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' l Brief City News Half Karat White Diamonds $75—Edholm. Have Root Print It—Ngw Beacon Press Lighting Fixtures—Burgess-Granden Co. Phone Bedford’s New Coal Yard— 1017 N. 23d, for Paradise coal, best for furnaces. Doug. 115. Dr. Merriam to Talk—Dr. Merriam will speak at the Omaha Philosophical meeting Sunduyl after- noon on “Fasting and Prayer. Robbed of Nine Dollars—A high- wayman stopped J. Rosenbloom, 1414 North Twenty-fourth, last night at Fifteenth and Ames avenue and robbed him of $9. Complny Gets Judgment—Judg- ment for $1,023.58 was awarded the W. P. Devereaux company Matilda Peterson in district court on a protested check issued August 21, 1914, for $1,023.58 for merchandise. $25 reward for information lead- ing to the recovery of Ford runabout 989334, white wheels, initials “JCH." State No. 84083. And $25 additional for the arrest and conviction of thief. —Love-Haskell Company, W. O. W. Bldg. Another Welch Cafeteria—Another Welch cafeteria is to be established in Omaha. This will make the sixth one. J. W. Welc s fitting up the place at 1517 K am street. This place was formerly occupied by The Baltimore. Two Seeking Divorce—Charging ex- ‘treme cruelty, Paul Jones has filed suit for divorce from: Lilly. They were married April 15, 1911, at Bremerton, ‘Wash. Nettie Oldaker has sued George, alleging nonsupport. They were married at Council Bluffs March 4, 1915, Weather Fine in State—With con- siderable rain out in the state Tues- day afternoon, the weather cleared during the night and is perfect today, according to the reports to the rail- roads. It is a little cooler, but from no place was there a report of frost last night. Taken to Station—C. H. Niebert, sald to be a Des Moines, Ta., physician, is being detained at police headquar- ters in a delirious condition. He was taken from St. Joseph's hospital, where he had been sent by friends. At the hospital he became so violent that the nurses could not restrain him. Dared Autos to Hit Him—Gust Carl- son of Florence fared forth on an anti-gasoline crusade Tuesday after- noon and was arrested after he had stood directly in front of autos at Fif- teenth and Farnam streets and dared the drivers to tome on. He was ar- raigned in police court and fined $5 and costs. Omaha Uni Class Elects—Thirty members of the sophomore class of the University of Omaha met yester- day afternoon and elected the follow- ing officers: Isidore Finkenstein, president; Naomi Lowe, vice presi- dent; Gertrude Reynolds, secretary and treasurer. Gold and maroon Bwere chosen as the class colors. John E. Utt Returns—John E. Utt, general agent of the Rock Island, who has been spending the summer in .northern Wisconsin, has returned, greatly improved in heaith, but not well enough yet to take up the duties of his position. Mr. Utt suffered a stroke of paralysis about a year ago and has never fully recovered from its effects. Gets Six Dollars a Week—Six dol- lars a week for 300 weeks must be paid to Mike Koma, a former em- ploye of Armour & Co., according to the decision of Judge Leslie. Koma was struck by a falling pipe while working in the packing house, He must be c«xamined every six months by physicians employed by the Armour company to ascertain the permanence of the injury. Koma was represented by Harold Haviland. Fine Fireplace Goods—Sunderiand. Indians Sell Many Carloads of Cattle- Here and in Chicago Chicago, Sept. Thirty-four car- loads of cattle from a shipment of fifty-one cars, seventeen of which were sold at Omaha yesterday, were sold at the market here today by In- dians from the Crow reservation in Montana, the first important sales "efrom an investment of funds derived two years ago by the sale of lands of the reservation. The fifty-one cars brought $97,993. Cato Sells, United States sioner of Indian affairs, super sale for the Indians. He said it was the first direct benefit the Indians had received from the government policy of using the grazing lands on the reservation for the benefit of the In- dians. “All of these cattle were range grazed and grass fed,” he said. “Not 4 a pound of corn or other feed than grass or hay had been given them. “Two years ago we purchased for the Crows 7,000 2-year-old heifers, 2,000 yearling steers and 350 bulls. In- cluding the increase in the