THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JITfE 17, 19V.. SELLING PROM TO MINORS Raid is Made on Drug Store and Three Are Arrested. BRIEF CITY NEWS .SEI&SQMSS 3B EM r s ' m0 -Lmv -rtWKralssssssWB CIstm MtuUrd Clngir Atbplt. Cr.nn Pppr Nutmeg WhoLMli.d Fidelias Spies snd all other. Spices With Natural Flavor We give you spices as Nature gives them to us teeming with zestful flavor. We import whole, ripe, fresh -picked spices clean and grind only the largest and best of the shipment and hurry them to you in protective packages. TONE'S . Spices are always fresh. They stay that way indefinitely much longer than ordinary spices which are flat and lifeless through exposure or age when you buy them You'll find Tone's Spices the most economi cal and satisfactory you can use. Bt Crocmra SU Tfitm Always 10c a Package TONE BROS., Des Moines, Iowa Bitndtn of thm famoat Old Golden Caffei, J? By MELLIFIOIA. HTHbre- o c x e vBee-Hive Monday, Juno 16, 1913. " ISS LOUIS ESPLIN is the posccssor of a Panama hat that Is tho envy of all Omaha women who have aoen It. MIbs Ksplin has Y S a B'Bter living on tho Panama canal zone. Her husband, R. C. Helnzo is In thn employ of the govornmont and tho creation comes as a preaont from this slstor and her husband. The panama that Ml6s Esplln is wearing is woven as fine as a piece of silk and is as soft and pliable, and in Omaha, or any of the cities of the states, would retail at $60, .or more. Theso hats, or at least those of high grade, are all wovon by the native women of tho zono, the weaving being dqno under water to keep ,the straw soft. With tho Panama canal ncarlng completion, the number of visitors to the zone is continually increasing. Tho picturesque hats of tho better element In the cities attract the northern visitors, and, of course, the ob servation 1b followed by tho impulse, which is gonerally obeyed, to tako one back home. It Is not so many years ago that Panamas wore first imported Into this country, and as more oxourionlsts tako tho trip to tho the big ditch, bo will the popularity of this style hat Increase in voguo. Lincoln lost week for a short visit with Mrs. lMeti's mother, Mn. A. M. Put nam. Miss Iluth Anderson of Omaha spent the Week end as the rueet of Miss Sarah Risdon of Lincoln. The Kpgun- thlan girls held a plcnlo In her honor at Capital Bach Thursday and a swimming party Friday afternoon. Fhlllp Met will soil June 24 from New York on the Btcamer Kaiser Wll helm II for a two months' trlD abroad. lie will Join several college frlendu from Yale. Other" Omahans sailing- on this steamer will be Dr. LeRoy Crummer and Dr. Dunn. Mrs. Q. M. Lnmbcrtson of T.lnin formerly of Omaha, accompanied by her father, J. II. Sherwood, and her daughter, jsiuaoein, will leave In July to make their home In Connecticut. Mm. ivm. bertson has leased her home In Lincoln to the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mrs. Laftibertson' has rented a cottage near Greenwich. Conn.. whem h.r daughter will attend school. Mrs. Lam- bertson expects to return to Lincoln next winter for a short vlslU At the Field Club. Many small Informal suppers were given Sunday evening at the club. George T. Wright had covers placed for two: J. A. Mclnfyre, four; L. B. Kemper, three; B. It Felld, four: T. Potter, five,; Kranx, three; F. C. Llndeman, two; A. L. Meyer, two; It. F. James, three; George T. Fet ters, two; II. Townsend, two; George Brande'ls, three; F. P. Loomls, three: J. B. Lindsay, three; J. W. Woodrough, two; Sumnry, three; Jack Sharp, seven; J. V Stout, five; E. P. Murphy, two; It. C. Martin, three; Charles Goss, five; Frank Walters, four; D. L. Danforth, four; D. J. O'Brien, three; Harry Koch, th,rre; Charles Mejx, six; Julius Kesiler, tour; II. Conant, six; J.'D. Foster, three; Ej P. Benedict, six. Wahneta Card Olub, The "Wahneta Card club met with Mrs. W. nice lost week. Prises were won by Mrs. O. H. Johnson, Mrs. A. Wetsmann and Mrs. J. Musgrave. The tiext meeting w) be in two weeks with Mrs. E. Nott. At the Country Club. Mrs. E. W. Nash will entertain at a children's party Thursday afternoon at the. club. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stewart of Council Bluffs win give a small dinner party next Saturday evening at the club. Entertaining at supper last evening at the club were: Miss Dorothy Stevens, who had four guests; Dr. J. E, Summers, two; II. L. Huntley, four; E. B. West brook, three; Hal Brady, two; J, E. Geor. four; W. H. McCord, two, and Barton Millard, seven. Celebrate Anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Nichols. SCM Tort street, celebrated their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary Friday, June 1J. Mr, Nichols came, to Omaha about Beautify the Complexion IN TEN DATS Nadinola CREAM The Uncquiltd Buutlflcr USES AND ENDORSED BY THOUSANDS Guaranteed to remove tan. frrcldej, pimples liver spots, etc. Extreme cases about twenty din. Kid pores and tissues of impurities. Two !ies, 50c. snd $1.00, By toilet counters or null. TiATXOltAZ. TOILET COUrANY. JWte Tm by Sherman & McConnell Drug vm- -" unit i o., iyiu i'harmacy, Tn I Try Anti-Kumnlm Tmiuit msA ba eonrlnced tbst all pato btadacbet la(U(esUoa,grippt.roi7ts.oTer-induV gence neurslt Is, rneumtUim, s out, etc , lekt quickly to these woodertui pla rtllerets. Not Mtimulantt, 4 prjn r nam imrmtr: AAU TAJ twenty-five years ago from New York state, and was employed In the Bee office and later with the Klopp & Bart lett company and the Rees Printing company, and for fifteen years waa In tho printing business under the firm name of Nichols & Broadfleld, finally moving to Florence and establishing a newspaper there. Commencement Exercises. - The Sisters of St. Domlnlo and the graduating class of Sacred Heart High school have Issued Invitations for the commencement exercises Thursday even ing at 8 o'clock at Saored Heart lyceum. At Seymour Lake Country Club. Miss Mae O'Brien will entertain at the Seymour Lake Country club Saturday afternoon for Miss Gladys Lobeck. Among those having supper at- Sey mour take Sunday evening were: Mr. and Mrs. John Parratt. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Boaeberry. Mr. and Mrsj H. . E. Said, Mr. and Mrs. Dohan. Mr. and Mrs. A. II. Fry. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Tobln. Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge McDonald. Mr. and Mrs. John Urlon. Mr. and Mrs. Angel. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Llchnovsky. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Skinner. Mr. and Mrs. n. D. Phillips. Mr, and Mrs. George J, Kyte. Mr. and Mrs. F. G, Sherwood. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Cheek. Dr. and Mrs. K. A. nose. Dr. and Mrs. M. L. King. Dr. and Mrs. W. Whlttaker. Mr. and Mrs. Edson Duncan. Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Kopeltz. Mr and Mrs. U M. Lord. Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Spitsbergen Dr. Alice Johnson. ' Misses Misses- May Moore, Mamie Splesberger, Clark, Muriel Johnson, liorieme BpiesDergerMildred Johnson. Messrs. Messrs. H. C. Murphy. N. A. Spltsberger, jr. ur. uox, Charles Johnson. Children's Party. Mrs. iiudoipn von Luttren entertained at a children's party Baturday after noon from 3 to 5 o'clock for her daughter Elisabeth. The table decorations were miniature ponds with tiny boats. Kindergarten games we.- played, and the chl'dren had a painting contest with Japanese paints sent from Callforn'a. The guests were: Misses- Constance Whitman, aArllne Luttgen, Virginia Biaoaugn, Masters- Frederick Green- Billy Bchelbel, lear, Paul Nelson. Jack Williams, Robert Braden. Gombs-Hagerman Wedding. Miss Hasel Wanda Hagerman. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Hagerman of Lincoln and Mr. Guy Combs of Omaha were married at S o'clock 8aturday even ing, Rev. C. E. Carroll officiating. The couple will reside In Omaha at (SOS North Twenty-seventh avenue. In and Out of the Bee Hive. Mrs. E. F. Snlvely Is visiting Mrs. J. C. SeacresU Mrs. J. M. Keys has returned from a short visit In St. Joseph. Miss Beulah Weiss of Denver Is the guest of Miss Fannie Livingston. Mrs. Jay E. White Is visiting her daughter, Mrrt Lew Marshall of Lincoln. Miss Tress Keys, who has been visiting In St Louts the past six weeks, returned Baturday. Mrs, Stanley Hartman of Chicago, who lias been visiting her father. Mr. Albert Cahn, left last evening for her home. Ur. ana Mrs. Gould Dltts wars In Olub Committee E'eaches Nothing on Gas Franchise The municipal affairs committee of thn Commercial club listened for two hnum and a half yestcrdny to arguments on tho proposed dollar gas ordinance. No con clusion was reached and no action was taken. The committee will set aside one hour at Its next meeting for further argu ments on. tho subject. Representatives of the Economic leaguo and the Real Estate exchange, who op pose the ordinance, will appear before the committee In opposing points given by representatives of the gas company and tho city commission. W. P. Herdman. representing the gas' company; W. C. Lambert, assistant city attorney, and John Rlne, city attorney, talked before tne committee at the Moni day meeting. COMPLAINTS ARE NOW FILED Jensen I.nd la to He Sent to Kearney Follorrlns; the Prnaecntlnn nf the Drnsfjtiita fnr the Sntea. Probation Officers Bernstein, Bosbure and McCauley arrested Dr. Robert Rellley nnd Mrs. Dora Brookdorf, proprietors of the Rex Drug company, Sixteenth and California streets, yesterday on a charge of selling cocaine to minors. Assistant County Attorney 8. F. Neble, Jr., entered the establishment and was present when Walter Jensen, a former rr.ssenger boy, ngrd 17 years, purchased a quarter's worth of the drug. At a word from Neble the officers, who were nearby, arrested the proprietors, to gether with J. P. Ralncy, 1111 North Twenty-third street, the clerk who made the sale. Mrs. Brookdorf lives at 2613 Cass street and Dr. Ralney, who Is physician for the Cudahy Packing colnpany, resides In South Omaha. Both admitted havlns sold the drug on previous occasions to the Jensen boy und others, stating It was a regular thing with tho majority of tho drug stores In the city. Last Friday Probation Officer Bern stein took Jensen to the Rex. Drug storo and gave him 60 cents from his pocket "to buy the drug, In order that Bernstein might make the' arrest Jensen carried out the purchase port of It, but gave the officer the slip and was not arrested until Saturday. Neble has filed state com plaints against all concerned for aiding' snd abetting a delinquent and selling1 cocaine to a minor. SENIORS OF HIGH SCHOOL T'O HAVE BANQUET THURSDAY The seniors of the High school will Jointly give a class banquet at Happy Hollow club Thursday evening, at S o'clock. One hundred and eighty have purchased plates In advance for this banquet. The seniors are getting a 11.25 dinner by paying but 85 cents apiece. The balance Is drawn from the proceeds made on the senior play. -The seniors will be seated In the big dance hall at tables arranged In the shape of a giant "W". Wayne Selby has been chosen toastmaster by the banquet committee, which. In turn, was chosen by James Durkee. Dlsirrncefal Conduct of liver and bowels, In refusing to act, Is quickly remedied with Dr. King's New Life 'Pills. Easy, safe, sure. 25c For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Advertisement. xneetrlo Tans Burgeas-Granden Co. Tlflsllty