Cairns, 3924 North Bighteenth street, an Aeolian vocalion. The judges recom- mended all other contestants be awarded sultable prizes and a souvenir, Movements of Ocenn Steame: Port Arrived PIRABUS Themistocies KIRKWALL. Helllg Olav LIVERPOOL. Musiclan HORDEAUX La Tourais NEW YORK. ~Hochambeau. Depart. Passenger revenues on the St. Joseph & Grand Island rallroad were higher under the 2-cent rate than under the 3-cent rate, according to the exhibits introduced 'before the Kansas Public Utllities commission in the hearing at Topeka, in which western raflroads are ing an increase in rates in Kansas he federal trade commission and Sherman anti-trust laws, the seamen's act a&nd _interstate commerce rulin were cited by George W. Simmons, Louls manufacturer, speaking today b fore the National Association of “Real Estate exchanges at New Orleans, as evidences that the campaign to reform big business had been overdone The Oliphant plant of the Dupont Powder company, eight miles from Union town, Kan., was blown up by an explos fon. Four ‘men were injured, two ser fously. No cause was assigned for the accident Immediate sale and reorganization of the Western Pacific raflroad, now in the hands of recelvers, virtually was a sured by a decigion of the United States circult court of appeals at San Frav Clsco, which overturned two orders is sued’ by Judge William € Van Fleet of the United States district court. Re cently Judge Van Fleet announced that if the circult court revoked his order the way to be cleared for a decrec of Glass of Hot Water | Before Breakfast | a Splendid Habit | | l morning and wash away the polsonous, stagnant matter, | DENVER, colo, March %.—Lawre Reynolds, pitcher, formerly with the D |troit American league and the Louts | ville American association clubs, has |been signed by “Rebel” Oakvs, mana of the Denver Western league club. | it was announced today | REYNOLDS SAYS A BIG CROWD IS GOING TO MATCH Aceo g to ity Passenger Agent | olds of 1) lington al i t match at Lincolr evening Increasing at a 1 yate and 1 r trair oin be hea r ! Reynolds now estimater the Omable crowd at 400 to 50 and would not be su prsed if it resched #%. Tickets for the mateh between Stecher and Ovdeman ar on sale at the Merchants hotel Lane es Ea AN PRANCISCO, March %).—8ecretary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane left her day directly for Washington, D. ( le has been visiting his brother in Rerke ¢ Cal., after reprosenting Presiden { Wilson at the dedication of the Panam. | Canal exp m at San Diego, Mareh " Those of us who are accustomed to fee 1ull and heavy when we arise; splittir headache, stuffy from a cold, f tong nasty breath, acld stomach, lame ba | can, instcad, hoth look and feel as f as a dalsy always by washing the poisor and toxins from the body with phospha hot water each morning We should drink, before breakfas glase of real hot water with a teas ful of limestone phate in it to flu from the st liver, kidneys and t ards of be previous day's ind gestible waste, sour bile and polsonou t ins thus cleansing sweetening a purifying the entire alimentary tract fore putting more food into t The action of | ne phospk N hot water on an empty stomack ae Invigorating. It cle he fermentation {acidity and gives on ' i for breakfast and it is ntl ceks., A ttle while the shiosphate ry way sho 1s busy preparing for the advent of the visitors by training staffs to replace the German and Austrian managers and walters of the pre-war period, renewing furniture, repainting and repapering and in particular improving the sanitary ar- rangements in the varfous hotels A writer in La Renaissance, Louls Forest, treating of a subject now occu pying a good deal of attention, thinks France ought to devote its efforts o at- tracting tourists instead of organizing with a view to Increasing her export Best for Liver, Bowels, Stomach, Headache, Colds They liven the liver and bowels and straighten you right up. Don’t be bilious, constipated, sick, with breath bad and stomach sour. UWORK WHILE VDU SLEEP Tonlght sure! Take Oascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest llver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Wake up with your head clear, stomach aweet, breath right and feeling fine. Get rid of sick headache, billousness, constipa tion, furred tongue, mour stomach, bad colds, Clear your skin, brighten your eyes, quicken your step and feel like doing a full day's work. Cascarets are better than salts, pills or calomel because they don't shock the lMver or gripe the bowels or cause Inconvenience all the next day Mothers ahould give cross, sivk, bilious, feverish children a whole Cascaret any. time as they can not injure the thirty feet of tender howels —Advertisement Open slulces of the system each E wp/:v:ms! pun.u, for the Onaha Beverage Co- OMAHA, NEBRASKA A Brannew Making an entirely new and novel beverage from the choicest American cereals, without fermentation, without sugar, not brewed, containing no aicohol, being tax-free; not a beer,’”’ with a flavor and taste of its own and The Man Who Put T-—EET in TEETH. 14th and Farnam Sts., 1824 Farnam St. Phone Doug. 2873, TONIGHT 15 Relay Races 53 Teams 607 Athletes THE BIG MEET rosp 'y um AUDITORIUM |MaRcH Prices - $1.00, 75¢, 50¢, 25¢ ) . 318T THE, ‘ PURE FOOD WHISKEY “The Inspector Is Back Of Every Bottle” \ GROTTE BROTHERS CO. General Distributors Omaha, Nebraska Beverage without malt, ‘“‘beer,”” ‘‘near beer’’ or ‘‘temperance being in a class of its own. 'i‘@. For sale at all drug stores, ho- i tels, restaurants, soda fountams and soft drink establishments. Omaha Beverage Co. 6002-6016 South 30th Street South Side Station ONIAHA, NEB. Family Trade Supplied by WILLIAM JETTER, 2502 N Street Phone Douglas 4231 “WE GROW WITH GROWING OMAHA"

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