Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 09, 1920, Page 11, Image 11

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    l'HB liEE: OMAHA, MATUKDAY, UirtOBtiK . li20.
Gov. McKelvie
Talks to Women
Voters of Omaha
Republican Dortrinofl Are Ex
pounded and Work of Last
State Legislature Is
Explained.
Governor McKelvie faced 500
Jmaha club women in the ball
ooni of the Hotel Fontcnclle ves
terday afternoon and expounded re
publican doctrines to the new vot
us. The overnor was introduced
by Mrs. Draper Smith, well known
lutfragc worker, who in her intro'
ihictory remarks emphasized the
fact that women should Rive more
thanks 10 republicans than demo
crats for pushing equal suffrage to
the foreground.
The governor told the women they
had much power in their own votes
mid in switching t he tes of their
Husbands and loved ones.
"Just to show you what one ccod
republican woman can do I'll refer
fb my own familv history," said the
governor. " My father was a demo
crat'and my mother was a reputf-
lican. They argued more about
politics than anything else. Four
of the five boys turned out remit)
licaus and the four of us finally con
verted the fifth to be a republican.
Governor McKelvie lauded moral
cleanliness in politics,, which, he as
Acrted, would result with the en
trance of women.
"And I wish, to call attention to
the fact that the republican party is
bunded on moral bulwarks, such
as women should wish to stand
upon," thq governor declared.
Continuing: he reveiwed the work
of the last legislature m passing the
suffrage anK'ndment, providing for
a civil administrative code, creating
a labor departnicnt,placing labor on
a par with all other organizations,
providing an appropriation for a new
state lj'ouse at Lincoln and giving
Omaha appointments to citizens
"standing for high moral intergity
in the city."
Car Shortage and
Low Prices Causing
Critical Situation
The freight cat shortage and low
rred prices of grain and live stork,
rvfulting in a broken niafket. is caus
ing the most critical' time in the his
tory of . agriculture, according to
Hugh F. Mcintosh,' inanager of the
agricultural bureau of the Chamber
of Commerce.
With yearlings selling todfly for
the same price that they would have
brought as calves a year ago, altc
carrying the expense of feeding
them all winter, labor's wages
mounting, and difficulty in obtaining
it, and the car shortage worrying the
fanners in addition, it is small wjp
der the fanners are leaving for the
city where the' can engage in mor?
profitable business, local financiers
&,':. in substantiating tneir remaps
they point to the decrease in a num
ber of the farming counties' popula
tion. Douglas County Legion
Will Adopt Two Orphans
Two orphans will be adopted by
the Douglas county post of the
American Legion, it was decided
at an executive meeting of the post
held Thursday at the University
club. Notification of the act was
forwarded yesterday to the French
Orphans' league.
This act is part 6f the American
ization program advocated by Col.
Arthur Woods of New York city,
chairman of the national committee
on Americanization.
Invented by a California man, a
new surf coaster, is made of a num
ber of metal tubes fastened together
and filled wiUi air to make them
bouyant v
Attorney Arrested
On Speeding Charge
Clashes With Police
F.rnest A. Conaway, 5117 Burt
street, attorney, clashed with Poli-c
Judge Foster and Policeman Harry
Rogers yesterday morning when ar
raigned for sprcd'iig and reckless
driving, and the atmosphere of the
cour'room was filled with angry
words and idiarp repov:3 by the
prin ; ::ls.
Conaway, according to Rogers,
disregarded the signal to stop after
the former had broken the traffic
rules at Twenty-fourth and Farnam
streets, and Rogers was forced to
pursue him in a passing automobile
without bring able to overtake him.
When Rogers testified to this ef
fect yesterday, it brought a flow of
wrath from Conaway, who charged
the policeman with prevaricating.
Conaway was fined $2.50 and costs
and immediately appealed the case
to the district court.
Caruso Spends Hour in
Omaha Station While
En Route to Denver
Signer Enrico Caruso, 'vorlJ
f anted Italian tenor, spent an hour
in Omaoa Thursday while c route
to Denver, where he sang last night.
It was not Omaha's final glimpse
of Signor Caruso, for he is to return
to grace the .'Auditorium on Octo
ber 12. ,
He was to have been whisked
away to the comfortable quarters of
a hotel and three taxicabs were wait
ing at the station to convey him and
his party there and enable him to
rest his temperamental bones, but
the train had arrived late and time
was at a premium, so the signor con
tented himself with remaining at the
station.
