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Be All The News Ail The Time Tli Bn gift it retdwi ft dQy panorkm of the happening! of the whol world. EDITORIAL PAGES ELEVEN TO TWENTY. H VOL." XLI NO. 312. OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNK 15, 191: SINGLE COP? TWO CENTS. Omaha Daily LIGHTING SYSTEM APPROVED Ornamental Illumination Ordinance I Passes Second Beading. CITY HAS AUTO REPAIR SHOP U-lpat' Chauffeur Ordered to Hare City Expert Make Re pair to Avoid Vnnece. ary Coats. f An ordinance providing for a system of ornamental electric lights on Farnan . street has been submitted to the city council by the legal department, placed j cn its first and second readings and laid -over untn this morning. This ordinance provides for the install. . ' - ..0 U. W to cost the city not more than JS5 per year. If funds permit as many more lights as the council deems necessary may bo installed. Police Commissiontr Ryder introduced resolution directing all commissioners to hereafter have their automobiles re paired at the city's repair shop adjoining the police statloti. The repairs, he said, have been costing the city too much. The ' resolution passed. H. H. Bowes appeared to protest v against me revocation or me eaioun li cense of William Miller. The council , heard his argument and upon the advic : of Judge Ben Baker, corporation counsel, advised him to scrap it out in the court? I as the council could do nothing under the law but revoke the license upon the conviction of the saloon keeper. Councilman McGovern objected to the ordinance reapportioning city funds. Mr. McGovern's department was cut $3,900. He said he would need this money. Ac tion was not taken to relieve the situa tion. Act on Bee Editorial. . A communication was read from the Insurance committee of the Commercial Iplub calling the council's attention to an 'editorial in The Bee in which the danger of constructing flimsy buildings was pointed out and permanent buildings of high class construction urged. The com munication was referred to the depart ment of fire protection and water supply. Report of appraisers fixed the value of the property condemned at Nineteenth and Twentieth and Ohio at $1,860. Councilman A. C. Kugel did not at tend the meeting, being confined to his oeen sunering tne last two days. The expense account of W. D. Marks, appraiser in the employ of the city to fix the value of the ga company' prop erty, was held over until Saturday for investigation. Upon the recommendation of the city attorney it was decided to return to the owners all Auditorium stock donated. A request from the .Daughters of the American Revolution to have an ordinance passed making it a misdemeanor to deface Oregon trail narkers, was referred to the legal department NESTOR OF THE OMAHA BAR IS NINETY YEARS OLD. High School Teacher Gets Ph.D. Degree The University of Nebraska has con ferred the degree of doctor of philisophy upon three candidates: Former Chan cellor E. B. Andrews, Prof. L. Pfeiffer of the department of history of Nebraska university and Mary Sullivan of Omaha Miss Sullivan's work for this degree was done In Europe under the direction of Prof. C. W. Wallace, the world-famous Shakespearean scholar. The work waa ready for presentation a year ago upon Miss Sullivan's return from Europe, but the examination was deferred because of the serious illness of Miss Sullivan's mother. The thesis, which is the chief basis for 1 the honor, Is an origmal contribution to I the knowledge of the Masques, presented They involve Shakespeare and hi fel lows in the social and diplomatic maneuvers which characterized the struggles between Spain, France and England for continental supremacy and gave bitterness to the conflict between Catholicism and Protestantism. Miss Sullivan will leave for New York ( ' i , i at .Via nliea e9 enhnnl kha txrlTl nnn. fer with other teachers of literature con cerning high school courses in English and will read proof upon the manuscript which is ready for publication. WALNUT HILL PUPILS PERFECT IN ATTENDANCE The following ' pupils of Walnut Hill school have been neither tardy nor absent during the school year just closed: Raymond Fellers, Glen Pickard, Albert H. Gustafson.Fay R. Byers, Ralph G. Ford, Alven Larsen, Emerson Westgate, Marie Ruhe, Charles Hall, Myrtle Erlkson. Venus Ketchner, Josephine Gavin, Laura Ruhe, Hazel Wiggington, Joyce Rosebrook, Ruth M. Gordon, Dessie Clark. Alice M. Jackson, Olga Eitner, Raymond Medlin, Helen Dawson, Maud Louise Cole, Willie Marsh, John Day, Frances Trebilcock, Katherine Janowski, Alice E. Day, Norman Fellers, Frances C. Cleland, Evelyn Westgate, Alma C. Larsen, Albert Carlyle, Douglas Cooper, Victor E. Nielson, Edwin Gray, Louise h. jonnson, Helen L. Cooper, Agnes Zlch, Joel Clark, Herbert Sprecher, Arnold Linder, Chester Holz, Charles Dawson, Ruth Cunningham, Helen Searson, Jean Palmer, Byron Tucker, TWO FINED FOR DRIVING ON WRONG SIDE OF STREET G. W. Beaver, arrested Tuesday by cycle officers for driving on the wrong side of the street, was fined to and costs in police court On the same morning H. H. Hawke of the Gray Bonnett Taxi cab company, his employer, was fined $25 and costs for the same offense. I .