Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1921)
14 THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. JUNE 2. 1921. .Wallace Wilson , Made Head of Welfare Board More Truth Than Poetry -By JAMES J. MONTAGUE- tarae Sent to City Council for Confirmation Rabbi Conn Selected as Chairman by Reorganized Body. Rabbi Frederick Cohn was re elected chairman of the welfare board at its reorganization Tuesday The Rev. E. J. Flanagan was made vice chairman. John A. Rinc war. made secretary and Dr. Harry A. Foster, and John J. Larkin were added to the board, these three sit ting in place of Dr. Jennie CalHas, -Mrs. E. B. Towl and Howard Ken nedy, resumed. Resignations of O. M. Adams, ; superintendent; Mrs. Julia Hudliti, . Mrs. Florence Ayleswortn ana Airs, Dessic Culver were accepted. ( Wallace Wilson, on recoir.menda- ! tion of Mayor Dahlman and Rabbi Cohn, was made superintendent ana j his name ordered sent to tl.c city i council for confirmation. I Mrs.. Ida Levin and Mis Mae J Mullen, sister of Arthur Mullen, will be Riven office positions. Ben i Short, president of the street car .'-mens union, will succeed Robert I Holmes as head of the men s em J poyment bureau. Elizabeth Stearns will be retained at the head of the j women's employment bureau. i ; '' 400 Acres to Be Reclaimed By Hamilton County Project Aurora, Neb., June 1. (Spe cial.) The big tunnel which J. H. Van Wormcr is digging through a i hill for the drainage of the Vet : trr-Liebhardt basin is nearly com pleted. He expects to have it done .before July 1. The farmers with crops growing in the basin are pray ing for a shortage of heavy rains until the project is completed. Us ually, Hamilton county has one big rain each year which fills up the basin and drowns out the crops. After this tunnel is completed, the drowning of .crops will be a thing of the past. About 400 acres of land will be reclaimed in this project. Rain in Hayes County Comes in Time to Save Crops - Hays Center, Neb., June 1. (Spe cial.) A one and one-half inch rain fell in Hayes county. It was badly needed as some of the wheat was ;heginning to show the effects of the 'dry and windy weather of the past two weeks. Much of the earlier wheat is heading out, and this rain Iwill assure it making a crop. Corn planting has been completed and the farmers report a general good stand. The acreage of wheat and corn is as large as last year and much new urouiut is being broken. Kxpress Rate Hearing Is Conducted by Taylor Lincoln, June 1. H. G. Taylor, state commissioners of railroads, heard the American Railway Express on its petition to have express rates in Nebraska made equal with those set by the Interstate Commerce com mission. Mr. Taylor said that this would mean a . slight raise in the fates of some commodities if the twtttinti ia cranial! . I o ' ' v Erect New Monument Chester, Neb., June 1. (Special.) A new G. A. R. monument, one of the finest in this section, was un veiled here. USELESS EDUCATION college iTAftuor iunMt a department of matrimony In the gnat uniteriUt. When I was earning my twelve a week I wearied of single life, So I made up my mind that I'd go and seek Some damsel to be my wife. The girls I knew seemed a likely lot, Yet I shuddered with horrid dread , For T couldn't be sure that the girl I got Was the one that I ought to wed. r I yearned for an ardor that wouldn't cool, And a wedlock no years could blight, So I took a course at a well known school .That taught you to pick 'em right. I learned that the kind of a girl" for me Was a maiden with auburn hair, Who tipped the beam at a hundred and three, And wasfknown by the name of Claire, With such a girl, so the profs, averred, I could wander in primrose ways With never a mean or peevish word To the end of our wedded days. She would save my money, and broil my steak And care for my clothes and health, Till I soon would find for her sweet sake I had conquered both fame and wealth. ( I hunted from Maine to Mexico In quest of this model lass, And after a couple of years or so I found her in Squantum. Mass. And our lives have been one long romance, With never a single sigh If it hadn't been for the circumstance That she'd married another guy. And as her like there can never be Any further quest is in vain, She's the only wife they prescribed for me So a bachelor I remain. . OUT OF THEIR LINE. J ' Why should 400 musical experts condemn the jazz. Does anvone be lieve that jazz has any -relation to music? ALWAYS ON THE ALERT. As soon as Greece hears about that other Mrs. Leeds, it'll trot out another eligible prince. - WE RE APPROACHING IT. This isn't quite the millenium, but