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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1919)
THE Brri: OMAHA, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1919. Long Service Means LONG Service. Send for our book "Customer CMfhUnc" before you rant or buy typewriter. It will tall you how to uvi money rnone Uouflae 9909. Call or writ. . 7J MAKE YOUR OWN BEER ' With ar Without Alcohol. HIGHEST GRADE MALT EXTRACT for the home manufacture of cereal beveragei ; IS. 60 per gallon, sufficient for from twenty to twenty-five uat lona of beverage. In quart lots, S1.00 per quart. Money Order in advance. Complete formula with each order. If you desire to use Hops in product price fifty cents additional. ' Make entire quantity or any portion at a time. REFERENCES; Second Ward Savings Bank. - Beer City Product Company, 478 Ttb St., Milwaukee, Wis. IMPOVERISHED MEN AND WOMEN Quickly Regain Health, Strength, Energy, and Ability by Taking 3-Grain i Cadomene Tablets i The Very Best Tonic. ' Sold by AH Druggists. ; Adv. i After each meal YOU wt one ATOMIC IF lcroi Vow STOMACHS sakQ and get full food value and real atom, acb comfort. Instantly relieves heart tarn, bloated, tasty feeling STOPS acidity, foci repeating and stomach misery. AIDS digestion, keeps the 'tomach sweet and pure. EATONIC is the beet remedy and only costs t sent or two a day to use it You will be de-la-nted with results. Satisfaction guaraateed r money back. Please call and try Sreen'S Pharmacy, Cor. 16th and Howard 5ts., Omaha, Neb. k7 ad Detroit Says, "I? Wonderful" HUN DELEGATES EMBITTERED BY TERHSOF PEACE Berlin Paper Says-Government Will Refuse to Sign Any ; Points Which Would Oppress Germany. Versailles, May 8. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The German dele gates to the peace congress com plained bitterly this morning to one of the French liaison officers of the unexpected harshness of the condi tions of the peace. The delegates said they had ex pected from the newspaper reports that the demands in many respects would.be far-reaching, but were not prepared for the terms as actually laid down in the printed copy of the document. , , All the exchanges between the delegation at Versailles and the home government are being kept secret.. A German courier left at 9 o'clock last night, bearing a copy of the treaty with Count Von Brockdorff Rantzau's first report on the nego tiations. Refusal to Sign Forecast. Berlin, May 8. The National Zei tung today publishes what it terms the official standpoint the govern ment expects to take regarding the peace terms. The government, according to the newspaper, will refuse to sign any point of the treaty which provides for "oppression of Germany." For instance, the entente's standpoint re garding Danzig and the Sarre valley will not be accepted. The German delegates, however, will make every effort to institute negotiations on these and other unacceptable de mands, says the National Zeitung. Wireless communication between Nauen and the Eiffel tower in Paris has been resumed so that the Ger man peace delegation can keep in close touch with Berlin. Candidate for National Head of Elks Here Friday '. All the Elks of the western states to the Pacific coast are campaign ing for Frank L. Rain of Fairbury, Neb., for grand exalted ruler of the ore'er at the grand lodge meeting to be held in Atlantic City, N. J., the week of July 7. Brooklyn, N. Y., has an opposi tion candidate, but the chances ap pear at present to largely favor the election of Mr. Rain. By special in vitation of Omaha lodge, Mr. Rain will come here from Fairbury on Friday and will attend the weekly meeting of the Omaha lodge. A class will be initiated into the lodge. With this double attraction, it is ex pected that the attendance will be large. ' A Smart Oxford This good looking oxford will be found ap propriate with morning or afternoon dress, with the simple frock or the carefully studied costume. The materials are Patent leather, Brown Kid or Calf and Black Glace Kid. $7.00 to $12.00 Many other Spring Models are here in a va riety of patterns which you will find well befitting the new Spring apparel. Drexel Shoe Co. ' 1419 Farnam Street. Mail Orders Solicited. . Parcels Post Paid. Many Citizens Congratulate 'Mother' Johns on Her Stand Expose of Treatment Which Calls for Indiscriminate Use of Dope Among Girls of Detention Home Rouses Wave of Comment. ! "Mother" Johns, matron at the Douglas county jail, has received hundreds of calls commending her for the scathing rebuke she gave Dr. Palmer Findley, medical director, and Miss Alta Berger, superintend ent, in Tuesday's Bee for their in discriminate use of dope among the girls of the Detention home. "Mother" Johns,- venerable angel of mercy, time tested and time hon ored friend of ' the fallen girl, has cured of the drug habit scores of women released from