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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28. 1920. TIDINGS JOY and PROFIT for movie patrons) But in order to actually get any of the joy and profit it will be necessary for you to ANSWER thias Announcement promptly by sending your name and address plainly writ ten on a postcard or letter-sheet. And don't let anybody, or any skeptical mood of your own, fool you out of mailing that postcard TODAY, for this is a very special and limited opportunity, which ends almost as soon as it starts. TtOHMANi AMU81MINT COWOtATWH; As soon as we have re ceived your name and address we will send you a certain BOOK with out cost to you together "with a list of Frohman Productions and 24 half tone portraits of Froh man Stars. This Book,' which ex plains I THE FROHMAN PLAN i for sharing some of the vast profits of the Screen with those who attend . . J motion mcture theaters. is likely to turn out to be you have ever read. Maybe you will read it under the light of your reading lamp in the quiet of your own home, or maybe you will, read it somewhere- else; but wherever you read it, be sure that you read it ALK Skip no paragraph. Overlook no fact. : Be prepared for action.. Possibly the ' last thing that would occur to you is the idea of your being per 1 sonally interested in the Motion Picture business and making money out of it. But life is a strange and I 11.! J j v r n ti rm 1 11 1 Trim rw nnn rnn UtaUVlUl vlAAJl J f C Kill ' really progreessive man or woman ' is always getting new gleams and facing new opportunities. So we need not be surprised at most anything that happens need we? ' Your name and address, promptly mailed, will bring you the Book, which con tains the story of your im mediate personal opportu nity in connection ."with the business-of producing and selling Motion Pictures ' one of the greatest, one of the most useful, one of the most profitable enterprises ' it - i j in xne worm. - And you may live right where you live now, keep at your own task, and still secure for yourself the benefits of this profit able and satisfying con nection. 'Address: FROHMAN AMUSEMENT CORPORATION 311 Times Building NEW YORK This ANNOUNCEMENT U biag luwirid bf thousands of fctlaiMM mtn and buiinus women ia Am other cities whara it kaa appaarad la tha aawtpa aar. Tha first edition af tha Baok on "Th Frokman Plan" it aahaustad. Tha aacen4 aditian it baiaf rashad from tha pratsas. Of coursa, yau want a copy. But aloa't lasa aay tima ia saadiag far it. This opportunity, lika all fiaa oppqrtaiitU Is LIMITED. PRIESTS PURSUE THIEF WHO LOOTS CHURCH RECTORY t saman Bonds and Cash Totaling $1,400 Are Taken From ... St. Philomenas Catholic -Church. ; Bonds and cash totalling $1,400 was stolen from the rectory of St. Philomenas Catholic church, 1334 South Ninth street, yesterday. Rev. James W. Stenson, pastor, was awakened at 3 a. m. by the noise of prowlers in the kitchen of the rectory. Reaching for hit trousers to dress hastily and make an inves tigation, Rev. Father Stenson found them missing.' He roused his assistant, Rev. Michael Quinn,:. and together they made a search of the house, ihey had hardly started when two dark figures dashed madly for the front door and made their escape. Cash and Bonds Gone. When the lights had been flashed on they found Rev. Father Stenson's trousers and a bureau drawer from his bedroom in the kitchen. Five $100 St. Cecilia cathedral bonds were discovered missing, along with one liberty bond valued at $350 and a canvas money bag con taining $21 in cash, all belonging to the church. iwo hundred dollars worm ot war saving stamps, $400 worth of Liberty bonds and $12 in cash, be longing to Rev. Father Stenson, .were also stolen. Overlook Collection. The burglars had overlooked $150 in change, part of the collection for last Sunday. The housekeeper at the rectory, Mrs. Schaffel, said she saw the two marauders disappear into the shad ows of the church. Entrance to the rectory was gained by breaking a lock on the library window. . Indict Four Sioux Falls v Men for Food Violations Sioux Falls. S. D.. Aoril 27. (Spe cial.) Indictments on .charges of violation of the food control act were returned by a federal grand jury here against John C. Look, meat market proprietor; wuiiam u Bessler and leorge H. Bessler, gro cers, and reter j. fciienoecker, grocer. Banks Increase Interest. VVahoo, Neb., April 27. (Special.) Practically every bank in Saunders county has announced intentions