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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER SO. l(J20. Two Cafe Men I Arrested on Arson Charge Restaurant Proprietors 'Jailed tfter Burning Fuse and Oil Smoked Rags Arc Found I By Officers. I ' Charles Mangiamella, 2226 .South Eleventh street, and Carmela Troia, 510 Woolworth avenue, proprietors -f the Italian-American restaurant, 120 South Fifteenth struct, were ar rested early yesterday by Police Sergeants Cotfey and Russell atid Patrolman Treglia,. after Officer I'reglia hail thwarted an attempt to bunt the Creighton block, Fifteenth jnd Douglas streets, Treglia found the door of the res taurant unlatched at 1:15 while "try ing" doors on his beat. He pushed the door open and saw a burning fuse on the floor. Tht room was 'illed witlr-.hc odor of gasoline. Treglia rushed over and extin guished the fire just as the fuse was burning through some newspapers aver a can of gasoline. Saturated Cloths Found. - Three large pans of gasoline and kerosene were connected by about 20 feet of saturated towels and aprons knotted together. Two min utes more would have been sufficient for the accomplishment of the explo sion and the spreading of the flames and nearly 100 persons living on the second and third floors of the build ing would have been trapped up stairs with the exit shut off by fire, according to the police. The stair way entrance to the building is only slve feet to the north of the place where the saturated cloths were found, and the stairway winds above '.he restaurant, Oil-Filled Vessels Listed Reports ntade to Assistant Fire Chief Crager in the city hall by the investigators listed the oil-filled re :eptacles as follows: One five-gallon can one-fourth full of kerosene. . One 10-gallon keg one-half full of krosene. i One four-gallon pan full of kero sene. One roasting pan, capacity two gallons, half full of kerosene, in ihnw rase N 6ne four-gallon can one-fourth 'till of gasoline. jAt each end of the show case were uprons saturated with kerosene lead ing from the pan in the case to the other vessels. These are all-being held as evi dence. Police Investigate. iThe arrests yesterday followed anj investigation by Sergeants Lotteyi and Russell and Assistant Fire Chief MjjKjtin Dineen. Mangiamella . pur ;h"ased his interest in the restaurant ityout a month ago. Both men claim thfttjthey are innocent and that they did not place the fuse and the pans it, gasoline behind the counter. They said that they were together in the restaurant until 11:30 Sunday sight, at which time they locked the Uore and went home. ' Following a conference between Police Judge J. M. Fitzgerald, J.- C. Trouton, city fire inspector, , and county officials bonds for Mangia mella and Troia were fixed at $5,000 pending investigation. r , r ... . Bar on Immigration After first of March f . Vashington, Nov. 29. If .an im migration law is not enacted before March 4 it will be necessary to sus pend temporarily, the entrance of aliens, according to Representative Johnson, chairman of the house com mittee on immigration and natural ization. In such ah event a final disposition of the matter would be made at the extraordinary session of congress next spring. ; l The erection of a temporary bar against foreigners will be demand ed, he said, if it is found impossible to pass a general immigration law at the short session., Such stop-gap legislation is imperative, Chairman Johnson says, because the passport law expires March' A, and the flood of undesirables after that date must be prevented. The nassoort law. which is serv ing as a partial check to the irirtuxS ?f aliens, automatically oies aiarm t. v After that, he said, it will be Nisy for aliens, unless congress takes -ireventive steps, to come into the, United States, as the literacy test nd certain requirements regarding :he physical fitness of immigrants would be' the only restriction. Two Counterfeiters Caught in Cincinnati Cincinnati, O., Nov. 29. Follow ing information given by a woman, '.hree policemen entered a room here nd; arrested two men who were irying the ink on more than $3,000 worth of $10 bank notes which had been printed from copper platest The counterfeiting outfit, police say, ;s one of the most complete which las ever been found in Cincinnati. Hie prisoners were, registered as Martin Hamman. 37, Cincinnatiand Charles Schwibbe. 