the Detention home, where they were given from regular tasks assigned them. she was arrested again, and when she did not pay the physician, she was, told she had the syphilis. Girl Held Four Weeks. "I was sent to the Detention home and held there for four week," she said. The girls now in the county jail undergoing treatment as Detention home dope fiends, without an ex ception, declare that it was the prac tice at the home to give them extra shots of morphine for doing work around the home in addition to the four to six injections of morphine a day for months at a time, which reputable attorneys and physicians have declared to be in flagrant viola tion of the law. Article Absolutely True. "I have been answering the tele phone night and day," she asserted. "It was 1 o'clock yesterday morning when I responded to the last call. Even later the bell continued to ring, but I had retired. Most of the calls were irom persons seeking confirma tion of the article printed in The Bee. In reply to each inquiry I said it was true absolutely. In many cases I ' gave additional and stronger in formation. "In my opinion, based on per sonal contact and observation, it is an impossibility to overstate the horrible and revolting details. Any one with a semblance of a spark of human kindness in his nature cannot view the condition of these poor girls who come to us from the De tention home without a feeling of pity for the poor, helpless, outraged victims. Advocate Immediate Action. "Every single person who speaks to me on the subject expresses the opinion that immediate steps should be taken to end the nefarious prac tice at that place. In my opinion it helps breed instead of curing the evil. And to think many good church people have been fooled into believing that such treatment of these poor victims is the right thing to do." There were 12 girls in the De tention home last Wednesday, and of these nine were being given four shots of morphine a day, according to Lula Patterson, 1315 Davenport street, who was released from the home on that day and committed to the county jail. "I spent one week in the Deten tion heme," she said, "and each day I was given four shots with the other girls. I heard two white girls and one colored girl refuse to take morphine. "I know another girl named Nora Coleman, who lives at Seventeenth and Eurt streets. Before being thrown into the Detention home she had taken a cure for the dope habit. To my certain knowledge she had not taken a shot in seven months. When she was released from the Detention home the habit was stronger with her than it ever had beem Nora is using the needle to day. She gradually is going down the other side of the hill. Nora Coleman is not the only girl I know who holds the Detention home re sponsible for her habit of using dope. Can Furnish Names. "I do not like to take the liberty of giving the names of'girls I know to the newspapers, but I can furnish names of other girls who never knew what it was to use the needle until they learned it in the Deten tion home, and .who today are con firmed drug addicts." Pearl Price and Ruth Morrison, both inmates of the county jail, and former prisoners at the Detention home, also declared they would be willing to furnish names of girls who had contracted the habit while at the Detention home. The Morrison girl told of an oc casion when she was arrested with Ethel Johnson, Emma Schweitzer and Loraine Miller, and taken to the police station. They were required to give $5 each to the physician who examined them and then per mitted, without a hearing in court, to continue the practice for which they were arrested, she said. Pearl Price also told of being taken to the police station and of being released by the examining physician upon the payment of $5. A short while afterwards, she said. 1417 Douglas Street 1417 Douglas Street FRIDAY-STARTING 8:30 A. M. SHARP We Place in Extraordinary Sale 1000 House Dresses AND Bungalow Aprons Actually Worth , I I O.SQ AM UP .50 u - -x TO u 11 11 M Unrestricted Choice While they last, only. , (Limit, 3 to a person) ' House Dresses and Bungalow Aprons at about one half the actual cost of the material alone. Wide variety of smart styles. Neat fitting. Ginghams Percales Chambras Plaids Checks Stripes . PLAIN COLORS ALL KEATLY TRIMMED Some have short sleeves, some are buttoned down the front. others are belted. Every wanted color is included, both light and dark. All sizes are here. It's the greatest value offer ever made by the Beddeo Clothing Co. Come early, as we have only 1,000 garments to offer. Ruth Morrison declared she heard Wilma Rice, the woman Miss Berger escorted to church to boost the Detention home before a Sunday morning congregation, boasting re cently of how many shots she was given "to key her up" for the oc casion. Advocates of the home smiled their approval, while Wilma Rice stood