The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, January 09, 1924, CITY EDITION, Page 2, Image 2

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    /Today
Another Mouse. Born.
Buy Your Overcoat.
Score One for England.
By Arthur Brisbane.
By ARTHUR BRISBANE
N-J
You know the fable about “The
Mountain in Labor.” Much groan
ing and crackling, and when the
critical moment came, out popped
a little mouse, That was the
mountain’s baby, about which it
had been making all the fuss.
That story of the mountain
roust come back to Mr. Edward
ft. Bok as he contemplates the
result of his $100,000 peace prize
offer. It’s a very small mouse
f}iat he got for his money.
That Bok prize peace plan will
hmuse you. Poor Mr. Bok must
ifiel rather silly paying $60,000
fbr a suggestion that the people
•of the United States should do
,,n»w what four years ago they re
fused to do with 7,000,000 votes
to spare.
■ » —■ -
Go into the world court now
dfid join the league on a modi
j fted basis is the $50,000, sugges
tion. It is as though serious peo
ple, discussing what they should
i.frsve for dinner, should see a well
^Meaning doggie drag in a cat long
;'«ead and offer that as a solution.
The league of nations is a dead
fete ....
i:: The United States doesn t m
[ tend to join the league of nations,
j doesn't intend to pay Europe's
Mils, or be held responsible for
! tjiem, and does not intend to enter
1 any world court that would cause
the affairs of the United States
to be submitted to a foreign
tribunal.
Mr. Bok can charge his $50,000
to experience.
■ Get now the overcoat that you
have perhaps neglected getting
thus far. Cold waves are start
ing in the north and traveling in
various directions. You will not
escape the winter’s cold, and there
is no greater folly than to econo
mize on the warmth that means
tiealth.
One severe cold might cost you
a,great more than several dozen
: overcoats.
The British are building the
biggest dam in the world on the
Indus river. It will be a mile
long, nearly a thousand feet high.
' Sixty-six gigantic steel gates will
•control the waters of the Indus,
irrigating a territory, nearly as
great as all England.
One single canal will supply
water to 500,000 acres of rice
land, enough to feed millions of
Hindus.
This kind of building in India
by the British is better than use
■ less monuments that ancient
rajahs used to build for their own
comfort or glory. It’s better than
Gandhi’s suggestion of a boycott
on the English, and going back to
the hand loom. That one single
, British enterprise will do more to
wipe out starvation in India than
••ever was done by all the rajahs
that ever ruled the country. Let
that be remembered to the credit
,pf our British cousins.
! -i * ■ "
Lenin of Russia, carrying bul
. lets fired into him by at least two
' would-bp assassins, and often pro
‘ bounced dying or dead, by news
papers, has been out twice recent
ly .hunting in the forest. He seems
to have a constitution almost as
tough as that of his soviet gov
ernment.
pne assassin tried to kill Kemal
Pasha, up to date ruler of Turkey,
aral succeeded only in injuring
hijj wife.
Another assassin, of a sort
hitherto unknown to Japan, threw
a bomb against the royal palace.
it is hard for western people
1 tofunderstand what that means to
th4 Japanese. The Mikado to them
is'still the “son of heaven” in
I spite of flying machines, tractors
and machine guns.
\t is quite likely that one or
more Japanese of the ancient type
tvill feel impelled, by duty, to
eofamit hari-kari, ripping open
th< stomach with a knife espe
cisdly made for the job, to ex
press horror at the blasphemous
atfeck on the mikado’s holy body.
We see in the mikado only a
vefy polite, well meaning gentle
man. He means something much
tnrfre than that to 80 per cent of
- ih« Japanese.
(Copyright 1134)
'J'rotsky Must Take Rest.
By Associated Prm.
Moscow, Jan. S,—An official bulle
tin-says the acuteness of the malady
iof Xeon Trotzky, the Russian soviet
Avar minister, which resulted from an
attack of influenza and from which
lie '■ hart suffered since November 5.
makes It desirable that he Immediate
ly tease work and take absolute rest
,in a” milder climate.
A mcdtcal examination showed that
lie.Rad Krown thinner and paler, tfhat
his' working capacity had been re
duced and that he had lost his ap
petite.
Nina Putnam
Hotly Denies
v Theft of Love
-k—
\
Noted Novelist Offers to Dis
charge Chauffeur Who,
His Wife Charges,
Writer Coveted.
