The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, March 18, 1923, Page 2-A, Image 2

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    Bank Replies
to Injunction on
Sale of Notes
\
Charge “Gross Injustice” in
Action of Holdrcge Judge
—Want the Loan
Paid.
' Lincoln, March IT.—(Special.)— In
an answer filed In the supremo court
Saturday, the temporary injunction
restraining the State Bank of Omaha
and John 8. McGurk, its vice presi
dent, from selling notes and other se
curities belonging to the Citizens
State bank of Holdrege, is termed a
"gross Injustice.”
The Omaha bank says the sale was
widely advertise^ and that neither
ihe banking department nor the stock
holders of the J-loldrege Citizens bank
objected to It, and that it was intend
ed to sell only enough of the notes to
settle the loan.
It is set forth that several bankers
had arranged to attend the public
uaclion and the securities would have
brought top price.
The brief says that if the Graft of
SlTS.OOt) on the guaranty fund order
ed by Judge Dilworth at Holdcege
had been paid. It would not have been
necessary to sell any of the securi
ties.
The state Bank of Omaha is will
li A to give up the securities any time
the original loan is paid, according to
the brief.
The newest design In vanity cases
hag a tiny electric light for illumin- I
sting the mirror under the lid. A
small battery is concealed in a little
black purse nea^ the light.
OUt Egyptians Took
"'Enemies"’ U itli Them
to Tomb. Doctor Says
True felicity was assured ancient
Egyptian kings liy statues of their
ciieiuics placed In their toiubs, upon
which the spirits of the departed
rulers were supposed to wreak re
venge in the after world, according
to l)r. A. E. -Innas, who spoke be
fore tlie Kiwanis club at lintel Koine
yesterday.
Statues of friends also were placed
In the tomb. Dr. donna said, in or
tier that the ruler might have thclr^
images with him.
Dr. donas described his tour in
Egypt in 19(1* and 1909, and also
the Interior of several tombs which
he visited.
Falls City Store
j
Gutted by Fire
J. C. Penney Company Cstfi
males Loss at $78.000— i
Started in Basement.
Kalis (Tty. Neb.. March 17.—(ripe-1
eial.)—Fire in thy basement of J. (’. !
Penney company store here caused
an estimated loss of (flO.OOu to the
stoc k and ^18,000 to the building. The
blase started in a rubbish pile in the
basement of the store and 15 minutes
later the flames were licking their
way through the roof of the two-story
building with four-fifths of the '(75,
000 stock an entire loss. Fire walls
constructed two years ago are be
lieved to have saved the adjoining
buildings. The store had been gaily
decorated in honor of St. Patrick
day with a newly arrived pre-blaster
stock of spring wearing apparel on
display. This is the third time the
building was gutted in three years.
Bryan Backs Up
on Challenge
for Code Debate
Go\ernor Refuses to Discuss
Issues in Omaha With
Representative R. R.
Strehlmv*.
Lincoln, March IT.—(Special.)—Gov
ernor C. W. Bryan apparently has no
•osife 10 debate Representative R. R.
Strehlow of Omaha on the Issue of the
repeal of the code, although the gover
nor recently suggested a series of
debates* with members in their own
home communities.
Replying to the letter which Repre
sentatlvc Strehlow eent to Mr. ltrynn
suggesting a debate lu Omaha, the
governor said: \
“I have Mr. Strehlow's commit niea
tlon. hut he evidently has tho errone
ous ifnpresslon that 1 issued a general
challenge to members of tho legisla-1
ture to debate the various plans of
code repeal and revision now before
the legislature.
“What I said was, that if any mem
ber did not feel that the people had
expressed their desire for repeal of
the code law by the 50,000 majority
which they gave my candidacy for
governor last November. I would go
to the county seats of their respec
tive districts and jointly discuss my
plan before their constituents and let
the latter judge ae to whether or
not it was in accordance with the
will of the majority.
“I do not Intend to he diverted
from this to anything else."
