Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 09, 1921, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE HLE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. tttPratttbn v. ivit.
a
ff rain Directors
Defer Action on
Wage Reductions
iv "II n n . . .
u. survey umditioui 10
Other Chin With View to
Ketreut-hmeut of Ex
peniei Later.
Itrlcf City A'wr
The board of directors ol tlie
Omaha & Council tlluffi Hrcet Rail
v. ay company decided yeaterdsv 10
I oiil in abeyance tlx nutter ol re
(iucing the wage of the cainien,
crnmniendrd bv the Xcbra.ka Stale
KailMiy commuiion in its oru-r ; r th, rr,iwjrn by nuraoa.
i t ; a .1.. ... ......... - . . i
mm urnicu inc iom'ny ( B,rtcH,f DeadVlrtU O. Htrlik-i-nry
parng-r rale of 8 cciila. vr, formerly an attorn- In Omaha
1 lie board alo direct K. A. Leua and a Christian ffcianra torturer 1ur
lcr. ffciicral manager, to make an In went y.ars, died lat week In
l ii a Uaiia 1 iiMtcxt o p L rrv J,
Flynn. brothar of tha lata Tom
Mnn. baa b en appuinl4 a-envral
baa It ft Inspector,
(,-niMorj RinnWa) SeWTne an
nual rail reunion or in umiw
ennalalorv. HVotlub fill Maaone,
ill ba bald in 1'iuaha November 11
to IT.
Ifctor Otaiia OlfcWe ftr. C C.
Murrleou and Or, tilenn Miller
have removed their emcee from til
brand! tbeaier building to Bulla
191, aU-Cague building.
IWconwa fe-tmnl PHmlnal Ilay F.
it yrare with The Uee rlrtula
Uon department, naa accepted a po
anion aa principal of tha high
arhool at Newport. Neb.
Mi-auraa In kVttonU Bix dlph
inert ana eu svari.t rever caeea
wera tltet'overed In the public arhoola
inia following an 'lamination
investigation of street railway wage
umditioiii in other cities, ao that the
board may know whether tin wage
'ccomcndation of the Mate commit
i on shall be adopted. M r. Lcm.lcr'i
investigation alto will include aalariet
of traction company executive!, inas
much aa the atale railway commit
lion's recommendations covered all
employes, from general manager
Jown ,
The directors of the street tailway
:ompatiy were disappointed in not
receiving" relief In the form of an
rtnergrncy rate. They announced
tcaterday that they wilt endeavor to
to do full justice to employes, the
public and their stockholders.
Would Require Tail
Lights on Parked Cars
An amended ordinance pertaining
to the operation of automobiles re
quires that cars narked between
sunset and sunrise must have tail
lights burning when the cars could
not otherwise be keen from the rear
at a distance of 200 feet.
Police Commissioner H. W. Dunn
explained that the chief purpose of
this ordinance is to regulate the
parking of automobile in dark
streets. lie asserted that many
cars are parked in tror.t of homes
New York City. II waa 61 year old.
talinol Karat Named Edith
rtii'hardaon and Minnie WhlUlake
huva been appointed to tha health
department u(T of nuraa. with
Chinese Seminary
Cornerstone Laid
Artbbisbop Htrty, Attuted by
Fifty Priest, Officiates at
Ceremonie.
Cornerstone ceremonies of the new
Chinese Cathohs Mi.skm seminary
were held yesterday morning on a
2.11 acre site wrt of Bellevue col
lr ae. Bellevue.
Archbishop J. J. Harty of the
dioeese of Omaha officiated and was
sui.ted by 50 priests. Key George
A. Smitkol of St Cecilias cathedral
was master of ceremonies. The
arehibthop, dressed in the roles of
office, blessed the stout.
This site will be the home of the
Chinese Mission Society of America.
The building will be known as St.
Columbians Mission House and will
co-t $650,000.
The Chinese Mission society was
established in Omaha two years ago
at 5035 Bedford avenue, ilie new
lutlea aa In-pectors or parochial seminary 'will be mainly for the edu-
einooie. i canon oi novices anaming w
k.iiv-a ft'ahiMsi William Ma. priesthood and missionary work in
per, ailea-ed boot runner and pal or the Chinese Mission society.
