Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 12, 1917, Image 11

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    I
THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. APRIL 12. 1917.
11
BARBERS PLEASED
AT SUNDAY CLOSING
Big Majority in this City Had
Signed the Petition to
Urge Its Passage.
HOTELS ARE HARDEST HIT
Omaha iourneymen barbers and
shop proprietors! are strong in their
support of the Bennett bill to close
barber shops on Sunday in Nebraska.
The barbers are particularly inter
ested in the measure, which was
passed by the house in the state leg
islature on Tuesday by an unanimous
vote of -il representatives at the
session.
The local union of journeymen
barbers, represented by Secretary
John Decker, worked hard for the
passage of the measure, which will
go into effect on July 1, assuming
that it wilt, be signed by the gov
ernor. Mr. Decker made this statement: "I
secured the signature of 115 of 135
barber shop proprietors in Greater
Omaha on a petition urging passage
of the bill. I feet confident in stat
ing that between 90 and 95 per cent
of the barbers of the state favor the
Sunday closing of their business.
There are 400 barbers in Greater
Omaha."
Harry Miller, proprietor of a local
shop, said he believed more than 80
per cent of the bosses favor the bill.
The chief opposition in Omaha was
from proprietors of shops in large
hotels.
The bill makes an exception for
"cases of necessity" on Sunday, ex
plained by Mr. Decker to mean that
if a man is confined to his room or
in a hospital he may send for a
barber.
"We have been fighting for fifteen
years for a Sunday closing taw and
now we feel we have won the fight,"
added the secretary of the local union.
Twenty-Five Prizes at
Letter Carriers' Ball
Twenty-five prizes will be given at
the grand masque ball which will be
held by the Omaha Letter Carriers'
auxiliary No. 78 Saturday evening at
the muny Auditorium. The grand
prize for the best costume at the ball
'.vill be a mahogany rocker. Ladies'
prizes include a toilet set, two silk
waists, silk skirt, coffee percolator and
a gas iron. For the men, a silk um
brella, six books, ten pounds of cof
fee, an elephant, $5 in cash and a
pair of shoes are offered.
Other prizes include a case of to
matoes, berry set, a vase, box of
crackers, cake box, picture, pipe,
macaroni, towels and candy.
Mayor Dahlman. Commissioners
Butler and Jardine, Oscar Leiben, Gus
Renze, Fred Paffenrath and Tom
Flynn will be judrces.
Stage Dancer Gets Work
Here as a Domestic
Gladys Davenport, claiming to have
been a stage dancer with operatic
companies, has been placed in do
mestic work by Mrs. Rose Ohaus of
the Board of Public Welfare.
This tiny miss said her home is in
Shreveport, La., and explained that
she was stranded in Kansas City and
came to Omaha in search of profes
sional work.
"I'm not ashamed of housework as
a temporary means of making my liv
ing, but I hope that I will be able to
join a company before long," she re
marked. She had never been "north" before,
and expressed the belief that she
would like this part of the world.
Old-Time Friends Will
Attend Dellone Funeral
Funeral services for Fred K. Del
lone, pioneer Omahan, who died
Tuesday, will be held from St. Peter's
(.'lurch at 9 o'clock Thursday morn
ing, 'nterment will be in Holy
Sepulcher cemetery. The following
old-time friends of Mr. Dellone are
to act as pallbearers:
.t: J. O'Connor T. r I.ttt
.fohn WlthneM nilwanl H, Ril.;y
Andrew Murphy Ktiwurd A. Smith
! Imported !
j Wines and j
Liquors (
I .We have several cases j
of the following high- 3
class stock I
I SCOTCH WHISKIES J
! r Black and White j
IHaig & Haig jj
Johnny Walker ;
I Old Smuggler f
Bushmills (Irish)
" Burkes (Irish) 1
(Imported Rhine Wines i
. Laubenheimer
INiersteiner
Berncasteller Doctor f
I Cunliff & Dobson Claret j
Full line of Italian Swiss
Canadian Club Whiskey I
I Colony table clarets and I
sauterns
FORMES SEATTLE MAYOR
TO LECTOR "5JEE. !
sauterns.
Mail Orders Filled
CACKLEYj
j BROTHERS
j 16th & Capitol Ave. j
iky J
This evening at X oclock Hon.
Max Wardall of Seattle, lawyer,
editor and student of sociology, and
recall mayor of Seattle, wilt deliver
a free lecture at 701 Bee building.
The subjects of his lectures are:
"The Swirl of Fate," "Magic in Serv
ice," "Esoteric Christianity." The
lecturer speaks under the auspices of
the Omaha branch of the Theosophi
cal society, of which he is national
lecturer.
TO FORM RED CROSS
SOCIETYIN COUNTY
Gould Dieta. is Authorized by
Wire to Start Organization
Here at Once.
TO SELECT DIRECTORS
Place Military Guard
At the Bertschy Plant
A military guard will be placed at
the plant of the A. J. P. Bertschy
Manufacturing company, Twentieth
and Harney streets, as a precaution
against cranks. A threatening letter
was received there Wednesday morn
ing. It is written in red ink. Some
of the letters are in German script
and some in English. It was slipped
under the door after midnight Tues
day. The letter makes threats against the
proprietor if he does not "stop this
war business." The note is anony
mous. Six hydrogen trucks are being built
in the plant for the aviation corps
at Fort Omaha. These are used for in
flating balloons.
Ashland Park School
Folks Are Entertained
More than 300 pupils and parents
attended an entertainment given at
Ashland Park school, west of the
South Side, Tuesday evening. Leo
.McShane of the extension department
of the University of Nebraska, gave
an illustrated talk on gardening. A
quartet sang.. County Superintendent
of Schools Keenan and Miss Bird
Claybaugh, principal of the school,
were in charge of the affair.
Persistent Advertising Is the Road
To Success.
By wire front Washington, D. C,
headquarters yesterday Gould Dietz
was officially authorised to or
ganize Douglas county for the Red
Cross society, the work to be extended
through the state later. The char
ter will be received later. V. G. lire
will serve as secretary and W. H. Bu
cholz as treasurer.
Mr. Dietz has already secured seventy-five
men who subscribed $10 each
to carry on the work. He wilt name
an executive committee of seven or
eight men in a few days, with a di
rectorate of thirty-five or forty men.
Thomas Kimball has offered the
old Hellman property at Twentieth
street and St. Mary's avenue for any
use the Red Cross society may put
it to.
To Head Women's Section.
Mrs. Charles T. Kountzc will head
the women's section of the Red Cross.
Her committee includes.
Mrs. E. H. Sprague, Mrs. Ward
Burgess, Mrs. W. A. C. Johnson, Mrs.
A. L. Reed, Miss Gertrude Smith, Mrs.
Howard H. Baldrige, Mrs. Arthur
Remington, Mrs. L. L. Kountze, Mrs.
J. T. Stewart, 2d,; Miss Katherine Mc
Cormick, Mrs. George Prinzi Mrs. E.
M. Morsman, jr.; Mrs. Lowrie Childs,
Mrs. Arthur C. Smith, Mrs. C. M.
IWilhelm, Mrs. C. II. Aull. Mrs. Wil
liatu Archibald Smith. Mrs. Dan
I v heeler, Mrs. William Tracy Bums,
Mrs. W. A. Redick. Mrs. Herbert
I Wheeler, Mis. C). T. Eastman, Mrs.
; F. W. .ludson, Mrs. K. A. Nash. Mrs.
Joseph Barker, Miss Daisy Hoane.
Miss Kate Worlcy, Mrs. K. R. J. lid
: holm, Miss Jessie Inches.
Mr. Dietz is deluged with corre
spondence from out in the state bv
men and women who wish to give
! their services for the Red Cross.
Public Invited to Free
Exhibit of Fine Paintings
From 10 to 10 today in the ball
room of the Fontenelle thirty excen
tionally tine paintings from all parts
of the country, New York, Chicago,
liostou and elsewhere, by interna
tional artists, will be on exhibit to
the public free of charge. This ex
hibition has been assembled under
the auspices of the Omaha Society of
Friends of Art by the president, John
Lee Webster. Before the stern real
ities of war take all the beauty out of
our livefe the people of Omaha arc
asked to avail themselves of the privi
lege of seeing these really beautiful
and famous pictures. Members of the
Omaha Fine Arts society will be in
charge during the day.
Riots Reported in Many
Cities in Bulgaria
London, April II. Rioting in sev
eral towns in Bulgaria is reported in
a Reutcr dispatch from the French
headquarters on the Macedonian
front. In Sofia German cavalry is
said to have charged the rioters, oc
casioning many casualties. In some
cases, the dispatch reports, Bulgarian
troops have taken sides with the
manifestants.
,
If it saves gasoline it is
a real benefit to the world
these booming days.
And that is just what the
Twin-six motor does
saves gasoline. By all the
tests of continued and
wide ran&e use it has dem
onstrated its ability to &ive
the greatest possible serv
ice at lowest possible cost.
Ask the man who owns ono
Sea tha Orr Motor Sal.i Co., Forttath and Farnant '
Sta., Omaha Aiao Lincoln ana Sioux City.
sir
! I
i
rail of
the Motor Wise
EACH year you will find the motor-wise
watching the achievement of some one
manufacturer with keen interest because
he has furnished them with a new conception of
motor construction a new value.
This Year It Is the Briscoe.
The much-talked-of Half-Million-Dollar Mo
tor has furnished them, at a low price, the quali
ties which they sought. A motor designed for
speed and low fuel consumption one which per
forms powerfully, smoothly and rhythmically in
high or low speed. No car will run further on a
gallon of gasoline than the Briscoe.
But with all the attention given to the motor,
the body lines and finish have not been overlook
ed. Its appearance is snappy and rakish. With
long, straight streamline, high sides and wide
doors, it offers an appearance not found in cars
under one thousand dollars.
$685
Complete
Foshier Brothers & Dutton
Distributors, Omaha, Neb.
2056-58 Farnam St. Douglas 6187.
Life Companies ISSUe continental United States entails no I THE PARISIAN CLOAK CO.
Nova Premium Ratnf 'L"!!,"""' ""I", abr,M1 l-c.t.d t ms-sao South mh St, mu.t
NeW rremilim haieS payments arc suspended unless i tio.e t . forth, bulldinu I. ln t.
New York, April 11 -New rates on1 f,?" . . pay P";
nol.riM rnn.aini,. war clauses have; "l" to an average of
1I . - .1.- . i ., .
i,n ,1 tlint tar lv .I.,.,.11" ",c ,dtc vaiue oi me
of the great life insurance ciiiupanies! '"' Ky'
In most cases military service within I Bee Want Ads Produce Kesults.
he torn Hi wit, und Dw spring auitn, cosls,
drpMcs, k rU and petticoats are nelling at
tremendous reductions. Buy your spring out
fit hire an. av ona-third, one-fourth nd
orn-ha!f off on Bomo garment, for
The Wreckers are Coming Soon
Trucks that paid for
themselves in 14 months
Every Pierce-Arrow Motor Truck sold helps
us sell another, and every Pierce-Arrow truck
bought helps the owner buy more.
Practically all the big Pierce-Arrow fleets
in service have grown up slowly from small
installations of one or two trucks. These
Pierce-Arrow trucks have done much more
than pay their way. Many of them have not
only paid for themselves, but by surplus earn
ings have helped pay for more Pierce-Arrows.
PIERCEARROW
Motor Trucks
for example:
Grand Union Tea Company, of
Brooklyn, operating 4 Pierce
Arrow trucks, report that they
have found that each of these
trucks by economies effected has
paid for itself in lest than 14
months.
J. T. STEWART MOTOR CO., Distributors
2048-50-52 Farnam St. OMAHA Phono Douglas 13S
Make Ms TTestt
It Will Open Your Eyes -Will Show
How You Have Been, Unintentionally of
Course. Working Great Havoc in Your
Mouth How to Avoid Injuring Your
Teeth and Gums.
Put into a small bottle a brushful of tooth powder, paste or cream.
Add a little warm water, shake well, let stand a few minutes. Then
note the sediment at bottom of bottle. That sediment is insoluble grit.
If that grit won't dissolve in the bottle it won't dissolve in your
mouth! Minute, hard, sharp particles get into pyorrhea pockets,
under the gums at the necks of the teeth, and remain there. What hap
pens? Irritation, inflammation, with more or less serious consequences.
This, in fact, is one of the chief factors that keep up the irritation of
pyorrhea, which is responsible for the loss of millions of teeth every
year. The injured gum tissues provide lodging places for the pyorrhea
parasite the "ameba buccalis" and these para
sites continue the work ot destroying tne gums and
the bone which holds the teeth.
Your dentist will verify these statements. He
knows the damage done by dentifrices containing
insoluble grits. He also knows that to keep the
teeth perfectly clean and free from stains, some
abrasive or grit is really necessary. What, then, are
you to do?
Soluble Avatol
Has Solved This Problem!
The grit in Soluble Avatol, after doing its work,
dissolves! It completely disappears one minute after
coming in contact with the saliva, leaving no irri
tant material behind.
You can easily prove this by the same test above
mentioned. You will see the grit dissolve no
sediment will remain at the, bottom of the bottle!
A soluble tooth cream is a brand new thing.
The introduction of this product marks an impor
tant step forward in dental hygiene.
It may truthfully be said that Soluble Avatol is
the only safe, effective tooth cleanser in the market.
There is nothing better to keep the teeth antisep
tically clean, spotless, sparkling and absolutely no
harm can result from its daily use.. It is germicidal
and a pyorrhea preventive. Yet it costs no more
than ordinary dentifrices.
SOLUBLE AVATOL sells at 25 cents per tube.
Your druggist has it, or will get it for you. Buy a
tube today test its cleansing power prove its
solubility and you'll never brusn your teeth with
anything else.
Pot mp aolelr kjr
Avatol Laboratories.
20 E. Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, HL
t
'"A
?!
v
Above llluitra
lion .hows in
Bclublt grit at
bottom of tub
'from a brush
ful of a wall,
known d.ntl.
trie
Illustration at
laft shows frtr
fra tJation
no tadimant at
bottom aftar
dissolving a
brushfn! af
SOLUBLE
.AVATOL in
thatuba.
V