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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1920)
Dance Hall Jazz Music Jolted by ., Welfare Board Terpeichorean Artists Must Dance From Floor Up, In stead of Waist Up De clare Members of Body. Jazz music as a dancing i accom paniment ' was given a sever joit yesterday afternoon in the city coun cil chamber, where members of the Board of Public Welfare conferred informally with managers of public dance halls, for the purpose of rais- - . . 1 . .. 1 - fit. A "1 wg ine sianaaras 01 me icrpsiciiur ca.n art in Omaha. " The " saxophone artist who plays his, seductive instrument in.) a stand ing position and cuts all manners of didoes the while, will be required to remain seated. " "Jazz music is causing most of the trouble in our dance halls,' said H. I.. Brid ell, dance' inspector for the Welfare board. "Cut out the jazz. You can't blame 'the dancers if they have, to follow the jazi , music. Sax ophone players .should sit down while playing. I saw a "crowd of 1.000 on a dance floor last summer , and when the saxophone players gave their stunts standing up, about 700 of the dancers followed the - movements of these musicians, i Players Standing Up Again. "I have ordered the players to sit down, but I find that in places they are standing un again. No wonder that some dancers make wieclv- vobbly movements when they hear tlUS Kind OI music aim onwivs uic movements of these musicians. I am going to make them sit down here after.' "I suppose that I am the oldest drncing teacher in Omaha," remark ed J. M. Gaynor, "and I say that we should cut out the jazz." . .. "I also wish" they would cut it out," asserted RMalvka, another danc hall manager. "I may know something about the ology," said Rev. Edward Flanagan, who presided at the meeting, "but I "must admit that I don't know much about this jazz musir" Close Dancing Prohibited - The attendants discussed-an exist ing rule of the Board of Public Wel fare, referring to positions of 'dancers on the floor. -'The touching of heads is positively prohibited," is one of the rules. .AV. L. Keep and Jiarry White il lustrated, for the benefit of Welfare board members the approved .posi tions of dancers, and demonstrated Thow easy it is for either of a danc ing couple to assume an improper , position. "The woman does not have to dance, close unless she wants to," said Mr. Keep. "It is all right so long as the woman's hand is four inches below tier partner's collar, because you don't want her hanging .... J .La MAf1an.4M0 n.1r .A .woman sometimes has to hang on firmly because her partner is a poor dancer. One should dance from the floor up, instead of from the waist up. The swinging of hips from side to side should be stopped." . "Clinging Vines" Cause Trouble. "What causes the trouble' is when they wrap themselves around each other," said Inspector Bridwell. " Mr. White stated that the proprie-tics-of tfny dance may be maintained if the supervisor exercises his au thority, according to a real moral sense. He insisted that a conscien tious supervisor is able to quickly detect any improper dancing and Should use his head to suppress the improper practices. He urged that clubs or groups renting dance halls should be held responsible for their dances. . Mr. Keep suggested that all dances ' held in Omaha, except those at pri vate homes, should be supervised by the Board of Public Welfare and that more supervisors be engaged by the city." Rule Remains in Force. It was the consensus of opinion that it would be unwiseo render u-ss restrictive the following rule, . which is now in force: "No person under the age of 18 years shall frequent remain in or patronize dances, unless accompan ied hv their narents or legal guar- Chief of Police Eberstein, who ap peared in the aDsence ot ronce wm- .rA T,.h1if Wplfar ctinnlH "en- 1 davor to stop drinking rtten booze ' in nu ri i. uaut.k 1.1 1 1 . j . TC .1.. .lr. ttnorrl rift this. ,thc police department will," said the Chief Favors Restrictions. -The chief said he believed that the ; present age restriction should not be lowered. He also asserted! that he could not imagine anyining nicer than a crowa