Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 22, 1919, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1919.
fc
TRAIN BANDIT
ELUDES POSSES
IN "BAD LANDS"
Union Pacific Spends $15,000
in Fruitless Search for
. CarlisleScour
Wide Areas.
I
"PHOTO 'PIAY OFFERING J FOR. TODAY'
Cheyenne, Wyo., Nov. 21. Will
iam L. Carlisle, the train bandit for
whom posses have been searching
since Saturday, continues to outwit
his pursuers.
Armed men covered wide areas of
wild country in and around Medi
cine Bow and ( in the vicinity of
Casper, without success. No one ap
parently has the least idea where
the outlaw is. 1
Officials of the Union Pacific rail
road announced they had spent
$15,000 in the search and in addi
tion hundreds of men volunteered
service in the man hunt. In the
meantime armed guards are main
. tained on all passenger trains, for
railroad men are corfident the ban
dit will make another robbery at
tempt, though possibty not until he
has spent the $250 he obtained in
his last robbery.
Baseless rumors have appeared
from many places, 'including Den
ver and. Pueblo, Colo., where the
bandit is reported. to have been seen.
. Little credence is placed in these
and yet officials here admit there is
nothing more definite than these
' rumor concerning the bandit's 'hid-
ing place.
' Governor Carey was asked to of-
fer a reward for the capture of the
bandit. He promised to do so if the
prosecuting attorney of the county
' in which the robbery occurred
'would ask., The only reward now
offered is one of $200 from the state
prison at Rawlins " where Carlisle
twas confined up to his escape last
' Saturday.
A considerable sentiment has de
veloped in favor of the bandit be-
' cause of his daring and courteous
treatment of women and children
.passengers and the possibility that
friends might be aiding the fugitive
was taken into consideration.
AT THE
THEATERS
9
r
;T,H1S afternoon "Cornfed"
; I ,Gus Fay, for whom burlesque
I lovers have a very tender spot
'in their hearts, opens a week's en
gagement at the Gayety. With him
are Jas. E. Cooper's "Sightseers"
on their annual? tour of looking
things over as regards the Colum
bia circuit. The entertainment is
said to be replete with novelties
and surprises. Johnnie Walker, Flo
Davis, Fred Nolan and Kathryn
Ross are among the principals and
the'-chorus numbers over 20. The
seat sale is immense, particularly for
Thanksgiving day. Tomorrow's
matinee starts at 3:00. ,
Many sorts of contrivances were
tried out by LeComte and Flesher
in their enthusiastic determination
to fittingly embellish and novelize
with surprising innovations their
splendid musical comedy find, "My
Sunshine Lady," the latest addition
to the group of modern stage suc-
i cesses based on revamped fairy
laies. a
Among the songs popularized in
the play are "My Sunshine Lady;"
"A S6ng of Old Brittany," "Cupid's
Sweets," "A Vampire Girl," "A
Night at the Riviera," "Mere Man,"
"The Songs I Sang "When I Was
Twenty-one," "Anything to Make a
Picture Now-a-Days," "Mystic,
Magic Man," "Love Needs Opposi
tion," "I Miss You Honey 'Deed
I do" and "Dixie- Land is Calling
You." This play will be seen at
the Brandeis for four days starting
matinee tomorrow. Wednesday
matinee will be given.
It was because the companV is
waiting for an engagement to go
into1 Chicago that John D. Williams
' was enabled to send to V Boyd's
theater next week Richard Bennett
in "For the Defense.", The play is
the story of an entangling web of
circumstantial evidence which grips
! an irVocent girl. Her fiance in a
duel of wits finally clears her of
the' accusation of murder. There
will be a-special matinee on Thanks
giving day. 1
Final performances, matinee and
. evening, will be given today of the
Orpheum bilf headed by Carl Jorn,
and George Kelly. The curtain this
evening is to riseat 8 o'clock. Next
week's show will have two stellar at
tractions and three featured acts.
, Julius Tannen will be one to head
the bill and another will be the
dancer, Alice Eis. Mrs. Gene
Hughes will appear in the one-act
. comedy, "When He . Came Back."
The vocal gifts of Sybil Vane,
known as the Galh-Curci of vaude
ville, will be displayed. A clever
company of minstrel men will pre
sent an offering called "Honey Boys
at Home."