Tom Kelly, waa arreated veaterday
by Detectives Heller and Rich and irtf r . V ' .
being held tor the authorltlea of OfllCen IO to KlDSai Llty
Bismarck, ff. V.
Jublleo UiniK'r Psnw Next
Thurmlny menibera of Carter Lake
club w ill hold a dinner I'anee at the
elubhouee aa a JuMloe for the cba.
ing or tha iJl memborship, with
mora than 130 enrolled.
BlM'Isblrda on Wing Mia. Helen
Arlon Lewie. 643 South Fiftieth
night and are dangerous unless
carrying tail lights.
. The commissioner explained that
the ordinance does not refer to the
uowniown srrecu.
or in alleys during part or nil of the cth"iou "H"10'! baa been
. I fkMtnhllKneH 4i ritat hat, ar I r k tTn mo (a.
For Strand Robbery Suspect
Detectives Andrew Trar-P and
Robert Munch have gone to Kansas
City to bring back V Omaha Joe
bhotwel . arrested on suspicion ot
having been implicated in the Strand
theater robbery.
I . If . ... .1.. L . .
i.iu. i. hi'rH. h.ve h.n .hi. City police, carried two revolvers and
week flylna- over tba city. Several $1,600 when arrested. It is believed
flocks have been . seen in eraln he will resist extradition.
neld. Police sav that Scott Irvintr. cor
Ask RaJnc for Teaohrra The Na- ter at the Strand, identified a photo
unnai f raternal congress in Chicago graph Of Shotwell.
Buupiru rroiuuun in lavor or. in-
rreancd pay for teachers. This ac
tion waa taken at tha request ofl
Mrs. Mary E. LaKooca, Omaha 1
teacher.
CHI NtaUon lloblMtl Euralarsl
made another raid on the L. V.I
Nicholua filling etatlona 'Wednesday
nlaht, selecting the station at Forty-1
nintn avenue and Dodge street,
where n aafe waa broken open and
sou Ktoien.
Welfare CViutioll Tho National
Mrs. Drake's Divorce
Plea Supplemented
By Alienation Sui
The divorce action filed on
Wednesday by Mrs. Lota M. Drake
against Frank II. Drake was fof
towed yesterday by an alienation
suit brought by Mrs. Drake against
Mrs. Nellie S. Harris.
Mrs. Drake alleged in the aliena
tion action that her husband v. si
"enticed" by Mrs. Harris. The
Drakes were married in 1900 and
have five children. Mr. Drike is
real estate man at 711 Brandcis
Theater building.
District Judge L. D. Day Issued an
order yesterday restraining Mrs.
Harris from disposing of an auto
mobile claimed by Mrs. Drake. The
car is kept at J915 Webster street
Clinics to Terminate
Reunion of Medicos
Clinics at University hospital to
day will end the llth annual reunion
ol the Alumni association ot trie
University of Nebraska College of
Medicine. The reunion opened
Monday.
Today's clinic will be under
the direction of Dr. F. W. Niehaus
and will be followed at 12u0 by
luncheon and round table.
I he social activities of the re
union ended last night with an in
formal banquet and dance at the
Omaha Field club.
Colonel Sibley in Omaha
Cot. W. G. Sibley of Gallipolis. O..
former editor of The Bee and now
editor of the Chicago Journal of
Commerce, was in Omaha yesterday
visiting old tnendsV
entabllhhed in Omaha, with Francis!
t: Aiatnewa, attorney, aa diocesan
president and delegate to the na
tional convention In Waahlngton
BcpieniDer 21, zz and 23.
Fooh Invitation Endomrd My-
iron T. Herrlck. United States am-
Kegro Insists as lie Paid Tax lbJuT,ad1or t0 Fra?c!'.ha:.nlorreJ ?
n T l r i r. '. .i I Invitation extended to Marahal Koch
vu Liiijuur tie uan 1 pc jbucu
John Brown, young negro, living
at J010 North Twenty-seventh street,
' can't comnrehrnd Uncle Sanl' l.iwii.
nohow, especially the prohibition
ones. . ' .v . -
"You-all cain't take me to jail," he
protested to Deputy Marshal Shaffer
yesterday, when the officer arrested
liim for illegal sale of liquor. "Ah
done paid mart tax to Uncle Sam."
