.'. THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY,- MARCH 28, 1919. 11 MADAME FASHION Tit nrinn niinnin ARBS WEEK' Government in Bulletin Urges Return to Normal Condi tions in the Matter of Dress. Boy Burglars Describe How They "Pulled Jobs Leader of Trio Says He Attached Ropes to Skylights and Descended Into Store Buildings Visited Boy Scout Headquarters Three Times, But Someone Else Got Loot. , ' 1 UU Will W t owt i J ' J vv something new to wear next week, which will be "Dress-up week," in cimihi and all rvr the United " States. -. It is i nation-wide movement to rlroniote the idea of returning to ' to normal conditions in the matter of dress. A government bulletin "comes a patriotic; dutv not to spend money -tor ciotnes. ve snoum gci back to normal." The big opening of the local ob servance will occur on next Monday flight when the curtains of the show ..windows .will be drawn back at 7:30 o'clock and Omahanj will be privil eged to benoia tne preuiesi oispiays ever presented. ' Dan Desdunes' hnA will elav all. evening on the downtown strcetss and a general gala appearance will be, the order of the occasion. , v , . Plan Special Illuminations. Store illuminations will be in keep ing with the evnt. It will be the proper caper to walk along the pub lic thoroughfares on Monday night, dresed in best bib and tucker. ( The- window displays will be changed during the week and they will be an education in the art of seasonable and sensible dress. Randall K. Brown, Gould Deitz, "Robert Manley, Charles Black, Joe 'Kelly, Frank judson and a few rothei bean brummels of the village will be asked to serve next Monday night as volunteer traffic cops. Mayor Smith ' Issues Proclamation : Mayor Smith has issued the fol lowing proclamation: ' "The retail merchants with char acteristic enterprise have set the week commencing Monday as "Dress-Up Week,' The Red Cross is also appealing for your old clothes for the benefit of the- desti tute women and children m Europe. Let us . respond to the appeals of both and get out of these old clothes and into new ones. , "The war is over. , "Put on a smile and dress up. "Throw that old hat into the scrap - nil nicrorH ttiaf nlrl suit and that old dress and you will feel better. "Brace up cheer up dress up. The world is not going to the- - - - 1 . . n .. Latin f r A 1 . A BftlllA liui uiucaa juu iici suu iu . 911.... and new clothes will make life worth -1- : . tt living. i Soecial menus and dansantes will .Monaay, me opening oay 01 urcss- T lf .1 MM T . . -11- T up wee. me r oiuciicuc, nvuic. tlHcnshaw and others will put oil V -special programs. ," , . . , in Japanese - Commerce Bid With T TnVocfinf eA ' T artrir Melbourne, April How Japan by an intense and - unrestricted appli cation to industry . and commerce f has come to dominate the east, po litically and commercially, was told by the Rev. C. M. Bazeley, general ' secretary of the Church missionary society, upon his return from a six ' months' visit to Japan, India and - China." 1 . . rrt V, .- . T. 1 'J it. . -st 1 ne Kev. iur. cazcicy saia xnai cue to tne great increase in inc number of factories in Japan that 'tcountry is manufacturing every ,! commodity that the. world wants, and is successfully selling its prod ucts by means of a large number of (Japanese agents, who are to be found ' in every city in the east, i This development, in the opinion 'of Mr. Bazeley, is causing great concern among those who under stand the political significance of such, wide commercial ramittcation. It is even with greater alarm that . Japanese penetration into India and China is viewed. In the first named tcountry Japanese goods are begin- 1 ning to dominate the markets, while in the latter they have held a first position for some time. t In manufacturing circles in 'Nip- , jon Mr. Bazeley found that the key note of endeavor was unrestricted production. Full steam ahead, with no thought for the laborer, seems to actuate capital, he said. He mar- ' veiled at the point of view that saw no danger in unrestricted hours of labor; that made overwhelming de mands on the worker's energy, and at tne uck oi iactory legislation tnai cut production costs to a minimum. Funeral Services ; for Thomas Redmond Largely Attended St. Peter's Catholic church. Twen ty-eighth and Leavenworth streets, kwas crowded yesterday when fu- Inefal services for Thomas Redmond, 18-year-old son of T. P. Redmond, 1013 South Thirtieth avenue, were held. "Rev. J. S. McCarthy, pastor of the church, was celebrant at a requiem high mass service. Rev. R. M. Kelley of Creighton university delivered a slfort sermon. Father vValsh of Bat tle Creek,-Neb., former pastor of ' ' St. Peter's church, and Fathers Nee- ligah and O'Flynn . assisted. A quartet, composed of Harry V. Burkley, Clinton Miller, Charles Moriarty and Thomas F. Swift, sang. Eileen McCaffrey played the "organ. , The following former classmates of young Redmond served as pall bearers: Paul McDermott, George . Murphy, Thomas McGovern, Charles Dwyer, Gerald Quintan, Gerald Ma honey, Robert Burkley and Joseph Kane. Many floral remembrances were received. " Burial was in the family lot in Holy Sepulchre cemetery, C. of C. Employment Bureau " Has Jobs for 50 Farmers J Fifty men are wanted immediately .. to work on farms in Iowa and Ne .v braska. according to the Chamber of Commerce employment bureau. i 1 Harry Stoler, Harry Grossman and Elmer Hansen. Three "kid-burglars" arrested by police Wednesday after they had "pulled" 14 robberies in professional style during the past three weeks were turned over to juvenile au thorities yesterday. Harry Stoller, 12 years old, lead er of the trio, told yesterday how he attached ropes to skylights and descended into store buildings in company with Harry Grossman, 14 years old, 50V touth thirteenth street, and Llmer Hansen, i years old, 1803 North Eighteenth street. When Wednesday s arrests were made, Stoller and Grossman are said to have just finished burglarizing the Dreibus Candy company, 510 South Ninth street oi $49 andiift car ton of gum. Ihe loot had Deen split and the pair had gone toi the Brandeis the ater building to wash the coal dust accumulated in the Dreibus engine room from their faces. Hansen, the only one of the trio to break down, acted as look-out for the gang. He gave the "office" for the gang, Stoller said, and kept a watch for the approaching "bulls." Hansen broke into tears when ques tioned. The other two lads an swered with a grin. ' i "Yeh, betchcr life, we burgled the Omaha hat factory," Stoller said, "I wound the rope 'round me and let Harry slide down to the floor from the skylight. "We only got $9 outa the cash registerthere, and then we went back again, but there wasn't a cent that time. Dairy Was Next. " 'N then we got the Crown Dairy company next night." "How did you get in there?" he was asked. i "Why, just filed a chain off'en the back door; soft stuff, the chain was; only took us about five minutes; but they only had $1.50 in the reg ister." Grossman told how the "gang" scouted about in the daytime, play ing "hookey" from school and plan ning a "job " for the night. "Just one job a night 's all we wanted to 'pull,' " Grossman said. Admit Scout Jobs. "We was in the Boyi Scout head quarters in the iPatterson block three times. NThe last time we got $80 and were afraid to take it home, so we 'ditched' it over in" a pil o' bricks near Fifteenth and California and someone 'swiped' it and the drawing tools and the other junk we got." "But say," Stoller explained when Grossman had finished, "You oughter seen Willyum S. Hart, in 'Hairpin Harry' last week. He just used a hair pin and got in the front door and took jools and things. He's a regular guy. We couldn't do nothin' like that. "Well, I suppose its back to Kearney," he finished with a sigh, as a juvenile officer came into the matron's room where the three are held at the city jail. Probation Of ficer Vosburg said they would prob rbly be sent to the boy's reforma tory at Kearney. Neb. Two Women, Married 28 and 29 Years Each, File Divorce Suits Two women who have been mar ried, respectively, 29 and 28 years, filed suit in dictrict court yesterday for divorces from their husbands. , Mrs. Sylvia E. Beats asked for a divorce from Thomas J. Beats, to whom she was married in 1890. For the last nine years, she says, he has not supported her and has not lived with her. She makes her living as a dressmaker. They have three chil dren, all past 21 years of age. Mrs. Anna Dowrie filed suit for a divorce from Roderick Dowrie on the ground of nonsupport for three years. They were married in Ohio in 1891. These suits bear out the recent statement made by District Judge Day, after the study of thousands of divorce cases, that there are three periods of married life which are "danger periods," when the great majority of divorces are sought. They are the first three years of married life, the 12th to the 14th years, and the 25th to the 30th years. Small Pill Small Dose Small Price iCARTBft! For Constipation Carter's Little Liver Pills will set you right over night. Purely Vegetable Try This Test: Rub a little Tuxedo briskly in the palm of your hand to bring out its full aroma. Then smell it deep its delicious, pure fragrance will convince you. Try this test with any other tobacco and we will let Tuxedo stand or fall on your judgment "Your Nose Knows" Finest Burley Tobacco Mellow-aged till Perfect 4- a Dash of Chocolate YourNoseKnows" The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe TO NAME BODY TO PROBE BUILDING SUPPLIES; SOON Chairman Wilhelm Says Spe cial Committee Will Include Representatives of Each Building Trade, i This morning H. O. Wilhelm will announce the personnel of the important committe he, as chairman of the Chamber of Commerce open forum Wednesday night, was in structed to name. Its members will probably meet at noon to outline their course of action. J I The committee is intrusted with the important task of digesting facts brought out in the broad discussion of every angle of building and hous ing probiems in Omaha, with a view of settling upon some price re duction which will give impetus to Omaha's much needed building pro gram. ' Wants More Time. "I want more time to select my men carefully, but will be ready to give the names before Friday noon when I should like to get the mem bers together," said Wilhelm. "The committee will include one repre sentative from each of the building trades. "1 should like to have at jeastone member of the city commission on this committee, but could reach none of them this morning on account of a cbuncil meeting. "I would like awfully well to have my committee co-operate with the investigative committee appointed by Mayor Smith to look into the charge -of combines among' building material dealers to hold up prices, said Wilhelm. Russia Plans Campaign Against Poland in Spring Paris, March 27. A great military campaign against Poland is to be opened by the Russian soviet gov ernment this spring, it was deeclared by M. Joffe, the former bolshevik ambassador at Berlin, at a recent meeting in Vilna, according to word received by the Polish national com mittee in Paris." Divorce Granted to Wife, Says She Was Thrown Out in Cold A divorce was awarded to Eliza beth Caillier by District Judge Troup yesterday after a long hear ing on her petition and the cross petition of her husband, William. She charged that he was cruel at various times during their married life in a sod house in Cheyenne county, Nebraska. Once, she said, he threw her out in a storm when she was clad only in a nightgown. An other time, she testified, he tied a rope around her neck and told her he was going to drag her from the rear end of a wagon. . Mrs. Caillier lives at 216 South Twenty-fifth street. Her husband's home is on the farm in Cheyenne county. They settled their property rights outside of court. .CONSTIPATION..... Have you ever thought of it aa a stoppage of the sewerage system of the body? You can well imagine its evil consequences. If you would en joy good health have bowels move once each day. When a medicine is required you will find Chamberlain's Tablets are hard to beat. They only cost a quarter. T PEOPLE SHOULD TAKE PHOSPHATE Nothlat Llkt Plain Bltr-PhopkU to Put Firm, Healthy Flh and to lit erati Strength, Vhjar u4 Narva Forca. JuJKin from tha eountletf preparation and treatment which are continually he- ln advertised for tha purpoe of su&icK thin people fleahjr. developing arms, necK. ami but, and replacing ugly hollow and nglea by the oft turved linei of health- i ... i . M .uMmih. tnnuiinfll of men and women who keenly feel their excessive thinneaa. ThlnnMi and weakneM are usually due to K.ul MM. tarvta nerree. vur- -' phosphate than , ta contained In modera foods, rnysiciani ciaim mc .i... m ...nnl tkl. (UAtiene ao well a the organic phosphate known among drag- fills aa oiiru.yuu.yivt - aive, and i old by Sherman McConneH in Omaha and most all druggist under guarantee of satisfaction or money bark. D.. h ...... rliitct 1 W and hv SUP- plying the body clls.wlth tha necessary h. k : 9 A 1 ..n Kitm.nhnanhat.a quickly produces a welcome transformation in the appearance; the increase in weight frequently being astonishing. Thi increase In weight also carries with it a general improvement in the health. Nervousness, sleeplessness and lack of energy, which nearly always accompany ex cessive thinness, soon disappear, dull eyes become bright, and pale cheeks glow with the bloom of perfect health. CAUTION: Although bitro.phosphato 1 unsurpassed for relieving nervousness, sleeplessness and general weakness, it should not, owing to its remarkable flesh growing properties, be used by anyone who does not desire to put oa flesh. Adv. , ) t Guaranteed by Tfic Wktory liberty Loan . We Started a Job in April 1917. Now We Mast Finish It The Fifth Liberty Loan, or the Victory Loan, as it is going to be called, is the last Liberty Loan. The money to be raised in this Loan is necessary to clean up the job we started in April, 1917. The Victory Loan drive will start in Doug las County on Monday, April 21, and end the next Saturday night. The United States Treasury Department has announced that Short Term Notes will be is sued for this Loan instead of longer term Bonds. ' The Short Term Notes will look very much like the former Liberty Bonds, but wili be re deemable in not over five years. ' The exact date the Notes will be redeemable, the rate of interest they will draw, and the amount of the Loan, will be annourfced shortly . by the Secretary of the Treasury. . It is expected, however, that the Loan will be for about five billion dollars, that the Notes will mature in five years and that they will draw about the same rate of interest, or slightly higher, than the last Liberty Loan. Why is another Government LosA neces sary? The Victory Loan is necessary because the bills of the war must be paid. . ! The Government has spent all the money raised by previous loans. "Too much money has been spent," you say. . Have you weighed the value of America's expenditure for guns, ships, airplanes and mu nitions, and of the training of four million men and transporting two million of them to France? This expenditure showed America's deter mination and strength and put war to an end a year sooner than predicted by allied military men. Have you compared the cost of munitions, even though unused, with the value of the lives of 200,000 American young men who would have been killed in the next year of fighting? What if we have to loss?, cancel contracts at a The making of these contracts and the work on them dispelled Germany's hope of victtry and ended war. ' Is it not better td bring our boys home from victory than it would have been to keep them over there to be killed? i Are we so ungrateful that we can lend our money to put our men into danger and not lend to get them home, now that they have stopped the Hun and won a great victory? Are we so selfish that we will say to our boys: "We supported you while we were fighting; you can now take care of yourselves?" The money to be raised by the Victory Loan will be used for the following purposes, which enumerate only some of the things to be paid for: ( It will be used in bringing home our boys, those that are hale and hearty and those that are still in the hospitals of France. . It will go toward re-educating the American soldiers that were maimed or crippled to such extent that they cannot return to their former . occupations and make a livelihood. It will be used in paying for war munitions and equipment, including shells that have been shot and millions of them thatyere in France , ready to be launched at the Hun at the time he quit; for guns, tanks, railway trains and steam- ships ; some of which ' were used, but many others that were on the way and that wotild : have been used had not the German hordes had enough of the Yanks at Chateau Thierry, at Belleau Wood, and in the Argonne, to convince them what America meant. It will, in short, pay off the bills our nation . incurred in carrying on the war. No matter if the munitions were not all con sumed 5 they must be paid for. , No matter if some of our ships have not yet spanned the seas; they will continue our com merce and build up our peace time prosperity, and they must be paid for. No matter if Germany is made to pay France and Belgium for a large part of the devasta tion which that mad autocracy ;wrought," we will still have our Own debts to pay. What if our American-made cannon and motor trucks and tanks and rolling kitchens and airplanes had not all been engaged in the fray? They were in readiness and would have gone into the lines this spring and helped win a delayed victory, which, though it may have been a certain victory, would have been a costly one. in Our debts must be paid. .-. And what if these boys we must bring home, whole-bodied or maim c J, were not your brothers or sons? They are our boys and they were the heroes of the world in putting a sud den end to the wholesale slaughter of men. . They must be brought home. ' Will we allow the world to point a finger of scorn at America with the accusation that we cared for Victory only as long as we were in im , niinent danger, and when that danger was over settled ungratefully down to greed and gain and refused to pay our honest debts? ' Will we laugh at the unfortunate wounded rather than help them fit themselves for what is left for them in life? The answer must be made by every Ameri can according to his ability to lend for a cause that was bis in 1917 and that will remain his cause until America has finished the job. . Wear This Button Monday, April 21, the Victory Loan Drive Begins Show You Have Helped Finish the Job DOUGLAS COUNTY VICTORY LOAN COMMITTEE W. 0. M'. Bldg, Ground Floor. Telephone Tjler 3106.