Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 15, 1919, Page 11, Image 11

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    E BEE: - OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCII 15, 1919.
11
QUI
DOGS 1ST KEEP
ET WHILE THE
TAB8YMAY SING
rtlour fir-fHriona in Drnfart
libit WIUHIUIIWb IU I IVlbVI
Those Who Prefer to
Spend Their Nights . m
in Sleep. .
Every dog In Omaha is going to
have its day and tne cats may have
the nights and days.
City Commissioner Ringer anH
Superintendent Bradley of the Hu
mane society are preparing a dog
ordinance which will be offered to
the city council on next Tuesday
mbrning. ,
This new measure will penalize
canine disturbers of the stilly night,
but no provision is entered against
feline songsters whose hallelujah
choruses reverberate through the
alley just about the time that the
tired business man is asleep.
The passage of this ordinance will
protect the sleep-loving citizen from
the strident notes of the little fox
terrier that baks beneath his win
dow along about 1 a. m. But if his
neighbor's tabby tunes up during. the
noctuyial hours, bootjacks and,
harsh words will have to suffice.
Collars for All Dogs.
' The ordinance will provide that
alii dogs, whether at large or other
wise, must" carry collars and
license tags. This will apply dur
ing the entire year and it is further
proposed to keep the dog pound
open continuously.
Owners of dogs will be held to
account for the actions of their pets
and owners of licensed dogs will
likewise be protected. A severe pen
alty will be imposed upon those who
poison or abuse dogs.
"Unusual and-habituah noises by
dogs will be declared to be nuisan
ces," is another provision.
Get Dogs From Pound.
Dogs impounded by the city will
be given to new owners upon pay
ment of the city license and the sign
inpf of an agreement to properly care
for these animals. j
' "It our purpose to eliminate un
desirable dogs and to protect the
better class of dogs," said Mr.
Ringer. , .
The mayor will be authorized to
issue a muzzle proclamation for a
period, not to exceed 90 days during
the prevalence of rabies.
Employment Offices
Close as Sundry Bill
Fails to Be passed
"Failure of congress to pass the
undry civil bill is responsible for
cutting down the federal employ
ment service to a skeleton organiza
tion," said Federal Director for Ne
braska George J. Kleffner.
Seven federal employes in the
hureau -iiere will be dropped March
22. The office at 1118 Farnam
street has been closed. Four other
offices in this district, at. Lincoln,
North Platte, Scottsbluff and Hast
ings, have been closed. .
"We expect to get assistance to
keep the employment service going
by means of additional state and
city employes," said Mr. Kleffner.
The service is maintained by co
operation among, city, state and fed
eral governments. If, the city and
state can increase tlieir ' contribu
tions to the service during this
period of lack of federal funds the
work will goright along. By July
we expect to have the needed funds
to resume th federal service at full
schedule."
The camp work of the tervice and
the care of aoldiera and sailorj will
be continued in co-operation with
the various other bodies whiofl have
been doing this work!
Joseph P. Butler will be in charge
of this work in connection with the
Knights of Columbus activities and
will be furloughed indefinitely for
this purpose.
Throughout the country, where
the reduction of offices from 780 to
56 xis necessary, the work of indi
rect connection with the return of
soldiers and sailors to their civilian
employment will be paramount.
If at the next session of congress
the necessary appropriation can be
obtained the work will' again be
taken us. Offices are urged by the
Department of Labor to co-operate
with various activities in their cities
in order to keep np the standard in
this vicinity. '
The servict has been tn Omaha
since January, '1916, . and has not
only taken care of the vacancies left
by the soldiers with no charge to
the applicants, but is now placiflg
returning soldiers in civilian work.
T. P. A. Will Hold Annual
Meet Saturday at C. of C.
The annual meeting of Post A,
Traveling Men's Protectiye associa
tion, will be held today at the
Chamber of Commerce rooms. Elec
tion of officers will take place atT :30
o'clock and the business meeting
will be started at 2 o'clock.
The officers will be elected for a
period of ons year. Delegates Jor
the state convention at York, Neb.,
which will be attended by about 30
Omahans, are to be elected. m Ten
men from the local Post A will at
tend the national convention at New
Orleans in May.
