Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 17, 1921, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, SUNDAY. APRIL 17, 1921.
7 A
uniana notanaiis
At Dubuque Win
Mileage Prize
Park Billings Named Prcsi
dent of Metropolis Club and
Is Presented With a Silver
Loving Cup.
Dubuque,. la., April 16. Luther
A. brewer of Cedar Rapids, la., was
elected governor of the Sixteenth
Rotary district at a convention which
came to a close Friday afternoon.
Delegates from 52 cities, more than
1,500 in number, from Iowa, Ne
braska and South Dakota, were pres
ent. To show their appreciation and to
recognize services rendered, William
Coppock, retiring governor of the
Sixteenth Rotary district, was pre
sented with $500 in gold, a silver
cigaret case, with date and Rotary
name engraved inside, by the Rotary
club.
Omaha's delegation was successful
in winning the mileage prize, a silver
, loving ' cup, presented by the
Dubuque Rotary club. They 'also
had the largest delegation. There
were eight other cities which com
peted for the mileage prize.
t.,i, d:h: i :a .
A Al IV Joinings V, A3 IldHICU JICaiUCUl
of the Omaha Rotary and was pre
sented with the silver loving "cup.
Following the election of district
governor and the consummation of
current busine before the conven
tion. 'the conference made its 'final
adjournment. ' , .
Woman Who Ditched 2 Mates
Eloped Here, Uncle Says
Grand Island, Neo., April 16.
Edward Smith, uncle of Mrs. Mc
Cracken, who "eloped with one Mc
Donald after McCracken had yield
ed to the greater claims on the
woman of Roy Yates, her returned
soldier husband, reported killed in
France, but just returned from a
hospital, has come back from Oma
ha, where, he says, he traced his
v.iece and McDonald to the Castle
hotel. At the Castle, from f a de
scription of a couple given, the flee
ing pair was registered as Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Sjnith.
Circumstantial . evidence leads
Smith to the conviction that the pair
stayed at the Casle hotel the first
night, leaving the next morning for
Dei Moines. He thinks, however,
that their destination is Chicago and
the police of that city, he declares,
have been notified to be on the
watch and to arrest, the couple. A
man and a woman answering the
description of McDonald and Mrs.
McCracken " purchased tickets for
Des Moines Friday morning.
i The concert will be under the
direction of the City Concert club.
Another concert will be given May
23 and one in June will close the
season at the Auditorium-.
Events of the Week in Omaha
I , TOOR SILL ill I -jfe
100 Men From State
To Go to Irish Meet
Nebraska Headquarters at
Chicago to Be in Morri
son Hotel.
Nebraska delegates to the national
convention of the American Asso
ciation ior the Recognition of the
Irish Republic in Chicago next Mon
day and Tuesday will number
nearly 100. Nebraska headquarters
will be in the Morrison hotel.
Chicago will welcome the 5,000
delegates to the convention with a
parade Sunday. World War Veterans
will hold the place of honor in the
line of march. Senators Norn's of
Nebraska, Walsh of Massachusetts,
France of Maryland, Gerry of
Rhode. Island, Johnson of California
and Borah of Colorado are expected
to speak at the sessions as well as
Miss Mary MacSwiney of Ireland,
Donai O'Callaghan,' mayor of Cork.
President De Valera will be repre
sented by his private "secretary,
Harry Boland.
The Omaha council will be repre
sented bv the following' delegates:
E. H. Barrett. T. P. Callaghan,
David J. Lynch. Edward Walsh,
Mrs. Margaret Moriarty, David C.
Sullivan, Phil Tierney, James Lane,
Patrick Clancy, W. M. Ryan, John
M. McGowan, Michael Qumlan,
Mrs. James H. Hanley. T. J. Hart,
S. J. Smith, Ambrose H. Lee, Rev.
P. J. Judge, John S. Coffey, Mis3
Kathleen O'Brien. Mrs. W. C.
McKnight, Rev. J. P. O'Mahoney,
Joseph MacMahon, John O'Brien,
Charles E. McAlpin, C. P. Heafey,
Rev. J. J. Hallinan, Miss Margaret
Nealon, John' P. Murphy, John
Flynn, Maurice P. Ilinchey, Thomas
P. Hinchey, Thomas Lynch, Leo
Hoffman, Miss Mary Gray, David J.
Shanahan, Clinton R. Miller, William
Maher, Edward F. Fogarty, M. R.
Hanna, L. D. Kavanaugh, D. Hur
ley. " ,
Beebe Bill Rejected
By Lower House Vote
Lincoln, April 16. (Special) The
lower house refused today to concur
on House Roll 113, the former mo
tion picture censorship bill but with
the senate amendment, now known
as the Beebe high license bill.
