Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 25, 1919, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1919.
X
SALESMEN MEET
TO BOOST STOCK
FOR AK-SAR-BEN
Volunteers to Work East of
Sixteenth Street Hold
Meeting at Hotel .
Fontenelle.
The volunteer stock salesmen who
will work next week east of Six
teenth street in behalf of the stock
yelling: campaign for the Ak-Sar-Ben
t. Exposition company met last night
at the Hotel Fontenelle, where they
first broke bread and then received
inspiring talks from their leaders.
The west-of-Sixteenth street
teams met at the Fontenelle Wed-
nesday night and were enthused in
similar manner.
Guy Cramer, Robert H. Manley,
Harvey Millikin and ,H. B. White
house comprise the executive com
' mittee of the sales organization and
J. . Davidson is treasurer of the
exposition company. Excepting
only the various war fund cam
paigns, it may be said that this or
ganization surpasses anything Oma
ha has ever seen in the way of or
ganized business "pep."
Business Men Active.
And it is pep with a purpose and
a punch. Nearly 400 energetic 4ive
wire Omaha business men are in
this campaign because they have
faith to believe that the project is
for the real inteests of Omaha.
They are going to start out Mon
day to cover the entire city of
Greater Omaha. They will be
primed with' as much information
and zeal as if they were out to sell
goods for their firms or for them
selves. Their object is to sell $1,000,000
of stock at $100 per share in the Ak-Sar-Ben
Exposition company. They
are ready to batter down any ob
jection that may be offered by any
prospect, but they are not anticipat
ing objections, because they believe
that full-page advertisements in the
Omaha newspapers have prepared
the people for their coming.
Size Up Prospects. .
They will know how nach each
prospect should subscribe for.
The leading business men of
Omaha already have agreed that
this exposition project will mean
more to Omaha than can be esti
mated at this time in dollars and
cents. The exposition wilt provide
nearly all-year entertainment and
amusements of a wide variety, in
cluding stock shows, automobile
and .aeroplane events, industrial
shows', carnivals of winter and sum
mer sports, open-air pageants, front
ier day exhibits, etc. . , .
v The salesmen are organized in 41
teams, each team with a major and
a captain. : ;
Each team has its own special dis
trict and will work only in that dis
trict. , , . ,
- Each salesman now has the name
of every prospect and the quota for
-r each prospect. , '. . .
Arrest for Embezzlement
Breaks Up a Honeymoon
Charges of forgery, embezzlement
and larceny as bailee broke up the
honeymoon of . Ernest Smith and his
wife, s formerly Miss . Anna Toth,
4512 -North Seventeenth street.
Smith was arrested at the Union
stock yards on the forgery charge
whtfn he is said to have attempted
to pass a check for $56.45 made pay
able to H. Smith and signed by A.
L. Parker, , '
Late . yesterday afternoon , Smith
was brought to the Central police
station by Detectives Troby and
Bolar and bo6ked for embezzlement
and larceny as bailee. The detectives
say he admitted collecting $68 on a
coal bill for Sunderland Bros, and
using the money to be married.
They eloped to Council Bluff s Tues
day. The wife is broken-hearted,
but says she will stand valiantly by
his side.
Nonpartisan League Bank
Solvent, Dakota Court Rules
Bismarck. N. D Oct. 24.-The
North Dakota supreme court, m a
Scandinavian-American bank of Far
eTo and State Bank Examiner Lof
tus a permanent writ restraining
the state bank board from interfer
ing with the rairs of the bank, and
held that the bank was solvent.
v.
I
Grand Ball
Rushing's Hall
Tonight
4426 S. 24th St. ,
Carl Lamp's Big .
Brass Band
With Organ ChimM
Everybody Welcome
Getting Closer to Home.
See Page 6
Young Brothers of '
Girl Rescue Her
From Attack by Man
i a
An unidentified white man at
tempted to attack Lulu Ulrich, 9
years old, 1129 North Seventeenth
street, at North Twentieth and
Nicholas streets, Thursday after
noon, when the child was on her
way home from school.
The man was frightened away by
the girl's two younger brothers, who
were following their sister home
from the Kellom school. North
Twenty-third and Paul streets.
The police were given a descrip
tion of the man, who is believed to
be the same person accessed of an
noying children of the .neighbor
hood for the past week.
The man was said to have been
loitering around the neighborhood
all afternoon. He followed the
child from school, and when she
reached North Twentieth and Nich
olas streets, he accosted her and
threw his arms around her. The
girl screamed and when her broth
ers hastened to her assistance the
man fled.
He is described as being 20 years
old, heavy set and wearing dark
clothes.
An aquarium that forms the base
of an electric table lamp has been
Jatented in the United States by a
apanese inventor.
AMUSEMENTS.
1HR KIT IN VAUDEVILLE
LAST TWO TIMES
"Putting It Over"; Long Tack
Sam; Dolly Kay and Current Bill
MATINEE TODAY 2:15
--EARLY CURTAIN
Tonight at 8
Noxt Week: Emm Half and Jack
Waldron: T. Roy Barnes and Beetle
Crawford; A Current ef Fun and Ex
cellent Bill.
