Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 1, 1916, Page 12

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12—A FINED BY JUSTICE ; Twenty-Two Pay Up and Prom. B ise to Do Better—Oaught by State Chemist. -OTHER CASES ARE PENDING Twenty-two milk dealers paid the penalty for selliag milk of the chalk water variety instead of the real K facteal fluid when they fell into the i traps laid by State Chemist W. T. Frisbee and his assistants Friday aft- ernoon. All appeared before Justice of the Peace Kubat, paid their fines, ranging from $10 to $20 and costs, 5 and went their way promising to re- b frain from using the town pump to Al bolster their business. Out of 229 camples taken by In- 4 spectors Maloney, Tusa, Morse ,and emble, in conjunction with the state chemist, these twenty-two cases were filed. Others are pending. The state law provides that milk must test more than 3 per cent but- terfat, while cream offered for sale must show 18 per cent or over. cording to the complaints filed against the convicted dairymen the milk has averaged from 1 to 2% per cent butterfat, while the cream proved 10 to 15 per cent. Country Milk Higher. “Tests made. in country towns where there have been no attempts made to dilute the cream show: as | high as 30 per cent butterfat,” said E State Chemist Frisbie. “There is no | .. reason [of violation of the state law 8Uth as has been staged by careless Omaha dairymen.” Those who plead guilty and paid their fines, flooding the top drawer of Judl'e Kubat's desk with currency Ilé‘ 8i ilver, were: m Chrigtianson, Chris Spanggard, L E. Sco%. Knud Knudson of the Walnut Hill dairy on two counts, James Milgard, Swendsen & Ander- son, H. Sheanin, K. Knudson, C. Mortensen and C. Grasbo of the Elite , H, Norgaard, Charles Hansen of the Fairview dairy, Sam Christen- sen, C. Jensen, H. J. Peterson, Beck & Knu son, Chris Spangaard on two counts, Chris Peterson, John Jacob- son, P. W. Winter,]ames Milgard of the Central dairy, Jacobson & Ban F ;Cl!rhu'anlon. School Inspection . Problem Solved by 5 Appoiniing Nurse Charlotte Townsend, who served last year as examining nurse in the public schools, has been appointed supervisor of the staff of school nurses. \ This practically disposes of the ::ool medical inspection controversy r the present, There are eight * nurses examining children of the pub- lic schools. e plan will be that n an unusual;situation arises in ool a competent physician will once be engaged to advise and work with the nurses.- The Board of Education considered the proposition of ennf‘ing a physi- cian on half time to have regular Q::’rn !i:‘ the lil‘ll’;elt n;:i (hel lch}?ol ection work, but that plan has been abandoned in favor of the selec- of a nurse to serve as chief of the examining staff. A bill covering medical inspection of public schools will be offered to the legislature this winter by the las county delegation. ~ This measure will have the Irprovll of the _ school officials before it shall be of- « fered for passage. The proposed law will give the school officers specific suthority, will provide for the ex- nditure of adequate funds to care or the children whose backwardn in ‘'school is due to adenoids, def; tive, hearing, eyesight and teeth, Bloan’s Liniment—Kills Pain, Ts the greatest pain killer ever discovered; simply lald on the skin—no rubbing re- - Ac-| of the Keystone Park dairy and W.| () Layiné Of Corner Stone Of New Temple North Sixteenth street, shot himself. Impressive ceremonies will mark the laying of the cornerstone Wednes- day of the new Masonic temple—a temple that will, when completed, represent an outlay of more than a half million dollars and rank as the finest structure of its kind west of Chicago. Ground was broken for the building last spring, five floors of the skeleton steel framework at Nineteenth and Douglas streets being in place at the resent time. There is one more rFloor of steel framework to be added. The masonry and brickwork has al- ready been started on the first floor. The laying of the corner stone will take place at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, The officers of the grand lodge of Nebraska Madons are to be escorted from the old temple, located at Six- teenth street and Capitol avenue, by a procession headed by the Arab pa- trol of Tangier temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, ollowing this body will be the Blue lodges of the city, with a di- vision for the visiting E.r(hrcn. The Knights Templar, forming a special | escort for the officers of the grand lodge, will come next. When the column. reaches the new temple the order will be reversed. The 'order issued by Fred Rogers, | imperial potentate of Tangier tem-| le, requesting Shriners to wear their | | fezes in the procession to the new | | temple, has been recalled. Shriners are urged to march either with the | Blue lodge or Knights Templar bodies. Shriners who are members of the Knights Templars will be ex- pected to march with that division. Although there will be no assem- blage of Scottish Rite Masons in a body they will march with the Knights Templar and the Blue lodges. he_oration will be delivered by Most Worshipful James R. Cain, jr., past grand master of Nebraska Ma- sons, Past Grand Master Alpha Morgan of Broken Bow, S. T. Davis of Te- cumsa, and John Ehrhardt of Stan- ton will be here for the ceremonies. It is hoped to, have the new t:n)lylc conmpleted by next spring. The structure will be one of the most im- posing homes of Masdnry in the country, and naturally an important unit among the finer buildings of maha, & The description, “six stories high,” does not do d’unice nor does it give but a faint hint at the true height of the structure. In reality the new Masonic temple will be as lofty ‘as any ten-utorrbuilding the city. The size of the plot of ground upon which it stands is 110 by 132 feet, situated on the northeast corner of Nineteenth and Douglas streets. X The construction cost of the build- ing alone is 3350,900, $100,000 having been spaid for the/lot. With the cost of the furnishings, etc., the total will be brought up to well over a million dollars. of Bedford Mone, terra cotta and brick. The interior will be finishe for the most part in marble and tilé, what woodwork there is to be quarter-sawed oak, The classic lines of the Omaha temple are to he somewhat similar to those of the one in{Brooklyn, N. Y., where the local building commit- tee obtained many of its ideas to be incorporated in the structure here, This committee, consisting of L. Pet- te?ill, chairman; M. M. Robertson and ] ames A. Howard, visited | the larger cities of the east and inspected the temples in each of them in order to gain ideas as to how the Omaha structure should be built. The Brook- lyn temple was regarded as the finest of them all. The first floor of the Omaha temple will be utilized for store rooms, five facing on Douglas street and one on Nineteenth street. Offices for business and professional men are to be on the second floor. \ The banquet room, which is to take u? the entire thi(dfloor. will be one of the most ml[‘mflcer.nt. in the United States, with lofty ceiling and rich furnishings. Offices for the Blue lodges and quired—it drives pain away. 26c. All drug- lsts.—Advertisoment. « privilege. Grand lodge are to be on the fourth floor, Lodge rooms for the Com- | mandery, the Eastern Star and the | “THE OLD The exterior of the temple will be | THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 1, MORE MILEMEN ARE |Omaha Masons Have Plans All Laid for COMPLETED. N\ — OMAHA MASONIC TEMPLE AS IT WILL APPEAR WHEN the Ada Belle between Decatur and Omaha, telephoned the Commercial club recently that he has been asked to go into Dakota and bring down this big boat for the owner there. Captain Walters was not advised as to what operations the boat is to start when it gets into Nebraska waters, 1916. Laborer, Despondent Over | 1l Health, Shoots Himself Mike Bogen, 35, laborer, of 11521 He was found in the rear of 1106 Douglas street shortly after noon Despair because ot continued ill health is the cause of the act. Attend- ants at St. Joseph's hospital say his chances for recovery are slight. Urges Everybfie: to Quickly Get on Water Wagon Drinks glass of hot water before breakfast to wash out poisons. To see the tinge of healthy bloom in your face, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up with- out a headache, backache, coated tongue or nasty breath, in fact to feel your best, day in and day out, just try inside-bathing every morning for one week. X Before breakfast each day drink a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it as a harmless mcans orwashing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bow- els the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before put- ting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is | wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. A quarter pound of limestone phophate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient ¢n ton onstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, sweetens and fresh- ens the skin, so hot water and lime- stone phosphate act on the blood and ject to constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, rheumatic twinges, also those whose skin is sajlow and com- plexion pallid, are assured that one week of inside-bathing will have them both looking and feeling better in HViele Most Worshipful Grand Master Grand Lodge of Nebraska, A. F. & A. M. different chapters will take up all 3 the space on the fifth floor. "I:Il:‘. print The sixth floor will be a huge au- S o% ditorium| with a twenty-five-foot ceil- your eyes in(,dufatmzbl.,soo fieuon_u. It ti|s to be tire easily-- used for big Masonic_gatherings, balls, and the fike. The Shriners will ook ed also hold their meetings on this floor. One of the features is to be a gallery extending around the auditorium, Big Steamboat is Headed This Way A big steamboat is on its way down the Missouri river. When it is sched- CUD ¢ CURAED ¢ CURRED ¢ GUREED * | apecially emfloyed /to make & thorough PHILLIPS Optical Co. L] ' 807-809 Brandeis Bldg. uled to come to Omaha is not known locally, or whether it \s destined to Omaha or not. Captain Davy Walters of Decatur, who for a time operated REAL SHOW GIRLS REAL ART AT “MY LADY’S FAN" EAL LIVE MONKEYS AT THE MONKEY SPEEDWAY internal organs. Those who are sub- | & Real Estate Loans / Loans made for building, for lifting a mortgage and for other purposes. If you own a lot and have a portion of the cost of building, we can loan you the balance. No commission.- No delay. Small monthly payments. Assets, $9,500,000.00. Reserve, $222,000.00 Omaha Loan and Building Ass’n Northwest Corner Dodge and 15th Sts. G. W. LOOMIS, President. W. R. ADAIR, Secy. and Treas. J. T. HELGREN, Asst. Secretary. A. A. ALLWINE, Asst. Secretary. SOUTH OMAHA OFFICE: 4733 So. 24th St J. H. KOPIETZ, Agent. every way.