oi jespecxaDie young :s i fiftA. with the right class of music. v ' JOSepn Miller, manager vi mc - ai T 1 A. a... mm a si rvrT t-l A ; "wished to co-operate with the welfare - sliictiu ins tduaici auu uuw i""vv. fi The board will consider an oi me '' ...... AfpAPAl VActAPrllV lVl PTl it meets in reffular session this after- ' noon, A . Ana to trie saxoDnone Diavcrs, nus 5 will be said: Dies in Hospital nere George H. Beck, 45. for 21 years -. . ITT 1 tf a soldier in the United Mates army, died, yesterday in an Omaha hospital a vicitim ot tuberculosis, rie- nsni 'f been out of the army less than 16 monthSj, The American Legion will conduct funeral services for him at 2-this . aftrrnnnn nr fill" Winrtuarv ttl H. H. t- Tr:r.4. nln.t. mA f;i '. itary avenue.- A firing squad will accompany the body to Mount Hope cemetery. ' vur mimical m jruui vcnic uvta not cease when you buy your tick et. Every convenience and luxury known to railroad travel and the i : 1.' j courteous attention of employes in jure a comfortable and pleasant trip . onthe -Umana-L.mcago j-imrien via the Chicago. Milwaukee & .St. Paul railway. Leaves Omaha, 0:05 p. m., arrives Chicago, 8:05 a. m. Tickets at consolidated ticket of fice and Union station,' Omaha. W. E., Bock, general agent pas senger department. Telephone Doug- lis ttoi, tu oouin riiieci:ni sinci. . . Ul!il . ' Win $100? Here's Your Chance! .Guess the identity of the moving picture star, a part of whose picture is shown below. Sixty pictures will be shown, two each day. The individual who guesses the largest number correctly wins $100. X Other prizes are: Second , . . . . $50 Third $25. Fourth ..1 $15 The rules are simple. Fill out the attached blank. Be sure to sign your name and address. Mail it to The Bee "Movie Contest Editor" with in three days of publication. Place pictures on the outside of the envelope. wfjt un Jfy, 4 v"iI Movie Contest Coupon J No. 33 is No. 34 is (Vour Same.) (Your BtMet Addrea.) Fill in this entry blank-and mail Bee." Write YOUR NAME and the on outside of envelope. Two pictures will be published TWO MORE PICTURES Obregonto Drive Vice From Mexico Order to Close Gambling House at Tia uana Come Like Bolt From .Sky. Chicago TrlbuneOmaha Bee LrasJ Wire. San Diego, Cal.. Dec. 20. Gen. Alvaro Obregon, president of Mexico, who closed 'the Casino gambling house at Tia Juana, Mex ico, last Monday night, has com mitted himself to the statement that he is gong to run .yice ont of Mex ico, and that his order to close America's Monte Carlo is perma nent. The order to closV; the gam bling hell at the American line just south of San ' Diego, came like a stroke of lightning from a clo.r sky. It was first thought that i' ' order could be overcome, but Oh' gon, through General Trevino, Jnr chief military aid and cabinet mem ber, has telegraphed his last order to this city. The order closed every form of gambling in the southern republic except horse racing, which means that the devotees of the roulette wheel, the faro bank, the wheel of fortune, the crap table and the vari our forms of poker will no longer find Tia Juana or any other border city, a mecca for their aft: Simul taneouslv with the closine of the Monte Carlo of America by the president, the State department at Washington announced that it ' had received the petition of. protest from San Diego organizations, j In. well-informed circles here the telegram from 'Obregon indicates that he has made a master stroke in the direction of having his govern ment recognized at Washington. Sunderland Chosen Head Of Cement Association Word was received in Omaha yes terday that'L. T. Sunderland, vjee president of Sunderland Brothers' company and president of he Sun derland Machine and . Supply com pany, Omaha, had been elected pres ident of the American Portland Ce ment association. This association consists of all the principal cement manufacturers hy American, banded togelher for the promotion of the use oi cement in building and road constructiin. Sunderland left Omaha 11 years ago to take active charge of the Ash Grove Lime and Portland ce ment company. Since that time, however, he has been actively inter ested in Sunderland activities in Omaha. Choir Boys Sing Daily At Department ihore The clear-cut vofces of the choir boys at Trininty cathedral, are heard for half an hour each morning on the first floor of the Burgess-Nash store. The. youths wear the vestments and cossacks worn in the cathedral and sing the same songs. They arc stationed in the balcony. The music is directed by Prof. Ben Stanley, organist at the cathedral. Lighting' Fixtures Qrande'n Elec tric Co., formerly Bureess-Granden Co. Adv.