Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 21, 1916, Page 7

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I , for furnaces. Brief City News Platinam Wedding Rings—Edholm. Have Root Print It—New Beacon Press Lighting Fixtures—Burgess-Granden Co. Phonc Bedford's New Coal Yard— 1017 N. 23d, tor Paradise coal, best Doug. 116. Asks for Divorce—Rose Vanous has filed suit for divorce with the clerk of ll'w district court against Louls Vanous. Cruelty is charged. Fined for Hitting Auto—H. B. Ruff- ner, 115 South Sixteenth street, col- lided with City Weight and Measure Inspector Scrugg's car at Twenty- fourth and California_streets. Ruff- ner was arrested and fined $5 and costs for reckless driving. Nilsen Goes to Sioux Falls—Marius Nilsen, chief quartermaster, has re- ported at the local naval recruiting station for duty. He came here from New York, where he spent eighteen years in the service, and will be sent to Bioux Faljs to take charge of the station there. ‘Women as Evangelists—Mrs. Mabel Q. Stevens, an evangelist of St. Peters- burg, Fla,, and Miss Minnie A. Nelson, chorus director of Omaha, will open an evangelistic campaign at the Pearl Memorial Methodist church, on the corner of Twenty-fourth and Lari- more avenue, Sunday evening. ilolmes for Municloal Judge. Goes to Congress of Surgeons—Dr. Henry M. Fitzgibbons leaves Saturday night for Philadelphia to attend the American Congress of Sugeons, after which he will be at the Biltmore in New York for a month while attend- ing some of the New York surgical hospitals. Drs, E. C. Henry and A. F. Jonas will also attend the annual con- vention of the American Surgeons’ congress. Fine Fireplace Gooas—Sunderland. Prohibition would deprive the city of Omaha of a yearly revenue of $352,- 000 derived at present from liquo! ll- censes. All of this large sum go the school fund. It is sufficient to build five new, modern, twelve-room school* houses every year of the type of the Castellar and Vinton schools. Only by greatly increasing taxes on property can this loss, which prohibi- tion would cause, be made up. Think it over. Douglas County Property Owners and Taxpayers’ Leagle, 335 Rose building, M. J. ( reevy, secretary, Sigma Chi Chapter At Lincoln Accused Lincoln, Neb., Oct. 20.—Chancellor Avery of the University of Nebraska announced last night that national-offi- cers of the Sigma Chi fraternity would be summonded to* Lincoln to take drastic action against the local chapter, possibly the wtihdrawal of its charter. The action of the chan- cellor follows complaints by the Lin- coln police authorities that the chap- ter house has been used as a hiding glace for property alleged to have een taken from hotels and billiard halls. Eighteen months ago, Chan- cellor Avery said, the local fraternity placed mclrundcr a cloud, and it was warned that a second offense would mean the request that its charter be forfeited. The charge against the members, he said, will be that of har+ boring stolen property. Wheat and Corn Soar Still Higher Going up! A Wheat went so high Friday that it smashed even Thursday’s record of $1.66. No. 2 hard brought $1.68, An excellent cash demand and rather light receipts boosted the wheat market from 1 to 3 cents, The bulk of No. 3 hard sold at $1.66, and No, 4 hard went as high as $1.64. Yellow corn reached the 90-cent level, the highest price ever paid for this corn in the Omaha market. One choice car of white corn soared as high as 90 cents. THE STORE OF THE TOWN A Fall Overcoat Is a Present Need We’ve Four \ Distinct Models. You May Have The Box-Back, The Pinch-Back, : Or Form-Fitting, Button Through Or Fly Front. The Variety of Fabrics Includes Tweeds, Novelty Cheviots, Knitted Fabrics in Heather | Mixtures, Oxford Or Cambridge Grays And Blacks. Silk-Faced or Plain. §150840 Beautiful Furnishings New Shapes in Hats Browning, King & Company GEO. T. WILSON, Mgr. EERCTT S PAPER BOY IS USED T0 HARD KNOCKS But the Training They Receive Develops Sturdiness, Self- Reliance and Ambition. SOME ARE SONS OF WEALTH By A. R. GROH. Let us sing a little song in praise of that bright-eyed, sturdy lad who comes to your house daily—the paper boy. ® He is a “paper boy" simply in the sense that he carries newspapers. In physique and haracter he is rather an “iron boy.” For he is industrious, am- bitious, self-reliant. Oftimes he does.’t “have to work.” Many of the boys who carry The Bee are sons of well-to-do parents, parents who realize that a job outside of school hours is the best kind of train- ing for their sons. One