of paying 5 per cent interest on time deposits. - ' ' Colorado Farmers to Quit Raising Hay and Plant Sugar Beets Jack Savage came in from Fort Morgan, Colo., Tuesday with a ship ment of fel lambs and he said pres ent indications promise a snort crop of alfalfa in his section next season and that there will be a scarcity of nay next tan and winter. In explanation Mr. Savage said a large majority ot farmers were go ing to put their land into sugar beets. He said that fields that for many yeeari around Fort Morgan, had been big producers of alfalfa, were ceing plowed up and planted to beets their owners having signed con tracts with the suear comoanv. "This condition not only exists in my locality," said Mr. Savage, "but prevails in other alfalfa districts of the state. Farmers are turning from hay to beets because they believe the latter crop will bring them more money. Many thousand acres around Fort Collins. Eaton and Greelev will be plowed up this spring to make room tor a larger beet crop. Pastor Badly Shaken Up In Table Rock Accident Terumseh, ' Neb- April 27. (Spe cial.) Rev. George S. Price, pastor of the Tecurhseh Baptist church, was considerably shaken up in a train accident at Table Rock. Fri day night. Mixed train No. 120, on the Burlington, had run ttno Ta ble Rock and taken the Y switch from the Lincoln-St. Toseoh line to the St. Joseph-Oxford line. A string of box cars had been left on the main line. Train No. 120 was undjtr considerable way, backing, when the coaches were run into these cars. A Mr. Ellis of Table Rock had his shoulder dislocated and two ribs broken, and Miss Laura Kovanda.of the same town was rendered unconscious and taken from the train in that condition. The compact broke a number of windows in the coaches and threw the passengers from their seats. The Tecumseh man escaped injury. The line of box cars on the main track were said to have been unprotected by either flagman or lights. Tecumseh Community Club , Is Busy Raising $3,000 'Tecumseh, Neb., April 27. (Spe cial.) The finance committee from the Tecumseh Community club, in cluding Messrs. C. E. Stewart, S. B. Parker and Frank Dafoe, have been soliciting funds for a budget from the local business and professional men. This city has never had the budget plan. The club asked for $3,000 to finance 1920, of this amount the committee has $2,500 at this time. The club will set aside $900 for the baud, $500 for base ball, $1,000 for a fourth of July celebration, some thing for street. sprinkling and so on Propositions not having the endorse ment ot toe club will lind it hard sledding to raise funds in Te cumseh. OVERALLS CLUB MAKE FORTUNE FOR THIS MAN Denies Manufacturer Sells Out at Profit Labor Unions Protest' on New Movement. 3c YOU never see any pie; crust xleft on the plate when Mazola is used for shortening. Everybody knows the crust is the best part of the pie. Mazola-made pies have such a delicate flaky crust you're sure to eat the last crumb. Cora Prod acts Refining Company P.O. Box 161 Nsw York City PINT CANS Ltrftr sixu catty str ft. u u Cartan A Jeffrey Co, 408 South 12th St. Omaha, Neb. Established 1866 Is A Qualified Directorate A Bank's capacity to serve in more than a .routine manner can he fairly measured by the capacity and experience of its management. The accumulated experience of business men, who have attained more tEtin average suc cess in tlieir respective fields characterizes the service of the directing: personnel of this bank. TheOxnflha National Bank EARN AMAT.il ta.STRECT Capital and Surplus, $2,000,000 Paris, April 27. Flashing like a meteor into Paris, loaded with more diamonds than the mate "Jim" Brady, and scattering handfulls of bills with a prodigality of "Million Dollar" Gates, Johnny Sorenson of New York was the first overall mil lionaire, who has just sold out his interests in the big overall factories in Newark, N. J.; Schenectady, N. V., and Buffalo, N. Y., at 1,000 per cent profit, arrived at Claridges, grabbing the royal suite a moment before Prince and Princess Christian telephoned requesting reservation. Reporter Started It All. "The overall campaign in America is the biggest publicity stunt ever pulled off," said Mr. borenson to Universal Service. '"It originated in the brain of a New York reporter who, seeing the possibilities of the 'story' went to the biggest overall firm in the country and put the scheme in operation. He got $10,000 for the idea and was given a job at the head of the firm's publicity