The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, April 18, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Youth Pleads
for Permit to
See Girl-Wife
Darrel Chiles, Forbidden h\
Court Order From \ i-iting
, Bride. Begs Judge to
Yield.
*fl‘e terrible to be separated like thH i
fro#fr •Jthe wife you love with all youi i
hetjfland soul.” de« la red Darrel Chiles i
he called on District Judge L.
B. |X|a\ Friday morning to get per i
to see Mrs. Darrel Chiles.
Both are 17 and are separated hv
order of the young man s parents, Dr.
and Mrs. Jessie Chiles who have in
stitujed suit for annulment of the
marriage which took plaop in Olcn
wood, la., December 4, lit24, and was
kept secret till a month ago.
!; Order Forbids Visit.
-V temporary order was allowed at
tha’thne of the suit which prohibited
th«6*£outh from visiting his bride.
Bfje was Miss Virginia Darker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Barker, frOOO North Twenty-fourth
strict. Both were Tech High school
stii|9#hts before their marriage.
have only seen Virginia twice
and then just at a distance since they
begjMt interfering with ns,” mourned
yoliifg Chiles, who looked handsome
and finappy" In a suit of the populat
ligljtj.'gray with draped trousers.
"I p to Parents."
“Can’t you give me an order to let
me iikt her?” he asked the judge.
“$Hgt Is not within my power," said
Judfce Day. ”lt is up to your parents.
Th#y; got the order prohibiting your
your wife. They are the ones
for!jypu to see about this.”
"Sctelephone to my wife every da>
hut that isn't like seeing her and haw
ing her near me,” said the youth a*
he left the building with a young man
friend. "But I will work and wait.”
The girl's parents are wiling to let
the irjRrriage stand.
Continental Directors
i,| ; Chosen for Two ^earsj
new director? for two yea*”*
werlKjH*ct*d by the Continental club
at jjldtel Fontenelle Friday noon. The
new'director? ate F. T. R. Martin. H.
r; Vcntmann. N. C. Rail. Stanley
Rreen and J. R Nicholson. Four di
rector? who have hold-over terms are
•T. p. Frazee, I,. M. Holliday, H. V.
Kntyusc and Roy A. Ralph.
Monday noon the heard of di
rectors will meet at Hotel Fontenelle
to eject club officers for the ensuing
yeaij
ffjil- ----—-- - «
A. O. lT. W. Delegate Chosen.
York. April 17.—York lodge. No. 3?.
A. O. 1*. \\\, chose J. \V. Little as
representative at th*1 biennial session
of the grand lodge. to he held n!
Grand I slangy in May. J M. Bell, wi(
Is chairman of the grand lodge lavs
committee, will also attend.
Henry Marlin 91 at Death.
Rfetitvice, April 17 —Henry Martin,
one . time resident «T (*> <■;« county,
died at h;r home at Summerfield.
Karja. according to word received
her#* He was I»1 year’ of ago and
leaves a. number of children, all
grown.
.=«—-—- -
; SPRING
CLEARANCE
|SALE |
of Slightly Used
Radio Sets and
ii Equipment
Scores of High - grade
Radio Receivers and
equipment taken in ex
change on New Bruns
' wick Radiolas offered at
■] below cost prices.
4-tube Airway, $27.50
3- tube Westing
house . $22.50
1-tube Reinartz, $1 2.00
| 3-tube Federal, $2 4.50
4- tube De Forest,
at . $21.00
4-tube Radiola,
;3-A $19.50
1-tubc Amrad $4.75
34ube Radiola IV
:>* $99.55
3-tube Zenith, $49.50
l 3-tube Reinartz $18.50
y 4-tube Set -$12.50
1- tube C.&W.,$ 15.00
2- tube C. & W., $22.50
3- tube C. & W., $52.50
Loud Speakers as
J?ow as.$4.75
Phonograph Attach
ments for .... $2.25
1 Lot of Slightly Used
45-Volt B Batteries at,
•ach.. $1.25
Tpbes, reconditioned,
I lieach.50<*
Terms to Suit
Sihmoller&Mueller
Piano Co.
1#14-16-18 Dodge St.
I—T
r -—' i
Nebraska News
Nubbins
j
Beatriir Mrs. W. A Tilton fnrmei
ly of this city, died nt the home nf
•>r daughter, M»«, Henry Seitz, a?
Osborn. Kan The body will be
brought to Beatrice, and the funeral
will he held Saturday afternoon
Bridgeport—Harry Rarrett, 44, well
known rancher of the Morrill country
and a resident of this district for 1*
years, died in a hospital in Denver,
following nn operation for appendicitis
Beatrice -Charles l^angdalc of thD
city has been a pointed manager of
the Farmers* Produce store at Wake
field. Kan.
Beatrice—Mrs. Frank Yott, obi re«
ident ofMftrgtrice, died at her home in
this city, aged 75.
Beatrice—Mrs. John Long. old
resident of Gage county, died at her
home seven miles southwest of the
city, aged fitf. She is survived by her
husband and three children, Agnes.
Elizabeth and John Long, all of
whom reside at home.
Pawnee City—A. H. Hurd of this
city has been appointed street com
n issioncr by Mayor Colwell to fill
the vacancy caused by the reslgna
tion of Charles Scott, who moved to
Dunning.
Wymore—Extensive repairs are he
ir.g made to the Yen Dome, formerly
the Touzalin hotel, an early landmark
in Wymore. The building was erect
cd by the late Col. A. E. Touzalin.
when lie was general manager of the
Burlington rnilvva v.
Surgical cases arc spectacular and
thereby attract our attention; non*
surgical cases aren't and we thereby
overlook their importance.
Pioneer Onialia
Drim Firm Sold
$
to Chain Store
Micrman & McConnell Vi ill
Become l’art of I.iffgct
establishments on
May 1.
Slip of the Sherman ft McConnell
Drug company to the lauds K. Lir
gett I'rue company of New York was
announced Friday morning by A. B.
Met 'nnnell.
The price Involved was not dis
I lnseil hy Mr McConnell, hut lie said
it was "one of the liiggest deals of
the year."
Four retail drug stores and a ware
house are included in the transaction.
The stores are at Sixteenth and Har
ney streets. Sixteenth and Dodge
streets, Nineteenth and Farnatn
streets, and Twenty-fourth and Far
nam streets.
The warehouse is located at 509
South Twelfth street.
Thirty-Nix Years in Business.
When the Liggett company takes
possession on May 1 it will mark the
retirement, of Mr. McConnell after 36
years in the retail drug business In
Omaha.
The Sherman ft McConnell Drug
company started in business on Sep
tember 2$. 1SR0, with a capital of
$2,000. The first year's business was
$23,000. Last year the firm's business
totaled nearly three-quarters of a mil
lion dollars.
Mr. McConnell explained I hat he Is
retiring becaose the active manage
ment of the hualneaa la too heavy for
one man to direct.
"Since the death ttvo years ago of
nty first and only partner, Charlr**
H. Sherman, 1 have had to htndlri
the whole business snd organisation
alone and it has grown to* large,
said Mr. McConnell.
Name to Be Changed.
The l.iggctt company is the retail
branch of the fnitad Prug company.
It has 579 stores la the United
States. 9S0 in Great Rritain, R75 In
Canada, last, year th# sales of this
corporation surpassed $99,000,000.
On May 1 the names of ttie Sher
man and McConnell stores will lie
changed tn Digged. Kaeh store will
he directed hy a manager under su
pervislon of Robert Hart, geticral dis
trict manager, whose headquarters
ara in Minneapolis. Digged stores
are conducted on a cash basis.
The first Sherman and McConnell
store was at 1513 podge street. Mr.
Sherman and Mr. McConnell were
employed together for a short time hv
Norman A. Kuhn, a druggist at
Fifteenth and Douglas streets. A
partnership was effected and Mr.
Sherman traded a lot ho owned at
Thirteenth and Cass streets for the
store at,1513 Dodge street. Mr. Mc
Connell paid $1,000 to Mr. Sherman
for a half interest in the new firm
and then the firm borrowed $1,000
from Mr. Sherman's savings ac
count. That was the financial foun
dation of the company which last
year did neatly throe quarters of a
million dollars worth of business.
Still in Operation.
In 1994 Sherman and McConnell
moved from 1513 Dodge street to the
southwest corner of Sixteenth and
Dodge streets. This store is still In
operation. In 1999 the store at Six
teenth and Harney was opened. At
first it wits known as the Ow! drug
store. Front 1910 to 1915 Sheiman
htid McConnell operated the drug
stoic department In the lirandela
stores and from 1917 to 1922
the company operated a etore at
Forty ninth and Hodge stecets.
The store at Twenty-fourth and
Farnatn streets was acquired In
1908 and the store at Nineteenth and
Farnatn streets in 1915.
Mr. McConnell will continue to
make Omaha his home, he said.
"It will always be my home." he |
continued. “Although I plan to i
divide each year into three parts, four
months to Vie passed in Omaha, four
in California and four In travel I in
tend to always call this my resi
dence."
Hastings Civic Bodies
to Kstalvlish Playgrounds
Hastings. April 17.—Maurice Wil
liams of Chicago, representing the Na
tional f’layground and Recreation as
sociation, has been assigned to Has
tings to assist several civic organi
zations, acting jointly to establish lo
cal, systematised playgrounds. A lo
< a 1 committee with George It. Dutton
as chairman is directing the prepara
tions.
Dirigible to Boston.
Washington, April 17.—The di
rigible Los ^ngeles will be sent to
Boston to participate Monday in thf*
exercises commemorating the 150th
anniversary of the first battles of the
American Revolution.
Sidney Bonds Bring Premium
Sidney, April 17.—At a special
meeting of the city council of Sidney,
$169,000 worth of refunding citv
bonds were sold at a premium*, of
$2,500 to the Western Securities com
pany of Omaha.
f
Burgess Bedtime
Stories
'--->
B> TIIBKNTON \V. Bl BHESS.
Husptrlnn H In h«*** to nrt
Amt almost alwaja l*rk|o* iV'
—OLD MOTHER NATURE.
Farmer Brown IHwovfr* Hie
New Home.
Jimmy Skunk kept away from
Farmer Brown's henhmiae, and Mis.
Jimmy, whose new home was under
that very henhouse, was wise enough
not to leave It until after dark and
to be hic k In It before daylight. So
the fait that she was living there
was not known in Fafmer Brown s
house for some time. Then one day
Farmer Brown happened, just hap
pened, to go around hack of the hen
house anil at. once he saw- the sand in
front of the entrance to Mrs. Skunk's"
home.
"Hello:” he exclaimed. "That look.-,
to me like a freshly 'tug hole, and it
looks, too. an if someone Is usiug it
right along. It Is too big, for a rat
and hardly big enatigh for a chuck.
Ha! there is a footprint! A skunk's
as surely as I live! And there is a
black hair. A skunk is living under
that henhouse and that won't do at
all! No, sir; that won't do at all.
That is living too close to the chick
ens for thWr good. We’ll have to
get rid of that scamp.”
So when he went back to the house
he told what he had discovered. "Bow
do you propose to get rid of l hat
skunk? ’ asked Farmre Brown's Boy.
"I'm going to leave that* to you,
son.'' replied Farmer Brown. '*1 sug
gest that you set a box trap and
carry that Wood Pussy a long way
off before you let it go. I suppose
It IS useless to suggest that you Mil
It."
Farmer Brown's Hoy smiled,
“Quite useless,'' said he. And h*
knew that, despite the things his
father sometimes said, he fell the
same way. "Hut why not leave that
skunk alone so long as It behave*
and doesn't get In mischief?"
"All right. Stilt yourself. Those
are your chickens out there, and If
you want to feed skunks with them
ihat Is your business. If they were
r »
Wf »oi
Fanner Brown's Boy went out and
looked at the hole under (lie
henhouse.
my chickens I should feel a whole
lot easier about them if I knew that
(hat skunk was a mile or two away,”
replied Fafrner Brown.
"I haven't missed a chiakpn so far,
■xcepting these the rats, from the
barn got,” said Farmer Brown's Bov.
' There is no way Into the henyard
where the chickens are. anywaj
"Perhaps not, now, but It will tie
is easy for that skunk to dig out
from under the henhouse into the
yard as it was to dig under the hen
house In the first plsee " replied
Farmer Brown. "Better get that bis
pox trap ready, son, and eel it.
Farmer Brown's boy went out and
looked at the hole under the hen
house,'and while he stood there look
ing at It Mrs. Skunk poked her head
nut and looked hard nnd long at
Farmer Brown's boy end he looked ,
tunc nnd hard at her. Then she came
cut. She expected to see Firmer
Brown's boy move off In a hurry.
He didn't move at all. lie stood
quite still. Mrs. Skunk stamped with
her front feet Farmer Brown's hoy
merely smiled. She stamped again
Still Farmer Browns boy didn't
move. Mrs. Skunk calmly turned
her hack and disaptieared in her hole
under the henhouse.
"I belirxe, old lady, that you are
Mrs. Jimmy, and that we are koine
to be friends," said Farmer Brown's
boy with a chuckle. "I don't believe
you'll touch those chickens. I'm cure
you won't if 1 bring you some tsble
“craps now and then. And this is
what 1 am coins to do. It will he
time enough to set the trap when
you get into mischief. 1 wonder
where Jimmy Skunk is."
But this of course, Mrs. Jimmy
didn't tell him.
The next ctory: "Mrs. Jimmy Calls
on Mis. Brown."
(Copyright, 1125.) *> .
Bonef-terl Banker Dies
in Hospital at Omaha
William A. .lelimek, 31, a hanker of
Bonesteel. S. II., died Friday morning
at a local hospital. He la survived
b.v his widow and two daughters.
Vena and Bids. The body will bo
spnt from the Heafey & Heaf?y under
taking pallors to Bonesteol for fu
neral aervb ps and burial.
Either coal
or dress
or both
are of sillp
for summer.
I •
Thompson Belden
Sixteenth at Howard
APPAREL - ACCESSORIES
♦ A- /
v
The Clothes That One Buys Now Must
Bear Thought for Summer—and Their
Wearableness in Warmer Days ....
, ' j
The Costume Ensemble The Smart Suit
of Silk With Velvet Collar
49“ to 98“ 2500
A silk frock with an unlined light wool coat or The plain tailored suit with its double breasted
a coat of black satin with lining and frock of short coat is a leader. Navy blue, gray her
georgette, a coat of corded silk and a frock of ringbone, or tan marked off with a dull green,
bright print, these are smart summer modes The jackets are well tailored with three pockets
• which, without being uncomfortably warm, pre- and are crepe lined; wrap-around skirts. Sizes
sent one well dressed. ' 14, 16, 18 and 20.
Third Floor Third Floor
\
-
Velvet collar,
double breasted ***,
coat and
smart kick
pleat.
■ I
Georgette Coats
in Black
15.00
The fashion of wearing a sheer georgette coat
over a frock of printed crepe is a new and de
lightful one. Straight and unlined, with long
sleeves, it merely serves to give the ensemble
effect with almost any frock of lace, of chiffon
or of georgette. /■
Third Floor
Small Furs
Fine Skins
29.75
The soft-toned furs of the new season will be
good for many seasons to come. One of the
most gratifying features of the new mode is that
these fur scarfs are not expensive. Beautiful
one-skin pieces of dark stone marten. . . .29.75
Two-skin stone marten pieces .59.75
Foxes dyed all the newer shades.39.75
Third Floor
La Chere Hose
Sheer Chiffon
3.95
Very fine, extremely sheer and of unusual clear
ness is'La Chere chiffon, a hose which we have
chosen for our most fastidious patrons, and
which is sold only at Thompson-Belden. Ba
nana, stardust, moonlight, cannon, mellow,
French nude, Sudan, mauve, and mule. ^
Street Floor
’ Lingerie in the New Manner
Teddies With Fullness at the Sides
With gathers at the sides and a perfect- Another model in this French style which
ly plain front and back, the new teddies wears its fullness to the sides and simulates
are designed to wear beneath the panties at the bottom is trimmed entirely ,
straight-line frocks one sees. Of five- with footing. At the top the wider foot
thread crepe, peach shade with cream ing is appliqued with the silk of the teddy,
footing and Irish medallions at the top Five-thread crepe, pink with white footing,
and in both pantie legs. and peach with cream footing.
Venetian lace and tucks trim the bodice of the
third models while the pantie fullness is held to
the sides in pleats. In sweetpeak, flesh, and
peach shades. All of these teddies have narrow
shoulder straps of the material.
Streot Floor
Bordered Silks Are Smartest
in Gan Designs and Colorful
750 and g50
We have received *everal new pattern*
within the last few days. So popular are
they that only one piece remains at 6.50.
Although the new pieces priced are a little
more a yard, they are much lovelier and a
dress requires only 1 V* yards.
The polk* dot pattern* in which there
are two background color* are 7.50.
Ro*e and navy dotted tan, green and
white dotted orange, light blue and
black dotted tan, black and white dotted
red. 54-inch width.
At 8.50 is a beautiful pattern of irregular square*
with wide flowered border. Tan with red and
black, cream with tan and brique, red with black
and gray. These frocks are so simply fashioned
that anyone may make them. 54-inch width.
Street Floor
i (
, <
There Is No Substitute for Thompson-Belden Quality
I
Coral Jewelry
Ultra-Smart
1.00 to 4.85
It has lately become quite the fashion to wear
one’s jewelry of coral when one’s costume will
allow it.
Cut coral choker, graduated beads.2.25
Cut coral choker, all large beads.. . 3.00
Other coral chokers, several styles.1.00
3-coil coral bracelet.1.25
Coral loop earrings in silver chains.1.00
60-inch coral beads.2.85 and 4.85
Street Floor
French Gloves
Im ported ~~
5.00
From Tretousse come these finest of French
cuff gloves, pert little affairs for wear with
either long or short sleeves. Black with white,
several shades of brown with champagne, mode
with brown, and racquet.
Street Floor
Blond Satin
Soroses Pumps
12.00
The fashion of wearing blond satin footwear
strikes the ensemble note in lovely costumes.
Sorosis have made a new pump with short
vamp, round toe, medium Spanish heel and a
) very narrow instep strap which is ornamented
) with a rosette at the instep.
Street Floor