of the boys was driven around his route by his father's chauffeur in | the big car several times this summer when his mother wanted him to get| through early. Usually he walks, like the sturdy, independent, democratic lad he is. Carries to Dad’s Employes. His parents could lap him in luxury, but they are too sensible for that. They want him to gain habits of in- dustry and self-reliance. Some of the employes of his father’s establishment are on the boy's route. Imagine a son of wealth delivering the daily paper to one of his father's mfiloyes in staid, old England! My wahrd! Just fawncy! This is an illustration of the mag- nificent democratic spirit of the west,|= Which lad, think you, is likely to de- velop into the finest man—the ond just mentioned, or the boy who lies abed late, who is taken to school in | the family limousine for feag the dear child will catch cold, who taps fa!her's purse for spending money, who, in short, never does anything except what he likes, who never makes an ¢ffort, who is larped in continual phy- sical and mental luxury? Not only do the rising generation in Omaha carry paper routes. Some of them rise early every morning to tend to their “lamp routes,” lighting and extinguishing the street gas lamps. My friend, John B., is proud of his job, working in a department store, Saturdays; and Elmer is not ashamed to drive the wagon of a humble vege table peddler on Saturdays. The school of hard work and hard knocks is, after all, the best school Dwellers in Utopia would quickly de generate into flabby-muscled, flabby- A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vcietnble ingredi- ents mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr.. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a nor- mal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s system. 1f you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head- aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olwe Tablets nightly for a time and note e pleasing results. Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the successful substitute for calomel—now and then Just to keep in the pink of con- dition. 10c and 25¢ per box, All druggists. THE BEE: brained, incompetent, unpmun good- for-nothings. The great men of the west were, al- most without exception, men who! struggled, and by that very ~lrugulmg made themselves capable of great things. Are Full of Pep.” Their struggles put iron into their blood. And this iron of character goes on today, hammering itself against obstacles and battering them down. One of the girls who keeps the Bee | the “Eaper boys.” “They are certainly the dandiest lot of boys,” she says. “So self-reliant, | wide-awake, bright, number of them have bank accounts, and nearly all of them buy their own clothes. They pracncall) all go to school. Some are saving up their money to go to college.” Solomon used the ant as the sym-| bol of industry. There weren't any paper boys in his day. “Go to the paper boy, thou sluge gard; consider his ways and be wise.” H. D. Estabraok To Talk at the Rome | Saturday Evening City, one of Omaha's men who went east to help make New York what it is today, will speak at 8 o'clock Satur- day evening under the auspices of the McKinley club. The subjec; will be, “America as a Nation.” Mr, Estabrook is a fluent | speaker and always receives a good hearing when he returns to his old home town. He was in the presidential primary race last spring, but decided to with- { the tra k MEN'S 1916 mend them for their worth. '.W“ A diseasen cured u PILES s Free Book for men and women. Establ DR. 0. circulation books is fairly in love with! ambitious. A| Henry D. Estabrook of New York| draw after making a few laps around‘ D _WITHO Fistula, Fissure and all slmfllr unti lga permanently {n Y. CLEMENT, SPECIALIST, 617 Good Block, OMAHA, SATURDAY, 'RECORDS FOR LOW MERCURY SMASHED Never So Early in the Month | Has the Weather Been So Cold as Just Experienced. All records for low temperatures | recorded in Omaha in October pre- vious to the twenty-first day of the month were knocked sky high when, {at 7 a. m, the thermometer at the local office of the weather bureau reg- istered 20 degrees. With but two ex- ceptions this is the lowest tempera- | ture recorded in Omaha in. October ‘ since the establishment of the obsery- | atory here on November 1, 1870. On ‘Ouober 27, 1878, the lowest—1S de- grecs—wu reached, and on one other ouasmn the mercury dropped to 20 degrers That was on October 2%, [ 1913, No records were broken for pre- | cipitation by