Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 08, 1917, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 8 1917.
H. S. BOYS HAVE TOO
MUCH MONEY-M'KEE
Should Not Have Coin to Spend
For Theaters or to Take
Trip to Lincoln Ball
Games.
"You all know that the average high
school boy has too much money,"
said Paul H. McKee, state boys' work
secretary of the Young Men's Chris
tian association of Nebraska, in his
talk before the Superintendents' and
Principals' section of the Nebraska
State Teachers' association at the
Hotel Rome yesterday.
"The average high school boy here
in' Omaha,, and in many other parts,
of the state, has money enough in his
pocket to go to the theater any time
he wants to go, or to go to Lincoln
to attend a foot ball game. That is
not good for that boy. He has not
felt the pinch of sacrifice which he
should feel at this time, and which all
of us have to feel while the country
is'engaged in war. The b6ys must
have a share in the present crisis.
They must be given a part in the war
work campaign."
ne aavocaicu uiai mc uujj i
taught production, sacrifice and living.
(Must Find Useful Work.
Under the head of production, he
held that the boys must be helped to
find useful employment, productive
employment of one kind or another
during their spare time and during va
cations. "A mistaken notion has
gone forth that we advocate taking
the Doys out of. school and putting
them into productive work on the
farms. That is wrong," he said. "We
have advocated nothing of the kind.
It is hard enough to get boys into
high school at all. We do not advo
cate taking them 'out. They will need
all the brains they can develop there
for the great reconstruction to come
after the war. But what we do advo
cate is that their spare time and their
vacations be turned to production in
any one of the numerous lines."
Time for1 Sacrifice.
Under the head of sacrifice he ad
vocates that the boys Be taught that
this is a time of sacrifice and that
they cannot have everything they
want, that they must save some of
their monev and devote it to useful
service, such as the purchase of Lib
erty bonds, etc., instead of spending
it all on shows, foot ball games and
other frivolities.
Under the head of living he fcrged
that the boys be taught right living
and right ideals during the sus
ceptible age of the high school years,
and especially that these ideals be
held up before them in these times
when the father or older brother in
many cases has gone to war and left
the boy without any real steadying
masculine restraint at home.
President J. A. Woodward of Lin
coln, head of the Superintendents
and Principals' association, presided.
Huge Service Flag Flies
From Burgess-Nash Windows
The Burgess-Nash company has
flauated the first service flag in
Omaha. It is 8x12 feet and contains
20 stars. The flag fiies from the third
floor on the Sixteenth street side.
Little Girl Who Reads This!
These Rosy, Cheeked Baby Dolls Are for You
Dwellers At Colonial Flee From
fire Which Does Little Damage
Fire this morning starting near the
elevator shaft created much excite
ment at the Colonial apartments,
Thirty-eighth and Farnam streets, but
did little real damage.
At 10 a. m. a dining room girl
screamed "Fire!" Miss Hazel Gilbert,
telephone operator at the apartments,
immediately turned in the alarm to
the tire department. Then she threw
open every telephone circuit in the
building in an effort to arouse every
tenant. She was carried fainting from
the smoke-filled hall of flic building.
Mrs. L. A. Burgess, mother of
Ward Burgess of the Burgess-Nash
company, was ill in an upstairs apart
ment, and was carried to safety by
Lillian Wilkinson, 263.1 Patrick ave
nue, colored maid.
Society omen descending shaking
la.lders, garments flung hastily from
upstairs windows and the din and
clang of the fire departments added
to the excitement and thrilled the
spectators.
Mrs. Ib Y. Cojk, who manages the
Colonial, descended to safety with a
pair of canary birds. Thf feathered
pets were taken to a nearby garage.
Mrs. Cayier, who dwells on the
fourth floor, found the doors on the
fire escape on that floor locked when
she attempted to escape. She was
aided to safety by her sister.
Mesdames M.vV. Porter, J. E. Da
vidson and J. E. Ludlow" also made
the trip down shaking ladders.
The fire started in the sub-cella
near an elevator shaft.
Tersistenf Advertising Is the Road
to Success.
Could any little mother resist the appealing
eyes of the little girl baby doll, who is beg
ging for someone to love her? Couldn't you
just adore the chubby farmer boy doll? Well,
then, why don't you get one of them? Even
if these pretty dolls whose pictures you see
here are not just the kind you want, remem
ber that we have twenty more, all different.
One of them is sure to be just the sprt of doll
you have always wished for. You can see their
pictures in The Bee, but you can see the real
dolls at our branch office, and after you see
them we know you will feel that you just
must have one of, them. Start today to earn
it. It is a very easy thing to get one.
You can have your choice of any one of
the twenty-four character dolls free if you
will bring us three new prepaid yearly sub
scriptions to the Morning or Evening and
Sunday Bee. Two subscriptions for six months,
or four for three months, or twelve for one
month, count the same as one for a year.
You can see the dolls and get all the in
formation about how to get one at The Bee
Branch office nearest you :
Ames Office, 4110 North 21th St.
Lake Office, 2516 North 24th St.