Inquiry . elicited the fact that
Brown had paid a $100 fine to the
collector of internal revenue, several
months ago, shortly , after his arrest
nn a ctar rrnrrrs ft nncostectnn f (
wis u b&js.i viibi ek x .ui vviiiidiwu ua
liquor.
"He thought the fact that he paid
Mlie fine entitled him td sell the liquor
openly' said Shaffer. ' r
e . i ..
Elects Peterson Secretary
Byron .' . Feterson, ' Omaha, was
elected secretary of ! the Nebraska
Osteopathic association at the.- an
nual election of officers held at the
Fontenclle hotel yesterday. s
Other officers elected werer N. J.
lloaglantf, Central City, president;
A. E.'Vallier, Columbus, vice presi
dent; , Lulu L. Crarhb, Fairbury,
treasurer. v-
Omaha was chosen for the 1922
convention city. The , convention
came to a close with the annual busi
ness meeting. L " '
Dr. Jennie Laird stated that re
ports that Omaha hospitals, were un
kind to local osteopatha was untrue.
U. S. Attorney Stewart in
Omaha to Get Evidence
Don W. Stewart of Lincoln, ap
pointee to the assistant United
States attorneyship there, was in "the
city yesterday, gathering information
from Lloyd Magney relative to the
federal ' cases to be tried before
Judge Woodrough in Chadron and
Norfolk, next week. -
' A. W. Lane, a second Lincoln
man to be appbinted to the same
post, according to dispatches from
Washington, will come to Omaha to
assist J. C. Kinsler, United States
district attorney, it was learned yes
terday. Lane served when Frank
Howell was in charge several years
ago.
to nttend the International Air con
gress In Omaha during November,
according to a letter received by H.
II. Baldrige.
Consent to Audit Officers of thei
American Brokerage and Develop
ment company appeared yesterday!
oerore District judge I B. Day and
agreed to an audit ot the booka of
the company in connection with an
action brought by John O. Sterner,
Biocanoiaer.
Sues for Divorce Mas Bowman,
540 North Twenty-eighth avenue.
urougnt an action ror divorce in dis
trict court yesterday against her I
nuenana, aeorge J., who -a a motion
picture operator. The wife, who
naa tnree children, alleged that Bow
man assaulted her.
rPIeee, jr., - 204 North Eleventh!
street, arrested on complaint ofl
Hugh Anderson for intimidating' a
Government witness, waa released by
United States Commissioner Boehler.
Plaoe has a federal narcotic law vio
lation charge still pending against
mm. ne is out on oond.
n T--. 1 ,rr. .
Still Near Death Here
7 Still unconscious from the effects
of a beating by tramps, supposed to
be members of the I. W. W., re
sulting in a fractured skull, a man
named Smith, believed to be from
St. Joseph, Mo., isin a critical con
dition at St Catherine'a hospital
His recovery is doubtfut, according
to hospital attendants. -
Ada Jones, the woman who was
with Smith when the two wee at
tacked in a box car on a Burlingtoa
train eu route from St Joseph to
Omaha, is still unable to tell a co
herent story of the affair. A
Flyer Yackey and His Bride
Return From Honeymoon
Wilfred Yackey, American ace
and reserve pilot for the local air
mail division, is back in Omaha with
hi bride, formerly Miss, Olive Koken
of St Louis." f 1 ' "' '
The river and his "bride, whom
he met while she was doing volunteer
Red Cross work, were married June
23 in St Louis.
Since then the young couple have
been , honeymooning at Richfield
Springs, New York. They have
taken an apartment at Forty-eighth
and Webster streets.