Miniature Hospital Will Be
Victory Loan Drive Feature
Leo Bozell, chairman of the ad
vertising committee for the Victory
loan, announces that an effort will
be made to construct on the court
house lawn a miniature reconstruc
Uion hospital, where maimed sol
diers will demonstrate their train
ing in new vocations as an illustra
tion of the government's work.
First Victory-Loan Drive
Organization Completed'
T." L. Davis, leader of Division
No. 3 in th$ Victory loan cam
paign, is the first to complete his
organization of majors, as follows:
JI. B. Whitehouse, George Platner,
W. B. Clift. R. T. Byrne, G. L. E.
Klingbeil, F. V. Roy, F. S. Keogh,
A. D. Kleia Each major will or
ganixt his wn ttam
World League's Restaurant '
Rumin International Way
Turkish Atmosphere With German Cabbage and a Hun
' garian Ganine Crawling About trie Legs of a Greek
x American Hyphenated Cook, Makes Lunchroom
Cosmopolitan. ,
"The League of Nations" is the
name of the new restaurant at 111
Sixteenth street. Philip Smith is the
Ttame by which the proprietor is
known. -
Smith's knowledge of things
American is limited-Jor the-reason
that he has not been in this country
a great while. He does not know
who his representative is at the
conference. A little thing like that,
however, did not prevent him from
eizinfc the opportunity offered by
international complications to name
his new place of business. '
He is ready to admit that however
inexperienced he may be in the
ways of the world on this side of
the Atlantic he knows the details of
his own- business. Smith prides him
self on the wisdom wtoich prompted
him to select an up-to-date name for
his restaurant.
The proprietor was busy in the
kitchen. ' He wore a white turban,
which bespoke an atmosphere Tur
kish. Simmering cabbage on the
stove rendered the stuffy little room
fragrant with the ,odor of the dish
DCCTAIIDAWT rW.
I I 14
y .
','OTIIEC IS GIVEN
CHILDREN; JUDGE
SCORES
German. A Hungarian canine was
sleeping peacefully beneath the ta
ble. "Come out of it, Smith, and tell
about the League of Nations.'"
"Me no no. Me geh sup."
'He means he has work to do,"
volunteered a waitress.
IKE TEST CASE
OF STATE'S BONE
DRY AMENDMENT
Judge Reserves Decision, in
Bootlegging Case Until
He Obtains District
Court Ruling.
Whether or not bootleggers in
the future will be prosecuted on the
charges of illegal possession and il
legal transportation of intoxicating
liquor will depend on a decision to
be hapded down in the next day or
twoby the district court.
The point was raised Friday
morning in the case of John DaileyJ
south Eighteenth and Washington
streets, who was being tried before
Judge Foster in the South Side po
lice court on a charge of illegal
possession of intoxicating liquor.
.The prisoner's attorney, S. L. Win
ters, argued that there was no such
charge authorized by the statutes.
He declared that the .charge- was
fixed by the state law as "illegal pos
session of an unreasonable quantity
of intoxicating liquor."
Mr. Winters argued that a ques
tion of what was an unreasonable
quantity was the only issue upon
which his client could be tried and
offered to submit the case for hear
ing. Judge Foster, after looking up
the law, declared he was unwilling
to proceed further until he obtained
a ruling in the district court
Mr. Winters also pointed out that
there was no such charge is illegal
transportation of intoxicating liquor.
He declared that the question of
quantity, as in the other charge,
77" 7 ! i
determined the guilt or innocence
of the prisoner.
Sixteen-Year-Old Lad .
Admits Robbing Two'
Stores When Caught
Otto Woodstock, 16 years old,
3009 South Ninth street, arrested
Thursday night in the Gibson rail
road yards by Special Officer Un
derwood of the Burlington Railroad
company, has confessed to Chief of
Detectives Dunn that he robbed two
stores Thursday evening.
In his confession he implicated Al
bert Karnett, 18, 2784 South Twelfth
street. Karnett was arrested and
admitted c6mplicity in the robberies.
The stores Vobbed by the two
youths, according to the police, are
the Delmar bakery,' Thirteenth and
Vinton streets,' and the Blumenthal
grocery, 418 South Twenty-fourth
street. The plunder at the bakery
was valued at $25 and consisted of
tobacco and cigars. The grocery
store burglary netted $14 and a car
ton of cigarettes.
