Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 7, 1916, Page 7

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- .with seats for quite an awdience and a I Brief City News ' Platinum Wedding Rings—Edholm. Have Root Print It—Now Beacon Press. Lighting Fixtures—Burgess-Granden Co. Elect Dickinson district judge, Adv. Notice Democrats—Am republican nomfinde for state representative. Vote for me if no one looks better. Sam Hofft, F. W. Fitch—For district judge.— Advertisement. A How about REDICK for judge? Vote for Jacob Fawcett for Chief Justice of Nebraska. The ofily mem- ber of Supreme Court from Douglas County. George A. Magney for county atty. Jeff W. Bedford for co. commission. Shriver for County Assessor. C. T. Dickinson for district judge.— Advertisement. Fine Fireplace Goods—Sunderland. Vote for Jacoh Fawcett for Chief Justice of Nebraska. The only mem- ber of Supreme Court from Douglas County. Carey Cleaning Co. Tel. Web. 392. Vote for Jacob Fawcett for Chief Justice of Ngbraska. The only mem- ber of Supreme Court from Douglas County. Two Are Granted Divorces—Two spouses were granted decrees in di- vorce court from alleged cruel hus- bands. Letty Hudson was freed from James. Barbara.Bushus was granted a decree from James, Bushus. Remember Dickinson for district judge.—Advertisement. Vote for Ql;mb Fawcett for Chief Justice of Nebraska. The only mem- ber of Supreme Court from Douglas County. John C. Martin for Supreme Judge. Travis for District Judge. Yellowstone Park Scenograph for the Visiting Teachers You can see.Yellowstorte park on the third floor of the Brandeis stores any day 'this week betwgen 10:30 a. m. and 4:30 p. m. 2 A little theater has been arranged talking machine to provide music. “The “scenograph” shows the upper geyser basin of the park where over fifty geysers are shown. These spout at intervals varying from one minute to fourteen days sending their streams of water up from thirty.to 259 feet. On the “scenograph” “you see the 0ld Faithful geyser in the foreground and other geysers in the background. A line of stage coaches moves along the road toward Old Raithful inn. Cloutls are moving across the sky. A cloud of steam gurgles and spurts from Old Faithful gci\;ser. Then the stream of water is shot into the air. “Old Faithful,” says the lecturer, “spouts every sixty-five minutes, send- ing a stream of hot water two feet in diameter to a height of 150 feet.”« Night now descends on the scene, the lights in the hotel are lighted and the stars come out in the sky. Soon a storm comes up, accompanied by bright lightning. After a while it is dawn again 'and the stage coaches draw up in front of the hotel to take the sightseers through the park. The show is for the public, the visiting teachers being especially in- vited. The performance and lecture ate given every fifteen minutes. Another Factory - Locatés in Omaka Omaha is'to have a washing ma- chiné' factory; #wo stories high and employing thirty-five to fifty people. D. D. Rullman ofSt. Joseph, Mo, who, with his brother, has been suc- cessfylly manufacturing the Rullman washing machine in St. Joseph for twelve years, has come here to locate a new factory for the manufacture of these machines. Mr. Rullman has al- ready moved his family here. They are now living at 1804 Lothrop street. The factory i8 to be located on the west side of Twentieth street where that gtreet meets the Belt line a short distance south of Ames avenue. The Missouri Pacific Railway company has agreed to put in a spur of track to provide shipping facilities. Ground is to be broken for the ,new plant this week. It is to be a brick building two stories high, with 100- - THE . BEE: OMAHA, TUES DAYS OF THRILLS |POLICE BREAK UP AND RED TORCHES|. GROOKS' SYNDICATE Grol} Recalls Days When Bry-|One Woman and Two Men Are anites Rented'All Halls and Trapped—Had Organized G. 0. P, Stayed_ Outdoors. Band for Shoplifting. By A. R. GROH. It is interesting to look back on| presidential elections of other years‘ and observe the changes. Take the election of twenty years ago, for in- stance. 2 7 (Of course, this will hardly be re- membered by the ladies. They were nearly all small children then, or per- The activities of an organized band of shoplifters, who in the last week have stolen goods valued at more than $500 from the Brandeis, Burgess- Nash and Hayden stores, have been lialted by the efforts of Detective Paul Sutton, whose work has led to the arrest and conviction of Mr. and Mrs |“Jack” McQuirk, 1720 Dadge street, and Russell Wagner of the same ad- BRYAN STILL FIGHTINGITWO OTHERS STILL FREE | still big. 'the measures taken by Chief of Police fawith flambeau and Romap foot front and 120-foot depth. It is to be modern in!eyery detail. The washing machiftes produced by the Rullman company are made for electric, water or hand power, The industrial committee of the Commercial club has been in confer- ence with Mr. Rullman for some months with regard to Omaha’s, de- sirability as a location. Pinch Constable. For What Judge Did vJudgc Vincent Hascall was in a|, hurry to ‘catch the train"that would carry him ‘to Lincoln and the Ne- braska-Ames game. So he Yorrowed the car of his constable, M. J. Roach, 2559 Marcy street. and hastened to catch it. | Being unable.to park the auto in its right positjon and catch thestrain 'at {he same time, he caught the train. . Later Roach was arrested fog leaving his conveyance where it should not be parked. . Monday morning Vincent Hascall heard of his deputy’s predicament and appeared in court to take a plea of gudlty for the offense for which his subordinate had been' pinched. But the magistrate said nay, and proceed- ed to tell Roach a number of things and then fined him $10 and costs. Deputy County Attorney Ramsey. w#lo was sitting in the prosecutor’s ‘chair, and Judge Hascall rescued haps not yet born.) ¢ ' It seems to me that the campaign | was “lots more fun” then than it is now, .lhough that may be because I| saw it with boyhood’s enthusiastic eyes. . . You don't see any “torchlight pro- | cessions” and “flambeau clubs” now- adays. They don't fire off cannon and have marching men shooting off. Rothar. candles’and carrying torches as they did in the big McKinley pa- rade here in 1896. In that year, I see by The Bee files, Bryan and Sewall and Bryan and Watson were the “popocratic” candi- dates and McKinley and Hobart made ! the race for the republicans. | . Where They Were Then. In the year 1896 * Charles F.vans; Hughes was a practicing lawyer in| New York; Woodrow Wilson was a| professor of jurisprudence at Prince- ton; a man wamed Theodore Roose-, velt was president of the New York?! City police board; Charles W, Fair-| banks was a lawyer in Indianapolis and Thomas R. Marshall (now vice | president of the United States) was | even more obscure than he is now, | for his name wasn't even in * ‘fo's\ Who,” and it didn't get in, either, until 1912, ey William Jennings Bryan is the onl big figure of the 1896 campaign wh% has survived the flight of years and,is The Bee of late October, 1896, fore- told the great victory of McKinley, “Fight for Bryan Hopeless,” “All for McKinley,” $aid the/ headlines, and on the day after election one big | heading- ptoclaimed victory. It/read| simply, “McKinley.” ' Hurl Eggs. The campaign was full of rough- ness, as the headlines recite. “Brutal Acts of a Bryan Mob. Cigar Butts and E§7s Hurled at J. G. Carlisle by Free Silverites’at Cinginnati.” “Ready for Bryan Rowdies,” was the heading of an article telling of Sigwart of Omaha. A “Bréan's Last Speech Made Cur- ious Crowds Jam Halls to See the Boy Orator and Return to Watch the Great McKinley Parade.” This was a heading on the day“before the elec- tion. There's a wealth of unconscious humdr in ‘the first four words, isn't there? . T “Miles of Marching Men. Popocrats Have Hired All the Halls, so Republj- can Demonstration Will Take Place in the Streets,” said the headlijes over an account of one of those pa- rades with flambeau, Roman candles and marching men. They /fired off cannons and hammered | on _anvils while the parade marched. Today we_have, our parade in’ auto- mobiles and arguments are niade in newspaper advertisements rather than candles. I wonder if the boys nowadays get the same thrill from an automobile parade that we did from a “flambeau parade” in 1896. ¢ Judge Seeks Home : + For a Little Lad Is there anyone in Omaha who wants to make a home for a well mannered, healthy, 12-year-old Amer- ican boy—a boy whom Judge Leslie of the juvenile court has taken/ such a liking to that he says he would take him into his own if he didn’t have. children of his own? Alvin Bushnell is the lad’s name. His mother is dead and his father is— well, his father is in‘a distant part of the country and has relinquished all rights to his son. Judge Leslie had planned to send young Bushnell to Lincoln and have the state authorities there seek a home for him. Alvin isn’t an incdr- rigible and so.can’y be_sent to the state industrial home.” * The juvenile court judge has ‘de- cided to seek a home for the boy in Omaha and is trying his best to find| out if there isn’t some family in this city that would takey Alvin, at- least for a few months. , China Scoffs at + Christian Europe “War-mad Europe’s challenge to| Christiahity has thwartéd China's Christian progress,” Miss Ruth Pax- on’ told’ her hearers Sunday at the young Women’s Christian association | vesper service. Miss Paxon, who was | association- missionary- at “Tients China, spoke on §Adequate Christian Preparedness.” “Preparedness has come' to ‘'mean to us a military thing, a means by which other lands and other ‘peoples may be conquered, and all for the pomp of power, idea of preparedness is infinit broader than the soldier's definition. “Tell a Chinese follower of Con-| fucius today of all the good being | done for the glory of God in Christian countries and he will politely but| Roach from the bull pen and went his bond after he had appealed the ~ case. " Health of Omaha is In Good Condition Health office statistics for October showed a decided improvement over the same month of 1915, with the ex- ception of typhoid fever cases. There were twelve typhoid cases last month, as against one during October last ear. Diphtheria cases dropped from 26 to 33 and scarlet fever from sixty- four to sixteen. Smallpox was re- duced from seven cases to one case. Health Commissioner Connell stated that the health of the city was never in better condition than at present. pointedly mdke reference to Europe,| where ghris!ians are killing Chriq'.i tians by thousands.” 0! urday night Sutton, who had been | street. | loney, Detectives Rich and Pszan- - Stuebénville, O., of his watch and $10 .| night; good for ‘brain, blood, nerves and | growing children, ane constipation and indigestion without the aid |~ !'ceipt of price. Address O-Eat-It Co., 187 But the Christian |~ dress. Two others, a man and a woman whose identity the police have not yet ascertained, escaped. It HWas been the practice of the missiig woman and Mrs. McQuirk to visit the principal stores of the city and through slits cut in the sides of long, loosesfitting cloaks, steal the articles that struck their fancy. Sat- working on the case for several days, focated the outfit at 1720 Dodge McQuirk Boss. McQuirk is the proprietor of the establishment. Sutton phoned head- quarters and Chief of Detectives Ma- owski, together, with Officer Larry Finn of the Brandeis stores and Of- | ficer O. Tagal of the Burgess-Nash stores responded. They surrounded the ‘house and in this manner were able to get three offenders and a large quantity of the stolen property. 'he man and woman who escaped did so by a clever ruse. Evidently | the culprits, were aware of the of-| ficers' presence outside, for 'the two | who got away were locked by the others in a room, the door of which | fastengd with a padlock on the. out- side. The police passed by this room and when they left the pair forced the barrier and escaped. . ‘Woman. Faints. In police court Mr. and Mrs,* Mc- Quirk and Wagner were sentenced to minety days in the county jail. Upon hearing the.sentence pronounced Mrs. M¢Quirk emitted a wild shriek and fell ,over backward .in a feint, (not faint). She' was removed to the ma- tron’s department. Wagner's function as a member of the crew was to dis- pose of the stolen articles. Shoots Man She " Finds in House Miss Fredd Keuchenhoff, 22-year- old daughter of the proprietress of the Grand Union hotel, Twenty-sixth and L streets, South: Side, shot and per- haps fatally wounded Robert Broder- ick, 30, whom she found prowling in the house early this morning, Broderick is in the South Side hos- pital, in bad shape. Police Surgeons | Losy and Shanahan say he has slight | chances of living., Miss Keuchenhoff said Broderick, who is a stranger td her, had no right in the house. He could not make a satisfactory explanation of his pres- ence to’the police when questioned at the hospital. Highwaymen Suspects ' Held Under $1,000 Bonds James Bentley and John Husheim of St. Louis, who are believed to have held up and robbed John Béck of Saturday night, were bound over to the district court with bonds fiked at $1,000 each. Eat Right - Feel Right hainz Bread for a Few Days, “Q-EAT-IT,” the New Bran and You Will Be Froee and from ation Iny jon Withs out Medicine. At @rocers 10 Cents | Eat Right and Health and Happiness Is Yours to a Ripe Old Age. “0-EAT-IT" is a new gomljnation fully baked, ready-to-eat, pure; delicious, nourish- ing bran bread food. Its crisp, tasty, toasted slices keep Indefinitely—miade from rich goj den wheat-bran and other cereals. “O-EAT- IT" takes the place of all old-style bréad and breakfast foods, ' morning, noon and ures freedom from of medicine or any added expense of living. Physicians heartily recommend it. For sale at_all grocers, 10c, or sent prepaid on re- Studebaker Bldg., Chicago, W' HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Chenp Su utef eost YOU same price. e~ s Used {oiné made from roots and herbs has constipation, indigestion, biliousness, headache, ete., etc. Thous- ands of letters tell of the good it has done to those who have used it—A med- 70 Years Alarge sized sample of Thedford’s Black-Draught liver med. fcine will be sent on receipt gf a 2 cent stamp. This old, reliable med- g [ boen used for over 10 years for DAY, GRAININ STORAGE INCREASES HERE| Corn Bins Practically Empty Because of Great Demand for the Cereal. WHEAT ALMOST TRIPLE Though outside parties are taking large quantities of grain, the quantity in storage continues to increase rather than diminish. This holds true par- ticularly with wheat and oats. Corn, however; is in such demand that the surplus has been reducgd until the bins are practically empty. The following from the inspection report shows the quantity of each kind of grain in storage in Omaha elevators, in bushels, as compared with the corresponding date of one vear ago: Yoar Ago. 601,000 86,000 647,000 38,000 30,000 Ry A Burley Totals Beauty's Treasures Of Hair and Skin Preserved by Cuticura, Trial If you use Cuticura Soap for every-day toilet purposes, with es of Cuticura | Ointment now and then as needed to soothe and heal the first Flmplu, red- ness, roughness or scalp irritation Xou will have as clear a complexion and as gaod hair as it is possible to have. Samg_lpe Each Free by Mail With 62-0. book o8 the skin. q icurs, Dept. o 4 everywhers. XX * Tole . S0 OO - “Mothertried all brands, she knows which is best— . knows how to get good, wholesome bakings every bake-day — how to .save RN C 30505 NOVEMBER 1T, [P Store Hours: 8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M. Saturdays Till 9 P, M Baking Powder money — avoid bake-day sorrows. “‘Shelikes the wonderful leavening strength — fine Tising qualities—absolute purityygreat economy of CALUMET BAKING POWDER “Don't think the Baking Powder younow use is best. Try Calumet once—find y outwhat realbakingsare.” Recelrad Highaot Awards lew. Cook Book Free— . See Slip in Pound Can OOR) OO0 000 »% NN AN NN F BOCTOMK s ¥0% %% [ Ad " OO0 \/ 4 XXX ISP OO0 &g > RIS - oo, OC A OC ..’ D D XY 4 » \ '0 » 6 g SO0 > OO > XK s Ve, > for skin trouble For over twenty years, physicians have relied on Resinol Qintment in the treat- ment of many skin and scalp troubles. They preferit because it so quicklystops itching and burning, and clgars away redness, rawness, Crusts or scales. icine that has had increasing use for so. many years and is so highly en- dorsed is surely deserving of a trial by every one having liver or stomach troubles. Yourdruggists sells Black-Draught— 25 cents a package. One cont & dosé, or for & simple address 8t., 8t. Louis, Mo. Thedford’s Black-Deaught, 1901 Pine . S 595 ey know, too, that it contains nnly:p:\le gentlestof healing materials, which could not injure or irritate the tenderest skin, Why net try it for your skin ? Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap are sold by all druggists. Forsamples free, writeto Dept. 1N, Res- inol, Baltimore, ! Use, Reginol Soap for your hair. 1916 BURGESS-NASH COMPANY. ~'I\(l RYBODY'S STORK” STORE NEWS FOR TUESDAY. Monday, November 6, 1916. i Phone Doug. 137. “Sugar' Plum Hospitality Week” Begins Wednesday at Burgess-Nash PL:’:,z:::;x::‘;é:,a‘w:;:;‘az;“.,;z“g:&‘;z‘::ii:g?:fi@ Brat. the sugar plums. Read Tuesday’s papers for full par- < Wg ticulars on “Sugar Plum Day.” Coats Featured in the November Sale Are Brimful of Style OATS for all the varied octasions of Winter are here. Voluminous coats of Bolivia cloth; velvet coats for, afternoon wear; with deep full cuffs and collars, Flaring skirted, fur-trimmed, some have clever button trimmed pieces at each side; others large fur collars, sometimes over collar of self material. Many odd ideas in belts and pockets and striking linings. $15.00 to $150.00 Young Women'’s Coats ANY interesting arrivals portraying new- ness in_every line. ! A number of high belted types vzith huge fur-banded collars; ‘qaint high-waisted coats with fur used in odd ‘ways, ful] swinginf coats™ with self stitched collars and ample cuffs; all affording safe protection against winter winds. Ripple Cloth, Wool Velour, Corduroy, Velveteen, Plush, ° \ $19.50, $25.00 and $35.00 Coats for Young Girls of six to fourteen. Cozy warm little coats that button snugly about the throat gnd warmly lined and interlined. / ; \ ' Some have the military cnge exténding i ever the shoulders; others have belt “runnin into” pockets. Htfh waisted ahd low wgilus types or with side !ullneu,lhifl;ad at waist line, Cheviot, Chinchilla, Zibeline, Corduroy, Velvet,eeni Plush, - = 5.95 to $36.00 ' Burgess-Nash Ce~Second Floor. -Tuéfiday--A qut Timely Sale of © - Gold and Silver Lace ‘Hats ‘Formerly $7.50, $8.50, $10.00 and $12.50 Values at - ‘?Iow,er Trimmed :Hatisf,(""" : Rib’bomT rimmed Hats | .Fur Trimmed Hats § Hats suitable for every ‘occa- + sion, and in styles that will please the matron as well as the young miss. Hats that were“originally marked $7.50, $8.50, $10.00 and * $12.60, Choice Tuesday, at $5.00 A wonderful collection of . the much-ingvogue gold and silver metal lace hats in all’ ; _ the becoming shapes of the § season. V& Burgess-Nash Co.—4Second Floor. y ' N Bury ess-Nash Co.—Everybody’s Store—16th and Harney e — e e St o Included in the purchase price of your ticket to Chicago’ via the Chicago & North Wgstem Ry. are = b —Smoath Double Track— + . —Automatic Electric Safety §iknaln— * —Reduction of Grades and Curves-— / —Wide Choice of Seven Fast Modernly Equipped Daily Trainé: 730 a. m, 12:30 p. m,, 6:00 p. m, 8:32 p. m., 9:00 p. m, (Overland Limited Extra Far~ Train), 10:10 p.gs, dnd 1:20 a. m. The Best of — — | — * You'll be pleased with the dining servide, too - . g AKE your ‘n;cwl!h'n ¥ at 1401-03 Farnam St. - ¢ Phone Douglas I2'?40 Eurjytlling } No Oth?r Service Like It NW4452

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