25 years old, Vinccnncs.Mnd. Nine ot the bank lotes had been completed arid the aper was still wet. The paper used .vas of the best grade, and an arti kial toughness was added with rlue. , Police say Hamman was sentenced :o serve five years in the federal prison at Leavenworth, after he had been convicted of countcrfeit ng in Oklahoma and was recently eleased. The proprietoress of the rooming louse gave the information leading ;o the arrests. Man Who Answered Ad Takes Diamond Rings From W oroan An unidentified .man answered an idvertiseraient concernmir an on rtnvV and icebox bv D. E. Miffett, US South Thirty-eighth 'avenue, Sun ' tay noon. When he left the borne. Mrs. Muf .'ett missed two diamond riugs she had left on the kitchen table. The rings held 3-4 carat and 1-4 carat toues set in platinum and were 'hied at SLOW Keg and' Oily Aprons Laid Out by Arson Plotters te mm 88$ UK fla Inside the Italian-American restaurant, 120 South Fifteenth street, showing the keg of gasoline and rope of oil-soaked aprons and towels leading from a pan of kerosene in the showcase to" other vessels. A lighted fuse was extinguished a few moments before an explosion was scheduled, which would have wrecked, the Creighton block, where the restaurant is located. , Reform Bodies fould Stop All Sunday Traffic Operation of Trains and Newspapers Prohibited Un der Provisions of Bill To Be Introduced. Chicago Tribune-OniahaISre Leased Wire. Washington, Nov. 29. Operation of trains in interstate traffic, deliv ery of mail and mailing of newspa pers on Sunday would be prohibited if congress should pass the legisla tion which will be urged by the re form organizations ' working for strict Ogscrvance of the Sabbath. The bill as prepared by the re formers provide: "1. " Hereafter it shall be unlaw ful for any persons in the employ ment of the United States to work or carry on his ordinary vocation on Sunday. "2. It shall be unlawful for any person or corporation to operate on Sunday, any freight --or passenger train, or mail train, or any other train or part of a train, in the car rying on of interstate commerce, trade or traffic of any kind. "3 It shall be unlawful for any postoffice to be open on Sunday, or to deliver mail on Sunday; it shall be unlawful for any ntail to be tar ried or delivered on Sunday by any employe of the United States whether in city or country. v' Would Stop Papers. v "4. It shall be unlawful for any newspaper or any .publication pub lished or purporting to be published on Sunday, to be received, carried or delivered as mail to any agency of the United States, in any postof fice or over any route under the jur isdiction of the United States. "5. It shall be uniawful for any person or corporation engaged in interstate commerce or carrying na any business or vocation under the laws of, or with the permission or license from the United States, or any of its agencies, to d, or carry on any-, ordinary vocation or busi ness orf Sunday, the purpose of this act being to express on national de termination to honor the Sabbath day and keep it holy, as God com mands, thereby securing for all that opportunity for spiritual and bodily refreshment decreed by our Lord for the happiness of all men and the safety of all nations. "6. Any person who does any of the things above declared unlawful, or who procures or aids another in doing any of the things above de clared unlawful, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and punished upon on- viction by due process ot law U a fine of not under $100 nr over $10,000 for each offense, and by im prisonment for not over six months, in the discretion of the court. "7. And any corporation that does, dr aids in doing those' forbid den things shall, upon conviction, be fined not less than ?1,000 nor over $100,000 for each offense.and upon conviction a second time for.Jike offenses shall forfeit its charter and franchise and be enjoined from op erating n interstate commerce." Condition of Thanksgiving Quarrel Victims Critical Mrs. John "Bulldog" Pearson, 2659 Farnarr. street, and J. W. Freeman, 2820 Blondo street, who were shot during fami'y quarrels Thanksgiving morning. were re ported in critical condition at hos pitals yesterday. Mrs. Pearson is in the Swedish Mission hospital. Freeman is in St. Joseph hospital. He was shot by his wife, who said he threatened her. Dr. Charles F. Shook, police surgeon, denied