THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1921. Gypsy Costume OfMrs.Stillman Sets New Vosuc ..uuuauu t V, la lu IICIU III' get of a Curious Crowd And Battery of Newspa per Photographers. Joughkeepsie, N. Y., June 17. James A. Stillman objects to being made the target of a curious crowd and a battery of newspaper photo graphers and publication of the agreement by his attorney to have him present at the hearing before Referee Gleason today "injured him greatly. For this reason, C. J. Sul livan, one of his attorneys, withdrew the agreement. John F. Brennan. chief counsel for Mrs. Stillman, said he would insist upon Mr. Stillman appearing for cross-examination, and it was finally agreed that he would be brought in before the hearing ended, but the exact date was not to be announced. Mr. Stillman did not fare well in in today's proceedings. The testi mony was given by servants for merly employed in '"Mondanne," the Stillman country home at Pleasant- ville, N. Y. Inscription on Moccasins. Finance Minister of Japan Is Pessimistic Tokio, June 17. (By The Asso ciated Press.) The newspapers yes terday gave prominence to a state ment by Baron Takahashi, the finance minister, concerning Japan's economic relations with China, in which he declares that Japan, which has poor national resources, must re alize the economic interdependence of Japan and China, lie pointed out that China s trade alone has shown a favorable balance in Japan's recent foreign commerce. The new Chinese consortium, he continues, is an economic syndicate cf which railway loans are the prin cipal object. The newspapers quote the concluding paragraph of Baron Takahashi's statement as follows: "In the event of the new consor tium failing to give effective services in this direction, I believe it may be found necessary for Japan to act in dependently and take such measures as would iurmsh the railway loan., with the approval of the Diet and underguarantee of the government." Another Chorus Beauty Files a Divorce Suit Triangle Result of Gay Party On New Amsterdam Roof Wife No. 2 Sticks With Hubby. Congressional Leaders Confer on Peace Plans Washington, June 17. Republican senate and house leaders began today an informal attempt to settle differ ences between the peace resolutions passed by the two houses. Senators Lodge and Knox, author of the sen ate resolution, were said to have held Mary Kelley, former parlor maid that the house resolution did not pro of Mrs. Stillman, was positive re- tect American property - adequately. garding the inscriptions on the in- The conference will be continued to soles of a pair of moccasins given morrow. , l)V l-rcd Seauvsi tn HIT S man Miss Kelley said she was acquainted 330-Foot Steel Bridge with Beavuais handwriting and was sure he had written the inscriptions. jn one moccasin this appeared: I hope Guy will always be good to Jiis mother," and on the insole of j the other was this inscription, ac cording to Miss Kelley: "I hope Guy will some dav know his father ' Miss Kelley, under cross-examina- saved. . tiort, contradicted testimony she had given on direct examination, declar ing mat a letter alleged to have been written . to Mrs. , Stillman by acauvais, ana which was placed in evidence by Bernard Kellev, was the letter she had handed to Kelley. This testimony concerning the in scriptions was corroborated by Mar guerite McDonough, former nurse of Alexander Stillman, second son of Mr. and Mrs. Stillman who also testified that she saw Mrs. Stillman coming from the bath room at Mondanne one morning while Beauvais was staying there and saw through a partly open door that her bed had not been slept in. Tells of Bed Scenes. " Mrs. Irene Kelly wife of Bernard icny, lormer superintendent at aiondanne," was once Mrs. Still man's personal maid, while they were at the Stillman country home ana naa seen him stand by Mrs. Stillman's bedside and play the vic- iroia ana read to her, while she was in bed. The force of this testimony was somewhat weakened when she ad mitted on cross-examination that she had seen "Bud" Stillman, Mrs. Still man's oldest son, and H. Phelps Clawson of Buffalo, a friend of Mrs stillman s bedroom on some of these occasions. It was explained later lat Mrs. Stillman freciucntlv rose late and received friends in her room. Mrs. Stillman's gypsy-like costume of Wednesday, which was topped by a bright-colored bandanna as a head-dress, seems to have set a style In Poughkeepsie. A number of young girls wore bandannas today, and when a group of girls from Arling ton, the home of John E. Mack, spe cial guardian for Guy Stillman, came to present Mrs. Stillman a bouquet tf flowers, several of them wore bandannas. Railway and Signal Wires In London Cut by Feiners London, June 17. (By The Asso rted Press.1 A campaign of wide spread cutting of railway and signal wires and burning of signal cabins sround London, attended by violence against signal men, was earned out last night by men who, the police declared, were "Sinn Feiners and members of the Irish belf-Uetermina-tion league." Nine men were arrested. "It has been known for some time that the heads of the Irish Self-De-termination league in London have been in correspondence with the so called Irish republican army, which has been directing the murders