the railroads are admittine that their rates are too high. - (Copyright, 1021. by The Bell Syndicate. Inc.) ! Dog Hill Paragrak By George Bingham The horse doctor, was summoned . to Musket Ridge Thursday night to see Columbus Allsbp, who had been kicked by a cow. Raz Barlow observes that he don't know whether there is much to this thing. of going south to spend the winter, for your health or not, and jay-birds never do go and noboby ever hears one of them complaining. ."' - . " I The Tickville Tidings deplores the publication of such a large number of papers in the United States. He says nearly everybody he approaches are already taking more papers than they "can read. Copyright, 1911. George Matthew Adama. ommon Sense By J. J. MUNDYl Are You Growing Old? Don't worry so much about the indications of old age which mani fest themselves so much more fre quently than they did a few years ago. : You cannot help growing old nor can you expect to do what you did when you were younger. It does no good to worry and fret as age advances. The more you think about how long you will be able to hold out, the sooner you will reach the place where you are completely worn out. One of the best things you can do to prolong your days of real use fulness is to be cheerful. When you art cheerful you have more confidence in yourself.- A cheerful heart accomplishes more work and with less wear. Worry has taken the lives of more persons than sickness and dis ease, which come without worry. Take more precautions to safe guard your own health as you grow older and you will feel your handi cap less. v Favor yourself in the hours when you are not employed and seek the right sort of recreation. Copyright. ' 1921. International Feature Service, Inc. Alliance Man Fined for ' Selling Calf Without Hide Alliance, Neb., June 1. (Special.) "Bill" Garrett, employed on the ranch of Mrs. Blanche Hoover near here, was fined $25 and costs in coun ty court on a charge of selling the carcass of a calf to a meat market without exhibiting the hide of the animal. He was arrested on com plaint of Robert Graham, postmaster of Alliance, in behalf of the Ne braska Stock Growers' association, of which Mr. Graham is president. Bible Conference Will Meet in DeWitt July 3 DeWitt, Neb., June 1. (Special.) The Blue River Bible Conference assembly, an interdenominational as sociation beirfg promoted in the in terests of Bible study and evangel ism, will open July 3 and continue the remainder of the month. A special Bible study will be held every morning, recreation in the afternoon and a preaching and song service at night. Youth Who Struck School Principal To Make Amends Cart Dimond, student editor of the Register, will not be expelled from Central High school for his fistic attack on Principal Joseph G. Masters and Dr. H. A. Senter Tuesday. of our solar system; a film projec- day following an argument over the printing contract for the school annual. "Carl will turn over to Principal Masters all material for the Register annual which he holds, and I shall instruct him to apologize to Mr. Masters," his mother, Mrs. Zaida Dimond, 204 South Twenty-fifth avenue, stated after a conference with the principal yesterday. "It's all settled now. "Carl apologized to Dr. (Sent-r a few minutes after the fight and went to school early this morning to apologize to Mr. Masters, but did not have the opportunity." "MilKonaireHobo" Gives Up Ranch Idea Alliance. Neb.. Tune 1. (Special.) John O'Brien, "knight of the road" and dubbed by police the "millionaire hobo," because of his purely imag inary wealth and position, asked the court for just three minutes in which to shake the dust of Alliance trom his feet after he had received a sus pended fine of $10 in police court on a charge of vagrancy. Tohn arrived from carts unknown and decided to go into the ranch business. He 'hired" four Alliance young women as cooks for the ranch and a man to work for him. He told each of his "employes" that he had leased the Hugh Smith ranch south of town. He casually men tioned his big touring car and out lined his plans for running the ranch, oromising to come in after the young women and the hired man the fol lowing day. When arrested by police as a va grant the bubble burst. John con fessed that he had no automoDiie, no intention of going into the ranch business and that he had utterly neglected to consult Mr. Smith about leasing the ranch. Mary Doremus Wins Honors In Aurora High School Aurora, Neb.. June 1. (Special.) -At the commencement exercises of the Aurora High school, Mary Dore mus will deliver the valedictory and Harold Edgerton . will deliver the salutatory. Mary Doremus and Vir ginia Nevih ranked highest in the class. Miss Doremus being just a fraction of 1 per cent above Miss Ncvil. Harold Edgerton has the greatest number of credits among the boys of the class: Install O. E. .S Officers Loud City, Neb., Tune 1. (Spe cial.) The Eastern Star lodge of Loup City installed the following officers: Worthy matron, Dr. Car rie L. Bowman; worthy patron, La mont L. Stephens; associate matron, Mrs. Asa J. Farnham. Eustis Memorial Day Eustis, Neb., June 1. (Special.) The American Legion had charge of the Memorial day exercises here. Rev. Mr. Howe of Lexington deliv ered the principal address. Legion Gives Play Oxford, Neb., June 1. (Special.) A three-act play, "Hurry, Hurry, Hurry," was presented by the American Legion. The Oxford band gave its first open-air concert. One way to get Big Mileage Regularly " "' ' The importance of gasoline with a complete chain of . ' boiling point fractions You wouldn't expect to light a green stick with a match. Yet .' some gasolines are like green sticks. They neither ignite quickly . nor burn up completely because they lack sufficient low-boiling , point fractions for kindling, and have too great a proportion of slow-burning elements. V Straight distilled gasoline possesses the complete chain of boiling points which assures quick ignition and practically instant, com plete combustion. Every bit is converted into heat and power gives bigger mileage per gallon than slow-burning mixtures, or less carefully refined gasoline. Red Crown Gasoline has a complete clurin of boiling point fractions v Red Crown Gasoline is straight distilled gasoline. It meets all specifications required by the United States Government for motor gasoline. It has a com plete chain of boiling point fractions low, medium and higher boiling point fractions which, in right proportion, assure big power and big mile age. It is uniform and depend able wherever you buy it. HottT to get better results at less cost The way to .get mileage and power economically, to escape carbon troubles, to have a spry, quick-starting engine, is by perfect adj'ustment of the motor to the fuel used. This can only be secured by using gasoline that is UNIFORM gasoline you can get wherever you are gasoline that gives a clean, dry, powerful mixture under all weather conditions. Use Red Crown Gasoline. Look for the Red Crown Service Station Always drive in to a: Red Crown Service Station. You are certain of clean burning, powerful gasoline that is as uniform as" modern refining can make it big-mileage gasoline. Polite service, free air, water for your radiator and' road in formation and directions are some of the little things which' reflect the ideals of this com panyprompt, courteous ser vice, products of highest qual ity,1 full measure and an. expanding service which antici pates the growing needs of the motoring pubKc, Write or ask for a Red Crown Road Map STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA ADVERTISEMENT. OLD TIME RIVER CAPTAIN SAYS If HAS WORLD BEAT "I Can't Say Enough for Tan lac," Writes Robert H. Trombley. BEAUTIFUL BLOUSES of sheer cotton materials, v to $3.00. alues $1.00 In the Annex. -TRY- Room size, xl2-foot Jap Mattlnr RUGS $498 In the Annex. Jewel, Rower. Color Symbols for Today ; By MILDRED MARSHALL. j Today's talismanic gem is the agate, which is especially dedicated to those who travel. To them, it ' promises a long and pleasant journey with good luck waiting at its destina tion. It is also indicitive of change in the conditions of one's lite, and those who wear it w ill be aided in changing their environments for the better. :'. The coral is today's natal stone. It endows its wearer with bodiy strength and mental poise, and en ables hirti to accomplish any worthy purpose. . The ancients also believed that it could give warning, by its paling color, of over fatigue and ap proaching disease. Black is the significant hue today. It is symbolic of industry and inde pendability. .. Today's flower is the yellow pansy, the symbol of thoughtfulness. . lOoyrtght, 1921. Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) Capt. Robert H. Trombley. well known proprietor of the Majestic Annex hotel, 323 Main street, Du buque, la., writes that Tanlac has helped him so much he believes he will be doing any one a gooa turn by getting them to try the medi cine. Captain Trombley is an old Mississippi river captain. He was on the river from 1881 to 1916 and numbers his friends by his acquain tances all the way from MinneapolU to St. Louis. " ' 1 "Tanlac is such a wonderful medi cine and has fixed me up so fine that I just can't help but write in and tell about it," says his letter, "and if my statement will get others to try Tanlac I hope it will be pub lished, for I don t believe anything can help them as much as this medi cine will. i "I was in such a weak, rundown condition I hardly had energy enough to get to the table, and when I did get there my appetite was so poor I could scarcely eat a thing. I was bilious most of the time and had taken calomel . until it seemed to have lost its powers to help me any. I was so nervous I could hardly sit still, and my sleep was restless and broken. I fell off in weight, felt wornout and miserable and my fam ily and friends told me I didn't look like myself at all. ."Tanlac was recommended to me by one whom it had helped .and I decided to try it, although 1 had little hope of it benefitting me, for I had tried .. most everything else without any relief. Well, sir, it was a mighty glad surprise to me, for' a few bottles have put me in the best of health and made me feel like a new man. I simply think it's the best medicine ever made, and the best I can say is not good enough for it." The Bee want ads are business boosters. Omaha's Greatest Sale of Silverware Starts at Hayden's Thursday As everyone knows conditions were unprecedented in the Silverware market a short time ago, and it was at this crucial moment that our plans were laid plans which culminate in this stupendous sale, starting Thursday (tomorrow) with unrivaling economies apparent in every piece.' ' Tn manufactur auu .Hay- usu6 name uat ui every vmcw at ailvcrwaix old during thU vreat itUe. Ivuad tau guarantee bond. A sale of Silverware involving thousands of dolla rs and only a "cash buying" policy could obtain Such great concessions. See the Front Window Display 20 to 60 Savings FOR THREE DAYS-THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY Gift Suggestions for the "June Bride' the "Graduate," "Anniversary" and the "Hope Box." Tha rtgulax prices are famll-. iar to every woman, therefore the most casual perusal of the items here listed, tells the economy story in no un certain terms. $2.00 Quality 5-piece Sheffield Plate Tea Sets. Sale Price ...... $9.50 '$2.40' $4.00 Bread Trays ., STANDARD QUALITY HOLLOW WARE $3.50 Child's Silver Mugs.......; $2.96 2.00 Child's Silver Mugs $1.19 $2.50 Child's Set, Knife, Fork and Spoon ........$l98 $1.00 Cold Meat Forks ijg 65c Baby Spoons 490 $1.50 Silver Inlaid Vases $1.00 $20.00 26-Piece Set, including 6 knires, 6 x'orks, 6 teaspoons, 6 dessert spoons, 1 sugar shell, 1 butter knife, with bond. Sale Price ...... $13.49 $15.00 Set Knives and Forks with hollow handle J1 QO knires, with bond. Sale Price V O $10.00 Set Knives and Forks, with bond. cVQ Sale Price p0.7O $25.00 Quality 26-Piece Set, including 6 knives, 6 forks, 1 butter knife, 1 sugar shell with bond. Sale' Price . $9.00 SugaT and Cream Set $7,20 ?8.95 Egg Set $7.16 $13.00 Vegetable Dish $10.40 $4.93 Trivet $3.96 $12.00 Vase $9.60 $2.00 Mayonaise Dish $1.25 $18.00 Coffee Set $14.40 $30.00 Steak Plate $2360 $27.50 Silver Platter $1800 $17.49 Is w ttii 111 rn li 1 iiiiiii 1 nhi 1 1 iiimii iiiair $2.00 set of six Tea Spoons. $2.00 set of three Table Spoons. $2.00 set of 3 Salad Forks. $2.50 set of three-piece Childs' Set. $2.00 Cold Meat Forks. $2.00 Jelly Server. $2.25 Berry Spoons. $2.00 Cream Ladles. $2.25 Gravv Ladles. $2.25 set Butter Knife and Sugar Shell $2.00 Infants' two-piece set. $2.00 set Dessert Spoons, 6-piece. READ THIS GUARANTEE A Guarantee Bend Without Time Limit With Every Piece Your Choice '12 Ta tha avent any placa you have purchased baarlng tha trad mark Stafford Silver Co. "Sectional" ahould (Ira any dlaaatlaf action whatsoever, fill out on blank apace, name of dealer, data of pur chase (approximately), alem your name, return tha place with bond to manufacturer! who will replace each piece with new rooda. 4 Factory C. International Silver Co., Bridgeport, Conn. ' Our entire stock of ITigh-Grade Silver Plated Hollow Ware included in this great sale. Our stock has originally been marked at the lowest cash prices. For instance, a w iter pitcher that generally sells for $16.00 we mark $14.00 in this sale a further reduction of 20 on every piece of Hollow Ware in stock. , . - - $14.00 Water Pitchers $11.20 $13.95 Silver Basket $11.16 $16.50 Loving Cup $13.20 $2.75 Bud Vases $2.21 $5.95 Syrup Jug $4.76 $19.50 Cake Basket............. s $15.59 $14.50 Fruit Bowl........ ........ $11. 60 $7.00 Sandwich Trays.. $5.60 $4.60 Bon Bon Dishes.. $3.60 $8.50 Cruets $6.80 $9.00 Sugar and Cream Sets $7.20 It Pays TRY HAYDEN'S FIRST It Pays HvV--vV-.fi