herd, the Indians’ profit on the original pur- chase in twenty-seven months, after paying all expenses, has been $350,000. The first year the Indians cut and stacked 5,000 tons of hay to winter their herds and last winter 7,000 tons.” Grist From the P_i_voroe Mill Agnes Chester has filed suit for di- vorce against Frank Chester. They were married in February, 1895 at Ulnik, province of Villinic, Russia, and have four children. They have been residents of Omaha for ten years. Charles R. Leuszler has been granted a divorce from Effie May, on grounds of extreme cruelty. John_ A. ‘Christopher was divorced from Bessie on allegations of deser- tion. Henrietta Priest has been divorced Y trom William L., because of alleged h:: nonsupport. ~ Mamie Hoffman secured a decree from Beryle, alleging nonsupport. _Edward J. Gilbert has filed a peti- tion against Addic, alleging cruclty. e b e Culls ng_the Wire Four members of the crew of the steamer Roberval of Ottawa, which foundered In Lake Ontario, were picked up on an im- provised raft, after being buffeted by the sea for twenty hours without food. Two others reported missing were seen in a vawl. Jos Milmeth, sald to be of the Live Stock National bank of Chicago, and George Myers, a resident of Del Rio, Tex., and owner of a ranch located In Mexico, forty miles from the border, were arrested on Myers' ranch last Friday and now are being held in jall at Sabinas, Mexico, pend- ing payment of $10,000 fin Willlam B. Wilson, secretary of labor, will begin a epeaking tour of the west in behalf of Wilson and Marshall in Indiane, October 5 and 6, and then go to Missouri, October # and 10. Other dates announced for him are: Butte, Mont, October, 23; Cheyenne, Wyo. and Denver, Colo, Oc- 2 Nebraska, October 28; Des October 30, and Chicago, Oc- tober, ALELL against | Rough vy ONTO S NUTS INOUS ez el 7 12087, FOR oz - €D 3?/ = '::: CANRDIAN usz £ 1) COMPET 0 EBRASKA g \NOTED ror~i@ / TREE ARGENTINE = ) + 'CORN YO COMPETE WITH NEBRASKA T, LE }_‘\ = THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, Riding ith] 1y \ ners ) L ON HARD SCHEDILE oJOevers 130 Mutes of Rowgh (™ | Roads and Makes M. Campairm = OMANA WORLD NERALD \ rough'as well 5 as slippery WILSON IS ALARMED: T0 STUMP NEW YORK Hears From Seabury, and De- cides to Waive Dignity and Make Speeches. | TOLD MUST OARRY STATE Long Branch, N. J., Sept. 27.—As a result of the conference today be- tween President Wilson and Judge Samuel Seabury, democratic candidate for governor of New York, the presi- dent is expected to make one of more speeches i.. New York within the next few weeks. Final arrangements have been made\s but Judge Seabury re- mained at Shadow Lawn qver night and will discus: the New York po- litical situation with Mr. Wilson fur- ther in the morning, The president{has been told that it is imperative thak the democrats carry | New York and it is said concentrated efforts will be made to prgsent the democratic case to New York voters. No Connection They Say. The announcement of a long itiner- ary for speeches in New York to be made by Charles E. Hughes, the\re- publican nominee, was read with in- terest by democratic leaders here to- day, but it was said that Mr. Hughes’ plans would have no effect on those of the president, In spite of the determination of Mr. Wilson to make only nonpolitical speeches on his forthcoming trips away from Shadow Lawn, it appeared probable tonight that he would find means for getting his views on par- tisan question before the country.| His addresses here will be more of a political character than those in other places. To Talk to Dems Only. Elaborate arrangements are being made to turn the reception of the president Saturday to mcmbers of young men’s democratic clubs into a big political event. It will be the first time since his notification speech that the president has addressed a purely democratic audienc Warren Ege Elected ‘ Senior Class President Warren Ege was elected president of the-senior class of the Central High school yesterday afternoon. Three candidates opposed Lge, but he out< distanced his nearest opponent hy twenty-three votes. Dorothy Balbach was elected vice president by a bare plurality of three votes over Ruby Swenson. Helen Pfeiffer was chosen secretary by a margin of twenty-eight For Piles Pyramid Pile Treatment Is Used At Home and Hap Saved a Vast Number.from the Horror of Operation. | Don't permit a dangerous operation for iles until you have seen what Pyramid Pile ‘reatment can do for you in the privacy of your own home. Remember Pyramid—Forget Piles. No ease can be called hopeless unless Pyramid Pile Treatment has been tried and has failed. Letters by ti re from peo- ple who ved their ca hopeless are &l onr files. They fairly breathe the joy | f the writers, \ i, Test Pyramid Pile Treatment yourself. Either get s box—price 50c—from your «druggist or mail the coupon below right away for a perfectly free trial. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. 528 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyr: mid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Name. . Btreet. . City, .. Tl votes. William Alley secured the treasurership by a unanimous vote. Paul Nicholson and Elfricda fer were eclected sergeants-at- 3 The class teachers elected were Jessie | M. Towne, Mary A. O’Sullivan and H. R. Mulligan. Restaurant Keeper Dying From Shot of Holdup Man's Gun George Maragos, aged 40, living At 803 South Twenty-fourth street, one of three brothers, running a restau- rant at 2322 Leavenworth street, was fatally shot early this morning, while resisting an attempted holdup of the restaurant. Two middle-aged white men entered and ordered him to throw up his hands. Maragos sized an unloaded rifle and smashed it on the head of one. The other bandit fired twice at Maragos. One bullet entered the throat, taking an upward course and lodged in the neck. The other bullet struck in the leg. The bandits escaped without securing any money. : : Policeman Fritz Frank was in the restaurant a few minutes before the tobbers entered. He heard the shots and rushed in, The men were gone, separating and disappearing. Slugged and Robbed In Jefferson Square Frank Krebs, 1950 South Eleventh street, switchman, brother of Police Officer William Krebs, staggered into the pool hall of Frank Gilchrist, 519 North Sixteenth street, last night and fell unconscious on the floor. He was found to have suffered concussion of the brain. Indicktions pointéd to his having been slugged and robbed in Jefferson square. ! Frank Hyatt, Elgin, Ill, stopping at the Millard hotel, told the police last night that he had been slugged by two men and robbed of a gold watch and $60. Little Tomlives up to Tom Moore's reputation. “It's all in the family” S e e =E { MOORE CIGAR (Havana fitled) TEN CENTS ROTHENBERG & SCHLOSS, Distributers Kansas City, Missouri. Omaha Branch, 1715 Douglas Street. SEPTEMBER STOLEN SILKS FOUND; THREE ARE ARRESTED Clerk in Brandeis Stores Ac- cused and Confesses, Impli- cating Outsiders. ALLEGE PACT TO ROB Stolen silks valued at nearly §1,500 were recovered last night by Detec- tive L. T. Finn of the Brandeis store, when he arrested Reba McKendrick, a salewoman in the store who lives at 204 South Twenty-sixth Her confession led to the arrest of Florence Williams, a dressmaker, liv- ing at 609 South Seventeenth, and Minnie Turner, 614 North Seven- teenth, on a charge of receiving stolen property. Detective Finn has known for months’ that valuable silks and pat- terns have been disappearing from the store, but could find no trace of the manner of disappearance, until yes- terday, when his suspicions centered upon Miss McKendrick. When he trapped her as she pocketed some money paid over by a decoy purchaser, she made a written con fesion. Passed Goods Over Counters. She said she passed hundreds of dollars’ worth of merchandise over the counter to Miss Williams and Miss Turner, and checked in only a few dollars in return. The stealing, she declared in her confession, has extending over a period of six months during which time thousands of dol lars’ worth of stuff has been taken from the store. Her share of the lot, she said was less than a hundred dollars for the entire thefts. Several tmonths ago, she said the Turner woman approached her with the scheme and later introduced the Wil Clear, Peachy Skin Awaits Anyone Who Drinks Hot Water £ Says an inside bath, before break- fast helps us look and feel clean, sweet, fresh. foforfororde ool o Sparkling and vivacious—merry, bright, alert—a good, clear skin and | a natural rosy, healthy complcxmll} ; are assured only by pure blood. only every man