- Fifth : $io . Twenty-five next $5 each 'Fifty next Autographed pictures of the stars. J. your name and the numbers of the (lour Fhone Number.) (City or Town.) to "Movie Contest Editor, Omaha numbers of THESE PICTURES 1 each day for 30 days. ' IN TOMORROW'S BEE. Kleptomania Plea Of Armv Officer Man on Trial for Desertion And Theft Placed On Witness Stand.s New York, Dec. 20. John I. Wil lers, former captain of the 48tK in fantry, now being tried by court martail at Governor's Island for de sertion and theft of more than $3,000 of his company's fund, after being declared mentally competent at the time of the alleged theft, according to a decision of a board of medical officers, took the witness 'stand in his own behalf. Willers testified he was born in the province of Hol stein, Germany, in 1891, and from the :ige of 10 years he -had a tendency toward kleptomania. When he was 14 years old, he testified, he run away, from home and as a con sequence of his waywardness, his family sent him to the-United States in 1905. ,i Willers said he traveled extensive ly in this country and finally enlisted in the United States army in At bany. He purchased his discharge in 1914. In 19?6,,he again joined the army. Later he was sent to the Platts burg training camp, where he was commissioned a captain of infantry. Subsequently he was assigned to the 48th infantry and sent to Camp Sevier. . .- j Willers 'testified that after thi armistice two Liberty bonds; belong ing to the men in his company, were entrusted to his keeping. This proved too much of a temptation and the following : day, he withdrew ' other bonds and the company's fund from the' bank. v Mrs. Willers, wife-of the accused officer, declared she met Willers in Chicago in June, 1919 and the fol lowing September they were married. She recounted the alleged irrespon sibility of her husband in business affairs, and said that he always ap peared greatly worried over some thing that he would not confide to her. At the time of Willers' arrest the police reported he made a confession stating that he was detailed to the United States in 1917 by German military authorities to act as a spy in' gathering data pertaining to the organization of the American army. "ijufihy". Clark Admits Crimes And Receives Jail Sentence , Glenn "Tubby"" Clark, who was re cently acquitted by a jury in district court or participation in the robbery of the Empress theater, pleaded, guil ly to a charge of breaking "and en tering the home of Douglas B. Wclp ton, 201 South Thirty-fourth street, three months ago. Forthis crime he was sentenced to five months in the county jail. For stealing an automobile tire from the Ben Gallagher garage,, hs received a sentence of 30 days. He pleaded guilty, also to this charge. Divorce Court, Petition. Anna nazal M. Chandler, Cliandlor galnt Cbuiu THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. UttUKMBER 21, iu. Soviet Charged pt to Start Uprising Representative of Trotzky Is Working to Cause( Revolu tion in Germany, Berlin Paper Declares. Berlin, Dec. 20. Victor Kopp, the Russian soviet representative in Ber lin, has been working under written instructions from Minister of War Trotzky to "do everything in his power to bring about a revolution in Germany and overthrow the present government," it is charged by the Pan-German Deucsche Zeitung in last night's issue.. A photographic copy ot 1 rotzky s letter with instructions to this effect is tlow in possession of Foreign Min ister Simons, the newspaper says, and it makes a demand for the im mediate expulsion or arrest of the soviet representative. According to the newspaper's in formation, theitletter was written dur ing the victorious march of the