Legion Delegates" Will B
Selected at Meeting Tonight
' Members of the American Legion
are called to meet in the council
chamber in the city hall tonight
to elect 44 delegates and 44 alter
nates to the national convention at
Kansas City the latter part of Oc
tober. Following the election there
will be special music and stunts, ,
Bequests Made to Public"
Institutions By Frenzer I
John IN. frenzer, late real estate
man, bequeathed considerable money
to church and charitable institutions,
according to a will filed in probate
court yesterday.
Among the beneficiaries are St.
Mary Magdalene church, City Mis
sion, St. Vincent de Paul society,
Child Slaving Institute,. Salvation
Army Rescue. home, Volunteers of
America, Visiting Nurse association,
M. Josephs hospital and St. James
Orphanage. The estate is estimated
at $100,000. W. H. Thompson is
named executor. -
Five Injured. When Street
Car Smashes Automobile
An attempt to pass in front of a I
moving street car .at Sixteenth andl
William streets yesterday noon re
sulted in the overturning of an auto
mobile and injuries to the following:
William Miller, 4616 -Nicholas
street; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Teele,
Twenty-first and Elm streets: Mrs.
M. Ohlman, 2211 South Twenty-first
street, and her son, Clarence, 7.
Miller was arrested on a charge!
of operating an automobile while I
intoxicated.
Rev. Charles H. Lyttle Is
New First Unitarian Pastor
Rev. Charles H. Lyttle, 37, who
was chosen to succeed tne ttev.
Robert Leavens as pastor of ttv
First Unitarian church, Thirty-first
and Harney streets, last spring has
arrived in umaha to take up nisi
new oastorate. .
Rev. Mr. Lyttle comes trom tne
Second Unitarian church of Brook
lyn, N.. Y., where he was pastor for
seven years.
Regular services at the churcn will
commence next Sunday. '
Illinois Organization ;
To Boost Air Meet Here
A state organization in Illinois has I
been organized to boost the interna
tional air congress, which is to be
held here November 3. Capt George
S. Foster of the Chicago Aviation
club, -and Reed Landis, son of Judge
Landis. former army aviator, are
boosting the organization. Twenty-1
five states are forming state organ
izations, according to word received
by Earl Porter, president of the I
Omaha Aero club.
Woman Who Died From Hurts
In Airplane Fall Is Buried
Mrs. Martha Gaines Bushman,
who died in a local hospital Tuesday
from injuries received in an airplane
ocrirfent a month ago. was buried
yesterday morning in Holy Seput-
rtir remeterv.
Funeral services were at St Peters
r.tholir church at 9. : LOW mass I
was said by Father McCarthy. Missj
Winniired Traynor played the organ
and John McAlpine sang.
Bee Want Ads Produce Results,
C3
W.
have seldom indulged in
superlatives. Kelly quality
has been so well established that
it hasn't been necessary. Today,
Kellys are better than ever, but
their price has been materially
lowered. Exhaustion of war-priced
material and economies made pos-
sible in the new Cumberland Plant
have brought down costs and this
saving -is being passed along to
the user. ' V-
Now you can buy Kellys for the
same prices you will have to pay
for other tires that have always
sold for less.
Kelly Cords are made in two types: the
Kan t-Slip Tread which offers a resis
tance to wet, slippery streets that makes
skidding next to impossible, and the sturdy
Block and Button Tread. Both are long
mileage tires and sell for the same price.
Six Cbrd Tubes
30x3 $28.40 $3.35
32x3 36.60 3.60
32x4 46.00 4.30,
33x4 47.60 4S0
34x4 49.40 4.65
32x4 53.00 5.45
33x4 55.00 5.60
34x4 55.40 5.80
33x5 65.40 6.65
35 x5 68.00 6.95
Kelly-Springfield Tire Co.
Factory Branch.
2578 Harney Street.
OMAHA,
Phone Douf las 3272.
NEB. .
Burges$-Nash Compony
In the Downstairs Store
Exceptional Valines :
Another Purchase of
Fall Dresses
May
New
$1500
These new arrivals in dresses offer many styles fea
tures, delightfully new and different. Noticeably charm
ins: are these straightline models of
Tricotine
Crepe de Chine
Serge
Satin
with elaborately trimmed skirts. Some are adorned with
heavy beadingothers with silk and yarn embroidery and
still others with rows and rows of shining braid; dozens of
styles in sizes 16 to 44. Very low priced.