and woman could be induced to adopt the morning inside bath, what a gratifying change would |7 take place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking men, women and girls, with pasty or muddy complexions; instead of the multi- tudes of “nerve wrecks,” “rundowns,” “brain fags” and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy-cheeked peop{c everywhere. An inside bath is had by drinking each morning before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea-| spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kid- neys and ten yards of bowels the pre- vious day’s indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach, Those subject to sick headache, bil- iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle, but is sufficient to demonstrate the quick and remarkable change in both health and appearance, awaitin~ those who practice internal sanitation. We must remember that inside cleanliness is more importart than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to contaminate the blood while the pores in the thirty feet of bowels do —Advertisement, The trips a said, the two, she week to liams woman | made several store. The store checking system finally developed the leak and Finn com- menced tracing the thefts. | After the McKendrick girl con- | fessed, she was taken to police head- | quarters and locked up. Detectives Dolan and Lahey then accompanied |Finn to the homes of the other two women and they were arrested Owing to the fact that but one ar ticle was actually seen stolen, Miss| McKendrick was arraigned on petit larceny count and fined $25 and costs | The other girls were given suspended [ fines | Key to the Situation—The RBee Want Ads street. | A FULL SIZE GAS RANGE COMBINED IN ONE. Cunningham Asks Twenty Thousand For Death of Wife Claude G. Cunningham, administra- tor of the estate of his wife, Christina, who was killed when she was struck by an automobile driven by Charles H. Stockdale at Twenty-sixth and Farnam streets, August 17, has filed suit in district court against the Linin- ger Jplement company, asking $20,- ;«mu damages. Stockdale was employed by the company at the time of the accident | Negligence alleged. Cunningham is 1 lrnmp]ains that the auto was traveling at an unreasonable rate of speed when Mrs. Cunningham, a trained nurse, 50 years old, stepped from the street car, United Improvers For Lighting Contract The United Improvement Clubg fast night, meeting at the'council chamber, adopted the following reso« lution: “It is the sense of the United Im- | provement Clubs, that, in view of the result of your efforts in securing the | 6-cent ordinance, we can join with you in approving a contract for street lighting, such as in your judgment is fair to the city and approved by your legal department as to form.” NS AS PART PAYMENT ON COMBINATION AN COAL AND GAS RANGE NO CH ANGES NOTHING TO PULL OUT OR PLACE IN OVEN A FuLL sizg coAL RaNGE T CHANGE FROM ONE FUEL TO THE OTHER —JUST TURN ON GAS AND LIGHT OVEN. DEMONSTRATION CONTINUES ALL THIS WEEK to Cuming, 1 To street car patrons: At the request of the Ak-Sar-Ben Governors and the City Authorities, the routing of all cars on the South Omaha Line, during the Ak-Sar-Ben Carnival, will be changed in the downtown dis- trict, and cars will run as follows: and Cuming east to 16th, South to Webster, east to 15th and south to Howard. On northbound trips, from 15th and Howard to Webster, to 16th, to 17th. This change is effective September 26, 1916. We trust that none of our patrons will be seri- ously inconvenienced on account of this tem- porary change in routing. ILTON RDOGERS & SONS CO. 515 HARNEY — From 17th T mile trip.” A A Sleeve Valve Motor “A Wizard of An Automobile”’ “Averaged 19.8 miles per gallon on a 1312 . “Have owned three other cars, but this is the King of them all.” “It is absolutely quiet, has increased steadily in power and efficiency and has not gwen the least bit of trouble.” We could fill the page with such quotations from enthusiastic own- ers of Willys-Knights. It is the only motor that knows no carbon trouble. Come in and see the car that owners swear by. WILLYS-OVERLAND, Inc., Omaha Branch SALES ROOMS 2047-49 Farnam Street Douglas 3292 The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio. SERVICE STATION 20th and Harney Streets Douglas 3290.