By International Mrwa Swrlft.
New Yi*>rk, Jan. 8.—“Believe You
Me," Nina Wilcox Putnam's next
novel will not he entitled “Ladles and
Their Chauffeurs." although it might
be. Miss Putnam, or Putnam-Sander
son—the verdict is still out—said so
in just those words today.
“I’ll 'discharge Mr. Bassett this
very minute if his wife says so,” Miss
Putnam promised in frank discussion
of the triangular events of her life,
involving Ellsworth F. Bassett, her
six-foot four blond New England
clam digger chauffeur-business agent,
and his little postoffice clerk wife.
"I'm not the kind of a woman who
would rob another woman of her hus
band—please say that for me,” Miss
Putnam insisted.
”1 have cried and cried over this
thing—now’ I am mad, and hurt,”
Miss Putnam said, shaking her be
witching black bob, in which traces
of gray are beginning to show. Fire
flashed from the eyes she inherited
from her Spanish mother.
Can't l nderstaiid.
"I had always thought Gertrude—
that is, Mrs. Bassett—my friend; I
thought so until now. How she can
say these things about me I cannot
understand.
Of course, I say It is unmoral for
man and wife to live together after
love has died—most unmoral. In the
case of the Bassetts, I do not know
If love's there or not—I have never in
quired.”
"I did not ask Gertrude to divorce
her husband and give him to me."
Miss Putnam said. “I flo not be
lieve in divorce—Oh, I know you will
ask how I square that with my writ
Ings for easier divorce.
“Divorce sometimes becomes neces
sary—it became so in my case. The
fault does not lie with marriage. It
is with the people who* marry. If
divorce were easier there would be
less divorce."
Miss Putnam made it clear she was
going to fight.
"Reputation Ruined.’*
“My reputation has been ruined—
ruined by malicious calumny,” Miss
Putnam said. “I want people to know
the truth. Mr. Bassett is Just an em
ploye. I have treated him as such. He
has driven my car and served as my
business agent. I will discharge him
this very minute if Mrs. Bassett says
so. Why I would rather cut off my
right hand than hurl her—or any
woman.”
Miss Putnam said she would confer
with her attorneys today and If
necessary prepare an answer to any
legal action which may be taken by
Mrs. Bassett, alleging alienation of
her husband's affections.
Miss Putnam said she had no Inti
mation of Mrs. Bassett’s charges
when she left Florida, where, with
Bassett, her secretary, and his wife,
she has been wintering at her orange
grove.
"I came home to straighten the
legal tangle of my divorce from my
second husband, B. J. Sanderson.”
Miss Putnam said. Miss Putnam was
granted a divorce at Providence, R.
I., her husband's home. The court
then set the decree aside pending In
vestigation of alleged collusion and
fraud.
Woman Says She
Passed Bad Coins
Mrs. G. R. Walker, 32, 817 North
Tenth street, arrested Monday for
investigation of her relations with
Harry Diuguid and Tom McCarthy,
alleged counterfeiters, told police
Tuesday morning the only counter
feit money she ever passed was two
half dollars which Diuguid gave her.
He told her she could go to a
show with the money, she said, but
spent both coins at a groeery store
instead.
Ethel Miller, 113 South Twen
tieth street, also was arrested Mon
day for investigation in connec
tion with the two accused counter
feiters.
Girl Blames Nebraska's
New Marriage Law for
Her Being Arrested
Nebraska's new marriage law.
which caused a postponement of her
wedding to Fred Padgett, soldier at
Fort Omaha, also caused the arrest
of I.orena Kletshe of lteshler, Neb
she told Juvenile authorities Tues
day morning.
She was arrested on complaint of
rooming house proprietor that she
ml the soldier were living together
t littttl South Thirteenth street.
I,orene says she is 19, and that
■lie lias known Padgett for more
than a year. She Haid her parents
knew she was entiling to Omaha to
marry him.
She was taken to Rivervlew home,
pending investigation of the ease by
juvenile authorities.
Mark Your Vote on Bok Peace
Plan and Mail Ballot to The Bee
THE PLAN IN BRIEF
Propones
t That tha Uni'ad Stales *h»ll imme
diately enter the Permanent Court of In
ternational Justice, under the conditions
stated br Secretary Hughe* *nd Presi
dent Harding In February, 1928.
