Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 11, 1916, Page 4

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)

B NICHOLAS LEADS REMEDIAL LOAN| Articles of Incorporatxon Filed and Company Soon Ready for Business. TO PAY SIX PER CENT ON STOCK days the Provident just organized In small loans on any Within thirty Loan soclety, Cmaha to make the is to be security borrowers are able to cffer, Articles of filed yesterday. The company is incor- with & capital of $100,000, ders are )imited to 6 per ent dividends by provisions in the: ar ticles of/ Incorporation. You see, it in to be largely eharitable and philanthropio sald Becretary Willlam B in operation incorporation were porated The stock hol in natyre, Palmatier. The officers were elected Tuesday. L V. Nicholas was made presidont; J. P. Yalmer, vies president; Willam ¥, Pal matier, secretary, and Willlam R, Adalr, treasurer Nr. Palmatier is t be the manager. and is to have charge of the office ns soon as one s opened, | At A meeting to be held Thursday forenoon in the office of J. P. Palmer, 719 Bean defs Thester buflding, the matter of & jocation and further details are 1o, be taken up The. flling of the articles of incorpora tion starts the official existence of the corporation, but thiryt days will elapse before the state license can be obtained in the regular course of events that such matters must take In the meantime Genera matier 15 to travel &Il over the’ country visiting the <cities where such remedisl loan assoclations are in exlstence to study conditions and study catefully the method employed In every detall. There are forty of these corpanies In opern tion dn various parts of the United Stutos, The corporation is modeled after the plan which has the endorsement of the Russell HBuge Foundation The articles of incorporation provide Manager Pal thet the dompany may begin business whenever 10 per cent of the stock I8 subscribed, The incorporators aro Yugeno Duval, Robert Cowell, R. A, Leussler, A. V¥ Stryker, W. ¥. Palmetier, -Willlam 1. Holgman, T. A, Pry, Willlam 1. Adait, Tinley L. Combs, W. D, Hosford, M, M Robertson, Dr, Ira W, Porter, J. P Palmer and L. V. Nicholas, The agitation for m company in Omaha that would take ecare of small Jowns whigh banks do not care to bother with, was started as soon as the lown whark putting loan sharks out of business, was declared valld in the state The Maorris Plan bank was another plan that wes, considered here for n time, but thus ‘lr it has not developed, and the Provident T.oan soclety now becomes the first in tho "fleld. Governor to Visit Rialto Movie City Governor John I, Ilorehun is to be one of the speakers at the celebration of the laying of the cornerstone for the Rialto movie city at Relston Saturday nfterncon, according to . 8. Bhaeffer, hiead of the Rialto Amusement company. Mr. Schaeffer invited the governor and has received notice of his mcceptance, Mayor Dahlman and a lot of local dignitaries are also to speak at this dedication. A half hollday has been pro- ¢laimed by Mayor Dahlman for that day In honor of the founding of the movie city at Ralston. JURY WORK IN FEDERAL COURT IS CONCLUDED Jury work In federal court has been concluded for the present ' and Judge ‘Woodraugh ts working on cases in equity, The jury which-has just' been dismissed broke all records in the Nebraska divi. slon of tho federnl court for smaliness of awards given plaintiffs. The ariesi award was given to Floyd Smith. colored, whose foot was cut off by a Missourl Pacific engine near the Wab- tor street station last November. e #ed for 30,000 and was awarded $3,500, One plaintiff who asked $20,000 was.glven $00; ono who asked 32,00 was given $1,500. A sult against the Unlon Pacific for 825,000 was taken from the jury and declded fn favor of the defendant BODY OF CHARLES BATZ FOUND ON A VACANT LOT Showing traces of carbolie neld pofson ing, the body of Charlbs Bats, # years old, a glass worker, was found on a va eant lot at Twelfth and Jackson streets by ¥. . Anderson, 1511 Binney street The police made an investigation ascertained that Bats had heen lving st the home of (. T. Patterson, ¥ Cuming stroet. Mo is said to have a wite and several childven in Pittaburgh, | His mother also lives In the east Corener Croaby examined the body and gave oarbollo ackd polsoning as the eause | of death. Mfforts ar w made to lo cate his family and relutives WANTED TO BURY CHILD IN BACK YARD TO SAVE MONEY Walter a5 held At 1 iy In o fon t his b ) Mansen, 8 . v BUT FEW SCARLET FEVER CASES ARE REPORTED ! [ P ales s b ke 16 £ the dlsvase. Hoalth o Wies * the Mllus will have b cared y Vb £ \ble menth DR, USHER WILL SPEAK AT THE UNIVERSITY CLUB P Roband 0. | hoad of the s Vory dopariwedt of Washington aiverst L N L g (T Faaitien of \he o Bt ot the ' i vaanity . v U oARRer of several warlls, Wnelwiing P Lo rwiand s Winiping pes C h . aaly are I Vienua and g hneb BI% A Gang ae . ahtrs petien fn wrap bread In why lsnger and g oo e : - Well They Had Their Hike, Even if |TRADE EXCURSION City's Big Oil Car It Did Not Take Them Anywherg! l For weeks the girls of the elub name jelete censor) had been plan: hike The idea was to get up early and go t far, far, far, far, far from the city | walk 1o some distant, some very point. Enroute they would make 1 of the arts of wooderaft; they would | isten to the birds twittering In the | branches thefr glad songs of praise; they would commune with natcher in her | nat rest natcherainess. Sunday morning the start was made, | | Chirars of thelr | pedestrianal ambitions The street oar brought the sixtesn falr point was the far goal ones to Albright. There the hike be wan | Off started the little line along the coun- | try road. The fair leader led on and the fair followers followed after The well-known sun arose in his cus- grandeur and was soon husy beatfg down upon the hikers, tomary Homehow the birds dldn't seem to be |on the job. Perhaps they Aidn't arise s enrly as usual on Sunday morning Wenriness began to make fitaeif fit and thers wers stragglers who dreamed of mutomobile rides But eventually camp was made “wienies” were roasted and the Bissonette Lively F]ght Not on the Program Averill )Iunmmh Iml Deputy Comp- troller Bissonette of the Hagriman sys tem of roads were In town yesterday en route west.,They came in from New York and stopped off n day hero to confer with Unlon Paciflc officials, While It was not scheduled on the pro- kram, Mr. Blssonette was given an imitation of an Ineiplent Greek uprising | Auring his visit at the Union Paciffe headquarters. He was in the office of the company treasuter on the seventh floor of the headquarters bullding, when n dozen or mo COreek lahorers entered for the purpose of having thelr pay checks cashed The CGreeks were given thelr money, when suddenly hostilitles commenced, A mintte later there was a free-for-all fight and two or three men fell tp the | floor. Wmployes of the office interfered | and then, ealled the police, but hefors the | officers arrived, peace was restored, The trouble was apparently caused by one of the laborer's aceusing the foreman of not reporting the correct time that he had worked, Mopt of the laborers aided with thelr companion and agalnat the foreman and then. the fight started Mr. Blsponette was an interested spec- tator, but as It was not his fight, he did not interfere. | W. A, HALBROOK DIES FROM ATTACK OF PNEUMONIA Willis A, Halbrook, # years old, n | resident of Omaha for the last twentys | one years and for thirteen years ma jor | of the gent's furnishing department st the Thompson-Belden compuny store, | dled at the home of his mother, Mra | CGeorge Walkery %016 Bherman avenue, after an iliness of several weeks, Pollowing a mnervous breakdown Mr, | Halbrook resigned about three years age, Jis recent fliness developed into pne monla. Desides hin mother he Is survived by a brother, Wade Halbrook, and a sister, Miss Besslo Halbrook. Funeral services will be held at the| home at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon, with interment In Forest Lawn cemetery. JOHN D. CAMPBELL ASKS i MARRIAGE BE ANNULLED Declaring that he_entered a marridge contract through fraudulent procsedings, Jobn D. Campbell filed a petition in dis trict court asking that h's marriage t Bula Hoftman Campbell be ' set aside They were married at West Polnt, In less than three weeks ago. Since then, he says, he has discovered that on Mareh 7, of this year, she filal suit for divorce from Harry Hoffman, her husband, and the suit ta wtill pe She told him she was a widow, Camp bell says, when he married her, 1608 - 1510 Douglas St. All of that,” opined a third, “why, wo've been walking over two hours This 18 A hike we can tell our friends about,” sald the leader proudly, sesking to | Inatiil spirit fnto the wilted little band Cama then a country youth, a yokel In "]"'.v]- Upon this blushing native the girls 'Roach Says Dam at “ BALDWIN SURPRISED TO | recent | notice, Mr. Baldwin Two Thursday Specials In Our Annual THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, MAY 1916. No sign kad been sean of Chiid's Point They hadn’'t even seen the child “Wonder how far e are from Al bright,” sald one falr one “I should think about sald another sixteen miles, pounced and sought information. ‘How far is it to the Albright car?” was what they wanted to know Aw, right over thataway,” the abashed youth stammared. "Right apast that thers house. Yeh kin walk to it in five minutes, cross-country hikers coudn’t be- ve it. But the routh spoke the truth The arte of wooderaft, so well known to girl guides and all godd hikers, had fafled. “The moss was growing on the wrong sides of the trees T y had walked n a ofrels and were back where they started But great gobs of gladness gittered gally fn the “gesiohts” of the girls, Wel- | come, mtreet car! A bas, hiking, glad songs of birds, woodcraft natcher! | Whalen Finished | Frank J. Roach, advertising agent for In back from a trip where he the Unjon Pacific made Into eastern Wyoming, went after the company’s silo special completed its tour of western Nebraska last week Vrom Gering, Neh.,, Mr. Roach went up the Platte river valley sixty miles, to where the Whalen dam is just about completed, This Aam 15 across the Platte, about seven miles east of Gurn sy, Wyo, It in constructed of cement, 18 forty feet high and 40 feet in length, holding back enoush water to irrigate 20,00 necre feet when the ditches are complated. To complate the ditches, Mr Roach amserts will require about three Contracts have been signed for fitteen miles of main yenrn the digging of ditch this year When completed, the east end of the ditol will be brought down to A point near Northport Mr, Hoach asserts that a large number of settlors are going into the country wlong the line of the ditch and taking up Iand with the idea of going into tarming and stock ralsing on an ex- tensive weale. A Inrge number of the settlers are men of considerable means LEARN HE:IS NOMINATED “Jack” Baldwin has been notified by Flection Commissioner Moorhead that he nominated for police judge at the primary. The Information was quite a surprise to Mr. Baldwin, who be- leved he waa defeated, The, officlal notice was in black and white and was acoompanied by a blank upen which Mi, Baldwin was < requested 1o Indicate his agceptance or declination. Upon second reading’ however, of the observed that he was nominated on the progressive ticket He filed as a rfllulnr republicat, which doclares he 18, tirst, Tast and all the time. A namber of voters 'wrote his | One-Day REACHES DECATUR Booster Trip Made b+ Eighty of the Leading Omaha Business Men. AND THEY CARRY A REAL PIPER Bucking a strong northerly wind, the trade extension auto tourists of the Commercial club ran out of Omaha and Into Tekamah on sched- uled time yesterday the first section of their one-day round trip to Decatur and back. on They reached Tekamah at 10:25, ‘'which was just a trifle ahead of their schedule, At Tekamah a large delegation of Decatur men met them in automo miles to pilot them back to Decatur, where the Decatur fellows enter tuined them at luncheon, Somo elghty men went from Omaha Nineteen cars pulled into Tekamah, but Trimble, left hour after the main body, tleth car, rond making good time to Postmaster Henry Osterman of Plalr, the mayor of Biair and a lot of husiness men met the tourists cheerfully and cor dially on the streets of Hlalr - passed through early in the morning Charles who Omaha an made the twen that wns somewhere on the ateh up. they e w and Plpes, MeDougal, the famous cabaret bag piper of Omaha, s accompanying the party, elad in full Beottish kilts and re kalin, He piped ahd piped through the streets of every town until he was purple in the face, Follownig is & partial list of thore who made the trip T, B. Coleman 1 J. Bouthard Henry Forster, ¥. O, Patton, G, H, Kelly, B, G, Jones, Myles Btandish, A. V. Dregher G. W, Johnston, T, 1, Combs, R, B. Towle, George Dingman V. E, Zeller, 1.V Btarrett Ray Low, X T, Austin, J, W. Gamble, J, B, Owen, N. fitanley Brown, T. W. Atatin D L. Hall, W. E. Bhepard T. B, Tholl, JF. Byrne ¥. 1. Haller, A W Beghers I H. G, Morphy, Fred Cuseaden, (len_ Wharton, C. B, Helmer Joe Kelley, F. L H, D, Frankfurt, ¢, 1 Willlam Hens, ¥, W. Thomas, 1. Clarke Colt, P, P. Fodren Leo Callahan 1’ H. Dumont, W. Boyd Bmith, Bam_ Reynolds, J. A, Rockwell, H. G, Hoel, A, ¥, McAdams 1. Burdick, W, . Rhoades, it H, Manley, J.'M. Harding, 'hagles Trimble, A M. Wells, Allan Parmer, 81 Potter, H. K. Burket A. L. Palmer, Indigestion Dune to Constipation. Take n dose of Dr. King's New Life Pills tonight. Bee how much better you feel in the morning. 2c, All drbggists, «~Advertisement. name.in dn the progressive nomines and thereln s the explanation of his nomina~ tion “Sorry, 1 cannot accept this nomina- thon,” stated Mr. Baldwin Rose The woadertus “‘Sunday Morning Bath” Soap Oréiny May Waist Sale Hore are the two best blouse ba galns ever offered Omaha women ppreciate the greatness and go wan 0f thes ial values, you ma w0t the themaelves. W Thursday y gpecml No. broidery ¢ 85c¢ Special No. 2 Beautiful Blouses, n ne corgette high ars, Al slaes holve Tharsday, s $2.95 ropy de erepe, #iiks with oW ar sonver Yalues 1o or ROADSTER YEAR L PASNENGER TOURING CAR, 0100 His YEARROUND OOUTR T o /,'Afll | Covers Boulevards Commissioner Hur.\n\h spent some {time Tuesday watching the new ity motor oll spreader in operation The machine takes the placo of the old horse- drawn wagon that was sometimes al- most a in covering the distance from the supply tanks to a distant point on the road A tretch of the houlevard south f Hanacor park was the tirst to recelve a vielt from the huge machine yesterday 5 Passenger Tourmq and the oll was spread with a neatness and dispatch that pleased sloner. mightily MOHLER RETURNS FROM FUNERAL OF MRS. SMITH the ecommis President Mohler has returned from Chicago, where he went after taking the body 6f Mrs, 8mith, mother of Mrs, Moh Jer to Cedar Rapids, la., where burial porvices were held last Bunday. After the funeral Mr. Mohler went on to Chi cago to meet some of the officials of the Harriman lines When all other ways fafl, try a Want Ad w. L o Res $3.00 3.50 *4.00 *4.50 & °5.00 SHOES YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES VALUE GUARANTEED For 33 years W. L. Dou; ;h;'io: ofH I:M highest stan name - gainst high wearer a are the best known W.L. of a most perfect skilled |hoemken;“1| determination to make the but W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00 S| are just as good for style, fit and wear ting $6.00 to $8.00, the only perceptible d;fferonee is the price. W. L. DOUGLAS $3.00 and $3. 50 SHOES hold their llupc, fit better and other makes as_other makes cos wear lonnf the price. . None genuine unless W. L Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bottom. r gunntmodu tl;'IIN‘:Iil d ull value an: w for inferior They in the world. Douflu shoes are made of the most carefnll( selected leathe: ter the latest models, in a well-equipped Brockton, Mass., under the direcfion and personal inspection nhon and the highest paid ot g o s Hfl@pfi@@bfifl@ This is SANITOL WEEK - Sign this SANITOL Coupon% & And present it with 25¢ to {mn druggist, or dealer in toilet accessories, for a 25¢ package of SANITOL TOOTH POWDER or SANITOL TOOTF PASTE and a full size 25¢ package of SANITOL FAC POWDER or SANI- rOL FACF CREAM. This coupon not good after May 15, 1916. Name . - 7 VT E T S ek e T SEISRICEEEISEGRIGE] s s - - DOUGLAS FOR MEN AND WOMEN name has stood for of quality for the uZmpedon W. L. DOUGLAS WA PUT TO WORK PEG INGSHOKSATBEVE YEARS OF AGE, WE BEGAN MANUFAC- TURING IN 1876,AND 18 NOW THE 0- EST MAKEROF 80 AND BHOES IN THE WORLD, BOYS SHOKS Best in the World actory at with an honest in the world. for O YOU KNOW that the Hup- mobile furnishes every essential of motor car performance—flexi- bility, quick pick-up, pulling power on high gear, smoothness, absence of vibration? Do you know that it is a a big, comfortable Touring Car for five or seven? quality and economy? its Do you know its reputation for Have you proved performance and its comfort by rid- ing in it? As a Dealer, do you know how “‘hig" going with motor ear huyers every one of them is glad he is selling Hupmobiles, the Hupmobhile is in this section and in Hupmobile Dealers know it, and every Here wo 7 other? are giving them the further sales impetus of large-size newspaper advertising, and serving their wants from a well-stocked factory branch. Hupmobile Co. of Nebraska naow ROUND TOURING CAR, §1,08 Weler car service FACTORY WHOLESALE RRANCH 2054 Farnam Street, Omaha McShane Motor Company RETALL DISTRIBUTORS 20584 Farnam Street, Omaha 1085— F. Q. B, Detroit

Other pages from this issue: