Tribute Is Paid ! to Buckingham c Plarr Can Never Be Filler!. Savg Civic Body’* Resolution. Member* of the Greater Omaha committee, in meeting Friday, paid glowing tribute to the memory of Everett Buckingham. • J. E. Davidson, chairman of the meeting, read a resolution, eulogizing the leader and companion who died February 2". The resolution as adopted by the committee Is: A giant has fallen in our midst. A voice powerful In counsel is si lent. A leader of men and events has passed away and we. his asso ciates and friends, are met to pay tribute to his memory. Most of us have known him inti mately for year". \Ve have seen him si the golf grounds and the club bouse when the cares of life were cast aside and the hoy in the man was at play. We have met him at the home fireside when heart speaks to heart Its Inmost secrets. We have met. with him in civic movements when the general wel fare was our concern, and we have aat with him at the council tahle over matters of business when grave questions were at stake and the utmost powers of the man were put forth, and out of It all and everywhere he rises a splendid character worthy of all respect and admiration. His presence radiated cheer and sunshine, snd always ha was ah optimist. We do not mean that hope led him always to look upon the bright side and to search for the silver lin ing of the clouds, but rather that , he had a profound conviction that the sober judgment of mankind would go onward and upward and that the years to come would he and must be better than the years that had passed, for with Tennyson he doubted not that “through the ages an IncrVasing purpose runs and the thoughts of man are widened with,the process of the suns.” He. was thus a man of faith and the man of faith doubts not that a bounteous harvest will follow the seed time If the sower has done hi* work well. It was certain from the begin ning that he must succeed In busi ness. for when he accepted employ ment he gave his utmost—great Shlllty. It was largely through his efforts in various positions that the Stock Yards company has com* to its present proud place as one of the financial and industrial Institutions of this state So necessary to busi ness and the general welfare. He was In the forefront of al most every civio movement and was an activ# and leading figure In Ak Har-Ben. one of Its board of governors from the beginning giv ing liberally of time and money to serve Omaha hy bringing Into our midst. In October each year, thou sands to participate with us In that festival week. No mere words can measure the loss to this city and state through his death. Ilia vacant chair will never he filled. Other* may take his place at the head of business institutions and of this board and In clvio movements. Their work, however, snd service will he different, for Everett Buck ingham made a place of his own which no other can fill. The world has been made richer and better because of his life. His work and memory is his inherit ance to us. When he died he was respected and honored and loved by all. Ene mies he had none. 150 FISHERMEN DIE ON ICE FtOE Ekaterinoslav, Russia, March 7.— Caught In an Ice fine In the Rea of Azov, lnh flshermenVand fid horse* were drowned or frozen to death, It was learned here today. The fisher men had gone out for their dally haul with horses and wagons. When In the middle 6f the sea the ice broke and they were carried away before assistance could arrive. * MOTHER! Fletcher’s Castoria is a pleasant, harmless sub stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrupy, prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. It has been in use for more than 30 years to safely relieve Constipation Wind Colic To Sweeten Stomach Flatulence Diarrhea Regulate Ro rels Aids in the assimilation of Food,promoting Cheerfulness,Rest and Natural Sleep without Opiates - To avoid imitation* alwayl look for the signature of ^ * Proven directions on each package. Phyliciani averywhere recommend it. * I McIntyre and Heath, Veteran Comedians, First Played Omaha in 1874 With Anderson's Circus; Next Here in 1880 Blackface Arli?t Say* He Ha* Worn Same Stage Shoe* 45 Years. By EDWARD BLACK. James McIntyre of the vaudeville, team of McIntyre and Heath sat in his dressing room at the Orpheum the other afternoon, his face masked with a covering of burnt cork and wearing the habiliments of hts act. “I have worn these same stage shoes for 45 years," the famous min strel said. "Many years ago Charles Evans of the team of Evans and Hoey traded shoes with me. Po you re member Evans and Hoev In their Parlor Match?' ” McIntyre told how he and Heath met In San Antonin In 1*74 and have bepn together ever since. "Before I went to San Antonin I had a partner whose name was Bu |er and who htrams Involved In some difficulty at Memphis." McIntyre said. "I got off the train outside of Mem phis to advise Butler that a detecthi was after him. When I reached San Antonio my clothes were covered with mud and I was a sorry looking spec tacle. BA Miles From Railroad. "At that time San Antonio was BO miles from a railroad and had a pnpu latlon of ahnuf. 4.00ft. There were many gamblers, cattlemen and Mex leans there, A man named Harris opened In San Antonin the first thea ter to have the name of 'vaudeville' displayed on a sign. 1 was an Irish lad of 17 then and T had some nice stage elnthe*. I asked the manage ment to give me a chance to show what I could do. The best clog dancer at that time was Steve Rogers and I was next to Rogers. "They paid me $25 a week. After the show we went to a fandango and my partner. Rutter, had the only silk top hat In the town. At the fandango Sam Bass and .lop Fowler shot But lers silk hat off and frightened him speechless A team of Howard anil Heath ramp down from Chicago, and that is how T met Heath. We Just were drawn to each other and have stuck together ever since." Big Gambling House. In the old days of San Antonio, McIntyre stated he saw a cattleman lose $75,000 In gold In one night at a gambling house. Mitchell's gambling house, he related, had 150 tables. He lold about "Big Foot Wallace,” pic turesque trapper and hunter In Texas jft years ago. Wallace was a giant and was the most feared of all white men by the Indians. McIntyre and Heath first appeared in Omaha as a team In 1874 with An demon's circus. In >880 they re hearsed their second minstrel show here^t the old Academy of Music on Rum Sleuths “Gum Shoe” at Federal Building; Practice “Swooping Down” Quietly, ever so quietly, Robert 3amardlck and two of his mule sounds tiptoed down the corridor of he federal building. They stopped at the door of the irohihitlon office, which was closed Boh” put a finger to his lips. “Ssssh!” he ssshed. “Ssssh!” ssshed hack his two aides Then “Bob” flung open the door. “Sic ’em!” he yelled ta his 'hounds.” The two agents went through the Then he explained. "We've been fooled so often by boot ledgers at soft drink stands,” he ex plained. "They keep their booze in a pitcher under the bar. As soon we raid the place t*bey simply dump It Into the sink, and the evidence is gone." “After we’d been fooled that way a few times 1 hit on this way to fool them. I picked out three of my crack sleuths and put them into’ training for hurdling. door In a hound and sprang: over the railing inside the office with the per fect form of a champion hurdler. They landed simultaneously on a man in side, and throttled him. "Bob" stood in ^he doorway, grin ning. "Fine!” be said. "Fine! Now let’s go back and do it again.” Fools Btxrtleggers. They did. time after time. It’s a new game, similar to the annual "war game'1 of the T’nited States navy. "Just a new way to fool bootleg gers.” said Samardick to an alienist who thought he had found a new ra*« for the sanity rommleslon. How it Work*. "When we raid a place now I throw open the door and two of the rrack jumpers make one leap through the door, another over the her, and ngh the bartender hefore he knows we've left the federal building. Then we can hunt for the liquor at leisure. It * a perfect plan." The jumping sleuths have received their training exclusively on the rail ing In the prohibition office In the federal building. The deep dents In the hardwood floor, about the shape of a human head. Indicate the hard ships which they underwent In the cause of prohibition. 102 NEW7 CITIZENS GIVEN WELCOME A confidence In the future of the country, based on "what Immigrants have done In the wav of Introducing foreign Idea*, foreign culture, arts, languages and science” was express ed bv District Judge \Vr. G. Hastings In hi* talk welcoming 102 men and women Into United States citizen ship. An' elaborate program was held In the courthouse Friday evening for these new citizens. It was opened with a. procession led by Boy Scouts, followed by an oath of allegiance and salute to the flag and music by the Central High school orchestra. Mayor Dahlman spoke a* did District Judge Goss, who was formerly In charge of the naturalization court. In hls talk on "Our Immigration Policy and Its Success,” Judge Hast ings advised the Immigrant