Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 21, 1919, Page 4, Image 4

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THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 21, 1919.
SOLDIERS BEAT
CAPITOL NEGROES
IN RACEJIOTS
Seven Taken to Hospital and
15 Uniformed Men
Charged With
Assault.
Washington, July 20. Scattering
elashesjjetween whites and negroes
occurred in Washington Sunday
night and at midnight the police
reported that seven negroes, badly
beaten, had been taken to hospitals
and IS soldiers and marines were
under arrest charged with assault.
The disorders were an aftermath
of the riot Saturday night, when a
mob of soldiers, sailors and civilians
invaded the negro district in the
southwest section of the city seek
ing a negro suspected of attacking
a white woman.
In each of the clashes Sunday
the most of which occurred on
Pennsylvania avenue, small bands
of white men, made up chiefly ( of
men in uiform, attacked the negroes
as they made their way alowg the
streets.
No shots were exchanged in the
fights and none of the negroes at
tacked were reported to have been
seriously injured.
I
TlASnW tGox, filmland
"PHOTO 'PlAY OFFERING J FOR. TODAY
fTT
Tobacco Habit
Dangerous
sty Doctor Connor, formerly of Johns
Hopkins hospital. Thousands of men suf
fering from fatal diseases would be in
perfect health today were it not for the
deadly drug Nicotine. Stop the habit
now before it's too late. It's a simple pro
cess to rid yourself of the tobacco habit
In any form. Just go to any up-to-date
drug store and get some Nicotol tablets ;
take them as directed and Iol the perni
cious habit quickly vanishes. Druggists
refund the money if they fail. Be sure
to read large and interesting announce
ment by Doctor Connor soon to appear in
this paper. It tells of the danger of nic
otine poisoning and how to avoid it. In
the meantime try Nicotol tablets; you will
be surprised at the result.
WILLIAM S. HART as Lem Bee
son, a Montana cowboy, is
featured in "The Money Cor
ral," written and directed by him
self. Proxies of the Collins Trust
company, reposing in the big safe
in the company offices in Chicago,
would ruin the concern if they feli
into the wrong hands. Several ef
forts have been made by crooks to
steal them and watchmen have been
killed or wounded. The president
of the company while in Montana
meets Lem Beeson at a rodeo and
hires him to guard the valuable pa
pers. Lem goes because he is at
tracted by a pretty girl, a poor re
lation of Mr. Collins. He outwits
the crooks, fights his way out of a
frameup and captures the arch vil
lian, a trusted employe of the mag
nate. He again demonstrates that a
sure eye, a quick draw and muscles
of steel are a match for subtle
knavery and incidently wins the
hand of the girl he loves.
In her play, "Fifty-Fifty," which
is at the Muse. Norma Talmadge ap
pears as Naomi, a girl of the studios
in New York's artist quarter. Naomi
is possessed of a desire for continu
ous frolic and adventure, which leads
her into a succession of perform
ances, startling even to her Bohe
mian friends.
Thomas H. Ince's latest photo
play, "The Homebreaker," at the
Strand theater features Dorothy
Dalton. Cubist art, jazz music and
all the strenuous pastimes of modern
life play a conspicuous part in the
production. A clever young woman,
who has learned to know life by
her experiences as a traveling sales
woman, tries to save her erstwhile
lover of the pleasure madness that i
has estranged them. She enlists his I
A t Neighborhood Hcusea
APOLLO S9th and Leavenworth
i MAROUKRITE CLARK In "THREE
MEN AND A GIRL."
GRAND 16th and Blniwy NORMA
TALMADGE in "THE PROBATION
WIFE."
ORPHKUM South Ride, 24th and M
CONSTANCE TALMADGE in "THE
VEILEU ADVENTURE."
DIAMOND 24th and Lake CHARLES
GUNN in "FRAMING THE KRAM
ERS." LOTH R 01 24th and Lothrop BERT
LYTELL in "BUND MEN'S EYES."
aged father in the scheme and the
old man steps out to the music of
youth even though it costs him sore
feet and an aching back. Miss Mar
bury, played by Dorothy Dalton, un
covers a plot by crooks to rob the
man she loves and his father. She
turns the plans of the crooks to her
own use and brings them into the
hands of the police and her lover to
her own leet.
