6 A THE OMAHA SUNDAY BiSU: MAY 2. 1S20. GREAT PARADE SHOWS OMAHA "FOR AMERICA" 20,000 March in Patriotic Pageant as Thousands' More Watch and Cheer in The Streets. Airplane Leads Former Soldiers of Air Service in Great Omaha Pageant Cnttaed From Tint Pm- - itein of the t .Nebraska National guard. Member's of the Grand Army of the Republic occupied seats in the reviewing stand. Tribute Paid to Dead. The memorial feature of the pa rade was impressive. In this divi sion, which was formed at Tenth and Farnam streets, 148' girls ap peared with gold stars bearing the names of Omaha men who died in the world war. These girls broke ranks at the reviewing stand, where they iwere given seats, accordinfi to the red. white and blue veils which ' ' tliey wore. Mrs. C. T. Kountze and Mrs. H. II. Baldige had charge of this feature. In connection with this memorial ceremony, taps was sounded by buglers, at the court- band, when passing the stand, play ed a funeral inarch in memory of Russell Hughes, the first Omaha boy who was killed in service. A casket, draped with flag and drawn by six horse! on an army equip , ment, added another effective touch to this service " Leigon Conceived Idea. This demonstration ' of Omaha's Americanism, conceived by the A Mi "i -o n T arrinn nr A tvAcn a( J A encouraged by the Knights of Ak . sar-Ben and other organizations was notable for the spjendid spirit . which -was manifested all along the line, tach marcher walked with , a firm and rfroud step. There were many large flags, service flags and patriotic inscriptions on banners, Unifprnis of all classes of ex-serv ice men were in evidence. Everv . body except the infirm and aged walked. It was a real American en semble. The High school cadet battalion stood at atention along Farnam street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets, while the parade passed. Two airplanes circled over the city, one being occupied by B. F. t.reeth and J. L. Brumley of Mc- i ook, Neb., and the other by R. S, Wagner and L. Mpser of Omaha, Soldiers in Line. The men of Fort Omaha made a splendid showing with an inflated observation balloon, kjtchen and . wireless outfits and other mobile equipment. The post at Fort Crook was also represented. Members of the American Igion appeared in Overseas caos. camDaiffn hats and in civies atid there were ex- , marines, ex-sailors and a few in Can . adian uniforms. The Sandstorm club of Omaha, former members of x - the 34th division, won hearty ap plause, ine world -war veterans were in evidence and the Omaha Aero club drew an airo ane. follow ed by a contingent of ex-fliers and aep-mechanics. . Most of the American War moth , era walked and so did members of the Omaha Woman's club. Lusty V yells were heard from the Camp Fire urns ana tne xoung Men s Christian association displayed a model srvm- nasium on a large trucks with aero- oats going through theier stunts Plaudits were generous for the Sal vation Army members. Public Officials March. , City and countv officials and nv ployes, members of the fire and po nce departments, municipal base bail association and other groups passed in review, each person saluting at the reviewing stand and ech section be ing cheered by th crowd. Members of the Rotry club wore white coats and caps and carried a large flag. ' . ' Among the business institutions represented were Union , Pacific railrotd, Live Stock exchange, Ne ' braska Telephone company, Omaha Grain exchange, packing plahts, Union Stock Yards and various lo cal industries. The colored men and women made a fine . demonstration . of their Americanism with a band of music, ex-service men in uniform or civilian clothes, members of the Colored Commercial club and Red Cross nurses. , f , Were Heady for Reds. y Chief of Police Eberstein, who ap peared in an automobile, made plans of preparedness in the event any , emergency should arise. Plain clothes men were distributed along the-line of march and machine guns '.. and riot guns were kept at conveni ent locations and were ready for action. The chief said he. did not .anticipate any trouble, but in view of a general feeling of uncertainty, he took every precaution that was advistable. -Yesterday's parade was the begin ning of an Americanization cam paign which will be sponsored by the American Legion, Red Cross, Boy Scouts, Masons, union labor. Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben, Knights of Columbus and other organizations. .The parade carried with it the challenge of or ' derly society to those who would fisturb orderly government. Scouts Cjear Route. The Boy scouts assisted yesterday in keeping Farnam street clear for the marchers. Everybody responded when a scout gave a command to clear the marching space. "America stands for ustice, free dom, love and equality, wa a senti ment which appeared on a banner carried by the Red Gross section. Amateur base ball nlavers carried t banner which read: Other patriotic sentiments appear ing on banners follow: 'Americans? H , yes; look us .over." , "One hundred' per cent Ameri cans." - . "Liberty and union one forever."