II. That without becoming a member of
j III. league o» nation* a* at present con
i'; atituted. the United State* shall offer to
extend it* present en-operatlon with the
laague and participate in the work of the
league a* a body of mutual counsel under
condition* which
; 1, Substitute morel force and public
opinion for the military and economic
force originally implied In Article* X
l| and XVI.
I' 2, Safeguard the Monroe doctrine.
3. Accept the taet. that the United State*
will assume no obligation* under the
treaty of Versatile* except by art of
congress.
4. Propose that membership in the league
should be opened to all nation*.
J. Provide for the continuing dovelop
1 mrnt of International law.
-_■
The Omaha Morning Bee
The Evening Bee
Omaha, Neb.
Do you approve the win- YesQ
' ning plan in substance? No Q
(Put an X inaide tha proper box.)
Name .
Plena* print.
Address .
City .. ...
State .
Are you a voter?...
Wife of Missing City Official Maintains Lonely Vigil
Waiting Tearfully for Return of Mate She Still Loves
' ' ' —
Mrs. Maybelle MeKean Bossie
Confident Her Husband
Is “Just Around
tbe Corner.."
Ilaybclle McKean Bossie main
tains a lonely vigil by day and by
night for the return of her husband,
Claude F. Bossie, former city clerk,
whose unceremonious leave of a
$300 a month city hall job has taken
the city hall by its ears.
At the Bossie apartment, 2213
Howard street, the husband-bereft
little woman of less than 100
pounds displays remarkable forti
tude. Her love has not yet turned
to hate, but her soul is in conflict
between the love that lingers and a
pent-up feeling of wounded pride.
She refuses to resign herself to the
“shadows and darkness and dust.”
She keeps peering into the 2eene
void of things and hopes and hopes
for the return of her husband.
• “Oh. God, my poor brain; 1 don’t
know if 1 am going to last or not,”
she exclaimed, staunching her tears.
Can’t Forget Him.
“I’m so weary. People tell me
to hold up. That’s easier said than
done. They say I should forget
him; that he isn't worth worrying
over. He was a wonderful husband
to me. I have no regrets that I
married him, although I gave 12 of
the best years of my life to him.”
She paused to observe her pet
canary which chirped merrily as if
to relieve the strain. The telephone
bell rang and a woman offered en
couraging words.
Can a woman think too much of
the man she weds? Mrs. Bossie pon
dered over that thought, of whether
she allowed her love to blind her to
the practical side of things. And she
repeated that she wanted her husband
back and believed that he will come
back.
She glanced furtively out the win
dow as if to recognize someone mov
ing in the distance, and she contin
ued:
“I don't know what has come over
Claude. The poor devil; foolish, fool
ish man. I wonder how his brain is
now, when he realizes he has no job.
I trusted him implicitly. When he left
Mrs. Claude Bossie.
home and told me he was going to a
meeting, I always believed lllm."
Mrs. Bossie was 37 on December
12 and her huaband was 47 on De
cember 11. Bhe stated that their mar
ried life was a continual honeymoon
to about eight months ago, when Mr.
Bossie went on a trip to California
and did not write to her during that
absence of four weeks. She indicated
that It seemed to be the Irony of fate
that Kansas City was the scene of
the genesis of their romance and It
also figured in her shattered romance.
According to city hall confidants of
Mr. Bossie, he made week end trips to
Kansas City to the time of his last
appearance in the city hall on Satur
day morning, December 33.
Went to “Sell Grapes.”
Mrs. Bossie explained that last sum
mer her husband said he went to Kan
sas City to sell grapes for a Califor
nia man. She said she told the grape
story so often to friends that they be
gan to have doubts, whereupon she
discarded the grape story.
The romance of the Bossies dates
hack to Convention hall in Kansas
Citv at the time of the appearance
of the New York Hippodrome show
during Christmas week, 1910. Mrs.
Bossie, as Maybelle McKean, had
been with the show about six
years as dancer and singer and
also in character parts. The show
Norris Farm
Body Approved
Corporation to Buy Products
and Sell Abroad O. K.'d by
Congress Committee.
Hy Awtocistrd I’rw.
Washington, Jan. 8.—Farm aid
legislation was considered today by
the senate and house agriculture
committees, with representatives of
farm organizations in various sec
tions appearing as witnesses.