—Advertisement. RI ‘ DRIVING REAL AUTOMOBILES Ordinary Nuxated Iron will often increase the strength and endurance of delicate, nervous folks 200 per cent in two weeks’ time. SPECIAL NOTE—Dr. B.,Sauer, & well- known physiclan, who has studled widely in both this country and Europe, has been investigation Into the real secret of the great strength, power and endurance of Jess Wil- lard, and the marvelous value of nuxated iron as a strength bullder. NEW YORK—Upon being interviewed at his apartments in the Colonial Hotel Mr. ‘Willard sald, “Yes, I have a chemist with me to study the value of different foods and products as to their power to produce great strength and endurance, both of which are 8o necessary In the prize ring. On his recommendation I have often taken nuxated iron and I have particularly advo- cated the free use of iron by all those who wish to obtain great physical and men- tal power. Without it I am sure that I should never have been able to whip Jack Johnson so completely and easily as I did, and while training for my fight with Frank Moran, I regularly took nuxated iron, and I am certain that it was a most impor- tant factor in my winning the fight so easlly.” Continuing, Dr. Sauer said: *“Mr. Willard's case is only one of hundreds which AL 1 A Famous Draught and Bottled Beer RELIABLE” : Right and Privilege There is a vast difference between right and privilege. That a manufac- turer has a right to make beer is un- deniable. That the individual has a right to drink beer-moderately and temperately-is indisputable. It'is the sale of and traffic in beer that is a -Metz Brothers Brewifig Company, Omaha * Brewers and Bottlers of Fine Beer Only Why should the right of the manu- facturer and the right of the individ- ual be endangered by the misuse of privilege? Is it not wiser to better regulate and control privilege than to impair and destroy rights? 1] rience, which proves conclusively the aston- S I could cite from my own personal expe- ishing power of nuxated iron to restors strength and vitality even In most compli- cated chronic conditions.” Not long ago a man came to me who was nearly half a century old, and asked me to give him a preliminary examination for life insurance. I was astonished to find him with the blood pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and vitality as a young man—in fact a young man he really was, notwithstanding his age. The secrot. he sald was taking Iron—nuxated iron had filled him with remewed Mfe. At 30 he was In bad health; at 46 careworn and nearly all in. Now at 60 a miracle of vitality and his face beaming with the buoy- ancy of youth. As I have sald a hundred times over iron {s the greatest of all strength bullders. If people would only | throw away patent medicines and ,nause- ous concoctions and take simple nuxated fron, I am convinced that the lives of thou- sands of persons might be saved who now die every year from pneumonia, grippe, umption, kidney, liver and heart trouuie, The real and true cause which started r discases was nothing more or less !than a weakened condition brought on by lack of iron in the blood. Iron {s abso- | lutely necessary to enable your blood to change food into living tissue. Without it, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you with out doing yoy any od. You don't get the strength out of I, and as a conse- ou become weak, pale and sickly just like a plant trying to grow eficlent in fron. If you are not or well, you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you me to whip Frank Moran ESS WILLARD GREAT TRIUMPH OVER JACK JOHNSON:SAYS IRON IS GREATEST.OF ALL STRENGTH BUILDERS ted Iron helpec TELLS SECRET OF HIS EASY VICTORY. ALSO REVEALS HITHERTO UNTOLD SECRET OF HIS N N R ards’’ with strong healthy bodles. Mr. Willard accounts for by saying:i— “1 consider that plenty of irow in my| blood is the secret of my great strengtl, power and endurance. ,-49/41&«/ can work or how far you can walk with- out becoming tired. Next take two five- three limes per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and nee for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, rundown peo- ple who were alling all the while, double their strength and endurance and entirely get rl of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days' time simply by taking fron in the proper form. And This after they had in some cases been doctoring for months with- out obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents, . You must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated llke nuxated Iron If you want it to do you any 00, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete or prize fighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and endurance and fllled his blood with iron before he went into tho affray, while many another has gone to in- glorious defeat simply for the lack of fron.— E. Sauer, M, D. NOTE—Nuxated Iron, recommended above by Dr.. Sauer, Is not a'patent medicine nor secret remedy, but one which Is well known to druggists and whose iron constituents ars widely prescribed by eminent physiclans everywhere. Unlike the older inorganic fron products, it is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the contrary, it s a most potent remedy in nearly all 'forms of indigestion, as well as for nervous, run- down conditions. The manufacturers have such great confidence in Nux%ated Iron that they offer to forfeit $100.00 to any charitable institution if they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and increase thelr strength 200 per cent or over in four weeks' time, provided they have no serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double 'your strength and endur- ance In ten days' time, It I8 dispensed by Sherman-McConnell drug stores and ail good druggists. FARM 9TH AND 10TH § ————— B 3 H IMPLEMENTS STREETS, HOWARD TO HAI‘FNEY OMAHA

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