Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 11, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE : OMAHA," FRIDAY. MARCH 11. 19211
Appropriation
Bill as Amended
: Passed by House
l)famalio Plea of Representa
tive Jeary gets $120,000
Fund for Tubercular
Hospital.
Lincoln, March 10. (Special. )
The dry, hacking cough of the tuber
cular, "described in dramatically
i-onched IauguuKe by Representative
Jeary of Lincoln, today forced open
'the purses of the Nebraska legisla
ture and caused it to vote 120.000
tor improvement?, including; a new
hospital for the stale tubercular hos
pital at Kearney.
"Shame on you gentlemen who a
few minutes ago voted an increase
of $100,000 for bridges in thd state
and sit here figuring in cold dollars
und cents on a proposition which
beyond dispute will s;we the lives of
many if we vote this ?1 20.000." Jeary
said, "llridges could wait. Tubercu
losis works fast and rapidly. You say
wait two rears. If you wait two
years, just how many lives of tuber
culars will be charged against you?"
Plea Carries Day.
The Jearv plea came up when the
1,301,757.45 appropriation bill was
heina considered bv the lower house.
A number of farmers fought the
yinemlmcnt offered bv Representative
Gould to appropriate the $120,000 for
the tuberculosis hospital. Cut the
leary plea silenced them.
There were only two more addi
tional items tacked onto the appropri
ation bill. One demand came from
the democrats, headed by Represen
tative O'Gara. asking to increase the
bridge fund from $250,000 to $350,
000. There was a short fight, ending
in victory for the democratic mem
bers when the O'Gara amendment
carried.
The big bank failure at Blair was
responsible for an additional appro
priation of $6,000 to employ an ad
ditional bank examiner under J. E.
Hart, secretary of trade and com
merce. . Halt Bank Failures.
1 "Let's try to do something to
avert these terrible losses to the de
positors of Nebraska." Representa
tive Frantz, author of the $6,000
amendment, said. The amendment
carried. svl "" '
The rhre -amendments adopted
will cost $226,1100 and increases the
total of the appropriation bill to $21,
527.757.43. .
'Representative Douglas of Polk
didn't receive more than four votes
on a motion to trim the attorney
sfeneral's.. appropriations. Douglas
declared that this officer-was going
into a too extensive, program in hir
ing assistant attorneys general. Rep
resentative, Reed of Dawes was on
his feet instantly in defending the
attorney general's department.
' Defend Attorney General, i
"The attorney general is one pf
the (cw officers who bobbed up at
the end of the biennium with $25,000
, which had not been expended," Reed
said. "He has more work than ever
with bank failures -to" investigate,
blue sky investigations, since the
enactment of the blue sky law two
vears ago, and many other impor
tant problems to deal with that never
before in history were checked up
to him."
Even 'Alfalfa John Franklin
fought against trimming the attor
ney general's appropriation It was
the only timeduring the session that
"Alfalfa John" wasn't fighting for a
reduction in appropriations. " "The
attorney general is O. K. and he
should 'have all he asked for," "Al
falfa John" declared.
Attempts of Representative Ep
person to trim one of two appropria
tions also failed.
Censorship of
Movies Comes Up
In House Today
7
Bitter Fight Expected on Four
Bills Which Treat Subject 0
From All Possible
Angles.
Lincoln, March 10. (Special.)
The big tight of the present session,
one for which members have been
in training for weeks, is scheduled
for tomorrow in the lower house,
when the motion picture censorship
bills are to be considered.
There are four bills to be consid
dered, each holding out a "cure" for
the alleged movie evil growing out
of numberless sex problem and crime
j screen.
Une is the straignt srate censor
ship bill which will create jobs for
more politicians and give a censor
ship board of three power to say
what pictures will be shown in' the
state. It is the bill prepared and
backed by the welfare commission.-
The Byrum-Gifford bill would bar
any pictures showing crime or sex
problems.
The McFarland bill would make
it a misdemeanor to show pictures
which would disrupt morals, leav
ing it to a local judge to decide
upon the, moral corruption, if any, in
the picture, when the movie picture
man is brought before him on a war
rant issued at the request of any pri
vate citizen.
The Berka bill memorializes con
gress to pass a federal censorship
bill. '
Hearing to Be Given
On Insurance Measure
I Forest Reserve.
Bill Has Rough
Trip in Senate
Beebe Charges Omaha Plans
To Foist 2,000 Acres on
The State Measure
Passes.
J Lincoln, March 10. (Special.)
! The insurance committee of the
senate got recommitted from third
reading for a special hearing S. F.
