Charity Fund Chest Is Over Half-Filled Total of Subscription! Re ceived by Noon Saturday Reache! $205,448.31, Workers Report. The community chest total at noon Saturday was $205,448.31, a little past the half way point. Thousands of dollars In subscrip tions from employes of business houses were reported to headquarters Saturday. i Thirty contributions ranging from $3,000 to $100 each from business firms were also added to the total. Among larger subscriptions Friday were the following: Omaha, arwi Council Bluff* Sheet rail ;r$ay, $.{,000; Hayden Brother*, $1,500; T. JK. Stevens, $500; It. P. Morsman. $500; Myron L. Learned, $400; A. L. Heed, $400; H. A. J&cobberger. $400; Plainer Brothers. •$850; L. G. Doup company, $300; Allied contractors, $300; Mr. and Mrs. Edgaj Morsman, jr.. $250; M. D. Cameron, $250; Omaha Fvrdwood Lumber company. $250; Jay Burns Baking company, $230; Haskin Brothers &■ Co., $350; Charles H. Mallin aon. $240; Universal Motor company, $200; Alfred Bloom, $200: Nebraska-Iowa Steel Tank. $200; Peter Kewitt & Sons, $200; Omaha School Supply company, $200; Barkalow Brothers company, $200; J. M. Baldridge. $200; Franklin Mann, $150; O'Brien, Davis Auto company, $150; Sample Ilart. Motor company. $150; Wheeler, Welpton and Alexander, $100; George II. Schnell, $100; George Kasmus aen. $100: J. H. Hansen Cadillac com pany. $100. The employes of three additional firms have subscribed 100 per cent. The firms are: Omaha National hank. $1,023.15: Gor don Lawless company. $160.65; Gordan Kainalter company. $125.25. Subscriptions were also turned In frem the employes of the following firms: • . Nebraska Clothing company. $634.53; Sunderland Brothers. $414.27; 'Western Newspaper Union, $379.60, Herzberg'f-. $336.16; Federal Land bank. $216.25; .Adams and Kelly. $211.55; Omaha Loan and Building association, $197.60; Man hattan Oil company. $170.35; Harding Cream company. $162.50; National Refin ing company, $157.50; Acorn Press. $126; J. H. Hansen Cadillac company, $9S.;.0; Trimble Brothel'S, $93.50; Beddeo Clothing company, $77.92. RIPE OLIVES SAFE, CHEMISTS REPORT Washington, Nov. 22.—Three out breaks of botulism, due to canned ripe olives, reported to the Depart ment of Agriculture early this year caused the government to make a searching survey of the ripe olive situation, it was disclosed today when the findings became public. "These unfortunate occurrences re vived suspicion of this product aroused by the series of outbreaks in 1919 and 1929, which had been largely allayed by the earnest efforts made jointly by the state and the packing companies involved," said the department's report. "A resurvey of the ripe olive situation by the bureau , 6t chemistry was therefore necessary. "Bacteriological examination of the samples showed that canned ripe olives which were free from swell, from abnormal odor, or other marks of spoilage, were not dangerous. Botulinus was not found in any sam ple. The investigation furnished no ground for attributing special danger to the consumption of ripe olives If Reasonable crjre is exercised to exclude spoiled products from sale or use." BLUFFS CHURCHES HONOR SPEAKERS Four Council Bluffs churches will be hosts Sunday to well-known out side speakers, two of whom will de liver sermons in behalf of the anti • ga!oon league of Iowa. 'Up, S. G. Pattison of Coe college, Cedar Rapids, la., will he the prlnci i pel speaker at evening services at the ItVestminster Presbyterian church, ' ‘INventy-eighth street and Third ave nue. At the Salem Evangelical church Miss Alive J. Boyer, general secre tary of the anti saloon league, wdli preach at the morning service. Municipal Judge H. H. Sawyer of Des Moines will speak at the evening service at the First Baptist church, * while Rev. Lawrence Acker of the First Lutheran church of Omaha will preach the evening sermon at St. Paul Lutheran church. His topic will 1 ** "Eternity." RAIL STOCKS TO NEW HIGH LEVELS | New York, Nov. 22.—Stock prices today withstood a severe test Imposed bv combined profit taking and bear selling, scoring an Impressive recov ery In a last-minute rally which can celled earlier losses and sent a num ber of railroad Issues to new high levels. Trying, which had been maintained At a terrific pace since the election, moderated ellghtly, although total sales In the two hours of trading ran close to 1,000,000 ehares. WOMAN, 64, DIES AFTER ILLNESS ■ Mrs. Peter Johnson. 64, a native of Denmark, died yesterday at her home, 2541 Avenue C, following an Illness of 15 months. She was a member of the Danish Lutheran church of Boomer township. The body waa re i. moved to the Cutler mortuary pend ing funeral arrangements. Mrs. John son Is survived by three sons end four daughters In addition to her hus band. * ~ 1 - -I JH At $10.00 fek We offer Silk, Cloth, end Flannel j Dristei, formerly sold for and up j to $25.00. J _ Julius Orkin I 1512 Douglas Street OSTEOPATHY -^7 Removes All Kinds of Bodily Troubles k Guarding 3,000 Gallons of Alcohol K.'O, Young, chief special agent of the Wabash railroad (left), and Deputy Sheriff L. If. Bird, guarding a carload of 3,000 gallons of alcohol, confiscated in the Council Bluffs yards Friday. It tvas labelled “olive oil,” and en route front Brooklyn, N. Y. to San Francisco. BRITAIN ANGERED BY STACK DEATH B.r Associated Fress. London, Nov. 22.—The British pub lic la expecting and the majority of the London press Is demanding that the government take firm action to ward Egypt In connection with the as sassination In Cairo of Maj. Gen. Sir I,ee Stack, governor general of the Sudan and sirdar of the Egyptian army. The opinion Is widely expressed that, notwithstanding the Egyptian officials’ compliance with the custo mary formalities and their expres sions of regret, the murder was actu ally ft political crime originating In a desire to oust the British from the Sudan. Clearings Show Increase. New York, Nov. 22.—The actual condition of clearing house banks and trust companies for the week shows an excess In reserve of $28,804,080. This Is an Increase of $24,35$,470, compared with last W'eek. FLIERS’ TRIP MOST DARING IN HISTORY < Continued From Taco One.I honor because of hls superior quali fications for undertaking a task of this kind. Hls experiences have made him the one man In the world best fitted *o this work. As an explorer and world traveler hls life hag been devoted to adventurous undertakings, and hs has supreme qualifications of experience to qualify him In assisting Commander Lowell Smith and hls fel low navigators of the air In prepar ing a permanent human Interest rec ord of the most adventurous episode since Columbus discovered America and Magellan galled round the world. He lg an aviation enthusiast, has flown over many of the countries of the globe, and has been a world traveler for many years has been spent In the very countrlee oYer which the w'orld aviators made their epoch making flight .Including Slam, India, Indo-China, the orient, the southern European nations, Burma, Arabia, Beloochlstan, and Alaska and the Aleutians as well. He la an American, bom In Colo rado, and a former newspaper man and a famous war correspondent. Lived With Aviators. Lowell Thomas has been living with the aviators, flying with them for thousands of miles, and taking down from their Ups the complete personal narrative of their hairbreadth es capes, their battles with Arctic bliz zards, flights through blinding rain and snow, encounters with tropic monsoons and simoons, experiences with ths natives of four continents over which they flew, ths Intimate story of their personal sensations, reactions, and opinions—and last, but by no means the least, the romantic and fantastically humorous story of their triumphal tour of America, with Its attendant conquests of hearts, a tour that has surely never been par alleled In the history of this or any other land. JVjch has been written, and In many languages, of how America's airmen won through where the air men of five different countries failed. But the big human Interest story which the public Is eager for and which hundreds of thousands of patri otic Americans have begged for in every city through which the boys have passed, Is the Inside story from the lips of the world fliers themselves, the Intimate tale of how they came to fly around the globe, how lines came In their faces and their hair turned gray under the strain; whom they saw. how they lived, what they thought, how they conquered the air, and then, as one would expect of six attractive bachelor heroes, how they returned to conquer the heart of the American girl. Odyssey From Real Ufe. It Is an American Odyssey from real life more thrilling than anything Jules Verne ever wrote, more hair raising than any dime novel, and more adventurous and romantic than the fabled Odyssey of Ulysses, for the reason that It la Intimate and trite story of the most adventurous ejysedl flon since those earliest navigators, the Phoenicians, set forth across un charted seas before the dawn of re corded history. It Is a story such as : that *et down In the chronicles of i ha voyage* of Columbia, Magellan, Frobisher, Drake, Vasco de Gama and Alfonao de Albuquerque. It Is a tale of daring and achievement that should be a trumpet call to every American man, woman and child to remind them of their inheritance; an epic capable of Inspiring a modern emu lator of Homer or Plutarch who through this tale will prove to us that, superficial appearances notwith standing, our race is no more degen erate today than It was when giants walked the earth. The story of the world flight will be published exclusively in The Omaha Bee beginning November 24. MRS: ARBUCKLE WILL TRY PARIS Providence, R. X., Nov. 22.—Mrs. Meta Arbuckle, who withdrew her pe tition for a divorce from Roacoe R. Arbuckle, former screen atar, after it bad been heard In the superior court, has gone to Pari* to seek a divorce, according to Francis P. Dougherty, who appeared as her counsel here. Mrs. Arbuckle's petition was heard and granted last January, but later the question of her legal residence in this state was raised'and she with* drew her petition and the divorce Was vacated. Creighton Prof to Talk. Dr. H. E. King of the Creighton university college of medicine will talk on "The Youth as He Enters College" at the noon meeting of the Professional Men's club Monday at Hotel Fontenelle. Simple Funeral for Mrs. Harding Glee Club Will Sing “Perfect Day,” Favorite of Late President's Wife. Marion, O., Nov. 22.—Funeral serv ices Monday afternoon at Epworth Methodist Episcopal church here for Mrs. Florence Kllng Harding, who died yesterday at the home of Dr. Carl W. Sawyer, son of the late Dr. C. E. Sawyer, President Harding's personal physician, will be simple. This was announced today by George B, Christian, jr., former secre tary to the late President Harding and a lifelong friend of the family, who Is In charge of the funeral ar rangementsr Tentative funeral plans, Christian said, include singing of "The End of a Perfect Dav” by the Columbus (O.) Republican Glee club, which, while Mr. Harding was president, was heard often at the White House on special occasions. The song was Mrs. Hard ing s favorite and always was re quested by her when any musical organization appeared at the execu tive mansion. Short Funeral Sermon. Dr. Jesse Swank, pastor of Epworth Methodist Episcopal church, of which Mrs. Harding had been a member since girlhood, will deliver a short sermon. Rev. George W. Landes, pastor of Trinity Baptist church, of which Mr, Hardin* wji a member, will read tha Scripture*. Tha en tombment aarvlca at the vault whei a Mr*. Hardin* will rest beside her hus band will be In charge of Hr. Swank. Honorary pallbeareca will b# of ficial* of tha government from Wash- ^ lngton whoa* names have not beer announced. Active pallbearers will In clud* old friends of the Harding fam lly. They are: Malcolm Jennings "I Columbus. George B. Van Fleet, E. K Uhler, J. F. Prendergast. O. S. Happ, Dr. Carl W. Sawyer. C. D. Schaffnrr and J. A. Schroeter, all of Marion. Niece Seriously III. Word was received today from Hock Ledge, Fla., that Mrs. C. B. Kltng, a slater in law of Mrs. Harding, and her daught-r, Louise, who ia seri ously ill, would not be able to corn* here for the services. Mr. Kllng ar rived In Marlon last week from Hock Ledge to be at the bedside Of his sister. Mrs. Harding’s body was taken late yesterday to the home of Mrs. F. J. Longshore, a daughter of Mr. Kltng, where It will remain until the services Monday. Mrs. Harding's old horn* has been closed for the winter. Washington, Nov. 22.—Military honors will he srrorded the late Mr* Warren G. Harding at Marion, O.j Monday, under orders Issued today by the AVar department. ^ Maj. Gen. Omar Bundy, commanded of the fifth corps, Columbus, was In structed to send a company of 104 men, properly officered, to Marion on the day of the funeral, these to sup plement tha force of 25 regulars that are on duty at the Harding tomb. Free Parking for Our Patrons ^a8^1 Customers Receive the Same n( Courtesies Aquila Court Station *8 Do Our Charge Patrons Smart Coats For Wear to the Games To appear smartly at the Thanksgiving games is to wear a Thompson-Belden coat of the I newer fabrics furred with the fashionable pelts and richly lined with silk. A new type sports model of Strook’s Upson Downs cloth, rosewood shade, has stripes of j brown woven on skirt and sleeves and a musk rat collar of dark skins. 98.50 t Cossock green chooses Jap mink to fur collar, cuffs and both sides of the front. Chic! 98.50 A wrap for either daytime or evening wear is of black cuir de laine with roll cuffs, crush col lar and front bindings of gray squirrel. The front is faced back with embroidery; the lining is of brocaded crepe. 175.00 ‘ Third Floor c New Frocks For Dinner Wear Black continues in vogue. The smartest frocks for street, afternoon and dinner wear are black, all black or black with a discreet touch of color. A straightline black satin affects the tunic by a band of black fox fur. Silver lace which forms the cap sleeve is repeated at the skirt. | 55.00 A black crepe is sparingly beaded with red and silver and banded at sleeves and hem with fur which is a most clever imitation of the real chinchilla. 98.50 A black satin sleeveless tunic with a wide band of curled ostrich uses color only in a silver stemmed crimson rose at the hip. 69.50 Third Floor Linens for Linens for the Bath Kitchen Use Turkish Towels Pot Cleaners Soft, absorbent towels, 18x36, Mitten shaped cleaner for scour* ■ in all white. Splendid values at ing pots and pans to shining 25c Wash Cloths Turknit wash cloths of white ! with colored border and shell edge. 12V2c “Martex” Towels Most attractive are these Jac quard woven 'white Turkish towels with flower patterned border in color. 1.00 Wash cloths to match, 20c. Linen Towels Satin bordered and hemstitched towels of linen, 18x45-inch size. 65c Guest Towels Linen huck with damask border of flower or monogram pattern in 14x22-i^ch size. 50c Fish-Eye Towel Pure white towels woven in Czechoslovakia; 18x34-inch size with hemstitched hems. 1.50 I I Str^t Floor II Dinner Cloths With Matching Napkins Richardson's Sons and Owden of Belfast are the makers of very fine linens. The Adams scroll is one of the established patterns for large 2x3-yard cloths and dinner napkins. Cloth 35.00 22 Vs x25-inch napkins — * «« to match, dozen.ZJ.Uy Odd Cloths Pure Irish linen cloths may be bought at excellent bargains for we have no napkins to match them. 2 to 3Va*yard cloths at 5.00 to 17.50 Madeira Napkins Dainty pure linen luncheon nap kins with corner design and hand scalloped edge, the majority rose scalloped. 12-inch, 13-inch, 6.75 8.75 Linen Damask Luncheon Set Soft lustrous, mellow finished linen damask makes a beautiful hemstitched luncheon set, in sev eral sizes. The set, including six napkins, is priced as follows: 45x45, 54x54, 63x63, 8.75 10.00 12.00 ■ — -I"-" For More Than a Generation « This has been a store famous for its high qual ity of linens. Today, this section is still in charge of Mr. W. W. P. Horne, whose knowledge and judgment of linens is nationally known. For Quality, for Price, for Assortment, the Thompson-Belden linen section is pre-eminent. Odd Napkins Cloth Napkins Odds and ends of dinner Exceptional values in napkins, excellent quali- beautiful round designs, ties in which there are only half a dozen of one 2x2-yard cloth . . . -8.00 pattern, are values when 2x2Va-y*rd cloth, 10.00 offered at 2x3-yard cloth . . 112.00 2.25 to 5.00 “i“rh."*pk:",10.oo French Filet Lace Scarf Rich scarfs of very coarse hand-tied filet are correct for table or buffet. Although quite new, we show these scarfs in four sizes: 18x45, 18x54, 18x63, 18x72, 6.75 7.50 8.75 10.00 Real Italian Filet and Cutwork Napkins Exquisitely beautiful dinner napkins are of finest linen with'corner motif of real filet and Italian cutwork, and an edge of real Italian filet lace. 14-inch napkin, 18-inch napkin, 25.00 35.00 •‘‘The Best Place to Shop, After All’ Dinner V^Joths With Matching Napkins From Dumferline, Scotland, come scroll, briar rose, chrysanthe mum, and rose and ribbon pat terned cloths of pure linen. Al though not an expensive cloth, it is of excellent quality in 2x2* yard size. Cloth 10.00 22-inch napkins to 1 match, dozen .1U.UU Odd Cloths All linen table cloths in 68x86 inch sizes are very specially priced because there are no nap kins to match. Each 4.98 Cream Crash Napkins Fourteen-inch luncheon napkins of Italian cream crash linen are double Italian hemstitched. Luncheon cloths and scarfs to match. Dozen 8.75 Colored Linen Breakfast Set Novelty weave with a crossbar of color, either blue or gold, makes an attractive breakfast set; half dozen napkins. 64x64-inch 15xl5-tnch cloth napkins Set b.00 cleanliness. ! 10c “Ritz" Silver Polishing Cloth Without the aid of pastes and polishes this cloth will rub the tarnish from silver or will polish glass. 25c Hot Pot Pad A padded square will allow one to hold hot pans and heated spoons without discomfort or danger of burning. 10c Dish Cloths Eighteen-inch porous knitted cloth for dish washing. 10c Dust Cloths An 18-inch “Ritz" dusting cloth is very soft. It is priced at 25c Tea Towels Unbleached muslin towels, hem med and ready for use. One needs a plentiful supply. Each, 12 y2c Street Flo«tr 4 i