General approval was given to
the Norris-Sinclair bill proposing
creation of a $100,000,000 corpor
ation to purchase American farm
products and to sell them at home
and abroad. It was argued that
such purchases would have the ef
fect of increasing and stabilizing
prices.
Early action on legislation per
taining to the grazing of livestock
on ranges of the national forests
was forecast today as a result of a
conference between Secretary Wal
lace and senators and representa
tives from western states.
Owing to the depressed condition
of the livestock industry in the
range states. Secretary Wallace
feels tnere should be no advance in
the grazing fees until conditions in
the industry warrants, and it is not
likely any increase will be made
until the grazing season of 1925.
He also las recommended that
grazing on all state and national
nublic lands should be co-ordinated
in the interest of efficiency, and he
desires legislation which would per
mit, under certain conditions, addi
tion to the national forests of con
tiguous unreserved public lands,
chiefly valuable for grazing live
stock. Creation and designation of
national ranges, comprising unre
served public lands, valuable chiefly
for grazing, under the administra
tion of the secretary of agriculture,
also is sought.
Under a resolution ordered ravor
atdy reported today by the senate
agricultural committees, the secre
tary of agriculture would be directed
to determine through the grain fu
tures administration the position on
mbthe wheat market taken by the well
known professional speculator* and
member* of the largo "future*" com
mission houses of the Chicago board
of trade. The findings would he pub
lished.
The resolution recites that since
the supreme court declared the grain
futures set constitutional, meml>*n«
of the Chicago board of trade and
other grain exchanges, with few ex
ceptions, “have systematically op
posed the price of wheat, or In trade
terms, tried to bear the market.”
A. E. Bowen of Minneapolis, rep
resenting the Farmers’ Stabilization
association, told the senate agricul
tural committee that the state of
North Dakota could not be sold for
enough to pay the total indebted
ness, mortgage and bonds. He pic
tured a very serious situation in
the middle and northwestern state*.
Illustrating his point, he said a
Kansas farmer bought a binder In
1901 at u cost equivalent to 120
bushels of wheat, and in 1922 the
same kind of a binder represented
a cost equivalent of 258 bushels of
wheat.
Mr. Bowen told of an instance
where white potatoes were bought
at the farm in the Bed river vnlley
of Minnesota at !15 cents a hundred
pounds and sold wholesale at Rn
linn, Kan., at $1.50 per hundred
pounds. The freight rate, he said,
was 56 cent*, giving the wholesaler
a protit of 00 cent*.
W. W. Kitzwater of Banhsm,
Tex., president of the Fnrm Labor
Union of America, said it was the
purpose of his organization to flx
und control the price of furm prod
ucts. The number of tenant farm
ers in Texas, he said, has increased
by several hundred since 1920 be
cause of the snlA of farms to pay
off mortgages and taxes.
A
Old Painting; Not
Raphael’s, Claim
A painting believed by Its owner.
Dr. John Stewart Livingston of
Plattsmouth, Neb., to be the original
of Raphael's “Madonna of th« Hose,"
or possibly the same artist’s ' Ma
donna of the Pink.” now Is being
studied by H. A. Hammond Smith,
noted connoisseur of New York. If an
original Raphael, the piece Is worth
$200,000, Mr. Smith, who has been a
restorer of paintings for the Metro
politan Museum of Art for many
years, estimates.
After a preliminary ejcaimrwtlon.
however, Mr. Smith ventured the
opinion that the picture, done on an
old wooden panel with no trace of
signature does not even belong to
the Rahpael school. He places its
period at 1525 several years after
Raphael's death.V
Purse Grabber Operating.
Stella Waller, 2023 Charles
street, reported to police that she
was held up by a lone highwayman
while crossing the circus grounds on
her way home Monday night and
robbed of her coat and 9 in cash.
A man answering the desagiption
snatched a purse containing $10 in
cash and a check for $37.70 from
Mrs. Ida Wolf, 218% Park avenue,
at Twelfth and Douglas streets yes
terday morning.
Girl Suspects Questioned.
Matthew Thiess, detective em
ployed by a Des Moines department
store, arrived here Tuesday morn
ing to question Margaret Antone,
Edith Bennett and Jessie Franks,
three girls held on a charge of for
gery and shoplifting. They ure al
leged to have admitted to him that
they stole merchandise from Des
Moines stores.
