T THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. APRIL 3. 1921. 1 1 6 A i T Furniture Styles Since Louis XIV At Builders Show t "Surgess-Nash to " Have Elab- ! ft m i- t ?i ic ejuudh mime j-iurary To Display Model Lib- v rary for Home. One of the most elaborate ex- hibits to be sbown at the Complete Building show to be held at the Au- . f ditorium, April 18-23, inclusive, un- der the direction .of Robert C. Mit chell and Charles A. Franke, is that now being prepared by Burgess- ' Nash company. W. G. Cilling has charge of the exhibit for this par- . ticular firm. , f "We will show furniture and drap , .' cries from the time of the rule of ,t t Louis XIV of France down to the j. present time," said Colling. "Amon i m ym vj luiiuiuic CAillullCU Will f i'v iiuiuuci nidi are very antique and sell for fabulous prices, while other furniture will have such prices that persons, in moderate circum stances can well afford to purchase it," Library to Have Exhibit. ' The Burgcss-Nash people have se ' cured eight spaces of the stage of the Auditorium. The Oinaha public library, througn miss taith lobitt, librarian, has al so secured space in which will be shown a model library for an Oma ha home. In addition to a number of books on history, literature, sci ence, fiction and the like will be hooks dealing with household plan )rtg. landscape gardening, how to conduct a home and many othcis. A furnace will be exhibited by the Holland Furnace company, 2208 Cuming street. Miniature House. C. L. Blissard, manager of the Truscon labratorics, located in the Baird building, will have an exhibit of a miniature house. This house, treated with a water proofing chem ical sold by this firm, will be dipped mto a laree tub of water tk V chemical prohibits the water from entering the house. Other chemi $ cals for the treatment of concrete uoors, walls and foundations also will be shown. Naprapatic Appeals Four $50 Fines for "SavingChild's Life'' Lincoln, April 2.(Special.) F. R. Carpenter of Long Pine, Neb., victed on four counts and fined $50 on each count on the charge, as his . attorney put it, of the crime of sav ing children's lives by the puractice v of niprapathy, has appealed to the supreme court. He was prosecuted on a state . j complaint charg'ns him with the practice of medicine without a li cense. His treatment was by spinal , manipulation, as taught in a two year course in a Chicago' school. His bruf said the counts included: Qt:ir! the daughter of J, A. Foriiri of r onrndicifis. Vij ,Cvn;i3 fbe baby daughter of L. B. k f?ni1t!i of an approaches nastoid process. j Curing L. E. Smith of a lame I back; I Curing the son of A. H. Cleal of pneumonia. f The lower court trred, he says, in i refusing to allow the IS witnesses to testify. ' Cut Off Avenue of Escape a From State Insane Asylums ! Lincoln, April 2. (Special.) J A legal avenue of escape-from insane asylums was cut off by the lower t house when it advanced "S. F. 288 for I third reading. Under the provisions of this bill a legal discharge by asylum authorities or a court order i through habeas corpus proceedings f become the only methods of dis i charge for inmates. The bill re- pealed the law which gave inmates I the right to appear every six months J before an insanity commission for W Maminatirtn with a v!ur fif ermttino- - " - - discharged by a sane finding of this commission. . Representative Mose ley of Lincoln, an attorney, was the sponsor for the bill in the lower house. , Husband Asks Divorce; Says $'ife "Drank Booze Madison, Neb., April 2. (Spe- citl.) Jacob Herman Schlack, Bat tle Creek, wants his marriage con tract with Carmen Belle Schlack dis solved, charging in his petition cruel ty, desertion and use of intoxicants. He also asks for the custody of his two children. . " The petition states that Mrs. Schlack before leaving home said that she was tired ?nd sick of the restraint of married life and desired 1 to get away from the work and car- nir tor the home and children ana Wt th following note: "Good bye, Take. I'm going. Don't look for me hoeatise I won't come hack. ' "CARMjEX." "ew 40.000 Church Planned By Methodists in Wahoo Wah. Neb. April 2. (Spe cial.) The Methodist' church here lms decided ti build a new church rext "ear. The structure will be ! erected on the site of th oresent r1-""?", cos';ng abort $40,000 and will be equipped with all modern nlisncs. It is planned to place the rudito-ium on- te imin floor rr.d to equip a rart of the basement as a gymnasium, usin.c the balance r"i c'-i-r'-h parlors. The present cluireh i the oldest church build i ir.g in Wahoo. ' , Edgar High School Holds Annual Declamatorv Contest Edgar Neb., April 2. (Special.) F.mma Wise won first olace, Roland Beebe second, and Wilma Eddy, third in the annual High school de clamatory contest here. The judges were Superintendent Blanche E. Wells and Rev. E. E. Shaffer of Davenport and Larl Berkey oi i-in- oin. Reduce Prison Sentences