The governor said that he had not
received an official notice of a chal
lenge to debate from Senator Perry
Reed.
t rJ(aa5 Kirolltprs)
New York Omaha Minneapolis ,
Commencing Monday
A Week of Intensified Selling of
r—Easter Capes—i
An occasion of the
utmost importance
to feminine Omaha
because it brings to
you at the very be
ginning of the sea
son an opportunity
to buy beautiful
Capes at a marked
saving.
(
Materials
Armandalc
Normandies
V elverettes
Cerona
Marvellas
Marcovas
Preciosa
Veldynes -
T raversine
Twill Cords
Silks
Arabella
>
Such an assem
blage of rich-styled
Capes is indeed an
achievement.
Weeks of planning
and effort were re
quired to material
ize this great Pre
Easter Cape Offer
ing.
t
Colors
Moth
Pandean
Cobrveb
Cordelia
Cinder
Black
Bathing
Malabar
and Nav\)
Paris puts on its Cape for another season. But this time
it’s a New Cape—a Cape with circular flounces, smart
braiding and upstanding collar. They are richly lined
with beautiful Canton Crepes. Many are enhanced with
collars of Summer furs.
L ' ■ " _ ./' -.
Others Priced Ujp to $150.00
Omaha women will be alert to the fact that on such an occasion at Haas
Brothers they may expect the unusual in assortments and in values.
If you contemplate buying a new Easter Cape, plan now to be
here Monday.
On the Second Floor In the Gray Shop
In Sizes 14 Of Extra Length
to 40 - Sizes 42 to 50
*
Haas Brothers
KfJAe SftopforUJomen'
Brown Block 16th and Douglas Sts.
“Sheik” and “Sheba”
Come in Special Car
Rudolph Valentino and hl» bride,
Winifred, arrived In Omaha In their
special car nt 3 2:30 p. m, Saturday
for an engagement at the Auditorium.
Advance ticket sale for the affair
indicates that the Auditorium will he
packed to the roof, according to the
sponsors of the performance.
The crowd will he representative
of the entire population of Omaha,^
from aged grandmothers to the young
' est galosh-clad flapper, and from staid
business men to youthful cake eat
ers and embryo sheiks.
Society, which frequently turns up
its nose and turns down Its thumbs
at performances In the Auditorium,
will also be on deck for a look at
the dashing movie hero and his'wife.
Parole Boar d
I
Frees Man Held
for Manslaughter
Indian. Accused of Forgery l>y
Father, Is Released —
Four Omahans Are
Paroled.
Lincoln. March 17.—(Special )—Ti c
state pardon toard today granted a
parole to Herbert F. Whittlmore, who
wag sentenced for from one to 10 ,
years orga manslaughter charge grow
ing out of the death of a man named
Lundy, his landlord at Hayard, N'eh.
County officials of Morrill county and
prominent jteople of New Castle,
Wyo., where Whittlmore waa former
ly a deputy sheriff, recommended the
prisoner's release. According to the
testimony at the parole hearing. ,
Whittlmore was convicted on circum
stantial evidence. A woman house
keeper, who had been tiled separately
on the same charge, was acquitted.
Whittlmore is going back to New J
Castle, where he will become super
intendent of the New Castle Oil com
pany plant.
Garnett Goings.' 17. Sioux Indian,
serving a term for forgery, was freed ,
by the board. Goings' father. Frank ,
C. Goings, chief of police of the Pine
Hidgo reservation In South Dakota,
brought the charge against his »"n. j
Goings has served three and a half!
years for forging a check for $3 on
his father.
Four Omaha prisoners, forger, one
to 20; James Churchill, grand larceny,
one to seven; Stanley G. Peters, grand
larceny, eno to seven; Harry Nelson,
breaking and entering, one to tlgee.
Paroles wero denied the following
Omaha prisoners: Arthur Tienc A auto
stealing, one to five; John Smith. I
grand larceny, one to seven; Walter
F. Bell, robbery, three to 15.
Goodhue Unahle to Prepare
Answer to Charges in Week
Lincoln, March 17.—(Special.)—Cap
itol Architect B. O. Goodhue hns no
tified Governor Bryan and State Kn
glncer Johnson that he was unable j
to prepare a reply to Johnson's last
series of questions addressed to him
within the week allowed him l>y the
commission for that purpose. Good
hue anys h|s ortho manager, F. L.
