Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 30, 1922, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE FF.K: OMAHA. THURSDAY. MARCH S. 18;
The Omaha Bee
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Sunday Avtrag ..78X!5
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farU. tranto ua BU Honor
Who Deserves the Credit?
Now that the four-power treaty '' !" r,it'
lied, md il companion, which limit naval
; rmaincr.t h- l"n all but unanimously ap
t roved, and the other work of the Washington
tonferrnce i coming to a glorious end, the
democrat are cttinj up claim to all the glory.
They omit to cay that President 1 larding'
lure in the conference wa to carry on the
preliminary negotiations, issue the invitation,
i ame the American delegates, and submit the
treaties to the senate.
On Thursday of last week, while Sen
ator Carraway of Arkansas was opposing the
iour-power treaty, he made a statement to the
effect that the president had bitterly opposed
the Borah resolution, or the idea of calling a
conference. This colloquy followed:
Mr. Poindexter: On the contrary. Mr.
President, of course, if it makes any difference
to the senator from Arkansas between stating
what is correct and what is not correct, the
president had made arrangement, so 1 am in
iormed, to call the conference long before any
of the occurrence to which tho senator is
referring. He had already begun negotiations
with certain of the powers, before the Borah
resolution came up. for the purpose of having
this conference.
Mr. Carraway: Why was he so bitterly op
posed to the Borah resolution?
Mr. roindcxter: I was not bitterly opposed
to it.
Vr. Carraway: I said why was the presi
dent? Mr. Poindexter: The senator had better
k the president. I do not know that he was
bitterly opposed to it.
Mr. Can .way: The senator knows. Will
he tell me?
Mr. Poindexter: The senator said the pres
ident was opposed to the conference. The
fact are that he had made arrangements to
tail UlC UUMIVI VU.OIUV v. .. ...... -
is misstating tacts, the senator irom Arkansas
. is right in other respects.
i Give to Woodrow Wilson all honor for his
devotion to high Ideals, to William E, Borah all
'credit for his effort to direct the nation into the
right path; but why detract from Warren G.
Harding his hare of the great work? Is the
srlorv of the late and little lamented administra
tion to shine only in proportion as the existing
one is besmirched?
Taxation of Intangibles.
" A decision of the Nebraska supreme court
has, on the surface at least, put the principal part
of the new revenue law into the discard by taking
away from the "intangible" list municipal war
rants and bonds. Ruling that these are govern
mental instrumentalities, the court holds them to
be exempt tinder the section of the constitution
which relieves all governmental property from
taxation.
A new angle to an interesting debate is thus
opened. If the bonds or other obligations of a
municipality are exempt from taxes, it might well
follow that any form of governmental obligation
is exempt, as all are instrumentalities of govern
ment to the extent that they have been used to
provide funds for carrying on the activities of
government. When the United States was ar
ranging to finance it share of the war, the ques
tion of taxable or tax-free securities was seriously
debated. The law eventually set a limit on the
amount of Liberty bonds that could escape taxes.
Land bank bonds are specifically exempted; cer
tain state and municipal bonds arc tax free in
states where they are issued, and from normal
income tax. Estimates a to the total of tax-free
securities emitted since 1917 vary, but the figure
. is somewhere, around thirty billions of dollars,
,' That is a good sized chunk of wealth of a
most tangible sort to be placed beyond reach of
the tax gatherer. Nebraska has shared with
'other states in the issuance as well as in the pur-
' chase of these bonds. The new rule will at least
increase the attractiveness of municipal evidences
of indebtedness as investments, and may also add
to the affirmative side of the debate as to whether
"the issuance of tax-free securities should not be
specifically forbidden.
hi undertaken to male liberal provUion (or
them lirn their vfkm days ait ended. This
ught to hold taod for all, and if the law require
amendment to mke it good for all, the amend
went ihould bf nude without delay.
"Youth Will Be Served."