to "keep alive Jit* association* with his native land for cultural purposes to the full extent ho can do ho without Interfer ing with the practical needs of hls existence.” Thu program was arranged bv the Americanization committee of which H. Jt. 1Json Is executive secretary. RABBI TALKS ON NEEDS OF OMAHA "Community uplrlt I* our big n*wd In Om/ihii," »*lrl Rabbi Ft**lle\*’ i Douglas street and were playing at the time in the St. Elmo theater. Some of the old songs heard In their early minstrel show were ‘ Climbing Up the Golden Stairs,” “You’ll Never Miss the Water Until the Well Runs Dry,” “Empty Is the Cradle, Baby’* Gone.” and "White Wings.” "We ran remember Omaha before there were any pavements,’ McIntyre reminisced. "For a time the old Metropolitan was the leading hostelry, and then came the Canfield, next the Millard, and later the Paxton.” • McIntyre attended school in Keno sha, AVIs., with the late Judge J. P. English. Heath is a native of Phila delphia. There are only a few stage teame today who were entertaining when McIntyre and Heath started out to get her 51 vea rs ago. Blast ^ recks Ziegman Home! Police Start Query of Explo sion in Sportsman's Apartment. Explosion and fire completely wrecked the home of Pant Ziegman, 2712 Jackson street, about 12 last night, Mr. Ziegman Is In Hot Springs, Ark., with his wife. They left for there last Monday. The explosion occurred under a front stairway and was followed by fire which gutted the first floor of the home before if was extinguished by the fire department. Police Detective A1 Nelson has been assigned to the rase to Investigate the cause of the explosion. Ziegman Is part owner of Baseball Headquarters and well known In sport rlrrles. His home is the west side of a du plex. The east side ts occupied by the owner, B. Rosenthal. "We had been out," said Mrs. Ros enthal. "Soon after we returned I heard what sounded like the rumble of thunder and then a sound that I thought was rain and the next we knew the fire department was here." All the windows tn the Ziegman home were blown out by the explo sion and several windows were broken In the house next door west, occupied by F. H. Gearhart, who turned In the fire alarm. Insurance Inspectors are at a loss to know how the explosion may have occurred. E. E. Hayduk, deputy state fire warden, hnd John T. Punn, fire In spector, Investigated the fire. A neighbor said she saw a man go to the house about 11 Friday night Hayduk said there seemed to he evl denoe of kerosene on rugs and walls. GIRL ATTACKED IN OPEN FIELD Pes Moines, la., March 7.—Miss Dorothy Keith, 12. was found in an unconscious condition In a field near her home here early this morning, suffering from Injuries to her head which were inflicted by a blunt Instru ment. She Is believed to have been at tacked by R. A. Graves, a former street car conductor, as she walked with him from her home to a street car line last night after breaking her engagement to him. Graves was found dead this morning, having been asphyxiated by gas escaping from two open Jets In a stove. The girl has a rhanca to recover, physicians itate. Keep on using apples. If you haven't tried an apple cheese hetty or a rice and apple pudding, send to the state college of agriculture st Ithaca for bulletin E right now . coon tlthorr»ph*d letterhead* Knic* ,n|t fr„„ s.nd een,* $28 50 for in ply pn*' nef uni mailing Kav !>•« I.i’hn To. Mt|wm»k*». Wi*. When Shipping Household Goods You will be given complete cost of pack ing. drayage and freight, if you phone JA \ 1504. Pool cars to all large cities give you carload service. TERMINAL WAREHOUSE 702 South 10th Street JA ckton 1504 ADVERTISEMENT. AD\ ERTISEM ENT. - HARMLESS I.AXATIVE * f For Sick, Fereriih, Bilioui Children Mother! ItJ When Child is Constipated Give “California Fig Syrup" Children love the pleasant fasts of “California Fig Syrup" *nd gladly taka It even when bilious, feverish, sick, or constipated. No other laxa five regulates the tender little bowels so nicely. It sweetens the stomach and starts the liver and bowels with | out cramping or overacting Contain* I no narcotic* or toothing drug* Tell your druggist you want only the genuine "California Kig Syrup" which ha* direction* for bable* and children of *11 ago* printed on bottle. Mother' You must *ay "California" or^ou may get an imitation fig *yrup. MAJESTIC LUMP| Arkansas Semi-Anthracite ft «. imi Harder and hotter than the kind you || have been using. - - ASK FOR IT! jflj Lump Size $13.50 Mine Run $11.50 I UPDIKE SSW Hi Your Choice of Truck or Team