THE BEE: OMAHA. THUKSDA, JUNE 5, 1919. IMPORT MEN TO BREAK BOILER MAKERHTRIKE Strikers Receive First Benefit From International Body; Men Leave City to Work. BRINGING UP FATHER See Jist and Maggie in Full Drawn for The Bee by McMamu PHOTOPLAYS. Page of Colors in The Sunday Bee. Lopyrigm miv International News Service. I HAD A, RECORD MADE OF ME. Wife TALKIK TO ME - tHE DOESN'T KNOW IT- WOULD tOO LIKE -TO HEAR T? YOO INJECT -WHAT DID I TELLXOO AOOOT J MOKIN4 IN THE PARLOR - SHOT OP TAKE fOOft. FEET OFF THE OFA HOW MANX TIMES MUVT I TELL--- Today rVE HEADVOOR WIFE TALK BUT IF YOO INIVr- 12 r i - r I r i r-ir- jvrsc i j onvj ( j nil - DON'T TALK pEVBOT ) . ,T OFF ,N IHE hl00L W Th ITSM L TO J ff WHAT THE , Lrt OF A SENTENCE- ' -7 REAL -IT'S ME-NO." f ... . IDEA OF HAVIN' ''. J w ' P TERRiaLE.' VOU CAN'T j rff"iftf lTO LISTEN . V fZf J y , Frl W f Sat. More than 20 strike breakers have been imported by the Drake-Williams-Mount company, boiler mak ers, from nearby cities in an effort to end the strike which has been in progress for more than two weeks. B. O. Mount, one of the company managers, stated yesterday that a few of the strikers had returned to work. Nearly all the others were strike breakers. More than 100 bbiler makers and their assistants are out. They ask for 80 cents an hour for machin ists and 60 cents an hour for helpers. Not a single striker has returned to work, V. V. Angell, international organizer for the boiler makers, who is conducting the strike in this city, declared. He stated further that the men were ready to continue their strike for an indefinite lengths of time". They have the support of the international body and yesterday received their strike benefits from the funds of the international bbody. According to Mr. Angell, many have left the city and obtained work. Others have taken jobs as laborers. The latter, Mr. Angell declared, are now receiving more money than they did when engaged as boiler makers. Verdict for $7,000 ' After deliberating two day3, a jury in District Judge Sears' court yesterday returned a verdict for $7,000 in favor of Mrs. -Mhy Hunt against the Swift Packing company. Mrs. Hunt alleged she was struck on the sidewalk at Twenty-sixth and Cuming streets one day last Novem ber. "King of Sewing Machines" We make generous allowances on YOUR old machine From no othtV sewing machine dealers can you expect such gcnerons allowance for old machines, as MICKEL8 make. Any make of machine no mat ter what condition we allow yon a generons sum to apply on yonr purchase of a new WHITE. Get a new WHITE Truly the WHITE is the "King of all Sewing Machines." Beau tifully and simply constructed ball-bearing; easy to run; with a number of features no other machine has; it will make your summer sewing a pleasure. Pay as You Use It! Just a reasonable sum down then pay the balance as you use the machine. See us TO DAT) write or phone if that is more convenient. MICKELS 15th and Harney Phone Doug. 1973 Auto Robes f There will be no further need for heavy robes and blankets this summer why not have yours dry :cleaned and wrapped in heavy paper for the summer? We guarantee no moths will bother them if left in the package iii which they are returned. : An ounce of prevention may save the price of a robe. THE PANT0RIUM "Good Cleaner and Dyera" . - 1515 Jones St. Phone Doug. 963. South Side, 4708 South 24th St. Phone South 1283. Guy Ligf ett, President. AWARD $11,800 ALIMONY TO TWO WOMENIN COURT Cruelty Charged by Women Granted Divorces; Will Sell Nebraska Farm to Se cure Money. Alimony aggregating $11,800 was awarded to two women by Judge Day, sitting in divorce court yester day. Gertrude Nelson, 2803 Ohio street, was granted a divorce from Arthur Nelsorl on the ground of cruelty, given the custody of their two chil-drerv-end the husband was ordered to pay $10 a week alimony for IS years. This aggregates $7,800. The Nelsons were married in Omaha in 1915. Mrs. Nelson said her husband treated her so cruelly that she was compelled f6 leave him on two different occasions. On the night of April 6, 1919, she said, he returned home in an intoxicated con dition and abused her. Ora Schmoker was awarded a di vorce from Arthur Schmoker on the ground of extreme cruelty and was granted $4,000 alimony. The order to sell 200 acres of land owned by the husband -in Hayes county, Neb., is contained in the de cree of divorce and Sheriff J. R. West of Hayes county is instructed to go ahead with the sale and he appointed a special master commis sioner for that purpose. They were married in 1907 and lived together until April. 