Lincoln. April 2. (Special.) The supreme court was authorized to re duce prison sentences when in appeal eases sentences of district judges are found to be excessive. This bill, S. F. 233. was advanced to third rcad mm in the lower house. Spanish War Veterans' Encampment June 12-14 Comrades Will Rally In Lincoln Fourteenth annual state encamp ment of the United Spanish War vet erans will be held in Lincoln, June 12-14. General orders notifying all Spanish war veterans were issued yesterday by Department Comman der O. V'- Meier and Department Adjutant Jacob H. North. Sunday, the first day of the en campment, will be givn over to re- Roster of Soldiers Will Be Published by State Lincoln, April 2. (Special.) County and precinct assessors in Ne braska this year, in addition to their other duties, will enumerate all ex soldiers, and a roster of the war veterans will be published. Chicken Stealing Expensive Tecumseh, Neb., April 2. (Spe cial.) Joe Hosa, Mexican, laborer, admitted steading 12 chickens and was sentenced to 50 days in the county jail. He has already been in the jail here for over a month, and this time does not count on the" sentence. I jSS'''1''1'11'"''''"1''''1'' i (Hpr 0 E A $15.00 investment will bring you these returns:-- qpHREE little five-dollar bills, $15.00, as a first pay A ment on one of these magnificent No. 11 VIC TROLAS, has the power of bringing you these returns: Happier evenings for a lifetime for YOU and your whole family; , Musical and theatrical entertainment which would cost you hundreds of dollars; 1 , Musical education which can hardly be approximated. We have arranged a plan whereby the entire financial v burden of securing one of these splendid instruments is transferred from YOUR shoulders to ours. You assume NO obligation in sending the coupon for information. NONE! We don't ask you to commit yourself uiow- But we do want a chance to (show you the fairness of this offer without an obligation on your part! 'Our whole reputation for fair and honest dealing is back of this offer. And sending the coupon costs but one 2-cent stamp which we will return. FIND OUT ABOUT THIS, -TODAY 1 MICKEUS "The House of Pleasant Dealings' ' 15th and Harney Sts., Omaha Phone DOUGLAS 1-9-7-3 1 iPX ffE 'if!C 111 Big Parade f il Flag Day r.ewing acquaintances and register ing of all comrades at the Chamber of Commerce. Churches of Lincoln will be open to veterans and their families for divine worship. Picnic in Evening. Committees for the session will be ap'poiritcd by the council of admin istration at a meeting Monday at 10 a. m. Monday at 2 p. m. the first gener al session of the encampment will be held, with an address of welcome by the mayor of Lincoln and gener-. al business. Monday evening a picnic will bt. held in Antelope park with enter tainment furnished by William Lew is camp and the Lincoln womenjs auxiliary. Big Patriotic Parade. A general street parade, in which all patriotic societies will be invited to take part, will be held the morn ing of 1 uesday, which is Flag day. At 2, Tuesday afternoon, the con chiding session of the encampment will be held concluding with the election and installation of new of ficers. I I Name Address I Town State Bill Favored to "Cut Out" Crime Among Children "Clinical Psychologist" Can Be Employed to Recommend Treatment for Defective Boys and Girls. ' Lincoln. April 2. (Special.) After voting to censor moving pic tures to keep the child mind of Ne braska clean by creating a salaried commission, the lower house voted today to give brain surgeons, "clin ical psychologists" and others, $20, 000 to literally cut the nasty thoughts out. of the child mind, if it can't be accomplished in any other way. The bill w.hich authorizes the em ployment of a "clinical psycholo gist" and others is House Roll 84, one of the child welfare measures. Originally the bill called for a bu reau of juvenile research which was to work on a salary under the board of control. Amendments Passed. Representatives Byrum and Epper son succeeded in getting amendments adopted which cut the salary and also the bureau out of the bill and left the "clinical psychologist" at the mercy of the board of control. The board of control has power to ar point the "clinical psychologist" and fix his, or her, salary. The mission of the newly-created officer will be to examine defective children with criminal tendencies and recommend operations or whatever treatment believed necessary to cor rect the child's downward path. It takes the consent of the parents, or guardians, before an operation can be performed. The "clinical psychologist" will deal mainly with children in state institutions, but county boards are authorized to seid bad boys and bad girls to the "psychologist" for ex amination and treatment. Goetfto Third Reading. The bill was advanced to third reading by a vote of 37 to 19. Representative J. Reid Green, sponsor for the bill, declared that the bill, even with the amendments adopted, would, if passed, cost the state $20,000. During debate "Alfalfa John" read the recent press dispatch from Houston, Tex., telling about a youth who underwent an operation for criminal tendencies and returned to health and moral stamina, excepting that the first day after he was able to get out he began stealing again. Start Work on Town Hall Atlantic,- la., April 2. (Special.) Work has begun on the excavation for the new town hall at Exira, to be erected at a cost of $7,000. III The Mickel Music House, 15th and Harney, Omaha Important Measures Put on General File Of House by Committee Lincoln, April 2. (Special.) The sifting committee shed a little trouble by throwing on the lower house the following important oills en ccueral hie: House Roll, 304 The Sarpy ccurty annexation bill. House Roll No. 2 Looked upon as a R. B. Howell bill. Amends present water power district law. Changes JO per cent petition require ment oelections to specify electors instead of freeholders. Provides for govcrt-.i'ig board of s:x members ap pointed in first place by governor and after that to be elected two at a time. Majority popular vote re quired for franchise to furnish elec tric light or power within any coun ty precinct or municipality within the district. House Roll No. 555 The anti cigaret bill. Senate File No. 160 The Norval language bill which forbids teach ing of any foreign language m any school in state. Special order 10, Tuesday morning. Disbarment Case is Delayed in High Court Lincoln ( April 2. (Special.) Ar guments in the disbarment proceed ings brought against Frank W. and Stanley Bartos, brothers and law partners of Wilber, Neb., have been put over on motion of the court from the April session to the May session of the Nebraska supreme court. The question was on the ethics of accept ing fees for draft exemption servi ces. The atorney general's office, which prosecuted the case, filed exceptions to the findings cf . Special Referee J. L. Geary of Grand Island, ex ororating the attorneys on every specification, and the court set the case for hearing at the April session. Eight Teachers Refuse To Sign Tecumseh Contract Tecumseh, Neb., April 2. (Spe cial.) Recently the Tecumseh board of education re-elected every mem ber of the present teaching force for another year, salaries to be gov erned by the schedule adopted last year. Time for acceptance on the part of the teachers is up and the board has eight vacancies to fill. Contemplated matrimony is the cause of some of the teachers desir ing to quit. i-i i Remova Vast Stocks of Beautiful New All card when compared with the new prices just effective. Beyond a shadow of a doubt this will prove to be' the most stupendous apparel values yet recorded in Omaha jnerchandising. Monday Entire Stocks Undergo Greater Price Sacrifices Right now is the time to Buy. Grasp this opportunity while the stocks afford the greatest field of selections. Our determination not to move a garment from our present stock into the New Store, combined with the fact that contractors are on the ground, ready to tear down the buildings, simply forces us to institute these fur ther drastic Slaughter of Prices. Halt High Rent War Two Couples Found Living On Island Near Fremont Arrested Sheriff Is Ideal Landlord. Fremont, Neb, April 2. (Special Telegram.) Where rent was free and there was no cantangerous land lords to demand fees, the police found Mabel Nelson. 15; Beatrice Snavely, 18; L. D. McLaughlin. 20, and Lee Stewart. 21, living together in a small cabin on an island in the Platte river, southwest of Fremont, going and coming as they saw fit, with no one in the vicinity to make com ment or to disturb their existence. The "camping party" was arrested and the men sentenced to 30 days in jail. The young Nelson girl was sent to the Geneva reform school, this being- her third appearance in pclice circles. The Snavely girl "was charged with disorderly conduct to which she pleaded guilty without hesitation. She stated that she had been married twice during her young life and both ventures had proved unsuccessful! Her first husband died shortly after their marriage and when her second husband tried to shact her. they separated, the woman asserted. She did not know whether her husband had been divorced. She was sentenced to 30 days in jail, but the sentence was suspended on con dition the girl's mother in York would send her enough money to get out of town. The girl explained that she lived with men on the island because she had no other home and was unable to find work. The Nelson girl sobbed she "never had a chance," and her parents failed to treat her right, when asked why she took up her abode on the inland. 30 Contestants in Cozad Declamatory Contest Cozad, Neb., April 2. (Special Telegram.) Miss Gertrude Owens won the gold medal in the High school declamatory contest here. There were 30 contestants in the three classes. Rounji Up License Slacker Wahoo, Neb., April 2. (Spe cial.) County Treasurer George F. Bartek intends to round' up automo bile license slackers in Saunders county. Precinct assessors will be given a list of the cars that were licensed in 1920, but have not ap plied tor a license this year. 1508-1510 DOUGLAS STREET Unforeseen Circumstances Compel Immediate Disposal of Present Stocks in This Great THE World Realty Co. have engaged contractors to start operations Monday to raze the buildings, pre paratory to the erection of the new Theater. We have but a very limited time to effect this store-wide rid-; dance of present stocks before moving into our new home. Suite, Wraps, Dresses, Skirts, Blouses, Furs At Prices Never to Be Equaled Again past performances of value-giving pass into the Alliance Selected As Meeting Place for Teachers' Convention Alliance, Neb., April 2. (Special Telegram.) By a unanimous vote of the more than 400 teachers who at tended the first annual convention of the Sixth district of the Nebraska State Teachers' association, here Fri day and Saturday, Alliance was named as the meeting place of the association's convention next year. The meeting was pronounced a de cided success by all who attended. Addresses were given by promi nent out-of-town educators, including Dr. Hugh S. McGill, secretary of the National Education association; Dr. R. 1. Elliott, president of Chadron State Normal: Dr. Lida 15. Enrhart, Department of Elementary Educa tion at the state university; Dr. Charles Fordice, specialist in educa tion measurements at the state uni versity; Dean Y. T. Stockdale, in charge of survey work of the Pan handle district, and others. The association adopted a consti tution similar to that of the state association and elected the follow ing officers: President, Supt. V. J. Braham, Sidney; vice president, Dean V. T. Stockdale, Chadron; secre tary. County Superintendent Anna McFadden, Cheyenne county; tres urer, Supt. L. F. Hamilton, Mitchell. Four delegates were elected to attend the central meeting to be held at Omaha or at Lincoln at a date to be announced later: Supt. V. R. Pate of Alliance, Supt. C. R. Craw ford of Chadron, Mrs. V. F. Bald ridge, Scottsbluff. and County Su perintendent Ada Haldemau of Scotts Bluff county. Crossings for Cattle Provided in House Bill Lincoln, April 2. (Special.) Farmers may compel railroads to erect crossings under which cattle can travel from one field to another, under provisions of S. F. 146, ad vanced to third reading in the lower house. The bill provides that when a farmer owns land on both sides of a railroad track he can file an application with the railway commis sion to force the railroad to build a crossing sufficient in height to let cattle pass tinder. If the expense of the crossing exceeds $600 the fanner is compelled to pay the excess cost. The bill also gives the state railway commission jurisdiction over all rail way crossings outside of city or town limits. 4 Presence of Lobby Reason for Delay in . Reed-Mears Measure Lincoln, April 2. (Special. )--The presence of a corporation lobby in the lower house aroused suspicion in the mind of Representative George Snow and caused delay in action on H. R. 369, which provides for an alleged equitable occupation tax on foreign and domestic corporations. The bill ws placed on general file this morn ing. "I move. we delay action on this bill until w'e have hd more time to study it," Snow said. "I haven't paid much attention to it and from the personnel and interest displayed in debate on the bill by a number of persons in the lobby, who 1 know are interested in corporation affairs, I think we had better wait a day, or ' two. and look it over.1' The Snow motion carried. The bill, known as the Reed-Mears tax measure- imposes a straight tax of $10 on corporation capital in vested in Nebraska, not in excess o: $20,000. and a tax of 50 cents on everv $1,000 in capital in excess of e 7n rvn Representative Keed announced that he would offer two amendments to the bill. On would cut the mini mum tax to $5 and the, other would fix the maximum tax at $5,000. Probe Past Activities of Man Held for Embezzlement Beatrice, Neb.. April 2 (Spe cial.) County Attorney Glenn of Medford, Old., who has been here investigating some of the escapades -of Roy Bunch, formerly of this city, who was recently bound over at Medford on the charge of embezzle- : mcnt vhile district clerk, states that a number of other charges are hang ing over Bunch, who was arrested here last winter while working in a cafe. Before coming to town, and shortly after his return from Okla homa, bf went to work on a farm near this city. Report Small Grain Crops In Fouriehing Condition Beatrice, Neb.. April 2. (Spe cial.) John Sailing of Odell made a trip to Beatrice by auto and says that he never saw winter wheat and oats look so promising as at pres- . ent. While crops are not suffer ing, a good soaking rain would improve conditions throughout the country. ale. dis v