i u ff Measure Making Deficiencies ; Felony Killed Three Votet Taken to Decide Issue Board of Control - Members Salary vFed At $4,000. Lincoln, April 22. (Special) It took three votes in the senate to kill H.- R. 465. a bill originally drawn to make it a felony for a state official to create a deficiency in his appro priation when that bill came up in the committee of the whole. Xhe. bill was first amended to in clude all county, city and local offi cials as well. Aftcr.it had been ad vanced by a vote of 14 to 13, the vote was reconsidered and a new vote taken and the bill was post poned, 15 to 12. Then a motion not to concur in the committee report for indefinite postponement was lost by a vote of 11 to 18. , While the senate was accepting a conference committee report recom mending a committee substitute for S. F. 89, a child welfare bill to pun ish pandering, the house was re jecting the report. A new commit ter from each house will have to be appointed. The substitute bill is a state white slave act, making it a felony, to transport a woman across county lines for immoral purposes. The senate adopted a conference committee report compromising the salary of state board of control members at $4,000 a year. The house passed the bill, H. R. 403, at $3,500 and the senate boosted it to $4,500. By a vote of 16 to 13, the senate killed H. R. 463, a bill to prevent any city or county official from employ ing relatives in public offices at sal aries above $800 a year. The bill, which the senate once killed and then revived, was drawn to prevent county boards from appointing relatives as state road overseers, The senate adopted an .adverse committee report to kill H. R. 610, originally drawn to permit correction of errors in estimates for paving in cities of the second class, but amende ed by the house to require "open bids on all public work in all cities of the state. The committee ruled against the legality of such a sub stitution. Recall of Censorship Committee Is Urged By Senator Hastings Lincoln, April 22. (Special.) Senator Hastings threw a bomb shell in the state senate late this afternoon when he introduced a motion demanding that the senate conference committee on House Roll 113, formerly the movie' censor ship bill, but now the Beebe high license substitute, be discharged and a iew committee appointed. Hastings was sponsor for the mo tion picture censorship bill in the senate and at the time he made the motion today he named three other senators to go on the new commit tee. Hastings declared that the sen ate and house committee was in a deadlock and unless the ' personnel was changed there would be neither censorship nor regulation." It was charged that senators on the proposed new committee were pro-censorship solons and that such a committee would not represent the attitude of the senate. The Hastings motion was lost. - - - Another motion carried, however, which called for a report from the senate committee at 10 tomorrow and if a deadlock is .reported 'it may be possible, another committee will be appointed. Homer Teachers Have Salary Held; May Quit I Homer, Neb., April 22. (Special.) Teachers in the Homer schools have not received pay for their serv ice since February 1. W, H. Ryan, secretary of the board of education, is also cashier in the bank that handles most of the school warrants. About the middle of the year, it was discovered that the school district . had a deficit of approximately $6,000. The bank began to call for its money , and now the school revenues are being paid to the bank instead of being applied on teachers' salaries. It is reported that because of these difficulties none of the present teach ing force expect to remain, next year. Amended Primary Bill Is Advanced by Senate Lincoln. April 22. (Special Tele gram.) The senate by a rote of 17 to 13 advanced the amended Douglas primary bill to third reading. Under the amendment the provisions of the bill must be submitted to a referen dum before they can become a law. .The bill calls for nomination of two candidates at party conventions and the names of these candidates shall be submitted to the people at the primaries. . The vote on the bill "follows: For: Beebe, Berka, Bliss,. Brown, ; Bushee, Davis, Gannon. Good, Hal derman, Harriss, HoaglandV Illian, McGowan, Norval, Pickett. Warner, Watson. ' '. Against : Anderson, , ' Cooper, Cronin, Dutton. Hastings, - Hum phrey, Johnson, Miller. Rickard, Rob ins, SturmJUWch:Wiltz:,.. Anti-Picketing Measure - Is Adyanced by Senate Lincoln, April 22. (Special Tele gram.) Following" a . two-hour de bate the Nebraska senate advanced the Randall-Hascall antt-picketing bill to third reading. The vote fol lows: ? For: " Anderson, Berka, : Bliss, Cooper, Cronin, Davis, Gannon, Hal derman, Harris, Humphrey, Illian, Johnson, Randall, Robbins, Saunders, Watson. Against: Beebe, Brown. Cronin, Dutton, Hastings, Hoagland, Mc Gowan, Norval, Pickett, Rickard, Ulrich, Warner, Wilts. . Pairing and not voting: Bushee and Miller, Sturm and Reed. Court at Central City . Central City, Neb., " April 