- "America, we are for you. "One country and one flag." "United we stand for liberty land." "The red flag may look all right at a bull fight, but it has no place iu America. "Let's take up the work where they left off." America, our glorious country; first in everything." "America, our home." 0 1 Ti,WX) w CJ Q 4P 4, From the Reviewing Stand Hair Cuts and Shaves Are Given Another Price Tilt e Mair flits anrl shave went itn in w ........ "f ... several local tonsorial sh6ps yester day. The high cost of supplies is blamed. Hair cuts went to 60 cents and shaves to 35 cents in sev- eral shops. Detroit Papers Raise Detroit,' Mich., .May 1. An in crease from 1 to 3 cents a copy, effective May 3, was announced to day by the Detroit News and De troit Journal evening papers. In creased production cost is given ds the reason. ' Kentucky Demos Meet ' , Louisville, Ky., May 1. ftetucky democrats today held county mass conventions to elect delegates to the democratic state convention to be held here May Approximately 2,000 .delegates were to be named. Hardly a hat remained on a head as the little group of War Mothers in the parade fifed by. Many of them were elderly, to whom the exertion of such a march was a serious problem, but without a murmur thev held their places, de termined to show that the spirit of their boys , was alive in tqem. Every, one carried a flag, and many of them service flags, with two and I three s'tars in the center. The. South Side was out in force ! every spectator at tile pafade real lized that as block 'after block xof marchers under Various flags from that district stepped past. And everyone was an American, volun tarily present, exemplifying the patriotic slogans on the banners each group carried. Their cohibined section was one of the largest in the line of march. The Iten Biscuit company's repre sentation von the second-hand joke book for being the merriest march ing club in the parade. The pretty makers of Iteh's edibles were full of pep from the start until they had disbanded and were headed for home, and during their entire march kept a string of laughs passnig up and down the line. Credit for the best Americaniza tion exhibit in the parade was uni versally accorded to rather Flana gan's boys. All Wore red, white and blue headgear. Many were dressed to represent Uncle Sam or colonial characters and every small group bore a slogan that pledged, loyalty to the country. " Each group ren dered an elaborate salute to the re viewing group. Appropriate combinations of the American game and Americanism were shown by the players in the Commercial and. Bankers league in their sections of the parade. Snappy slogans ringing with the patriotism that fires their sporting blood were carried by each team. Every one proved himself an American,, as the sign said. All carried flags on base ball bats. . William F. Russell, Grand Army of the Republic veteran, of Guthrie Center, Neb., sat in the reviewing stand with a parrot on his knee. He explained that he is on his way home from Brownsville, Tex., by automobile, and stopped over here to have his car overhauled. The parrot was astonishingly pacific for a Mexican bird. The eyes of the regular army of ficers in the reviewing stand snapped, a hit brighter when the American Legioners came swinging past These men,, prime movers in the Americanization celebration, showed in the perfect lines and col umns they kept that their training camp days have not been focgotten. "Tell me the army isn't demo cratic!" Colonel Bucksaid. "There go firmer majors and line officers shoulder to shoulder with former 'bucks' and everyone there for the same reason." A well known- legion man who followed the Third army into Ger many recalled the long wet marches of the winter of 1918. Me admitted ii. One of Omaha's Down town Stores is closing out their entire stock of Hardware, Paint ajid Groceries. , Ham Sods Print jPma. A.dv, It Beacon NATIONAL S EXT EH BUILT IN FIVE CUSTOM BODY MODES ' Speed So Smooth , that Miles Melt 4way Sixty milts an hour is an'cffbrtkss speed for t:he new National Sextet. So smoothly and masterfully does the car hit this road racing gait that you are tempted to question the accuracy of the speedometer and wonder if it should not be showing a leisurely thirty. The retarded throttle brings the speed of the Sextet down to two miles an hour in high, yet the car accelerates to forty miles an hour within a city block. The Sextet also recognizes the authority of the brake, as well as the command of the accelerator, coming to a full stop from thirty miles an hour in 20 feet. Utmost case of handling is a salient Sex tet virtue. The car obeys the slightest touch of hand and foot. The steering is of the freely operating worm-and-gear type." Brake and clutch pedajs yield eas ily to