Wood's Ex-Partner Jailed.
Lancaster, Pa., Jsn. *.—Atbort 8.
Fish, former manager of a theatrical
stock company and former partner of
Leonard Wood. Jr., In the theatrical
business, was unable to obtain bell
early today after ependlng the night
In the county Jail on a charge of paa»
jlng fraudulent checke.
Your Ailing Tooth
That Needs Extraction
This week teeth will be extracted t*
lemonstrate improved TOOTH-NUF
net hod at oneethird regular charge
\ 18 00 operation for 11.00 each tooth
vhieh Includes X-ray examination I*
necessary. No pain during operation
• r afterward.
Clip and present this announcemen'
this week—lt*a worth $2.00 to you
Dr. Shipherd, Dentist
• 1# Sacurltiea Bldg.
16th and Famam Sta. (B) Omah I
Astrachan Jacquottoa *g Price
Heavy Wool Skirta ^ Price j
MID WINTER CLEARANCE
luirmis
VaOMBBBOaBMHBBMBBaHHBO •
Sherwin-Williams’ Paint!
VARNISHES, ENAMELS
COMPLETE STOCK
Barker Bros. Paint Co.
1609H Farnam JA 4750
When in Omaha
Stop at
Hotel Rome
Married Life One Big Honey
moon Until Light Months
Ago, Says Former
Show Girl,
was booked for the Auditorium
here during January, 1911, and a
publicity feature was an invitation
to Omaha city officials to go to
Kansas City and accompany the
special train to Omaha.
In the party of Omahans was Mr.
Bossie, then dairy and milk inspec
tor. On the stage at Convention
hall Manager McBride introduced
the visitors to members of the com
pany. Maybelle McKean, attractive
little dancer, caught the eye of one
of the Omahans, who remarked that
he believed it would be a clever idea
to steal the cute miss.
“She’s going to be mine,” Bos
sie said in a challenging tone.
Pair Get Chummy.
Enroute to Omaha Bossie and
Miss McKean became chummy.
During the Omaha engagement the
dairy inspector paid gallant atten
tions to the maid from New York.
After a week in St. Paul the show
went to Chicago to play six weeks.
Bossie journeyed to Chicago, where
he stormed the young woman’s
heart and obtained a promise of
marriage. Miss McKean finished
the season with the show, went to
her home in New York for a rest
and came out to Omaha during Sep
tember, when she and Bossie were
married in Mayor Dahlmnn’s office.
“Yes, that is our romance,” Mrs.
Bossie added. “Previous to eight
months ago Mr. Bossie was a de
voted and attentive husband. Many
of my friends remarked that if
their husbands thought as much of
them as Claude seemed to think of
me, they would be happy. We
went everywhere together. I even
made silk shirts for him.”
She looked out of the window
again and remarked that it Mr.
Bossie did not return soon she
would have to think of going to
work, for she did not have funds
to carry her long.
Can’t Go Back.
‘ I am not able to go back to the
show business,” she reflected, ‘‘but
I will do something. I can’t help
having a feeling, however, that
Claude is just around the corner
and will be back tomorrow. Some
thing just tells me he will come
back.” •
The canary chirped again and
Mrs. Bossie brushed away a few
more tears which came from ‘‘a
woman’s heart, a woman’s life and
a woman’s wonderful love.”
Making
and Taking
The winter fun in pho
tography embraces the
making as well as the taking
of pictures—and we shall
be pleased, not merely to
furnish the material, but to
give you intelligent advice
as to its use.
Kodak and Graflex cam
eras of every style always
in stock.
Developing, printing and en- |
larging of tht superior kind, ,
Eastman Kodak Co.
^__(The Robert Dempster Co.)
fl/\ 1813 Farnem St.
[ndua Breech Store
308 South lftth Si. ^
Showdown on
I * Bonus Thursday
House (J. O. P. Conference
('ailed—Fight on for
Mellon Tax Hill.
lljr AMwlMtH Tr««.
Washington. J:in. 8.—A showdown
among house republicans on the
soldiers’ bonus was assured today
with issuance of a formal call for a
conference Thursday night for dis
cussion of the question. The call,
sent out by Representative Ander
son of Minesota, chairman of the
conference, was so worded to permit
consideration of taxation and other
pending legislation.