department ihe stock of my comoanv bound ed from 43 to 600 in a few days after the idea was sprung on the public. At the psychological moment I sold out and grabbed the first boat for France to get a cocktail." Unions Protest on Movement. Marysville, Cat, April 27. Mem bers of the Marysville Carpenters' union, it was announced today, voted to boycott businessmen who participate or permit their employes to participate in the movement to wear overalls as a means of reducing clothing costs. The. action was taken, it was said, because the "movement tends to increase prices of overalls and makes their pur chase prohibitive for mechanics and artisans. Elkhorn River Flood Interrupts Traffic On Railroad Line Norfolk, , Neb., April 26. (Spe cial Telegram.) Flood waters in the Elkhorn river rose so rapidly Sun day night that traffic on the main line of the Northwestern railroad was held up in Norfolk because of the damage caused to a section of a bridge five miles west of the city. Approximately 400 passengers stayed in the city over night and walked across the bridge late Mon day morning to a train waiting on the other side. At 9 Monday morning the water had receded about an inch as com pared with the high point of Sun-! day night when the rain made it impossible to venture repair work on the bridge. At O'Neill and points west the water was receding very slowly, but indications are that the crest of the flood has passed Nor folk, and that the highest water in 20 years was pouring down on points east of Norfolk including West Point. Wisner, Beemer, Crowell and Arlington. Stromsburg Telephone . . . Operators Out on Strike Stromsburg, Neb., April 27. (Spe cial.) Telephone service is uninter rupted here, although all of the local operators and relief girls walked out last week when their request for an increase in salaries was re fused by the company. Substitutes were imported from nearby towns to take their places at the switch boards. . ' Bee Want Ads Are Best Business Boosters. Cook Book Free at Florence Oil Cook Stove Demonstration Union Outfitting Co. Hot Doughnuts Made of Gooch's Flour, Advo Cof fee With Alamito . Cream Free Four-Burner "Florence" Oil Cook Stove Given Away Friday, April 30th During the Florence Oil Cook Stove Demonstration, now in progress at the Union Outfitting Company, a splendid Cook Book of 64 pages'is being given away FREE. It is an intensely practical book. Every page is full of u.e ful (every-day) recipes tested by the experts of the Home Eco nomics Department of the Corn Products Refining Co., makers of Mazola Oil, Karo and Argo Corn Starch. The "Florence" Oil Stove be ing demonstrated means a cool kitchen for you this Summer and perfect cooking results, as well, for its clean, blue flame gives an intensely hot heat. Delicious luncheons are also being served FREE and everyone who attends has an opportunity to win a Florence Oil Stove. The Union Outfitting Company is known as the "Home of Home Outfits," because special induce ments are always made to young couples just starting housekeep ing. No transaction is consider ed complete until the customer is satisfied. Heavy Rain in State Delays Farmers in Planting Grain Gop Recent rains in Nebraska have de layed farming and work in general according to H. J. Smalley of Ne ligh, who was a visitor at the stock yards Tuesday with a load of 34 yearlings and a load of 23 steers, the latter weighing an average of 1,010 pounds. Mr. Smalley said the rain had so softened the ground that the horses went up to their knees in mud, while driving the eattle to stock cars, a distance of 13 miles. He said winter wheat in his sec tion was looking fine and that a few days of hot weather will put it in first class condition. Many acres of oats are under water and if weath er conditions permit, he says, the corn crop will be good and plentiful, as most of the farmers in his scc toin are planting large acreages of corn. Bee Want Ads Are Best Business Boosters. CALL POLICE Douglas 174 A party reprtwntlnf thtnielvaa as an mploya of tht Carey Clcaninf Co. has baen oiicitinr clothe from house to house and tailing to return them. If ha comet te yaur heme call us at Web ster 392, or notify Police Headquarters. in ond Don't make a mistake when you buy your phono' graph. Make sure that you have the one which will bring you the greatest joy the one which will delight you and your family for years to come. There is a great differ ence between phonographs both in tone and in ap pearance. You should know all about these differences before you decide which phonograph you want to have in your home. Send the coupon today and let us tell you about the $3,000,000 Phonograph. ma punchy & Rest fet me knot Sifter from ottKr phonographs Nans....... " Address. Shults Bros.,-Owners 313 So. 15th St. THOMPSON-BELDEN & COMPANY ' Wednesday These Values . in Petticoats QC Attractive ror y.yD swrts, with changeable taffeta flounces and jersey tops; regularly priced $10. Wednesday for $7.95. White Tub Silk Petticoats, to be worn under Summer frocks, are ready for Sum mer needs. The prices $4.50 and $7.50 Third Floor Housewear Aprons, Dresses for Home and Street Wear. , There are ginghams, of course, and per cales, and tissues,' in dainty shades becom ingly fashioned. In the Basement The Element of Style In Women's Apparel Is as much a matter of fabric quality and work manship as of lines. A well-made garment, chosen with a consideration of one's particular type,' will reach a higher perfection of stylo than one which is carelessly fashioned to mimic a passing fad. More especially is this true of tailored suits, for in them-there must be a foundation of fine hand tailoring before any pretension to distinction may . result. In Thompson-Belden tailleurs one finds only correct styles, the best of materials and tailor ing, with a careful attention to details of lining and finishing. We Shall Be Glad to Show You the Newest of Tailleurs In Tricotines, Poiret Twills, Serges and the like, ir. a number of fashionable silhouettes. Apparel Section- Third Floor Irish Linen Table Cloths With Napkins to Match AT A SAVING The scarcity of linens makes this of fer doubly attractive. The heavy linen damask of which these cloths and napkins are made is of a very satisfactory quality. This offering consists of round floral designs lily, chrysanthemum, rose and wild, rose. The Table Cloths are 2x2 yards, and regularly fc 1 A QQ $13.50. Wednesday PlV.oy Napkins to match (22 inch) ; regularly $15.00. in qq Wednesday, a dozen $ 1 6.07 Linaa Section Main Floor An Opportunity Wednesday to Purchase Pumps and Oxfords for only $7.85 A sale of dependable qualities in de sirable styles at a reduction of more than passing importance. Kid Pumps, with welt soles and Cu ban heels. Brown Pumps, in the same styles. Oxfords in dull kid and patent leather with turn soles and Louis heels. Patent Oxfords with welt soles and Louis heels. - Wednesday $7.85 apair DO YOU KNOW- that from 30 to 60 of the children in America are under- nourished? ; - " the three causes of this? That it' comes from ignorance, indifference ' and poverty? that thousands of little children die every year for lack of proper nourishment? that the rich child is as often under-nourished as the poor? : what the Creator put into the breast of the mother of the race? that cow's milk is the next best food for babies and little children? that 303,987 bottles of milk were used by the School Medical De partment of Seattle in the schools last year and that the efficiency of the children and their general health were increased to a remark able extent? r ' what is in milk? the food value of milk in terms of other foods? that it has those mysterious elements that make the six-foot Ameri can and European as compared with the smaller sized and dwarf races of the world? That it has flesh, blood, brain and nerve-producing substances? that a quart of milk is equal in protein to seven ounces of sirloin steaJc, four eggs and eight ounces of chicken? And in energy value to nine eggs, eleven ounces of sirloin steak and fourteen ounces of chicken? 4 f M V -the economic side of the milk question its cost? -the factors that enter into I (j f) 5 0 11 the City Health requirements as to quality and cleanliness? of any other food with which such care is taken? that it is given to the weak and sick because it is almost predigested in the four stomachs of the cow? IF YOU DON'T let the famous lecturer, Miss Lutie E. Stearns of Milwaukee, explain to you at the Alamito Dairy, Leavenworth at 26th Street, from May 3d to May 29th. Miss Stearns also brings a wonderful message about A SCHOOL OF MOTHERHOOD AS OMAHA'S GREATEST NEED Alamito "Milk White" Dairy Omaha Phone Douglas 409 Council Bluffs 205 A A Lutie E. Stearns Miss Stearns says her lectures are not alone for women's organizations of size, but for smaller clubs and social gather ings as well. She invites them all to make individ ual reservations during her stay here. Phone B. G. Barron Douglas 409