Thursday's storm, how- ’e\er The snow and rain which fell amounted to only .50 of an inch of precipitation. According to reports received at the local weather office the central portion of the state | lower temperatures Thursday night | than did the eastern and western por | tions. At North Platte and Valen- ,nnc the mercury dropped to 14 de- yrees, while at Lhevenne. Wyo., and points in western Nebraska 36 de- grees was reeorded. So far as Nebraska is concerned, the blizzard is over, The prediction fair, \\lth slowly rmng lem era- and ONYX Guaranteed HOSIERY for and in all Popular Colors, WALK-OVERS : Less advance in prices than any other known make. & || § All men who have worn Walk-Overs know and recom- ° A last to fit any shape foot. = = Try our boys’ and youths school and dress shoes; g g best money can buy, $3.00, §. 'WALK-OVER 317 So. 3.50, $4.00. . BOOT SHOP 16th St. e KN IFE an 3% 10 l nr-. nder a positive cured, SERVICE STATIONS IN OMAHA 18th and Cass Sts. 20th and Hamey Sts. 39th and Famam Sts. 45th and Grant Sts. 50th and Dodge Sts. 24th and I Sts,, 18th and Ouming Sts. South Side. MOISTURE HALF AN INCH| experienced |* OCTOBER 21, When your lver gets torpld and atomach | Govoe ™ oreanizer of Nebraska chap- acts queer take Dr. King's New Life You will feel better. Eists.—~Advertisement, ture, tion for lowa, 1916. 7 D. of 1812 Unveil e o A s ey e T Snow and colder is the predic- the storm having passed on to that state. ' A. Rine, in the absence of Mayor e e N 0. Gates Memorial | vaniman. - wrs. W. L. Selby and Help Your Liver—It Pays. Mrs. William Ardhibald Smith un- A memorial hrm'h to Nettie Collins veiled the benclf ludge Arthur Wakeley and Dean James A. Tancock [ter, Daughters of 1812, was unveiled | also took part in the exercises. Mrs. | at Iurnrr park and the boulevard at|J. J. Stubbs is president of the chap- fternoon. Mr-. (.enrge | ter Plils, All drug Only 2bc ——Store Hours: 8:30 A M. to 6. P. M. Saturdays Till 9 P. M. == BURGESS NASH COMPANY “EVERYBODY'S STORE" yo October 20, 1916, STORE NEWS FOR SATURDAY. A Marvelous Sale of MILLINERY Starts Saturday Morning A'Sale That Is Really Sensational An Offering That Stands Without a Parallel for Value Giving VERY year about this time we clear the surplus of our millinery section to make room for new winter models, everything is priced to go regardless of the former style or dependability; all new and clever dependable merchandise offered at prices that border on the sensational, It's a wonderful gathering of mew trimmed hats—choice individual crea- tions offered at prices that are but a fraction of the original or intended selling price. It's impossible for us to tell you the exqui- site beauty of these hats. You must come and see for yourself—but let us emphasize the fact that they are all new and desirable styles trimmed the most becoming ways. TRIMMED TRIMMED HATS HATS Every one different, smart Pretty new creations that were to $7.50 in the clear- | new effects; formerly to $16.50, Saturday at— i l Extra Special! | l | TRIMMED HATS Exquisite new creations, individual in styl® charac- Ready-to-Wear Hats That Are| Usually to $5 Offered Saturday 1.00 HE surplus of a big Chicago manufacturing milliner; every hat bears the label of this concern, a label that stands for the best in millinery. Scores of smart new effects ready to wear; usually to $6.00, Saturday $1.00. Burgess-Nash Co ~=Secand Floor. Two Groups of Children’s Hats In the Down-Stairs Store Saturday ATEST shapes in plushes, velvets; prettily trimmed with rib- bons, etc. Every mother with a little girl will want one or two of these splendid values. Children’s Hats ’ 59c $1.00 Children’s Hats Usually to $1.98, Satur- Usually to $2.98, Sat- day, at urday, at .. Burgess-Nash Co.—Down-Stairs Store. The Women of Omaha Will Appreciate This News of Tailored Suits At About V4 Underprice Involving a Special Purchue by Our Representative Now in the Eastern Market. THE headlines tell the story— other than to say the suits are strictly new and measure up to the BURGESS-NASH STAND- ARD OF QUALITY in every re- spect. Two Special Groups Suits That would ordinarily be priced 0 $45.00, Saturday— 29.50 o~ Suits That would ordinarily be priced to $60.00, Saturday— '39.50 1lg are fine chiffon broadcloths and velours; some plain trimmed, ly trimmed with fur. Wide variety of styles from which to make ulec- | isonable shades, including Burgundy, green, plum, etc.; sizes for Burgess-Nash Co.—Second Floor. LTS « *‘ 1L « 1Y |

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