Storage b Tan Co. Doug. lilt. Xar Boot Print It Now Beacon Press. Wlisa yon tax your vacation leav your silverware, etc.. In Omaha Safe De posit Co.'a burglar proof vault Mi Far nam St 11.00 per month for a good stsed package. Sermon for Oradnate Worsts Rev. Harold Llnwood Bowen will preach tho sermon of the occasion to the graduating class of nurses from the South Omaha hospital this evening at St. Martin's church, Twenty-fourth and J streets, Bouth Omaha. Protest Late Hours Employment of girls under it years of age after S o'clock at night In the Ten-cent store no longer Is to be permitted. Probation Officer Mogy Bernstein has consulted County Attorney Magney and has given notice that under the law formal charges can be filed If necessary. Soldiers Qo to Gettysburg A carload of regular sodlers are enroute from Cheyenne, Wyo., going to Gettysburg, where they will do camp duty during the reunion there, July 1 to 4. The men were In Omaha last night coming over the Union Pacific From here they went over the Milwaukee. Brerton Gets big Terdto George T. Brerton obtained a verdict In federal court against the Union Pacific railroad for $5,000 for permanent personal In juries received while In the employ of that company. He sued for J10.000. He waa Internally Injured to such an ex tent that he Is disabled. Hasen Buys on Chicago Street Thomas J. Hazen has bought the lot at 1413-15 Chicago street, paying about for It. ' An old house stands on the prop erty. Hazen took It as an Investment. It waa owned by F. N. Rood and other heirs of the Hazen estate who live In the cast. and. sold for them by George & Co. Xeleassd This Tims George and John Clark engaged with some unknown gen tlerran at Twenty-ninth and Martha streets Sunday night In a free-for-all shooting scrape. Neither of the Clarks could explain what the trouble was about. Judge Foster discharged them with the Instructions that the next fight they en tered Into would likely to result in a sen tence of ninety days apiece. To Answer Blr Chargs Charles Good man and John Ozal, highly elated from the Indulgence In liberal amounts of liquor, passed the police station Sunday night, and, observing a mall box on the corner, proceeded to kick the same Into the street Officer Relglman heared the noise and arrested the two men. Thty were turned over to Hugh Mills, govern ment detective, and will probably be charged by the federal authorities with tampering with the malls. isflKfsl M j. i3E y sss ss RAILWAY MAIL SERVICE MEN EXAMINING NEW CARS Both siiperlntondent El L. SUce of the Fourteenth Division of the railway man senaoe ana Assistant HyQerlntend ent F. D. Johnston are out of the city at present Mr, Johnston Is attending a committee meeting at Atlantic City, N. J., where the standardized mall cars are being discussed and demonstrated. The Milwaukee Railroad company Is thero exhibiting one of the new steel standardized cars recomrnended by the committee of officials of the railway mall service, and the committee Is meet ing to further consider the standard ized car. Superintendent 8tlce Is still on his vacation In St. Louis. Keep and enhance your personal beauty First of all maintain your good heahh which means to a large extent the proper digeirtioa of the food you eat. The surest "way h to safeguard your teeth by Good Teethkeepin& Visit .your dentist at least twice a year. Keep your teeth in good condition by the habitual night and morning use of Dr.lyDii's PERFECT Tooth Powder The Standard DenttMc, prepared for nearly half a emnttrry by a Doctor of Dtntat Sargury Prevents the formation of tartar and the beginning of decay. Cleanses by harmless yet thorough polishing the xafie Bsay. Its use beeps the mouth fresh and wholesome and the breath naturally fragrant. Teach your children to use Dr. Lyon's night and morning. EpcimHy at might. The habit of good teethlceeping safeguards the teeth today and during all the years to follow. Are you reading Dr. Lyon's mag azine advertising? Whet Dr. Lyon's does do o!y your dentist is competent to do. Sold Everywhere PAINT IG SALE OF... and VARNISHES Although these goods were slightly damaged by water in the recent "Atlas Oil Fire" we absolutely guarantee them to be in first-class condition and of the very highest grade manufactured. Evoryono is familiar with "OLD ENG LISH BRAND PAINTS." 13 different colors to select from. 2,000 gal lons of $2.00 paints at, gallon. . . . 500 gallons of PERSIAN VARNISH, floor and interior, guaranteed new $ CA stock, regular $3.50 goods, gallon. Iww This Varnish will not mar or turn white, which gives it a superior quality none others have. These goods will be on sale Tuesday and all next week at McCape Building 108 No. ISth Street Opposite Union Pacific Headquarters. R. J. SAUNDERS McCagoe Building SIX SPECIALS IN BASEMENT White Goods and Wash Fabrics 50c Pure Linen Suitings 35c Yd. 46-inch wide Pure Linen an excellent weight for women's suits or dresses In cream color only water shrunk. 25c Silk Stripe Crepe at 12k Yd. Cotton crepe is the most economical fabrlo to buy. It launders perfectly ond requires no Ironing. This spo- . clal lot Includes plain colors only white, blue, pink and tan 28 inches wide. m 3c White Dress Materials 10c Yd. Fine lnlported Dress Swisses, fancy marquisettes, beautiful satin plaids, dimities, novelty voiles, batistes, etc. all perfect goods, in full bolts 27 inches wide. 35c Silk Foulards g Silk Jacquards 15c Yd. Desirable for lingerie gowns and blouses pretty navies; reseda, lavonder, black and white, also many light colors 27 inches wide. 15c Fast Color Zephyrs, at 7c Yard. A larger or better assortment of zephyr ginghams has never before been offered. Colorings are absolutely fast. Every yard perfect and worth double the salo price. 40-iaeh. Bordered Batistes at 6c Yard 200 bolts fine quality Batiste, light colored grounds with blue, lavender, pink and black designs fast col ors that will launder perfectly, at, yard 6c. IN OUR SHOE DEPT. MAIN FLOOR, NEW STORE Women's $3 Oifords $1j Perfect in Style and Quality, Tuesday at Pair In order to make room for many new shipments of foot wear we are forced to clear these high grado shoes at prices much below regular values. For one day we of fer patent leather, tan and dull calfskin and white buck skin oxfords, the kind you would expect to pay $3.00 for if you bought them anywhere, at a pair Women's White Buckskin Shoes 3i Pr. - Made of genuine Lawrence's Nubuck very service able leather that keeps Its proper color. New season's lasts in button style, medium and narrow toes, short Vamps, medium heels all sizes. , Edwin C. Burt Oxfords for Women 3?g Pr. Fine quality leather in tan and black kidskln and patent leather with dull kid tops, hand turned soles, heart shaped pattern all sizes and widths. $198 1 m mumm SscsslsHsssVisHu! tBWl 1. A little Bee want ad does the business. Everybody reads Bee want ads Your printed matter is absolutely without vsdue if it is not read. If it is wall lllastr&tod, you will bo sure people will reed It. Furthermore, a ploturo often tells the tgry t a slnsrle glanoa. If you have your cuts and illustrations made in a newspaper engraving plant, you may be certain that they will print well. The requirements of making cuts for news paper illustration are so severe that it re quires the very best ability and machinery. Our artista, our plant, consisting of the finest, newest and lateet equipment, and our skilled work men are at your command at the very lowest ratss for all Kinds of art and engraving work. Bee Enrfravmrf Deparlmeui ! i i-9 f 4 V VI B - - w ,i lw A A mt : 4 is nlHittlH hfttiti