Jligli choo tudent did not exactly telhheir
parent where to head in, at the joint Iieuion
of the dance, but did give the old folk a jrtUy
clear idea of how tome thing look to young
i) c. Thii i natural;. in fact, it ha been so front
the beginning. It U the tendency to diverge, the
everlasting impulse to improve, mniieting ittrl.
again nd again, jut a it always has. Parent,
however, are not the everlasting atick-ld-tfie-mud
their retle offspring sometime regard
them a bring. Most father and mother are
progre.ir, at leant to the point of wishing for
their offspring advantage that come from the
newer way of doing things. Here i where the
tendency to diverge impinge on the conervatie
inclination, born of experience and reluctant to
enter on any path the end of which may not be
foreseen. Youth, buoyant and trusting its own
power, sometime rushe heedlessly to destruc
tion. A di.daiu fur difficulties and a thirst or
knowledge a it driving force impel the letting
out upon enterprise that may or may not have
pith but certainly allure because they arc novel.
Lldcrs may only Mand on the oilier side of the
stream of adolescence and hope that those who
enter o joyously will come out safely. No rule
has yet been devised for it passage, no wisdom
has solved it mystery, no tenderness of love ha
rounded it depth or averted it danger. Boy
end girls can not realize this as men and women
do. Youth will be Served, and it will alway be
true, as Tennyson wrote
Knowledira cornea.
Hut Wladom linaor. and he tieara laden breimt.
Full of nad experience, moving to the otitlnea
Everybody Works America
l and of the Eay Mark and
Home of the Btiy Producer
of his rest.
Civil Service and Federal Employes.
A difference of opinion between the attorney
general of the United States and the associated
federal employe is bringing out some facts the
- public is interested in. Mr. Daugherty's inter
pretation of the retirement law may be correct,
but, as already set out by The Bee, it is unjust to
80,000 federal employes, whose long and faithful
-service give them the right to expect all the
benefits of the retirement provision. The presi
dent of the federal employes' association chal
lenges the statement of the attorney general with
legard to the tenure of office of any civil service
' employe. Any servant of th government
: subject to discharge; that is as it should be. The
) civil service law was framed to protect the worthy
; servant from the exigencies of politics. If dis
missed It must be for cause and not because'of
party affiliations. Examinations determine fit'
ness, and service and seniority control promo
. t'.ons. But no individual should be deprived o
civil and political right because of being on the
government pay roll. Uncle Sam is a good fel
low to work for; he does not always pay top
: wages, but he gives hi men good conditions
JakMteisohable care uf them at all times,-and
Old Phrase With New Meaning.
"Tcmpus mutantur," or words to that effect.
Once the cellar was a hole in the ground under
the house; it was poorly lighted, almost without
ventilation, difficult of access, and generally de
voted to the storage of vegetables. As civilia
t:on advanced, the condition of the cellar im
proved, and, with modern heating appliances and
methods, it took on a continually increasing im
portance. In prc-VoIstead days, the home of
comfort and convenience had in its cellar a fur
nace room, a vegetable closet, a fuel bunker, and
frequently a laundry. To these is now added a
work room," said by some to be the most im
portant adjunct of the modem house. Plans and
pecifications for these work rooms are not made
public, but those who are interested will have
ittle difficulty in getting full information from
those who have one. That is one delightful
quality Of the brotherhood that has grown tip
since the 1st of July, 1919. Its members are ever
willing to exchange experiences, and bv consult
ing together as to methods and processes are
able to achieve results of which they are proud,
o matter what others may think. Therefore.
none need go long in quest of what is rcauired
to properly outfit a "work room" in a cellar, nor
suner lor want of detailed instructions as to how
to proceed. The progress thus connoted U ia-
nificant, and between the apparatus down stairs
and the wireless set overhead, the old phrase,
"from cellar to garret," has become something
entirely new and full of meaning-.
Between Children and Parents.
Joseph Spence of Unionville. Pa., and hU 17-
ycar-old daughter, Marie, met for the first time
m eight vears at- F i t Tdo.,ri i, j...
Marie had lived eight years in France. Shi.
could speak no word of English; her father could
speak no 1-rench. An interpreter was called in
make it possible for father and daughter to converse.
Immigration authorities spoke of the affair
as tragic. It wasn't nearly as tragic as countless
meetings between fathers and mothers and sons
and daughters every day in the year all over the
wqrld. The real tragedy is when oarcnts and
children speak the same words but a different"
language, when the boys and girls have different
interests, different theories of conduct, different'
ropes and aspirations from those of their par
ents; Sometimes the children "grow away" from;
their parents because of superior training, some
times, because of waywardness. The heart
ache is almost the same in cither case. The child
who "goes to the bad" causes many a tear: the
hild who "looks down" on the father and mother
who made their life possible gives almost as much
pain. And it happens every day.
