Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 26, 1920, Page 7, Image 7
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 26, 1920. i . A i M- mm 4 I f I ( 1 ! , I- ... , 1 Armory Wanted I' M n o Omaha Troopers State Now Pays $30 Per Drill IkCity of Omaha for Use of the Audi- torium. v During the month of August the enlisted strength of the National Guard was increased by 3,431 men, according to an announcement by the War department. The present strength of the National Guard of ' Nebraska is six officers and 137 eir- . listed men. J The approximate pay per annum . of line officers and enlisted men of the National Guard is as follows: , Captain . Flnt Lfcutrnant , Second Lieutenant'.... ,Srireant, first class . . SrKant, arc-ond class Senteant, third class , Sergeant, fourth class Corporal . 94.72 Private, first clasa 74. 8.1 Frlvata 64.no The above pay includes 49 drills ; fend IS days' field service. t Overseas Veterans. Omalja has one company of 53 en listed men and three officers. Cap '"tain Harry Montgomery of the Love ;;HaskeIl Insurance company is in Command of Omaha's company. More than $18,000 worth of equip ment for the Omaha company, in cluding everything from mosquito ',, bars to tooth brushes, is on the way from Washington, according to Cap tain Montgomery. ; Serving in the local company as enlisted men are, two former cap , tains, one first lieutenant, three sec ond lieutenants and eight former sergeants, most of whom saw serv ice in France during the world war. four companies are to be formed making one battalion for this city. The Union Pacific has a second company practically , formed of Lnion Pacific employes. Scotts " bluffs has a company of three off i- cers and 84 enlisted menv The Scotts Bluff company was the first one to ,. be organized in Nebraska. Armory is Wanted, v ;.' -"Omaha should ' provide an " armory for its-company," said Cap tain Montgomery. "At the present time the state pays the city of Oma ha $50 a drill night for the use of the Auditorium for Omaha's Ns- tional Guard company continued !. the captain. The other officers of the local .! company are: First Lt. Timon Daw son of the Hefiiin Lock and Gun company, and Second Lt. Fraifk Peterson of the E. W. Arthur com- pany. t 1 Miners Will Strike , If Troops Are Called vz Charleston, W. Va., Sept. 25. A general strike involving 126.000 or ganized workers of West Virginia will be called '.'if federal troops are to be used as a strike-breaking agency instead of for the protection of the constitutional rights of citi zenS'otrthe stale and nation," said C. F. Keeney, president of district No. 7, United Mine Workers of America, in a statement. Mr. Keeney 'added that "before X this drastic action is taken, however, ;;; the associations of coal miners in , northern and southern WcstVir !; ginia will be requested to use their influence to have federal soldiers re ;' moved from the state in order that :!! tranquility may prevail."- ' ;; Speedy Settlement of China-Jap Trouble Near Tokio, Sept. 25. Speedy settle ment of questions pending between Japan and China, including early withdrawal of Japanese troops from Shantung and a solution of the TsingTau question, has tjecn ad " vised by the China-Japanese Busi '! rtess association in communications Ij, to Premier Hara. This association is headedby Viscount RHchi Shi .;; busawa, conservative leader. " Man Arrested On Charge Of Stealing From Roommate Frank Johnson, 1015j Capitol avenue, was arrested yesterday, charged with larceny on complaint of Cleveland Sellis. 1013 Capitol avenue, who told police that he had shared a room with Johnson at a rooming house at 1013 Capitol ave nue Thursday night and had found Johnson and $10 missing when he awoke. Free Dental Examination The examination we render you is thor ough, critical and searching and is in no way a mere "looking over." The value of this serv ice can tyardly be estimated in dollars and cents, for it acquaints you with the real condition of your mouth and teeth, and with what is neces FCy to correct or remedy it. Our examination is given you freely and entails no obligation upon your part to have us do your work. ' - PROMPT, EFFICIENT X-RAY SERVICE TEETII wrrv J 324 Farnam Street Corner 14th and Farnam Phone Douglas 2872 x Fireman Was . Baby When Herets Joe Sherry, jr., city fire man, as he is today, and as he ap peared as a prize-winning baby at the age of three months. Joseph Sherry, jr., fireman at sta tion No. 4, Sixteenth and Izard streets, got a good start when he was but an infant. He weighed 14 younds and eight ounces at the time of his birth, but the period 6f phenominal growth for this big fireman 'was during the first three months of his life. After that, his development was more gradual. He is a big man to day, but his physical propensities are not what might be termed phenome nal. When he was three months old, however, he was a wonder. He won several prizes for being the most handsome and most nearly physical ly perfect infant in the state. Fireman Sherry is 29 years old. Last week in a fire at Sixteenth and Clark streets . he distinguished himself. ' With two feflow firemen, he was holding a high-pressure hose dis charging water into the third stpry of the blazing building. And it was a job for the three of them. But the flames soon transformed Both Exports and v. Imports Fall Off Value of GoodsShipped Out Show t)ejKne of $?7,000,000. Washington, Sept. 25. Both ex ports and imports fell off sharply in August, figures issued today by the Department of Commerce showing that exports-totalled $584,000,000, a decrease of $67,000,000 from July, and imports $519,000,000, a decrease of 818,000,000 from July. " Exports for (he eight months end- AnVERTlSEMENT Have Beauty Without ffort Let Stuart,'i Calcium Wafer Do the Work to Rid JKour Face o( Pimj. plei and Such Blemilje. . ' Instead of those futile efforts irthe fa,ce massage, cream f atcam lotions, etc., that have brought only disappoint ment, suppose you leave it to the won dcrful action of calcium. There is hut one way to remove pirn nles. blackheads, and such blemishes through the blood and skin. In Stuart s Calcium Wafers, "taken at meals, the won derful calcium serves to supply the blood with one of tne most remarkable action known to science. This is its activity in keeping firm the tiny fibres that compose even such nrtnute muscles as those which control the slightest change of expression. It is this substance which acts upon the skin, keeps it healthy and drives away impurities. " Get a 60-centi box of Stuart's Wafers any drug store. McKenney Dentists 1 Calcium v Champion S Months Old the building into a seething furnace and his two comrades were needed at the reaavto assist in restraining the blaze. Sherry sent the two men back, and 1-eld the hose alone for more than an hotfr, squeezing it between his knees and directing its heavy flow of water from the nozzle with his hands. Here is, a chart to show what a phenomenal baby Sherry was when 3 rrfonths old and how he appears today: ia hk tvn u As he Is 20 years old. vcii;ht 110 Tmnnds. height S ft. In. r,!)-in. reach. 4Vii in. rhest expansion. 3 month old. 4'2 pounds. Sll inched , HiVt In. heud. XiV" In. waist. 10 ',.. in. calf. S in. wriHtn. Hi in. ankle. cd with August were vaiueu at , 48.3,000,000, an increase of $211,000, 000 over the first eight months of 1919, while imports were valued at approximately $4,000,000,000, an in crease of 77 per cent. i . Gold imported in August was'val ud at $15,400,000", compared with im ports of $2,500,000 in August, J919, while exports in August were $25, 000,000, compared with $45,000,000 last "year. 1 V S.ilvpr ininorts increased from $56.- 000.000 during the first eight months of 1919 to $67,000,000 this year, while exports decreased from' $164,000,000 in the first eitrht months of 1919 to $92,000,000 for 1920. -J 7 No Exchanges No C. O.D.'s Col. Roosevelt's Sister Would Clear Up Doubt Says Western Trip Is to Urge Republicans to Back Can didate as Former States man Would. Chicago, 111., Sept. 25. (Special Telegram) "As the sister of Col. Theodore Roosevelt, there is a spe cial reason whicri caused me to take this trip to the middle west," said Mrs. Corrine-Roosevelt Robins6n of New York at republican national headquarters. "That reason is to impress upon former members of the progressive party in the middle west that I am ubsolutely convinced that the colonel would wish them to get in behind the republican nominee, , as he did in 1916, and put an end to what he considered the most sinister influence that had ever enmeshed a country in its clutches. The people of the United States know the influence of the democratic party during the last seven years." ' "By the frequent use of; the name of Theodore Roosevelt,", continued Mrs. Robinson, "the democratic nominees are trying to confuse the minds of former, progressives. and I speak as one having authority and would clarify the thought jo all fol lowers of Theodore Roosevelt." The itinerary in the middle west includes Indianapolis, St.' Joseph, Mo., Omaha, Minneapolis, Duluth and then Mrs. Robinson will join in Chicago the delegation of women who are to visit. Senator and" Mrs. Harding October. "In my public address thus far I have found that my audiences are most interested in the Wilson league of nations." said Mrs. Robinson. "The people are beginning to realize that without Americanization reser vations, the Wilson league would be a detriment not only to America, but to the whole world. Sailors Refuse to Man Ship With Troops inboard Tricst. Sept. 25. (By The Asso ciated Press.) The -crev of the steamship Gablonz, fron Bombay to Tricst, refused to operate the ship yesterday at Venice, where the ship callad, because 500 troops wefe embarked. The men -declared the soldiers were "to be used against the working class." It develops thv troops were being sent to flood district near this city, where-thousands of 'persons were made libmeless. ; : for- . ,:. Women, Misses and School Girl . Stunning! Every One of These Autumn' Models, in , Coat. 'Tuxedo, Ripple, Slip-Over, Fish Tail, Blouse, Tie-Back and made in 11 the new and very fashionable fall colors Emerald, Nile, Sage, ' Leaf,x Turquoise, Topaz, Peacock, Navy, Copen, Royal, . Midnight Blue, Seal x Mole, Nut, Sand, Taupe, And . as to price $3.95 Are Simply Just an idea of their beautj viewing the window display tor necessary to choose just a few of marvelous assortment. ' v m t . . BYERYBODYS STORE Testimony Completed ' lAgainst Mother of-v GrovetC. Bergdoll Philadelphia, Sept. 25. All testi inony was in today when court ad journed until Monday in the trial of Mrs. Emma Bergdoll, Charles A. Braun, her son; James A. Romig, a lormer magistrate; Albert S. Mitchell and Harry Schuh, charged with conspiracy to aid Glover C. and Erwin Bergdoll to evade the draft. Erwin-Bergdoll, who is serving a four-year sentence in Fort Leaven worth, took the stand in an effort to secure the acquittal of the defendr ants. 1 5 "2sTo one induced me to run off," he declared. " v Under cross-exauiinatio.'i, he de tailed his flight across the country, part of the time with his brother, Grover, also a convicted draft evader, who recently escaped from army guards in Philadelphia and is now a fugitive. He also told how lie hud spent long stretches at his home at Broomall, Delaware county, sleep ing in a barn to foil raiders who might appear at the house. Following the escape of Grover, on May 21, Erwin said he had re mained away from his heme until he decided to surrender lasr July 20. Dismembered Body of Man Discovered in Dry Well Flagstaff, Ariz., Sept. 25. The dismembered body of Martin Schwab, 55, of Payson, Utah, a trav eling salesman for a Cleveland firm, was found at 2 o'clock tjiis afternoon in an abandoned dry well, one mile west of this city. Schwab had been missing since April 15 last. 1 Airplane Crashes. London, Sept. 25. An inland pas senger airplane crashed in the out skirts of London this afternoon. The pilot and four passengers were killed and another passenger se riously injured. LEG TROUBLE LACED STOCKING rs- NO RUBBER WASHABLE OPEN OR SWOLLEN LIMBS, VARICOSE VETNS Lac like letting. f0 IT each, two at re- P.f 5 duced r- c" T or send lor mea surement Blank No. 35. Corliss Limb Spec. Co., Room 323, Longacre Bldj.. B'way and 42d St. New York City. , CUT THIS OUT A'Mpnsiw The Best" and ' - Unheard of Prices may be gained by which it has been thp models from this Burgess-Mash Cqmpamy - Publishers Deny Parties Run' Papery "i "7 V i Stars and Stripes and Legion Weekly Editors Repudiate Statement. New York, Sept. 25. Denial of charges that the American Legion Weekly is controlled by the repub lican national committee and that the Stars and Stripes, another soldier publication, is controlled by the dem ocratic national committee is made in statements last night by Harold Ross, editor of the Legion weekly, and George XV. White, democratic national committee chairman. The allegations were made by Joseph L. Hcffcrnan, secretary-treasurer of tqe Stars and Stripes, before the senate campaign investigating committee In Washington. ' ' "The American Legion Weekly s owned entirely by the 'American L-' gion'and is fully supported by tfie membership of thts organization aid the income from legitimate advertfi ing," Mr. Ross said. In denying the charge alleging OH, BOY! KNITTED TIES ; : The Neckwear Scream J , i of the Montent Worn by Every Good Dresser N Sold by Your Haberdasher Sroadway Is Wild Over"Oh-Boyr i A Popular Tie at a Popular Price. Wholesale Distributors LEON BROS. CO. ; 10th and Farnam Sts., Omaha Dealers Order one dozen Oh Boy Ties on our 30-day approv al plan. Newest Styles Brown, Wisteria, Purple, Plum, Maroon, Lavender, American Beauty, Scarkt, Flame, --Roe, Coral, Black, ', Navy and White. for This Class of Merchandise Without any question it is an event so extraordi nary as to attract ' many more than 1,000 women who are particular about' i control of the Stars and Stripes by his committee, Mr. White said: , "The democratic national commit tee hasn't a dollar invested in the Stars and Stripes or any other pub lication. I know no suclj, investment has-been made since I became chair man and ati.fxami'nation of the. rec ords of the committee show no such investment was made' previous to my election. ' . ' , Scott C. Bone, directbr'of public ity of the republican national com mittee, denied that he ever had stated the committee controlled the Ameri can Legion Weekly!.; Bee want ads 'are best business getters. ' Schmoiler & Mueller Piano Co. 114-118 So. 15th St. Phone Doug. 1623. Better Get Your Tickets Now for the Carnso Concert. a RS $7.95 wearing exclusive sweaters. i A Limited Number j. to a Customer Burglars Rifle Home Of Prohibition Agent -v As Wife Is at FuneraL Los Anseles, Sept. 25. Burglars Friday robbed the house of the widow of Lorin A. Handler, state prohibition director, killed in an automobile' accident near Calt, Cal., Monday night, while she was at tending her husband'o funeral. Tewels- of considereable value were taken, according to the lcpirt to the police, . Caruso Acknowledged king of ten ors, at the Auditorium, Oct 12th 4 ' uses and indorses the ? ft Hardmanj Piano exclusively. . No other piano possesses a tone which blends so well wjth the human voice or is so satisfactory to thp vocal artist as the ; Hardman It Is the Official Piano at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York. We are the appointed representa tives or this world-renowned piano for this section. We are showing a fine selection of these celebrated pianos now. Priced Ffom $825. 7