Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 14, 1921, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1921.
Coyotes Holding
Lead in Drive for
New Ak Members
Jack Rabbits Expect to Stage
Comeback and Win Din
ner Which Is Stake
In Campaign.
The score:
Coyotes, 65 members. ,
Jack Rabbits, 32 members.
Thus did the rival Ak-Sar-Ben
member-getting teams stand at the
close of activities last night.
At stake in the drive is one good
dinner and the reputation of Ak-Sar-
Ben for never having a membership
sciuacic in us nisiory.
The losing team must buy the din
ner for the winners, but despite the
lead of the Coyotes, the Jack Rab
bits expect to stage a comeback, and
eat at their rival's expense.
But two and a half days remain
for the membership hustlers to gain
the desired number of new members.
The drive, which was started Tues
day noon .with 700 new members as
its objective, closes at 1 p. m. Satur
day. - "
Six hundred and three more mem
bers must be roped into King Ak's
realm before that time.
But Ak-Sar-Ben-ites are confident
the drive will succeed.
Three Hundred Jacks
Being Used in Raising
Two-Story Building
Passersby have been tarrying for
several days at the southeast corner
of Seventeenth and Howard streets
to observe the work of raising the
two-story brick building used for
general office purposes by the L. V.
Nicholas Oil company.
i The grading of St. Marys avenue
necessitated raising this building six
feet, the work being done by the
I P. Fnesteadt company without
interference with the usual routine
within the building. ,
Three hundred raising packs are
used in the operation and 24 men
turned the. jacks in response to sig
jials from a wMstle. A party wall
difficulties.
The building was erected 35 years
ago and was originally used by
Henry St. Felix as a grocery.
A. J. Volkman, superintending en
gineer in charge, also supervised the
recent remodeling of the Peters'
Irust building. ,
mar
VJLU UlsAl
Forfeits $500 Bond
Carl A. Dagerman forfeited a $500
cash bond when he failed to appear
before County Judge. Crawford, yes
terday, on the charge of illegal sale
of beer. His place is eight miles
west on the Dodge street road.
Frank Kinney, Frank Quinn and Or
ville Haines, arrested in the same
raid, were held on bonds. They de
nied being employed ,by Dagerman.
The penalty for. manufacture and
sale of liquor, on which charge all
except Haines are held, is a fine of
$500 to $5,000 or 30 days to one year
in jail, or both. Haines .is held on
bond as a witness.
Motorists to Take Lesson
In Lens Focusing Tonight
A motorists' rally to obtain com
pliance with the new auto lens law
will be held at Ak-Sar-Ben field to
day at 8 p. m. Electrical engineers
will be there to demonstrate correct
focusing.
, The new law requires that light
rays must not extend higher than 42
inches from the roadway at a dis
tance of 75 feet from the lens.
Twelve testing stations were ap
proved. Man Who Shot Wife at Movie
. Given 3-Year Prison Term
A three-year sentence in the peni
tentiary is Harry McCauley's punish
ment for shooting his wife. Myrtle, at
the Rialto theater, June 10. Judge
Troup imposed the sentence yester
day. McCauley said his wife drove him
to the act by "treating him worse
than a dog." Her injuries were at
first thought to be mortal, but she
has recovered. She lives at 922
South Twentieth street.
Omaha Municipal Bonds -To
Be Sold in Open Market
Municipal bonds, $950,000 worth,
will go on sale in open market in
the near future. They run 20 years,
are nontaxable and bear 5'A per
cent interest
Failure to sell the bonds on terms
which would comply with the law
induced Mayor Dahlman and Com
missioner Butler to consider the
public sale.
Funeral of Mrs. Mary Morris
: Will Be Friday Afternoon
Funeral of Mrs. Mary Morris, 49,
1616 Burt street, will be held tomor
row afternoon from her home. Bur
ial will be at Forest Lawn cemetery.
Mrs. Morris is survived by her hus
band, Richard; her mother, Mrs. L.
C Coon; a son, William, and four
daughters, Miss Ellen Morris, Mrs.
O. W. Olson. Mrs'. J. O. Clayton
and Mrs. O. G. Printz.
Omaha Woman in Contest
For Movie Star Candidates
Mrs. Shaji Osato, wife of the
Japanese photographer, is in a mov
ing picture magazine contest for
candidates for movie stardom. She
entered under the name of "Frances
Frances Fitzpatrick. The contest
closes September 1.
Wahoo Mayor Will Open
Swimming Pool Friday
Wahoo, Neb., July 13. (Special)
Mayor Oscar Hanson of Wahoo
will put on his bathing suit Friday
and dive off .the spring board into
the new swimming pool at Wanahoo
park to officially open the plunge.
The new pool is 80x160 feet, cement,
equipped with every modern conven
ience and hat uo-to-date filtering
lystemf
Wife Kidnaps Own Child
ill x ,
in
III t yf V n
? ft Qmi
(
"Leave her? Bless her heart! Mother never would." That's what
Mrs. Charlotte Catherine Mayo was saying between kisses when the above
photograph was made. Determined to leave her broker husband, Roy
Alfred Mayo, and determined, too, not to desert her 2-year-old daughter,
the mother had starred in a limousine kidnaping de luxe in New York City
with five private detectives to help her.
Following differences with her husband, Mrs. Mayo left him and con
sulted a lawyer. Later in the day she returned to her home in an automo
bile with detectives. The limousine, with engine running, waited outside.
On gaining admittance to the apartment, accompanied by the detectives,
Mrs. Mayo snatched up the child, made her way to the ground floor and
was whirled away in the auto."
nan
Brief City News
Ad-Sell Picnic The Advertising-
Selling league will hold Its annual
picnic in Elmwood pars juiy a.
Fireman Hurt In Fall William
Hieston, city flretnan, fell from a
truck ho was cleaning yesterday,, in
juring both legs. ,
Jovrlder Sentenced For taking a
Joyride in a stolen automobile,
James Spellman, 19, must go to the
penitentiary for two years.
New Train The Rainbow Spe
cial, a new through train to Hot
Springs. Ark., will be Inaugurated
by the Missouri Pacific Sunday.
Goes Home to Mother Because
she went home to mother twice and
refuses , to return, Joseph Pokorny
seeks a divorce from his wife, Mary.
Jtuss Agent Goes Through Boris
Bakengies, representative of the
Russian government, passed through
the city yesterday, en route west on
business.
Mall Packages Sale Mail pack
ages salvaged frorn the .Pueblo
food will be auctioned from the
north steps of the postoffice at 10
this morning.
Filings Closed Tdesday was the
last day for applicants to file for
the position of Omaha postmaster.
Civil service examination dates will
be announced later.
Follows Circus Theodore Mitch
ell listened to the call of the "big
top" again Tuesday and followed
the circus out of town. He did bo
last year, but returned.
- Invitation to Foeh The Cham
ber of Commerce will " join the
American Legion and Omaha Aero
club in - inviting Marshal Foch to
visit In Omaha this fall
McGintjs Reconciled Mrs. J' Ida
McGinty and her wealthy husband,
Frank McGinty, are reconciled.
Yesterday she dismissed divorce ac
tion begun against -him April 13.
Braid Snipped Off "The Clipper,"
an unknown young man, snipped
off the hair braid of Lillian Ler
wold, 16, as the girl was walking
home from the street car Tuesday.
Playgrounds Move Balked In
stallation of playgrounds in several
congested districts in Omaha struck
a snag when wealthy Omahans
fathering the movement tried to get
the city council to take over the
grounds they would lease, In order
to forestall possible damage suits
against them. The city charter does
not permit the council to take over
such" projects.
Leave for Outing Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. McGrew, 1148 Park avenue,
will leave this week 'or- Milford,
la., for a six-weeks' outing.
Takes Vacation Frank Blair, in
charge of the Hotel Fontenelle
cigar stand, will leave Saturday on
a vacation which will take him
first to Chicago and then to Chey
enne, Wyo.
Wife and Kiddies Gone Wed In
Italy in 1912, Concetta Raffa has
left her husband, Filadelflo, taking
the three little Raffas with her. Yes
terday Filadelflo sued for divorce,
charging desertion.
Dudley Starts New Move Joe
Dudley, "ex-human semaphore"
traffic officer, bobs up again, this
time with a petition to permit
senior men on the police force to
choose their own beats and hours
of duty.