and outrages in Ireland," the police an nouncement said. - British Miners Are Said To Have Rejected Settlement London, June 17. Unofficial re ports from various mining districts throughout England indicate the coal miners have rejected the terms offered by the mine owners in settlement of the coal diggers .strike which began April 1. There was pessimism over the prospects for ending the strike, which has virtually paralyzed many lines of business. Collapses at Brattleboro Brattleboro, Vt., June 17. A new steel bridge, 330 feet long, being built across the . Connecticut . river here, collapsed today. A working party of 23 men were on it when it went into the river, but all were New York, June 17. The filing of a suit for divorce in Poughkeepsie by Olga Harting Mackay. former Ziegfeld chorus beauty, against Don ald Francis Mackay, former Yale athlete, sportsman and wealthv man rbout town, has brought to light an other' triangle. Mr. Mackay says he has no recol lection of ever having married the former Ziegfeld beautv and is mar ricd and living happily with a di vorcee prominent in New York so ciety. The alleged marriage to Olga Harting took place after a gay party on the New Amsterdam roof in 1915. The second marriage to Mrs. J. M. Galloway, who was Miss Beatrice Wright, was performed in Connecti cut. Mr. Mackay admits being on inti mate, terms with the former chorus girl, but said: "I cannot recall having married her." He did not deny the fact put forth in the marriage license of Donald Francis Mackay and Olga Harting issued in Newark, N. J., May 24, 1915, Mrs. Beatrice Galloway Mackay, who is the mother of two children by her first marriage, denied her husband had married previously. But she was reticent about the facts sur rounding his connection with the former Miss Harting. , A private hearing on the divorce of As. Mackay No. 1, has been held before John E. Mack, fcuard ian of Guy Stillman in that divorce tangle). Mr. Mack has recommended that a divorce be granted the chorus girl. Men Must Stand Trial For High Court "Leak" Washington, June 17 Ashtcn R. Embry, James Harwood Graves, Rarnett E. Moses and E. Mallard Meyer, must go to trial cn a charge of conspiracy to defraud the United Slates in connection with "Leaks" on supreme court decisions. Justice Siduons of the District of Col-jmbii supreme court today overruled their demurrer that the indictment did not charge a crime was committed arrainst the government. An investigation of rumors that advance information on (legions had teen used to influence the stock market resulted more than a vear ago in the arrest of the n en. Embrv was a clerk in Justice McKennas office, Graves, an attorney in the De partment of Justice, and Moses, a Washington lawyer. Meyer formerly was in business in Cincinnati. Hubby Tires of Dodging Chairs So Asks Divorce For three months Opro Aldia has been dodging chairs wielded by his wife, Martha, in their home, 3535 Monroe street, he declares in a peti tion for divorce filed yesterday in district court. The wedding bells rang for them just two years ago this month. But her love has waned, he says, or rather has switched, he alleges, to one John Negra. He says she has threatened to take his life. St. Louis Fur Exchange Holds Last Auction St. Louis, Mo., June 17. The passing of the International Fur ex change at which some of the largest auctions in the history of the trade were held was announced this aft ernoon following a conference be tween bankers and officers of the exchange. BEE The As pleasant a novel for summer reading as cne need hope to find is "The House With the Golden Win dows," by J. E. Buckrose (published by JJoran). Jt is the story of an English girl who fell heir to the for tune of an old family, although un der conditions amcunting to fraud on the part of the man she believed to be her father. Wooed then for her fortune, only to be jilted when, in spite of her rascally suitor, she decides to renounce her wealth, she later is rewarded by a romance of the true blue kind. The golden sunshine of an Eng lish seaside village, the good humor and the kindly gossip of small town life, the cleanliness and charm as of the sparkling waters 'and the sea breezes, all go to make this a jelly novel. A novel with sweet and appealing religious atmosphere is "A Bridal Trip in a Prairie Schooner," by Gil bert Guest, the pen name of an Oma ha woman who has written a num ber of novels, plays and books of essays from the Catnohc standpoint. The dangers of a journey across the woes of a western camp, the situa tion of women cast among the teem ing bachelor life of a primitive com munity, and the strong faith that brought happiness and security are powerfully depicted in this romance. It is published by the Burkley Print ing company, Omaha, plains in early days, the joys and A practical and simple work on a most popular subject is "Outwitting Our Nerves," by Dr. Joseph:ne'A. Jackson and Helen M. Salisbury. Many misapprehensions which com plicate existence for so many ;ieoplc are cleared away by this interesting recital of the effect of what may be called plain psychic common tense Through the discussion of various cases met with in medical practice the authors convey an easy funda mental knowledge of the nature and uses of