rim T.a:-. om.uia. s.mniuv. mahcii i. io::. The.Omaha Bee MOIl.M.N'C-tVCNI.VU-SU.N'DAV. THB BEE fWBUSMWO COMPANY mlsun b. treut. rkiuk b. tnuam, itMf MEMBER OF ItlC ASSOCIATED r33 t lw4 fnei, of e Im ks I maar. m as I ...1.11 m um r.4 iiiUk iit f 14 m .t. efcl IO U W 4 4teO.M SeaAiUO U 1- Mf. Ml IM ..l pUtM.aeaO MA AH raIO Of rtWSlMeiieO St , Tm " Ik if t UMM IM a4il linq at Omo UltaM, lae wiiii4 lkMU so OmllM 4U. Iht net circulation of Tk Oath Boo for February, 1122 Daily Average 71.306 Sunday Average ...78,325 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY H RftEWCIL Caaorel Muifir LLMtft B. ROOD, CarJaiieo Mtuiw Sworn lo an ubKr,k. kafor t.i. . U of , Match, JBjj, I Jl) W. a QUIVI V, Notary fusil. ATloet.'e 1000 PEE TELEPHONE rrlula Branch fi.-hanf . Atk for (he Ppartoirni i.r I'ennn Wantr4. r nhi Call Aft.r It p. M.i Editorial Department, A I linlle 1011 or Itil. OPTICtS . ' Main Office lTta as arnia Co. Bluffo U tau St. Sovtk aide 4111 I. Itih It. ..hi York 2.1 rlfik Ave. nahinttnn.-l3 0 St. - Chirsfo nto fuger t it, rsrn, rraoce ill juil bu lienor. Priceless Privilege of Speech. It i a.jragone conclusion tliat the four th rr Italy will be ratified when the final vote i taken in the senate. ' This it admitted, even by (lie 'irreconcilable,", who ee in the diminution of nitcrot in their attack the decision of the sen ators. Undeterred by this,' however, the verbal bombardment proceeds. A dispatch from Vth mgtoii , with reference to Thursday in the senate: "For more than three hours, in a senate chamber whkh most of the time was ail but de serted, Senator Kccd, democrat; of Missouri, as sailed both the four-power and naval treaties." It is, of little moment that the senator affects to see in these raits a menace to the United States; mat ne nowi mem to place our country in a position of helplessness before the world. Other senator?, whose judgment is as sound, and whose perception as acute as his, take the opposite stand, and look upon the treaties as harbingers of peace. ' Senator Reed shares with Senator Borah the latter' expressed doubt that Secretary Hughes fold the truth when he said, he wrote the four power treaty. Commenting;' on the secretary's letter to Senator Underwood, the Boston Tran script says: The four-power treaty is a bargain: it is ;thc price we pay for the termination of the Anglo-Japanese alliance; it is the price Great Britain and Japan get for ending their alliance. Prance ii more or less a silent partner, a part-. ,'ner upoif our insistence and in deference to our .wish. In support of the reasonableness of the price paid, Secretary Hughes has now ef fective! reinforced the arguments of Senator . .Lodge 'and Senator Underwood. ' t x-- .' .. . i .... .. n: . i - i. t -u aiguuitiu, tiuwoci, is sumucm iu men .the implacable mood of the opponents. Their attitude is One of unyielding hostility to any idea that contains a bargain between the United Statcs'atul another nation. In face of certain dc $cat,i they insist on the priceless right of speech, jibe Expensive delay of the country's business. A few weeks from now we will note 'Senator Reed on the stump in Missouri, urging that the repub licans be turned out of office because the present. congress has-not done everything the democrats laid out for its accomplishment. But he will not tell of the three precious hours he consumed, , haranguing empty seats and stirring up the dust 6f straw long since beaten to chaff. . v Road Work for Convicts. State Engineer Johnson has just made an an nouncement that wilt be the subject of some ; wonde.r- to most Xebraskans. It is to the effect .that, because of the lowered nrice of labor, it is i no longer profitable to employ convicts in road building. Contractors will prefer free labor at present prices, because the "overhead" on the convict labor secured from the state is too great. ' Without questioning the conclusion of the. state engineer, The Bee is minded .to ask a 4ues--,tion it deems pertinent. Why. may not the con victs be employed to build roads without inter vention of a contractor? I V Colorado has a remarkably fine system of highways built by men from its state prison at Canyon City, the work directed by the warden of the-prison. Other states have tried the plan, and generally it has worked well. Modern opin ion abhors the thought of men being held in idle ness in confinement, when they might be usefully employed, and equally repugnant is the thought of permitting a contractor to turn to his own profit labor that is in a large sense, enforced. A way' ought to be found .whereby Nebraska can employ convicts on road wofkj, under condi- ' tions .that will allow reasonable earnings to be. ! fcredited to. the 'men. In this. Way help could be civan the families of prisoners; 'or the prisoner himself be furnished with a fund to. start on when released.. If additional, legislation is needed, the next legislature should be advised Ot. tne tact ana '.the heeded law passed.. Nebraska. has a duty to .the men in prison, and ought, never again be ;to1d that convicts can not be employed on work for which they' are available because contractors io not find it profitable to use prison labor. "Balance of Power" in Politics. ')' A. C. Townley presented to North Dakota the same ''balance of power" plan he offered in Ne braska, and, according to .advices,, the idea is tcingspontaiwotisly rejected bV the. -leaguers up !hete.t They are in this much sound. "Boring from within" mayvbe good tactics in Europe, but it has no place in American party politics. A platform of principles, if it contains anything 'of merit,' deserves to be presented in the open, o those, w ho espouse its dogma may rally openly to its support.'. It is not at all singular that the chief support for , the Townley plan in Nebraska Emanates rfroni the paper whose principal owner ".is seeking a.third term something aever yet ac corded, a citizen of this i state in the United .States' senate. T In its plea that the third party ad vocates unite with "the progressive'' democratic party, it promises them only half a loaf, but pro vides that its preferred candidate for the United States senatorship will, if its advice is followed and the deal goes through, get a lot of votes he is not entitled to from people whose views and aspirations he does jtot represent nor even $3- ' Tathize with. The spfde'r inviting the fly to step inio.his parlor i a smpql of open-handed hos-tulafify-when' compirtd'to'this aUemptao get ineSepcnelent eu to s!!jf thmie!vi ith !es. rersts demotrits In rdr ta mur the Uf.er of vutorjr, Mr. J lays, gnj the Mowei. When Poitmiitrr Genera! 1ft) t took tin ti e active duties of his flier, the frit thing he dli H 9 rati toethr department liesdi an J tm J love j and tell them hi notions of how a pot r fttieoug'it to be run. 1 he public t;! Wei.ei I im for the Improvement he achieved snj for the reforms in tenlre h set under. my. No, as heid of th gfest moing picture iudu.tr), Mr, Hays Is repeating that operation. He ba had s.emblfd in meeting more movie sttis and dl rectors than ever were a.iembled In one pUee, and to them and through them to the public h (id: The fndu'try accepts the challenge in the demands c the American youth that its pic tures shall give the right kind of entertainment and instruction. Jt accepts the challenge In the righteous d-mind of American mothers that the entertainment and amusement of that youth he worthy of their value as the most potent factor in the country's future. . The opportun ity is great, and so in like measure is the re sponsibility, ihst responsibility is accepted. Now, if he rin make good en this as he did in his effort to humanite the postofficr, he wilt do a wonderful thing for the industry ts welt as for the public. No mistake is made at to the chat l'nge. The movie at such is on trial; it must justify itself to its right to exi.t or go down. Pictures have big place in the life of America, and for that reason the demand that they be clean is imperatively made. Co to it, Mr. Hays. We are strong for jour idea, and will back you up in your efforts to not only humanite but to deodorize the great indus try of which you are now head. The Husking Bee I Its lour Daij -Start It WiihaLauah Stop the Speeders. Eight culprits, two of them women, faced the police judge in Omaha on Friday, charged witft peeding. Each was fined, most-of them the merely nominal sum of $5. This proceeding will probably be repeated, day after day as the spring poes on and summer draws near, just as it hat been in the past. Fining speeders is not a suf ficient remedy for the offense. Exceeding the speed limit, involvet reckless driving; it impliet a disregard for law, shows lack of consideration for others, and above all has in it contempt for life and limb. The speeder is a potential mur derer. Many lives have been lost, many victims maimed and crippled, because some foolish driver has persisted in "stepping on the gas." Careful drivers are as much exposed ts pedestrians. Moreover, there is no good excuse for speeding. The utmost emergency does not warrant a driver in proceeding at the risk of accident to others as well as to himself. The Bee has often pro tested and will continue to protest until some plan is adopted and enforced to make the streets of Omaha safe at all times, and this objective will not be obtained until the speeder is elimi nated. It is up to the authorities to stop speed ing on the city streets. The Bee's Free Shoe Fund. In recording the fact that 480 children -were outfitted with good new shoes from the fund aised. through the agency of The Bee, this paper fdesires also to record that it merely was the agent. It laid before the good people of Ne braska the. facts,. organized the work of collec tion, and turned the money over to be. expended at the direction of a committee of teachers. Our part in the work was small; it was the generous response, of our