bol sheviki amies toward Warsaw. Since then, declares ths article, Kopp has ,lrad every opportunity to visit the Russian rr'son camps in Ger many where 160,000 Russian prison ers are held, approximately 120,000 of whom were captured duringt the war and the remainder interned after the bolsheviki drive into Poland. The charges against Kopp were made in connection with a national interpellation in the -feichstag, which charged that the "free and easy" manner in which the Germans were managing the Russion prison camps under iheimperial department of fered a fertile field for propaganda. Dr. Simons declined to go into de tails before the reichstag, but said the evidence against Kopp was in sufficieent to warrant government action. The interpellation, however, rrsnltpd in an order that these camDS hereafter be under the authority of the ministry of defense. The Kreuse Zeitung ana tne Deutsche Zeitung have been ham mering the administration steadily lor several weeks on the ground that the Hussion prisoners m Ger manv "in realitv formed a body' truard for Kopp and they alleged that bolsheviki progagandists in ev- every camp have been working vir tually unmolested. These organs exoressed belief that the German government will be endangered un less steps are taken at once to remove the menace. Men Warned Against Overuse of Tobacco Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee leaned Wire. New York. Dec. 20. Health Com missioner Royal S. Copeland warn ed against "indecent smokers," those who overindulge in , tobacco , and who did so at the wrong time and in the wrong places. He said thye use of tobacco in pipes, cigars and cigarettes was being greatly over done. This is not only evident in statistics in the sale of tobacco, but one could see it and smell it. He warned users of the weed that those who were overinduleina in the were giving ammunition to those be- hind the blue laws campaign and that their practice would be made use of when the fight .against to bacco really be.gan. This was over and above the evil effects on the health of thos who abused tobacco. He thought the dinner cigar a mis take and he adviSed stopping smok ing at restaurants ai wjfair to non smokers. He saw the least harm, however, in th2 cigarette, s Chinarjliriedln Negro Holdup Fight Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leaxed Wire. Chicago, Dec. 20. Two 'negro holdup men who invaded Yung Yick's laundry about midnight, fought a desperate knife and re volver battle with three Chinese as a result of which one Chinese is dead, another is dying and one of the negroes was badly slashed about the head. The third Chinaman, who was badly beaten, told the police of the battle. The negro bandits entered the laundry, and demanded the Satur day receipts. They ordered the three Orientals to hold up their hands, enforcing the demand bin oeaung me neaas wnn ine duiii, of their revolvers. The Chinese grabbed up long, keen Malay knives, kept for just such emergencies, and put up a stiff battle. The negroes killed one by a shot and fatally wounded Shother. The third Chin ese was knocked Insensible and the negroes ran out and escaped. Store Equipped With Wire For Use of Customers The Burgess-Nash company is now equipped with a direct Western Union wire for the use of its custom ers. The first message sent over the wire was signed by L. C. Nash and was directed to Ward M. Burgess in New York, recording a record breaking sales day in the store Sat urday, i The telegraph station is in the new building. Two Killed When Train Strikes Automobile Byers, Colo., Dec 20. John Col bert, 22, wasnstantly killed aud Al len Fossn, 35, sustained injuries that caused his death a fev. hours later, when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by an cast-bound Rock IslaniTtrain at the depot railway crossing here. Deaths and Funerals Tha funernl ot Fred E. La Cuke, will be held today at 2 p. m. from hln home on the Ollmore road, Rev, B. L, Wheeler officiating. Burial at the Bailey ceme tery. . Vesta Chapter of the Eastern Star con ducted the funeral service for Mrs. Selma Sack, who died Saturday at the home of her aisterMrs. William Nollman, 61 ( South Thlrtyhlrd