Matinee and evening perform
ances today conclude the engage
ment of "Oh. I Lady, Lady!" at
Boyd's theater. No musical play of
. the season has approached this in
point of dainty conceit, pretty girls,
melodious music, snappy dances or
clever comedy.
The De Pace Opera company, ap
pearing at the Empress for the last
times today, has a combination of
music and song arranged for a per
fect display of remarkable talents.
An act that meets with general
' favor is offered by ' Keane and
Walsh, whose talk is the brightest
and wittiest comedy heard in this
theater in some time.
The attraction at the Brandeis
theater tonight is "Twin Beds." It
is the laugh play of the century, a
comedy for all taste, a tonic for old
and young.
Julian Mitchell, the wizard of en
semble numbers in musical comedy,
has shown some of his mastery m
Klaw & Erlanger'a production of
Kill llomfrntt
AaOll ASUUUIUU
With Cuticura
Is
Alt dmglati! Soap 36, Ointment
2& and 50, Talram & Sample arh
tree of "Catfcaia, Dt. I, batu."
EVERBODY likes to see a
good two-fisted fight between
men, especially if there be suf
ficient provocation. ' When there is
mystery attached to the fight -it sat
isfies the brain as well as the brute
instinct. In "The Open Door" the
mystery drama starring Anna Lehr
and Walter Miller at the Moon thea
ter for the last times today, two
husky men are seen in a smashing
hand-to-hand fight in a brokerage
office. "The Open Door" is a pic
ture that will hold an audience
spellbound and one you should see.
Strand "The Vengeance of Du
ra nd," starring Alice Joyce at the
Strand, and which will be shown
for the last times today, has some
of the most gorgeous settings ever
seen in a picture. Its happenings
occur mid the social whirl in great
receptions, balls and dinners with
in a splendid chateau. The char
acters are drawn from among a
class of beings who dwell at the
very top of cultured, finished society.
The climax of this picture is gigan
tic. A
Muse How would you like to get
a sled at the top of a hill and coast
down it at a mile a minute and plow
right through an enemy camp?
Dangerous sport, we hear yousay.
Well, that is exactly what Tom Mix
starring in "The Wilderness Trail,"
does, and if you want to see this
picture don't wait any longer, as it
has its. last showing at the Muse to
day. It is a piece of work that makes
one hold their breath till it is over,
and the star comes .out alive and
smiling. It gives a fine tafste of the
life of the great wild out-of-doors.
Neighborhood Houses
LOTHROP JUh ind' Lothrop
ANITA STEWART In "HUMAN
1 ESI RES," and a Roland oomady.
AI'OIXO 29th and Leavenworth
CRBIGHTON HALK In tha "BLACK
CIRCLE."
GRAND Uth and Blnnay CHARLK8
RAY In "HATFOOT STRAW
KOOT." HAMILTON 4 Otic and Hamilton
TOM MOORE In "JUST FOR TO
NIGHT," and a Harold Xloyd corn
ed v. i
DIAMOND 14th and Lake BESSIE
LOVA In "HEART OF A GIRL."
and nth eplsoda of tha "MASKED
RIDERS."
COMFORT J4th and Vinton ALICE
BRADY In "THE BETTER HALF."
and a Big V comedy, entitled
"GIRLIES AND QRUFFERS."
Slin "The Gav I
starring Tom Mooreat the Sun,
nas Deen attracting large audi
ences to this theater. Jt is a peppy
picture about oast and nronrietv.
A handsome young lord who
couldn't resist a silk ankle; a new
found love and a promise to re
form? an rtlrl' flumA nnA a mAncrt
intrigue in her apartment, and a
spying servant are a tew ot the
many screen scenes you will enjoy
in "The f.av I nn) Onir " utiiVh ia
to be shown for the last times today.
Rialto Merely a woman! What
right had she to love, when by mar
rying the man of his choice she could
bring her, selfish father ease and
wealth? And so, stiffling her dreams,
yielding to "duty',', she marries a
drunken beast. This is the character
part portrayed by Elsie Ferguson in
"The Witness for the Defense,"
which has. its last showing at the
Rialto theater today. It is a picture
story that sweeps through the heart
ina storm of emotion, and one yoti
will want to see.