today the bullet lodged in Freeman's heart,' but said UTxmt He saill thi. f uncommon among re it is behind the heart in the lett situation is not volver victims. Postal Announces Boost In Rates and Salaries 'ew York,Nov. 29. Increases of 2(.er cent in rates aivd 10 per cent in ijlaries of employes, effective De cember 1. was announced here by the lHcslal Telegraph and Cable com pany Loss of Radium " Causes Stir at Iowa University Authorities , Baffled hy Mys terious Disappearance of $3,000 Worth of Mineral During Operation. Des Moines, Nov. 29. (Special.) A tiny capsule, containing 24.96 milligrams of radium, valued at $3, 000, mysteriously disappeared during an operation in the university hos pital at the) State university at Iowa City a few days ago. Scientists with modern apparatus for locating radium, detectives and representa tives of Lloyds. London, worked in vain to find it. The radium was. Jast used on a woman patient from Washington, la., who was being operated on for can cer of the jaw. The metal was en cased in turn in a glass tube, a silver tube, a brass tube and a rub ber tube. Another capsule of the radium was also contained in the rubber receptacle. This ' had been placed in the woman's mouth after the operation to fight infection. The treatment was made in the morning, at noon and in the afternoon. At night the young surgeon who handled the receptacle discovered that one of the pieces of radium had disappeared, together with one of the inner tubes. The outer rubber wrapper was intact, with no evi dence that it had been tampered with. - s Chicago Police Seek Niece of Late lake t Hamon, G.O.P. Leader i Chicago, Nov. 29. Active search was begun in Chicago for Mrs. Clara Smith Hamon, who is wanted in con nection with the death of Jake L. Hamon, republican national com mitteeman fr.om Oklahoma and mil lionaire oil man. Hamon died at Ardmore after he had been mysteriously wounded in a room at a hotel. It was claimed he had shot himself accidentally. There were rumors that Hamon and Mrs. Hamon, who is his niece by marriage and who was his former secretary, had quarreled. She disappeared at' the time,,of the shooting. Oklahoma police have traced her baggage as far as Kansas City, but all trace was lost there. Karrants have seen issued in Ard more for the arrest of Clara Smith Hamon, charging her with a statu tory offense and with assault to kill Hamon. ' Bridge Damaged When Ice Breaks in Missouri River Bismarck, N. D., Nov, 29. The 'ice broke in the Missouri river here and within an hour the stream had risen five to eight inches. The breaking ice carried out a large portion of temporary piling bridge used by a construction companv in building a bridge across the river here. The damage v.as estimated at $10,000. Warnings was sent up and down the river earlier in the day when it was reported that the ice had gone out at Washburn. Fears were ex pressed that live stock herds in the river bottoms might be caught in the sudden rise. Federal Troops Arrive At West Virginia Mines Williamson, W. Va Nov. 29. A provisional battalion of approxi mately 500 regular army troops from Chillicothe, O.," arrived here last nigght. iThe troops are here in re sponse to a request of Gov. John J. Cornwell, who decided that the dis orders of the last few weeks had cre ated a situation with which the state and county officers could not cope. Detachments of soldiers have al ready been sent to Kermit. Cedrr laud, and Mtewun for guatd duty No disorders have lycn rcport?d. City Couneilnicn All to Run Again Is City Hall Talk Mayor Smith Not Expected to Seek Re-Election, ,Rut 3 .. Commissioners Are Being GroomedJ Is Rumor. 'Rumors about 'the city hall, grow ing stronger as the holiday season approaches, hold that all the incum bent city commissioners will be can didates for re-election at the prima ries the first week in April. Mayor Smith ha sannounced he is through with politics and it is generally un derstood he will not seek re-election. Commissioners Zimman and Ring er will not be it) the same combina tion, if there are; any combinations growing out of the present adminis tration. Both have expressed dis satisfaction with the other's policies on certain phases of government. Ure May Run. An organization, is already , being bunched in behalf of Commissioner Falconer. Commissioner Butler, it is stated, is ready to make the race alone. Commissioner Ure is" being men tioned as a potential candidate for mayor. He declines to discuss it. He is also spbken of as' a possible postmaster under the new federal administration. Commissioner Towl likewise declines to' discuss the city campaign. . Dahlman Won't Talk United States Marshal J. C. Dahl nan, who was mayor for 12 years, is mentioned for the citySiall, but has refused to commit himself on Whether he will run. Steve Maloney, former chief of detectives, and B. F. Thomas, former postmaster, are being groomed by friends for the commissioners' heat. Others whose names have been heard in the public forum are Gould Dietz, M. L. Learned, Rome Miller, and J. B. Hummel. Farmers' Strike Not Governed by Anti-TfUst Act , v'ashington, Nov. 29. Because farmers' co-operative organizations are exempt from application of anti trust laws, the Department of Justice has given no consideration to the campaign to withhold crons from the markets until prices acvance. it was said by F. K. Nebeker, special as sistant to the attorney general. Mr. Nebeker's explanation of the department's atfltude followed a statement by C. S. Barrett, president of the National Farmers' union, that he understood federal agent were attempting to obtain evidence for prosecutions in Kansas, Iowa and other states. v The Clayton anti-trust act, Mr. Nebeker said, (provides that agricul tural organizations, not having capi tal st6ck or conducted fpr profit, can not be construed as conspiracies in restraint of trade. Withholding of crops for personal profit, he asserted, probably would not be h$ld as or ganization profits. Mr. Nebeker also explained that the limitations on the appropriation act for the enforcement of the anti trust law would seem to preclude action against farmers, inasmuch as the act specifies no part of the ap propriations shall be expanded for the prosecution of farmers who co operate to obtain a fair and reason able price for their products. Blue Grass State Asks Recognition in New Presidential Family Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee astd Wire. ' Washington, Nov. 29. Kentucky wants recognition from the new re-, publican administration for its part in displacing a democratic United States senator and almost getting in to: the republican electoral column, according to Representative John W. Yangley, who reached Washington today. He brought vv'th him a boom for Col. A. T. Hert, vice chairman of the republican national committee, fora, place in Mr. Harding's cabinet. Mr. Langley says that Kentucky should land a cabinet portfolio, as it is now almost completely a republican-state. Tennessee, he said, should also be recognized and he predicted that Sam R. Sells, who manaeed the Hardine campaign in Tennessee and who has served as chairman ot the pensions' committee in the bouse, would be rewarded for his services in turning Tenneessee into the republican column by ap pointment to the office of pension commissioner. Doose Funeral Tomorrow. Funeral services for Henry W. Doose, 59 years old, retired Union Pacific employe, will be held at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at Cross Lutheran church. Twentieth and bpnng streets. Uunal will be in Laurel Hill cemetery. Mr. Dqosc died last Friday while visiting a daughter in Plainview. Neb. His home was in Omaha at 1802 Van Camp avenue. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost A))jjij ! th trade mark at Baer Maumaclu, ,1 Man Is Identified V x As Theater Robber rv : llank' Alc.-Mdlc. l.tH South Twenty-eighth ftreet, sispce ted as pne of the men who robbed the Empress theater of $3,000 last month, was identified Sunday night, following his arrest by- Detectives Franks and Graham, by Manager Lcdoux of the theater who was bound and gagged by the bandits who cut the telephone wires. Glenn "Tubby" Clark, arrested a few days after the rohbery, was bound over to the district court for trial. Girl Identifies Trio as Bandits Who Held Up Bank Three Men Held by Omaha Police Identified as Men Who Robbed Bank in Superior, Wis. Scattered through a crowd of in discriminate prisoners at Central police station yesterday J. J. Bohmer, Charles Stewart and "Chi cago" Daly, suspected bank robbers, were identified by Cashier H. E. Erickson and Martha Nelson, clerk, of Superior, Wis., as the three nfen who robbed their bank of $7,000 November 16. Erickson and Miss Nelson reached Omaha late Sunday night, after Archibald McKay, district attorney, and Sheriff M. J. McGuire, arrived to fight for the extradition of the trio. : Miss Nelson kept herself from fainting at sight of "Chicago" Daly only through the force of her will, staggering slightly from nervous shock when put face to face with the man. Pictures of the three men were identified by Erickson and Miss Nelson, Mrs. J. W. Leader, customer, and Nell Mulligan, an other clerk, all of whom were locked in the vault by the robbers. Extradition for the return of the three men to Superior to stand trial will be sought before Governor McKelvie Wednesday. Mann Probably Next Republican Leader To Replace Mondell Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leased H ire. Washington, Nov. 29. Represen tative James R. Mann has returned to Washington completely restored to health and feeling strong enough to resume his former activity in the house. It is expected that Mr. ,Mann will be the actual republican leader 5n the house this winter on account of the disability of Majority Leader Mondell, who suffered a fracture of the lcj several weeks ago and re cently experienced a setback when his crutch broke and precipitated him down a stairway. v In view of his restored vigor, Mr. Mann is being talked of again for majority leader, if not speaker of the house in the next congress, which will be called into extraordinary ses sion next spring. If Claude Kitchin should remain incapacitated by illness the democra tic, leadership may go to either Ed ward W. t'ou of North Carolina, or Charles R. Crisp of Georgia,, son of the late Speaker Crisp. Proposed Rent. Ordinance , Tabled by City Council The citycouijcil committee of the whole this morning voted to place on file a proposed ordinance, offered by the legislative league of Omaha Cen tral Labor union, and which con templated .regulation of the business of renting houses and apartments. The proposition was to issue licenses and impose annual fees, according to the extent of the business. The city commissioners do not believe that this ordinance would fill a pub lic need at this time. SeventeenJMen Discharged. W. D. McCuIlocli, 1121 Douglas street, arrested Sunday charged with keeping-a disorderly house, and 17 men, charged with being inmates, were discharged when arraigned be fore Poli:e Judge Fitzgerald in po lice court Monday morning. but & few cents Larger packages. of MoiYacctkad'lclrar Kallcyllcadd Beneficiary of "Deathbed" Will Doubts Validity 4Man Who j Received $1,200 Admits to Court Suspicion That Will Was Prepared By Interested Parties. , Although- Daniel Stekrat, .1002 South Sixteenth strew, is a bene ficiary for $1,200 in the will alleged to have been made by Gustave Oelschlaeger, on his death bed, Oc tober 19, he .testified in county court yesterday that , he did not believe Orlschlaeget was competent mental ly to make a will and furthennpre that he believes the will had been prepared secretly by , "interested"' persons.. "1 was !np at John lloescn's house, 2702 South Eighteenth street, the day this will is alleged to have been made," said Mr. vStekrat, "and Mr. Oelschlaeger didn't even know, me any'mpr. That was on Tuesday. Told of New Will. i " The previous , Sunday Boeson said to nu 'Can you keep a secret?' I told him 1 could and he said. 'Oelschlaeger has made a will and I think you will be satisfied 'with it. He left you -three times as much as he left me.' " Henry Kieser, executor named in a will made by Oelschlaeier in 1912, is contesting the alleged "deathbed" will, charging that Oelschlaeger was given liquor and was intoxicated when the last will was made. An odd feature of this "deathbed" wS44-. is that it is dated "November 19, 1920." Oelschlaeger died October 21. This was an oversight, said the lawyer who assisted in drawing up the will. In the will of 1912 Oelschlaeger left all his property except $500 to relatives in Germany. The $500 is left to Anna Roth of South Omaha. In the "deathbed" will he left Mrs. Rotli $1,200. and the following sums to other Omahans: John Boesen, $500; Morris Yist, $1,200 Daniel Stekrat, '$1,200, and Frank Gross, $1,500. Boesen i3 named executor. Sums ranging 'from $1,000 to $2,000 each are left to uncles and aunts and cousins in.Hirsau, Stuttgart and Wit tenburg, Oermauy. littleTEnr Looks to America for Financial Stability New York, Nov. 29. The "little entente," composed