$::.:: M '--Wfe-.W f TV, ' U J v '. . -.v.-..y.-..:. - m AV BW.vfJr.v v. -v. . -,t- ft -tin r JUDGE ELEA2ER WAKELET. Objections Are Made Against Renewal of Rescue Home License A petition, objecting to the re-jstab-Ishment of the Tinley Rescue home at Fourth and Bancroft has been cent to the city council and is now in the hands of the legal department Objections are made, by Judge Howard Kennedy. Dr. E. Holovtchiner, Dr. J. A. Williams, William H. Hatteroth and fifty others. One of the reasons for objecting to the "home" advanced by the peitioners is that in the past it "received unfavorable comment and created notoriety." Also, the Douglas County Detantlon home is within one block of the site and too many institutions of such nature are being grouped near Fourth and Bancroft. The petitions sets forth that the value of property is decreased by having this borne to near, improvement are re tarded and the neighborhood is made undesirable. Another reason for the objection Is that there were disagreeable sights in connec tion with the operation of. such an insti tution." It is not "conducive to good morals of those residing near or rasping by the institution." For these reasons the petitions request that the. license be withheld. The council will consider the case when the city attorney brings in a report. Segerstrom Pianos to Be Sold Very Cheap The Segerstrom Manufacturing com pany. 1825 Farnanr street, Stock of high grade pianos will be closed out at a gale which will begin Monday morning. E. B. Segerstrom, who is in charge of the local headquarters of the firm, has found It necessary to give up the busi ness here in order to go to the Seger strom factory in Wisconsin and there help in conducting the piano-making busi ness, which is one of the largest in this section of the country. The Segerstrom company now has orders that will keep the factory busy until September 1, though no new business should be se cured. The' Omaha stock of the Segerstrom company includes more than twenty dif ferent makes and is one of the largest in the city. One of the lines carried la the famous Knabe piano. All these pianos will be sold at great reduction in prices, beginning Monday morning. No piano will be held in re serve, for the Segerstrom company has decided to ell every Instrument within a certain time. The pianos have been priced so low that they are certain to go, declare the Segerstrom company. BOOST FOR OMAHA Insist on having your suit made in Omaha. ! CLOTHING MAN IS SUED BY WIFE FOR SEPARATION Mabel Gray Smith is suing Frederick Lyman Smith, a well-known Omaha clothing dealer, for divorce, setting forth cruelty as ground for spparation. She asks also for the custody of their 8-year-old child and reasonable alimony. They were married eleven year ago. A Serious Breakdown results rrom enromo constipation. ut. King' New Life Pills relieve headache, etomach, liver and bowel trouble. 25c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. We are Bltlag- Omaha because B " vua wuiy mteen aeiiar tailor tUi( elotkea la Omaha. Every Coat Tried on in the Basting Without Extra Charge. The price U Jut half actual ralue. MID-WEST TAILORS " Artbar L. Lemon, Mgr. 1606 Harney St, Omaha. 423 N. 24th, South Omaha. WAKELEY NINETY YEARS OLD Nestor of the Dough County Bar is Hale and Hearty. TENDS TO PRACTICE AS USUAL FUNERAL OF E. M. BAKER WILL BE HELD SATURDAY Delivers Principal Address at the Meeting of tbe Omaha Bar As sociation Helped Form State Government. Despite the fact that he was up rather late Thursday night, Eleazer Wakeley. attorney, was at his office bright and early yesterday morning, ready to meet several clients who came in to consult him. He will be 90 years old today. "Judge" Wakely, as he is called because he served as a Judge for sixteen years. In many ways Is Omaha's most wonder ful man. One of the most brilliant ad dresses made at the Omaha Bar associa tion's annual dinner last night-was made by him. His forehead is bald, his hair is white and his beard gives him a look of advanced age; but his face is the face of a man not beyond middle age. When he stands he is as straight as a young Sioux. Every faculty Is retained in full strength, a remarkable vocabulary Is at his command to express the profound thoughts of an active mind, the voice rings loud and clear. Native of New York. Judge Wakeley was born June 15, 1S22. in Homer N. Y. In 1S44 tie was admitted to the bar in Ohio. In 1847 he was a mem ber of Wisconsin's last territorial legis lature and drafted the constitutional con vention act which preceded the admission of Wisconsin to statehood. In 1S57 he came to Nebraska as associate Justice of the territorial supreme court. After serving three year he went back to Wis consin and resumed the practice of law, but he returned to Nebraska and located in Omaha in 1867. He was a member of the state constitutional convention in 1871 and helped Nebraska into statehood. Last night Chief Justice Manah B. Reese of the Nebraska supreme court, wished that in ten years Judge Wakeley might let the bar association help him celebrate his hundredth anniversary and the association Joined him in the wish. Xneteen Hurt In Wreck. MACON, Ga.( June 14. Nineteen per sons were hurt, three seriously, when a Central of Georgia passenger train crashed Into a string of freight cars on a curve at Evrette, Ga., today. The funeral of E. M. Baker will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Cole-McKay chapel. Interment will be In the Masonic plot in Forest Lawn cemetery. Mr. Baker died Thursday from an overdose of strychnine in hi? rooms at 1711 California street. He was a druggist by profession. He has no known relatives. Capito! lodge, Ancient, Free and Ac cepted Masons, will have charge of the service. He was a member of the Masonic lodge at Dakota City, Neb. Persistant Advertising Is the Road to Big Returns, BIG FINE FOR HITTING ELEVATOR CONDUCTOR Ed McTlgue waa fined U5 and cost in police court for assaulting Leo Gannon, elevator conductor at the Union station. Thursday evening. He pleaded guilty to the charge. McTlgue was drunk and made some insulting remark to Gannon which he re. sented. Thia precipitated a fight between the two in which Gannon wa llghtiy disfigured. At the time the car was be tween two floors and filled with women paksenger. The Persistent and Judicious Ue of 1 Newspaper Advertising Is the Road to.. Business Success. .. i The Half Million Dollar Stock of the Bennett Company Goes on Sale Monday Morning, June 17th That's a very simple announcement to make, but it conveys more of real mportance to you than any other merchandise announcement ever made in Omaha.' There never was a sale like this in the whole United States, and it isn't likely there will ever be another. We Have Purchased the Entire Stock of the Dennett Company and Leased the Building for Thirty Years and it is in keeping with the famous Orkin Policy that this tremendous stock is to be sac rificed at once not a dollar's worth of the old Bennett Company's goods shall remain when the sale is over. Each Day of This Sale will Teem with New Features. The Store will Sparkle with a Rare Bargain Brilliancy Every one of the 71 big departments of this store is included-not a single item in the entire store will escape the mark of the blue pencil. Men's and boys' furnishings and clothing, women's and chil dren's furnishiDgs and clothing, dry goods of all kinds, and everything wanted and needed for the home, will be sold regardless of value or former pricing. The Purpose of This Advertisement is to simply call your attention to those facts and suggest that you watch the announce ments concerning the sale as they daily appear in the public press. Be 6ure you get your share. Orkin Brothers Company ANNOUNCEFSEEW! 'l l ' .""it"l b D Smith & Bros. Typewriter p Opens Direct Branch Office in Omaha Owing to the great demand and increasing popu larity of the L C. Smith & Bros, writing in sight typewriter, we are opening a direct branch of our home office in Omaha, with Mr. B. F. Swanson, our former dealer, as man ager for the Omaha territory. Sub offices have been opened at Des Moines, Lincoln and Sioux City, and additional traveling Salesmen will be added so as to cover closely our entire Omaha territory, which comprises Iowa, Nebraska and a part of South Dakota. This will enable us to better care for the business of our many users in this field. An efficient employment department will be a feature of our business, the services of which will be free to employer and employee. An invitation is extended to the many friends of the L. C. Smith & Bros, typewriter to call and visit our store and inspect the New No. 5 model. Cata logue mailed on request. L C. Smith & Bros, Typewriter Go. B. F. Swanson, Manager i Kf 1316 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. SUB OFFICES: 510 Fifth Street, Sioux City. 417 Locust Street, Des Moines 135 North 13th Street, Lincoln. TP"" IE V