22. (Special) The May term of dis trict court will convene in this city May 2. , Night Session Held by State Senate to Clean Up Odds and Ends Lincoln, April 22. (Special Tele gram.) The senate held its first night session tonight in the hope that odds and ends of unfinished busi ness might be cleaned up to give a right of way to consideration of the big appropriation and revenue and taxation bills due out of conference committees tomorrow. The conference committee on the appropriation bill was reported to be voting for a majority of the ad ditions inserted in the bill when it went through the senate, including the $125,000 Fort Crook road ap priation, which, because it was not in the original budget, will require a three-fifths vote to approve it in the house tomorrow. Reports on the work of the con ference committee on S. F. 65, thi big revenue and taxation bill, were meager tonight. Both of these bills must be considered by both houses tomorrow and there was 'much doubt expressed as to whether the work could be finished by Saturday night. Orientals Barred From Acquiring Land in State Lincoln, April 22. (Special Tele gram.) The senate's substitute for the house alien property bill was ac cepted by the house with conference committee amendments today. The bill as it goes to the governor for signature bars Orientals from ac quiring further real estate in Ne braska and also puts a ban on their acquiring controlling interest in real estate through creation of corpora tions. Henderson Chicken Thieves Plead Guilty to Offense Aurora, Neb., April 22. (Special.) Aaron Epp and Ernest Epp, both of Henderson, pleaded guilty to chicken stealing in district . court. Aaron Epp was sentenced to 60 days in the county jail and Ernest was paroled to his mother, who needs his help on the farm. The boys stole 40 chickens from the roost of A.-P. Brown and sold them in Stockham. Madison County Fair to w Beautify Show Grounds Madison, Neb., April 22. (Spe cial) The Madison County Fair association has employed the services of a landscape gardener in making the grounds more beautiful and from year to year improvements will be made. New arrangements have been perfected whereby concessions will be benefited by a better circulation of the people. Raise Teachers Salaries Lodgepole, Neb., April 22. (Spe cial.) Dalton is one of the few towns in this end of the state that is not retrenching on teachers' salaries. The whole corps has been re-elected at an increase. Superintendent Gibbs was raised $225. Convention at Edison - KHicnn Nv. Anril 22 fSnerial A The Fourth district convention ot the Christian church of Nebraska was held here. One hundred out-of- town delegates were registered., Legislature is Entertained by Omaha Members Lawmakers Loud in Praise of Delegation From Metropolis Good Fellowship Predominates. Lincoln. April 22. (Special Tele gram.) Members ot the state legis lature learned last night that the Omaha fellows weren't such "bad guys, after all." The discovery was made when the members attended a big banquet at the capital city's leading hotel given by members of the Douglas county delegation. Music, stunts and "good . fellow ship" predominated. '";': V. L. Anderson, speaker" of the house of representatives, said: When Omaha wants things done, wants favors from Nebraska and wants to set a precedent for gentle men of influence, let it send the same representatives to Lincoln two years' hence that it did this year." Representative Douglas of Polk, in poetry, read a like appreciation of the. friendship of the rest of the state for the Omaha delegation. He called the 12 members of the lower house from Omaha, "The, 12 apostles." Girls Sing and Dance. After the speeches of Anderson and Douglas girls from the Lincoln theaters entertained with dances and songs which met loud approval from all members. As the evening progressed, Gus Hyers, state sheriff, made a closer search of the members than the newspaper .men did. Suddenly his vpice sounded like a clarion in the banquet room: . ' , , "Lookee, lookee," he shouted. ": Hyers held . aloft a bottle, square in shape and green in color, which bore the label, "Johnnie --Walker.-.' Hyers was standing directly be hind Representative George Williams of Fillmore,, a Seventh day adventist. ; Williams 'immediately was sum moned before the court. ; Druesedow Remembers Taste. Tom Hollister of 'Omaha, who with Ed Clemenson, has been pro tecting the -interests of the Nebraska Power company, was appointed prosecuting attorney. Twelve members of the jury, in cluding Representative Beans, the Nonpartisan leaguer, who wore a necktie and a smile on his face for the first time during the session, were selected from the house and senate membership. Each was or dered to taste the contents of he "Johnnie" Walker bottle. Everyone, excepting Bob Druesedow of Om aha, declared it was tea. Druesedow yelled: "Whisky!" Hollister immediately announced he would have Druesedow tried be fore an insanity commissioner. , ' Representatives I. A. Medlar and M. M. Robertson of Omaha were in charge of the dinner and entertain