Writes Out Words Alleged
to Be Cause of Libel Suit
Lawyers disputed for haSf an hour
in District Judge Wakeley's court
Friday morning to get an accurate
tarnslatkm of the exact Bohemian
words that Anna Petr is alleged to
have said to Ann Ziskovsky in the
lodge rooms of Bohemian Lodge No.
161, Degree of Honor, Ancient Or
der of United Workmen, 6n No
vember 18, 1918.-
Mrs. Ziskovsky was on the wit-'
ncss stand. She was finally allowed
td write down the alleged words in
Bohemian, then read them aloud and
finally gave a translation of them
into English. v - "
Mrs. Ziskovsky is suing Mrs. Petr
for $5,000, alleging that Mrs. Petr
called her a thief. -
Judge Troup Calls Evidence of
Carl Heydorn in Divorce
Proceedings "False-
on Face."
"You re a' recreant husband and
haven't s eared enough about yopr
two little children to contribute one
penny to their support," declared
District Judge Troup Friday morn
ing, .pointing at Carl Heydorn, at
the conclusion of the hearing of
Jennie Heydorn's divorce suit
f again st Carl.
"The evidence that Carl Hevdorn
gave on the witness stand is false
on the face of it," continued the
judge. "When he says he did not
communicate the disease to hisl
wife, I don t believe a word of it.
"These two little children will
never be given to the mother of this
man.- They will be left with their
own mother, the little woman who
sits here and who, -at least, has had
the fine mother instinct to care for
her little ones a thing that this
recreant husband has not had.
Children to Mother. -.
She has worked her fingers to the
bone iif trying to support them. A
woman is almost excused for not
living the' strictest kind of a life
when she is so sorely driven as this
woman has been by the neglect of
her husband. These children will
be left with the mother, who has
given them good care."
, The judge ordered Mrs. Heydorn
to discontinue keeping Morris Nel
son, a widower with out child, as a
boarder in her home on the South
Side. The pale little woman nod
ded her head happily. She held her
two little children in her arms, chil
dren, of 3 and 4 years of age. -
Carl Heydorn was in his soldier
uniform. He was inducted into the
army with the draft of last July and
was discharged February 8. Ac
cording to his testimony, he had
"knocked around" in a number of
'jobs.
Finds Note from Wife. ,
Tn the summer of 1916 he was a
railroad fireman running out of
Aberdeen, S. D. One day he came
home, to find his wife gone and, he
said, this note on the table:
Lari. take tne kids home. I am
leaving for good. "Can't stand it
any longer. Don't look for me for
you will "not find me. Jennie"."
tie brought the children to the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Heydorn at Bellevue, where
they remained until the mother ap
peared on day, got possession of
the children and has cared for them
since. She has worked in South
Omaha for their support Heydorn
said while in the army he made an
allotment to his mother for the
children. His mejther said she had
not turned any of this t money over
to the children's mother.
Heydorn said he met his" wife
with Morris Nelson one day- After
a moment's conversation, he testi
fied, Nelson said:
"It's about time for you to move."
He alleges that Nelson fired two
revolver shots at hiin.
3
VERY CHOICE
0&
N
-FOUR SELECT SIZES
We evggest VICTORIAS: 10c
I U HAS PLACE A HIGHEA PLACE
There are bo. many good cigars these days"
that we would not offer another unless we
knew it to be something very choice.
The leaf that makes Van Dyck is very choice.
The skill and care that make it are of a very
high order. The result is a cigar which is not
only handsome- to' the eye but very choice in
smoking qualities. ; ,'
Such a cigar" is certain to win higher and '
higher standing every day among -men who
appreciate the better things of life.
General Cigar Co., Inc.
Best & Russell Branch,
Omaha, Neb., Distributors
3
One'Mi vie
" Store Talk
MI md up my mind whiU in
the Army, wearing the, trimly
fitted waiie defining khaki that
I would go far to avoid getting
back into the pre-war meal-tack
type of clothes. But I find I
needn't go any farther thin
15th and Farnam. Your de
signer must have tented the'
new idea," said a returned sol
dier. Our. designers not only
"sensed" but have the dis
tinction of having designed
th U. S. Army Officers'""
uniforms and know what's'
what in "civies."
iJ0HN A. SWANSON, Pres.
WJfi L. HOLZMAN, Treas.
SHOP EARLY STORE CLOSES AT 6.30 P. M. SATURDAY
K """" " "
M .-4 Mjk M K
x-m wmwm . iv.; mm t m
ol
' Vf'O '
- DRESS UP
EVERYBODY
For .it's Spring
time and the boys
are C o-m i n g
Home.
The Greatest "March"
of Spring Styles
in History
YOU'LL appreciatewhen you come
here, the tremendous achieve
ment of this establishment in prepar
ing to meet the sudden demands of
thousands of. men whose Army and
Navy experience ha v6 made them
z more critical of style than ever before.
i i . - .
But rising to any occasion, meeting any
demand, has won for Greater Nebraska the pres
tige it enjoys and Victory year of all years sug
gests that f ,
America's 'Best Clothes
are none too good for you
AND THE BEST OP THE BEST AWAITS YOU
HERE IN SUPREME VARIETY. . -
&$20to$50..
Every man has been thought of in our showing of smart suits. Young men just out
of the service are enthusiastic about the waist seam stylet ia single and double
breasted suits. The Bel! Dell sleeve and Raglan back is a distinctive feature. Then
there are the substantial quiet business styles the slim straight.up youthful sacks. '
The flare skirt models. Ultra fashionable or conservative to the extreme. We serve
all and at never before. -
Hard-To-Fit Men ;
Your clothes troubles are past in our vast range of special
sires. We've the-right model and proportion for every man
from extreme tall to extra large and fetout men. N '
$25 to $50 V
Spring Top Coats
Never have ,lothinsr designers evolved such , attractive
Spring overcoats. Waist seam models, Bell Dell sleeves,
Raglan shoulders. Fitted models, Beautiful fabrics and col-
ors: Green, olive, brownf tan, fancy mixtures, oxford.
$15 to $50
7
FEATURING THE FAMOUS LINES' OF FASHION PARK CLOTHES, HICKEY
FREEMAN, SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES AND MANY OTHER QUALITY PRODUC-'
TIONS IN MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S vAPfAREL MAKES THIS STORE SU
PREME HEADQUARTERS FOR STYLE AND VALUE, v : A .
' '
Men's, YoUBf Men's and Boys' Clothtaf, Entire Scon& Floor, Mala Building and Annea.
7T
The NEW Spring Hats
' Expect to find a becoming hat here because we've the
vast selections and the service to help you get it. ,Be;
sides here's enduring style backed by quality. See our,
' wonderful showing of . , :
. John B. Stetson Hats
Borsalino Imported Hats, C. & K. and E. V. Connets, Nebraska
Superior and Nebraska Special Hats. Prices range
i .
1 . .
I v?y 'LX pill i
$3 to $15
v 7WI
Spring caps in distinctive new styles and colors, Boys' and Childrens' Spring hats and cap3.
$2 to $3. Prices at $1 to $3.
Thk'NEW- Spring Shirts
1 The early shirt buyer wins this season. Anticipating
a normal demand-, shirt makers prepared for jtv but
- an extraordinary call for fine shirts has developed.
Result choice patterns will be scarce later. Great
selections here Now. '
Madras Negligee Beautiful Silk
Shirts,' $1.50 to $4 Shirts, $5 to $12
- f ,
NECKWEAR brilliance helps a man give vent to his Victory year
feelings. Rich .new colorings, 90c to $3.00. Spring under
wear, gloves, hosiery and all the fixin's a man demands.
Where Shoe Satisfaction Is What a Man Gets
- Arnold Glove Grip
shoes specially . built
for hard-to-fit feet.
$9.50 to $12
Hurley customi builtshoes an exclusive Greater hAll America shoes, an
Nebraska feature. -Once you realize the wonderful ' other satisfying 'foot
quality of Hurley's, you'll recognize their value. i wear feature exclusive
Oxfords $10 Shoe. $12 I
Nebraska Special Solid Service' Shoes, $4.00 to $7.50
SEE OUR SHOW WINDOWS TODAY.
" $8 to $9
HEADQUARTERS FOR
BOY SCOUT SHOES
i-iin ivtirnnu .i u I !!"J "' i hi . 8 i f"
s HEADQUARTERS FOR
BOYS' OUTING SHOES
$3.50 to $K00 . $2.75 to $4.50
. CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOEN ,