THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1918. WHISKY MAY BE USED AS A CURE FOR INFLUENZA x City Commissioners Vote to Give Confiscated "Booze" to Hospitals for Use in Combating Disease. Do you feel that old, pre-prohibi-v tion 'feeling coming on? Do you long for a good stiff drink of whisky? Then, listen! Just call on City Health Commissioner Manning and tell 'im you feel the "flu" coming on, and he'll give you a bottle of whisky. Hold on, read a little farther. This is what he would do if be undertook to do all that four of the city commissioners voted to let him do Friday morning. Commissioners Zimman, Falconer, Butler and Ure voted to release all the liquor held impounded in the city jail, for life of individual! or hospitals in figh ing the "flu." Commissioners Smith, Towl and Ringer voted against it as illegal. Commissioner Zimman made a speech in defense of the action and even admitted that he had violated the strict letter of the law recently in procuring a little whisky for the sick child of a man who appealed to him. "I technically violated the law," li p vr! a i iimrl "Mpr T am Arrpcf me, if you like." Dut nobody arrested him and the measure was carried. But will Dr. Manning give out whisky to individuals who complain of feeling the "flu" coming on? He will not. In loud and ringing tones he answered: ( "This whisky is for the use of hospitals only. Not a single, soli tary exception will be made in that, you may be sure. , So the thirsty need not call and try to stall. There is nothing doing. F. J. Ramey Back on the Job; "Flu" Prevents Departure F. J. Ramey Who was to have left for Camp Kearny last Monday, but whose departure was deferred on ac count of the "flu," is back at his old job at tle Wellington Inn, and will stay there until he receives further orders. When Mr. Ramey was called into the service, the Wellington Inn com pany presented him with a fine gold further showed his appreciation of (his services by giving him a beauti ful gold identification ring. Capitol Lodge Calls Off DinnerSet for Monday In compliance with the regulation of the State Board of Health and city physician Capitol lodge, No. 3, A. F. & A. M., has postponed its regular Btonthly dinner scheduled for Monday evening, October 28. Members will please take notice. SOME NEW UICTOR RECORDS Will Cheer You . Immensely Here are some dandies No. 18439 Baby's Prayer at Twilight ; PRICE 85c No. 18333 Over There PRICE 85c No. 18479 My Belgian Rose PRICE 85c No. 64729 Darling Nellie Gray PRICE $1.00 No. 18462 I'm Sorry I Made You Cry PRICE 85c No. 18429 ( Dixie Volunteers PRICE 85c ' No. 35663 Missouri Waltz PRICE $1.35 No. 64741 Send Me Away With a Smile PRICE $1.00 MICHEL'S Corner 15th and Harney Douglas 1973 South Side Melady Asks Information About Fixed Prices on Hogs The great decline in the price, of hogs and the varying indifferent markets from the minimum price of $18, which was reported to have been fixed by an agreement between the food administratioin and the packers in Chicago, hat given rise to so much dissatisfaction that Gene Melady, of the commission firm of Melady Brothers, has written Louis D. Hall, specialist in marketing live stock ana meats in the bureau of markets in Washington, asking where to draw the line on hogs. ported to-'fiave been made between the food administration and the packers $18 was to be the minimum for October in Chicago for good hogs, giving the purchasers the op portunity to buy hogs at any price and calling the big end of them "common. According to reports yesterday from Chicago, good hogs sold there from ?14 to $14.75, With rough grades under. This gives the hog producers in this territory the impression that hogs would sell on the Omaha mar ket with the difference in freight be tween Omaha and Chicago, which would be 25 to SO cents lower than the minimum agreed upon in Chicago. Mr. Melady asks that the producer be consulted In the fixing of the price if he is expected to stay in the business of producing hogs, and that some information be sent the local market concerning the Axed price agreed upon for the month of No vember, if there is to be any limit placed on the price. Dealers on the Omaha Live Stock exchange say the conditions in the hog situation have never been as unsatisfactory as they are at present and feel that some arrangements ought to be mdae to protect the producer. South Side Brevities Mrs. Vincent Hravik of Sarpy county,( aiea Friday morning, Octobf ZS, In the' Lord Lister hospital of Spanish influenza, She la survived by her husband and aev eral children. Funeral arrangements have not been made. A. T. Strykef, leeretary and traffic Man airer of the Omaha Live Stock exchange, relurnnd Friday morning from a business trip of several days to St. Paul, Minn., and Sioux City, la. Real Winter Weather Strikes Nebraska as Rain Turns Into Snow A touch of real winter sent Oma hans shivering into their heavy overcoats Friday night. Cold rain, which was nearly snow, fell during the entire night, and the lowest temperatures recorded this fall pre vailed. Farmers about Gothenberg are rejoicing ''at 11 inches of havy snow within the last 24 hours. A winter wheat crop of great abundance is now assured, and ground plowed for spring sowing will be in the best of condition. Reports show an average temper ature of about 32 degrees above zero between Grand Island and North Platte. Union Pacific, West ern Union, and Postal Telegraph company connections are crippled between North Flatte ana urana Island, but clear wires have been maintained west of North Platte to Julesburg, Colo. Price of Potatoes at Retail is Cut by State Food Administration The fnorl administration has taken a fal out of the high prices on po tatoes, Food Administrator Wattles has held that effective at once, the re tail prioj of No. 1 red potatoes to consumers shall be 2J4 instead of 3y2 cents a pound. No. 1 white potatoes have been cut a cent a pound. The former price fixed at 2lA cents a- pound, present price is 24. A nrAr ha. rtppn marl fnr No. 2 potatoes itad the retail selling price fixed at lyi cents a pouna. These prices are to maintain with all retail dealers and at the stores. Brief City News Lighting Fixtures Burgess-Granden Have Root Print It Beacon Press. Dr. T. J. Schleler has resumed practice. Dr. Frank Shnon, sulta 713, Oma ha National Bank Bldsr. Shirley Much Better- Robert D. Shirley, owner of the Muse theater, who has been very ill with Influenza, is believed out of danger. Tom Enclish Has the "Flu" Tom English, chairman of local exemp tion board No. 3, iB ill at his home suffering from what is feared to be an attack of Spanish influenza. Held for Selling: Booze to Indians Lillian Clay, negro woman, plead ed not guilty in federal court 1 nday morning to the charge of selling liquor to Indians. She was bound over to the next term of court The Clay woman Is said to be married to an Indian man. G. V. Garloch Arrives in France Mrs. George W. Garloch, 3704 Haw thorne avenue, has Just received a cablegram announcing the safe ar rival of her husband in France. Mr. Garloch was appointed one of the six men to have charge of the con struction or permanent i. m. a. buildings in France and England, and Sailed from New York on Oc tober 7. Alleges Assaults William Jackson, negro, giving his - address as the Coming: hotel, was. arrested' and charged with assault and battery on the person of Miss Ella Davis, a ne gress employed at the Fonteneiie hotel. Miss Davis alleges that Jack son attacked her Friday morning as she was entering the hotel, and in flicted deep wounds on her person with a knife. . Telephone Man Has "Flu" "Wil liam J. Brazell, chief clerk to the general superintendent of plant of the Nebraska Telephone, was taken to the Clarkson hospital Thursday suffering from a mild attack of the Spanish tntuenza. His home is at Harper's Ferry, la While in Oma ha he has resided at 1230 Poppleton avenue. Before coming here a year ago he was district plant chief of the telephone company at Grand Island. ' FUmj JlrlQe (ood at pf&ttimS, COURT HOUSE MACHINE VENTS SPITEON CARDS Democrats Ignore Rules of the Game and Tear Down Mike Clark's Announcements as Sheriff Candidate. The democratic court house ma chine has placed a ban on Sheriff Clark's campaign cards and pla cards and is making a systematic effort to tear down Clark's cards as fast as posted. It has been custom ary to allow candidate's cards in the court house, but in their pre-?nt desperate state of mind, the demo crats arc ignoring all the rules of "civilized political warfare." Another bit f evidence of the workings of the democratic mind at this time may be observed and heard in the resort to epithets. "Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad," was a quota tion used ' a republican, while dis cussing th. situation. "The demo crats surely are mad. They are also disorganized. I never hearda man so berated by his own party as 'King' Arthur Mullen is just now being excoriated, they charge Mul len with mussing things up generally and they see nothing but defeat ahea.d. That is why they are mad at him. .They are running around in circles. I don't like to laugh at folks In distress, but it's .hard to keep from laughing at this situation." Last chance yesterday for electors to correct their registrations in the election commissioner's office for the election in November. Likewise, it was the last day for first voters, not already registered, to have their names duly recorded in time to vote Lt this election. The commissioner s office was open until 9 o'clock last night. ' Taxicabs Collide and Climb Steps at Harney Hotel Friday Night A taxicab, belonging to the Oma ha Taxi company, scaled six high stone steps and landed squarely in the entrance to the Harney hotel, Fourteenth and Harney streets, Fri day night when it collided with an other taxicab. The Omaha cab was driven by Bernard Lesley, 2534 Davenport street, and the other car by Dan Sullivan, driver for the Central Taxi company. According to Lesley, he was com ing west on Harney when, in an effort to avoid Sullivan's car, which was going south on Fourteenth street, he headed for the Harney hotel entrance. Sullivan's car veered around and was also part way up the steps. Sullivan had thre,e passengers in his car, but all escaped uninjured. Neither car was damaged badly. Lesley and Sullivan were arrested 1 and charged with wreckless driv ing. Discussion of Boundaries Starts Row in Conference Philadelphia, o'ct. 25. With all its aims clearly defined the confer- mii-p: nf tti Hmnrratir mirl-Rnrn- pean union, which have ,6een going on in Independence hall, came to an end today. Tomorrow a new liberty will be proclaimed here for these small oppressed nations, whose delegates declare that there must be an absolute freedom for all the races therein. ' That nothing short of an absolute plebiscite can be accepted for the nrw state vm declared todav bv Professor Masaryk, president of the council, who said there must dc a vital minority representation, one that must be granted unrestricted ritrhts- Discussion of boundaries caused. some discord among the delegates today and led tp heated arguments and the threat of a Jugo-Slav dele tv withdraw from the confer ence after he had torn to shreds a small map showing the location ot each nation's territory. T. J. Farley, Ex-Omahan, Dies of Burns in Oklahoma Thomas T.Farley, former Oma- han. died Tuesday in Oklahoma City, Okl., from burns received irt an explosion in tne ou neias csepi. 17. Mr. Farley was in charge of steel construction over oil wells. He was the son of "Mrs. Sarah Far ley of Omaha. A brother, John, and the wife, Mrs. Thomas J. Farley of Chicago, arrived Friday with the remains. Two small children, John and Mary, two brothers, H. P. Farley of Seattle and Charles at Camp Funston and two sisters, Mrs. O. J. McGlynn and Miss Sarah Farley of the Visiting Nurses, survive. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Boy Severely Injured s Playing at Roundhouse . Earl Selders, 12 years old, living at 3715 North Eighteenth street, re ceived a severe wound in the abdo men Friday afternoon, while playing 1 1 1 ' r r- Tl 1 im , wun nis menu, ueorge rooic, jou North Nineteenth street, at the Mis souri Pacific roundhouse. The injured boy was taken to the Swedish Mission hospital. His fa ther, Frank Selders, is an employe of the Omaha Van and Storage company. Hsu's Reconciliation Policy Ends Hostilities in China Washington, Oct 25. Cable ad vices received today from Peking said .the policy of reconciliation of the new president of China, Hsu Shih-Chang, already has met with considerable success. Hostilities have ceased and the leaders of the suthwestern provinces, who 'have been opposing the central govern ment at Peking, have sent delegates to confer with the new president The progress of the conference, it it said, has been satisfactory to both sides, , fc ABDICATION OF KAISER DEMAND OF BERLIN MOB Time of People Has Arrived, Liebknecht Tells His Fol lowers; Cabinet Con siders Wilson Note. Parfs, Oct. 25. An enormous crowd assembled before the Reich stag building in Berlin yesterday calling for the abdication of Emper or William and the formation of a republic, according to a special dis patch from Zurich to L'lnforma tion. Dr. Karl Liebknecht, the socialist leader, who has just been released, from prison, was applauded frantic ally. He was compelled to enter a carriage filled with flowers, from which he made a speech declaring the time of the people had arrived. The German warv cabinet consid ered President Wilson's reply at a lengthy session yesterday, accord ing to the Frankfort Zeitung. v It was decided not to answer at the present time, but to wait until it is learned what the entente's armistice conditions may be. Turks Seek Peace. Basel, Switzerland. Oct. 25. (Havas) Turkey will accept peace based on the principles of right and justice laid down by President Wil son, which the new Turkish govern ment approves, the grand vizier, Tewfik Pasha, is quoted in a Con stantinople dispatch as having stat ed in Parliament. The grand vizier's speech was made on the occasion of the" pre sentation of the new ministry to the chamber. He said the government would grant without delay to all elements not only political rights without distinction as to nationality or religion but the right to partici pate in administration of the country. 1 Another Belgian Loan. Washington, Oct. 25. With the addition of $9,000,000 credit estab lished by the treasury today for Bel gium, that nation's total loans from the United States now amounts to $180,020,000. The total for all th allies is $7,529,746,666. ... ' Now Is the Time to Buy That Fall Suit and Overcoat Classy Suits that sell everywhere in Omaha at $30. Saturday, at $20 " A wonderful group of fine hand-tailored wool Suits every one cut in the New Fall Styles of extra quality fabrics scores of nifty patterns and colors priced Saturday at $20. - Men's and Young Men's OVER COATS Worth $20 Splendid all wo o 1 o v e rcoats in a varie ty of up-to-the-minute styles, patt e r n s and colors ma n y are bilk lined Saturday, $15 Men's $30 OVER- f.OATS Saturday at vST $20 Exceptionally attractive wool Overcoats in both the belted and plain back 'Models nearly all are in the serviceable dark colors choice of self or velvet' collars priced Saturday at $20. Boys' Good Cassimere Suits-Real $10 Values Suits that will prove unusually durable for school wear. Two pair pants; sizes 6 to 17; worth $10; .Saturday, $7.48. M CIOXHINO COMPACT COR.ktr DOUGLAS PURGES s-ta tarn 'EVERYBODY. STORE" Friday, October 25, 1918. STORE NEWS FOR SATURDAY Phone Douglas 2100 i . . ' ' i ' "' "THE fewer end more costly the war-time passenger U chariots become, the louder they're painted. Possibly for the same reason that ether expensive toys are gaudily camouflaged to tempt the simple minds of children. Gasoline is now in a class with bootleg hyena broth, pint for pint. CAPTAIN KIDDER. POTTED Ferns 5-Inch Pots, for 39c Good size ferns in 5-inch pots, specially priced for Satur day, at 39c. Burgcts-Nath Co. Main Floor 7 HIS Leather Case for Your Draft Card FREE for the Asking WE had them made espe cially for your Registra tion Certificates Go n u i n e leather with celluoid transpar ency, and if you will come to our Soldiers' Booth on the Main Floor it is yours for the asking and with our compli ments. BURGESS-NASH CO. We Can Not Advise You Too Strongly to Buy Your Winter Coat Saturday-Three Special Groups $25-$29.50-$39.50 THE advisability of buying your winter coat now is ap preciated by every woman who understands merchandising con ditions. Many of the fabrics fromwhich these coats are made will be un obtainable after their present supply is depleted; labor condi tions are more unsettled all the time and consequently the cost of labor is higher. We cannot urge too strongly the necessity of selecting your winter coat now. -Coats o) Wool Velour -Coats of Kersey Cloth -Coats aj Pom Pom Cloth x -Coats o Burella Cloth , ' -Coats oj Plush all beautifullyvlined and tailored in accordance with our rigid requirements, which give attention to such details as carefully made buttonholes, buttons sewed on to stay, seams deep enough to not pull out easily, fabrics cliosen because of wearing qualities as well as style requirements. The season's newest shades and black are represented. Burgess-Nash Co. Second Floor NotableValues in Georgette and Crepe de Chine Blouses $5.00 SATURDAY we will place on sale a new group of beautiful Georgette and Crepe de Chine Blouses that evidence the splendid achievements that result from intimate co-operation between manufacturers and retailers. The value3 are most extraordinary, and made possible because of the many great economies that have resulted from the genuine thrift plan under which' they were made and sold. To just one good store in each city is the sale of these Blouses confined, and, fortunate indeed are we to have been chosen as the store to offer them. The material are of a superior quality; the Blouse re) cut on full generous lino; the style are new, au thentic, appealing. The charming simplicity of de sign, and the sturdiness of character that the times so much demand is the rare possession of each of these new models. Burgess-Nash Co. Second Floor Radical Price Reductions on Smartly Trimmed Hats 6 $5.00 In Some Instances the Price is About Vs the Original. The offering includes the greater portion of our stock, large dress hats small street hats chic tailored hats dreny evening hats They're all new, fresh caea- tions not a one that has been in the house over two weeks individual styles no two alike ' every one embracing that "differentness" which every woman recognizes in Burgess Nash millinery.' The materials are the finest quality hatter's plush, velvets ana satin celay, etc. Burgess-Nash Co. Second Floor. Sale of Hot Water Bottles $1.00 IS HIT EEP the head cool and the feet warm the doctor's advice, and these hot water bottles will come in handy. They're known as factory seconds, but the imnprfpe. tions are so slight that you can hard ly detect them. The price is about and every bot tle guaranteed. Burgess-Nash Co. Main Floor Perfection Oil Heaters at $4.95 WE have a limited quantity --don't' know how long iney win lasc and can't tell when we will get more or what the price will be. So i f y o u want to save coal and keep warm this winter, bet ter get yours S aturdav. S moke less and odorless Saturday. $4.93 Burgess-Nash Ca. Downstairs Store To Your Choice of Apy Pair Of Women's Patent Leather Shoes in Our Store Saturday $3.95 EXTRAORDINARY to the extreme. ' The newest of a special clearaway effort of our entire stock of wom en's patent kid, patent colt and patent leather shoes. The Saving Means From y3 to Vz on Every Pair Included are : Women's patent vamp shoes v-ith cloth tops, button style. Women's patent vamo shoes x with kid top, button style. Light weight or turned soles, Cuban heels or Louis heels. The shoe buying opportunity of the entire season. Burgess-Nash Co. Second Floor t ! 1 Fix Up the Old Car and Get Out Into the Open DR. MANNING advises "plenty of fresh air keep in the open as much as possible." Maybe a spark plug, a new tire or some other accessory will fix up the old car in running order so you can take the family out Sunday. These specials Saturday. ' GAS PEP on Remoyes carbon, increases mileage at least 20. Makes your engine run smoother and give additional power. Used and recommended by the largest auto users in the city. A $1.25 box will purify 150 gallons of gasoline. Results absolutely guaranteed or money will be refunded after a 15-day trial. i Champion X spark plur, special, 49c. Woods Everlock tire catch. 39. Veedol heat resisting lubri cant, the ideal oil for your auto, gallon can, 95c ; Vulcan guaranteed inner tubes 30x3 size, at $1.95. 30x3 ft size, at $2.25. 32x3 H size, at $2.95. Monitor hand oper ated horns, black and nickel v fin ish, $1.95 . . . .. rora eiectnc , tail lamps, complete with ,bolt and nut, also bulb, at 59c. Johnson's liquid wax, large bottle, sat B9e. I !