His aristocratic bearing was
matched by attire of the latest fash-
Xewfiboys diesis of l?ee
And Moon at Moie Show
Over 100 Omaha Bee newsboys
werentertained at the Moon theater
lat night, where "The Vu'i!a:tcs"
was shown, as the guests of The Bee
and the Moon theater management.
The young street merchants
marched in a toiy to the show, fill
ing the air with merriment as they
looped down the street.
Two Youths Arrested. .
Verdel, Neb., Oct. 8. (Special
TeIegram.)--Lestcr Lantis of Nio
brara, 17, and a jouth from Huron,
S. I)., are in the county jail at Center
charged with robbing the Farmers
store here Tuesday night. After the
robbery here, suspicion turned to
Niobrara, and Wednesday morning
William Lockwood, K. A. Sewell, F.
W. Kellogg and E. E. Kellogg drove
to that city, where they succeeded
in locating yie young men. The
Lantis boy confessed but the other
remained firm in his denial that he
had been connected with the robbery.
Tiro Destroys (Parage.
Mindcn, Neb., Oct. 7. (Special)
Fire, starting in the workshop of
the Doyle garage at Heart well, com
pletely destroyed the building and
contents. The loss on the building
is estimated at from ?7,000 to 10,000,
$2,500 of uhiVh was covered by in
surance. Twelve or 15 cars valued
at about .$12,000 were destroyed. A
call for help was sent to Miuden
and the fire department responded.
No clue as to the origin of the ,1'ire
has been discovered.
Koosevelt Through Omaha
Franklin D. Roosevelt, democratic
candidate for vice president, and his
party passed through Omaha in a
private car at .1:05 yesterday after
noon, enroute from Colorado
Springs to Des Moines, on the Rock
Island.
Union Paeific Trains
Delayed by Freight Wreck
Salt Lake' Ciiy. Oct. 8. Service
on the mail linf of the Union Pa-'
;ific railroad between Cheyenne.
Wyo., and Ocden, Utah, is being
considerably delayed because of the
derailment of a freight train of K
cars at Rock, Springs, Wyo., accord-
ng to word received hera Utticials
of the- road here state trains wili
be about eight hours behind schedule
until the wreck has been cleared.
Alien Prisoners Will
Be Deported by U. S.
Lincoln. Oct. 8. (Special.) Two
alien prisoners at the penitentiary
are to be turned over to the federal
immigration officials for deporli-
Mon. James A. Mildrum, sent up
horn Cheyenne county for grand
larceny, and Charles Again, sent
from Douglas county for automo
bile stealing and given a 10-year
sentence, will be released.
Indianola Man Seeks to
Enter Race for Senator
Lincoln, Oct. 8. (Special.) Ed
ward Sughroue of Indianola has
filed a petition with Secretary of
State Ansberry asking that his
name be placed on the official bal
lot as a candidate "by petition" for
the office of state senator from the
26th district. Mr. Sughroue was a
member of the constitutionaKcon-vention.
Freight Agent Promoted
To General Agent of TJ. P.
W. D. Clifford, 35k who for sev
eral years has worked as a clerk in
the freight department of the Union
Pacific, and was promoted to freight
agent at Cheyenne, Wyo., .during
the war, was yesterday made gen
eral agent of the Union Pacific
road, an office just created, with,
headquarters m Omaha.
The Store of the Town"
Fall and
Winter
Clothes
For Boys and Children
In Knicker Und
Juvenile Styles
Juvenile Suits,
$8.50 to $16.50
Juvenile Overcoats,
$8.50 Jo $30.00
v.
Knicker Suits,
$12.50 to $35.00
Two-Pant Knicker
' Suits, . -$15.00
to $35.00 v
Authorized
Agents, for Boy
Scout Uniforms
and Equipment.
Boys' Overcoats,
$12.50 to -$40.00
AN EXTRA SPECIAL
CORDUROY SUITS
FOR SCHOOL WEAR
$12.00
Browning King & Co,
- Geo. T. Wilson, Mgr. r
JOHN A. SWANSON, Pres.
WM. L. II0LZMAN, Treas.