Madlaine Traverse in her latest
screen drama, "Rose of the West,"
an intense photoplay revealing in
full measure the unusual ability of
this star who can handle elemental
emotion with great power. The
scene of this play is in the Canadian
Northwest. An unhappv wife be
lieves her brutal husband dead and
is about to remarry and take her
daughter within the borders of civil
ization, when the husband reappears.
The play cc -ins many scenes of
similar inters ty and the thrills are
abundant. Miss Traverse held her
audiences spellbound throughout.
In the supporting cast are Thomas
Santschi, Jack Nelson, Beatrice La
Plante, Frank Leigh and Minna Pre
vost the last-named a real Indian
who enacts an Indian role. Excel
lent photography adds much to en
joyment of the photoplay.
Court House Tax Pefeatedj
Women Vote for First Time
Stella, Neb., July 20. (Special
Telegram.) Sixty-eight women
voted on political matters for the
first time in Stella and West Muddy
precinct Saturday at the election on
county court house levy. A total
of 202 votes were cast, of which 29
were for the levy and 173 against.
TiliiluliiliiliiliilMluliiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirinliiliiliiliiliiliilMliiiniiiinii'iniiilHIiil'iinliiliiliiliilnliJi
SOME DAY
You Will Learn That-
GOOCH'S
BEST
MACARONI
Is the Best
Macaroni You
Can Buy. Then
You Will Regret
That You Did Not
Begin Buying It
TODAY
r
I
Sold in the Best Stores.
"iiSHIiiliiliiliiinli'iiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiMitiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiHiniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliil'iiiiiiiiKiiiir.
Brie) City News
Have Root Print It Beacon Press
Elec. Fans $8.50 Burgess-Granden
Patronize the American State
Bank. Adv.
Four Per Cent Interest on time de
posits. American State Bank. Adv.
Goes to Washington Mrs. Emil
Jensen, 116 North Twenty-fourth
street, left last night for Washing
ton, P. C, where she will visit with
relatives. She is expected to return
to Omaha In September.
G. IV. Slianahan, Arrested G. W.
Shanahan, news dealer, 2756 Web
ster street, was arrested last night by
Officer Behrens and charged with
carrying concealed weapons, while
he wan on his way home from his
; news stand, 912 Isorth Twenty-
5 fourth street.
? I .
I Chicago Firemen Agree
to End Strike and Arbitrate
Chicago, July 20. The first strike
of members of the fire department
in the history of the city has ended
and the men have returned to work,
after agreeing to submit their griev
ances to an arbitration committee.
The arbitration plan was an
nounced shortly after last midnight
following a conference by the griev
ance committee of the union, Fire
Marshal Thomas O Connor and John
F. Cullerton, manager of the proper
ties of the fire department.
The strike of the firemen started
Saturday when about 250 engineers
and assistants quit their work after
refusal of- the city to grant an in
crease in wages.
Peeved at Fitzgerald, Take
Liquor to South Side Court
State Agent Robert P. amar
dick has refused to bring any more
liquor cases before Judge Fitzgerald
for trial, so when he and the morals
squad yesterday afternoon raided
the home of E. B. Demarest, 2204
Grand avenue and seized a laigt
quanity of booze, Demarest and his
liquor were hauled to Soutth Side
station to await trial this morning
before Judge Foster.
Thirteen pints of "American
Pride", 6 quarts of Bond and Lil
lard's and 3 gallons of just plain
whisky were taken by Samardick
as evidence.
Demarest was charged with illegal
possesion of liquor.
An Entirely New Product
In Ford Tires
Salesmen Wanted
FOR HIGH GRADE CORD TIRES FOR FORD CARS. MANU
FACTURING PROPOSITION. LOCATED IN COUNCIL
BLUFFS, IOWA: KNOWN AS THE FORDCORD RUBBER
COMPANY.
WE FIRMLY BELIEVE WE HAVE THE LAST WORD IN
CORD TIRES FOR FORD CARS. CRITICAL TESTS THE
LAST SIX MONTHS PROVE THE WORTH OF OUR PROD
UCT. PATENT PENDING.
'
OnfUllzed by sua of High Business Standing. Reference, any bank in
Omaha or Council Bluffs.
President, JAMES A. GILMORE, for the past thirteen years
with the STANDARD OIL COMPANY of NEBRASKA, serving
in capacity as member of Board of Directors, Secretary, Pur-
' chasing Agent and Sale Manager for the Company.
Vic President, MAX GEISLER, successful Omaha business
man of 25 year' experience.
Treasurer, FRANK T. TRUE, present Treasurer of Council
Bluffs. He has occupied this position for past 20 years.
Secretary, GEORGE S. WRIGHT, senior member of the old
Mtabliahed law firm of WRIGHT BALDWIN.
Wo are authorized by the state and will start selling stock In Iowa July 20.
ThU la an unusual opportunity for good salesmen to handle our stock.
ThU Company is capitalized for $2,000,000, of which $1,000,000 is cumu
lative guaranteed S preferred stock, par value $10 (see our prospectus) and
$1,000,000 of participating, voting, common stock, par value $10 per share.
Soiling price of common stock, $20.
Thla Company reserves th right to discontinue the sale of or Increase
tho selling price of oommon stock without notice.
Fordcord Rubber Company
"Th Cord Tire for Ford Car."
Ground Floor Grand HoteL a .
Council Bluffs, Iowa.
FISTULA CURED
Rectal Disease Cured without a sever surgical
operation. No Chloroform or Ether used. Cure
guaranteed. PAY WHEN CURED. Write for illus
trated book on Rectal Disease, with sum and
testimonials of mora than 1,000 prominent people
who have been permanently cured. ,
DR. . R. TARRY, 240 Bee Bldg., Omaha, Neb.
Bombs Sent by Anarchists
to Be X-Rayed in Future
New York, July 20. Bombs sent
by anarchists to public officials and
which fail to explode, will be exam
ined in future by X-rays by govern
ment experts before being opened.
This announcement was made fol
lowing a conference between New
York police officers and representa
tives of the U. ?, Bureau of Mines.
Valuable clues to the senders of the
bombs will be obtained in this way,
it is expected.
Bill at the Empress.
Eight Whirlwinds, Arabia's tum
blers, experts in equilibristics, per
forming novel and amazing feats in
rapid succession, headline at the
Empress theater. A novelty offer
ing made up of piano and violin
playings, songs and 'stories, is con
tributed by Snow and Sigsworth.
"Just for Fun," is a brand new of
fering of Jack Lamey assisted by
the clever comedienne, Violet Pear
son. Leslie and Monday present a
sure fire dancing act, one of .the real
dancing gems in vaudeville. "God's
Outlaw," featuring Francis X.
Bushman, is the photoplay attrac
tion. A "Fatty" Arbuckle' comedy
is also shown.
There's
bubbles
on 'fern"
says-
No
corn
flakes
like
I
POST
TOASTIES
GOVERNMENT IN
CONTRACT WITH
GRAIN BUYERS
Agreement for Purpose of
Settling Long-Standing Dis
pute With Farmers is
Reason Given.
New York, July 20. To settle the
long-standing dispute between farm
ers and grain buyers as to a proper
price basis for wheat,t the United
States Grain Corporation has en
tered into a contract with buyers
whereby the latter agree "to reflect
properly to producers the govern
ment's guaranteed price for various
grades of wheat," it is announced.
This contract, which places the
government in the position of
standing behind producers to see
they obtain a proper price for their
wheat, provides that, in case of dis
agreement, either farmers or buyers
are privileged to submit a sample
of the wheat in dispute to the near
est zone vice president of the grain
corporation and from him get are
view of the method of determining
of the price.
It also provides that appeal for
final decision may be taken to Ju
lius H. Barnes, wheat director.
Ihe contract specifies that millers
and dealers "shall purchase on the
proper grade and dockage under the
federal standards, and shall oav
therefor not less than the guaran
teed price based on such proper
grade and dockage, at the terminal
most advantageously reached, less
freight and less a reasonable hand
ling margin."
New York Concern Buys
ilson & Co. Grocery
Business of Chicago
New York, July 20. Announce
ment was made here that Austin
Nichols and company, New York
wholesale grocery concern. haO
completed a deal for purchase of
the grocery business of Wilson &
company of Chicago and allied con
cerns. Harry Balfe, president of the
iew iork concern, said he was not
prepared to state terms agreed
upon.
The deal includes purchase of the
entire business of the Fame Canning
company, which operates a num
ber of important vegetable can
ning plants in the middle west, and
also controlling interest in the Wil
son Fisheries company, which oper
ates important packing and fish in
dustries on the Pacific coast.
Iron and Steel Workers
Plan Taking Strike Vote
Pittsburgh, Pa., July 20. The
American Federation of Labor's na
tional committee for organizing iron
and steel workers, in session Sun
day, ordered the taking of a strike
vot : of 150,000 organized employes
of the United States Steel corpora
tion and other iron and steel and al
lied industries throughout the coun
try at once.
An effort also will be made to
secure the votes of unorganized
workers, according to the commit
tee. The right of collective bargain
ing is the thief demand of the union,
said an announcement by the com
mittee. Other demands included
establishment of the eight-hour day;
increases in wages sufficient to
guarantee American standards of
living; and abolition of company
unions.
THE
WOMAN IN BLACK
By EDMUND CLERIHEW BE NT LEY
Copyright. by ths Century company. 1
Eastern Arizona Washouts
Delay Santa Fe Traffic
Albuqerque, N. M, July 20.
Washouts in eastern Arizona have
delayed all transportation traffic on
the Santa Fe. Train No. 10, djc
here from the west at 7 o'clock Sun
day morning, was about 16 hours
late. Trains due Sunday night were
reported from three to four hours
late.
The worst washouts in years fol
lowed heavy snow and rain storms.
A bridge 'and several miles of tracl.
between Houck and Chambers, 41
miles east of Winslow, have been
washed out. Serious washouts also
are reported on the Ceader Glade
Clarksdale branch of the Santa Fe.
Landslides of rock and gravel are
reported to have covered the track
between these points to a depth of
from 8 to 10 feet for a distance of
nearly two miles.
Fortune Gallo Decorated
by Victor Emmanuele
Friends and patrons of the San
Carlo Grand Opera company, whose
visits to this community have come
to be regarded as important features
of the cultural life, will be inter
ested to learn that Mr. Fortune Gal
lo, managing director of the organi
zation, was recently the recipient,
from the Italian sovereign, King
Victor Emmanuele, of an honor con
ferring upon him the tilte of Chev
alier of the Italian Royal Crown.
This is a knighthood enjoyed by
personages of no less distinction
thr.n Puccini and, Mascagni, the
composers; Gabriel D'Annunzio, the
eminent soldier-poet; Signor Caruso,
and others prominent in the Italian
world of art.
Boy Drowned in Municipal
Swimming Pool at Pierre
Pierre, S. D., July 20. (Special
Telegram.) Lee Dewell, 14-year old
son of a mail clerk drowned in the
municipal swimming pool here Sun
day morning before an attendant
came on duty. The boy dove from
a high diving board and evidently
could not swim. Small children m
the pool gave the alarm but help
came too late to save his life.
Detective Frank Murphy
f Reported Worse Last Night
Detective Frank Murphy, who was
shot last Wednesday morning by
Judd Tobias, alleged bandit, in a
istol duel in which Tobias was
' illed, was reported last night as
doing poorly." Gastritis has added
to his suffering. A brief rest yes
terday afternoon relieved him some
what, but he suffered greatly all day.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Evil Days
"I am returning the check you
sent for what I did on the Mander
son case," Trent wrote to Sir James
Molloy from Munich, whither he had
gone immediately after handing in
at the Record office a btief dis
patch bring his work on the case to
an unexciting close. "What I sent
you wasn't worth one-tenth of the
amount; but I should have no scruple
about pocketing it, if I hadn t taken
a fancy never mind why not to
touch any money at all for this
business., I should like you, if there
is no objection, to pay for the stuff
at your ordinary space-rate, and
hand the money to some charity
which does not devote to bullying
people, if you know of any vuch.
I have come to this place to see
some old friends and arrange my
ideas, and the idea that comes out
uppermost is that for a little while
I want some emplovment with ac
tivity in it. I find I can't paint at
all; I couldn't paint a fence. Will
you try me as your own correspond
ent somewhere? If you can find me
a good adventure l will send you
good accounts. After that I could
settle down and work."
Sir James sent him instructions
by telegram to proceed at once to
Kurland and Livonia, where Citizen
Browning was abroad again, and
town and countryside blazed in re
volt. It was a roving 'commission,
and for two months Trent followed
his luck. It served him not less
well th?n usual. He was the only
correspondent who saw General
Dragilew killed in the street at Vol
mar by a girl of 18. He saw burn
ings, lynchings. fusillades, hangings;
each day his soul sickened afresh
at the imbecilities born of misrule.
Many nights he lay down in danger.
Many days he went fasting. But
there was never an evening or a
morning when he did not see the
face of the woman whom he hope
lessly loved.
He discovered in himself an un
happy pride at the lasting force of
this infatuation. It interested him
as a phenamenon; it amazed and en
lightened him. Such a thing had not
visited him before; it confirmed so
much that he had found dubious in
the recorded experience of men.
It was not that, at 32, he coulci
pretend to ignorance of this world
of emotion. About his knowledge,
let it be enough to say that what
he had learned had come unpursued
and unpurchased, and was without
intolerable memories; broken to the
realities of sex, he was still troubled
by its inscrutable history; he went
through life full of a strange respect
for certain feminine weakness and
a very simple terror of certain fem
inine strength. He had held to a
rather- lukewarm faith that some
thing remained in him to be called
forth, and that the voice that should
call would be heard in its own time,
if ever, and not through any seeking.
But he had not thought of the pos
sibility that, if this proved true some
day, the truth might come in a sin
ister shape. The two buildings that
had taken him utterly by surprise
in the matter of his feelings towards
Mabel Manderson were the insane
suddenness of its uprising in full
strength and its extravagant hope
lessness. Before it came, he had
been much disposed to laugh at the
permanence of unrequieted passion
as a generous boyish delusion. He
knew now that he had been wrong,
and he was living bitterly in the
knowledge.
Before the eye of his fancv the
woman always came just as she was
when he had first had sight of her,
with the gesture which he ad sur
prised as he walked past unseen on
the edge of the cliff; that great ges
ture of passionate joy in her new
liberty which had told him more
plainly than speech that her widow
hood was a release from torment,
and had confirmed with terrible
force the suspicion, active in his
mind before, that it was her pass
port to happiness with a man whom
she loved. He could not with cer
tainty name to himself the moment
when he had first suspected that it
might be so. The seed of the thought
must have been sown, he believed,
at his first meeting with Marlowe;
his mind would have noted automat
ically that such evident strength and
grace, with the sort of looke and
manners that the tall young man
possessed, might go far with any wo
man of unfixed affections. - And the
connection of this with what Mr.
Cupple,s had told him of the Man
dersons' married life must have
formed itself in the unconscious
depths of his mind. Certainly it had
presented itself as an already es
tablished thing when he began,
after satisfying himself of the iden
tity of the murderer, to cast about
for the motive of the crime. Motive,
motive! How desperately he had
sought for another, turning his
back upon that grim thought, the
Marlowe obsessed by passion like
himself, and privy perhaps to mad
dneing truths about the wife's un
happiness had taken a leaf, the
guiltiest, from the book of Both
well. But in all his investigations
at the time, in all his broodings on
the matter afterwards, he had been
able to discover nothing else that
could prompt Marlowe to such a
deed nothing but that temptation,
the whole strength.of which he could
not know, but which if it had existed
must have pressed urgently upon a
bold spirit in which scruple had
been somehow paralyzed. If he
could trust his senses at all, the
young man was neither insane nor
by nature evil. But that could not
clear him. Murder for a woman's
sake, he thought, was not a rare
crime, Heaven knew! If the modern
feebleness of impulse in the comfort
able classes, and their respect for
the modern apparatus of detection,
had made it rare among them, it was
yet far from " impossible; it only
needed a man of equal daring and in
telligence, his soul drugged with the
vapors of an intoxicating intrigue,
to plan and perform such a deed.
A thousand times, with a heart full
of anguish, he had sought to reason
away the dread that Mable Mander-
SORENESS
in joint or mus
cles, give a brisk
massage with
Vic&sVapob
fro
son had known tnX murk nt .,
had been intended against her hus-
RisIm'm 111- T1 i s ...
uauu a mc. i nat sne knew all the
truth after the thing was done, he
i-ouiu not doubt; her unforgettable
collapse m his presence when the
question about Marlowe was sud
denly and bluntly, put had swept
away his last hope that there was
no love between the pair, and had
seemed to him, moreover, to speak
of dread of discovery. In any case,
she knew the eruth after reading
wuat ne naa lett with her; and it
was certain that no public suspicion
uau uccu nasi upon aianowe since.
sne nad destroyed his manuscript,
thn, and taken him at his work to
keep the secret that threatened her
lover s life.
But it was the monstrous thought
that she might have known murder
was brewing, and guiltily kept si
lence, that haunted Trent's mind.
She might have suspected, have
guessed something; was it conceiv
able that she was aware of the whole
plot, that she connived? He could
never torget that his first suspicion
of Marlowe's motive in the crime
had been roused by the fact that
his escape was made through the
lady's room. At that time, when
he had not vet seen her. he had
been ready enough to entertain the
idea ot her equal guilt and her co
operation. He had figured to him
self some passionate hysteric, merci
less as a tiger in her fate and her
love, a zealous abettor, perhaps
even the ruling spirit in the crime.
Then he had seen her, had spoken
with her, had helped her in her
weakness; and such suspicions, since
their first meeting, had seemed the
vilest of infamy. He had seen her
eyes and her mouth; he had breathed
the woman's atmosphere. Trent was
one of those who fancy they can
scent true wickedness "in the air.
In her presence he had felt an in
varied certainty of her ultimate
goodness of heart; and it was noth
ing against this, that she had aband
oned herself a moment, that day
on the cliff, to the seintiment of
relief at the ending of her bondage,
of her years of starved sympathy
and unquickened motherhood. That
she had turned to Marlowe in her
destruction he believed; that she had
any knowledge of his deadly pur
pose he did not believe.
And yet,, morning and evening,
the sickening doubts returned, and
he recalled again that it was almost
in her very presence that Marlowe
had made his preparations in tut
bedroom of the murdered man, that
it was from the window of her own
chamber that he had escaped from
the house. Had he forgotten his
cunning and taken the risk of telling
her then? Or had he, as Trent
thought more likely, still played hi
part with her then, and stolen off
while she slept? He did not think
she had known of the masquerade
when she gave evidence at the in
quest; it read like honest evidence.
Or the question would never be si
lenced, though he scorned it had
she Iain expecting the footstep in
the room and the whisper that
should tell her it was done? Among
the foul possibilities of human na
ture, was it possible that black
ruthlessness and black deceit as
well were hidden behind that good
and straight and gentle seeming?
These thoughts would scarcely
leave him when he was alone.
(Continued Tomorrow.)
South Sfde
Bluffs Woman Dies at Home
of Daughter in South Omaha
Mrs. Ann Hughes, age 79 years, a
pioneer of Council Bluffs, i died at
the home of her daughter, Mrs. L. J.
Gillea, 6815 South Thirteenth street
Omaha, Sunday afternoon. Besides
her daughter, she is survived by two
sons, John of Houston, Tex., and
Tom, of Omaha. Funeral services
will be held in St. Francis Xavier
church, Council Bluffs at 9 o'clock
Wednesday morning. Interment
will be in St. Joseph cemetery,
Council Bluffs.
South Side Brevities
Light baggage and express; call office.
South 1281 or South 1109. P. J. Ford.
BEAUTIFUL GARDKN LOTS.
Lot sale going on at Thirty-sixth and
Monroe streets. South Side; lots, $76 to
$323; very easy payments.
LOT SALE
at Thirty-sixth and Monroe streets; $75
up Buy now before prices get higher.
Come out today or Call Colfax 719.
PLAN YOUR HOME FOR $75 TO $375.
See the high and sightly lots at Thirty-sixth
and Monroe streets. Come out
now. Salesman there all the time. Very
easy payments.
FOR YOUR CHILDREN'S SAKE
buy a fine lot in a good neighborhood for
your children. Easy payments. Come out
to Thirty-sixth and Monroe streets, only
$75 to $375.
COME OUT SUNDAY .
to Thirty-sixth and Monroe streets; big ldt
sale near Skinner's new packing plant. Just
a few lots loft; price from $75 up. Terms
very easy. Call Colfax 719.
Bee Want Ads Produce Results.
AMUSEMENTS
wmm
OMCOTPICNIO
Many Clean Amusments
BATHING
DANCING-RIDES
THRILLS
PICNIC GROUND'S
FREE EVERY DAY
the
THREE VALDANOS
In Their Sensational Flying
Aeroplane and Perch Novelty.
3 ff A el I
U " II a-! a. VI W M
TWO SHOWS IN ONE
Eltht Whllwlndi.. Snow and Slsworth. J.iMc
snd Mondy, Lamay snd Parion. Ptiototy:
Francli X. Buihman in "God'i Outlsw." Ft.
ty Arbuckl Cemtdy.
DIFFERENCE OF
OPINION ABOUT
EXTRA SESSION
Some 'Say Meeting Can Be
Concluded in One Day;
Others Say Five
Necessary.
Lincoln, July 20. (Special)
When Governor McKelvie returns
from a short rest ' he is taking in
neighboring states, it is probable
that the call for the special session,
if'it is called, will be made.
It is understood just now that
there will be nothing in the call ex
cept the ratification of the suffrage
amendment to the national constitu
tion, but something might turn up
that would cause the executive to
change his mind.
It is also understood that there is
a sentiment among some mat tne
session will last but a day and that
all that is necessary is to introduce
the resolution in one house, shoot it
over to the other end of the build-
incr. and the deed is done.
Others are of the opinion that it
would be foolish to call a special
session and take such hasty action
that by resorting to the courts the
work of the session might be held
up because the resolution was not
read on three separate clays in
each body and passed as other acts
of the legislature.
These latter prophets insist that
to some extent, precedent makes
law and that resolutions of this na
ture have always taken the same
route through the legislature as
bills. The last work of the legisla
ture along that line, the passage of
the act for the ratification of the na
tional prohibitory amendment took
the regular course. '
Section 10 of Article 3 of the
state constitution under the head
Legislative." reads:
"Every bill and concurrent resolu
tion shall be read at large on three
separate days in each house, etc.
Those who claim to be authority
on the matter urge that a "concur
rent resolution" is any resolution
which is acted upon favorably by
one house and concurred in by the
other. If the ratification of the na
tional suffrage amendment is not a
bill it is a concurrent resolution
and therefore must be treated as the
constitution provides and be "read
in each house on three separate
davs."
Must Take Regular Course.
They are of the opinion that acts
of the legislature which can be
passed in less than three days spe
cified are simply resolutions in
which action is taken only in the
body in which they originated and
come under the "going over one day
under the rules proposition. If
there is any action which deals
with changing a present law or the
constitution it must go through the
regular channels as any other legis
tion. Ratification of an act of con
gress which effects present laws in
Jvebraska or its constitutional pro-
isions comes under the regular or
der of enactment of laws and must
take the same channel.
Should this be the conclusion of
the members then the special ses
sion cannot adjourn in less than
five days. The resolution can be
read on three separate days in the
branch in which it originates and
then on the third day go to the other
branch and be read the same day,
thus saving a day and completing
the work in five days.
Konenkamp Resigns.
Chicago, July 20. S. J. Kon
enkamp resigned today as president
of the Commercial Telegraphers
Union of America. In his letter to
the executive board tendering his
resignation he said he was going to
practice law.
Lift offComs!
Doesn't hurt a bit and Frecion)
costs only a few cents.
With your fingers! ou can lift
off any hard corn, soft corn, or
corn between the toes, and the hard
skin callouses from bottom of feet.
A tiny bottle of "Freezone" costs
little at any drug store: apply a few
drops upon the corn or callus. In
stantly it stops hurting, then shortly
you lift that bothersome corn or cal
lus right off, root and all, without
one bit of pain or soreness. Truly 1
Don't scratch
mosquito bites!
For relief rub on
BAUME
ANALGtfSIQUE
BENGUE
It quickly reduces
swelling and all ir
ritation. Get a tube
Thos. Leetniaf ft Co., N. Y.
The. r.n.. te
,0S6 Dandruff and
itcning;
WhyL
AT M Th Rn.J
lournanr cuticurk
AndiutfghUg Soap 26, OtntmtntSfi AGO, Talcum K.
SampU each frM of "0tlcmr,j Ppt. y ,toa "LL
GIRLS
The newest complexion fad is derwfllo.
(t instantly beautifies the complexion.
whitens the skin and astonishes all who
try it. Never be without it. Derwillo
gives you a rosy, peach-like skin which
everybody will rave about. It's absolutely
harmless. Get it today. Druggists refund
the money if it fails. See large announce
ment soon to appear in this paper.
PHOTOPLAYS.
& ''The Money U
H ZilL Corral'' I
Stamn!
WILLIAM
Dorothy Dalton
in
"The Home Breaker"
Fatty Arbuckle
in
"A Desert Hero"
The Ideal Family Loaf.
Patronize Your
Neighborhood Grocer
JAY BURNS BAKING CO.
A. F. ROBERTS IS
GLAD HE TOOK
DOCTOR'S ADVICE
Cattle Dealer Gains Sixteen
Pounds in Sixty Days
Taking Tanlac. ,
WADLAINE
H TRAVERSE j
liHE WEST'
I jffiLH , . . -1
Norma
Talmadge
in
"Fifty-Fifty'
LOTHROP"',t"d
Today and Tuesday
BERT LYTELL in "BUND MAN'S EYES"
"One of the best doctors in Colo-!
rado advised me to take Tanlav
and it has not only overcome mv
troubles, but I have gained 16
pounds since I began taking it 60
days ago," said A. F. Roberts, who
lives at Rocky Ford, Alberta, Can
ada, a few days ago.
Mr. Roberts is one of the largest
cattla dealers in his section of the
country, and before moving to
Canada a short time ago, he had
spent most of his life in Colorado,
U. S. A.
"t can now understand why Tan
lac enjoys such wide popularity
both in Canada and the United
States." continued Mr. Roberts,
"and since it has done me so much
good, I know that it is a very de
pendable medicine and deserves all
the praise that is being given it.
For the past two years I have suf
fered from stomach trouble, and
when I commenced taking this Tan
lac, it was' almost impossible for
me to retain anything I ate. I was
very nervous and never got a good
night's sleep, and finally got so
weak and run-down that I was hard
ly able to get about. I often had
dizzy spells, and was bothered a
great deal with constipation.
"My physician certainly knew
what he was doing when he pre
scribed Tanlac for me, for it has
done the work for me, as I am as
healthy and strong now as I ever
was in my life. In fact, it has done
much more for me than I expected
it would do. I have a fine appetite
and everything I eat agrees with
me perfectly, and I never have the
slightest sign of stomach trouble
of any kind. I am no longer both
ered with constipation, and never
have those dizzy spells any more.
I have regained all my strength, too,
and that nervousness has left me,
and I sleep like a log every night.
In fact, I am simply enjoying per
feet health again, and I give Tan
lac. credit for it all." '
-Tanlac is sold in Omaha at all
Sherman & McConnell Drug Com
pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy
and West End Pharmacy. Also For
rest and Meany Drug Company in
South Omaha and the leading drug
gist in each city and town through
out the state of Nebraska. Adv.
The Bee Want Ads Are the Best
Business Boosters.