Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 04, 1918, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1HK iJEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1U18.
l i lit dhd-i
SAV
? CAMPAIGN IN U. S.
Declares Children Next to So!
: diers in Importance to Na
i tion; Constitute One
Third of Population.
Washington, April 3 President
Wilson today gave hearty approval to
the plan of the children's bureau for
Waking thesecond year of the war a
''children's year" at home by an edu
jtational campaign which it is hoped
fvill reduce at least one-third of the
annual total of 300,000 preventable
deaths among children less than five
fears old.
"Next to the duty of doing every
thing possible for the soldier at the
front," President Wilson said, "there
jtould be,-it seems to me, no more pa
triotic duty than that of protecting the
children."
President Wilson's, letter, addressed
o Secretary Wilson, who transmitted
t to Miss Julia Lathrop, head of the
Ithildren's bureau follows:
"Next to the duty of doing every
thing possible for the soldiers at the
front, there could be, it seems to me,
no more patriotic duty than that of
protecting the children, who consti
tute one-third of our population.
Success In England.
"The success of the efforts made
In England in behalf cf the children
is evidenced by the fact that the in
fant death rate in England for the sec
end year of the war was the lowest
in her history. Attention is now be
ing given to education and labor con
ditions for children by the legislatures
both France and England, show
, ing that the conviction among the
allies is that the protection of child
hood is essential to winning the war.
V"I am very glad that the same
processes are being set afoot in this
country and I heartily approve the
plan of the children's bureau and the
woman's committee of the Council of
National Defense for making the sec
ond year of the war o united activ
ity on behalf of children and in that
sense a children's year.
"I trust that the year will not only
se"e, the goal reached of saving 100,000
lives of infants and young children,
but that the work may so success
fully develop as to set up certain ir
reducible minimum standards for
health, education and work of the
American child."
MEMBER OF WELL
-KNOWN FAMILY IS
: CALLED BY DEATH
Mrs. Hugh Myers, wife of Hugh f ounn do . . - - said
Myers, well known.Omaha attorney tuauy - ..u o esides at 3322
died Tuesday night in BirchmontTMrs. Arch Allen, or
Mm fvrs had been in del
licate health for several years and
pioneers of Nebraska. Benjamin Itt- sucn wiae 7"'cr.rie t to afi
V Z- tu aa cveral vears suffering, -will be, of interest w
rer, oci xauit., ".v.- - ei.iT1, vp ef from stomacu
ago.
education at Hillsdale unwersity,
Mich.
A,Tned to Mr. Myers in kV ne?- were so unstrung
1889. Two daughters were born to
them
band, her mother, Mrs. Ella A. Itt-
j. m- ea on my owiui . " . f
Mrs V ed Baumeister of Council often had dizzy spells and violent
Bluff,' . ...... headaches and J mwh "gjg
IMrs. Ella A: lttner will De unapie io at times ma. " - pon.
in
arrive here
funeral.
time to attend the
ill 1.11 A
Funeral services will De iieia at time, ana aiuiuuKn ;:i0,
2:30 o'cWC' Thursday afternoon in treatment and too many, differtnt
. the. Brailey & Dorrance s cnapei,
interment will be in a rece
jioiilt in Forest Lawn cemetery.
'
Hear From Former Cudahyv.
Man Now in South Africa
Armour & Co. have received a let
ter from a former, employe, Sava
Milosavlevich, who is fighting Ger
mans in South Africa, with the Brit
ish expeditionary forces, which he
joined soon after the war started.
Through friends heret he heard of
the Armour , Soldiers' fend Sailors
Comfort i ub, which keeps all of the
former employes who are in service
tupplied with sweaters, socks, caps,
imokes, etc., and asked to have his
aamed placed on the list.
"We had lost track of him,' said
Manager R. C. Howe, "and was glad
ta get the letter and put him on the
list."
k Another former employe is sta
tioned in Santo Domingo.
Net Satisfied, Says E. 0. M&y
field, With Way Bids Are
Handled ; Commissioner
Makes Statement.
E. O. May field, member' of the
board of commissioners of state insti
tutions, has recently submitted a set
of resolutions to the chairman of the
board outlining the general dissatis
faction of bidders who have figured
and submitted bids for supplies to the
School for the Deaf, a state institu
tion in Omaha.
Mr. May field states that, heretofore,
where competitive bids have corre
sponded, it has been customary for
the local board to give preference to
a local bidder, all things being equal,
and in this way stimulate as much
of this business at home as possible.
While this "location rule" seems
practical to a degree, it does more to
restrain trade than stimulate it. ac
cording -to Mr. Mayfield, insofar as
the letting of contracts for the va
rious state institutions, four of which
are located in Lincoln, is concerned.
Under this rule the Omaha bidder
has to content himself with the busi
ness from the one institution with
littfe or no chance to obtain any of
the out-of-town contracts m view of
the close margin on whidi supplies
are figured, resulting invariably in a
number of tic bids. ,
In his resolution Mr. Mayfield sug
gests the flipping of, a coin to decide,
where corresponding bids exist, in
place of the old "location rule. This
would eliminate all prefcrnces and
give all bidders an equal opportunity
to submit bids for supplies for the
various state institutions, he says.
'Hundred Indians Here
Seeking Federal Aid
Nearly 100 Thurston county In
dians are in Omaha this week for the
purpose of finding out if they are to
be granted 40 acres of Nebraska land
bv the government. Their case is be
ing heard by Judge Woodrough m
federal court, ft involves some tech
nical points in-law relating to In
dians and goveremetrtaljai
OMAHA WOMAN
GIVESACCOUNTOF
HER EXPERIENCE
Former Hospital Nurse Tells
of Recovery; Gams
Twelve Pounds
'"Miave just finished taking my
fourth bottle of Taniac wiu
Allen formerly lived in Evansville,
Ina?. and was at one time a nurse in
had undergone three operations. ma., " w ""trr cjty. Her state
P Mrs. Myers was born in Omaha and a hospital near tha onW
as a member, of the lttner tami y, mwn, v xeiieving
suffering, wm y.VJwn inrnach
who are seeking relief from stomacn
She-received ner eariy scnooi.8 "uu"mc 7 r nuine her statement,
Omaha and competed a university symptoms Continuing .
Mrs. Alien sam. naZy,
"I- had suiierea nui" d.
, .t . tr m T was scarcely more
She was a member of the Kappa troume unm n't the strength
Kappa Gamma sorority of the Omaha than a frame , d jftX
My nerves were so unstrung that I
couldn't even raise a saucer from
r, ulr.Li. ,;i, f mv hand trembling
i tne lauic wiwium" j .
Ss. Myers is survived by her hus- like a leaf. My food lyjur-
ea on uj . ",,'i 7-.A; f
it no- longer. Sometimes 1 was con
fined to my bed for two weeks at a
i a thmicrn i I tuc ut-tu
OLD THEATER
Famous Playhouse to
Become Large Garage.
NOW HASBEEN
Another landmark has gone.
The Krug theater has jdined the
long procession of things that were.
This old-time favorite amusement
resort, which has gone through so
many changes and vicissitudes, is to
become an ordinary huge garage for
the housing of big and little autow.
For sorpe time the old Krug thea
ter at Fourteenth and Harney streets
had been piactically idle and has
watched the playhouses multiply in
Omaha during the last few years.
Veur nlavhotises have been comincr
along in Omaha for some years, butj
.was when some of the best shows
htre played there. Theft it was the
Trocadero, at one time a burlesque
house, at another and various times
it housed stock companies. ' Many
boxing matches, wrestling matches
and minstrel shows held forth there.
At one time when it was playing
to melo-drama' thrillers it was about
the best patronized house in the city,
as it had an immense following for
this class of shows.
But now the carpenters and the
Ul llwiciycis ailU lilt oiujhiio oiv
traiorming it from a hous of art
)o a garage for auto - I
nf medicines. 1 Kept geiung
. .
a receiving worse in place 01 Deuer.
i t f j i. .. . a - -on i
"When l ursi ran -was
nursing in a hospital near Evans
ville, Indiana. Many 01 oui .."
1..J ;f Dn cnfcossf nllv for stom-
ach trouble and indigestion that 1 de
cided to try it, too. Ana i ih v-
tainly very glad I did, for it is the
only thing that ever reached the seat
of my trouble. I felt greatly relieved
while taking my first bottle. Soon the
gas stopped forming on my stomach
and I could eat all I wanted without
any bad effects from it. My neau
aches and dizzy spells gradually wore
away and I kept gaining m weight
and strength right along. I finished
my fourth bottle ieenng wen u
strong and found that I had actually
gained welv pounds. My nerves are
in better shape than they liave ever
been. I sleep like a baby every night
and get up in the mornings thorough
ly rested and refreshed. In fact, I
feel fine all the time now and can do
all my housework without the least
trouble. Tanlac is by far the grand
est medicine I have ever tried and I
am glad to tell everybody about it."
Indigestion1 is not only one of the
most distressing, but one of the most
prevalent of all diseases. It is also
one (rfthe most difficult to treat and
has baffled the medical profession
for years, the most skilled specialists
being unable to cope with it success
fully. Tanlac, the celebrated medicine,
which has proyn of such great bene
,fit to those suffering from this trou
ble, contains certain medicinal prop
erties, which, being purely vegetable,
are rapidly taken up by the system,
thereby stimulating the appetite and
aiding digestion by assisting the
stomach in converting the food into
nourishing elements that build up
tissue and nerve force.
Tanlac is sold in Omaha by Sher
man & McUonnell Drug L-ompany,
corner 16th and Dodge streets; Owl
Drug Co., 16th and Harney streeto;
Harvard Pharmacy, 24th and Farnam
streets; Northeast corner 19tn and
Farnam ctrppta. and West End Phar
macy, 49th and Dodge streets, u'ndeW
th personal direction oi a special
Tanlac representative. Adv.
EIL-ANS
Ahsnliitfilv Removes
fndigestion. Druggists,
refund money n it tans. - oc
iggsf-st J
Till
Bousing Ualues ff
For Thursday
York to sc. wmm -
s purcnase y i i n,
ay, in many V MA
LI 1 1 '
Hm rtnvarmnl vpnrpapnt.nt.ivft mndft n snppial iournev to Ne
cure these Splendid Blouses, and made such an advantageou
that we will be able to sell these superb models, here on Thursd;
. A It II 1 II II Ml l Jl.- 1J .1
instances tor less than tne cost oi tne suk oy me yaru wuay.
Samples and Surplus Stocks
From Some of New York's Best Makers
This is one of our famous Blouse Sales and you will do welMo come
prepared to buy several for immediate future as well as present needs.
Georgette Crepes, Tub Silks, Crepe de Chines,
Washable Satins and Beautiful Nets
ALL HIGH COLORS, such as Soldier Blue, Orchid, Rose, Coral, Peach,
Nile, Turquoise, Ruby, Pearl, Gray, White, Flesh and". Suit shades.
$2.1
.9
Extra quality Crepe de
Chine Blousea, jn hand em
broideredmodel ; others lace
. trimmed, some with two-in-ohe
collars, to be worn low
of high neck; also Georgette
Crepe Blouses with lace
trimmed fichus. A good as
sortment of Tub Silks in this
lot also.
$2.89
Crepe de Chines, Georg
ettes and Plain Silks, lace
trimmed" and embroidered
models; semi-tailored styles;
two-in-one collars; high or
low necks, lace - trimmed
fichus, also beaded models
and some with dainty frills.
A very fascinating showing
at this price.
$5.89
Extremely handsome
Dress Blouses, some of them
trimmed with real Filet
laces, others in beautiful
beaded models; hand em
broidered . models, some Ve
nise lad-trimmed Blouses.
Some dark Suit Blouses. :n
this lot. These are some " of
the most beautiful Blouses
that you ever saw, at $5.89.
Extra Salespeople and Extra Tables
Second Floor
Sale Starts
Promptly at 8:30
Sale Starts
Promptly at 8:30
Trimming
Sii
This Pinned - On
Millinery Service
Gives every woman the oppor
tunity to exercise her own choice
in the Hat and trimmings.
MANY WOMEN like to have
a voice in the selection of the
trimming to be used on their Hats,
and to make this easy of accom.
plishment as possible, we origi
nated this Pin-On-Trim Service a
few months ago.
We select shapes, scores of thejn, and then our experts
pin on the trimmings they think most; appropriate.
These are displayed on tables in the Millinery Department,
with a ticket on each Hat, showing the price of the shape and
each bit of trim if you desire to make a change, you simply add
the price of .another trim and deduct the price of the old, and
when you have it the way you want it, take it home with you and
sew on the trimmings. ,
men you nave me very nai
that you want, with the very trim
mings that you want, you save a
tidy little sum by sewing the trim
mings on yourself.
You Also Get Our Ideas an
Expert Trims
We are now showing Ribbon
Hats, Flower Hats and many
with Quill Trims all exception
ally fascinating.
Second Floor
"BILLIKEN"
Shoes
Best for Children
Our Stock is Complete
Right Now
SUMMER FOOTWEAR
for little folk should be
absolutely correct and
comfortable. Jn Billi
ken Shoes we have the
best Footwear for 'chil
dren that we know of. '
No nails to cut or tear
little feet no lumps to
annoy made correct in
shape and size, tbfit
. well to present good
style with lasting satis
faction and ,keep the
youngsters happy.
The Low Style for Spring and
Summer Are Ready
We exercise extreme care to
fit children's Shoes our sales
people are trained especially for
this branch of our business.
Main Floor, Rea
Books of Gripping Interest
About the
Great
War
& TP raw
biunutmiBJuo
.Gunner Depew, by himself........ $1.50
F!rt Call, by Empcy $1.50
Private Peat, by H. R. Peat ; . ..$1.50
Under Fire, by Henri Barbusse $1.50
Wounded and Prisoner of War. $1.25
Letter to the Mother of a Soldier, by Wright. $1.00
Cavalry of the Cloud, by "Contact" 1 .$1.25
Cruiader in France, by Belmont $1.50
Yankee in the Trenches, by Holmes J $1.35
Holding the Line, by Baldwin . .$1.50
Over the Top, by Empey .$1.50
I Accuse, by a German ' 60c
Pan-Germanism, by Roland G. Usher ,60c
Chaland of Future, by Roland G. Usher ......60e
Germany, the Next Republic, by Ackerman 60c
Evidence in Case, by Beck '....60c
Kitchener' Mob, by Hall 60c
My Home in Field of Honour, by Huard . . ; 60c
Firt Hundred Thousand, by Dan Hay ... i . .'f .......... .60c
Great Push, by Patrick MacGill ...,60c
Red Horizon, by Patrick MacGill .60c
Battle of Somme, by John Buchan ..60c
Fighting in Flanders, b E. A. Powell ..60c
Yellow Dove, by Geo. Gibbs 60c
REMEMBER
Saturday. April 6th
Starts the
Third Liberty Loan
' v -
bmim Stores
...... y
Store Opens at 8:30
and Closes at 6:00
EVERY DAY