ment. y The Bee want ads are business boosters! , . " Chicks' Judgment In Selecting Mother Upheld by Judiciary Sacramento, April 22. Chickens haven't much sense, but they ought to know their own mothers except when the mother is an incubator, and then they ought to know their foster mother. This was the deefsion of Judge L. M. Shelley in the police court here yesterday when warring neighbors came before him, each seeking pos session of 10 little yellow balls of fluff. The evidence showed that . one neighbor, missing, her chicks, saw a group ot chicks in a neighbor's yard, so she took the bereft foster mother over and set her down. "Cluck, cluck," said the hen. "Peep, peep," replied 10 chicks, and ran to the shelter of, the big hovering wings. The hen refused to have anything to do with the. other rliirlfs in tht varrl anil tViov in t,,m declined to seek the shelter o her wings. So the complainant got her 10 chicks back, the incubator chicks have their foster mother again and the judge dismissed the defendant. Sawyer Outlines Plans to Improve Soldier Relief Activities for Ex-Service Men Would Be Consolidated in One Department as Ad dition to Cabinet. France to Send 100,000 More Troops Into Germany Paris, April 22. (By The Asso ciated Press.) One hundred thou sand French .troops, in addition to those now on the Rhine, are pro vided for in the plan elaborated by the. mixed military and civil com mission, according to La Liberte. There are now 80,000 French troops in the occupied territory, the average cost for the maintenance of which is 44,000,000 francs monthly. La Liberte adds that the plan calls for the occupation of two thirds of the Ruhr industrial valley and also Elberfeld and Barmen in Westphalia. ... ' The essential principle of the economic measures consists, ac cording to the paper, of continuation of the working of the mines and mills and other plants by German companies under , control of the allies. The allied ' plan provides that a certain percentage of coal mined shall be exported to Germany. Governor Signs Bill Giving Judges Power to Fix Terms Lincoln, 'April 22. Governor Mc Kelvie has signed the bill defining the duties of a new state board of pardons and amending the indeter minate sentence law to permit "the judge to fix any term of imprison ment between the minimum and maximum prescribed by statute. Kearney Normal Glee Club In Concert at Central City Central City, Neb., April 22. (Special.) The .Kearney Normal Glee club appeared before a crowded house at the Methodist Episcopal church here. Local critics are en thusiastic in their praise of this or ganization. , Name Civic Committees , . Central City, Neb., April 22. (Special.) At a sperial meeting of the Commercial club, President E. H. Bishop announced the committees for the coming year. Chlcitro Trlbun-OmIi lk' Leaned Wire. Washington, April 22. The admin istration's program for consolidating and improving the various govern mental agencies dealing with soldiers relief was laid before the senate com mittee on education and labor by Brig. Gen, Charles E. Sawyer, Presi dent Harding's personal physician and reputed spokesman. The program provides for the crea tion of an, entirely new executive de partment, headed by a member of the cabinet, to be known as the sec retary of public welfare. Under this department there are to be four main divisions, each headed by an assistant secretary, to be known as .the divis ions of education, public health, so cial service and veteran administra tion. Under the new plan, practically all agencies dealing with the soldiers would be consolidated. According to General Sawyer, this would in clude the war risk bureaus, pensions, allotments, and similar matters. An exception would be the work of pro viding , adequate hospital facilities which would be placed under the di vision of public health. The administration plan as set forth by General bawyer is intended to carry out the recommendations of the Dawes committee. It varies from these., recommendations n that the Dawes report favored the creation of an entirely separate agency, deal ing exclusively with soldier relief, and headed by a director responsible di rectly to the president. Under the. administration plan, the veterans' ad ministration, would be directed by an assistant secretary, but it is believed that the secretary would give his attention largely to this subject. General Sawyer impressed upon the committee President Harding's desire for prompt action. Steel Bridge Across Platte Jiiver Being Constructed Central City, Neb., April 22. (Special.) The steel work on the steel bridge being erected over the Platte river immediately south of this city, is progressing rapidly. Fifty men are employed and it is estimated that the bridge will be completed early this fall. The new steel edifice will take the place of the old mile bridge. Heavy, Tourist Traffic Reported at York Grounds York, Neb., April 22. (Special.) The caretaker at the city park says that the tourist traffic is starting heavier this year than ever before. Many cars are parcked in