Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1920)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST 1, 1920. 7 K BISHOP MONNIX i WILDLY CHEERED WHEN JE SAILS Police Use Guns to Keep Order in Throngs De Va-"" lera Did Not Go 1 ' With Him. New York, July 31. Archbishop Daniel J. Mannix of Australia sailed away for Ireland this afternoon on the- steamship Baltic, although the -im.t ui uitat iiudjn an nounced that the Australian prelate s would not be permitted to land on Irish soil because of his expressed views on the Irish question. Eamonn de Valera, "president of the Irish t republic," did not sail on the Baltic. Wearing a black frock coat and tall silk hat and carrying an Ameri can flag, the archbishop arrived at the pier to tind a crowd of more than 1,000 with an even greater num ber massed inside the Tines on the pier itself. There was some anti-Mannix sen- tii ("rt among the crowd outside the "i .i. . J, i- , i pier, dui tins rapidly dissipated, while the throng assembled nearer the liner was distinctly pro-Mannix. Men, women and children were . there,-bearing signs with taunts di rected at Lloyd George. One read: "Admit that American public opin ion counts." With police reserves making a wedge, the archbishop stepped from his machine and advanced with dif- ' ficulty through the crowd, which at :, the strains of a band went wild with enthusiasm. After the prelate had moved up the gang plank the throng surged forward after him and broke through the first line of guards in - an effort to follow him aboard. The second line also gave way, but the third held. The archbishop was visibly affect ed by the demonstration. Pale from emotion, he advanced to the. rail and replied time a:! time again to the cheers which greeted him. Accompanying the prelate were the Rev. Albert Vaughn, his secre V tary, and Bishop Daniel Foley of Australia. -A scene almost approaching a riot , had, followed the booing of the arch- : the ship. The longshoremen who scaled the ship's sides and attacked him were driven away only after de tectives with drawn revolvers broke through the crowd and reached the . Englishman. '' Shortly after his arrival the arch tishop issued a statement in which he said that he had been "represent ed, in certain quarters as a promoter of strife." - He declared, that he really was working for peace in Ire- , land, inside and outside the British empire., He said the peace he hoped for "is a peace not resting on force, but on justice and . the free , will of the people concerned."?- Godmother of Young ; Stowaway - Gilhooley ' - Is Sued for $1,900 New York, July 31. Her life gov " erned by a series of impulses which netted her three husbautls and sev eral .adventuresome jaunts across the Atlantic ocean and elsewhere, Mrs. Marian Gilhooley Laurie White Curry faced a court today in which she appeared as a $1,900 debtor, pleaded for permission to 'ride a new "hunch" and won. She won because counsel for her debtors is convinced her new idea has enough in it to win. Mrs. Curry gained publicity a short time ago when she declared that no one whose name was Gil- hooleyand wanted to come into the United States should be kept out. There was her reason for adopting Mike Gilhooley, the Belgian $tow- away, who made four trips to the United States in a vain effort to f enter and go in on his fifth when ; Mrs. Curry adopted him.; After a ' few days at a "fashionable hotel he was sent to a luxurious estate in Connecticut. . Mrs. Curry wouldn't tell to hat her new plan is except to say that she went into it on impulse and knows that she will get the money to pay her debts. Wheat Drops to New Low Level of $2.14 a Bushel at St. Louis ."" St. Louis, July 31 Future wheat, for the first time since, the food con- ' trol act expired May 31, last, sold here today under $2.21 a bushel, the minimum price allowed here under the act. December wheat closed at $J144. or 91, cents under yester day's finish. This is 60J-S cents under the low est price paid when trading in wheat futures was resumed July 15. The reported tense money situation and prospects of god crops were . ascribed as reasons for the declines. Sensational breaks occurred in the j Rtain market generally. Wheat for March delivery fell 11 cents, closing t $2.15, and September and Decem- " ter corn dropped about 4 cents, binding up at $1.3554 and $1.204, respectively. The cash market No, 2 red win ter wheat closed at $2.28 to $2.30, an kverage of 16 cents below yester lay's finish.' White oats. No. 3 fell cents, the close being 77 to 77JS rents. . ' large Black; Bear Blocks Road for Auto, Tourists RutlaoC Vt., July 311 While tour . ing northern . New England in an ' tuto Mr. and Mrs. C. L, Oberg of ; Clayton, Mass., came upon a large black animal which . completely ' Mr.rViM fhp rnaHtt-av through Cav- ' endish gorge. Said animal took no ; notice of insistent tootings of the horn-and the autoisU pressed closer, i whereupon the animal, a big, ugly - she bear, reared on her haunches and T offered battle. Brakes and reverse - M.n.r cnt th little auto hark tr s afe distance. The animal glowered ' t the couple and when no fight was i forthcoming moved into the bushes , with her cub. i . " Liberty Bonds Cashed ' : Amtjican State Bank, , . . ' " ' 18tH jand Farnam Sts. Ait. tfUGUST SALE of FU RS fe - : ... . ... : V ,W MWk V H. IU lliMtl Every Piece Carries the BiuiiriaeeNaelh Smairainit of style, quality and service, and therefore you may be sure that every fur piece sold will be exactly as represented. Finest Pelts- When makmg our purchases for this great sale the latest and smartest models were chosen,, and these were made up with the choicest pelts that could be secured among the season's most popu lar furs. Hudson Seal Pony if ink Jap French Seal Squirrel Fitch Hiidson Seal Opossum Mink, Jap Mink Marinat , eat Mob arter Lynx (colors) Coney Coats (3 to 14 years) Coney Starts Monday And I i :.Ui tlhmk '-j' Latest Models French Seal Walby French Coney Wirap Mink Kolinsky Marten Mink Jap Mink Hudson Seal Cellar. Squirrel Hudson Seal Squirrel Muff Squirrel Fox Wolf Fox Brown Taupe Sets Ermine TV iuaip White Mink Rat I II PCTlfflni 4 M us I- Fox Baby Carriage Robes . XTH During This Great Annual Event OFF X WE HAVE assembled an exquisite and exten sive collection of luxurious furs, and by con tracting for them early in the year we forestalled the rising prices on furs and are therefore in a posi tion to offer you enormous savings." Australian Opossum i"mS V X ?r IWlfc l French Seal. I JSSf W WoW Block I r Tjg Zfi J f EYERYBODYS $TOFffi' ANNUAL 5 ULfl Discount to Be Taken have been selected by those who have fur knowledge. They have been developed into artistic conception by designers who are artists, and the finishing has been handled by experts. TUT an August 2nd . You Can Save Off at Time of R PRICE HOWEVER, when purchasing furs, price is not the only consideration. No matter what you save, you must get something of which you can be proud, something which has the finest workmanship and is constructed oh the newest models. Mmh Fin Sale r SAVE-- Bhiiy Mw As this large discount is in effect only until Sep tember 1; it is not only economy but the best sort of an' investment to buy your furs at this time rather than later on. The 25 is taken "off of the,1" marked price. Purchased Now . if desired will be stored until October 1st Should you so desire, you can make your selec tion and we will carefully stor6 them for you until OCTOBER 1 upon pay ment of 25 of their value.