before the Sabbath day wor shipers and offered herself as a shin ing example of the redemption wrought by the institution in which she then was an inmate. She pro nounced herself cured of disease and dope. Was Later Released. Wilma Rice was later released from the Detention home. "Wilma never did quit using the dope," said Ruth Morrison. "I know positively she got all of it she wanted at the Detention home. I know absolutely she is using it today. She went into the Detention home a dope fiend and came out a worse fiend. Every one who knows the girl knows she is an addict to day; She was helped to her ruin in the Detention home. She was bribed with the poison which is sapping away herxlife, to boost the Deten tion home, the worst enemy she had in the world." Dr. Jennie Callfas. one of the founders and defenders of the De tention home, and secretary of the Public Welfare board, was given several days ago a letter written by a physician, who is an official of the Detention home, to Ruby Mar tin, 1722 Cuming street, remind ing the girl she was delinquent in her monthly payments, in considera tion of which it was stipulated she was to be exempted from imprison ment in the Detention home, in spite of the fact the physician de clared the girl had the syphilis, ac cording to her statement. Dr. Callfas declared she would make an investigation and if any crooked work was going on at the institution, she would see that the guilty ones were punished. Miss Martin has ceased to make her pay ments to the physician. She called the physician on the telephone and told him she would pay him no more money and defied him when again he threatened to have her arrested and detained in the home. Miss Martin is working every day and has heard nothing further from the physician who succeeded in mak ing her pay a monthly sum of $20 for two months, and who backed up when the girl called his bluff. Strikers Clash With Police at Big Toledo Automobile Plant Toledo, May 8. The plant of the Willys-Overland company was closed late this afternoon by Clar ence A. Earl, vice president of, the company, following a clash between strikers and police in which bricks, stones and clubs were used as weapons. The trouble resulted when several hundred strikers attempted to talk with employes who had refused to join their ranks. Nearly 100 policemen were rush ed to the plant when a citizen re ported a disturbance. All traffic po licemen were taken from the streets and ordered to report at the plant. Labor officials claims 10,000 men are on strike. Vice President Earl gave out a statement tonight that the plant will be closed indefinitely to "protect the lives of the workingmen." General Haller's Army Reinforced by Polish Troops From France Berne, May 8. Marshal Foch, a dispatch from Warsaw says, has sent the following message to General HallerJ commander of the Polish troops in France during the war: "Tomorrow an army created un der the protection of the French flag will join on the liberated Polish territory the Polish army that has been for a long time fighting for right, liberty and civilization. I am convinced that the gallant soldiers now united under the white eagle flag will soon write in golden letters a new page of the history of noble Poland. My best wishes accompany you." General Haller, in an interview in the Warsaw Courier, praised the part played by the French govern ment and the Polish national com mittee in Paris in connection with the formation of the Polish army in France. CarUarl, Sr., Says He Was Not Man Recently Arrested Carl Jarl, sr., says the Carl Jarl who was recently arrested and held by police in connection with alleged thefts of automobile tires was not him. Police records show the ar rested man to be "Carl Jarl," with occupation listed as a locksmith. Carl Jarl, sr., says he was not' ar rested, but that he is a locksmith. He says he has a son by the name of Carl Adolph Jarl. Iowan Decorated. Washington, May 8. General Pershing has cabled the War de partment the names of 24 additional officers and enlisted men of the ex peditionary forces to whom he has awarded the distinguished service cross for acts of extraordinary bravery. The list includes Lieuts. William H. Kofmehl, Parley, la. , NOTHING GIVEN UNITED STATES BY PEACE PACT There Are Many "Fingers in Pie" for Victors, But No American Fingers Are Among Them. By Universal Service. Washington, May 8. The Paris treaty will go down in history show ing the nation whose entrance into thewar, according to the enemy's own admission, caused his defeatl receiving not a single advantage, pecuniarily, territorially or any oth er way through the victory it helped achieve. That nation is the United States of America, Practically every other belligerent is shown by the peace treaty sum mary as profiting by the defeat of Germany. Some of them notably France, England and Japan profit largely. Their names .-re mentioned a score or more of times each. But the name, "United States of Amer ica" is mentioned as such but six times in the summary. This is how: 1. As one of the five principal nations in the preamble of the league of nations covenant. 2. As having a r .presentative on the reparation commission, which shall periodically estimate Ger many's ability to pay her damages. 3. In connection with the Samo an treaty of 1899 with Germany and Great Britain. 4. When our nation is excepted in the clause. dealing with the can cellation of pre-war contracts. 5. When a like exception is made regarding pre-war licenses. 6. As naming the prospective ar biter in Germany's cession of cer tain river craft. There are many "fingers in the pie" of a victorious peace, but they numblr no American f.ngers among them. Funearl of Liljenstolpe to Be Held in Omaha Funeral services for C. A. Liljen stolpe, who was killed Tuesday night when an automobile in which he was riding was struck by a train near the Nebraska-Wyoming line, will be held at the residence of Mrs. N. liljenstolpe, 5823 Miami street, Benson, either Saturday or Sunday. Liljenstolpe was returning from Torrington, accompanied by Frank McCarter of Bayard, when the ac cident oqcured. McCarter was bad ly injured, but is expected to re cover. Liljenstolpe was one of the best known engineers in western Nebras ka. He was in the employe of the Union Pacific during the building of the North Platte branch and after ward represented the state engineer in this . section. He was born in Omaha. April 11, 1887, the son of Mrs. N. Liljenstople and the late Knut Liljenstolpe. He attended Creighton university and later studied engineering at the Unversity of Nebraska, where he was a mem ber of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Surviving relatives are his wife and little son, the mother, three sisters, the Misses Margarite and Katherine Liljenstolpe, and Mrs. W. J. McCaffrey, and a brother, Otto, all of Omaha. AT THE THEATERS MUSIC ILYA SCHKOLN1K, violinist; Constance Alexandre, soprano, and Imogene Peay, pianist, ap peared in joint recital at the Y. W. C. A. auditorium Wednesday even ing, for the benefit of the Frances Willard W. C. T. U. According to a yearly custom, two programs are given for this society by a group of visiting musicians, and this was the opening recital, this season. Ilya Schkolnik, violinist, draws an excel lent tone from his instrument. He plays with an abundance of both temperament and technique. His harmonics are sure and lovely, and those numbers demanding breadth and fullness of tone were especially well done. Constance Alexandre has a big, brilliant voice, and was at her best in the more brilliant num bers of her different groups. The "Cuckoo Clock," Grant-Schaeffer and "An Open Secret" by Woodman won especial favor from the audi ence. Imogene Peay. pianist, dis played both skill and understanding in her piano solo, and in her ac- ceptable accompaniments. The pro gram was well arranged and well contrasted, although Mr. Schkolnik changed some of his selections with out announcement. A large audi ence was present, which heartily re soonded to the various numbers with generous applause. The sec- ond program will be1 presented at the same place under the same auspices tomorrow evening. R M. R Humbert Exonerated. Paris, May 8. Senator Humbert, who has been on trial by court martial on a charge of having had dealings with the enemy, was ac quitted today. i Miss Uthel Barrymore and company in The Off Chance," a new comedy by R. C. Carton; in four acta; presented at the Brandets. The cast:' Duke of Burchester William Boyd Lord Cardonnell Harry Pllmmer Sir George Ralnsford. Bart, M. P Harry Ashford Cornelius Jeffoolt Boyna. Joseph Brennan MVjor Ua sleigh Edward Emery Mr. Brunson, Solicitor. T. Wlgney Percyval Deads, his clerk ,.C. MacLean Savage Meeclier. carekeeper at the bungalow. J. M. Troughton Lethbrldge, Duke of Burchneter'a Valet Robert Brlnton Ducheaa of Burchester. .Eva La Oalllenne Lady Ralnsford Cecelia Radcllff Madame Maria De Blanca Marcelle Rouslllon Mrs. Ueecher Anita Rothe Watson, Duchess of Burchexter'a Maid Mary Balfour Lady Cardonnell, Ethel Barry more MISS BARRYMORE'S visits to this section of the world are so few she is almost a stran ger amongst those who might learn in time to love her; the press agent talks glibly of "the Barrymore fol lowing"" in Omaha; it is non-existent, but it might easily be mobilized and made a really effective division of local importance, were she to look in on us at least once a season. So long as she shows up only at inter vals so widely spaced as the gap which stretches between the last time she was here and now, it is hardly fair either to her or to the people who really love a good com edy well presented to ascribe the presence of so many at the Brandeis last evening to the fact that they are of that peculiar cult to which the P A. person alludes. Nothing in this is said in deroga tion of Miss Barrymore; she might be welcomed here for her charming personality, were she more intimate ly known; as it happens to be, she is welcomed because she is Ethel Barrymore, actress of ability and charm, whose growth from willowy days of ingenue roles to the present position she deservedly holds as a leader of the gild might be traced by the appearances she has made in this city. And for her art alone, then, she secures the plaudits of the polite and' discriminating, who really know a good thing and enjoy it. That ought to appeal to her profes sional sense, at least. In the present Carton production she has a role that exacts not a great deal from her. She gets full opportunity to exhibit her poise, her sense of value and her appreciation of delicate comedy points. In this latter she excels. This is traditional with her, and nothing of the Drew capacity for fine irony is lost through mixing it with a modicum of the Barrymore penchant for the broader and more obvious humor. while the reserve of the one is neat ly matched by the vivacity of the other, and the combination shows to wonderful advantage in the role of Lady Cardonnell. It is a fit picture to put alongside the one she gave us a few seasons ago, when she por trayed Barrie's pretty conceit in "Alice-Sit-by-the-Fire."' Carton has taken some characters Dickens and Thackeray paraded and humanized them; the reckless young lord and the ancient, toothless old grafter; the orderly-minded lawyer and the priggish baronet, whose Pharisaical outlook on life gives a splendid excuse for the mild follies into which the others plunged, such as elopement, divorce, philandering and the like. As these are all blown away finally in a gust of real de cent, honorable behavior, they may be overlooked as dangers escaped,' Mr. Boyd plays the young lord with excellent taste, and Mr. Emery gives a welcome characterization of the aged jackal, while Messrs. Plimmer, Ashford, Brennan and Percyval de serve thanks for their contributions to the pleasure of the evening. It would be unfair to pass Miss Le Gallienne without noting that she possesses the, attributes that make for success on the stage, not alone youth and beauty, charm of manner and grace of person, but the intelligence that enables her to grasp the meaning of her phrases and accurately to impart it. Her work suggests a future of greater things. The piece is staged in the Froh man fashion, and ws greatly en joyed by the audience last night. The engagement is for the week end, with a matinee on Saturday. The Rubini recital at the Or pheum this afternoon immediately following the regular vaudeville bill is going to be attended by the larg est matinee audience of the current week. The demand for seats has been large and music lovers are go ing to turn out to hear the distin guished and accomplished young Swedish violin virtuoso. All who attend the matinee this afternoon are cordially invited to remain for the Rubini recital, which will start at 4:35 o'clock. The opportunity to hear this noted violinist in a pro gram more extensive than is possi ble in a regular vaudeville bill is in response to the numerous re quests received from Omaha music lovers. An excellent program of 10 numbers has been arranged for the occasion. Martin Johnson and his plucky little wife, who will show their pic ture, "Cannibals of the South Seas," at the Brandeis theater for four days, starting next Sunday, traveled 18,000 miles alone among the re mote isles of the lonely South Pa cific, visiting savages who had nev er before looked upon a white face. They risked their lives every sec ond of their perilous trip, made by small steamer, sailboat and native WHEN BUYING ASPIRIN ALWAYS SAY "BAYER" Ask for "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" In a Bayer package-marked with "Bayer Cross." . Don't buy Aspirin tablets in a pill box. Insist on getting the Bayer package with the safety "Bayer Cross" on both package and on tab lets. No other way I You must say "Bayer." Never ask for merely Aspirin tablets. The name "Bayer" means you are get ting the genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," proven safe by millions of people. Beware of counterfeits !Only re cently a Brooklyn manufacturer was sent to the penitentiary for flooding the country with talcum powder tablets, which he claimed to be Aspirin, In the Bayer package are proper directions and the dose for Head ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural gia, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciati ca, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal-Colds, Neuritis and pain generally. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," American made and owned, are sold in vest pocket boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few cents, also in bottles of 24 and bottles of 100 also capsules. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid -Adv, f ; canoe, but they returned with the most remarkable authentic pictures ever filmed of the least known peo ple on the face of the earth. Once captured by cannibals, only to es cape by a hair's-breadth, the John sons discovered a tribe of pigmies, watched head hunters bury their old people alive, and looked with civil ized eyes upon strange, primitive races tor the first time. Through it all they kept their motion pic ture camera and the resultant film is the most amazing thing ever ex hibited. Crepe will be tied on the door of Omaha's Fun Center, the Gayety, after today's two performances, the season passing away in a paroxysm of hearty laughter to be supplied by clever Frank Hunter and the big cast comprising "The Best Show in Town." The funeral cortege will occur directly after tonight's per formance, several hearses in the form of baggage and scenery wagons being supplied by the trans fer company. Old Man Johnson says: "Tell the natives to come here and laugh today or wear a glum countenance until next August 9, when the new season opens." 'Resista," the 98-pound doll girl, who is attracting so much attention at the Empress theater this last half, is just a slip of a girl, yet she issues a challenge to any man in the theater to lift her dainty feet off the floor. She bars all "bunny hugs, "half Nelsons," etc. That's Good," the brilliant comedy drama, which will be shown at the Empress for the last times today, in which Hale Hamilton is starred, is a play a', exceptional merit, which has de lighted the large audiences that have seen it. Two Beatrice Men Injured When Scaffold Breaks Beatrice, Neb., May 8. (Special Telegram.) Edward McLain and Eugene Larimore, two employes of the Beatrice Cold Storage company, narrowly escaped death Thursday afternoon when they fell from a scaffold on the third story of the company's plant, a distance of about 50 feet. The men were painting the building and the accident was caus ed by the scaffold breaking. Both sustained minor cuts and bruises. GUNBOATS AID ALLIED TROOPS IN ARCHANGEL Admiral Kolchak. Head oi Omsk Government, Continues Successful Operations Against Bolsheviki. Archangel, May 8. (By the' A sociated Press.) British gunboats were active against the bolsheviki for the first time yesterday. They co-operated with a strong patrol which broke through an enemy out post north of Tulgas and destroyed dugouts and an ammunition dump. A bolshevik attempt against th British, American and Russian posi tions at Malobereznik was repulsed. London, May 8. Admiral Kol chak, head of the Omsk government, continues his successful offensive operations, according to a report re ceived from Omsk, dated April 29. In the Simbursk region the Siber ian forces, in active pursuit of the bolsheviki, have occupied a number of places west of the station of Shentala. In the north the capture is announced of the town of -Ser-gieffsk, the last place the bolsheviki can stand until Samara is reached. South of the Kazan-Yekaterinburg railway the reds are retreating, closely pursued by the Siberians, who nave captured several , towns and considerable war rnaterial ' Claims for Bedding1 . Mrs. Lizzie DuffU. 150.V Biiiiie street, submitted to the city council a claim of $10 on account of alleged failure to return bedding taken from her home by policemen and firemen on the occasion of a recent fire. The articles were used in the care of an injured man, she explained. . HYMENEAL Liesinger-Baron. Miss Frances Liesinger, daughter of Frank Liesinger, and Moses F. Baron, both of Hastings, Neb., were married by Rev. Charles W. Savidge at his study Thursday afternoon.. A druggist in Rochester, Ind., sold over . fifty packages of Chamberlain's Tablets on the recommendation of one of his lady customers, who used them with such good results that she persuaded her friends'to try them. They are excellent for stomach troubles, constipation and biliousness. V!ll!lHHl!Uaanflt4l.f(l Unfit to Win You are unfit f of any responsible z position and unfit to continue any voca- Z tion if you are handicapped with poor. Z eyesight or a continued strain on your l eyes causing nervousness, headaches, etc. I Let us examine your eyes and tell you 2 just what to do to get relief from that Z ejie strain. ' I FLITTON OPTICAL CO. j i zij aouta ioth at. . 3tt south 16th St. . m ana m .aim., jduio oiae. - 1 : HAVE YOUR EYES EXAMINED. ! . " . iiiiiiliiliiliiliiliiijiniHluijiijiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 Extra Special! On Sale Saturday 3,000 Day Old Chicks at a Surprising Low Price and Another Shipment of Milady Rose Bushes See Friday Papers for Details of This and Other Interesting Selling Events atrs thb mc IgigTTjrf oacoiuic onaiu , HP .