for Delivery jg| See Sample* of Thi* Coal at Hayden'* Grocery Dept. Ray Short Is Elected Exalted Ruler of Elks ! Ray Short, government statistician at the postofflce garage, was elected exalted ruler of the Omaha I.odge 39, Elks. Friday evening at the club building. Ho succeeds Herbert W. Johnson. Mr, Short has been In gov. ernment service for 20 years, and Joined the lodge In 1912, and has been an officer for six years. Judge J. M. Fitzgerald was elected esteemed leading knight; Penn F. Fod tea esteemed loyal knight: David A. Fitch, esteemed lecturing knight: Herbert W. Johnson, representative to the grand lodge, and John H. Kil lian, alternate representative to the grand lodge. Otto N'lelsen was reelected secre tary, Charles M. Fixa was re elected treasurer, and John E. Himoe was re elected tiler. R. Jullen was elected trustee for five years. The officers will be installed April 3. The Brandeis [Store ! VASHER is the washer you should own. * •>* A VOSS is as good a washer as is made today. __ I jj Owners of VOSS WASH- | ERS are our biggest boosters. Buy a VOSS, enjoy doing your own laundry and become a VOSS booster too. Here's what makes the VOSS popular with the ladies: I It’s easy to operate. It washes clean. And it costs less than any other washer of its class. - I.ot us demonstrate the efficiency of this washer in your home. WatMitf Machine*—Fifth Ft»«r The Brandeis StoreI Monday—In the Linens 1 SVfe-Inch Initial Hand I Embroidered _- Without Charge I On Evcrv Linen Cloth Purchased at 6.98 . or More. This is an innovation in our linen section. To revive interest in this lovely art of hand-embroider ing linens, we are making this special offer Monday. An instructor of hand embroidery’ will be here to help you and to give advice as to where and how to em broider any piece you may select. German Damask Beautiful designs in a soft, mellow finish. A quality that becomes even more lovely after it is laundered. 72x72-inch cloth.10.50 72x90-inch cloth.15.50 72x90-5nch cloth.13.50 72x108-inch cloth.18.50 72xl08-inch cloth.16.50 24x24-ir napkins, doz. 17.50 72xl26-inch cloth.10.50 72x72-inch cloth .14.00 ! Irish and Scotch Linen Snowy white finish in all the newest patterns. Nap kins to match. 7Ox70-inch cloth .6.98 I 70x106-inch cloth .8.98 70x88-inch cloth .7.98 ’ 22x22-inch napkins, doz. 7.98 600 Pieces of Venetian Lace Trimmed Linens 49c to 10.98 Ovals, oblongs and scarfs in every’ wanted size in all the newest designs. You can match these pieces to make a lovely buffet set, dining room set or bed room set. DTht Brandcit Stor«—Main Floor .® | Sun or Tub Has No Effect uu These Guaranteed I Fast Color Fabrics Never before, we believe, have you been offered wash fabrics with such a generous refund guar antee. For we agree to refund the total cost of material and making of any garment made from these fabrics, if it should fade, regardless of the cause. The display is almost unlimited and in cludes all the beautiful materials that will be in demand for early spring. t "6-inch Cotton Shantung in plain shades, yard, 59C 36-inch Everfast Suiting, yard. 49<^ I* 36-in. Indian Head Suiting, permanent finish, yd. 48<^ 32-inch Everfast Zephyr Dross Gingham, yard, 65<* 36-inch Peter Pan Prints, yard. 59c I 36-inch English Prints, fast color, yard, 36C 36»inch Pretti-Prints in Foulard effects,Vyard, S9C 36-inch Suitings, fast color plain shades, yard. 39C 36-inch Prints in chintz effects, yard. 25C 36-inch Peter Pan Ginghams in plain colors, yard. 55£ > =■ | meshed ' 'Dress Ginghams I Pepperell l ubing 32-inch combed yum gingham* I 42-inch tubing in this brand, >n plaid* and check*. Very of long recognitted quality;. In finest quality Zephyr in lengths ! long mill length*. OQ that may be easily Yard, A27C matched. Yard. <(COC 1 Tissue Gingham 32-inch tissue gingham in at. tractive novelties, including the embroidered patterns. In long mill lengths. •% £■ _ Yard. OOC Kirtle Cloth A 36-inch material suitable for slips, bloomers and other undergarments. A range of the wanted colors in iQ nnire effect. Yard. a27C Normandie Voile 3!> inch Normandie dress voile In the very lowest Swiss dot effects. In all the popular color ig combinations. Yard, HOC Shirting Madras 3R-inch madras in a wide assortment of patterns and color*. For men's shirts and hovs’ blouses. Of? _ Yard. ZdC Chiffon Voile 44-inch fancy printed chiffon voiles in the newest , 75c spring pattern*, \ ard, ____ a t Silk and Cotton Canton A SR-inch dress crepe in an exclusive range of patterns and color*. A favored spring fabric. QQ Yard. SJOC