Meyers, is seriously ill and ho will
reed the lattor's help In draping the
reply.
Special Election Asked
in Beatrice on City Manaper
Beatrice, Neb., March 17.—A pell- j
tion was filed at the city hall here I
asking for a special election at which
the voters will decide whether or j
not Beatrice is to nbandon the pres- ;
ent city commission and adopt the
manager plan of municipal govern
ment.
Barrows Gun Draw Pay.
Lincoln. March 17 —HHpei la).^—For
mer Lieutenant Governor P. A. Bar
rows can now draw his pav as acting
governor under the McKclvie admin- j
1st ration. Governor Bryan has no- j
lined Secretary ' of State Pool that
Barrows' salary bill for ft.802 t»
<-ame a law Friday without the execu
tive signature.
Turk Proposals
Prove Kemalists’
Desire for Peace
Reply to Draft of Treaty Sum
marized by Angora Repre
sentative at Paris—Sev
eral Paris Acceptable.
Paris, March 17.—(M—‘The Tuikish
counter proposals to the I-auaanne
peace treaty draft are "replete with
evidences of Turkey’s pacificism, all
the conditions conforming to the An
gora government's desire for peace
and independence," declared Hussein
Raghili Pry, the Angora representa
tive here.
Raghib Bey, who sut up Ihrougli
out Friday night digesting the text
of this lengthy document, which
reached Paris bv courier, forecast
possible differences In the interpreta
tion of the text, according to which
nation was doing the translation. His
digest divides the Angora propect into
two parts, the first being given over
to these parts of the Bausanne treaty
which are acceptable to the Turks
and the second to the sections which
their propositions have modified.
Proposals Accepted.
In the first part is included Tur
key's acceptance of a delay in the
sr 1 uiion of the disputo over the Mosul
oil fields between Turkey and Great
Britain for one year, and its refer
ence to the league of nations for set
tlement if no agreement was then
reached; the granting of Karaghatch,
the Adrianople suburb, to the Greeks,
the draft treaty solution fot» the free
dom of the straits and the treaty's
adjustment of the minorities problem.
Turkey likewise accepts the ap
pointment of three neutral judges of
Turkish cotlrts for five j-ears and
agrees Jo reorganize the department
of justice, these stipulations being in
line with the allied plan for solution
of the question of the status of for
eigners in the Turkish courts.
Want Frontier Changes.
In the second part of the digest the
modifications include the request that
the frontier line between Greece and
Turkey run through the middle river
Maritza instead of along the left bank
and for the possession by Turkey of
the island of Castellorizza, part of
the Dodecanese group, thus leaving
Italy 11 of the islands. Turkey claims
that Castellorizza practically belongs
to the Anatolian coast.
The Turks further propose to dis
tribute the "public debt'' among the
allied governments which, by the
treaty, are confirmed in their posses
sion of territory which belonged, up |
to the time of the armistice, to the
Ottoman empire. It is argued that !
it is unjust to ask the Anatolian
faction of that empire to sustain the
burden of the entire prewar debt, i
This proposal includes the debts con
tracted In the name of the empire
during the war."
Negro Rare Makes
Rapid Increase
Census Shows Males Exceed
Females in Stale —
Little Illiteracy.
Lincoln. March 17.—(Special)—The
negro race showed tho Urgent per
centage of increase in Nebraska In
the decade from 1910 to 1920, accord
ing to figures made public today by
Acting Secretary Joseph W. Mayer of
the department of agriculture.
The precentage of Increi.so In na.
t.ve born white* is given a* 12.8; of
foreign born white* 14 9 and negro
72.2.
Mayer'* report show* 2S9.390 dwell- ■
Ings in the state and 303.436 families,
with u total population in Lincoln of 1
34.948 and 191,404 In Omaha. Lin- |
coin ha* 26.334 male* and 28 934 fe- '
male*. Omaha ha* 93,934 males and i
92.464 females.
Between the Age* of 3 amt 20. 70.6
per cent of nationalities attend school,
and between the ages of 7 to 13. 7
per rent of all nationalities arc On- j
rolled in the school*.
With a total papulation of 1.296
372 for the state. Mayer report* 493.
3o6 are found In tho cities and 891,064
In the rural communities. There are
672,805 male* and 623.676 females Hut
1.4 per cent of Illiteracy it reported
for the state.
Of the total population, 1,129.667 I
or 37.1 per cent 1* native born White*: 1
3 49.652 or II per cent foreign horn !
whites: 2.8SH or .2 per cent Indian, j
and nil other race* have less than 1 j
per cent.
Paving Program Opposed.
Beatrice, Neb . March 17.—That lo
cal taxpayers may opjioso tho city *
1923 paving program tifcamo nppnr
■ nl w hen property owner* In district
*7 a paving subdivision, f led a re
monstrance against the proposed Im
provement. It ha* not been deter- ,
mined whether the remonstrance
hears sufficient i-ignatures to kill the
project.
FREE COUPON
Good for 12c
Good Only at Piggly Wiggly ,
30c ThisCoupon
Value 18SH and 12c
for IBM Will Buy 2
£ jrfil Regular 15c
12c ■_ U Packages
Britt’s Powdered Ammonia
Cut This Out and Take to Nearest Piggly Wiggly Tqjlay
Nim« . Addr#»» .
/
WHY not? Fpr
Easter! Just
one extra-good
looking frock. A
little out of the
ordinary. Smart.
Distinctive. Not too
costly! * * * It’s here, -
waiting for you.
*25 *35 ‘49—
Thompson, Belden
£? Company
The Best Bluer to Shop After All
No. 4. Privacy in Credit Transactions
When you drop in to the Grocer
to give him an order, or, when you
hastily phone him for the next day’s
tables supplies, you simply say
“Charge it!” if you have a credit
account with him.
Why, then, be flustered when it
cotnes to buying a bill of clothing
on credit?
It should be a natural procedure
to buy clothes on payments. We
want to SELL. You want to BUY.
WE have a Credit Plan to offer.
YOU could use the clothes if you
were not compelled to lay out all
of the purchase price AT ONE
TIME.
That’s where YOU and WE fit
together hand in glove.
How much you buy; where you
buy; what you buy and how you
buy it is NOBODY ELSE’S busi
ness. It's a private matter ’twixt
yourselves and ourselves. When
you make selections of clothing,
dresses, etc., here, you simply say:
"Charge it,” if you are known to
us and have done business with us
right along.
If you are not known to us. you
simply step into the private office
of one of our courteous credit man
agers and arrange your payment
plan to your absolute satisfaction.
The office you enter is just a neat
business office, like any other neat
office. It looks just like the office
of any department store, where you
would talk credit to the same kind
of a manager in the same kind of a
room. There is no mystery; no
trap; no displeasure; no doubt; no
misgivings; it's just plain, simple,
every-day business. The world
does not know your business here
any more than it would at the
credit department of any cash
house.
We assure the world at large
that there isn’t the SLIGHTEST
reason to hesitate, apologize, ex
plain or hide the fact that you are
buying goods on credit at Beddeo’s.
The clothes you buy here are a
constant challenge to the clothes
sold by the highest class all'cash
houses you know of. The prices
you pay here are no higher than the
prices you would pay at the self
s: le, aforesaid all-cash houses.
The only difference is that some
swells would say that they have a
“chawge account” at so and so’s,
where you and we would say we
have “A Charge Account at Bed*
deo’s.”
Now, then. Easter with its de
mand for newer, fresher, more styl
ish attire, will soon be with us. Are
you togged out to meet it? And
if you are not, wouldn’t this be a
suitable time to try out the newer,
improved, all together different
Beddeo Credit Plan?
Remember, our newer plan is
NOT like the usual department
stores thirty-day charge account;
neither is it like the old-time Easy
Payment Plan of the installment
house; it’s better, more liberal,
more applicable to ALL persons
than either or both.
We want to see you here—now
—while Easter showings are at
their best.
Will you not honor us with your
presence?
Yours for Better Service,
Beddeo Clothing Co.
1417 Douglas Street
New York OM AHA Salt Lake City