The vote was 5$ to 27.
Friends of the censorship bill
gasped with astonishment when the
Douglas county delegation, except
ing Thomas Dysart, voted as a unit
against concurrence.
Later, they began to analyze the
vote and took it to be an attempt to
defeat both censorship and regula
tion. .
The Douglas county delegation,
during the fight in the lower house,
voted almost solid against censor
ship. "
A conference commitee was ap
pointed at noon by Speaker W. L.
Andersoif, consisting of J. Reid
Green of Lincoln, James Axtell of
Fairbury and E. E. Good of Peru,
all pro-censorship advocates.
Confirm Sale of Hotels
Lincoln, Neb., April 16. District
Judge Morning last evening con
firmed the sale by a receiver to Eu
gene C. Eppley of Sioux City, la., of
hotel properties in Nebraska recent
ly held by the Nebraska Hotel com
pany. The price paid was $1,000,000.
Market Stiffens;
Liquidation Ends
May Wheat on Board of Trade
Closes 5 Cents
Higher.
Chicago, April 16. American
politics, foreign crop reports and
grain belt weather combined today
to force prices higher on the Chi
cago Board of Trade. May wheat
recorded an advance of 5 cents a
bushel over yesterday's dosing price,
and other grains and provisions were
pulled along with wheat in the fu
ture trading.
There was a regular scramble to
buy wheat at the start of the market,
but professional and trade orders to
sell halted the initial advance when
.May wheat touched $1.25. Within
the next hour, however, the traders
heard that official reports indicated
the drouth in Indiana had wiped out
the exportable wheat surplus in that
country, that the Argentine crop
would be 29,000,000 bushels less than
last year's and that a steady drouth
of six months in France had affected
the crops there already.
These factors, taken with storm
reports and forecasts for freezing
temperature over the middle west
grain belt in this country, were too
much for the bears. They scurried
to cover and May wheat went to
$1.274 a bushel before the move
ment war checked, front taking at
that figure then took half a cent off
the advance. - -
Bargains of all kinds in Bee
Want Ads.
.Refinite
1 .j ,: ',-'.' 1 . ' -
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Industry and Home
In planning your factory, shop or home, do not overlook the
Refinite Water Softening System.
Like tjie i heating, lighting and plumbing, it has become an
, ' integral part of a modern structure.
Se a Refinite Water Softener
(in operation and a model of the
Booth Lime-Soda System at the
Building Exposition, Audi
torium, 'April 18-23.
Bethi. Not. S4 and 8S .
- " In industry, where hard water was formerly used, Refinite
now saves literally millions of dollars each year.
In the home, clear, sparkling, velvety soft water flowing to
every faucet means greater comfort and refinement.
1
Nature' s Water Softener '
v COPYRIGHT 1920 THE REFINITE CO. . . f' "
The Refinite Water Softener attaches to the cold water sup
ply line in the basement. It requires no expert supervision, prac
tically no attention. Water "coming in for your use is softened as
it flows through this system. , . - ,
In laundries and the laundry department of hotels, hospitals
and institutions, Refinite saves more than half on washroom sup
plies. It adds to the life and beauty of fabric.
In steam power plants, it prevents boiler scale, saving fuel,
labor and equipment. - . -
In beauty parlors, barber shops, or the home, Refinite soft
' water is most delightful soothing to the skin, beneficial to the
hair and complexion.
LIME-SODA WATER SOFTENERS FILTERS
. We also manufacture and install the Booth Lime-Soda Water
Softener and Refinite Rapid Pressure Filters. The former is de--signed
especially for railroads, municipalities and the larger
steam power and central heating plants.
. ' Let us give you particulars about a Water Softener for
your use." No obligation. 4 If unable to attend the. Ex
hibit, call at our main office when in Omaha, or write
The Refinite Company
Refinite Building OMAHA, NEB.
V 11th and Harney SU. Phone Tyler 2856
Mines and We-rlu, Ardmore, S. D.-
-Equlpmant Assembling Plant, Omaha, Nb
; CHICAGO (Special Display Salts Rooms) 908 S. Michigan Arc.
NEW YORK, 1116 Nat'I Au'n. Bldf., 23 Wast 43rd Street
SAN FRANCISCO, 419 Cell Bldf.
Father Has Man Jailed as
Envoy of His Girl's Lover
, Suspected of being' a secret emis
sary extraordinary for, the forbidden
lover of Maria Sacco, 14, daughter
of Fred Sacco. 2202 South Twelfth
street, Sam Capello, 1923 South.
Twelfth street, was arretted "Friday
night on complaint of the father and
charged with carrying concealed
weapons and threatening to kill.
Capello was fined $50 by Judge
Foster in Central police court, or
dered to stay away from the girl and
warned against carrying revolvers.
Bergdoll Sends
Letter to Kaliii of
Army Committee
Chairman of Military Affairs
Body Gets Clipping of
Newspaper Account of
Attempted Kidnaping.
Washington, April 16. Running
through' his mail today, Chairman
Kahn of the bouse military commit
tee swung back suddenly in his chair
and the genial smile characteristic of
the Californian got away -from him.
"The nerve of the vagabond,"
shouted the chairman, as his office
force looked up in amazement. ,
"From a big envelope, apparently
addressed, by an American . and
mailed in Germany, brought to Mr.
Kahn a clipping from a German
newspaper containing an account .of
the trial of two Americans who had
attempted to kidnap Grover Cleve
land Bergdoll, the Philadelphia draft
evader. '
"It's from Bergdoll or I'm a
Dutchman." Mr. Kahn said, and
then the joke of the thing caught
him and lie laughed.
"But it simply goes to show," he
added, "that we ought to find out
how he managed to escape, and that
he ought to be 'brought back to this
country and put in jail, where he be
longs." . .
Man's Name Changed ,
Martin Christen sen was given per
mission by the district court yes
terday to change his name to Ray L.
Martin. He wanted to change be
cause Christensen is too common a
name and too long, he said.
J. Frank Barr Dies of
Pneumonia at Lincoln
'V m
I K
0 W
J. Frank Barr.
Lincoln, Neb., April .16. Pneu
monia, which developed suddenly
Thursday, caused the death here of
J. Frank Barr, secretary of the Ne
braska Federation of Retailers. He
died at his home. The attack of
pneumonia followed recovery of an
operation on his nose 10 days ago.
Mr. Barr formerly lived in Oma
ha. He has been secretary of the
Nebraska retailers for 12 years. He
was a harness maker out in the state
before becoming the retailers' rep
resentative. ' '
Operated by ' an electric motor,
a camera used by a California pho
tographer can take up to 400 pic
tures on a single plate.
Senate Confirms
Appointment of
Two Ambassadors
Harvey . and Herrick Will
Represent U. S. at London
and Paris Respectively
Many Nominations,Made.
Washington, April 16. Nomina
tions of George Harvey of New
York to be ambassador to Great
Britain and Myron T. Herrick of
Ohio to be ambassador to France
were confirmed today by the senate.
The vote on confirmation of
Colonel Harvey's nomination was 47
to 20, it was announced..
H. Foster Bain of California was
nominated to be director of the .bu
reau of mines. Mary Anderson of
Illinois was nominated to be director
of the women's bureau of the De
partment of Labor. .
Three vacancies on the railroad
labor board were also filled today by
President Harding by the nomina
tion of Walter L. McMenimen of
Massachusetts, deputy president of
the Brotherhood of Railway (Train
men, to represent tlw labor group;
S,amuel Higgins of New York, for
mer general manager of the New
York, New Haven & Hartford rail
way, to represent the management
grpup, and Ben W., Hooper, former
governor of Tennessee, to represent
the public group.
Pipe Price Reduced
New York, April 16. Reductions
ranging from $4 to $12 a ton o:i
prices of steel pipe were, announced '
here today by the . United States
Steel corporation, through its subsi
diary, the National Tube company. .
:JOHN A. SWANSON, Pres.:
WM. L. HOLZMAN, Treas.'
. Beginning MONDA Y Morning
A Most Remarkable Value-Giving
April. Suit; Sale.
ffitffif? Ordering the results of the best purchase this szk?
' sfj organization has made this season in women's Qf
jfoj!Q& and misses' beautiful new "Spring Suits the pricf; - J"K. ;
If Entirely New ' Beautiful Styles mPi M
I Model " anil Effects rfy
LOOK at the suits in this wonderful sale from every angle style, quality of
materials, workmanship, linings, trimmings and doubly important is the fact
that a host of style innovations not shown heretofore this season are offered at
this most unexpectedly low price for such high quality.
This is not an offer of thousands of suitswe're
lucky to have secured these few hundred. Shop
ping early means much to you in this salet
Tricotine Suits
Poiret Twill Suits
Imported Serge Suits
Twill Cord Suits '
Novelties and
Hair Line Serge Suits
Embroidered Styles
; Plain Tailored Suits
Box Coat Effects
Jaunty Short Coats
' Bead, Ripple, Braid
and Button Trimmed
A Small Charge for Alterations and No Approvals or Refunds. Sales Final.
Wraaa Wrliis Aprcl Eatlr Tklrd riMr. '
SEE OUR
WINDOWS
TODAY.
COMPARE J
OUR VALUES
ALWAYS.
CORRECT APPAREL FOR fEN AND WOMEN: