TEE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 19i9. A - Lincoln Bureau of The Omaha Bee PLANS MADE FOR VETERANS' TRAIN TO ENCAMPMENT Official Special Will Leave Omaha September 7500 Expected to Etejn Nev braska Party. Lincoln, Aug. 15. All arrange ments have been perfected for the Nebraska Sons of Veterans' special train, which will run from this state to the national G. A. R, encampment in Columbus, O., September 7. This train will carry the department haads of the G. A. R., Sons of Vet erans, W. R. C, Ladies of the G. A. R., Daughters of Veterans and S. V. auxiliary, delegates and their fam ilies. The Douglas county contingent will leave Omaha over the North western Sunday, September 7, at 6 o'clock, the train consisting of Pullman and tourist sleepers and chair cars, and will be attached to the official train at Missouri Valley, which will leave Lincoln" at 4 o'clock. The fare from Omaha will be $17.95 for the round trip, which in cludes the war tax. Parties going on the special via Chicago may re turn any other route they wish, via St. L,ouis and Kansas City. It is y Sbt a Quarter GitlufU Player Pianos TheHobart M. Cable j , 1 Here is a player piano that will meet with your every expectation of a piano. We could write a full page on this beautiful instrument of music, yet it would not make it any bet ter YOU MUST HEAR IT PLAY Then you wll know why we handle this niino. Tha HOUSE Of MICKELS for over a quarter century ha held an invincible reputation for honesty and re liability. It it our belief that we are offering the best instrument that can be told al a moderate price. Q. R. S. PLAYER ROLL The One Roll for a Player Piano. "Lay Eyes" "The Alcoholic Blues" "Follies of 1919" - "Blue Bird" ' , "Tears" "Mickey" Come in Today Let Us Get Acquainted. MICHEL'S 15th and Harney Sts., OMAHA, NEB. - P. A. Banows,vCorr8poadent expected that there will be approxi mately 500 people from Nebraska on this train. Parties desiring sleep ers from Omaha must tonfer with Mr. Mallison in the McCague build ing, who has charge of assignment of berths. Parties going on the official train fro"m Lincoln will no tify Harmon Bross, assistant ad jutant general of the G. Ay R., state house, who has charge of -assignment of berths.' Passengers from the west should join the special at Fremont. - The train will go through to Co lumbus intact and without change, and will be switched to the Penn sylvania road in Chicago without having to go through the depots, thus doing away with any delays, and will reach Columbus Monday. Contracts for Building State Roads Are Awarded Lincoln, Aug. 15. (Special.) The highways department has made con tracts for the building of the follow ing pieces of road: From Beaver City to Arapahoe, a distance of 19 miles, Furnace county will do the building, having beer, given the contract for $58,000. Cul verts and pieces of road in low places -which will have to be paved were awarded to other parties for $23,000. Bartley to McCook, a distance of 17 miles, Russell Condon of Omaha secured the contract for $62,000. Culverts and short pieces of paving were let extra for $35,000. 'Hastings to Ayr, a distance of 11 miles, Cook & O'Brien of Kansas City were awarded the contract for $39,500, while the culverts and small pieces of paving will cost $15,000. Ayr to Red Cloud, a distance of 27 miles, Cook & O'Brien will pave in Adams county for $20,000, and George W. Condon gets that part in Webster county for $80,000. Cul verts and paving in small places for $26,000. - Cass County Telephone Companies Cited by State Lirccln, Aug. 15. The telephone company at Alvo, it is charged, has doubled its telephone rates without asking permission of the State Rail way commission, and the Murdock Telephone company is reported to have refused to put in an accounting system after being ordered so to do by the State Railway commission. . . th companies have been .cited to appear before the commission and explain, if they can, why they have ignored the commission. New Bank Examiner. Lincoln, Aug. 15. R. O. Chase, cashier of the First National bank of Randolph, has been appointed hank examiner, to take the place of R. S. Thornton of Lincoln, who has been appointed an examiner in the new 'bureau of securities, formerly known a the blue sky department of the state. Horlick the Original Malted M i 1 k Avoid Imitations and Substitutes? 