of Czecho slovakia, Jugo-Slavia and Roumania, look to the United States to restore the financial and economic stability of central Europe, asserted Dr.Beo rick Stephanek, first minister from Czechp-SJovakia 6 the United States, on his arrival. He explained that the "little en tente will notcoiiflict with the leagoe of nations and that it was formed to combat radical elements of the Magyars and to affect a realignment of the fmauiial system of central Eu rope, lie said it would not deal with matters of industrial importance be yond their own boundaries. England, France and Italy are powerless to cope with the problems of financial and industrial readjust ment "and it devolves upon the United States as the world's largest creditor to extend 'its infloeuce in normalizing conditions, he declared. Negro Holds Up Man A lone negro held up Oscar Jacobs, 1543J.S North Sixteenth Street, in front of 1609 Nicholas street, Sunday night, and robbed him of $10.28. according to the re port lacribs made to the police. MOTHER'S WM For. Expectant Mothers Used By Three Generations WH1TI roil BOOKLET ON MOTHERHOOD U 1A1T. ml IDIIILD RiaUUTOI CO. DEPT. I-D. ATLANTA, aa. His little Boy A. Mass of Sores So writet W. C. Warren of MlUboro, Virginia, and he addi: , "We tried two rood doe tori, one a ine. cialiit on ikin disease and they did him no rood. We uied 7 bottlei of D. D. D. and his face, which wai limply a man of tores, is now imootb as paper." Thousands of grateful wert of D. D. D.hara written to tell of the wonderful relief It a them even one application completely stop, piiurallitchioirandburnine. WhynottryD.D.IX at once and be convinced? Your money back if the first bottle does not bring relief. Uc.600 and 11.00. Try D. D. D. soap. too. m lotion for SKin Disease Five Sherman 4 McConnell Drug Store. Gets 28 Eggs A Day Hon, Fra 34 Hens C. C. White, Well-Knowt) Breeder, Tells How. Cost3 Nothing ta Try. "I ffnvo Don Sung to 3t utility Buff Orpingtons aud the egg yield increased from 7 to 28 a day. Don Sung ia a wonder nnd I am now giving it to all W bens regularly," Clias. C. Whit lh fa lit. I- In. kville. i r&MfsBP Mr. Whiia iivw v l atin, 111(1. !e in thft well fZ4 known broci brooder and ex hibitor. He wrote tbo l a above rtier in jiocem- Ia. -w-vt. ber, after his test bad iaLAJUtii bNiitu a gain of 21 eg).'" n day from 81 nous. We will make you the iJaine odcr we ninde h!m. Here It 1b: Give your hens Dou Su;i(r and wutch results for one uionlh. If yuu dou't find that it jiaya for itself and pays you a good prulit besides, simply tell na and your mhner will bo cheerfully refunded. Don Sung: (Chinese for eRg-laylne) la n sek ntllle tonic and conditioner. It ts vaslly (tiven In the feed, iniproTea th hen s henllh nnd makes her Btronger and more active. It toin s up the egg-lnylng organs, und gets the eggs. Do matter bow cold or wet the weather. You can obtain Don Hung from yonr, druggist or poultry remedy dealer, or send J1.04 (includes war tax) for package by mall. Jiurrell-Diigger Co., 214 Columbia Uldg., Indianapolis, lud. Chinese for EejjLayintj A!H r.KTIKEMKS V 666 is a prescription for Colds, Fever and LaGrippe. It's the most speedy remedy we know. Girl Bride Held fo Big Diamond Theft Mrs. Dorothy McFarige of De troit, Mich., pretty 16-year-old bride, who has been arrested in Chicago charged 'villi the theft of jewelrv valued a. $1,500. The -young woman was living at 'the home of Mrs. Martin Rose, wife of a wealthy Detroit real estate deal cr. Mrs. Rose reported to the ( po lice that her jewels had disappeared '.lie sac day Mrs. McFarige left for ChicagoV, Though married recently, the youi't woman is separated from hei" husband. Paris Thrilled ... By Girl Bandit Feminine Leader of ''Apache" Gang Shot Down While Resisting Arrest. New Vurk 'J tmc-t IiIchko Tribune tablo ' CopyrlKbt IDJO. Paris, Nov. 9. The exploits of the girl leader of the gang of "Apacfits" have thrilled Paris. Her name is llenriettc Miffor.ne, . alias Yevette, and she lios between life and death in the police infirmary as the result of a wound received while resisting arrest yesterday morning. Trctty, slim, well educated, and barely 20, it was at first thought she was only an accomplice of half a dozen male gun-men of the band ar rested simultaneously. That she. slipped from a taxicab in yhich the was seated with four companions when the police attack ed them at