343, amended to require all fraternal
insurance organizations in the state
to submit rate increases to a referen
dum of their "membership
The original bill permitted 10 per
cent of the members to initiate a
Referendum 'on rates, but Senator
Hoagland submitted amendments in
committee of the whole, which were
accepted not only to make the refer
endum mandatory in all cases, but
to require that such societies have a
governing board .of at least 100
members. '
Senator Warner explained (in the;
senate Thursday that" a request had
been made by insurance, meri for a
hearing on the amended bill, which
he had promised for Friday, of this
week.
' : -
Columbia Graronojas
at pre-war prices
at Bo wen's
, The price of this7
Standard Model, Co- -lumbia
Graf onola, the
most popular model
made, and the prices of
our entire line of Graf
onolas have been Re
duced to Pre-War
Levels.
Yesterday This Model ,Was$125
Now it is $85
Others at Proportionate Reductions. On Model 12
You .Save $100.00
Just Received a New Supply of the Standard Retired
Records. Here Is Where You Get' Them.
Columbia Records for 59c
And as usual on Grafonolas and Records you
make your own terms. .
' I
co'
HOWARD STREET. BETWEEN 15TH AND 1STH
All Heat No Ah! . Q
Petroleum Coke 0
NOW fi
COriSUMEItS COAL & SUPPLY CO.
Doug. 0530 "Dealer in Good Coal" 13th aW Nicholas
High Grade '
Colorado Lump
Smokeless Sootless ,
Screened and
Delivered
JLfii-'Ten
Lincoln, March 10 (Special.)
Charges that Omaha was trying to
foist 2,000 acres of the Fontenelle
forest near Bcllevue on the state
wore made by Senator H. C. Beebe
of Polk in a fight on S. F. 189,
creating a state park board author
ized to lay out a park program, in
the senate committee of the whole
Thursday morning.
The committee by a vote pf 15 to
14 recommended the, bill for post
ponement, but Senator Robbins of
Douglas, introducer, got the bill ad
vanced on a motion nSt to concur
in the report.
Davis, Good and Brown change
their votes to naw the bill to go to
thifd reading. Senator Hoagland
voted against postponement, reserv
ing the right to change his vote on
third reading.
Senator Beebe charged that the bill
also sought to create a useless board
to do the work now being handled
by Director George A. Condra of
the state conservation and soil sur
vey bureau.
The Douglas county delegation,
he said, had even taken control over
forestration from Dr. Condra in a
proposed bill, S. F. 272. Senator
Cooper defended this bill with the
explanation that it was drafted by
Colonel McCttllough of the Omaha
Bee, who had made a study of the
situation.
Senator Robbins argued that his
bill carried no apropriation and
would not be expensive. Senator
Dutton 'bought that a nonpaid board
might be too easily influenced by a
cordial municipality.
Lobby Controversy
Taken Out of Senate
Lincoln, March 10. (Special.)
At the request of W. E. Barkley,
Senator Miller 'on the. floor of the
senate Thursday asked leave to with
draw a resolution he and Senator
Rickard introduced Wednesday to
give Mrs. Barkley a vote of con
fidence following charges made the
day before on the floor by Senator
Hoagland that she had made mis
statements to discredit certain sena
tors. Unanimous consent was grantc d .
Neither Senator Hoagland nor Mrs.
Barkley were in the chamber at the
time. Senator Miller said the reso
lution would only stir up feeling and
would not serve the best interests
of the senate.
Mrs. Barkley had been character-
! ized by Senator Hoagland and Sena
tor Beebe as a lady lobbyist. She
had been present in the senate cham
ber daily for two weeks in the in
terest of the standard bread loaf."
Her alleged charge that Senator
HoaaJand was fighting the bill
brought the clash.
Welfare Committee .
Loses First Round of
Censorship Fight
x Lincoln, March "0. (Special.)
A strategic maneuver to force the
senate to record itself on the child
welfare movie censorship bill, S. F.
78, failed in the committee of the
whole Thursday, when the opposi
tion seized on the excuse of having
no printed amendments before it to
put the bill over.
Seventeen senators voted to lay
the matter over, on a motion by
Senator Beebe. Senator Hastings,
chairman of the child welfare com
mittee, had arranged for a special
order on the bill.
The senate was determined to have
nothing to do with the bill until the
house had first threshed out the
censorship bills in that body. It was !
the hope of the bill advocates to j
force the issue in the senate, in
order to simplify the house contro
versy by the moral effect of senate
action. '
t r yr.--. --t-
I 1
It melts in t
your mouth -so
creamy
and licit
when made
Willi
EAGLE BRAND
CcadasedMfflt
Four Measures
Killed in Senate
Six Bills Passed to Third Head
ing Omaha Bills Are In
cluded in List.
Lincoln, March ID. (Special.)
The senate accepted adverse reports
of committees on four bills Thurs
day and agreed to their slaughter.
They were S. F. No. 316, restricting
the sale of butter substitutes; S. F.
No. 313, regulating the disposition ol
dead animals; S. F. No. 345, live
'stock quarantine law; and S. F. No.
307, to repeal the law making the
j amount of an insurance policy to
I true value of the property insured.
; On third reading, the senate passed
S. F. No. 239, repealing the obsolete
South Omaha school laws, and H. R.
No. 217, boosting the mileage and
meal fees for county sheriffs
In committee of the whole, the
senate adhnced to third reading:
II. R. iso. 126 Making second
class villages single voting units.
II. R. No. 69 Double election
boards for Douglas county.
S. F. No. 148 Exempting , from
tfond co-operative warehouses.
H. R. No. 12 Giving annexed ter-
FRITZ KREISLER
Ill jfv I
THE HOni.Dd f.REATEiT
VIOM.MST. -
W ho appears In concert Friday
evening, March 11th, at the
Omaha Auditorium, pays the fol
lowing tfltfuts to ths WORLD'S
BEST PIANO,
THE
STEINWAY
Ornr Mr. Htehiwaj:
I most rr?l 1m jea the innenaoar
-motion f my heart and toll yeas l
the treat musical dfllrh row beam
pambl pianos (Ira ma.
At every concert at which I aia ac
companied on year ptano, I am aataaM
Nl at the help and aiwlotanee year tone
quality firm my Ttolln. The abootata
hlemKir of tone and harmony that os
i9ts between theae two marreioa In
truments not only rratlflee all my
mnalcol Instinct and mcltee mo to rl"
the beet there l to me. bat I ea feel
and nee the marnetle taetantaaeog ef
fect that it ha on my aodttnee.
Very elneerely yaarc,
t'Rme KKH8I.KK.
V
t. -Toil i Viaaf 4Via Wnrlri fSrMtest Violinist'. 8110-
XJV XChU W AiwtM mAV - r .
ported by the World's Greatest Piano, THE STEINWAY.
You are cordially invited to visit our display rooms where
' you will find at all times a complete line of these world
famed instruments. JsTew York prices guaranteed. Mod- .j
erate monthly payments arranged to suit the convenience c
of the purchaser, if desired. Portraits of musical cele
brities free to all visitors. , .
Beautiful antique mahogany ?rands, $1,373 and up.
Colonial Satin finish uprights, $875 and up.
SCHM0LLER .& MUELLER
1514-16-18
Dodge St.
Exclusive Stein way KepresentatiVes for SebmU and TTsfra
i Ion a
PIANO CO.
Strength atad-
fthe
Weakraess"
Hatdini? GaMiet
President Harding's backbone, his refusal to be dictated to by any clique or faction within
his party, is demonstrated to the Satisfaction of many journalistic observers by his first official
act, the selection of Ms Cabinet. Noting that three outstanding figures, Mr. Hughes as Secretary of
State, Mr Hoover as Secretary of Commerce, and Mr. Wallace as Secretary of Agriculture, were
chosen in the face of formidable opposition, the independent New York Weekly Review thinks
that "the time has come when one may regard the charge that Mr. Harding was a mere puppet
in the hands of j the 'Senatorial clique as definitely disproved." The New i York Evening Mail
(Injd.) 'thmks that it is "a Cabinet that spells America, about as accurately as any other group of
men likely to be gathered around a President's council-table." On the other hand the Omaha
WDrld-Herald (In,d.) says that the Harding Cabinet innouncements "dilute, to the Volsteadian
measure of one-half of one per cent, the lively hopes that were aroused wrhen we were assured
that a Republican Administration would rally the best minds of the country to the public serv
ice." The Philadelphia North American (Progressive) says that "It would be an extravagance to
call the new Cabinet great, but no less absurd to assume that it is not capable of good service."
' ' THfe LITERARY DIGEST this week, March 12th, iirtts leading article presents all angles of
public opinion upon the strength and weakness j of the Harding Cabinet, and gives a brief
biography of each member of it, with his photograph.
-Other news-articles of more than usual interest in this week's DIGEST are:
; Who Will Have the Greatest Navy?
