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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1918)
Lac THE bkk: UM THURSDAY, JUNE IS, 1915. SOUTH SIDE HEAVY CATTLE PRICE MAKES NEW HIGH RECORD Nineteen Hereford Steers Sell for $17.80 Per Hundred; Previous Mark Was $17.75. . A new record price for heavy cattle , was established on the South Side market Wednesday when the com mission firm of Donahue, Randall & Co. sold a load of 19 Hereford steers. . averaging 1,460 pounds, and shipped by Zwiener Brothers, Pleasanton, Neb., to the packers for $17.80 per .100 pounds. The previous record for this grade of cattle was $1775. ; Zwiener Brothers are widely known among stockmen as breeders of pure bred , Hereford cattle. -Their cattle have topped the Omaha market for the Jast 20 years. Enlisting Men Are Honor f - Guests at a Bank Picnic Max H. Vance and Alvin E. Nelson of the Stock Yards National bank, who will leave to enter war services, were honor guests at the annual pic nic of bank officials and employes and their families at Elmwood park Wed nesday night. . Mr. Vance has enlisted in the navy, and Mr. Nelson in the army. Each was presented with a gold wrist watch by their fellow workers in the bank. There were SO people present, and the evening was spent in games and ' music, followed by a bountiful picnic dinner. Special Serviec for The Mothers of Soldiers A special service for the mothers of soldiers will be held at the South Side Christian church Sunday, June 30. " Special committees have been ap pointed to arrange for the service. The music will be in charge of A. E. Carter and Misses Florence Brooker ; and Bessie Wilson. The committee ' in charge of decorations is Mesdames ' Earl Hodgen, N. R. Bryson, S. C. r Shrigley, Misse.s Ruby Wilson and " Beulah Carter, and Mr. James Shain s holtz. . Soldier Comes Home to ; .c Marry South Side Girl ' Edwin C. Goddard and Miss Maud , Edwin C. Goddard and Miss Maud Lee I were married by Rev. F. A. Ellis, at si parsonage Monday. The groom is ' stationed with the field artillery at . Camp Cody, Deming. N. M. Mrs. Goddard will make her home at 4404 - South Thirteenth street while her husband is in the service. South Side Brevities 11 William J. Martin. on of William T. Mar $ tin. 8816 T street, has joined the coaat ar i tillery and gone to Fort Logan, Colo. i Tha . Ladles' Aid 'society of St. Luke's i Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mr. R.'P. Bowers, 2419 A street, Thursday afternoon, at 2 o'clock Mrs. Walter Brandes, sister of Captain ' Various of the South Side police, is re ported to be critically ill in Los Angeles, where aha went about a month ago. Her husband arrived at the bedside Saturday, but was not recognized by his wife, who has been unconscious for several days. Father Jonattis, who recently returned ' from Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Ky., where he completed a training course for army chaplains, lert Tuesday mgni iut Camp Funston. He has been rector of St. Anthony's Catholic church, South Side, for several years, and is well known in Ne braska. Ho received his commission as firat lieutenant at Camp Taylor, and will re main at Camp Funston until called for over seas duty. A DoSstJlllilil Starting Thursday at 8:30 A. M. Sharp , Most sensational in point of value-giving 1 100 BEAUTIFUL BLOUSES Br'iej City News Have Bool Print l-N Beaooo Fresm Eltx Fans. IS. Burgess-Granden Co. Shoe Man Visits Omaha Sol Panor of Des Moines, head of the Panor chain of shoe stores, is In the city on a business deal. Sparks Cautj Blaie Sparks from :. passing locomotive started a blaze at the plant of the Omaha Auto Body company. 1529 She.man avenue, at noon Wednesday. Prudent saving In war tlmea la ft hostage for opportunities -of peace. Play sate by starting ac account with Nebraska Savings A Loan Ass n. 211 & 18th St tl to $5. COO received. Sane Fourth Meeting The Cham ber of Commerce will participate in the meeting called by Mayor Smith Thursday to make plans for a safe and sane celebration of the Fourth of July in Omaha. Many Enlist In Navy Nearly 800 men have enlisted in the navy al ready this month. Drafted men who can obtain release from their exemp tion boards are eligible for enlistment and men more than 35 years of age are being accepted for special work. Pledge Support The executive committee of the Chamber of Com merce adopted a resolution express ing confidence in the patriotism and ! loyalty of the Nebraska State Council of Defense and pledged the council its support in stamping out disloyalty. New Recruiting Sergeant Sergeant Compton, formerly in charge of re cruiting in Grand Island, has been transferred to Omaha, where he will have charge of street recruiting. He made a record at Grand Island last month, when he enlisted 116 men in the army. Graff Gets Raise E. U. Graff, former superintendent of Omaha schools, has been given an lucrease of $1,500 in salary by the Indianapo lis, Ind., Board of Education. Mr. Graff was given a three-year contract as superintendent of the Indianapolis schools at a salary cf $7,500. Visit Peters Mill tThe governing board of the Bureau of Publicity visited the plant of the M. C. Peters Mill company. This Is the second of a series of visits planned to Omaha industries. The firft was to the ag ricultural museum of the colonization department of the Union Pacific rail road. Trainmaster Goes to War H. C. Higgins, Northwestern trainmaster In Council Bluffs, has enlisted in the railroad contin."jnt of the govern ment service and has been commis sioned a captain. Captain Higgins has been instructed to report In New York City at the earliest possible date. Tan cock on West Front Lieut Montague Tancock, son of Dean J. A. Tancock, is seeing active service on the western front with the British Hoyal Flying corps, according to a let ter written by him to hh father, who is stationed at Fort Des Moines as chaplain of the Nebraska base hospi tal unit Tancock writes that he has been assigned to a fast scout machine. Fine fireplace goods at Sunderlands. Internally Injured When Knocked Oown by Motor Car Santos Bonocorso, 723 Pierce street, city laborer, was struck by an auto mobile, driven by C. W. Parker, 513 South Twenty-sixth street, Wednes day morning while crossing the street near Thirty-first and Harney. He suffered severe internal injuries and was taken to Lord Lister hospital. Parker was taken to the police sta tion. Witnesses of the accident who were working near by complained to the police that the "intersection of Thirty-first and Harney streets is dan gerous and automobiles constantly speed .by there." Pioneers Meet Thursday. Douglas County Association of Nebraska Pioneers will meet Thurs day at 2 o'clock in the county com missioners' room in he court house. Judge Charges Record Price for Cake of Ice K. E. Keller, 19 years old. 2025 North Twentieth street, was fined $1 and costs in plice court Wednes day morning on a charge of stealing a 75-pound chunk of ice from the Northwestern railroad ice house. Most extraordinary in 700 Georgette Blouses; 300 Crepe de Chine Blouses; 100 Pussy Willow Blouses "DEAUTIFUL beaded and embroidered effects; large collars, roll col-' " ' ' lars and new round neck creations. Taken all in all this store has surpassed its best past effort in collecting Blouses of such extreme , beauty to be offered for so little money. . - BLIND WORKERS MEET IN OMAHA IN CONVENTION " Forty Delegates Assemble at Hotel Rome; Report on Ap propriation Made by State. Forty delegates are in Omaha at tending the state convention of the Workers for the Blind, at the Hotel Rome. Nearly all of these are blind. Some are entirely blind while others have enough eyesight to distinguish lightirom darkness. The convention sessions are filled with brightness. The blind are a cheerful people. At the Wednesday morning session, Lyle A. Harris pre sided. N. C. Abbott, superintendent of the state institution for the blind at Ne braska City, made a report of the use made of an appropriation of $3,000 made by the last legislature to assist the blind people in Nebraska. A survey had been made previously, showing that there are about 500 We're Just As Particular As You About Tires 0 ,UR customers are thrifty, calculating fellows who know tireup-keep costs. Believe lis, we've looked into this tire proposition from top to bottom. Take our advice and buy Diamonds, the one best buy on the market The Dia monds we have sold our customers axe running farther, giving less trouble, and costing less in the end than any other tires we k:ow. Put a Diamond Tube In a Diamond cas ing and you have the ideal tire equipment LININGER IMPLEMENT CO. OMAHA TIRE REPAIR CO. SQUEEGEEgjBffD rm s Qrkm 21 scope of assortments Thoroughly Worth From $7.50 to $ 10 Your Unrestricted Choice STARTING THURSDAY ONLY t A NOTHER Julius Orkin Blouse Sale which challenges all rivals. Hun dreds of practical, beautiful Blouses, ac , quired by special purchases and selected from our regular stocks, comprise this immense sale group. Flesh, White, Rose, Coral, Peach, Belgian, French and Marine Blue. Beige, Sand, Maize, Turquoise, Cherry, Gray. blind persons in Nebraska nearly all of whom are self-supporting or trying to fit themselves for self-support The small fund appropriated by the legislature is to be loaned or given to needy blind persons to help them toward self-support. Ut this sum, $205 has been given to help deserv intr cases, and $910 has been loaned. Mrs. E. C Cook, spoke on "Home Economics, declaring that "blind women can do all kinds of housework as well as those who see, after they become accustomed to the location of things in a house. I know blind women who make the best of bread and the daintiest of desserts. A vocal solo by Frank Teddalar of Havelock was feature of the morn inar session. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon the delegates took a street car for Lake Manawa, where they had luncheon and enjoyed the various amusements, boating, bathing, etc. $10,000 Suit Is Result of Auto and Gas Bike Crash Oscar Johansen, in a petition filed in district court Tuesday, asks $10, 225 damages from Frank S. Fiale. as a result of a collision alleged to have occurred between Johansen motorcycle and Fiale's automobile on May 5 at Forty-ninth and Dodge streets. Johansen alleges that Fiale ran into his motorcycle, was driving on the wrong side of the street and was speeding. He alleges that he was permanently injured in the ac cident. Tread Red Sides TIRES I 1508-1510 Douglas St. r gin- i m 1 IP t iX One-Minute Store Talk "Don't dope nature, us Datura's dope," said n Oma ha physician, while buying a skeleton-lined suit here. "Bodily comfort is the first thing needed for per sonal efficiency. Stuffy clothes in summer are just as bad for a man as the other extreme in winter." What's pood for "Dr. Good" is pood for you. CwrrWtrtud ion BisoisjHr KuKjdCothe fa m Superb Summer Suits Halfor (hQr (hq (hqr (bin d i r Quarter or Full Lined p40 yOU tpOO pqJ $ JD Skeleton Lined Palm Beach, Mohair and Tropical Worsted Suits All Sizes for Men J y ( fn (JC)'fZ Special Models for - : and Young Men plv LU p 6o Every Type of Man SEE OUR WINDOWS TODAY W afaT r LIIIE GLAlrf! "SHACKLED" Not a "wronged gal" story. 1 Not a "vampire wench" affair but the story of a real woman who scatters to the winds prejudice, slander, calumny, by the force , of her noble nature and sterling character, A loyal woman who fights the merciless puppets of society to save those she loves, and whose love is her reward. A Paralla Play TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Today to Saturday 4 i&DOUGI Presena Men. Demand Quality in Summer Clothes THERE'S NO COMFORT WITHOUT IT THAT'S WHY WE SAY DON'T OVERLOOK . Brandegee Kincaid Clothes rpHEY'RE cool comfort and perfect freedom of action, with style and fabrics correct and in good taste to the very last detail, plus the lasting s a t i s f a c t i o n that only quality can give. ,.:'" ' ' ' , . Whether you want Summer Clothes for strenuous or for ' .easy, outdoor recreation, or for just "lazing around" in sold comfort,- we have them.7 Men's and Young Men's Clothes Entire Second Floor Main -CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND I'lIOTOl'LAVH IN A Paralta Flay TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Last Times Today HARfl "THE TIGER MAN" n Hunan maiiiMliiiu WILLIAM SrWl tailored to give Building and Annas. 1 COMPARE OUR VALUES ' ALWAYS WOMEN. AMIStMKNTS. EMPRESS NEW SHOW TODAY No Man's Land TENSE DRAMATIC PLAYLET SergeanTFraser Let or the 13th Battalion Black Watch Royal Highlanders. Front Line Trench Many Electrical Effects, Artistically Stared. LOWRY'S DOG5 Acme of Canine Intellifence, A Treat (or the Kiddles. DONALD DUNN In "Fllllnf a Disappointment.'' ELIZABETH OTTO j I Musical Milestone. -V. Photoplay Profram- VIOLA DANA in "RIDERS OF THE NIGHT." LAKEVIEW PARK Omaha's Greatest Attraction. Dancing Every Evening CARL LAMP'S JAZZ BAND One Night Only, Thursday, ine 15. Grand Prix Walts Contest for Priara. irscooL ; Bathing, Boating, Dancing MANAWA PARK PHOTOPLAYS. Muse FRANK KEENAN IN LOADED DICE" FRIDAY Constance Talmadge SuStiiifc it wawninw Sia Meieeiaimwii' ii.iiiwitieiojiiJaitiiei imt moni-owilw- 2wm LOTHROP " 24th and othropi GEORGE WALSH, in "THE PRIDE OF NEW YORK." G-R-N-A-D 16th and nn7 J. WARREN KERRIGAN, in "THE TURN OF A CARD" HAMILTON saj- THE SUBMARINE EYE." . , Friday and Saturday, -"OVER THERE." ULAKE SGH001 FOR DOYS LAKEWOOD, N. J. rjumoiff irinioQ from July to October., ttftpM) premratlon for college fot - bort wlsblog to enter government rtce. Military Uniutag bf experts, horxeiwrlt riding, land tnd water ixirti. tr you hare a sun from II to Vs tm will be interested in our new booklet 4ddrew ufrtttrv When Writing to Our Adrertiien Mention Seeing it in' Th Be v f "i J ii V )!,:'