6 Beu-ans Hot water Sure Relief BELL-ANS FOR IfMDIGFSTION BILIOUSNESS Caused by Acid-Stomach K people 5J10 are billons are treated oceord in; to locaTymptom they seldom get very much better. Whatever relief Isobtuiued is usually temporary. TracerbilinuBiitss to its ource aad remove the cause and the ohauccs arc that the patient will remain strong and healthy. Doctors nay that more than 70 non- riranic diseases can be traced to an Acid-Stomach. Biliousness is one of them. Indigestion), heart burn, belching, anur stomach, bloat and gas are other slgna of acid-stomach. EATON 1C, the marvelous modern stomach remedy, brings quick relief from these stomach is erlea which lead to a lone train ot ailmenta that make lite miserable if not corrected. EATON IO literally absorbs and carrlaff way the excess acid. Makes the stomach strong, cool and comfortable. Helps diges tion: improves the appetite and you then get full strength from your food. Thousands say that E ATONIC is the most effective stomach remedy in the world. It is the help YOU need. Try it orrtur money-back-lf-not-sati-Red guarantee. At all druggists. OnlySOe lor a bis box. ATONIC Cf OR YOUR ACIPCTOMACg) Five Applications for State Bank Charters Filed LinColn.Auff. IS. fSnocial 1 Tin. der the operation of v the banking ucpsrimcm unaer ine coae Din sec retary of Trade and Commerce J. E. Hart will give out all applications for bank charters instead of waiting until action has been taken on the applications. Tne first ones to be filed are: Goodwin Stat hantr nnnrtwJn Dakota countv. Neh. T C Dnco-an. president; H. H. Adair, vice-president; Ray F. Quinn, cashier. Capi ta!. $10,000. rarmers State bank. Hazard, Sherman countv. Nh VV P San. ders, president; C. E. Peters, cashier. capital, $li,uuu. Farmers' State bank, Rockville, Sherman rminfv. NTph W P Mc Donald, president; A. F. Nielsen, vice-president; S. E. Sorensen, cashier. Capital, $15,000. Farmers & Merchants bank, Spald ing, Greeley county, Neb. Frank Moran, president; M. J. Flynn, vice president. Capital, $30,000. surety Mate bank, David City, Butler rnimrv Neh H A Rrvanr president; J. B. Hookstro and J. C. Harris, -vice-president; O. E. Davis, cashier. Capital, $75,000. Cole Appeals to Supreme Court to Save His Life Lincoln, Aug. 15. Alson B. Cole, Sentenced to electrocution for the murder of Mrs. Lulu Vogt in How ard county, has -appealed to the su preme 'ourt from an adverse ruling of the district court of Lancaster county on an action brought asking for a new trial. Cole claims that he .is entitled to a trial and that he had no chance to introduce testi mony. He- pleaded guilty to the inurder and charged Allen Grammer, son-in-law of Mrs. Vogt, with hav ing hked him to commit the crime. 'Both men were sentenced to death, bqj have had several respites be cause of court proceedings. State Executive Leaves for Governors' Conference Lincoln, Aug. 15. Governor Mc Kelvie left Friday evening for Salt Lake City, where he will attend th? governors' conference, to'open Monciay. He will stop in Denver and attend a picnic of the Lincoln club of Colorado. It is expected several governors on their way to Salt Lake will address the meeting. Will Appraise Land. Lincoln, Aug. 15. Land Com missioner Dan Swanson will make a niltrrimaire into some of the muti nies of the middle and northwestern part of the state next Monday for the purpose of appraising about 3,500 acres of school land for sale purposes. Minnesota Governor and Party Visiting in Aurora Aurora, Neb., Aug. 15. (Special.) Gov. J. A. A. Burnquist of Minne sota, accompanied by Mrs. Burn quist, his sister, Miss Mabel Burn quist of Dayton, -la., and Maj. W. C. Garis, are visiting at the Oscar Gunnarsen home in this city. Gov ernor Burnquist and Mrs. Gunnar sen are cousins, and he has a num ber of other relatives in this vicinity. The party is enroute to Salt Lake City to attend a conference of governors. One Killed, One Injured Kearney, Neb., Aug. 15. (.Spe cial.) Mrs. W., T- Judy was killed and her husband was seriously in jured yesterday, when an automo bile in whifjh they were riding col lided with a Burlington freight train at a railroad crossing just outside theVity. Mr. Tudv. who has a state- Tcle reputation as a breeder of draft horses, is in a local hospital. Brick Plant Destroyed. West Point, Neb., Aug. 15. (Special. ) Fire Thursday destroyed ! the big drying sheds of the West ; I oint brick plant. the city water supply was not available. The loss is $3,000. TELLS HOW AUTOS AND PLANES WERE THROWNJN FIRE Stripped of Motors, Machines Were Stacked In Piles.. Soaked In Oil and Burned. Sioux Falls, S. D., Aug. 15. (Spe cial.) Henry Brown, a Sioux Falls boys, who served in France as a sergeant, first class, in Third com pany, Second Air Service Mechanics regiment, was not only a witness, but" an actual although unwilling participant in the deliberate destruc tion in France this spring of many thousands of dollars' worth' pi American government property, act ing under orders which he was obliged to obey. While not a flyer, he was station ed at the largest aviation field in the world, Issodun, about 150 miles from Paris, and, according to his story, personally helped to demolish over 1,000 automobiles, dozens of airplanes and scores of motor trucks, all of which, he asserts, appeared to be in workable condition. - Brown states that he has his own theories for the wanton waste of material. Officially he is unable to give the cause of the instructions is sued to him last December and Jan uary to burn and cut up both planes and cars. On orders received late in December of last year he shipped a number of airplanes to Romoran tin, after first removing the motors, as instructed by his superiors. Then", iater, they commenced to hear that the airplanes were being burned in large quantities at Romorantin. "And, of, course," he said in relat ing the story, "the boys commenced to talk about it." ' - In January, he states, they received orders to burn the planes on their field, and this they did, after strip ping of the wings and removing the motors. "The wings," he said, "we piled with the planes, putting usually i to 15 planes in a pile, and it made quite a stack. Then we applied oil liberally and then a torch.'' You should have seen those planes burn. They-tfiade some bonfire, I'll say. Brown does not know what be came of the motors, as they were taken out of their charge. Grant Bank Charter. Washington, D. C, Aug. 15 (Spe cial Telegram.) A charter has been issued to the First National bank, Bassett, Nb., with a Capital of $30,-000. TheB Free ees Fund for and Ice Have you ever gone without a bite to .eat for 24 hours? If you have you can, to some small extent, realize the suffering frail little babies undergo when their only nourishment, milk, is delayed. x Picture, if you can, a helpless baby, faint from lack'of. food, and weakened by the long weeks of con stant high temperatures. You can almost hear its weak, plaintive cries, and thevsob of the mother who is unable to buy it nourishment. Not a pleasant picture, but there are many such cases in Omaha now. NOW is the crisis in the baby',s life. If cool, fresh soothing milk can be bought for it, all is well. If not all efforts to keep it alive during the past-ixortured weeks have been in vain. WILL YOU RESPOND TO THE CRISIS WITH A CONTRI BUTION TO WHICH CAN HELP SUCH CASES? Prrvimnlr acknowlrdird S88S.70 E. H. Steven. Shenandoah, la 2.SO C. P. Terwillger, Imperial, Neb 1.00 Total ' SS70 Dodge County World War Vets Guests of Fremont Fremont, Neb., Aug. 15. (Special Telegram.) Fremont entertained world war veterans of Dodge county Friday, a big crowd turning out to honor the boys. More than 300 sol diers, sailors and marines registered at. the Hotel Pathfinder. In the cjty park a program of band music and speaking was carried out. Capt. C. E. Adams of Omaha was the speaker. He was introduced by C. D. Marr, presidentof the Commer cial club. Following the exercises at the park, there was a base ball game-j between Fremont and benbner at the driving park. During the after noon Pilot E. J. Robins, in the Fremont-owned airplane, made exhibi tion flights over the city. The veterans were entertained at supper at the Hotel Pathfinder and at a dance on the pavement in the. street at the park, and were given tickets to the theater. Two Flyers Killed When -Plane Crashes to Ground Paducah.y Ky., Aug. 15. Lieut. James D. Stewart of Park field, Memphis and S. Reed Campbell, reporter employed by the Commer cial Appeal, were killed when the army airplane in which they were giving exhibition flights fell near the Country club here Friday night. The pilot was attempting to make a third loop when he lost con trol of the machine. MlMMIMMIMMlMtlMIII New York Office, 120 West 32d St. i Chicago Office, 118 Michigan Aye. POTFOTTOS S. B. CPU 16th A JACKSON STS. A Special Purchase Makes Possible This r1 iQ A- At Prices That Will Set New Records For Value-Giving I Mixed Summer Foods The Cause Of Much Indigestion CUMMER days are days of J cooking, cold lunches at the with the result that many a Give the stomach and bowels a new start by taking a dose of a good laxative tonic like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Then put variety into your diet by eating more warm food. It is more easily digested. A bottle of Syrup Pepsin can be bought at any drug store for 50c and $1, the latter the family size. It acts so gently and safely that it can be given even to a baby in constipation, indiges tion, "summer colds" and similar ills. The formula on.which Syrup Pepsin careless living, kitchens too hot (or homes of friends, open-air picnics. family is down with indigestion. it based wat written by Dr. Caldwell over 30 years ago. It u a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin that trains the stomach-muscles to do their work naturally so that medicines can again be dispensed with. Over 6 million bottles of Syrup Pepsin are told by druggists every year. ,That is recomr mendation in itself. If you have never used Syrup Pepsin, send your address for a free trial bottle to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 480 Washing ton St., Monticello, III. 1 '24x36-In. Hit or Mis Rag Rugs. Special Purchase Price 49 c 27x54-In. Hit or Miss Rag Rugs. Special Purchase Sale 89c 36x72-In. Hit or Miss Rag Rugs. Special Purchase Price $1.45 24x36-In. Colonial Rag Rugs in the' Special Purchase Sale 76c I $1.25 ... . . . i 27x54-ln. Colonial Rag Rugs in the Special N Purchase Sale 27x54 Axminster Rugs, on sale a $2.90 4x7-Ft. Colonial Rag Rugs, go at $3.35 27x54-In. Velvet Rugs, on sale at $4.85 36x63 Axminster Rugs, on sale at $5.45 27x54-In. Wilton Rugs, on sale at $6.30 36x72 Axminster Rugs, on sale at $6.85 Rugs in the Special 1 Purchase Sale i $2.20 j 36x63-In. Velvet Rugs, on sale at I $7,25 I 36x63-In. Wilton Rugs, on sale at I $9.45 1 ' A SPECIAL PURCHASE OF KIDDO TRUCKS At About V2 Price iT" Dr Caldwell's Bvru fJTiQ Perfect Xcpcatiue inA s The Dresti M.-is says: "Mam ma always buys my nhoes at Drexcl's because their shoes .wear best and they fit ml best. Still plenty 6f weath er for wearing Slippers. Our stock is complete in all thX popular styles and materials. y DlflEXEL'S Children's Shoes Our new stock of shoes for children's Fall wear are now ready for your inspec tion. Pretty patent leather lace and button models, tan calf, gun metal and glaze kid in a variety of styles that are sure to please'. Every pair of SERVICE CHOOL HOES are of strictly Drexel qual ity and the best that can be made. Bring the children in-Saturday. DREXEL SHOE CO, 1419 FARNAM STREET La A Fin al Clearance of TVT Men's Suits ' Saturday in Three Groups 13??18??'23 95 I T is hard to imagine men's good quality suits at these extremely low prices, but yoi must remember that when new goods arrive there must be room made for them, and we are willing to accept a sacrifice on these suits in order to dispose of them im mediately. COME EARLY SATURDAY and Make Your Selection BOYS' SCHOOL SUITS $9.95 "and $11.95 Just at an opportune time to secure splemlid quality boys' suits at prices that have, been greatly reduced. Bturesa-'aah Co. Fourth Floor. urgess-Nash Gonmhy. 'EVERYBODY STOP7' Boys and girls can have a lot of fun riding on side walks with a "Kiddo Truck" and yet, it is more than a toy wagop. It is a useful, practical truck that will haul groceries, ice, vegetables, etc., with ease. Built of solid oak, nicely finished and stongly braced throughout, it will last for years. At the "Special Pur- -i. ii - ii. splendid investment. Only II -SS' I l i $195 A Refrigerators I D 1 i I i Thre-door, family style refnVprntnr. with white o , 9 enameled lining and non rusting galvanized shelves, regularly dOT C ti $36.50, at pi .DU t Apartment top icing style refrigerator, with air cir- culation, regu- QC m larly $12.50, for. tpO.iD I Important Announcement! Fan Fashions Ready Extensive Assortments of Fabrics and Styles to Select From Large stocks of smart, fall apparel so early in the season are made possible by the fact that our Apparel Buyer has been in eastern Fashion centers for more than a month, selectintr modes that ar I I authentically correct for fall and winter wear and sending them on by express. 1 Serge Dresses I Tailored 'Suits Novelty Suits Fur Trimmed Suits The suits introduce many new interpreta tions of fashion, made up in rich fabrics, such as serge, poiret twill, silvertone, Yalama coth, etc. Prices are moderate. $32.50, $39.50 uP Satin Dresses Tricolette Dresses i The frocks vary their lines, materials and colors. Fringe and embroideries arevdecorative features and there are styles for every type of figure, ranging from $19.50, $29.75 vp Skirts I "x Good looking, cleverly tailored models that will go so well with the dark colored fall waists are here in abundance, made from fine, mannish spro-pa honntifnl follla .nf;. .wi r:.i I fancy belts, swagger pockets, cuffs and self trimming to make I them distinctive, nrices ranee from I $8J5 MMMIWMi