The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, March 28, 1925, Page 2, Image 2
GERMAN SECURITY PLAN EXPLAINED By The A<«n«iatpil Fre*<». rati*. March 1!?.—The German gov ernment aoon will have an opportun ity to explain in detail its tentative suggestion for a pact of guarantee for the frontier* of France and Ttel cium The allies have about agreed to th« procedure they will follow and in a few days each nation will, on its own account, reply to the mem oranduni which the German am bassadors recently left at the chan celleries of the allied povernments. The French reply it i« believed.' will be the chief test of Germany’s I intentions to cooperate in an effec-| live security plan. It will say that the French government 1* ready to consider any project to put an end to the existing anxiety in Europe hut would like to he Informed precisely concerning certain essentials of any such project interesting as It does not effect only France itself, hut the allies of France in central Europe. Roe Want Ads produce results. " " "ra i Saturday finds Orkin Bros, ready with the season’s most marvelous values in SPRING COATS Gorgeous Fur-Collared and Banded Coats Luxurious Silk Linings—Beautiful Styles tin i|fi) Coats Worth Many Dollars More-Choice Saturday * Fabrics Colors Polo Cloth Sumac Wigwam T willbloom Claret Larkspur Tmllccds Veldyne 0a* Heart Acorn Novelties Point Twills Tea Ro$e Nav» Kasha Formosa Black Copper It is indeed unusual to he privileged to select such wonderful coats for so little as $25. Elegantly tailored. Styles so varied that you are certain of full_ satisfaction in your selection. ■- ■ A Great Sale of New HATS * / In fact, comparison will reveal that double this price is what you would be compelled to pay in most stores. The assortments are strikingly beautiful. Every tiev> color, material, trimming and style, Hals for the miss and her mother. Hals that you will rarely find offered for only $r). Solons Seek to Break Deadlock in Legislature c Conferees Meet lo Adjust i House and Senate Differ ences on Three Big Measures. (Continurd From Pure Onrt mi I la free with tare horses. After a sharp fight the samp body advanced a hill to third reading, forcing all <ar owners to obtain certificates of purchase at $1 earh from the county treasurer and on all transfers there after the make of the ear must he duly noted o'n certificates. Second hand car dealers are forced to obtain state licenses at $15 each and ate obliged to keep a full record of nil prior ownerships of cars. Proceeds from the law are to he applied In cheeking automobile thieves. After smiling on this hill, the house showed its teeth to the auto drivers' license bill when it appeared on third reading. The hill was killed. Attorney General O. S. Spillman may he spurred to activity under a resolution introduced in the senate by Shellenbnrger and Kerr, demo eiats. asking for a thorough Investi gation of the alleged cement trust. The resolution will lie acted upon to I morrow. It is a result of charges launched hv Senator Clark .Tenry | against "'the cement trust and Spill I man's inactivity.” '£hp charges were ] made Tuesday durng debate on the I runny gas and coal bll. House roll 217, which would place | rate making of rural electric lines under the stale railway commssion, was killed in the senate. Only one vote was registered in favor of the measure. Sheriffs Feeding Kill Passe*. The Hoye-Caldwell sheriff's feeding Mil was passed on third reading in the senate with only three opposing votes. They came from Heed, Robert .■jon, and Shellenhnrger. The hill now goes to the house for concurrence on the Griswold amendment striking out the emergency clause. The house passed a hill on third reading giving mutual insurance companies power to write auto theft insurance. During the day Senator John W Hohhins and Representative George Dyhall presented outstate members Ak-SarBen pins and membership cards. The new knights were invited to visit Ak Sar-Ben den at any time. Passage of the bank guaranty bill is assured. Briefly this bill provides the following; Protection of the guaranty fund removed, from deposits which axe "otherwise secured." Officials and employea of Ne braska hanking administration barred from borrowing money from state hanks. Repeal of requirement that state hanks must keep one third of rash reserve in vault, thus enabling small town banka to place money In city hanks and aafeguard them from holdups. Fixing penitentiary sentence for hank examiners who fall to report all had and doubtful paper to atate hanking bureau. Authorizing money to he drawn from guaranty fund and paid to a new organized bank which takes over assets of a failed institution and assumes liability for deposit*. Blue Sky Vote Today. Tomorrow the senate will vote on the Pollock blue sky repeal bill ss it was amended by a senate committee, after passing the house. The bill as amended retains the bureau of se curltles and exempts from the blue sky law all securities listed on the New Vork, Chirago and Boston stock ex changes. Other exemptions under the amendments follow; Securities of corporations, when the total outstanding and contem plated stock Issues do not exceed 150,000. Any increase In the capital stock sold snd distributed among stoek holdera of a corporation. Anv securities other than enm Grind ind Upright Pianos For Bent $3.00 Per Month and lip Rental will be credited on purchase price if you with to buy later. We tune, repair, refinisb, • tore and more pianoa at loweat pricea. Schmoller&Mueller ISI4-10-10 O. Phone Dodge st. nano i»o. at.im« men stork wherein interests and dividends have been paid for more that) five years preceding, without default. A colorful scene closed the day when a number of Indians from Ne braska reservations appeared before a senate committee anil pleaded for death of the Wingctt bill which out laws use of peyote, claimed lo he a | harmful drug, for religious or any I.other use. Paper Standards Protest Renewed Publishers Continue b ifilil Against Regulation of Treasury on News Print. ■Washington, March 27.—Renewed protests by publishers against s treasury regulation defining standard news print paper were presented at a two-hour hearing today before As sistant Secretary Moss. The publish ers' argument failed to settle the longstanding question today, how ever, and another hearing was ar ranged for April 17. In a decision handed down In Au gust, 1112.7, Secretary Mellon pre scribed the standard news print paper as consisting of "mechanically ground pulp and chemical wood pulp or sulphite containing not In excess of .70 per cent sulphite and varying In weight not more than 10 per cent from 72 pounds per 500 sheets of 24 bv 70 inches." This, it was thought, at that time, would permit fie* entry under the tariff act for all paper ac tually used In publication of news papers and compel assessment of duties against various other forms. The publishers representatives de dared today that the 10 per cent tol erance from the 72 pound average was ton great, and suggested a limit ation of 5 per cent. Treasury offi cials, however, were not convinced that 5 per cent was the correct figure and It was made known that Mellon, after Issuing his ruling, had ordered an Investigation bv the bureau of standards. The finding of the bureau experts was said to approximate closely the content and variable fea tures set out In the Mellon ruling. The publishers asserted, however, that greater quantities and different kinds of paper than had been expect ed were coming into the country j under the ruling. Irish Immigrants i Have ^ eak Hearts Condition in Ireland Since ]()1 t Blamed by Experts for Prevalence of Disease. Washngton, March 27.—While Im migration bureau official* here op pea red puzzled today over rejection of a relatively large number of young Irish immigrants because of heart ailments, officials of the public health service, which Is charged with physi cal examination of aliens attempting to enter the 1'nlted States, attributed the abnormally high heart disease rate found among these applicants to local conditions existing In Ireland since 1914. These conditions, It was explained, brought about prolonged fatigue and extreme muscular effort, which result In mediae affections. Another cause Is found in the condi tion of the applicants' teeth. Immigrants from Engiana, too, public health officers said, as being rejected because of heart trouble, the climate of the British Isles being practically conducive of tonsilitls and its aftermath rheumatism, with re sulting strains on the heart. Surgeon Hen. Hugh S. Humming saiil a comparison of statistics shows that In adult ages from 20 to 94^ the mortality rate from diseases of the heart in the 1'nlted States was uni formly higher among the Irish than among the English, Welsh or Ameri can. This condition, which public health Officials said had been brought to their attention some months ago, was reviewed in the light of yester day's action of New York attorneys In asking Federal .Judge Knox to In quire Into the unusual numher of Irish immigrants recently rejected because of heart trouble. Boston Fishing Srhoonor (latches Fire and Sinks Highland l.ight, Mass., March 27.— Eight members of the crew' of the Boston fishing schooner Herald landed here in two dories late today and re ported that their vessel caught fire and sank last night off CJeorges Banks. Coast guardsmen were search ing the coast for the remaining dories of the schooner, which carried a crew of 27 men. 1 Moderate Price*, ^ Women’* 1 Style Distinction, W 1 ■■— -■ inJ Mine*’ V ! S.ore Serve- UlIllllS Wj/JKjTl 'nP'"' ""d f ■ Millinery. I I 1512 Douglas | Lolvest-in-lhe-City Prices > i niFchasos Made Today and the Remainder of Thi* J Month Placed on April Statement l 1 PAYABLE BY MAY 10TH f IroiBSIE®1 DislinctiteJfpparelfix' tiemen cflftCroty^Bldg. On 16th Between Farnam and Douglas Before Easter Specials $z|.85 Visit our Shop and see the Snappy Novelty Footwear - Twenty-Four Hours Faster Time All Freight Shipments Chicago to Omaha THE Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Announces This Improved Service Now in Effect and the Patronage of Receivers is Respectfully Solicited. L EUGENE DUVAL, General Agent Saturday Bargains at The Toilet Goods One Really Needs and Uses /or Unusually Low Prices Soaps Creme Oil, cake .5c Bocabelli, large bar .1.15 Physician* and Sur., 3 for 25c Woodbury Soap, cake.19c Sundries n Powder Puffs, 4 for.25c Powder Puff in Rubber Case. 5c Hair Brushes .25c Bobbed Hair Combs.3c Face Powders L’Azurea or LeTrefle .69c Coty’s Face Powder.79c Roger A Gallet Rice Powder, 23c Deodorants Non-Spi . 37c Creme Odorono .18c | Dentifrices Listerine, bottle .39c Squibb's Tube.35c Colgate Tube.19c Pepsodent Tube.35c Talcum Powders Special Talcum .9c Mavis. 15c Djer Kiss .19c Johnson . 16c Mennen’s. 19c Squibb’s.15c ^ Compacts and Rouge Special Compacts, all shades.. . . ,15c Tre Jur Triple Compact... 85c Coty’s Compact .77c Nordica Compact.1.15 Madcap Rouge .47c Dorin’s Rouge . Jar Pond’s Vanishing Cream, 23c Cold Creams Jar Krank’s Lemon Cream . . . .59c Jar Sempray Jovenay.39c Street Floor Fiberloid Ivory Each Piece 1.00 | White and shell, fiberloid, of excellent heavy qual ! ity, is a real bargain, for each piece is priced at 1.00, with the exception of small pieces, which are three for 1.00. Ivory Hair Brushes Combs Powder Boxes Hair Receivers Brushes Perfume Bottles Bud l oses Pin Cushions 3 Small Pieces Shell Mirrors Brushes Combs Hat Brushes Pin Cushions Manicure Pieces : Button Hook* Street Floor Women’s Hosiery All First Quality I Silk hose, both service and chiffon weights, wool and silk, and wool. This is an early spring clear ance of hosiery, and while there is not every color in every size, there is a hosiery bargain for every woman. It is one of those Thompson-Belden sales where every piece comes from regular stock and is, of course, first quality. Street Floor Y. W. C. A. Pastry Shop will hold another of their food sales at our south door. Instead of doing the Sunday baking on Sat urday, spend the day shopping and buy your pas tries in this sale. 5tr«»t Floor