Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 17, 1917, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1917.
VAL PETER VALIANTLY TRIMS
"COL " STOECKER IN TRIBUNE;
LEA VESNOTHING BUT RIBBONS
German Editor Voices Long Standing Grievances Against
German Would-Be Editor in Which Doughty Type
'wtcrieldw lleducct' HU 'Ancient Enemy
i i ; : to Literary Hash, Well Spiced.
'
There' blood on .the moon, and i
v merry. row in sight.- ' ? ;-
- Val J.r Peter, editor of the Omaha
Daily Tribune," has. put on fifs war
v paint, filed his front teeth) 'unsheathed'
his scalping knife and. literally "gone
'after" W. ' F. Stoecker.
"Ooinell is Stoecker?"
, The Tribune solves that problem.
, The fiery editor declares in perfectly
' good English that Stoecker has been
attacking the German press in letters
and articles written by him to news
papers and periodicals in various parts
of the country. -
, ' Editor. Peter first says Stoecker's
' grammar is bad. Then he proceeds to
. lather him with sulphuric acid, shave
him with crosscut saw and hang his
hide on the fence to dry. This is the
way he does it in Friday's Tribune:
" Craves For Glory.
"A certain" person by the name of
V. F. Stoecker has again been send
ing letters and other literature to
various newspapers of 1 the country.
.It is doubtful whether he is the
author of these letters, because they
occasionally contain a sentence that
is grammatically correct;, but since
' li attacks the German language press
and since letters with his signature
. .have been published in several large
papers," it may be opportune to set
iorth a few facts concerning the
extensible author, which may help
editors and the general public to
Range his actions and writings prop
' erly. From this little sketch I think
it will sufficiently appear that the
jtwo mainsprings of his actions are
an inordinate craving for glory and
- an implacable passion for revenge,
neither of which has ever been satis
fied, for every attempt at revenge
' failed and his glory always turned
out to be notoriety. -
' Intolerable Gas Bag.
"My acquaintance with this individ
ual dates from the time when I first
came to Omaha eight years ago and
consolidated all the German language
papers into, a modern, up-to-date
paper worthy of the large and splen
did German element of this city and
country. At that time he was striv
ing for leadership among the German
people. ' He . was a man ; of some
means.' He had operated a cigar
stand with the usual adjunctive sys
tem of slot machines in various
places, out of which he made con
siderable money. When they were
abolished by ordinance, he appeared
before the city council and among
other things in his remonstrance ,he
is said to have made the following
statement; 'But, gentlemen, this is
, nnt uamMincr device only a little
game of chance.' In, 1908 ihe had
take palt in democratic campaign
against prohibition as he later worked
for it There was a democratic land
slide that year, and m tne general
avalanche this little fame-seeker slid
into the legislature along with other
' "wets," where he made a record as
an intolerable gas bag.
Glory Monger Seeks Office.
"The irrepressible egoist soon forced
himself "on my' attention. -The pri
mary election law allows any person,
irrespective of his mental equipment,
to file as candidate, and so the glory
monger filed as a candidate for con
gress. At that time he tried to
make political capital out his Ger
man nationality. In his conceit he
believed that as publisher of the Ger
man daily paper, I had the entire Ger
man vote in my vest pocket, and that
I was in duty bound, because he was
German born, to hand that vote to
him. -1 had a different conception ot
my duty, and felt in conscience bound
not to nuonort him. i The natural con-
- r. - . . . .. . ......
sequence of his toonsn auemp. w,
of course, overwhelming defeat, and,
holding me responsible for n
ignominy and in the bitterness of his
l-umiliation, he swore- vengeance
gainst me. .That is the time when
his enmity began, which has ver
hince been growing more and more
venomous. ; y V v - '
; Tries to Buy Brains. ;
"He did cot. however, at once dis
close his purpose or cease to curry
favor with the-Germans of the city.
Wearing the cloak of friendship, he
came into my office one day and
proposed to become my partner He
complimented me upon my intellect
ual attainments and argued that a
union of my brains and his money
must make - a tremendous success.