; Including Diagrams Showing the Strength of the Three Greatest Navies of the World as
':. ' They Are Today and as'They Will Be in Three Years if Building Programs Are Carried Out
To Reimburse the Liquor Interests
The Return oi the Hyphen
Yap
Y
Townley in Kansas
The Franco-Polish "Ring" Avound
Germany (Including Map)
Mystery of Italy's , Revolutions - N
Breaking Up Bolshevism in Norway
Shop Conditions in Europe
The Increase in Smallpox
The Laundry Found Not Guilty
Shipping Coal by Wire
What Porridge Had John Keats?"
j
New York "Side-Shows"
Yale Goes West for a. President
Moving Picture Abuses v
How Home-Work Menaces the Home
Saving the Immigrant from the Slum
The Career of a Bill in Congress '
Judge Landis Under Fire
How to Guard" Against the Pickpocket
kTwo Razorbacks and the South's Biggest
Feud "
Topics of the Day
Best of the Current Poetry
Spice of Life ' 1
Many Interesting Illustrations and Cartoons
March 12th Number on ale To-day News-dealers 10 Cents $4.00 a Year
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK
ritory a voting right in Omaha water
district.
S. F. No. 268 Validating paving
proceeding to enable Dodge county
to collect $23,939.70 from objecting
landowners for . permanent paving
between Fremont and' Ames.
S. F. No.- 20S Forbids exclusion
of territory from irrigation district
without consent of department of
public works.
City Light and Ice Plant
' Advocated in Osceola
Osceola, Xeb., March 10. (Spe
cial.) Osceola citizens will meet at
the city auditorium to consider th
advisability of installing a munici
pal electric light and ice plant.
Fridavj Saiujrdavj
v A Sale of ,.
Women's Easter
livery pair of hose included in this Two-Day
Hosiery Sale is absolutely high grade, first
quality hoss; no irregulars or seconds.
Embroidered Silk Hose
All Silk to the Knee ,
59 Lisle Garter Tops $
Embroidered Insteps
Beautiful Designs
Fashioned Leg and Foot
Colors are Navy Black Cordovan Afrioan
59
Brown White.
Plain Silk Hose
59
All Full Fashioned
Lisle Garter Tops
Lisle Heels and Toes
Regularly Priced $3
Colors are Black White Brown
,,v Tan Grey Navy.
59 -
No C. O. D.'s ' No Refunds.
No Exchanges. AH Sales Filial.
Hosiery Shop-
-Main Floor
Nnesiore oi specialty onus.
Affords protection tgtlnst In
fectious diseases. All prudent
persons should avail themselves
rfthi dependable germicide.
AT MUa ST0RB9 BVBRYWHERB '
ADTEBTISEMENT.
Cured His RUPTURE
1 w ' badly tnptund while liftln
trunk leTersl Teri mgo. Doctor! laid mr
only Bop el cur was an operation.
Truaiea Hi ma no rood. Finally I sot
hold of something that quickly and com
pletely cured me. Year have passed and
the rupture has never returned, although
I am doing hard work as a csrpenten
There was no operation, no lost (time, no
trouble. I have nothing to se)l but will
jrlve full information about how you may
find complete cure without operation, if
you write to me, Kugene M. Fullen, Car
penter, 714 G Marcellus Avenue, Mna
quan, N. J. Better cut out this notice
and show ft to any others who are rup
tured yon may save a life or at least
stop the misery of rupture and the worry
and danger of an operation.
The First and Original
Cold and Grip Tablet
is
St
Orovo'o
Laxtttlvm
Quinlno
tabid soc.
Be store you get
Cuticura For M
Skin Irritations
Babe with Cvfjcsci Soa e5 ha vatar
terrcctkeoaacast I
IT mJrnSm tol,r"!" '"'"T-e,,
tllVKRTlSESISKT
BAD BREATH
The genuine hears this sifnatur
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get
at the Cause and Remove It
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub
stitute for calomel, act gently on the
bowels and positively do the work.
People afflicted with bad breath find
furck relief through Dr. Edwards' Olive
ablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated
tablets are taken for bad breath by
all who know them.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gen
tly but firmly on the bowels and liver,
stimulating them to natural action.
cleaTing the blood and gently purifyins
the entire system. They do that which
dangerous calomel does without any
of the bad after effects.
All the benefits of nasty, sickenir.fr,
piping cathartics are dsrivad from
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Wthout
griping j)ainor any disagreeable effects.
Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the
formula after seventeen years of prac
tice among patients afflicted with
bowel and Hver complaint, with the
attendant bad breath.
Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable
compound mixed with olive oil; you
wili know them by their olive co'ior.
Take one or two everv night for a w k
and note the effect. 15c and Wc.
i
3
i.