1918. Youth Charged With Aiding Delinquency Of Two Young Girls Aaron Benash, 20 years old. 2226 North Sixteenth street, and Harold Ruffner, 19 years old, 6316 Spencer street, were bound over to the dis trict court yesterday by Judge Foster under $750 bonds on a charge of aiding and abetting in the de linquency of Lillian Pallas, 6316 Wirt street, and Sylvia Clapper, 6305 Military avenue, both under 18 years of age. The two youths are alleged by police to have taken the girls to a garage of which Benash's father is the proprietor Saturday night and to have detained them there all night. The Clapper and Pallas girls have been taken to the Detention home. After each meal YOU eat one ATONIC CFOR YOUR STOMACH'S SAKE) and get full food value and real stom ach comfort. Instantly relieves heart burn, bloated, gassy feeling, STOPS acidity food repeating and stomach misery. AIDS digestion: keeps the stomach sweet and pure EATONIG it the best remedy and only costs i cent or two a day to use it. You will be de lighted with tesulta. Satisfaction guarantaar Vr money back. Pleasa call and try it. Sherman & McConnell Drug Co., 0 Busy Stores, Omaha. EURALGIA or Headache Rub the torehead and temples with T? X? TICKS VAPOR! YOUR BODYGUARD" - 309. Win Ban so Young KUD uanaruu aim Itching with Cutiaira Ointment Shampoo With Catkara Soap and Blankets re mm 6051.? " ft 4 Ntll Omaha Girl, Wedded to Hindu, Have Romantic Honeymoon Dr. Keshava Deva Shastri, Well Known Philosopher, Graduate of Three Universities, With Young Bride and Sister-in-law, to Visit Land of Forefathers. . Miss Minnie Jensen, Omaha girl, and Dr. Keshava Deva Shastri, Hindu philosopher, graduate of three universities, international lec turer and owner of a winter palace in Benares, India, and a summer home in the Vale of Kashmir, In dia, were married yesterday after noon at the home of the bride's fos ter parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Kahn, 2015 Sherman avenue. Exactly three months ago, March 4, Miss Mabel Kahn, the bride's foster sister, took out a marriage li cense at the court house for Miss Jensen and Dr. Shastri and public interest was immediately aroused in tins international marriage. Dr. Shastri has been filling lec ture engagements in a number of iarge American cities and, now having completed his work here for the present, he and his bride arr abcut to leave on the most romantic of wedding tours, u tour which will carry them first to the south, then to California, the Hawaiian Islands the Philippines. Japan. China, Persia ind Egypt. In all these countries Dr. Shastri is well acquainted. He speaks manv of th: languages. From Egypt they will go back to India and to the sacred city of Benares, fountainhead of Hindu WOMEN CONTINUE TO REGISTER FOR BOND ELECTION Women Who Failed to Record Names Tuesday May Do So Up to June 13. Many women who failed to regis ter Tuesday for the special election of June 24 for $3,000,000 paving bonds, evidently intend to register yet. Numerous telephone calls have come to Election Commissioner Moorhead asking whether registra tion, is still open. Several registered yesterday and about IS Tuesday night after 7 o'clock. Party Affiliations. Party affiliations of the women who registered Tuesday run about the same as those of the men vot ers', says Election Commissioner Moorhead, after a brief check on the registrations of Tuesday for the spe cial election of June 24 on the $3,000,000 paving bond proposal. "If there is any variation it is in favor of prohibition," he said. "There are also a number who put down 'no party.' But in general the republican strongholds of the men arc republican strongholds of the women voters and the same with the democratic districts." Saunders school, Forty-first and Cass streets, had a registration of 57 women as follows: Republican, 39; democrat, 12; prohibition, 5; socialist, 1. One woman who registered at the court house said: "I'm a republican, since my boy got back from the army. My hus band is a democrat." State Bank of Omaha Takes Bonds at Par The State Bank of Omaha has an offer for Liberty bonds that it is believed will appeal most strongly to holders of these securities. President Schantz explains it thus: "People will get full value for their Liberty bonds. The bank buys them at par, 100 cents on the dollar, and puts them into a savings account for the depositor. The only condition is that he or she cannot withdraw the money for twelve