Incidentally it was to be understood
,i,. h tn have the editorial con
trol of the paper, I saw his scheme
. to get control of my publication, and
informed him that a partnership of
x,nA Wween him and me was an
impossibility. "' r v ; 1 .
Becomes Obnoxious.
"When he saw. that he could not
accomplish anything in thai way, he
threw aside the mask and began open
uot;i;,;.. HU fimt maneuver was an
' .Hmnt tn nnU mv trood name. He
former home in Hit'
nois and investigated my record. He
interviewed my former employers and
the publishers of the paper that I had
,,,-iu Awnixt. But he made him
self so obnoxious to them by his slurs
against my character, that the editors
showed him the door and advised him
to Use... whire a d.gnitiea exit was u.
i : possible.',; ? x:: -v-f-.'v t: V
," V la Role of Baptiier. ' - i-
"Not lavintf found anything jn my
antecedent! that he could use against
me socially, he decided upon my fi
nancial nim. To this end he started
an opposition paper, which he bap
tized The Missing Link.' He found
again that he had started something
'he could not finish. A prospectus of
the sheet was issued, in which It was
announced that the Links were to be
printed, half in German and half in
Entrliih. But the naoer never got be-
yond the prospectus, and all the other
4inics are iuu luisamfc. ' r ;
Slot Machine Moneybag,
"After the failure of this publics
" tion. he started another paper, a kind
- of craty-quilt,' to which he gave the
, pompous sobriquet of . The - Free
Lance.' Being unable to write eram-
' matically, he employed a woman to do
it, concerning; whom the Omaha Daily
incwj use winter reported rne sensa
tional story told by her at police head
quarters about, her having suddenly
been thrown out of employment. The
wealthy- publisher swung his - Lance
freely for about a year, at the end of
whicb-time it began to be too expen
sive a luxury for the Hon. Slotma
chine Moneybag, and the paper passed
into that oblivion from which it should
never have emerged.
Unfitted for Office.
"Tn the meantime the congressional
campaign of 1912 was at hand, and
the opportunist again filed as-a can
didate for congress. Holdings as I
have always done, to the American
theorv that neither creed nor nation
ality ought to make any difference in
the election of men to puouc tmces,
felt bound this time actively to op
pose his election. It was a duty
nuhlisher. I felt I owed to
my country; and a duty, which, as a
German .editor, X teit i owea to ine
public; a) duty, which, as a citizen, I
felt I owed to all citizens of German
I therefore showed to ifiy'
readers his unfitness for office, with
the result that has was snowed under
worse than before. This did not stop
him at ,the next opportunity, trom
attempting to get 'the democratic
nomination tor governor, ims time
his case was so utterly hopeless that
even he himself saw into it after a
while and withdrew. ,
Changes N.tlonaliry.
"It was during this campaign that
he executed one of his characteri:
maneuvers. The rest of mankind
have very little choice as regards
their parentage and the place of their
birth. Not so with our slotmachine
genius. Having ! lost the confiden a
and respect of the Germans whose
votes he had so often, asked for on
the ground that he was German born,
he conveniently changed his nation
ality by writing letters to the news
papers in which he laid the scene
of his birth in Denmark one year
previous to the time that he was
born in Germany.
Charged With Duplicity.
"Although the Danish people did
rot seem to relish the distinction
thus thrust upon them, he continued
to claim to be a Dane until the end
of that campaign. This duplicity was
resented by both nationalities. I have
not heard, of any Danish society that
admitted him on the ground of his
Danish birh; and in spite of his Ger
man birth, the German societies have
repeatedly back-balled him. Of one
German society he is a charter mem
ber. This society cannot get rid of him
because it has an insurance feature,
and as long as he pays his dues the
society is bound by its contract
A Vainglorious Politican.
"Another characterstic of this va'in-
crWtaui politician is the impression
he seeks to create everywhere, that
the titlcor colonel is one wntcn iwas
haitAwec. nn him because Of some
heroism or military achievement ; of
his. It was, in fact, obtained during
the time, when he was most active
politically. He succeeded in persuad
fnor the democratic county chairman
to Intercede for him with the gOv
ernor. This was done, and tne gov
ernor thereupon dubbed him colonel
a '! .H.'Mif'.kAiil t.i an.
f Hurnuir.HiiL Limm auuuh ..1.0 K
p'ointment is that it lasted only for
the brief space of one administration,
for uDon our .vanity-nero was dc-
stowed the signal distinction of being
the only one of all the colonels ap
pointed during Governor Morehead s
first term who was not reappointed.
Thui hiit fflorv aeain turned out ,to
be notoriety; out ne maue tne mcmcm
still more notorious by showing that
he was peeved, chagrined and cut to
the quick. He disregarded the action
of the governor and bid open defiance
to h m by declaring in nis rree
Lance,' 'Once a colonel, always
colonel - - - .
Entertains Hallucinations.
'Snrh i the man who never lost an
opportunity to strike a blow at me and
my nusiness. ao again wncu im
prohibition wave spread over Ne
braska. he seized upon that oppor
tumty, as he considered it, to put
me out of bustneft. He seemed to
entertain the hallucination that my
publication was entirely financed by
the liquor interests. He even made
a wager with one of our well-known
noliticians that ninetv days after pro
hibition went into effect I would be
out of business. So he joined the Anti
Saloon league and worked for prohi
bition with mitrht and main, with
mouth and money (but not with ex
ample), lhis scheme was perhaps tits
worst failure, for, although through a
combination of circumstances, prohi
bition came, yet my paper remained
. . ." l. a ' 1.1. 1
ana continues to nvc, ; qpunsn , nu
nroner more than ever--1 i ,
r.r, ----- - .
"In the light of the foregomg facts
can anyone doubt the motive of this
super patriot in the present attempt
to ride the crest of the wave of agita
tion anainst the German: language
press? Can anyone believe for an in
stant that he is actuated t by any
other than private and' personal mo
tives? I am fully aware that 'he him
self does not deserve this extended
notice, but I felt that I owed it to
my fellow journalists to let them
know who it is that is making the
noise. . ... .
(The article is signed Val J. Peter,
publisher Omaha Daily --Tribune,
German.) . .
Red Cross Inspector
Gives Account or
, Bombing Hospital
(Continued from P One.)
4
I
Persistent Advertising Ts the Road
to buccess. .
j Dtmrttniit Orders.''
Wuhlnf ton, Bpt. H. (8pelt Tlrrm.
-Kcnrr H. Carr. 1 appointed tooatmaaUr
at Franklin City, la., vice T. K. McMur-
ray, removed. . v t . ..; ' ,',!v.;
The followlnr named etfleera ef the engt
neer ertleera' reeerre corpe are relieved from
dutr at the engineer training eamp at fort
Leavenworth. Kan., aad are attached to the
Ftfty-tbird eniiaeere. Camp Dodfe: Captain
Frederick R. Gteraen, First Lieutenant
Arthur T. Alntlee. Second Lieutenant Bjal
mar If. rettereon.
' Ftrat TJeutenanta Foster T. Burnett and
Itoeke 3. Wilson, medical reserve corps, are
asslaned to duty at Fort Ces Molnea, la.
and First Lieutenant Edward T. Edrerly,
First Lieutenant Oeorce E, Penn, First Lien
tenant Oscar L. Perkins, First Lieutenant
K. T. Thomson, First Lieutenant Jesse O.
Dillon. First Lieutenant Arthur W. M. Clean,
Second Infantry. North Dakota National
Guard, and Second Lieutenant Max Btokes,
Fourth Infantry, South Dakota National
Ouard, are relieved from reorultlnt duty at
Aberdeen, B, D., and will proceed to jot
tneir respective reiunents,
RUSSIAN FIGHTING WOMEN AND THEIR MASCOTS
Girls of all classes, and manv married women, were members
of the "Battalion of Death," which recently emerged so
gloriously from its first actual conflict with the enemy. And,
like all other fighters, they, too, have their mascots.
MRS. JOHN F. STOUT
IS CALLEDBY DEATH
Leading Church and Charity
Worker, Director of Y. W.
C. A. in Omaha, Answers
Final Summons.
THESE SOLDIERS
ARE ENJOYING LIFE
probably never knew what happened
to him as his body was torn to shreds.
Th next two fell a hundred feet be
yond in a five marquee ward in which
there were many patients, ana tne iasi
strucK tne reception tent.
"Overhead there was no sound. The
German aviator flew too high to be
heard, but he left his identity behind
him, not only in the oomos ne arop
neA. hut in the derisive handful of
pfennigs "he scattered upon the hos
pital as he whirled away, a numucr oi
these were found when light came.
No Sign of Panic.
"Although the exolodisg bomb creat
ed horror in the hospital, there was
not the smallest sign of panic and the
work of discovering the wounded and
collecting them was immediately be
gun. This was made cruelly aitncuit
by the darkness, but every one sprang
to it with a will. Many of the injured
had been blown from their cots, some
even outside their tents, where they
were found tangle 1 up in the tent
ropes. The American nurse and a hos
pital orderly, although injured, re
fused to be relieved and remained at
their tasks. ' , .
"In the operating room Captains
Horace Binnev and Elliott, with their
assistants, worked all night long. Sev
eral delicate operations were perform
ed and their task was made an tne
harder by the fact that in innumerable
cases, tne oatienis were in icnum
d.nger of infection trom tne pieces
of wood and nails and dirt which had
been blown into their bodies.
"Lieutenant Colonel R. U. Patter
son, U. S. A., commanding officer of
the unit, and Major Harvey Cushing,
hd of the iursric 1 force, the latter
being at the front at the time of the
disaster have expressed the highest
admiration for the manner in which
he emergency was met Latest reports
are that the condition of the wounded
is progressing satisfactorily. 1
Health of Men Aboard
Destroyers is Excellent
(Correspondence ot The Aasoclated Preae.)
Base American Flotillas in British
Watrre. Tulv IS. The excellent state
,.
of the health ot tne men on ooara
the American destroyers after two
months active service in the great
war is one of the gratifying features
of their experiences here. In that
neriod onlv six cases for major opera'
tions have presented 1 themselves to
the hospital on the supply, or mother
ship, which has accommodations tor
fortv-five. The fact that not one
man has been lost either through an
accident of war or sickness is the
proud record of which the fleet can
boast, Altogether less than fifty hos
pital cases have been handled since
tne arrival oi tne nouiias.
"We have had remarkably fewer
cases than expected," said one of the
surgeons, "in fact there has been
an almost complete absence of the
illnesses such as we naturally expect
among such a large body of men
working at high pressure under vastly
different conditions, especially clim
atic, than they have been accustomed
to. ' The health record of the men is
one of our agreeable surprises. Their
Dnvsicai conaiiion continues excel
lent; ll have good appetites and seem
to thrive on their new life. They are
so busy they don t have time to get
sick. - 1... .I'".' I V-" -.- ,-
Amole "tooflortunity for the exer
cise of base ball, golf, tennis and long
walks . m the beautiful countryside,
the surgeon said, contributed to the
healthy condition of his men.
the Hospital on ooara tne motner
ship is as full equipped and up-to-date
as "could be found ny where ashore.
It is in charge of a senior surgeon
who was a doctor of wide experience
in private practice, and two junior
surgeons. They have a staff of medi
cal corps men who do the work of
nurse.
For possible future needs there
has been turned over to the Ameri
cans by the British authorities a naval
hospital ashore which has accomo
dations for several hundred patients.
It is one of the best equipped in the
country.
A prominenttownsman here offer
ed the Americans the use of his beau
tiful home as a hospital, but it was
declined for the time being. He of
fered it free of charge for the dura
tion of the war and six months there
after. It was thought that the hos
pital on the mother ship and the one
placed at the disposal of the Ameri
cans by the British would provide
sufficient accommodation tor any un
mediate luture needs.
Retail Merchants in U. S.
Recent statistics show that there are
in the United States 523,393 retail mer
chants. They are divided as follows
Grocers and chain stores 318,631
Druggists 43.790
Dry goods 32,47
Hardwar 30,808
Quartermaster's Eeserve Corps
Men Have Fine Time Hiking
Over Roads Near Fort
Crook.
The men of the quartermaster's re
serve corps now quartered at Fort
Crook are having a fine time getting
acquainted with this part of the west.
Almost all of them came from eastern
states.
Coming in Nebraska at the most
delightful time of the year, they are
charmed with the state. They may
be here a month more before being
sent to camps, and cantonments.
In their leisure hours they swarm
over the country roads and beg the
farmers' wives to sell them home
made pies and doughnuts, take long
hikes over the hills of Douglas and
Sarpy counties, and in the evenings
they come into Omaha for a taste of
city life.
Only Truck Companies Here. '
The entire contingent consists of
truck companies. Thd make-up of a
truck company is unique in that there
are no privates. For each company
there is a captain and a truckmaster,
cook and twenty-eight chauffeurs.
each with a motor truck in his charge.
What are your duties? was asked
one of the truckmasters the other
day. '
We go wherever there is anything
to be hauled," he answertd. "Where-
ever there are supplies, equipment
and such to be taken from one, place
to another, we are in demand.
"They Understand Autos.",
The men of these truck companies
have had a wide experience with au
tomobiles. A great many of them
came from the famous automobile
factories in the east, where they have
been employed in every capacity pos
sible. There is one whole company
recruited from Detroit, the home of
'
automooues.
Another company comes from Chi
cago, there is one from Toledo, and
all the cities in the Central depart
men? of the army have their reoresen
tatives in the companies now at rort
Crook awaiting their equipment.
Many are college men, the Univer
sity of Michigan being the best ren
resented. A large number of the men
own their own cars at home and all
have been holding good positions
which they save up to help win the
war.
The little shops of Crooktown
have been reaping a rich harvest
since the men of the quartermaster's
reserve corps arrived. The following
tale is told of one merchant there. A
young soldier came in and made
purchase amounting to a few dollars.
throwing a $20 bill on the counter,
The shop-keeper, his eyes bulging
put. admitted his inability to change
it.
"Oh, that's all right keep the
change the soldier is reported to
have said as he walked out. Next
day every article in the store was
advanced 100 per cent in nriee. in
deference to the afluence of the soU,
Aiara J .
w.w. .....
Mrs. Lida M. Stout, wife of Attor
ney John F. Stout, died at her home,
117 South Thirty-ninth street, Satur
day after an illness of two months.
'Mrs. Stout was active in church
work, being, a member of Westmin
ster Presbyterian church. She ob
tained unsought praise by her charity
work and gifts to charitable organi
zations. She was president of the
Ladies' Aid society of her church,
and was director and treasurer of the
Young Women's Christian association
of Omaha. While performing the
duties pertaining to these offices she
was always considerate of the feelings
of others, and invariably gained the
love and affection of every one she
met.
Mrs. Stout was born in Cambridge,
O., and was married there in 1887 and
moved" to Omaha twenty years ago.
Mr. Stout is a member of the law
firm of Stout, Rose & Wells.
Mrs. Stout was 54 years ot age. bhe
. . , T ,
is survived Dy ner nusoana, jonn
Stout; one sister, Miss Nan btitt ot
Cambridge, O., who was present at
the time of death; one son, Robeat L,
of the National Bank of Commerce of
New York, now in training at the of
ficers' reserve camp at Plattsburg, and
a daughter, Gertrude, a graduate of
Brownell Hall and the Miss Sum
mers school at Washington, D. C.
Services will be held at the home
at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon, and
the body will be forwarded to the old
home at Cambridge for interment.
Dr. T. F. Younir of Westminster
church will conduct the services. ,
An appeal Is being mads by Mrs. A.
L. Reed, chairman of the committee
on instruction for women to all scnooi
girls to so to the Red Cross work shop
in the Balrd building Saturday morn
ings to help make hospital supplies.
"Even if they have only a couple of
hours to devote, we want them," she
said.
How Nebraska Jeweler
Qets Clerks Loyalty
There is a little iewelrv stnro in
Nebraska, which has no time clock
and no rules of conduct The four
or five clerks .are supposed to get
down to the store at 8 m the morning
ana to aust tne stock, build a tire in
tne turnace and sweep the store.
I he i man for whom thev work
nevef criticises anything which they
may do and very seldom does he give
an order ot any kind. But he is the
first one down irt the morning and if
one of the clerks, whose turn it was,
should neglect to start the fire upon
his arrival the proprietor would do it
himself rather than ask him. And
if this proprietor wants the stock
cleaned or rearranged, he takes off
LI a. J j i a if
nis coat ana starts on it nimseir. tie
has to do no more than start, how
ever, for his clerks are quick to per
ceive the hint and take the job away
from him.
Most of the clerks in this store ap
pear five to ten minutes before 8.
They actually worship their employer
and are glad to do more rather than
less the amount of ' work expected
from them. , And when any personal
trouble comes up they immediately go
to him. t ,
This Nebraska jeweler gets more
efficient service from his salespeople
than most jewelers, because his clerks
are loyal to- him, in return for the
feeling that he would do as much for
them. Keystone Weekly.
RELEASE SUSPECTS;
ALLEN NOT TO BLAME
United States District Attorney
Says Three Men Charged
With Treason Dismissed
by Washington.
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
Lincoln, Neb., Sept 16. (Special.)
United States District Attorney T.
S. Allen was not responsible for the
release of three men held for treason
against the government as charged
by a local paper a few weeks ago.
The newspaper investigated the
matter and discovered that the re
lease of the men was on orders from
the Department of Justice at Wash
ington and not by Mr. Allen on his
own initiative.
One of the cases was that of Mar
tin Bowman arrested at Hubbel for
alleged cursing President Wilson and
United States soldiers. He was or
dered interned by Washington au
thority. Allen was called to Washington,
after the department had examined
the brief of Bowman's attorney and
ordered to parole Bowman to rela
tives in South Dakota who will hold
him there until after the war.
The other case was that of Ber
nard Linau and Max Mattes, sus
pected as being alien enemies. They
were released oif orders of a govern
ment secret service officer .who in
formed Mr. Allen that there was no
evidence against them sufficient to
warrant holding them.
Russian Naval Mission .
Will Visit the Middle West
Washington, Sept. 16. A visit to
the Pacific coast probably will be in
eluded in the tour of the Russian
naval mission. A program has not
been arranged, but Vice Admiral
Koltchak, head of the mission, is
eager to accept invitations from the
middle west and the Pacific coast as
soon as conferences with naval ot
ficer are over, probably in about a
week. .
PHOTOPLAYS.
MUSE
M Last Times Today V
g " BESSIE LOVE . X
H "WEE LADY BETTY"
News Weekly .
M Latest Events x
Last Times Today
CATHERINE CALVERT
FRANK MILLS
KITTENS REICHERT
-m-
"THE HOUSE OF CARDS"
Tues. VIOLA DANA
PHOTO FLAYS.
JMMMaMlllllrnMM
Sessue Hayakawa
"HASHMURI
TOGO"
Tues. BILLY BURKE
A MrSEMKNTS.
BRILLIANT MUSICAL BURLESQUI
Twice Daily welelr Mat. Today':
final PrlonBtm Friday Nltt
THERE'S NO ARGUMENT
Wa'va Got tha
BEST SHOW
IN TOWN
Jaa. E. Coopar la tha boaa of tha troupa
and faia principal hirad man.
FRANK HUNTEft, thmakergh
VAUDEVILLE INCLUDES
Mile. Davenport'a Art Groupa; .Lpm
Canter, Ski-Hi Soprano and Tha Fid
dling Isabella Sitters.
BEWITCHING BEAUTY CHORUS
Der Header Sure. tlil 1 the best show
In town tin whole town ALWAYS looks
to u for Just that class of goods and
It finds 'em here. too. Start being a
Gayetyite this week: tout neighbor baa,
OLD MAN JOHNSON. Mgr. Oaysty.
En ia n Sub. Mats., uo, ouo, , i,
7:; Mats.li and 25? .US:
Chew Go) If Yea Like, But Na SsisMbb,
LADIES1 1 tg AT ANY WEEK
' TICKETS XUC DAY MATINEE
Bsby Carriage G araas la the Lebb
..1.1 U II' I
Home ot the Big Double Show.
CHIEF LITTLE ELK &.CO.
Indian Entertainer, Singing, Cello
KEENE and FOXWORTH .
Those Inky Boya .
LINK and ROBINSON
Mirth ProYokera
MUDGE MORTON TRIO
A Musical Melange
Vitagraph Photoplay Featur
"SOLDIERS OF CHANCE"
Featuring Erert Orertoft
Paths Newt . Fox Comedy
Last Times Today
RUTH CLIFFORD
RUPERT JULIAN, in
"MYSTERIOUS MR. TILLER"
LOTH R OF Today
THE FALL OF A NATION'
Thos. Dixon's sequel to The Birth of a
lequi
Na
ation."
SUBURBAN
Phone
Col. 2841
Today: DOROTHY DALTON in
"THE FLAME OF THE YUKON"
- Tonite, Tues, Wed.
II Y If MaU. Tomorrow
1 and Wednesday.
"A DAUGHTER OF THE SUM"
I A STORY OF AN iNItes
- "HAWAIIAN BUTTERFLY! 2Se
2Se NOT A MOTION PICTURE! to 7Se
Next Sun. "GOING STRAIGHT
Thursday
Nite, Sept.
20
Seats Now
AL JOLSON
"Robinson
Crusoe Jr."
T
Phono
Dong. 494.
THE BEST OF VAUDEVILLE
Matinee Daily, 2:15; Night, 8:1S. This Week.
IMartin Beck Presents!
JULIA ARTHUR I
In "Liberty Aflame."
HUGH HERBERT:
DeLeon A Davies;
Marie Stoddard;
Vara Berliner:
Long A Ward; Decima & Eddie McLean ; Or
pheum Travel Weekly.
Prices: Matinee, gallery, 10c; Best Seats
(except Saturday and Sunday) 25c; Nights,
10c, 25c, 60c and 75c.
Flaws
Harry L. Mlnrurn. Dorothy Shoemaker
TONIGHT AT 8:20
"HIS MAJESTY, BUNKER
v BEAN."
Mai, Wed. and Sat., 25c, 38c, 80c
Every Night, 25c, 35c, SOe 75c Boxes $1.00
Persistent Advertising Is the Road
to Success.
Chambers' School
Or 0ANCING.
HOTEL CASTLE. REOPENS
Adirt. atone-. Taw., Sept. 23, I a. . Aiurt.
bslBri. Than- Sat. 27, a. m. Hit.
SckMl. Sat. SM. . a. as. CklMraa's So
il il Clan. Sat., Saet. W, I a. Chlldraa
Claulc Sal., Sft. 29, 14 a. at. Ls4l Clsas.
Wd.. Seat. 2S, 10:30 a. av Clreaiara.
Studio, , Oowj. 1(71. Rm.. WslRai 121
For the Blue-Jackets
MO.
0C6.US.PAT.0rT.
Our boys in the Navy enjoy their Bevo. The Navy De
partment has put its official seal, of endorsement on this
triumph in soft drinks, by allowing it to be sold and served
on all Naval Vessels.
Ashore or afloat, you will find Bevo a palate-pleasing,
refreshing and nutritious beverage.
Just the thing to take along for sail or cruise auto trip
or camp and for the ice-box at home.
Bevo the all-year-Vound soft drink
Bevo is sold in bottles only, and is bottled exclusively by
Anheuser-Busch-st. Louis
Paxton & Gallagher Co.
Wholw ale Dealers
OMAHA, NEBR.
1