street. Services were held yesterday In the Maaonlo temple. FINAL CLOSING-OUT SALE Discount 23 to' 50 Per cent. M. D. FRANKS JEWELER 201 So. 15th St. Room Vacated January 1st. With Attem ..' ....... ; I New Record Made 1 For Auto Crashes j Truck, Four Cars, 21 Persons I In Smashes on Sanic Corner In Space of 14 Minutes, v Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Lened Wire. Chicago, Dec. 20. A motor truck, four automobiles, and 21 persons, figured in a series of accidents at Forty-third street and Grand boule vard shortly after midnight, and the casualties were none. The show started when an auto mobile owned by A. ' Whiting-was driven up to the curb filling Station of the Lakeside garage by Miss Whiting, his daughter. In the car were Miss Helen O'Neill, Roy Huntsberger, and a Mr. Hedgecock. Huntsberger was aiding the night watchman to fill the tank when Arthur Ahem drove up in a big touring car. . Ahem ran into the front wheel of the Whiting car and his machine turned over. None of the occupants suffered more than minor scratches. The impact shunted the Whiting automobile ba.ck into a tree, bowling over Huntsberger. A crowd gathered. A car drove by and knocked down a young man looking at the wrecked cars. He got up, limping a n"ttle. The driver stopped, offered the young man a ride home which was accepted and drove off. By this time a wrecking truck had arrived to take r.way Ahern's car. As it started to leave a "Henry" came along, driven by Joseph Smith, and filled with five musicians.. lr. Smith slammed into the truck and the ''Henry's" nose caved in spilling water, grease and oil over the street as it expired. Again, no body hurt. ' ' After1 all this Miss O'Neill com plained of a headache. She was the only sufferer physically. Big Coal Production Reported- During Week Ending December 1 1 Chtrago Tribune-Omaha Be Leaud Wire. Washington, Dec. 20. The pro duction of bituminous coal during the week ending December 11 was 12,865,000 tons, the United States geological survey reports. The dut put.of the bituminous mines for the 49 weeks of the year was 525,403,000 tons. If this rate of production is maintained during the succeeding three weeks.-the total output in 1920 will be 557,610,000 tons, or about 17,000,000 above the estimated mini mum needs of the country for this year. The production during the week of December 11 was the 10th in the period of sustained mine output which has been equalled only once before, and is the'highest at this season of the year in the history of the bitumious industry. In the sum mer of 1918, when the zone distribu tion system, car" pools and war meas ures were in effect, the sustained production attained that of the last 10 weeks. . Man Sentenced tp ' Prison Year After Robbery Committed Atlantic, la., Dec. 20. (Special.) George Burns has been sentenced to five years in the state reforma tory at Anamosa for the theft of" several sacks of sugar from a freight car in the Rock Island railroad yards here. Burns entered a plea of guilty when arraigned before Judge Rockafellow in district court. The theft was committed a year ago. Burns succeeded in eluding ar rest until . recently, when he was taken by police at Sioux Falls, S. D. He consented to return here without extradition papers. At the time of the theft Burns and a .companion, Perry Shafer. were indicted. Shafer was arrested immediately and pleaded guilty. He was sentenced to the reformatory and was later paroled. ' Burns' wife was in the court room when he was sentenced. She took tile matter calmlyj . ' ' ' ' JIhe Picturesque Way Home from the Coast ' .Are you spending the winter in California? Return via the Canadian Pacific Rockies Stop at quaint Vic toria, with ftp ivy cov ered Empress Hotel enthroned at the head of the harbor, where the soft airs of the. Japan Current lure you to play golf on numerous beautiful courses. And pictur esque V a n c o uver, s with the rosergarden of its famous' hotel -then through 6 0 0 miles of mountains that make wonder pictures r e a sons that bring thousands from "the states" to the Canadian .Pacific Rockies each' year. The standard of serv ice on Canadian Pa cific trains both win ' ter. and summer in sures comfort all the way. Canadian Pacific Railway Thos. J. Wall, General Afent 140 So. Clark St., Chicago, III. Canadian newspapers and informa tion regarding; Canada on file at this office. . 