A Decided Readjistmeirifi:
of Prices
That
aves
Yaii m
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hhm ivm m mmm w .ay.vv. '.v.. vJm,i cm
Uri ST"
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One-Mhiute
Store Tallc
"There'i one thins about
it, when you folk talk
about lower price all
the world can tee it bo
caute you have mora
Standard Lines of Cloth
ing and more of each line
than any other (tore in
. the wed. It'a eaiy to
make an intelligent com
parison under these con
dition!," remarked a cus
tomer. V O If It FALL
CLOTHES AT
WONKY SAVINli
V RICES ARE
HEADY.
OUR justifiable demands for more quality in
clothes at your price is being met here by '
the most liberal readjustment of prices that is being made by
any store in America today!.
In spite of wholesale clothing prices that show no decline (except
in newspaper reports colored to tickle the reader) Greater Ne
braska is forcing the issue, anticipating the future, offering today
More Than Twelve Thousand
NEW Fall and Winter Suits, Overcoats,
Top Coats, . Utility Coats
A 1L T : T. NT"i 1
m me lowest rnces on aecora
$25 $30 $35 $40 $45
$50 $60 $65 $75
OUR Prices-Exclusively OUR Prices for
Clothes Made To Sell at $35 to $100
Greater Nebraska's principles of service stand back
of this price policy. There is no other reason for il
than this store's intense interest in its patrons. Your
good rvill is worth more to us than your money.
Select Your Fall Clothes Saturday at
Style and Value Headquarters .
The New Fall Suits for Come and enjoy the style treat . that our mammoth selections alone afford.
Men and Young Men Every new model of 1920-21 is to be found here in men's, young men's and
younger young men's styles. The range of weaves and colorings is so vast andi varied that every style prefer
ence may be suited this Autumn Brown, Blue Grayson stripes, over-plaids, hairlines, invisible checks, fancy mix
tures no end to them single-breasted or double-breasted. The greatest stocks of special sizes ever assembled
under one roof in the west. Regulars in all proportions; stouts, slims, shorts, longs, very large or small men's
clothes. Custom service without the annoyance of a try-on. 'v
An Overcoat
Exposition
Overcoats! Overcoats dressy, single and
double-breasted models, Ever right Chester
fields, heavy ulsters and novelty weaves, belted
ulsterettes never a more interesting assem
blage of a season's new styles!
it
'
t J .
1 rmm
A Top Coat
Exposition
The coat of great utility the top coat from
dressy silk lined Chesterfields td ultra novelty,
high color weaves, from staple fly front styles
to swagger button through models. The chill
of Fall calls them out. We're ready.
On top of the greatest value campaign in our history here's
the west's supreme style shor for extra good measure:
A Motor Coat
Exposition
New leather coats that? are two coats in one
reversible to a regulation overcoat. New leath
erette coats reversible; new moleskin and
suede cloth coats tans, brown, green, dashing
full belted high collar, wind and weather
proof models.
HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMERSOCIE TY BRAND - HICKEY-FREEMAN
FASHION PARK-LANCHAM HIGH AND A HOST OF OTHERS-FINEST
CLOTHES DESIGNERS SUPERB FALL AND WINTER STYLES.
Man't, Youn Men ana Younger Young Men's Clothing Entire Second Floor Main Building and Annex.
Shirts -- Underwear - Sweaters
Be particular about values in haberdashery it pays. Price means
, nothing Values, variety the vast selections here that make
' ,vour satisfaction possible produces the volume of business that
make our values the big attraction that they are.
Shirts from all famous makers.
Fall weaves and colors look
ing for something different?
It's here
82.50 to 812.50
Underwear that a man will en
joy Vassar, Superior, Duo
fold, Stephenson, Cooper Union
Suits all weights and styles
S2.00 to S12.50
Warm Sweaters, nnll-nvpr
neck coats, heavv slmwi rnHnr
styles, "Travelo" we're head-'
quarters for sweaters
S2.50 to 817.50
STETSON,
BORSALINO
and
MALLORY
HATS
NEW FALL GLOVES, NECKWEAR, HOSIERY, NIGHT ROBES, PAJAMAS
John a SWANSON.PBCS. -rTfflrtTT3Trmi... . '
HURLEY
and .
ARNOLD
GLOVE-GRIl
SHOES
. CORRECT APPAREl'fOR MEN AND WOMEN
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