Vinton Office, 1715 Vinton St.
Park Office, 2615 Leavenworth St.
Walnut Office, 819,, North 40th St.
South Side Office, 2318 N St. '
Council Bluffs Office, 14 North Main St. ,
Benson Office, Military Ave. & Main St.
We want every little girl in Omaha to have one of these dollies
Patriotic Mass Meeting
Planned for Auditorium
A big patriotic mass meeting is
being planned for November 19 at
the Auditorium. All patriotic socie
ties will participate, as well as the
various- organizatidlis of foreign-born
citizens of every nationality. The
.Seventh regiment will attend in for
mation, and it is expected that de
tachments of soldiers from Fort
Omaha and Fort Crook will be at the
fueling. There will be music, and
short speeches by our best known
oratofs.
The committee oforganization has
called a conference for Thursday
morning at the court house, Memor
ial hall, at which time arrangements
for the mass meeting will.be com
pleted. It is expected that represen
tatives from at least 40 societies, as
sociations, clubs, etc., will participate
in this conference, the plan being to
make the event of the 19th the great
est expression of patriotic sentiment
since the outbreak of the war.
Congregationalists Delay
Construction of New Church
First Congregational church of
Omaha has abandoned for the time
the proposed Hew church at Forty
ninth and Dodge streets. Tentative
plans had been drawn and a consid
erable sum subscribed toward the new
church.
The first meeting of the Nebraska State
Teachers' association was held at Brown
vtlle October lli, 1 Sfi7. Robert W. Furnas was
president. Teachers attending this conven
tion and who attended the Brownville meet
in;? 50 years ago are requested to notlfey the
registrar at headquarters, Rome hotel.
Brillhart Has Scheme to
Beat Kaiser's U-Boats
Jesse T. Brillhart, employed by the
Metropolitan Water board, has ap
plied Sot patents on a "barage screen
or camouflage," which , he declares
will obscure vessels at sea, making
.them immune from German U-boats.
The invention relates to a defensive
screen for sea-going vessels and has
for its object to provide a means for
obscuring the vijw of vessels at s$a,
the element causing obscuration and
having the same appearance as the
water.
The invention consists of the novel
construction, combination and ar
rangement of parts that" would over
an entire vessel.- Brillhart resides at
1332 South Twenty-first street.
i'lninllilii:BHiii:liliiiitIiiliilIi'illiil:ll'1'i:lll:l'l,i'iIli:ili'li!SiiiiSl', 'iiiii.iS' l-s: ::trs'i,,a;i:lSnl;;a,l ':a : : iiiuiiiiuiiiiuitiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiliiiiiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinit
$4.8b
$4.89
I $2.89
NO
Exchanges.
Approvals.
Deliveries.
Part Pays. i
ITq lUrvrajfa sCmSF" TITO'S 8:30 A.M.
1508-1510 Douglas St
And Now for the Greatest
Thursday
The Big
Event
Begins.
$2.89
loose Saile rf 1
917
The sails are all set, the immense
stocks arranged, and tomorrow morning
the one dominating Blouse sale of the
year will start pouring out most extraor
dinary bargains to Omaha women. This
store's reputation for Blouse values is
sufficient cause to pack this great Blouse
shop to capacity.!
Georgette Crepes
Crepe de Chines
Pussy Willow
Taffetas
Novelties
Our policy of ever showing a complete
new stock for each seasonable period of
the year, calls for drastic measures to
reduce our stock of Blouses in order to
make room for Holiday stocks now in the
hands of transportation companies. Our
necessity is your great opportunity.
4,600 Blouses Must Be Sold to Make Room for Immense Holiday
Shipments Which Will Begin to Arrive During the Next Week
From White, Flesh, Maize and other delicate, shades to all the much-
favored Suit Shades, your Blouse Needs can be perfectly cared for in
this one remarkable sale. Eight now is the Blouse Buying Period of the
Season. Your opportunity for rare economizing.
Three great lots have been arranged for the first day's selling. To
attempt description of the Blouses would be impossible it is sufficient
to say every Blouse is a regular stock Blouse, and that assures you of
beauty and individuality unsurpassed.
f $3.50, $3.95, and $4.50
! BLOUSES
I Will Be Sold at
S9
$5.00, $5.95 and $6.50
BLOUSES
Will Be Sold at
3!.89
$6.95, $7.50 and $8.75 t
BLOUSES !
Will Be Sold at !
$4
891
I These prices are doubly attractive because reductions are based on out well recognized low prices.
No job lots, special purchase or riddance of odds and ends, but a reduction of our beautiful and select ?
I regular stock., l
' '., p
..rtiiiiiiiituiuii'iiiiiiiiir.iiii'ii.ii'irir'iiiriiHiiiiiirii i i i i i,i i i iimii nrrniiiiii i ffc.i mi i i i i i in i i i in nun inn i i i n inn.
One-Minute
Store JTalk
Openly admitting: Great
er Nebraska clothes su
premacy a customer said:
"I tried to duplicate
thi suit for which 1
paid $60 last year at
a custom tailor',
but the price today
it $85. Here's the
identical worsted and
your price it only
$33,001"
Every day we demon
strate this store's ability
to outclass the
custom tailor on
his own ground
are you ready
to save the difference?
Q
Supreme Showing of
America's Finest
uality Clothes
P ARTICULAR Men, an entirely new,
fine clothes service awaits you at this
greater store today. The top notch produc
tions very finest goods made from a
score of strictly high-class clothes makers.
jt -
Style Headquarters in every tense of the
term; all the new Society Brand, Fashion
Park clothes, Hickcy-Freeman quality
clothes, "Bonavcstis" London overcoats,
L. Adler ffros., Levy Bros., Rochester and
many others.
. -
Cosmopolitan Exhibit of
Overcoats
One of our great floors devoted exclu
sively to overcoats, revealing the west's most
remarkably complete showing of new models.
"Trench"1 Overcoats in all belted variations.
Motor Coats, Fur Collar Coats, Ulsters, Ulster
ettes, London-made Great Coats, Silk Lined
Chesterfields; finest imported weaves. Carr
Meltons, Kerseys, Vicunas, Warumbo end
less range of patterns, in novelty weaves and
colors, at '
$15, $20, $25, $30, $35, $40
VERY FINEST OVERCOATS
$50. S6Q. 875. $100
Amazing Display of
Men's Fall Suits
With thousands to choose from, every man is
enabled to find what he wants here. An entire floor
of fine suits for men and young men. Belted Military
styles, belt back styles, English sacks, business men's
smart styles or distinguished conservative models.
Immense range of special sizes for hard-to-fit men
$15, $20, $25, $30, $35, $40
Men's Furnishing Goods Headquarters
Every section of this business is expanding, growing moip efficient, Bhbwing larger and ever
y ..... ... i . i -1 i.i : T : ....I' .nh.n main f Iaav
V HKe 11. C urniBIUIUfc guuua owv-n. vuwiQ iiioiii jaw..
larger selections. Nothing in the west
Manhkttan,
Bates-Street,
Yorke Shirts
Vassar, Superior,
Duofold and
Winsted Underwear
Hurler and Arnold
Glore Grip
Shoe for Men'
Stetson, C. A Kn
Borsalino and
Other Fin Hats
MEN'S SWEATERS MOST COMPLETE SHOWING IN NEBRASKA
SEE OUR
WINDOW
TODAY.
- ' " --rs'fTf fiiaaar
i now
COMPARE
OUR VALUES
ALWAYS.
CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
.
Hgjs liLiiiil!! L
SAVE YOUR BREAD
m
3f
t3
Pa
Unless we save food, we cannot win this war.
This is no exaggeration, but a plain statement
of fact. ' '
The time has come for every American home
io show where it stands not by words, but by
deeds. k
v Let The Bee show you how your home can
help. Write today for free "War Cook Book."
Are You a Saver or a Waster?
This book will tell you how to save food, save
money, eat more cheaply and eat right.
It tells you exactly what your countiy asks of
you, and exactly how to do it, without sacrifice to
yourself.
It contains numerous new recipes and timely
war suggestions.
USE THIS COUPON AND SAVE TIME
m
THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU
Washington, D. C.
Enclosed find a 2-cent staAp, for which you will please
send me, entirely free, a copy of "The War Cook Book."
Name
Street Address
City. Stated
When Buying Advertised Goods
Say You Read of Them in The Bee
(TttTTTttTttwttTtttTtTTTt
at
Clear, Peachy Skin
Awaits Anyone Who
Drinks Hot Water
fait helpa us look and feel
clean, tweet, fresh, .
t Say an inside bath, before break-
Sparkling and vivacious merry,
bright, alert a good, clear skin and
a natural, rosy, healthy complexion
are assured only by pure blood. If
only every man and woman could be
induced to adopt the morning inside
bath, what a gratifying change would
take place. Instead of the thousands
of - sickly, anaemic-looking men,
women and girls, with pasty or mud
dy complexions; instead of the multi
tudesf "nerve wrecks," "rundown,
"brain fags" 1 and pessimists we
should see a virile, optimistic throng
of rosy-cheeked people everywhere.
An inside bath is had by drinking
each morning, before breakfast, a
glass of real hot water with a tea
spoonful of limestone phosphate in
it to wash from the stomach, liver,
kidneys and ten yards of bowels the
previous day's indigestible waste,
sour fermentations and poisons, thus
:leansing, sweetening and refreshen
mg tnc entire alimentary canal oe
fore putting more food into ths
stomach.
. Those subject to sick headache.
biliousness, nasty breath, rheumatism,
colds; ana particularly those wno
have a pallid sallow complexion and
who are constipated very often,- are
urged to obtain a quarter nound of
limestone phosphate at the drag
store which , will cost but a trifle,
but is sufficient to demonstrate the
quick and remarkable change in both
health and appearance, awaiting
those who practice internal sani
tation. We must remember that
inside cleanliness is more important
than outside, because the skin does
not absorb impurities to contaminate
the blood while, the pores in thf
thirty feet of bowels do.Adv,