Other dresses range in price from $10 to 139.90. Very special lines
in Extra Sixea: 42 to 54,&.
TbaDowntUira Sura
New Percale .
18c yd.
New Kali percales 36 In.
wide. In very attractive
leafjrns and of excellent qual
ity. 18c yd.
Flannel Shirting
29c yd.
32 inch Flannel Shirting
In neat stripes and checks
and excellent quality for
early fall wear. 29c yd.
Bed Spreads
$225 est
Scalloped bed spreads with
cut corners suitable for full
slzo beds. These are of
heavy weight and pood qual
ity. ' '
Tha Dewaitaira Stars
New Fall Skirts
$5.00
Smart and practical in pleated and box pleated .models,
of all wool velour plaids and stripes, in brown and green, red
and tan and other delightful combinations.
Tha Downataira Stora
New Velvet Hats
$3.50
Many smart styles, in close fitting
models, also hats with wider brims with
tailored trimming effect- in black and
other popular autumn colors.
Tha Downataira Store
Children's Cotton
Union Suit
- J . . . . - . ,:
A Clearance Price in children's
white Cotton Union Suits, low
neck, sleeveless, knee length with
sizes from 6-16, 39c. '
39c : 3 for $1.00
Children's Rib Hose
A good weight for school wear,
black only.
All sizes 6 to 10.
17c: 3 for 50c
The Downetalrs Store
More Beautiful Silks
99c yd.
In plain and fancy weaves, 32 to 40 inches wide, including:
Georgette Crepes,
Crepe de Chine,
Chiffon Taffetas,
Satin Messaline,
Stripe Satins,
Foulards, .'
Brocaded Linings,
Bloomer Satins, -
Tha Downataira Store
Printed Kimono Silks,
Satin Stripe Poplins, .
Printed Pongee,
Satin Stripe Tub Silks
Turkish Towels
23c ea.
Good weight Turkish towels,
made of two-ply yarn ; neatly hem
med ends. This quality will give
practical service, !;
The Downataira Store ,
56-inch Habit Cloth : 95c yd.
This is a wool mixture of splendid weight. . Excellent for boys' suits,
men's shirts and women's and children's suits and skirts; in attractive gray
mixtures, brown mixtures, navy blue and black.' . -
The Downataira Store "
School
Shoes for Boys : Girls
' For Older Girls
For big girls, school shoes of the better quality, in black and brown calf or kid,
in high lace stylea,..with low military heel. - Sizes 2Yt to 7. . Specially priced
at $3.00 pair. -
Shoes for Girls
In black or brown calf, with foot form
toes, lace styles. .-
Sizes 8 Vi to 11; Priced at $2.95 to $3.43.
Sizes 11 to 2. ' Priced at $3.45 to $3.95.
Shoes for Boys
The kind that will stand wear. In
brown or black calf, Blucher lace style,
solid leather throughout. Sizes 1 to 6.
Priced at $2.95, $3.45.
The Downstairs Stora
New
'Union Suits: $1.25
Fine quality elastic ribbed,
' medium weight, long sleeves,
ankle length. Sizes 34 to 46.
Natural color. $1.25 each.
Hose : 10c
Excellent quality reinforced
heels and toes, elastic ribbed
tops, medium weight for fall
wear; all colors, all sizes.
10c pair.
Shirts : $1.49
New Fall Shirts, well known
makes, excellent quality madras
and percale, neat patterns, coat
styles, all sizes. $1.49 each.
Fall Suits for Men
and Young Men
$14.50 to $25
Conservative models of excellent make, in attractive
patterns in brown and blue, wool mixed fabrics and wool -cheviot
mixtures. Many suits have extra trousers. Sizes
34 to 42.
' Men's Trousers
Smart patterns in correct fall cobra. All sizes;
$2.95 to $4 95. -
The Dewaataira Store
Tb. Dmrnatoira Store
V