pressure. Control levers are excep tionally long,andopcratedwithbutchange of posture. Lift the long, tapering hood of the Na tional Sextet and you will see the source of the car's extraordinary road compe tence. It is an improved overhead-valve, high-efficiency; six-cylinder engine, built complete in National shops and capable 1 of developing 71 horsepower. Only the experienced eye will note the correctness of design that makes the Sex tet engine the fine piece of mechanism that it is. And only a visit to the National factories can disclose the close limits to which this engine is built and the advanced methods ( of precision manufacture that are prac ticed hy expert craftsmen in translating this design into steel and its alloys. Yet even the novice, when he takes the , , wheel, instantly appreciates the advan tages of these qualities which are respon sible for the abundant, smooth, silent, flexible power that is ever at his bidding and control. A demonstration? Gladly, and at your pleasure.1 National Motor. Car. & Vehicle Corporation, Indianapolis ' Twentieth Sucetjsul Year ' , Ti$ National puHt thdiily , mi tartly limgM iry trirt Iti lufplt fewer muni iniuu iiri-likt fttcnoas Aniitt lart-fioui ctnfiJeiue tftik luurtly m dipaia . and tuna r " asaa.V..r?.T. j"" LL " if Z.zFlDli 1 . and tuna National Car Sales Corporation r Distributors . 2429 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Phone Doiiglas 8334 - ttotngCar tt,7t ' Phton ti,7S RaadMer J,75 Coupe 49 Sedan ) 495 T. 0. B. JndianafiaBl, fltiu ar tajl that pavements hadn't gotten a bit softer since those days, and that his feet felt exactly as they did when they dragged him into Coblen. Among all the girls in the "gold star" group, only one, Miss Ruth Weeks, 3J28 Ruggles, street, bore a star for a dead brother. Inscribed on the wand she carried was the name of Egbert Week her brother, who died of influenza at Fort Lo gan. Col., in 1918. He, had been in service for a number of months when he died. He was assigned to recruiting duty. Marching with Miss Weeks were her two sisters. Norma and Ca milla. They were all members of a group that had asked to be allowed to represent certain men who hal given their lives in the service. The girls are daughters cf G. Weeks. There are spiders in New Guiuc? wnicn weave weDS strung cnruva for the natives to use as fishing tfin. Attention, Ladies! Park Your Car at 14th and Capitol While Shopping ;ri,i;7x-'TTw-iTT7TTiT'TaiTr,TTtrf?:TT.Tjrujrtl:.'r ;'tir:.llinj'ij.' ,, ., ...TJi i:.jftTjfm.,MM ri'.ag..Mi.M.' i.i:.i:i.-.3 iiiimiiiii i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililM Special Service and Price on a Rogers One-Pipe Furnace 0 to Those Wise Enough to ' Install Immediately Why! Because-- 1. We are not too busy now to serve you with all the care and , attention our 65 years of experL . cute in luu xuiuavo y uoxuvou v a to offer. . . 2. We make' liberal discounts on all payments made on Rogers One-Pipe Furnaces before Sept. 1. This month we are selling our No. 38 size, installed by our skilled workmen and guaranteed, as low as $161.00. ' " i i 3. While the spring house cleaning is going on you can get rid of your old stoves and mod ernize your home with a Rogers One-Pipe Furnace. ONE REGISTER HEATS THE HOME , Flooding every room- with volumes of warm air. The basement .is always cool. PERFECT CONSTRUCTION Heavy- one-piece castings galvanized Iron casings properly proportioned air supply and register openings make the Rogers OnaJ Pipe unexcelled by other furnaces on the market. Phone Tyler 414. One of Our Men Will Be Glad to Call. MCTOMB06ERS & SONS CO. iiVl 1515 HARNEY SI. llllllHlllllllllllllllllllHllllllllll 1515 Harney St. The Secret of Improved Washing E 'j VER hear of the Mel lon Institute? It's the intelligence d e n a p t- ment of business: More than four score men of sci ence work in its labora tories. They are . research men hunters in the world of science for facts and methods that can bo made use of in the world of business. The National Laundry Owners Association supports, for their ex- . i elusive use, a department in this institution whose sole business is to test supplies used in the laun dry and to determine the best methods of washing and handling the 'hundreds of varied fabrics which are sent to us for cleansing. There is a right way and wrong way to wash t.heso fabrics. After much experimenting, we are told the one way to get the best re suits. , In modern laundries, the form ulas for laundering clothes are as carefully balanced as the pre scription issued by your family physician. Laundrymen of today ; are specialists. They know what they are about.- "They have learned the secret of improved cleansing. It is such specialists as these who do your washing when you send it to the modern laun- dries. ' THERE 'S A SAVING IN HEALTH AND WEALTH IP YOU Send ft mm I f 1 t 1 rv v m u m -M m m w m w w m mm mv-wm -mm mm n a a vmftua Liauiiuij VVUCId idOll."