H SOUTH SIDE CONDITIONS NORMAL AFTER BIG STRIKE ; South 'Siders Breath Sigh of Belief as Packing House Laborers Go Back "to Work Again. Last week 5,000 South- Side work men were on strike. The four large packing houses were practically tied up. Restless crowds paced the streets, South Side, old ia experience with strikes, held its breath. The air was full of rumors strikebreakers, scabs, shots, riots. Feeling was tense. Lite Tuesday afternom the strike was settled. Wednesday morning found South Side normal again. Every workman was in his place. The big packing houses were turning out their quota of the world's meat. AH was busy and natural. There is an undercurrent of glad ness in South Side. South Siders feel it and respond to it. Grocers are glad that their patrons are getting paid again. The strikers, mostly persons who need their pay, are glad to be on the job again. The packers are glad that their big plants are busy again. South Side is experiencing that feel ing of relief which people feel when come dread disease has been enar, but passed on. v Military Carnival Plans Not Affected by Boys' Leaving The boys of Company D of the , "Dandy Sixth" will probably be in Deming when their military carnival is being staged in- South Side. South Side business men have assured the boys that they will push the carnival and make it a success. Canteens, built to reproduce JLht original army canteens, will be erect ed at the carnival grounds. Since the boys of Company DvVill not be here i to take charge of the canteens, the Red Cross women of the South Side . have been asked to give their services in running the canteens. A big arch will be built over the entrance of the grounds at Twenty- " fourth and 0 streets. The Nat Reiss , shows will furnish attractions at the carnival. They had charge of the military carnival in Council Bluffs last week and cleared over $8,000 for the soldier boys there., South Side men say that they expect the carnival here to be just as big a success as the one in Council Bluffs. Police Tell Owner of vSpitz Canine to "Tie Dog Outside" "Tie your little dog outside," is the advice Police Judge Madden gave to Riley Anthony, 3920 S street, who appeared in court Thursday with his little white spitz dog. Joha J., Back ley, mail carrier, testified tftat the dog ia a vicious animal- Anthony pleaded for the dog's life and promised to keep it tied. Packers National Bank Names New Assistant Cashiers Directors of thePackers National bankmet Wednesday afternoon and elected E, R. Spaulding and Amos W. Gates new assistant cashiers. LOVERS MAY TURN OUT AUTO LIGHTS Going With Same Girl for Two Years Saves Young Man Ar rested for Violating Road Rules. "Did j'ou have both hands on the steering wheel?" is the leading ques tion which City Prosecutor Anheu ser asked Tames Drhelka of Avery, Lwho was in South Side police station Friday morning for violating the au tomobile light ordinance. "Yes," answered young Drhelka, "you see, my girl was with me, but we've been going together for two years- "Well, any fellow who goes with the same girl for two years has a right to blow out the lights," chuckled Pcflice Judge Madden. Drhelka had been to the'military ball at the Auditorium. He has a brother who is a member of the "Dandy Sixth" and he told the court he had taken his girl to the dance to celebrate his brother's last even ing in Nebraska. Officer Beister ar rested him when he was on his way home from the dance. He was brought to the station, but when he told the police that his girl was with him he was given a "goldenrule" sentence and was allowed to go and take his sweetheart home. "You see," said Desk Sergeant Mc Carthy, "everybody loves a lover." "Ahem same girl two years," said Judge Madden, rubbing his chin. "Say, Doy, you're discharged." South Side Girl Dies At Home of Her Mother iV-r'e Veverka, aged 9 years, died at the home of he mother, 2223 W street, Thursday morning. She is sur vived by her mother and two brothers. The funeral will be held from the resi dence at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Interment will be in the Laurel Hill cemetery. ' Mad Dog Terrorizes South Side Until Shot by Police A mad dog terrorized people in the district about Twenty-seventh and Drexel streets for an hour yesterday. Calls to the police station brought Officers Flen ing, Jackman, Scott and Goralski to the spot. Officer Fleming killed the vicious animal. Nebraska Strawberries Found in Omaha Stores .. South 8ld Brevities. For Rent Two 6-room all modern eot tagei. Tel. South 803. Mn, O, W. Wright li home from Lyndon, O., where aha ipent her summer vacation. Phil Kearney post No. S, Grand Army of the Republic, will meet at the home of Jf. W. Cress, 4427 South Twenty-third atreet, Saturday night. Telephone South 900 and order a esse of Onu or Lactonade, the healthful, refreshing Horn Beverages, dfllveryl to your residence. Omaha Beverage Co. Harry Combs has returned from a visit III Ord arid other towns out In the state. Aa aoon aa he finishes his business here he lasf tends ta li-ave (or Indiana, where he will make his future home. Sunday arhool will b held at the Bt. Luke's Luthoran church, Twenty-fifth and K streets, at :45 a. in , church services at 11 a. m. and Luther league at 7:30 p. m. Rev. 8. H. Yearlan la the pastor. C. O. Long of the stock yards exchange building shipped twenty-oru head of feeder cattla tx Knoxville, la., TUursilay. The cat tle brought 114.20, the highest price aver paid for feeder cattle. The twenty-one head weighed thirteen tons. They wera shipped In from CodV, Neb. V Potatoes took a sensational jump upward Thursday of this week. One store .was selling them at 35 cents a peck early in the morning, but when the vegetable man returned from the wholesale market they were marked up to 50 cents. "Growers aren't dig ging them," he said, "and there is a shortage in the market They will probably go down again soon." The market is "loaded with other good. things, both fruits and vegeta bles. Cabbage is splendid at 5 cents a head. Cauliflower sells at 12 to 15 cents a pound. Carrots cost 4 and 5 cents a pound or 30 cents for market basket full. Green tomatoes for preserves are around 35 cents a market basket."' Green grapes for making preserves and jellies are plentiful and bring from' 75 to 90 cents for a market bas ket. Concord grapes for eat;ng are qn the market at 25 and 30 cents a basket. Tokay grapes are as low as 25 cents a basket in some stores and 10 to 15 cents a pound. Apples of various kinds for various purposes are fine and plentiful, selling from 25 to 50 cents a peck. Excellent crabapples are on the market as low as 30 cents a peck. Now is the time to make crabapple jelly. ,Big fine blackberries, the kind that-j go well witn cream ana sugar, are here at 15 cents a box. One store even displayed a small line of straw berries. They were grown at Ains worth, Neb., and sold at 40 cents a box. Watermelons are still here at 2'2 cents a pound. Cantaloupes cost from 7 to 15 cents each and honeydew mel ons are about 25 cents. Oranges range from 30 to 50 cents a dozen. I Fancy slicing cucumbers are 5 and 10 cents each. Wax. beans bring 15 cents a pound and considerably less by the market basket. Sweet corn is from 15 to 20 cents a dozen ears. Brown Is Held For Passing 91 Bogus Checks W. C. Brown, charged with passing worthless checks, pleaded guilty in police court Thursday morning,and was bound over to the distr ct court. Bail was fixed at $1,500. Special Detective Finn of the Bran deis stores went to Louisville, Ky, after Brown, and returned with him Thursday morning. Brown began his checkered career by faking advertisements for the Gayety and Empress theaters and for the Mills Advertising company. Man ager E. L. Johnson of the Gayety says that his loss was $185. Brown passed worthless checks at the Hen shaw hotel amounting to $60, and at the Brandeis and Rurgess-Nash stores and the Merritt, Beaton and Schaefer pharmacies. In all he has forged ninety-one checks, averaging $50 each, using E. L. Johnson's name. He traveled through the east, stopping at the lead ing hotels in fifteen large cities. In these hotels he gave from one to three checks, always for larger amounts than his bills called for. In Louisville, Ky., Brown stopped at four hotels and it was only at the last or.e that he was detected iin his forgeries. Former Baptist Pastor Pays Visit to Old Omaha Friends Rev. J. W. HaVris, pastor of the First Baptist church, St. Petersburg, Fla., arrived in Omaha yesterday. Rev. Mr. Harris was pastor of the First Baptist church in Omaha1 from 1879 to 1885. He lived in Omaha fif teen years and has a host of friends here. He will preach for the First Bap tist church, Harney and Park avenue, Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Rev, Mr. Harris will also preach at the -Calvary Baptist church, Twenty-fifth and Hamilton streets, Sunday even ing at 8 o'clock. Rev. and Mrs. Har ris are guests of Dr. Martha Clark, 4108 Lafayette avenue. FRENCH OFFICERS HERE JJHORT TIE High Commission Makes Step in Omaha for Few, Minutes Between Trains on Way East. The high commission of the French government stopped over in Omaha for two hours yesterday while making viiaugv-i in ii a. in - iui Wiv tasi ksu j their return from. San Francisco. I They were met at the station by a delegation of members of the Alliance Francaise who had charge of their entertainment while in the city. "The conditions in the United States exceeded our fondest expecta tions," said High Commissioner De billy. "We were entertained continu ally while in this country, but no city accorded us a more royal welcome than did Omaha." A committee from the Alliance Francaise, headed by Dr. Felix Des pecher, took the mission to the home r.f Henry Doory, 124South Thirty ninth street, upon their arrival, where a social session was spent until the party left for Chicago. In the pajty were Deputy High Commissioner Eduard Debilly,, Colo nel James Martin, Captain E. J. P. Rouvier and Lieutenants Henri de Courtivron and Emanuel Limouzain. King Corn Must Hand the Sceptre to Humble Bean ' Washington, Sept. 14. Beans take their place this year as one of the Country's most important and valuable crops. Forecast of pro duction in the five important bean growing states, Michigan, Cali fornia, New York, Colorado and New Mexico, announced by the De partment of Agriculture today in a special report, shows 19,969,000 bushels, compared with 8,846,000 bushels last year and 10,321,000 bushels in 1915. More than 1,500,000 acres were planted to beans in those states, and the average farm price paid for them on August 15 was $7.24 a bushel, compared with $4.60 on that date last year. At the August 15 price the prospective crop was worth about $145,000,000. Shipping Board Faces ' Huge Wage Increase Washington, Sept. 14 A decision as to the general policy the government will pursue in dealing with demands for wage increases in ship-building plant faces the shipping board in con ferences it is holding with Seattle builders and labor representatives.' At the close of today's meeting no agree ment had bten reached. The Seattle workers employed in plants in which construction has been l commandeered bv the government ask wage increases approaching 33 per cent ' If similar increase were given hip, yard workers throughout the tountry it would cost the government Ibout $200,000,000 a year to be added o the ship-building program's cost The shipping board will have to pay any wage advances in yards in which construction has been commandeered, as the contracts taken over provide that labor costs enter into the cost of the vessels. In the Seattle yards the builders are backing the workers in their demands. Trade Acceptance Plan Coming, Say Credit Men The Omaha Credit Men's associa tion held a meeting and banquet at the Castle hotel last evening. F. A. Cascade;, of the Omaha Na tional x bank spoke on the bankers'i view of the trade acceptance. W. F. Baxter of the Thomas Kilpatrick com pany told of the effect on the retailer, and C J. Chiltree of the Martin Cott Hat company toM of the view taken by the wholesalers. A general discus sion followed. ' There is no question in the minds of the credit men othef than that the trade acceptance will 60on be in gen eral use in this country' as it has in France and other European countries, and plans were made forintroducing it in Omaha. ' Austrian Official Says Country Can't Hold Out Geneva, Sept ( 14. The Freie Zeittfng of Berne publishes an ar ticle from a high Austrian official who recently traveled through sev eral sections of this country, in which the writer states that Atre-tro-Hungary cannot hold out the' coming winter, owing to economic reasons, as both soldiers and civil ians will be starved. He gives sev eral reasons, notably the almost 'complete destruction of the crops in the richest regions of Hungary by the cold and the heavy rain, while 300,000 tons of Roumanian1 cereals could not be transported,- owing to lack of rolling stock, which, first of all, is utilized for military purposes. In the meantime, he says, the neces saries of life are mounting to ex traordinary prices. MEMs Sioux City Dos Moines 1512 Dougla . SHOE COMPANY 1512 Douglas YOU BETTER BUY TWO PAIRS Tomorrow and Monday .We Will Sell Shoes for Less Than a Year Ago Merc than 300 pairs of fine Eng. ' luh shot, soft leather, aw ' Rcda to. On sal for tw dy . jL. r PHEn. Saw on Your I l '',- , Elk skin soles, tan or , :; fc2--x Wk leathers; same in 1 . -dS""-7"' '""A ' Wucner tyl. ' Extra ' "V T v ' T'-LLmi ' a i'i ii i ffi . heavy aolet. Go on sale Announcing The Opening of Omaha's Finest Men's Furnishing Store It is with a great deal of pride that we-announce the opening of our new men's furnishing store, No expense hasten spared to make this the most complete and up-to-date .establishment of its kind in the city. Our motto will be to handle only merchandise of known quality and our moderate prices will be a surprise to those who become acquainted with our service. YOUR INSPECTION INVITED New Fall Hats The Btyles are as smart and snappy as you've ever seen. Whatever your requirements may be, you'll find your shape here. We have a fine line of the ever reliable Stfetsons Priced from $4.00 and up An endless variety of Hats made especially for bur trade. All the popular shapes and colors. A style and shape for every head. Come in and look them over. Specially priced at $2.00 and $2.50 Saturday Special NECKWEAR Some wonderful new weaves and patterns .for fall. A real 1.00 value s ' 65c MEMC FURNISHINGS 103 DOUvLAS Saturday Special SHIRTS The newest" fall patterns and cloths. Genuine $1.50 values r 1 $1.15 FIIIIIIUIHIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII ; rr KV.iWAiUhr PRODUCTS, I f l4Z 1 Ngiiinnrmifi 1)1111111110 The Domestic Science Teacher Says: you prefer a vegetable shortening in place of lard, be sure to use VEGETOLE the perfect alter native for use in frying and shortening. "Use VEGETOLE just as you would lard; it will make your cake delicious, your pastry light and flaky ana your tried tooas digestible. "VEGETOLE comes only in pails, under the Armour Oval Label. Good dealers everywhere can supply you with VEGETOLE atynoderate prices." ARMOUR COMPANY y Rokt. Budats, Mgr., 13th and 'Jones Sts., Omaha. Deuf. 1055. H. P. Lcfferts, 29th and Q Sts. South 1740. Tan csus hmy paekmmm wwmtt, fUK aowos, Mftmblma, frmita. ate., mil mmdrnr thm M Laktl't rnmutity-ptofctum. 7lllllllllll.lMI!Mmnmil!ll!MtHM;M..m-.v..!.,- ; - n 7 Make Homfe Comfortable From Oiir TWO Tremendous STOCKS Look Over The BIG VALUES In Living Room Pieces At Either or Both Stores ' THE FAMIL Y CIRCLE may all have a comfortable chair or rocker at the most moderate cost by buying now. , LIBRARY and STUDY Tables from 19.75 to $22.50. in fumed or golden oak Rockers In golden oak and fumed oak ?2.75, 14.50, $5.50 and up to big. easy, comfortable ones, covered with leather, tapestry and velour from $12.50 to $22.50. ETery One Are Bare Values. THIS 3-Riece Duofold Suite, in mahogany and Spanish leather $69.50. Unifold Bed Davenports, in golden oak and fumed oak, in Spanish Leatherette -covering of H the best grade, at $18.60, $24.50, $29.00 and up. WeSare YoaM oa$y There "Xre Returns tx 'IJ ' " - X . i ---sjsnsj" - r-sj 17th and Howard Streets and SfFjP'' ldl3lt tiowara oirceu - IT. Strongly Built and Correctly Shaped , Shoes for Sturdy Boys Boys are notoriously hard on shoes and no one realizes this more than we do. That is why we have all our boya' shnps madfi' to our own sne- ,cifications, and of the best - Materials only. Mannish, perfect-fitting lasts that please the boyi Service and lasting qualities that please the parents. Jfnced irom $3.00 Up N 7 tea.DOUGLYis iL I s. wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmaMrngm Dancing at ' -The Fontenelle i syja-o-'-a,.iiJ'". 'T-s Commencing Saturday night, Sep tember Fifteenth, thevPalm Room will be open each 'night at Eleven o'clock for Dancing, Sundays ex cepted. Reservations May Be Made by Phone Douglas 3207 ' 1 "Built for You to Enjoy" 3 a rmiiif lib. .1 lira