2 Survivors of Fatal Gun Fight Placed On Trial i v- iAlleged Bank RobbeTB Caujit 1 rra 1 W -Ta 1 With Loot ami Nitroglycerin Escaped Bullets and Wreck. s . RoanOke, Va., Dec. 20. William Porter and Charles Carter, captured by Roanoke police in the early morn ing erf-November 19 a few hours after the Bank of Glasgow, Va., was robbed of $'16,253 in liberty bonds and securities, were placed on trial here, today. In a pitched battle on TSc outskirts of Roaivbkc, James -B. Rodgers of Philadelphia, driving a large touring automobile, was killed by the police and his companions. Porter, who bears the aliases of William Welsh and Bcllfontaine "Slini," and Carter whose -alias is Charles WilkcsVcrc arrested. Much of the loot as found in the automobile. The police had been in formed of the robbery by the Glas gow bank ohicials. at i o clock in the morning and immediately set wajich on the three roads from tha't place. Auto Turns Over. When intercepted on one of the roads an hour later the automobile was going at high speed and turned turtle when 'an effort was made to swerve around the police patrol which had beefl placed across 'the road. In the battle which followed Rodgers was killed and a police man WQunded. About 50 shots were exchanged between the authorities and the bandits. In the automobile was found" a quart Aask of nitro glycerin carefully packed in cotton in a wooden box. Although all the loot was identi fied as belonging to the Glasgow bank, local police maintained that the men were responsible for rob beries in 'Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee. In addition to the valuables the three men had about $1,600 in cash. . Half of "this was found on Porter on his second day in jail when he, refused to take a bath. ' Identity Still Mystery. Baltimore authorities claim to have identified Porter as a "yeggman ot il years standing," who was ar rested there by federal postal in spectors inJ909. Carter told the police his real name is Wilkes and gave Peters burg, Va., as his home. The iden tity of Rodgers remains a mystery, although scores of people viewed his body. The only clue the police I rave is a statement or sorters tnat Rodgers told him his name was Beale. Porter added that he knew Rodgers only a week before the Glasgow robhery. V . Bank officials and others have in-r terviewed the men in jail here ttut failed to obtain any information connecting them with any other than the Glasgow robbery. It was thought they might have been im plicated in the robbery of the Bapk of Mineral, Va., when, more than 300,000 worth of Liberty bonds and other securities were taken, and the Landisville, Pa., bank robbery in which three mon overpowered the watchman and tcok $100,000. f A WELL-KNOWN PHYSICIAN WRITES: "I 'prescribe grapefruit for all my patients, and tell them-; to be sure and get as other grapefruit to the Atwood is as cider apples to pippins." i i ifaaPFFsmmMPJSYi HANAVISW. Sold only under this trade mark. TRIMBLE, BROTHERS, Omaha. Wholesale Distributors Give Her One of Bowen's Cedar Chests Let a Keen, Fresh Whiff of Tennessee Red Cedar Greet Her Christmas Morn., And Bowen is offering them while they last fof 12 the frSrmer price, y We have several styles and sizes to hoose from. Some copper-banded and others plain. All of them the very best the markets afford ; made by master mechanics and ot, the very best Tennessee Red Cedar obtainable. One of these would'meair a real sensible gift and could not "fail to be ap-. predated. v ) And, as usual, ' yott make your own ttrms. Advertisement MANAVISTA. I'M THE GUY ' I'M THE GUY Who watches the chickens on the sidewalks while he drives on a crowded street, . WelL why not? I don't want to miss anything and I certainly would if I kept my eyes on the road, and watched where I was going. I like to gaze upon the fair ones, and watch their looks of admiration for me) and my car. It's a cinch to flirt with them, then, v N ' I always try to keep in the mid dle of