psychoanalysis. Published by the Century company. A real boy's story of adventure among the Hindus is The Emerald Buddha," by Joseph B. Ames. Two boys share the thrills and brave the terrors of a journey through India, laden with this precious gem. Pub lished by Small. Maynard & Co. "A Free Union." by Mary Marcy. published by Charles H. Kerr & Co., is a one-act play based on the struggle for freedom and the love of man for woman, which in some cases may approach the instinct for property. Thtre is humor of a kind in it, but still not of a sort for open display. "The Case of Korea," written by Henry Chung, Korean commissioner to America and Europe, is a powerful recital of the events surrounding the struggle for independence in that land. Six thousand people of this race live in the United States and are aiding in the crusade for the emancipation of their homeland from Japan. Mr. Chung was edu cated in the University of Nebraska, and comprehends the western as well as the eastern viewpoint. His book is published by Revcll. The concise record of how a large city church met the problem of re ligious education triumphantly is told in "A New Way to Solve Old Problems," by Frank E. Duddy (published by Scribner's.) Everyone engaged in Sunday school work and in making it a greater asset to his church will find much that is help ful and suggestive in these pages. In England, during the reign of George III. fashionable ladies wvre head-dresses which involved so much preparation that they were often not undone for weeks. One-Minute Store Talk "Why, I know ttoree thai would call up every man In town on the telephone if thay could give val ue half at food aa your. Will you people ever fet over the idea that all men have learned to com pare value and do it without be ins urged to do It. Isn't there some way to let all know emphatically what you are iv!n to your cus tomer?" (aid an enthusiastic patron here yesterday, i Most Men Do Compare That's Why This Store Grow and Crows. COMPARE! .TOHN A. SWANSON, Pres. TSGeSUmttka EWM. L. HOLZMAN, Treaa. Fine Summer Suits Prices Down To the Last Notch Sac3feoiwnaj The Century's Greatest Sale of Finest Silk Shirts i n v jajjrss In Full Swing SATURDAY Made to retail at $10.00 to $12.50 today Retailed last year at $15.00 and $18.00 When Greater Nebraska says "Come," you men know that values that will startle await you. Eagle Crepe Silk Shirts Broadcloth Silk Shirts Jersey Silk Shirts Pussy Willow Silk Shirti Buy By the Dozen $1.00 and $1.50 Silk Neckwear The Cool Underwear . Store Largest showing Athletic and knitted union suits $1, $1.50, $2 and better SEE OUR WINDOWS TODAY. i'alk about before the war prices at no time in quarter century have you bought such won derful neckwear bargains, 50c Bathing Suits Easily the most complete stocks clever new colorings. See them Boys' 501 to $6.00 Jill - HIOM,il HtlWI""'" Men's $1 to $7.50 COMPARE OUR VALUES ALWAYS. :CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN: World' Best Clothes Priced Here at f . . 33V3 Below New Lower Price Levels BUY your comfort summer clothes NOW at the prices you hoped to get later in the season. This store is merchandising this season on a price basis unknown before in the entire history of the men's apparel business. Mak ing "Sale" prices every day in the season to help meet the jus tifiable demand for rock bottom prices. Buy Now The Limit of Low Clothing Prices Is Here for This Season Your Cool Straw Hat Is Here THERE'S a' vast dif ference in straw hats get yours at head quarters, where style, quality and value all the elements thalrmake the most for your money in straw hat buy ing awaits you at 2 to I- Caps $150 4 $Q It takes a vast stock like ours to please particular men. Silk, Palm Beach, Fabric. Boys STRAWS for conserva tive dressers straws for the young man with something "different" in mind. Straws for every man, and the expert at tention, too, that in sures you a becoming style to 1022 j and children's eool hats and cans- wide selection of styles. $Qoo 50c to Qoo : CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN: COMPARE These Fine Suits at $35 to $50 with what you paid $60.00 to $90.00 for last year Compare with suits shown elsewhere at $50.00 to $75.00 today. COMPARE These Worsted Suits M at $25 and $30 with what you paid $45.00 and $50.00 for last year Suits made of fine hard fin ished fabrics not shown at any price last year. i i 1 -. Celebrated Kuppenheimer Good Clothes Society Brand Clothes and the finest of fine journeymen tailored Rochester productions. Ne.west sport and business suits in all wanted weights and fabrics. Genuine Palm Beach Suits $12.50 $15.00 $20.00 made to sell at the new lower prices of $18.00 to $30.00 Palm Beach Suits that are all that finest I Palm Beach Suits that are tailored by makers can produce in fit and fabric. tailors, not machined by "machines." Tropical Coat and Pant Suits $15 to $35 Many new weaves are available for the man looking for comfort clothes. Mohairs, silk mohairs, tropical worsteds, aero weaves, silk Shantung and pongee suits. a5C5ZV7 50. s- $3 50to$7 50 Panto Pnnf.a V Pnnf 7 TV. Kj mJJ JJ . vS b Miaavw et. vw SEE OUR WINDOWS TODAY yarm a swansonmi. COM PARI OTJR VALUES ALWAYS . CORRECT APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN.