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a drink. VISITED HERE DEAD Mrs. John Murray Anderson, Nee Lyon, Was Cousin of Two Omaha Women. MARRIED NEW YORKER Omaha friends of Mrs. George E. Mickel and Miss Mary E. Van Wag- ener have learned of the death of their cousin, Mrs. John Murray An- derson, who as Miss Genevieve Lyon, in 1910, was pronounced the most beautiful girl in the United States, Josef C. Korbel, sculptor, and mem- bers of the faculty of the Chicago Art institute made the decision, and Kor- bel chiseled the face of the young girl p for the marble keystone at the en- ' trance of the new Hotel Shreman. | Later Miss Lyon took up classic dancing and married John Murray Anderson of New York, a playwright and director of pageants. She died in Denver last week after an illness of many months. Mrs. Anderson visited Mrs. Mickel in Omaha prior to her marriage, and THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JULY FAMOUS BEAUTY WHO‘ SOCIETY LEADER TAKES MUCH INTEREST IN HUMANE WORK—Mrs. || Richards shows her sympathy for little pony that couldn’t reach the horse trough to get hampered by careless harnessing. The Bee picture of the well known society ma- tron one warm day last week when “the lady of the humane spirit” drew off her white glove and sprinkled cool- ing water on the face of June, little George Medlock’s pony, which was trying desperately to refresh itself with a drink in_the fountain at Seven- teenth and Capitol avenue. June wasn't big enough, however, and had to content herself with drinking from ghoto rapher snapped this | comes within her ken and to assure | the trough below, provided for thirsty herself that he is well-shod and un- Mogs. De Forest | Mrs. Richards was touched b the little pony's effort to get a drin from the regular horses' trough. “Do you think you would care to sell this pony some day,” she asked George Medlock, the f'outhful owner of the cart and animal, “No, ma'am! I wouldn't sell June for a thousand dollars. No, sir-ree.” Mrs. Richards, Miss Jessie Millard and Mrs. George Prinz have been nicknamed “the boosters' committee” because of their strenuous efforts along the lines of humane work. N sister, Evelyn, who is now a student at the Art institute, was Mrs. Mickel's guest last year. Still another sister, 3 Miss Enid Lyon, is expected before b the end of the summer to visit her Omaha cousin. Street Railway Company Issues “Safety First” Order| Mrs. J. de Forest Richards is an 1f you want to board a street car, Omaha matron devoted to the cause don't go out into the middle of the |of helpless children and animals, “put- str_eetf when Sit is a b}l’OCk i“)'uyt?l",‘i ting the children first,” she insists. wait for it. Stay on the curb until i ; R . is within a length or two of you. Then thi: v::: o;}erl:\g;lg: fiu%::}fg';:?; signal the motorman and he will stop voted $100 for The Bee's free milk } ;“d l‘)l'u‘;l will have plenty of time to |4 jce fund, while her activities in OI“ ; e f“‘ ot .11 | the cause of poor, broken-down horses A havqu: ?n:‘ru‘t:tt‘il;;eafro’r‘:lo svrmi“ Mv:l;_ and suffering dogs has received much grove, superintendent of transporta- &::‘:ble comment in the last few tion of the Omaha & Counicl Bluffs | "y ™0 (00014 nature for Mrs. Rich- Street Railway Co,, to pay special at- |, 4q 4 stop and note any horse that tention to signals from the curb so P y that ]thcre will be no reason hfor people to stand in‘ the street where ' ' there is danger. When the matter was Exa;mlnaotlons fOI' called to his attention by Special Traf- fic Office Phalon of the Amaha Auto- Government Jobs mobile club he promised to issue an order to the motormen directing = ; them to pay special attention to curb | Several 8°°>d positions with the gov- signals. He expressed.his hearty ap- | ernment, paying from $1,200 to $4,000 v oroval of the course of the club in|; year, will be competed for in ex- asking for this assistance and said that it was a real “Safety First” { aminations to be held August 8. Ex- aminations will be given here and at measure. 5 other points throughout the United States. They are these positions: As- Even a Freight Car Looks | States. Theyare these positions: As- sistant ce , $2 Pre“y GOOd to j' E' Baum 2,500; assistant in farm ecor_\omics. J. E. Baum, who is in Danbury, 21,800 to $2,000; senior highway Conn., saw an Ak-Sar-Ben Dispatch | engineer, $2,220 to $4,000; assistant in butter car on the tracks there a few [ market business practice, grade 2, days ago. This is one of the special |$1,200 to $1,600; assistant in market Omaha refrigerator cars which carry | business practice, grade 1, $1,800 to the name of Omaha and Ak-Sar-Ben | $2,400. g all over the country wherever they de-| Full information can be secured by liver the Omaha product. “It looked | writing to the civil service commis- good to see it,” wrote Mr. Baun sion, Washington, or by applying to Miss Viola Coffin, federal building. Omaha. | Monday Night Dances Are Popular at Krug Park Monday night is the weekly society event at Krug park, especially so at the ball room. On the occasions terpsichorean pastime. Fashion’s fair- est fancies of frocks, gowns and shoes are displayed to a nicety, and one can see a reproduction of Mrs. Whitney's New York Fashion show. Preisman’s orchestra continues to please the dancers with selections of late popular music, o Basket picnics are popular and many families take advantage of the facilities offered by the park for the picnicker. | | | many can be seen indulging in the | Going Out on Home Trade Excursion * If it is hot next Tuesday, there will be a few score of Omaha business and Commercial club men who will not care, for they will be taking the cooler cure in the vaults of the Omaha Cold Storage company plant. A home trade excursion is planned for the day. When it gets a little cooler in the aft- ernoon the crowds wants to visit also the Beebe & Runyan Furniture com- pany plant. This is to be one of the most in- teresting home trade excursions the Omaha men have yet conducted. They want to know more about the details of some of the big plants of the city. AUTOMOBILE STOCKS are making more money for the in- vestor than any other stocks on the market. Had you invested a few hundred dollars at the begin- ning with Ford, Hupp, the Reo, Saxon, Chalmers, Paige-Detroit, Chandler, White or any of several others, you would have a tidy for- tune today. SPECIFICATIONS MOTOR—33% x4, cast en-bloc. RADIATOR — Thermo syphon cooling. TRANSMISSION—Selective type, three speeds forward and one reverse in unit with motor. CLUTCH—Multiple disc. CONTROL—Center lever oper- ated by right hand, on trans- mission direct. IGNITION—Distributor nection with battery. CARBURETOR—Float feed. GASOLINE—10 gallons capacity. FENDERS—Crown. LAMPS—Two head and one tail. HORN—Electric. TOOLS—Tool kit, jack, tire repair kit and pump. Today the automobile industry established along ) nt and today it is paying bigger profits than ever before in the history of the busine solid fact, however, that the big s been made by those ight to get in on the ground floor with a newly es- tablished company. It is very true that some la profits have been made on the Stock Exchange dur- ing the past few months, but it is lly true that much larger pro- fits have been made by those who bought these stocks when they were first put out and the com- panies were being organized. We are the largest excl dealers in automol ecuriti the country. We do not han any other stocks or bonds devote our entire time and atten- tion to the automobile security market. For that reason we b lieve that w tion to furnish facts and informa- tion and advice regarding auto- securities than any other in the Within the last few months Willys-Overland has advanced $130 per share. Reo has advanced over $30 per share. Chevrolet was selling for I than $100 a few months ago, and THE EMERSON MOTORS you would have more than doubled your money. . The above advice is worth while and can be verified through any broker. Regardless of the merit of other we _today | shares of the Common Stock. advise the purchase of Em n. We urge all of our clients and s to act promptly, for the is on the eve of a big New York. DEMONSTRATING CARS q vance. — — — — JOHN H. POWERS & CO., Inc. Woodmen of the World Bldg. Omaha, Neb. pany). Please send me catalogue, RC. Hupp, Vice Pre . C. H photographs and full informa- tion regarding an investment in the Emerson Motors Company. NAME Automobile Co.). \ M. S. Shanks, Assistant Secretary (formerly Secre- STREET ...... R SR :';.ryho)f the Monarch Motor Car Company of Detroit, ch. ). George B. Gifford, Director (General Manager of T Y oo ole oy osisisiewny the Standard Qil Company, 26 Broadway, New York, N. Y.). Omaha Bee, 7-16-16 i!:corpouled with a capital stock of one mil- lion shares, each of a par value of $10.00. 'l'hree. hundred thousand (300,000) shares of this stock is 7 per cent preferred, but at the present time all the Preferred Stock is in the Treasury. The Treasury also holds at | present two hundred thousand (200,000) has no debts, has a substantial cash treasury and is actively engaged in manufacturing its first cars at its factory in Long Island City, IN NEW YORK CITY TODAY. The Officers and Directors include:— Willis Geo. Emerson, Chairman Board of Directors. T. A. Campbell, President (formerly Treasurer and General Manager of the Imperial Automobile Com. ent (formerly Vice Presi- of the Hupp Motor of international repute) , Secretary ecretary and Factory Manager Imperial COMPANY is Jo mobile Company. The company experlence. During Mr. fame has become checking everything ON DISPLAY world, Ford runabouts. d Trea: priced car. poration, e R. Leonard, Director (Director Columbus National Bank, Pittsh: Amos H. Stevens, General Counsel Travelers In- surance Company; also General Counsel Stutz Auto- In addition to these the Advisory Board contains the names of many men prominent throughout the | United States in the banking and business world. The books of this Company are audited once every month by The American Audit &‘ This new five-passenger touring car, to sell at the low price of $395, is the result of Mr. R. C. Hupp's many years' Hupp's long experience in the automobile world, and In the course of the evolution of the automobile industry for the past fiftecn years, during which period his international, over, that this new creation is without question the most perfect in design, any low-priced automobile ever made. It is well known that Mr. K. C. opinion of this new car is eminentiy worth while, He started with the Oldsmobile in 1902, at $650, when other automobiles were selling from $2,000 up. Mr. Hupp was graduated from the Oldsmotor Works to the Ford Company, In 1905, experience while making the lowest priced automobile in the with the Oldsmotor Works, factors with Henry Ford in the production of the first $600 In 1008 Mr. Hupp and assoclates organized the Hupp Motor Car Company, producing a car at $760 which at that time was lower in price than the car which the Ford Company was turning out, as the Ford Company had ad- vanced the price of their cars to §976. management the Hupp Company sales jumped from 590 cars the first year to 5,000 cars the second year, and an orlginal irvestment of less than $10,000 grew to a cool million dollars by 1912, when Mr. Hupp disposed of his interest and retired from the company, owing to the fact that he did not agres with the policy of his associates in bringing out a higher This same year Mr. Hupp organized the R. C. H. Cor- manufacturing and selling a touring car that was lower in price than any other car made except the Ford, and the very first year produced 8,000 cars, and had contracts with dealers for 19,000 additional cars, making a total sale of 27,000 for the first year. - The Lowest Priced , 110-INCH WHEEL BASE 16, 1916. Indian Bucks and Squaws To Show in Store Windows Pacer and Ketcham-—these are the semi-civilized names of the two Sioux bucks who, with their squaws, will be on exhibition in the show windows of the Brandeis stores and the Burgess- Nash store next Tuesday afternoon. Of course, inside the teepee, and within the boundaries of the reserva- tion, they may go by the names of Pink Thunder and Young-Man-Afraid- of-Toil, but they are now in the region of real civilization and have cast off | their hyphens. Each of these bucks will be accom- panied by his squaw and will spend the afternoon in the show windows, where the passersby may view them at close range. They are with the arty of Sioux Indians with Charley rwin'd frontier and round-up celebra- tion at the Douglas county fair grounds. Stomach Relieved Digestion Alded MR. CHAS. A. WARNER. “I want to express my thanks for the good Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey has 5one me. My attending physician told me I could not live three months and said I had consumption of the stomach. I read your advertisement in-the newspaper, bought a bottle, took it, and it has done me so much fond I cannot praise Duffy’s enough. have taken it for three years and keep it in the house all the time. I would not be without Duffy’s. I am 63 years of age.”—Mr. Chas. A, War- ner, Cambridgeport, Vt. Duffy’s pure M AT wiskey is recommended in tablespoon doses i amounts of water or milk before on retiring as an aid to digestion similation of food. ' “Get Duffy'’s and Keep Well” At most druggists, [ grocers and dealers, $ .0?. If they.tcm‘t supply you write us. Useful household booklet free. The Duffy M Roche: BERG SUITS ME Our Grand Semi-Annual Half Price Sale continues with increased energy and enthusiasm. Mer- chandise of which there is no finer in the world—at One- Half the Original Price. $10 Suits, $15 Suits, $18 Suits, $20 Suits, $5.00 $7.50 $9.00 $10.00 Kuppenheimer, Society Brand, - L System and Adler Collegian Suits Strictly in a class by them- 4% selves, without an equal; in- cluded in this great Half Price Sale. $25.00 Suits, $12.50 $30.00 Suits, $15.00 $35 Suits, $17.50 $40 Suits, $20.00 Tropical and Palm Beach Suits— $5.00, $7.50, $8.50, $10.00 Outing Trousers— $1.50 to $5.00 urgh, Pa.). he says, after carefully durability and line of Hupp's approval and At that time the car was sold Through Mr. Hupp's knowledge and he became one of the Under Mr. Hupp's that may arise, there yet remains based upon an annual production of only 30,000 cars. A this profit can be and should be increased by the Increased That the sale of the Preferred Stock at par will insure a sufficlent capital to enable this Mr. Hupp has also had some experienca in manufacturing but his hobby has always been, and It has been his alm and ambition, to make and sell the lowent- For fifteen years he has concen- trated upon this one dominant ides, and at last has per- fected a car so cheap to buy and so economclal to operate that it can be owned and used by practically every family higher priced cars, priced car in the world. head In this country. This new design, approved by Mr. Hupp, is the result of fifteen years' effort to make a low priced car and a car that can be operated at a low cost and that will stand up and glve a greater service for the money than any other The car itself is as well built, look at and easy to ride In as as its higher priced competitors. It is a pure stream line body, with all late improvements, and will not only appeal to the public at large, method of transportation sultable for the man or woman in any walk of life. While the car will particularly appeal to those of limited means because of its low price, yet its graceful lines, ample power and economical expense of operation will create for the car a demand among every class. An itemized estimate of the cost of manufacturing and automobile made. prove a _consistent, satisfactory marketing these car: per annum, beginnin car, after making facturing, advertising, selling, allowing the 7 per cent dividend on the entire ferred Stock, It Indicates a net profit of §1,860, ticlent to pay dividends of 20 per cont per annum on the Common Stock, besides setting aside $460,000 to surplus. These figuren nre based on an_ estimi who know the automoblle business and successful ploneers in the Industry. This new car should average 20 to 27 miles or more to a gallon of gasoline, and at the present high price of gasoline this in itself is & declded argument in favor of the use of this _car. The profits In the automoblle industry are too well known The day of experiment has passed, the third largest {n the United to require comment Today the industry, fs on a substantial and highly profitable basis. rofit is belng made in the manufacture of low-priced cars, he demand for the car that we propose to bulld s apparent The cost of manufacture has been carefully o has been made for and for any exigencles I t profit of $60 per car, to everyone. worked out, and after proper allo the increased price of raw materi production 1s self-evident. overhead expense, arefully compiled by men THE EMERSON “FOUR”’ SPECIFICATIONS - STEERING GEAR—Sixteen inch wheel. (Right hand, for for. eign trade only.) REAR AXLE—Floating type. BRAKES—Two sets of rear hubs. FRONT AXLE—Drop forged, | beam. WHEELS—Artillery type. TIRES—30x3 front, smooth tread, 31x33§ rear. : FRAME—Pressed steel. SPRINGS—Semi-elliptic front and rear, long and easy riding. WHEELBASE—110 inches. BODY-—Stream line five-passen- ger neatly upholstered. FINISH—Black and nickel, no op- tion as to color. WINDSHIELD — Slanting, clear vision, TOP—One man. Five-P—éssenger Car in the World ‘ AUTOMOBILE PROFIT SHARING YOU CAN SHARE In The Enormous Profits Now Being Made In The Manufacture of Automobiles. Read Every Word of This Announcement Whether You Have $20 Or $20,000 YOUR OPPORTUNITY company to go on a profit-earning basis seems an assured fact. That the Common Stock will soon become more valuable ‘han the preferred see: itable. The Company proj o adopt the most modern busi- ness methods, paying as it goes, and pursuing s ocon- servative, business-like administration. The most progressive ng will be adopted. very limited block of the on Stock at $6 per share. The par valuo is §10, and the stock is fully pald and non- assessable. If you act promptly you can buy any number of shares from five (5) to five thousand (5,000) at $6.00 per hare. Simply fill out the coupon below for the number of es you want and mall it with your remittance by chec dr: or money order. If you send currency be sure an register the letter. Certificate of stock fssued in your name will go forward to you by regiatered mail. We belleve that you will see this stock selling at twice this pfice within the next few weeks, Immediate action is necessary if you desire to obtain any of the stock at this very low figure, Fill out and mail the coupon below today. . Common Pre-Organizatin Pro good to but will John H. Powers & Co., Inc., Woodmen of the World Bldg., Omaha, Neb. l inclose herewith $...... in full payment for ... .shares of the Pre-Organization Promotion Stock of the Emerson Motors Company at the special price of $6.00 per share par value $10.00 fully paid and non-assessable. NAME . ... ccocvnennsanns The & STREET .40 tovnsnesrnasnsnsnsancrnnnnns Omaha Bee—7-16-18.