IS
TONIGHT
MATINEE TODAY
i tme umr.iN PRESENTS
M-rs W AW . - - - -
A Musical Comedy With Punch
"A DANGEROUS GIRL"
LAUGHS SONGS GIRLS.
Mats. 25c. 5Qc. Nighta gOc, 75c. $1.
ALL NEXT WEEK BEGIN. SUNDAY
t N. Y. Winter Garden Revue, The
PASSING SHOW
SEATS NOW SELLING. I
PRICES Nights, $1.00 to $2.60. Sat.
Mat., 7Sc to $2.00. Wed. and Thure.
Mats., 50c to $1.50. Curtain rises. Mats,
at 2. Nifhts at 8.
COMPANY FREES
BLUE EYES; FINE
OF S500JS PAID
Lincoln Lumber Concern Set
tles Charge Against Biga
mistLeaves With Sec
ond Wife.
Harvey Floyd Harris, famous
"Blue Eyes," quitted the county jail
in Council Bluffs yesterday after
noon free and untrammelled. Before
he reached the side 'walk in front of
the courthouse he met Mrs. "Babe
Young-Benjamin, whose marriage to
him January 20 last, causeH his ar
rest and prosecution by Mrs. Clara
Harris, deserted Des Moines wife,
ori bigamy charges.
It would have required ISO days
more in jail unless a $500 fine had
PHOTO PLATS
Ell
-r-
78 Breaflwsy
Three Days, Bef.
MONDAY,
October 27
N iht
50c to $2.00
Matinee
50c to $1.50
a MU6IC
SHOW OF
SONO HITS
DELICIOUS
HUMOR.
ENGAGING
ROMANCE
AND CAPtl.
VATIN8
GIRLS
f ivofttts Ammntd Omtmtn
COM AN X
"Omaha's Fun Center"
tf5rrltTZi Daily Mat., 15-25-SOc
SXeWffS'ffj Evncs., 25J50-75C, $1
BARNEY GERARD PRESENTS
Watson & Cohan -RStau -
and
THE GIRLS DeLOOKS bJK!
Beauty Chorus of Do Lux Girl Do Looks
LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS
LAST TIMES TODAY.
Gypsy Review, Skelly tt Heit, Ward
Wilson, Corp. Joe Nathan.
Photoplay Attraction Billie Rhodes in
"The Blue Bonnet." Billy West Comedy.
COLOSSAL!
MIGHTY!
STUPENDOUS
5,000 PEOPLE
STARTS
SUNDAY
ben paid by two men, who came
from Lincoln bringing financial cre
dentials that enabled them to secure
a cashier's check from a Council
Bluffs bank for $566.45, total of fine
and costs. The men did not give
their names, but admitted they were
representing- the Service Lumber
company, of Lincoln, where Harris
has been employed during the sum
mer while oat on bond. Harris is
said to have made a big success with
the company.
Harris and his second, wife went
away together, accompanied by the
Lincoln men. v
Infant Badly Burned
When Coffee Spills
Reaching for a pot of coffee which
was boiling on the kitchen stove,
Jack Schneider, 2 years old, son of
ohn Schneider, 3860 Gordon street,
overturned the pot, spilling the
coffee on himself and receiving
burns about the face, body and
arms, yesterday.
- Police Surgeon Johnson, who at
tended the child at the home, says
he will recover. The child's mother
was present, but could not reach
hint before the coffee was spilled,
she says.
PHOTO PUTS.
Hi
DCS'
y a T TOP I
MacDomld
' f, 7entemDer her in.
' TieVomat 7kou Geoest ffZe)
In Iter first picture by first Nalioaal
Thomas Mcfchan
of Wrack flan firms
Sunday towbdnesc
to.
Riot Will Not Stop Payment
Of Taxes, Says Treasurer
Rumors that records in the
county treasurer' office, destroyed
during the riot and fire of Septem
ber 28, will never be restored, and
that delinquent and unpaid taxes
will not be collected are strongly
denied by M. L. Endres, city and
county treasurer
"The receipts given for taxes paid
in years past are numbered and in
triplicate, and are credited to- tax
accounts of property. These were
not destroyed, and a recheck is
now being made in order to give
us a complete list of unpaid and de
linquent taxes," says Mr. Endres.
PnOTO PLASS.
PHOTO FLATS,
i
OLIVE THOMAS
-in-
"THE SPITE
BRIDE"
Are you going to the theater or
movies tonight? If so see amuse
ment page.
BRKO SOTS MB.
w Today, in tHe motion picture
theatres of this city, will be shown
the first episode of a new and ex-
cellent Pathe' serial.
Today wiU begin the startling
and oft times amusing adventures of
- rip-roaring Archie who starts to tour
the world without clothing and with
- out money, all to win a girl.
Today
you will see his first e fforts
LAST TIMES TODAY
"A Damsel
in Distress"
From the Sat. Eve. Post Story.
' and
THE JAZZ MONKEY
Featuring
JOE MARTIN
The Original Monkey Comedian-
1 ,Tr3iemh3
A Paramount-Art
Craft Special , ,
The White Heather'
Today and Saturday
LAST TIMES TODAY
MAE MURRAY, Captivating and
Bewitching Ingenue
In a Dramatic Screen Adaptation ef
Wilkie Collins' Famous Novel, "The
Woman in White."
Twin Pawns
Bee Want' Ads Are the Best Busi
ness Boosters.
ifo win an apparently impossible bet.
GeoieB.Seit7
PATHE
Distributors
With Mqrgkierite Gortot
Wnttenly frank Smith
Directed Srotfaced hyMxSek I
Omaha Theaters Shewing "Bound and Gagged" t
PALM, 14th and Douglas. ALHAMBRA, 24th and Parker.
COLUMBIA, 10th and Hickory. SUBURBAN, 24th and Ames.
BOULEVARD, 33d and Leavenworth. LYRIC, 16th and Vinton.
SWAN, Kearney, Neb. SWAN, Walthill, Neb.
THE BEST EVER
That's the way men express their opinions of
, V- our
NEW FALL SUITS
REAL CLASS .....
is reflected in tne aupenor gtyies
shown at this store. .
Single and double-breasted models.
Some have full belts that can be con
verted into half belts, or taken off en
tirely-lEaist seam and high waist mod
els. One, two and three
buttons,. The all-wool fab
rics are unusual. The best
from foreign shops and,
from home.
Brown, gray, blue and
green tones. Superb val
ues! , '
$30 $35 $40 $45
and Up to $75
You'll Like Them.
Fall and Win
ter Overcoats
No use waiting till the
mercury drops to zero, and
you're chilled to the bone be
fore you buy your coat.
'r-s Get the satisfaction of
choosing from, complete stock
now
All the new stylet and ma
terials, weight and lengths.
830.00 to 975.00
The talk of the town our
Moleskin Coats. 3 shades
$37.50
lie i
jjjj
Fall Hat Styles
Berg Clothing Oo.'s name in
a hat MEANS good style,
good looks, good quality and
they cost a little less here
too. 1 , V
See the new fall and winter
styles and colors.
$3.00 $3.50 S4.00
$5.00 $6.00 $7.00
New Shirt ::' J
Styles ; J
New ' pattern effects !n pro
nounced or subdued color
tones. Quality weaves in high r
grade madras, cords, fibre
silk and pure silks.
$1.95 to $15.00
Fall tnd Winter
Underwear
One of the best assortment In
town; all lengths of sleeves and
legs.
Different weights, cottons, wool
and mixtures. ,
2 piece and union styles. '
. $2 82.50 S3 and, better.
Sweaters
Sweater and sweater coats in
all colors and collar styles. , '
83.50 to $16.50
-A- -
1415 F&m&m Street, f
i PHOTO PLAYS
PHOTO PLATS f-V
mi w w mm si ws
DOROTHY r.i.qu
In "PEPPY POLLY"
And Comedy.
Lothrop
MUSE
CHARLES RAY
in' THE DESERTER
FOR BEST RESULTS GET YOUR AD IN THE BEE TODAY.
Skinner's the ' Best
Macaroni ; and Spaghetti
Recipe Book Free Omaha
OMAHA'S NEW STORE.
SPECIAL FOR
SATURDAY.
Grocary Dpartmnt.
NAVY BEANS. 9KMh.
H. H. HARPER CO.
ITU and Howard Sts Flatiraa Bldf.
GEORGETTE BLOUSES
Wonderful Values
Regular $5.00 to $6.75 Blouses . . .$3.95
Regular $7.50 to $9.75 Blouses. . .$5.95
Regular $10.75 to $16.75 Blouses. $8.75
yraii
1508-10 DOUGLAS ST.
SILK UNDERWEAR
Specially Priced :
A
Regular $1.95 to $2.50 Camisoles. $1.50
Regular $5.00 to $5.95 Chemise . . $3.95
Regular $6.50 to $7.50 Bloomers . . $5.00
1 - : v .
Saturday-AGreat Reduction Sale,
i'
. J
Wi'nter'Goats
Unusually great reductions N
.just at the beginning of the
season, offer great values at
$35 $45 $65
A wide range of
styles, including
fur trimmed
models in Silver
tone, Te 1 o u rs,
Polo Cloths and
Broadcloth.
Plain and Fur
Trimmed; in
Duvet de
Laine, Chev
rona, ''Silver
tone arid
Plushes.
Plain and models,
trimmed in Nu
tria, Opossum,
Natural Raccoon
and Se aline, of
Tinseltone, Duvet
Superior, Silver
tone and Baffin
Seal Plushes.
Fall Suits
It will pay you to take advan
tage of these reductions
Two Special Groups-"
m
$44
Fall Suits, both fur
trimmed and tai
lored, of Velour de
Laines, Silvertone,
Broadcloth and Tri-cotine.
Plain and hand
somely fur trimmed
Suits of Tinseltone,
Silvertone, C h e v
rona and Duvet de
Laine.
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