the road so I can see both sides. . . What if other drivers do yell at me, and tell me to keep to the right? LI should worry. And it doesn't jar me, if I almost run down- a pe destrian, who tries to cross in front of me, or if I nearly run into the car ahead of mC. ' I don't mind the traffic cop, eith er. If I don't get his, signal and he holds me up. 1 fix it tip with him. I eiijovyiriviiig when I can watch the pavement pounders, especially of the chicken type. I can't be bothered with traffic regulations or with watching svliere I'm going. Let the other fellow look out for me. What I ought to have is a private boulevard. Pedestrians ought not to he allowed on the streets, anyway. The only way to keep me from looking at both sidewalks is to keep the fair ones indoors. (Copyright, 1920, Thompson Feature Scrvk-B.) With an increase of-29 per cent, Tennessee leads the country in in crease of motor car registration. Originated y HORUCK The Old Reliable Round Package Write for fr,o nample to Horlick's. Dpt B. Racine. Wis. We still have the best assortment of Xmas Cards in in town. Come up the hill to 203 So. 19th St. J. PORTER ALLAN ACRUISEdeLUXEtothe MEDITERRANEAN SSS.'CARONIA'&cCDNARDIJNE A seven weeks' cruise, including a week's stay in Egypt, sailing January 15th. Comprehen sive programs of Entertainments and Shore Excursions. Option to stay over in Europe and return to New York by Cunard North Atlantic Service. Fares according to Staterooms selected. Minimum $1450 I ApdIv immediately THOS. COOK & SON ' . " NEW; YORK, or ' , PETERS TRUST CO., Omaha, Neb. !' WSyr & J & P Doug-Iae 3d40 kit eMVCNTKENTH ATV DOUOLAM anaxrr i Xmas Week Specials 4 Oranges, per box of 100x126 $3.75 Oranges, 100 size, per doz .48 Oranges, 100 size, 2 dozen -93 Oranges, 126 size, dozen 39 Oranges, 126 size, 2 dozen .' 77 CIGARS , Just Inside the Door ' Mozart Classic, box of 50 4.50 AU other Cigars ,at special prices by the box. Camels, Spurs and Lucly Strike Cigarettes, car ton S1.75 Prince "Albert, Tuxedo, full lb., in special Xmas packing ...$1.34 Youngest Soldier Arrives' in Omaha Bobemian Lad Decorated Times for Bravery in World War. In a clear, bold vojee Mirolav farlk 17, youngest world war veteran, told upon his arrival in Omaha yester day of his experiences with the Kns sian Cossacks, the Bohemian army and of his senSce in India, i'gypt and Italy. He is heralded as the youngest soldier who seivcd in the world war. This is his first visit to America and he is traveling at the expense i.f President T. G. Ma'saryk of Czecho slovakia. , ' Stepping from a train yesterday, he was first greeted Ji Dr. F. A. Scdlacck, formerly Captain Sed lacek of the American Red Cross They had met at . Vladisvostok dur ing the summer of 1919. Young Marck wears several dec orations tf' bravery. He was awarded the Golden Medal of St. George, two Czech, o.e France and one American decoratiN The jouthful soldier is touring America with his two brothers, K. F. and Macha Miroslav. lie is giv ing illustrated lectures with moving pictures of his experience in Siberia. He will lecture tonight at the Maryland theater,- Thirteenth and William streets. ' Get the ORIGINAL Fresh, full-cream m3k and the extract of se lected malted grain", reduced to powder form. The Food-Drink for AIJ Ages. I Used successfully for over 13 century. C3 Superior to tea, coffee cocn A quick lunch readily digested. , - Invigorating, Nourishing, Delicious Ask lop Horlick's t AV fountain , Prepared in a moment by briskly stirring the powder ill hot or cold water. Keep at home or when traveling. Ask For and Get Horlick's thus Avoiding Imitations SUBSTITUTES Cost VoU Samo Price COOKS l Courtney -Bulldinf jripes ana bmokers ar- jZ tides in fancy cases, 25 dff. J 1920 Crop Mixed Nuts, per lb ...25 W Dromedary Dates, per jSM Pkg a ..... . ., i . . . f(3 Xmas Trees, table size... ....25d nd up All kinds of Figs, Dates, Table Raisins, Holly, Holly Wreaths and Mis- ft tletoe. ' ' ft y CANDY ft J Just Inside he Door ft tarjre box Choc Cherries. 75c J3J Small box Choc'. Cherries. 3?c S Assortment of fniicy Mixd f filled candy. r , ft Old-Fashioned Peanut . a Squares, per lb 30 Peanut Brittle, per lb. .30 ft