With former set vice tnen in the
house pressing for action on the
bonus before the end of the month,
the republican organization redoubled
its efforts meantime to keep the Mel
ion tax bill from being displaced on
the tentative leg.slative program. The
republican leaders want the ways and
means committee to complete its
adoption of the tax bill before tak
ing up the bonus, but the soldier bloc
intends to introduce at the confer
ence the resolution instructing the
committee to lose no time in report
ing the bonus bill.
Taxes, the soldiers' bonus, farm
aid and Russ a were subjects to
which congress gave its attention to
day, either in debate on the floor
or in committees.
Having* failed to break the dead
lock over the chairmanship of the in
terstate commerce committee yester
day, the senate faced a renewal of
the contest, but with little prospect
of a decision. Senator Smith, demo
crat, South Carolina, continued to lead
yesterday, but with the insurgents
and so-called progressives on the re
publican side supporting Senator
Couzens, republican, Michigan, and
the regulars voting for Senator
Cummins, republican, Iowa, he fell
several voles short of a necessary
majority.
Holdup Gets $17;
15 Years in Pen!
St. Louis. Jan. 8.—James W. Gal
lagher, 26, was sentenced to 15 years ,
in prison here for a highway rob->
bery which netted him only $17.50. i
Gallagher was charged with robbing
William V. Stockton on the night
of June 8.
Your Credit
1 IS GOOD HERE!
I GOOD CLOIHES -
Men. Women. Children.
- QUALITY OlAMONLYS
; Elgin Watchea, 1847 and Com- f
j muniry Silverware.
Advance Srylea In EVEBV Oept. <
bu Bu Slom BMII Iviti rolum*
jrice* and mi* irrtn* Orea arl a tKout
miaiint (ha rnonr> Ore® *ou. acMd•
Foonoroa o* <rrit» Pro* CoOint.
0»UM i Biot—» 0—00 •—
lARniSGOARS
>1070511 SOUTH IBS SI
High - Class Dressmaker Supply House
or Prominent Department Store
wanted to represent, in your city, exclusively, one of the largest
French importers and manufacturers (with New York office) of
art-gir:l!es, rhinestone end crystal novelties and ornaments, hand
carved French art-buckles, farcy dress garnitures and novelty
buttons.
The only authentic house which is showing trimmings and
novelties used on all models at the Parisian opening, two weeks
luter in their New York branch.
Those organizations are preferred which have a large sale*
force and cover their own city as well as surrounding districts, or
department stores with a large dressmaker clientele.
A personal interview would be desired. Address all corre
spondence to Mons. W. W. Hobe, c. o. IJobe Cie, 219 West 37th
Street, New York City.
w •
SPARKLING sunshine, fleecy
clouds, glorious su nsc ts, and af ter
glows. Flowers.fruit,fragrant forests.
Romance of the past; pleasures of the
present: golf .motoring, fishing .hunting.
You'll love New Orleans. Bay St.
Louis, Pass Christian, Gulfport,
Biloxi, Ocean Springs, Mobile ana
Pensacola—the American Riviera.
Special winter fares nnd through one-day service from
Chicago or St Louis. 250 miles along the Gulf.
LOUISVILLE & NASHVILLE RAILROAD
Our New Orleans tourist tirlrets give free stop-overs at all Gulf
Coast point*. Our Florida tourist tickets give free stop-over st
I’rnsat'ola. and only a few dollars estra for 400 mite round trip;
stop over, side trip along entire Gulf Coast including New Orleans,
.''end for ourfares and special guide look with elaborate bird s-eye
map. A revelation of joys in store for you. Address
T. W MORROW, N.-W. l> a.
\ 3J2 Marguou BMi.
ChkMu. 111.
WTTO, Tr«v. r«M*r AgrnC
^11 Rail*** Fichana* IlLlg ^
^^•r^ Kana Cil*. Mo.
Supreme Court
Reverses Suit
A mandate was received In federal
court Tuesday from the United States
supreme court reversing decisions of
the local federal court and the court
of appeals In the suit of Charles Q.
Binderup against the Pathe Exchange
and 15 other moving picture concerns
and distributing exchanges.