The bar of language can be surmounted: the
tar of differing: ideas and ideals is more difficult.
People have not forgotten it was Toseohus
Daniel who proposed that the United States build
a navy greater than that of any other power, and
it was woodrow Wilson, not Warren G. Har
ding, who approved that plan.
A speedy trial of the murderer of the Tenth
street pawnbroker will do much to tranquilize
the crime wave in Omaha. Sometimes a cood
example has a wonderful effect.
Governor Miller has declined to pardon Jim
Larkin, and the strife between De Valera and
Griffith will have to be adjusted by somebody
else. s
From the Detroit Free Pre.
In the role of pcUI commissioner ol lmmi
e ration for the Department of Labor, Lillian
kutsell 1 rather a novel tentation. The country
never ha afsociated Mi Kuell itH erwu
part. Siill there I no reawm why he houlI
be denied obcr attention, and he ay thing
not to be Ignored, when he aert that America
i being "over-propagandered,' and the tone
of tuffering humanity in Lurope and of oppre
ion "all have the dollar Mgu lack ol them,
that it is her personal belief there are organisa
tion financed for the sole purpose of "making
money out of what they call humanity, and when,
finally, she warn against letting down the im
migration bar.
It is probable MU Rue!t will modify, or
explain, wme of her rather iweeping utement
when he make an official report to the ecre
tary of labor, for we do not imagine she intend
to deny the existence of tui'fering and oppression
in l"urope. ,,.
Hut there i one point where Mi iUell
dm- not exaggerate, because it i ncx: to impon-
ibte to use even hyperbole in discussing it. 'i he
United State is propaganda-ridden today a it
never was before. Not even when Mr. Creel was
running his department of "public Information"
for the benefit of the Wilson administration were
the people of America, and the newspaper in
particular, so bombarded. Anybody who want
anything, whether in Europe, Aia. Africa, South
America, or the lag end of creation, make a
plea to the people of the United State, generally
for financial aid, frequently for political help, and
sometime for actual warlike interference.
"Emancipators" and lecturer and special emis
saries tour the country. Magazines, books and
pamphlets flood the mail. Special writer litter
the desk and eventually the waste baskets of
editors with "exclusive articles." for some of
which they even have the effrontery to ask mon
ey. Agent of all sorts and degrees of subtlety
pervade the country, and a part of the work they
do is clever enough to drceive temporarily gov
ernment official and veteran copy handlers;
while the inexperienced pass over their wealth
a though they were lambs in Wall street. Ef
fort are even made to use the government, pud
make congress a tool for the furtherance of ior
cign political plots, scheme and plans. More
than this, when Washington or the country at
large shows any decided disposition to Isalk. and
declines to be a general "good thing." America
becomes a target for abuse.
It will be a good thing if the American peo
ple as a whole will develop a more or lcs "hard
boiled" attitude, and while continuing quick to
respond to legitimate appeals and to pleas from
real sufferers, will make pretty certain they know
what they are doing before going down into their
pockethooks or giving endorsements. In fact,
things have reached a pass where America sim
ply must protect itself from adventuring and ho
bo organizations and governments.
St. Paul is about to move into a new $11,000,
000 passenger station. Omaha is still occupying
the inadequate and ancient terminus.
Democrats
are not altogether hnnpV in
their search for candidates. They know who is
going to run for senator.
Volstead is meeting determined opposition in
his home district, but his defeat will not repeal
his law.
The man nt TrUnJ . .- . . .
... -m. ucmg siuaiea today as
u r.as not been for a long time.
Amount ttna wants the world to understand
mac it is not a dead one vet.
ieel,
Miliukoff now knows how the czar used
to
Gent
e Spring is coy, but constant.
Bribes, Costs and Taxes
Not Worth Claiming.
Wrangell Island, the Arctic stretch of earth
surrounded by ice and water over which the
Lrnish flag has been raised, is said to be "famed
as the paradise of polar bears." Well, if that is
its only attraction the British are welcome to it.
Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegrapp.
Officers of the dyestuff company to which
the Federal Trade commission has recently issued
cease and desist order, admitted snendine be
tween $30,000 and $40,000 during twelve months
in bribes to dyers and tinishcrs. J hey testilicd
that in view of competitive conditions they re
garded this a regular item of business expense
and acknowledged that it increased the selling
price of their goods. 1 he facts brought out em
phasize two aspects of commercial bribery that
the Commercial Standards council should not 1
fail to call to the attention of congress in their
laudable efforts to secure the passage of a feder
al law adequate to cope with this growing com
mercial evil.
First, the American public pays the country's
graft bills.
Second, commercial bribery, as commonly
practiced, doubly defrauds the government out of
taxes.
What huce sum is spent secretly to buy or
ders no man knows. It is a matter of record,
however, that in provisioning a single passenger
ship for one South American cruise, $4,000 was
paid in illicit commissions and a drug store ad
mits paying $500 monthly in petty graft to maids,
valets and butlers. These instances 'show the
variety and extent of commercial bribery. The
total sum paid must reach the billions.
Commercial bribery is indefensible on any
count except expediency. It defeats duality, ad
vertising and salesmanship, and it prevents hon
est purchasing on the true basis of price and
quality. American business is instinctively clean
and likes direct dealing. It is unanimously op
posed to business graft. It can call on the pub
lic to support aiui-DriDcry legislation, it can
count on congress to suppress an insidious form
of tax dodging. Its anti-bribery measure, known
as the legislative committee's bill, should be a
law of the land soon. Drug and Chemical
Markets.
' A Storehouse of History
.The Congressional Record is the butt of the
humorist of today and the storehouse of political
knowledge for the historian of tomorrow. It is
the target at which the satirist shoots his arrows
of wit, but it contains a compendium of informa
tion which stands as a permanent contribution
to political science through the ages, when those
who have cast their jibes and sneers have been
forgotten. A mariner cast away on a desert is
land with nothing to read but the debates of con
gress could come away in a few years as cram
med Avith facts as a college student on the eve
of an examination. He would know something
about nearly every subject under the sun, in
cluding romantic literature and poetry. He
would have a substantial grasp upon the develop
ment of government, economics and political
philosophy. . .
Every man who has ever spoken on the floor
of the senate or house has added something to
the sum total of what the Record contains. Even
the errors propagated in debate are useful: thev
help one to ascertain the ultimate truth. Thom
as D. Reed once said -that every member of the
house was an expert on some one thing; that if
an investigation were made it would be discov
ered that there was a substantial reason explain
ing why every man was there. A great deal of
matter gets into the Record every oay which at
that time may seem irrelevant. With the pass
ing of the years its importance is emphasized.
In 2022 the Congressional Record of today will
be an invaluable repository of facts bearing unon
all phases of life as it is now lived. Washington
l'OSt.
How to Keep Well
t. W.A. IVAM
Quaattaa Macaraiaf iaa, (f
Itaa a4 arasaaiiaa at a . tw.
iiu4 la Pr. . ay mm al
1 km m, aiH ka axa4 wily
ukjwi la aaa IwiiaDM, a
iimh4 aaaaa4 aatalaa M
!. Pr, Isaaa vtll al awaa
4aMi mw arika tr nulisiaual
iMata. Aaa fetiait ta (
SX1N DISEASES OF WORKERS,
Thera ara many kimta f.f railroad
man dii many kind tf work, jt
fuiiowg that railroad ni-n luta all
Muda of tfcin diaeaxa, Thera iuul-1
ta no ona kind tf akin iti-.i tit
which only railroad turn ara aubj.-ri.
It Olso follows iIihi tjtimt u ,4
t'out railroad men's akin dlsrnsa l"
fiiia in soma measure to all kind
of folk ensaiittd In all sort of work.
Medical opinion setmia to t !
tlina down la tha com luslmi ttu.t
ulmut one-llilrd vt tha at'inna i due
to diet. About another third la due
to axernal cause, and about one
half vt tlies are dua in wi'iipiilloii.