Xeuilly yesterday morn ing4 and sheltering herself behind a tree tried to open lire en tha inspec tors with an automatic, :ls attribu ted to her affection for a criminal named Degory, who is thought to be the leader of the" gang which recent ly committed a number of holdups and robberies in Paries and suburbs. Her pistol jammed and she rushed forward striking viciously with the butt, at a policeman grappling with one of the bandits by the roadside, who was trying to draw his gun. Another ,-insplctor was forced to shoot her down. I 1 4$ Continue to come to- our closing out sale. Others are taking advantage of thei low prices why not you. CJ Our lease expires in Janu ary and we must aell the merchandise. , i Ryan Jewelry Co- Securities BIdg. Bcwen's Again Makes Price Appealing Reductions in Hall . Carpeting Measure up the num ber of yards your halls, require, "then come to the Greater" Bowen Store and make your selection from the many beautiful pat terns now displayed for your approval at prices far lower than they have been offered before in years. It's economy to carpet the halls; it keeps the rooms warmer, saves fuel and adds much to the ap pearance of the home. Throughout the Bowen Store, on each and every floor, you will find home furnishings priced at a Saving priced so you can buy and still have money left to complete your Christmas Giving. Making your own terms at.this store enables you to buy whatever you want and .when you want it . . Advertisement. i M Price of Bread To Slump in M Davs, Sav Bakers Flour Now $8 a Hariri Bread Cost to Drop When High-Priced Flour in Bakeries Used Up. A decline in bread price within the next 30 days is predicted .bv Omaha bakers. Any immediate decline is impos sible because takers are using flour purchased before the sensational drop in wheat and flour prices be gan, bakers sav. , ."It i3 necessary for' large bakeries to 'carry from 40 to 80 days supply of flour on hand," explained Jay Hums,, of the Burns flaking Co. "Last week we were using flour for which we paid $1.2.1- per bar rel. . $8 a Barrel, "The drop in wheat prices lias brought the price of floir down to as low as $S 3 barrel during the past 30 'days r.ud by about January 1, it may be possible to reduce the price of the 10and 15 cent loaves as much as 16 per cent. "At present the 15-ceut loaf is scaled at from 23 to 24 ounces. At one time during this year it was sealed at as low as 19'' ounces. May Drop to 13 Cents. . "The 10-cent. lest l.eiiiR scaled at about 154 ounces at present, while it has been scaled as low as 12S ounces during the1 year." The price of the 15-cent loaf may drop to 13 cents, according to Mr. Burns. t nVF.BTISt.HESI I AFRAID TO. EAT MEALS . ,- . : ? , ; j "Pape's Diapepsin" is the best t " ' Antacid and Stomach J ; Regulator known - i - . ...i t ...-.-".""-.---.'....-.. When vour meals don't fit and vol feel uncomfortable, whe,n you belch gases, acids or raise sour, undigest ed food. When you feel lumps ol indigestion pain, heartburn oi headache from acidity, just eat a tab let of harmless and reliable rape; Diapepsin and the stomach distress is gone. Millions ot people know the magic of Pape's Diapepsin as an antacid. They know that most indigestion anc disordered stomach are from acid- itv. The relief comes quickly, no disappointment! Pape's Diapepsir helps regulate your stomach so you - - .. i . i can eat tavonte tooas wunoui icnr and -a box of these world-famous stomach tablets cost so little at drug stores. ooooocoxxoo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Geo. Wt Ryan, Pres. A. HOSPE CO. 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This medicine acts upon lh digestive as well elimlnatlvis organs promotes food digestion, causes thn body to get the nourishment from alt the foot! you cat. gives you a pood, fiearty appetite, strengthens the liver, avorcomes biliousness, regulates kidnev and bowel action and gives the whol'a body a thorough cleaning out. This accomplished you rlll not have to Ink. medlctno every day. An ocrarlonal Ni; tablet will keep your body In condi tion and you can always feel yo.ir best. Try Nature' Remedy (N'P. Tablets and prove this. It Is the best bowel medicine that you enn use nnd cost only 25c per box, eontaininir enough to Inst twenty-five days? Nature's Rm dy (NR Tablets) la sold, guaranteed nd recommended by your druggist. Sherman & McConnell DruR Co.