Binderup, who operated movie
houses In Minden. Upland, Blue Ilill,
Alma, Franklin and Bloomington, Neb.,
alleged that the producers and dis
tributors conspired to cut him off
from his supply of pictures. He asked
for $720,153 damages.
Judge Woodrough held that he had
no case when the suit came up for
trial In 1921. The circuit court of ap
peals upheld him. The decision of the
highest tribunal puts the ease ba'k in
federal court for trial by Jury.
Coolidge Frowns
on Demo Surtax
- ■ ■- ^*4^
Washington. Jar. President Coc!
idge regards the surtax provisions of
the flamer democratic tax program
as disregarding the principle that the
government should encourage Invest
ment of capital la business enterprises
rather than In tax free securities.
O’Ryan Changes Findings.
Washington, Jan. 8.—Chairman
Reed of the senate veterans’ com
mittee told the senate today that
John F. O’Ryan, the committee's
general counsel in its veterans’
bureau investigation, had ‘‘exten
sively changed" some of the find
ings he made in his first report, pub
lished yesterday.
Tuesday We Feature
T abl e Linens
Of Thoroughly Reliable Quality
Table Cloths With
Matching Napkins
Hand Woven
2x2 V*-yard table cloth, flJOA
reduced to, each ....
2x3-yard table cloth, O C
reduced to, each .... *P«50
2x31*-yard table cloth, ^ A
reduced to, each.'P**'-'
Irish Linen
70x70-:nch table cloths, re
duced to, QC
each .
70x90-inch table cloths, re
d”;du>:.$5.00
20x20-incn napkins, 0 C OQ
reduced to, each..
Entire Stock of Fancy Linens
Luncheon Cloths
ISapkins
Scarfs
Doilies
Buffet Sets
20^
Discount
Mosaic
Maderia
Italian Filet
Cut W ork
Venetian
Linen Damask Table Cloths
With Napkins to Match
Beautiful quality Irish linen, woven in round
deigns of laurel wreath, chrysanthemum and
rose; also plain with satin border.
2x2-yard cloth, <£10 QQ
each .
15.00
"°,h: $17.50
,!«h4:y*rd'l0,h $20.00
22x22-in. Nap- d* t O OQ
kins, dozen .... 1uiO«7
24x24-inch Nap- <|? 1 C QQ
kins, dozen .... 0»O*/
The Prices .4 re Lower—Sot the Quality
Stroot Floor
Thompson-BelderTs
“The Best Place to Shop, After AIT
Tomorrow
! Alright
MX vuttibli
aperient, adda
tone and vigor to
the digeetive aod
eliminative eyetem,
Improvea the appe
tite, reltevee Sick
Headache and Bil
louaneaa, correcta
Coeatipatioo.
I Sherman A McConnell drug (tore*
^AtATOruallSr""^
FACE} 01
tt
Also Behind Ears and On
Limbs. Cuticura Heals.
"I was affected with ecrems
Which broke out in a rash. I had
it on my face, behind my ears and
on my limbs. My skin was acre
end ted and my clothing aggravated
it. It itched and burned causing
me to scratch, and sometimes I
could not sleep at night. My face
was disfigured.
“ I finally read an advertisement
for Cuticura Soap and Ointment
and sent for a free sample. I got
relief so purchased more, and after
using one box of Cuticura Oint
ment, with the Cuticura Soso. I
was healed.” (Signed' Miss An ills
C. Cryslex, 3639 Taylor St. N. E..
Minneapolis, Minn.
Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes
Fnato Mall. IWn -r.Htw.ua.
•MrUs Mtl 1. Hue.. U Maw tU-i nr
-a.tr Q»nt»l«aa.1 MU T.r— M.
IIT~ Tit o—r .m Shaving 5lwk.
V|l\ I KTtst HI M
WHY WOMEN LOOK 60 IT 40
■With (Utli circles unjer ihc.r eyes,
sallow complexions, drawn expr.le
sions, drooping shoulders a lagging
step, many women of forty have the
appearance of women at sixty. 1
many cases this condition is ca it sed
by overwork or tieghvt >>f such warn
lng symptoms, s» headaches, ba. k
ache, nerwusness, displacements, an !
irregularities which Indicate ailment*
peculiar to women. If all women so
afflicted would only rely up 'l 1 '
K Pink ham's Vegetable Compound,
would restore them to a non'
healthy condition, and the premat »*
signs of age will soon dls ipucer.