months. The money earns the regular savings in terest. This we do to encourage people to deposit more money, build up a savings account and learn thrift instead of carrying their bonds about or leaving them at home to be stolen or trading them for some doubtful investment." Railroads Asks Increase In Smelter Products Rate Railroads operating from the southwest have filed application with the interstate commerce, com mission, asking for further increase in the freight rates on bullion, ore and smelter products into Omaha, Chicago and several Illinois points. One year ago there was a hori zontal advance of 25 per cent on smelter products. The advance asked at this time would bring the total to 55 per cent over the rates effective early in 1918. The product that it is proposed to take the i;ew rate originates in Mexico and enters the United States at Brownsville, Eagle Pass, El Paso and Laredo, Tex. learning, seat of a famous Sanscrit college. There Dr. Shastri's splendid pa'ace is located. There the Omah g:rl will be waited on by dozens u servants, who, in oriental style, fly to do the slightest bidding of their master and mistress. Miss Mabel Kahn is going to ac company Dr. and Mrs. Shastri on tueir wedding trip. Miss Jensen and Miss Kahn have been inseparable companions for the years that Miss Jensen has been a member of the family. The wedding yesterday afternoon was pivate, only the relatives and friends being present. Miss Jensen is an adopted daughter of Isaac Kahn, president of the Megeath Stationery Co. Judge Holmes, a life-long friend of Mr. Kahn, per formed the ceremony. The romance of the Hundu phil osopher and the Omaha girl was a case of love at first sight. They met when he came here two years ago to deliver a series of lectures before the Theosophical society. A wonderful ring is a feature of the romance. It is of immense value, a dazzling diamond of per fection, set in platinum. Dr. Shastri, before presenting it to Miss Jensen, had it elaborately engraved by a remarkable craftsman in both Eng lish and Hindu characters. H. C. OF LABOR CAUSE OF PHONE RATE INCREASE New Subscription Prices, Which Were Effective June 1, Announced by Tele phone Company. The high cost of labor and ma terials is cited in the explanation of the Nebraska Telephone Co. for the increase in tlephone rates, which be came effective June 1. Businss telephone rentals have in creased from $6.60 to $7 and from $7.70 to $8 a month, according to the announcement. The former rate includes the telephones which do not have the suburban service and the latter covers greater Omaha con tracts. Residence individual lines have increased from $3.25 to $3.50 with a discount of 50 cents for pay ment between the 10th and 18th of the month, and business extension lines have decreased from $1.10 to $1. Mileage private branch exchange lines have decreased from $2-75 to $2.40. Read The Bee Want Ads for the best opportunities in bargains. PHOTOPLAYS. CECIL B DeMIUES IN 'fwBetter, For Worse' Maxwell Schwartz, singing whistler, featuring, by request, "Anything I Nice if It Comes from Dixie Land," and "Friend." AMUSEMENTS. NEW SHOW TODAY Bert Lytell 'The Lion's Den' A Pulsing Drama of High Idealism BUD SNYDER & COM PANY v TWO LILIES WILLIAMS & TAYLOR JULIA EDWARDS Billy West Comedy. Pathe Weekly. J SLOW SERVICE IS CAUSE OF MANY MAIL "SPECIALS" v. Postoffice Department Re ports Rapid Increase In Number of Special De livery Letters. Due to the slowing down of mail schedules, which, since the war and under the United States railroad administration, amounts to more than a half day's delay, there has been a large increase in the amount of special delivery letters handled "' the local postoffice. Business men in an effort to e pedite the delivery of letters ai. sending a constantly increasing number as special deliveries. East ern mail, which before the war and under private management used to arrive in Omaha on the early morn ing trains, now due to the slowing down of the service, does not arrive until afternoon, and the delivery is made at the close of the business day. It is to overcome this condition that the out-of-town correspondents are using special delivery stamps more and more. The increase in the spec:al deliv ery business will run from 200 to 1,000 letters per day. This r'ass of mail is handled by boys, a;.d there j are 18 of them employed in the Omaha postoffice. The boys do not receive a regular salary, as they must depend on the fees for their pay. They are al lowed 8 cents on each special de livery letter, and some of them earn as high as $100 per month. The sale of special delivery stamps at the Omaha pos'.oflice is getting to be a very large item. A great many persons resorting to this service affix 10 cents' worth of ordi nary postage stamps to a letter and mark it special delivery. The advertiser who uses The Bee Want Ad Column increases his business thereby and the persons who read them profit by the oppor tunities offered. imTniniiiiiiHiiwiHiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiinniiiHiniiiHimiiiiHMiimuimiiiiiiiMiHiiiitm l 9 nn I I! Ill 1H Now Playing 5 Shows Daily 1:15, 3:15,5:15, 7:15, 9:15 THE MOST TREMEND OUS TALE of Love and adventure EVER m FILMED I I I Matinees, 25c and 35e L leMflPF' --"'J in If kVQwl,,'i ' r S I Shows-A Few at 75c fT"" Hospital Train With 140 Wounded Men Stops Here A hospital train over the Norrh-western-Union Pacific, carrying 14(1 wounded soldiers brought from a government hospital in New Jersey and enroute to Fort Douglas, passed through Omaha yesterday noon. Red Cross and canteen workers were at the Union station to distribute dain ties among the boys and look after their wants. Tiow I what Oir doctor told me that the safest way to give him milk was to give him Nestle's Milk Food which is made out of pure milk modified with just the right amount of sugar and cereal. He explained to me that making the milk into a fluffy powder breaks up those hard-to-digest curds, so that when you add water and boil just a minute, you have the nearest thing in the world to mother's milk clean, ' Nestle'lls pure Milk In powder form thit la alrudy modified tnd does not require the further addition of milk. Always pure and safe, always uniform, and free from the dangers of home modifica tion, Nestle's has stood the test of thrte generation! and hat ttdsj lit targtit lat of any baby feed in lit wrli. FRFE! Enough Nestle's for 12 feedings. Send the coupon t Nestlc's Food Company Dept. SS. 130 William St., N. V. City. Pleaic tend me tree your book tnJ trial package Name M Address . City State ...................... PHOTOPLAYS. Today whentiie feult & committed' WOMAN hides herself- ftANwalb proudly erect ! So convenient for MANSb bitter for70MAN I HARRY CARSON PrPientf Wife Wants Divorce, But Not Any of Her Husband's Money In spite that her husband, Leon Frank, owns property valued at $15,000, Mrs. Nettie Frank in her divorce petition distinctly states that she does not want any of his money. She says she is contented with the restoration of her maiden name, Nettie Nocita, and hopes to "never see him again." Found The Saje'Way ToGiveMyDabyMilL 1AM the 'happi est woman alive. Mv babv is on the road to health Only a mother cah know that meansl safe, and almost sure to agree with a baby's delicate stomach. That is why I am the happiest womsn .alive formy baby is well. I know that if your baby has trouble with his food, the Nestle Company will be glad to help you. They will send you free.as they sent me,a big Mother's Book on how to take care of your baby and enough Nestle's Food for"12 feed ings. All you have todois tofillout and send the coupon. Then you can be, with me, the happiest woman in the world because your baby is well. NESTLE'S MILK. FOOD : Ukl RUPERT KUCKZ AtoutWin? Jtoo ' He was rich and didn't have a thing to do except spend money. Lazy? Gosh, yes. Doc tor said if he didn't do some thing he'd die. And did he do anything? I'll say he did, and you'll catch your breath one minute and then laugh it away the next. AND IN PATHE NEWS CEDAR RAPIDS, I A, Starch Plant Explodes. 13.000.000 Damage, It Killed. FIRST ACROSS THE BEA. America's Navy Conquers At lantic. Remarkable Pictures at Azores. NC-3 Arrives at Ponta Delgrada after 62 hours' fight with ele ments. NC-4, after 1,200 miles success ful non-stop flight, hops on to Lisbon. Brave crew of NC-4. SOME MEN. Monroe Salisbury in a mighty picture of the frozen north "THE BONDING TRAIL' n Screen Magazine Two-Reel Comedy Albin Huiter'a Concert Orchestra . Admission Adults, 20c; Children, 10c THEDA BARA 'A WOMAN THERE WAS A Tale of the South Sea Isles. Of a Woman's Sacrifice of Life for Love. Dustin Farnum in The Gentleman From Ipdiana." LOTHROP'SL LAST TIMES TODAY REX BEACH'S "THE AUCTION BLOCK" HAMILTON SSei J. BARNEY SHERRY and FRiTZI RIDGE WAY in "REAL FOLKS" VAUDEVILLE PROGRAM BENEFIT ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH Bee Want Ads Mean In creased Business for the One Who Uses Them and Opportunity for the One Who Reads Them. PS w