"The Velvet Lady," which will be
seen here shortly. Julian Mitchell,
coupled with such names as Victor
Herbert, Henry Blossom andVFred
Jackson as composer and authors,
explains the success of "The Velvet
Lady." . v r .
Says Act of God May ,
Have Stoped Germans
Coningsby Dawson, an English
American writer, spoke before the
Omaha Society of Fine Arts yes
terday afternoon on the great war
and the future of the nations.
"In the fall of ,1914 Germany
could have been victorious but for
what we like to believe was a su
pernatural blow struck by God for
cur cause,'" said Mr. Coningsby,"
who was a Canadian field artillery
lieutenant. -"The German army was
sweeping toward the channel ports.
The British Tommies had retreated
so far they were too tired to go any
farther. There was nothing what
ever standing in the way of the
German hordes but the thin line of
Tommies.
"But the Germans stopped. It
never has been explained until late
ly when it has been reported that
as they came near Mons tney saw
the hills covered with horsemen.
The horsemen weren't there unless
they were the horsemen of heaven."
Mrs. Elsie Clinchard Dies at
Age of 71 After Brief ftlness
Mrs. Elsie Clinchard, 71 year old,
died at her home, 2526 Cleveland
avenue, yesterday afternoon after
a brief illness. She had been a resi
dent of Omaha for 15 years. She
is (survived by seven sons and three
daughters. Edward, Charles, Al
bert George, William, Fred and
Earl, and Mrs.'Addie Philipoteaux,
Miss Amelia and Mrs. Constance
Rausch. The only son living in
Omaha is Albert, who is a member
of the Omaha Fire department.
Funeral services will be held from
the Hoffman Funeral home, Sunday
afternoon at 2:'30. ' Burial, will be
Forest Lawn cemetery.
Funeral Services Are Held
ForlPioneer Omaha, Woman
The pallbearers at the funeral
of Mrs. Ellen Lynch, yesterday
-were: William Fitzpatrick, James
Beard, Lawrence Dhyberg, Edward
Moriarty, Charles Moriarty and, Ben
Lynch. Services were held in St.
Patricks church, Fourteenth and
'Castelar streets, at 9 o'clock and
burial was in Holy. Sepulchre cem
etery. Mrs. Lynch lived 50 years
in Omaha1 and died Wednesday
night at her home, 2304 South
Twelfth' street.
Class of 390 Novices
Initiated Into the
Mystic Shrine Order
Three hundred and ninety novices
were initiated into the mysteries of
the Mystic Shrine last night at the
Municipal auditorium. The class is
the largest ever assembled in Oma
ha for admission to Tangier temple.
The first section of the work was
exemplified yesterday afternoon at
fne Masonic temple, and a banquet
was given in the evening. The great
dining hall was too small to accom
modate the candidates and visitors,
numbering more than 600, and the
Hotel Fontenelle handled an over-
Cow from the banquet room- of
early 300. -
. Ihe candidates were assembled at
the temple after, the dinner and
marched to the auditorium where
the second section of the work was
carried out
Tinlev L. Combs, illustrious po
tentate, assisted by his complete
divan, had charge of the ceremo
nies. The fall ceremonial this year was
pronounced the most successful
ever held. .
The class was one of the most
enthusiastic ever assembled. Syd
ney, Neb., alone, was represented
by 50 candidates. One candidate
was from Fbrt Worth, Tex.
Prof. Fling Addresses
Central High Students
Prof. Fred Morrow Fling, head
of the department of history at the
University of Nebraska, lectured to
the students of Central High school
Friday afternoon on the subject of
"The Inside of the Peace Confer
ence," Dr. Fling attended all the meet
ings of the conferenceand acted as
the historian for the United States.
He sailed for Versailles on the
same ship that President Wilson
did. The story of the arrival of the
country's executive in England,
France and Italy ,was told in the
course of his talk.
"No pupil ha business in the high
school unless he has some knowl
edge of world problems," said Prof.
Fling.
Seven Years for Youth
Who Forged to Get Car
A plea of guilty was made by
Lloyd Reed, Omaha youth, arrested
in' Council Bluffs, who admitted
forging a deposit slip showing that
he had $403 in a Logan bank, and
against which he drew a check for
$400 and gavt it C. L. Kingsley,
Council Bluffs, in payment for a
used Ford car. He took the car to
Omaha and traded it for a Scripps
Bocth, paying $50 difference. He
was given seven years in the Ana
mosa reformatory.
Divorce
Coyrts
Frieda M. Sutton alleges that her
husband, Slayter Sutton, struck her
and treated her cruelly in other
ways, in a petition for divorce filed
in district court. They were mar
ried in 1911. N
Harrison Smith was ordered to
pay his wife, Stella Smith, $75 a
month alimony in a decree of di
vorce granted Mrs. Smith by Judge
Wakelcy in divorce court. Mrs.
Smith was also given half -interest
in their home and awarded the cus
tody of their child.
Dollie Henps asked the district
court to giv her a divorce from
Charles Henos on the ground of ex
treme cruelty and to restore her
maiden' name, King.
Lydia Edwards was granted a di
vorce from Richard Edwards on al
legations of nonsupport by Judge
Troup in divorce court
The three children of Lucia and
Za,etano Bongiovanni were given
into the cutsody of Mrs. Bongiovan.
ni in a decree of divorce granted
her in' djvorce court by Judgo
Wakeley, Mr. Bonfiiivanni wa
given the right to visit (he children
any Sunday afternoon for not more
than two hours. Mrs. Bongiovanni
was given the furniture in their
home at 703& North Eighteenth
street, and Mr. Bongiovanni was pr
dered to pay $30 a month alimony.
Montenegrins to Occupy
: Cattaro, Albania, Report
Rome, Nov. 21. Six hundred
Montenegrin volunteers left Brindis!
on Tuesday to occupy Cattaro, Al
bania, according to reports reaching
this city.
French "Normal Price''
Committees Disappear
Paris, Nov. 21. The "normal
price" committees, which came into
being with considerable trumpeting,
three months ago and promised ti
bring down the cost of living ii
Paris with a crash, have quietlj
passed out of existence.
Farmers and produce dealers exe
cuted boycotts against districti
wjiere the committees had posted
lists of "normal prices." Resident!
of these districts were forced to in.
vadS other sections of Paris whers
they found prices out of tight So
the committees went out of business
and prices went-back.
Should the Holy land be colon
ized on a large scale a Norwegian
engineer proposes to utilize the dif
ference in water levels between the
Mediterranean and Dead seas for
the extensive production of hydrc-
electnc power.
Julius rkiit
1508-1510
Douglas St.
In This Low Priced
1508-1510
Douglas St
DRESS
SALE
Ar V dikes We Believe Cannot Be Duplicated
at these ridiculously low prices
$19.75
At this price there are many very attractive models in
Serges, Satins, Georgettes, Velveteens and Jerseys. All at
enormous reductiQn
i
Dresses of Tricotine, Velveteen, Serge, Satin, Georgette
and Jersey, in a wide range of smart styles, all at enor
mous reduction. !
125 Dresses-Sacrificed
i
Dresses of serge, taffeta, satin and Geor
gette combinations, in many styles, abso
lutely sacrificed for immediate clearance
':$U.75
..... l ! -
I ' ' ' i an "Z -n o - 11 . " Vl
i ii 1 1 w r r . ii - I
r i - . . i
WKM
Silk Teddy Bears
Regular $5.00 to $7.50 Values $3.95 I
Saturday we will offer a big lot of Women's Silk Teddy
Bears in crepe da chine and satins, formerly priced at
$5.00, $5.95, $6.75 and $7.50. dO QC
Special for Saturday. PO,VJ
dJllll
1508-1510 Douglas Street
Georgette Blouses -
' Regular $12.50 to $19.50 Values, $8.75
Saturday we will offer about 300 Georgette Crepe Blouses
which we have taken from regular stock that were telling
$12.50, $14.75, $17.50 and $19.50; ; dQ
special for Saturday ipOui D
200 Goats,
Marvelous
Values
Specially
Purchased-Have Been Added to
the Great Reductiohs From
Our Regular Stock
Silvertones
Bolivias-
Broadcloths-"
Duvet de Laines
Wool Velours--Polo
Cloths-
The variety oj styles is large and varied1, including
smart plain coats and handsomely fur trimmed
models, all marvelous values at this low price.
v
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