Sue for Building Permit
Westminster Presbyterian church
members began mandamus proceed
ings yesterday in an effort to ob
tain a building permit for their new
edifice- at Thirty-fifth and Wool
worth avenue. Field club mem
bers object.
Treat your
nerves right
When tea or coffee
came annoyance, try
Instant
POSTUM
Charm without ham
in this table drink
There's a Reason
Sold everywhere
by grocers
Our First Semi-Annual
Clearance Sale of Men's Oxfords
. Now On
Choose from dozens of styles in Brown and Black
Calfskin, Goodyear Welted Soles with Rubber Heels.
, We Offer You Value SrTk
to $10 at . 0
At this price you find the new Ball Strap, Brogue and
Straight Lasts.
See Our Show Windows
16I4BU?HAH0MAHA.MEBR
f.O.W. Insurgent
Leaders Expelled
Sovereign Commander Fraser
Decorated by Veterans of
Foreign Wars.
Dispatches received from Wood
men of the World headquarters in
New York City state that Claude
Wilkerson of Missouri and William
Franklin of Oklahoma, leaders'of the
insurgents in the convention, were
expelled from the order for 10 years
bv oracticaily unanimous vote.
These men attemoted to unseat
Nebraska and Texas delegates and
were opposed to the present supreme
officers, headed by W. A. rraser,
sovereign commander, all of whom
were reelected last week for a term
of four years.
These dispatches also state that
Mr. Fraser was decorated with a
medal by Commander Sullivan of
the Veterans of Foreign wars, in the
presence of that organization and the
entire membership of the convention,
"in recognition of services rendered
the government during the war as
a member of the bureau of war
risk insurance" and on account of
"his activity and success in promot
ine the sale of Liberty bonds.'
Fraser was sworn in as a member
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
by Commander Sullivan when the
medal was betowed upon hiin.
The Omaha end of the insurgency
was headed by County Commissioner
Unitt. Mr. Fraser declared, before
the convention, that the insurgent
movement was headed by men who
had been divorced from the Wood
men pay roll by himself.
Omaha Woman Sells
Land in Indiana
Mrs. Philippine Diamond, 2804
Woolworth avenue, sold 80 acres of
land near Hammond, Ind., for $2,000
an acre to Chicago capitalists, who
plan to construct a race track there,
according to word reaching here
from Chicago yesterday.
. A "member of the family" at the
Diamond home, said Mrs. Diamond,
could not be disturbed, and declined
to give any information regarding
the transaction. She admitted such
a transaction had been made, how
ever. Mrs. Diamond is the widow
of Ambrose Diamond.
Burned in Explosion
Hebron. Neb., July 13. (Special.)
The explosion of a battery in a
battery station here threw sulphuric
acid into the eyes,of Felix Grugan,
an employe, burning them badly.
Wife and Baby Gone,
Man Tries to End Life
Deserted by his wife and small
son, Bobby, Frank Suchy, 30, book
keeper for a local construction com
pany, turned on the gas in his room,
2204 Wirt street, yesterday.
A picture of his wife and baby
lay beside the farewell note he in
dicted to them. Their names were
spelled out in pennies on the dresser.
Mrs. M. G. Johnson, landlady, de
tected the odor of gas from Suchy's
room before he had inhaled enough
to have fatal effect. She called the
police surgeon who revived the
man.
Mrs. Suchy left her husband five
weeks ago and began suit for divorce.
She is now with her mother in Port
land, Ore.
Ruby Valued at $50,000
Stolen From Man's Pocket
A $50,000 ruby was stolen from the
pocket of Don De Bow, 522 Paxton
building, yesterday, the owner
stated, as he was en route to his of
fice from the safety deposit vault.
De Bow acquired the gem in ex
change for Texas land, he said.
Kindly Donors
Boost MUk Fund
Toward $1,000
But There Are Two Impor
tant Mileposts Yet to Be
. Passed in Campaign to
Save Children of Poor
The $l,000-goal is in sight for The
Bee milk and ice fund for poor kid
dies of Omaha. There are two
important1 mileposts Jet to reach.
Each donation, be it large or small,
brings the fund closer to this point.
And assures that many m6re suf
fering little tots an adequate milk
and ice supply tor the hot summer
days.
The Visiting Nurse association is
restless in its vigilance, searching out
needy families for The Bee funds
beneficence. Bee readers do the rest.
The fund today stands as follows:
rrivloulT arknowledced SSOl.Ml
l ash, niair, Neb 1.00
A. I". .. ruiirnon. neo z.ou
rub, Sidney. Ia 1.00
! K. Nturgis... 1,00
A Friend 1.00
Total W07.MI
Miiimiiiiaiiiiitiiii
Special Offer
This Genuine
VOCALION
$1 DOWN
$1 PER WEEK
III
O
m
PI1
1 Full cabinet size, genuine mahogany. Will play any record.
m Finest patent automatic stop and lid lift. Many machines not
so good sold at $ SO more than our price,
of these sold so come early.
There will be Just six
Instruments
of Quality
Store Open Every Night
1807 Farnam,
MdjeicC, Omaha, Neb.
!!!!
IBlHif
giro
The
new sugar-coated
chewing stum
A .
J V SSr which everybody
r likes -you wili.TO
A delicious
peppermint
flavored soar
Jacket around pep
permint flavored chewins
gum that will aid your appe
tite and digestion, polish youi
teeth and moisten your throat.
Cflfi
By tbe makers of
After Every Meat
The Flavor LasM
Burgess-Nash Cour
'BVIRYBOOYk gTOBS"
5 t.l.OHAJMO
Our Summer Apparel! S?
Of Taste and Distinction?
I
a .iixlnl
is brought within the reach of all, in this:JdlV.i
Clearance aie 01 Deauwiuj Keaay-io-wear, ac
Moll
I Iv)I)kI wkmiM
aria
mortal
nammul
nun .114
,nH
tnniiH' !tH
.hmU MO jn,
Spring and early summer stocks attfife?
. - -T . . i i " -a
ciuaea; correct styles ior mia-summer wearyrv:
i nunrpn. nun "
TT nch Dfjeo)0
Silk Dresses Smart Wraps r
Separate Skirts sports uoats
For Misses and Junior: Sizes 6 to 19.
For Women: Sises 36 to 48.
Tit Naw Salt and Gown Shap Third Floor
Laces
A special purchase of edg
ings and headings in Va
lencienne and cotton Tor
chons in those dainty widths
which are often so hard to
find. Delightful assortments
from the "baby" width to 3
inches; priced, per yard,
3c, 5c, 10c
Main Floor
French Clox
New imported French
cloxed stockings, full fash
ioned, in all sizes for women,
in black, a pair, $1.25. , "
Women's lace striped
Hosette, of good weight fibre
silk, in black and cordovan,'
a pair, 50e. ' r
Main Floor ; '
Drugs: At Special Prices
Pepsodent Dental Cream .37c
Pebeco Dental Cream. .37c
Tooth Brushes, in sanitary boxes. .19c
Dorins' Compact Powder. .35c
Dorins' Theatrical Rouge. .27c
Amami Liquid Henna Shampoo. . .47c
Ivory Hair Brushes. .$2.75
.Ivory Combs .35c
Mavis Toilet Soap 75c
Mavis Talcum Powder .18c
Shaving Brushes, with ivory handles . . .59c
Rubber Gloves .47c
- Main Floor " ' '
The Needs of the Home
are uppermost in the minds of many women during
this hot weather. Important items which make lighter
the daily tasks are suggested at low prices.
American Beauty Electric Irons
A full size six and one-half pound nickel finished dQ PA
iron. Complete with cord, plug and stand. ....... POeOU
36x36-Inch Ice Blankets
prevents unnecessary and rapid melting; made of water-T C ,;
proof parchment paper; 5 blankets to the carton: .;.
Folding Iron Boards x
strongly made of kiln dried materials. Very QC
specially priced at . O
Fourth Floor ' " '
Sewing Machines
At Very Special Prices
Some of these have been used as floor samples,' others
as demonstration machines. All are in excellent condition
and offer important savings on the usual prices. :
Crescent Machines $22.50
White Machines $35.00
Rockford Machines $39.00
Standard Machines .$50.00
Burgess-Nash Machines ...$25.00
The New National (A small hand machine) $ 5.50
Fourth Floor
(I
Universal" Ware
New and final price reductions have been made
on our complete line of Universal wares:
Food Choppers
Percolators
Electric Irons
tread Mixers
Electric Percolators "
Electric Curling Irons
Fourth Floor