the free camping ground every night. York furnished tenting space, running water and shelter for the cars. The chautauqua pavilion is thrown open to tourists either for camping provi lege or for shelter for cars. ,il!WiHtti:tlt i.'Hilrllii:il"l I ,IH. I! tu TYLER 9000 Wli.l :...li.M.!l.m'J Girls! Girls!! Clear; Your Skin With Cuticura Snap! neb (Soto, pfrtrnwit, TalcmO CtUw UtmttanM.Dn X. tUlOu.tlua. inicUTrTwhr. The Boy it would almost seem, was designed for the sole purpose of wearing out shoes. Years ago parents solved the problem by letting the boy go bare foot at about this time of year, but today wise parents come to Drexel's for TEEL HOD HOES They are better made of the beat materials- made to stand the hard knocks of boydom and still present a neat, dressy appearance. Bring the boy in Saturday Boy. Sue., J4 QQ Little Men', EJQ DREXEL SHOE CO. . 1419 Farnam St. New Location First Door West of Old ' Location Jiltas 1512 DOUGLAS STREET ic f Srafl Cites New Location First Door East : of Empress Theater Of All iiifl 8PO - Wraps aid Dfbss.cs. That We Were Compelled to Move From Former Store THIS final opportunity. to share in these wonder ful values is greater than ever before, due to the new and more sensational price sacrifices made for Saturday. IF YOU have the slightest need for a New Suit, Dress or Wrap these almost unhelieveable price ... reductions should prompt you to - early buying action Saturday. WRAPS AND DRESSES THAT FORMERLY SOLD UP TO $29.50 I WRAPS AND DRESSES THAT FORMERLY SOLD UP TO $45.00 1 WRAPS AND DRESSES THAT FORMERLY SOLD UP TO $65.00 25 SataFday Close Ountt oil Tailored! mH Suits Worth to $45.00 Saturday $2 Suits Worth ' to v $65.00 Saturday Suits ' Worth to $85.00 Saturday, $43 SIXTEENTH AND HOWARD STREETS ri' L ' SATURDAY Last Day To Secure the Big $15.00 Aluminum Kitchen Set Given FREE With Every McDougall . Kitchen Cabinet Sold THIS WEEK The McDougall is an. improved method of Kitchen Manage ment. It does for the home-keeper what the dictaphone, tele phone and typewriter do for the business man It simplifies your workv ' Haven't you often thought, "If I could only sit down and do this?" A McDougall makes this possible. You sit and reach, with your hundred and one utensils and ingredients all before you, within arm's reach not scattered around you. It is the stooping and lifting, the trudging and carrying that brings weariness and wrinkles at the end of the day. The sliding bottom and shelf in the utensil compartment bring all your kettles, pots and pan3 within easy reach as you sit before your McDougall. The time saved alone pays for the McDougall. One hour a day saved means 365 hours a year. Fifteen Days fewer spent in the kitchen; Fifteen Days more of leisure. What value do you place on your time? TERMS IF DESIRED $5.00 Cash and $5.00 Per Month Special Window and Store Display -for your Windows CURTAIN MATERIALS . A very dependable range of curtain nets in more than twenty patterns Is offered at one dollar per yaTd. You will find that these nets will "live up to" your highest ideals in window curtaining; certainly we have seldom been able -to show as wide an assort ment in attractive designs. Price, per yard $1.00 Other reliable curtain nets are offered at 65, 756. 856 and $1.25 CURTAIN MUSLINS This straight hanging practical curtain material is offered at per yard . . ....35 BORDERED SCRIMS , that do away with the necessity of hemming the edges. Shown in white, ivory and ecru. Price, per yaTd."... .500 PLAIN MARQUISETTE , A limited yardage of this much wanted curtaining is offered at the very low price of per yard..... 300 COLORED VOILES Very dainty for use at chamber windows, price per yard, 65 CRETONNES , 'J Although inexpensive, the two dozen patterns we are offering will prove ideal for a hundred purposes where a bright, cheerf fabric should be used. Two prices, per yard. . ... - 500 and 65 CURTAINS OF VOILE . and Marquisette are offered in a dozen good patterns in ivory and ecru colors. Notwithstanding the very low price the quality will be found to be dependable. Price, per pair....... ...... 7:. $1,85 $40.00 'f: v.,. i ' "'y. "'48.00 fj'J ' "V ' " 75X0 U'TJ. na j 91.00,; jjRt - 60.00 1 . 34.00 ' - There Is. No Better Time Than NOW to Purchase Your ' . Herrick Refrigerator 60-lb. White Enameled ; Herrick Refrigerator 75-lb. White Enameled Herrick Refrigerator. 115-lb. White Enameled Herrick Refrigerator. 130-lb White Enameled Herrick Refrigerator. 175-lb. White Enameled Herrick Refrigerator. Special 100-lb. White Enameled Herrick Refrigerator , 60-lb. . Spruce Lined i Herrick Refrigerator. J Buy Your Detroit Jewel Gas Range MONDAY The Detroit Jewel line presents a score ot sizes and styles that will not only fit your kitchen, but your family; requirements. ; High Oven Cabinet Styles from $50.00 Low Ovens from.. 39.00 Terms on Cos Ranges: 10 cash and 10 per month iiniuuiiiiMntniiiiMiiiMririiinuiuiSIXTEENTH AND HOWARD;lri:,i,r,r itii!i;;i:iiiii:iiii:iiti;iiii tYOUR NEEDS EASILY SECURED BY USING BEE WANT ADS. Phone Tyler 1000. m i ' s, S I . ft i m 9 T i 3 i a a 3