Home aiiilmntles say iliat oiie-ihml
of th ecseins are dua to vituim
tlon. I'tMi'h clnnsra dfvclnp acyenm of
th hands bue tliey nut ilitm so
freqiipuily In aottp ami wafr.
iiili'tn, tiiui'Iiiuists and pointer eft
n tiiui li src'ito. oil and paint on Urn
skin, and una wnsts tn frinuiMitly,
no to sg iln mention soap and wit
ter, that they ara quit aubjrrt to
dermatitlf, or eczema.
Various forms of sens and prlrkly
neat ucveion nnionK stokers and (Ire
men. Kiiitlnvrrs and brakenu'ii aro
very apt lo dwlop ilia tunm-d.
louali. leathery skin seen especially
In ranchers In tho arid wet. out
of this condition warty and horny
Krowths develop, nnd soma nt them
chniiKO Into ram'vr.
Klreinen, ro:il sliovrlers, cinder
pitmen, and tout miners develop akin
diseases due to ohoklnir of the it mix
alunds and folttrles with soot and
coal dust.
TIioms who work In cieiines and
nil are prone to develop bulls and
ahscese. J)r. A. t', Senear, who re
ports on a loin: list of skin dlMouses
which he has vliKcrved ainonir rail
rood men. tells of a yuuni; ninn who
had a mild aene, which nulekly be
came urns of deep pustules after
lip wus transferred to a pHlnting
KUMff.
hen he clianevd his Job bis facial
blemishes quickly cleared up while
he was using a simple local applli-a
tlon.
Men who work In the plants de
velop eruptions, due to rmmllinK
woods that have been soaked in pre
servatives.
If zinc chloride is the preserva
tive, there are burns duo to the ac
tion of the chemical on tho skin.
While the original solution Is too
diluted to cause trouble, it is prone
to evaporate on the skin xr on the
clothes or gloves and to be thus con
verted into a concentrated corrosive
solution.
The tie workers who handle tar
nnd pitch first Ret warts, brown
patches, pimples or boils. Later tar
cancer develops on the baso of these
milder skin conditions. Senear does
not say that he has ever soon tar
cancer develop in snction men, bridge
gang!', and other maintenance of
way men due to handling preserved
tics and piles.
Since work crews live In bunk cars.
they aro mora than average subject
to the bites of bedbugs and lice.
Then men that cot the tanned.
weather-beaten skins which result
from exposure to cold and wind are
subject to the skin cancers which de
velop in such skins.
The growths on tanned skins are
especially in evidence in the winter
and spring.
Diseased Blood Vcssc-N.
C. V. writes: "In your article on
angina pectoris you say it is caused
by a disease of the walls of the largo
blood vessels near the heart and of
the small vessels which rise in the
heart muscle.
"Now, what I want to know is,
what causes these blood vessels to
become diseased and whether or not
it is serious?"
REPLY.
Many causes of atheroma of the
blood vessels and angina pectoris
have been claimed.-
Among them are syphilis, various
other infections, such as diphtheria,
rheumatism, scariet fever, pneu
monia, typhoid fever., lead poisoning
and tobacco poisoning.
A Useful Toy.
' Radio is capturinc the bovs in Greater num
bers than any other of their enthusiasms since
the early bicycle days, except war. It is raising
tip a generation of young scientists and the re
sults are bound to be important to the whole
human race. Chicago iNews.
One Cause For Gratitude.
Anyway there's one thing to be grateful for
and that is that the house doesn't have to ratify
treaties. 1 here are members of the house
and only ninety-six of the senate. There's a sav
ing of 339 speeches right there. Kansas City
limes.
Who Told You?
It might be proper to observe that the ladies
who have secured official distinction in politics
do not wear knickerbockers. Washington Star.
Important And True.
When money is said to be close it really is
far away, This is authentic. Eureka (Kan.)
Herald.
Milk . Nightcap Is Good.
H.f',.o XX tJ A nri-lto. "la It rllrht
for a child of 3 years and 5 months
to be given a cup ot warm milk be
fore retiring at 8 p. m.?"
REPLY.
I can see no objection to it unless
he has already had enough or too
much. food.
In fact, I think it a good practice.
And There Yon Are. ,
Constant Readier writes; "The un
dersigned is bothered with so called
scabies or itch.- I have been using
sulphur mixed with cold cream, but
as yet have not been cured.
"Would you advise me to continue
the sulphur?"
REPLY.
Do not continue using sulphur
ointment.
Sulphur ointment, proferly used,
should cure scabies promptly.
If it is improperly used, that's an
other matter.
If used properly there is no use
continuing it. .Nor is there if it is
improperly used.
Advice for Young Girls.
REPLY TO MRS. C. J. B.
1. Send stamped addressed en
velope for our little booklet, "Per
sonal Hygiene for Women."
2. Write to the American Social
Hygiene society, 370 Seventh afrenue,
New York city, for their list of books
for young girls. These are excellent
and several sell for about 10 cents.
'Kip! Cry the Bugs nnd Die.
A Reader writes: "Kindly state in
your column whether sulphur oint
ment is good for the itch."
REPLY.
It is. Sulphur is a great insect
killer.
The reputation of sulphur springs,
sulphur baths and sulphur medicines
in skin diseases came from the
ability of sulphur to kill the bugs
that bite us.
CENTER SHOTS.
Nobody so far has had the hardi
hood to propose Sing day. Charles
ton (W. Va.) Daily Mail.
A man who took several shots at
his wife offers the excuse that she
tried to make a fool of him. She
should have known the hopelessness
of trying to improve upon nature.
Los Angeles Express.
Mary Pickford has done well for
herself, and hasn't done badly for a
lot ot ner lawyer?. rruviucine i..
une. The vital and telling phrases coin
ed day by day soon are incorporated
into our slanguage. Richmond
News Leader.
Paris dancing girls have joined the
reds. This should give a deeper blush
to, their pink tights. Philadelphia
Record,
L
1 '
established u 1970s
"Unless a High Reputation Accompanies a Low Quota
tion It Is Not a Value Symbol, but a Danger Signal"
Thursday we call attention to Style Showing
in Garments and a few Low Quotations.
Embroideries
A moot alt tin 1 he and nnoi collvi'tiou is bubiuitlrd
Thursday fur jour interested scrutiny.
t it n Sale? Yen, m-uiitly, nud it value ii n cri
terion a tnoht vcmnrfcoble Sale.
No preponderant ciuriiitily of otic thins, tut a f urin
ating eolli'eli'Mi of Swiss edges, borders and inser
tion from narrow bending to wide i'lniineing.
Seam PcadlnR, Ilibbon Head
ing: tinrrow edgo urn! in
sertion for tmby'a and bin
sister' undergarment.
12 lo JS-lnch Cambric ed;;c
for petticoats.
I'ine orsandy nlse for col
lars cm summer dresses.
' Etru Ilallste ami colored
embroidery.
Prices Well, they en tis varied ns the patterns and
range from 'Jc to $0.50 a yard. Kvcry purchase will
be it bargain and it wiil be fun to go through them
even if you don't buy at nil.
Daby embroidery In the fin
est of wis, some with
ruffled edge. (Made In St.
ia!l.)
Sti-lnch Imported cream !!a
tinte. All-over eyelet embroidery.
Also Includes aevcral pat
terns ot Hand French Oi '
candy collaring now so
popular fur neckwear.
Undergarments of Pongee Silk
Tailored effects In nightgowns, vests, step-ins, petticoats
and bloomers,
$2.98 S3.98 $5.98
Enchanting Clothes for Easter
The Three-Piece Suit
There are sleeveless models and others with .
short elbow sleeves with veldette bodice In con
t lasting colors, and for the smart miss we have
them iu sylvette and veldette In nigh shades
w ith separate Bramley blouse effect.
S19.50. S59.50, $98.50
The Tailored Suits
Wherever there is a gathering of smartly
groomed women, there you will see the Tai
lored Suit. Our stock of cleanly styled tailored
suits in Tricatines, Tricafinas and Toirets are
most complete.
$49.50. $59.50. $65.00.. SllO OO
Suits for Larger Women
(Sizes to 52)
Ideally tailored models so styled that tbey mini
mize tht size of the individual. They come in
two and three-piece effects. The materials are
full wool, tweed, broken checks, full wool
jackets with skirt of plaited plaid, Prunella
cloth combined with full wool, Tricatines, Tric
afinas and Poirets; self handings, stttchings
and braid are the trimmings.
$39.50. $49.50. $125.00
The $25 Dress Rack
Notable values will be added to this rack on
Thursday at 9 a. m. and the happiest chopper!
will be those who are here at the opening
hour. Some of the super values are beaded
Canton Crepes, Taffetas, Checked Flannel
Sport Dresses and Crepe de Chine and Krepe
Knit combinations in navy and gray, Nile and
white, sand and brown, and henna and black.
On sale Thursday,
25
Sample Line Silk Kimotias
One-of-a'kind la Crepe de Chine, Pussy Willoir,
Georgette and Taffeta. Some with beads, hand
embroidery and lace trimmings. Your choice
of a wide color range. Original values ?12.95
and upward.
Thursday at One-Half Price
Women's nnd Misses' Section
Second Floor
Furs for Spring
These cool Spring days there is nothing quite so com
fortable 'and appropriate as a Fur Coatee, Cape or Stole.
FoprrTpeeay 1 Summer Furs
.1 Genuine Kolinsky Stole, 72 in, cluster tail trim.?395.00 $1.0.00 SZlilJtSSXi
1 Jap Mink Stole, 12x72 in 150.00 9.00 combinations In the Dew stock
1 Jap Mink Stole, pouch pockets, cape back effect. 193.00 89.00 collar and slip-through ef-
1 Waistline Cape of Mole and Blended Squirrel.. 197.50 110.00 fects, $59.00 to $75.00.
1 Cape of Hudson Seal and Siberian Squirrel Stone Marten Chokers,
waistline length, for . 350.00 19S.0O $35.00 to $45.00.
1 Jap Mink Coatee, Kolinsky blend 450.00 275.00 Squirrel Chokers, $19.75-
1 Jap Mink Coatee, Kolinsky blend, Chokers of Mink, Fitch, Jap
cluster tail trim 275.00 197.50 sajje ana animal scarfs,
1 Large Hudson Seal Stole, pocketed 225.00 98.50 $16.75 to $29.50.
Time to Buy Your Gingham Frocks
FROCKS that have caught Spring's freshness in their delightful color- (Sizes 16 to 62 )
Ings and lines. 'They come in small, medium and large checks in pink,
blue, lavender, red and black and white checks, as well as plaids JCV MX
.and stripes. v
Touches of organdie and other dainty contrasting trimmings give these Qt QO
dresses a charm little short of amazing, considering the special prices at 9J7J
which they will be sold. a a rCt
Included are many JAirlun Presses llioso eleverly ipT:.7C5
styled ones, as advertised in the Ladies' Homo Journal.
We strongly advise making your purchases while the colors and sizes
S5.98
are complete. ....,,.
House Dress and Apron Seclion Second Floor
Two Bales of
Pongee Silk
On Sale Thursday Morning
This Is the Imported Jap pure
bilk 12 Momtne ilntb. From
style Indications a most fa
vored fabric for spring. Ilc
comins a staple for the plain
or garments, underwear,'
men's shirts also for drapery
uses. Our regular price. It.Jii.
llriaitho of this quantity purl-bane,
Thursday prlre,
98c yd.
Hosiery
For Women
These interesting It emu on
Thursday:
A Jap silk storking with lisle (op,
was 12.00; black only, $1.29
An all silk to the top, very elas
tic nnd durable, was 12.00;
black aud brown, $1.55.
Full fashioned 10-strand pure sillc
wide lisle top; the regular $2.60
number, brown only, $1.90.
Van Rnalte Ingrain Fashioned
(lavender line cuff);- priced
$3.50: African brown only,
$2.65.
i
When In Omaha
STOP WITH US
Hotel Conant
Hotel Sanford
Hotel Henshaw
Our reputation of 20 years fair
dealing is back of these hotels.
Guests may stop at any one of them
with the assurance of receiving hon
est value and courteous treatment.
Conant Hotel Company
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Tlii, jr u e.dct.at I'om ill eil,e.
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COLD IN CHEST
Do the right thing and be wre of speedy
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Better than a mustard plaster, does the
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A freahly brewed cup ot C)rv Kin even
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For Sale by Five Sherman
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