readers that made possible the very gratifying result that is shown in the report, already published in the news columns. T" be sure, The Bee has a pardonable pride in the qual ity, of its readers, and the confidence they ex hibit in its management, for the ready .response made to the appeal is a proof that its purpose was understood because it was fairly presented the donors. They knew when they gave the money it would be expended with due care and without the meticulous ritualism that destroys the uses of charity by tubjecting it to an 'un charitable routine.. The Bee has a pride in its hare of the work, and passes on to its readers the greater share of the credit for the good that was done. - , Marriages made in France break down just like those made in Nebraska when the romance of war gives way to the cold facts of housekeep ing in peaee time. Charity workers are against pursuing the "panhandler," just as has been going on for a long, long time, and with about as much chance of winning. A California convict who invited the prosecut ing attorney to attend his execution ought to re member that they do hang murderen out there. " If the'debate on politics in Nebraska is dying down, you may ascribe the fact to the opening of the season for outdoor farm work. Getting jobs for jobless veterans ought to be little easier now, but it is no more important than it was months ago. Another theater mergeris proposed, but like all the rest, art has a place in line just behind the control of the box office. The auto, dealers are advised to forget 1921. That goes for all of us, but does not include its lessons.- " A girl in Emporia needs $141.08 a year to dress on, say the women, and they ought to know. If, it was publicity Matzenauer sought, she has no cause to worry. . Of course France will pay its debts; whoever doubted this? Simple Words and Simple Minds. It certainly begins to look as if the only way to reach the understanding of some of these sena tors is to write our treaties in words of one sylla. ble, words that are incapable of more than one meaning, no matter what distorted intelligences are brought to bear on them.. But if these sena tors have no common sense of their own perhaps he people m tne states they misrepresent have enough common sense and enough backbone to write to them and tell "them in pretty plain lan guage wffiit is expected of them. Here we have the greatest chance to ensure world peace that e have ever had, and yet it is being jeopardized by a handful of crossroads statesmen. Lef the people of those states speak up and tell these senators not to disgrace the United States in the eyes of the whole civilized world. New York Commercial. ; ' . HUMAN' NATURE. Tl b itf girl ttenograpber lias quite a clever hand, AM wlule the bos is watching her She types to heat the band: W hen her employer's Mauding near She nuke the old mill hum. . But when the bo tth disappear )ns and cnew t Her gum. I'he little mirror In her palm May show a shiney ior, , U so she powders it. nime Calm, . And plans her evening' clthe; The door it opened comet a breee, .The bos hat entered in. And then the falls upon the keys And makri an auiul din, ' t 1,'Fuvoi. The moral here it not t Maine The tteuo it a hirker. But jut to show that she's the unit At any other worker. PHILOSOPHY. t There are two ptople who don't have to worry about the bott. One is the man who keeps busy ana trie other it the bott himsell. To err it human at also it the alibi that fol lows the error. IT MADE A GOOD STORV, ANYWAY. Babe Ruth i-n't really goinx to get a bonus for each homer, but he it ture of an onus for each boner. 00 They now have revolving barber, poles. In the old pre-pro days we used to get the same ef fect from a stationary one. . ooo AND THINK OF THE HONOR. There's a literary guy they call Thilo, Whote column stand out like a silo, Thilo cops all the "nion," s . While we do it for fun, But at that it is well worth our whil o. Tim. , ooo "What are you doine so lone at vour mirror. old dear?" "Oh, just killing time," answered Hie matron. as she proceeded to massage out a couple of wrinkles that were beginning to show. 0 0 0 SUCH IS FAME. ' .' ' A prophet is not without honor except in his own country, or words to that general effect. Wed like to call Charlie Black s posttnasterial attention to the gloomy fact that a recent letter addressed to the "Husking Bee." Omaha, Neb., was returned to writer, marked "Unclaimed." ' The persevering writer, Dr. R. H. Foster, Tildcn, Neb., remailcd it in a new envelope ad dressed to "Philo." care Omaha Bee, which was, due to the perspicacity of the local authorities, received, hut at the same time the genial doc ex pressed his surprise at their' failure to fathom the first address. How to Keep Well r oa. w, a. i.va.sj Quaauaaa caaomiaf krilaot. aaaitaiioa a itrtHM ol o1 . aukaiiil.a lo Dr. E.aaa fc raaO., ( fa Ma, will fc aaa,4 aaiawllr. kiatl to ' 'pm llauialw, kaio o iaaB' oatS,a4 Mxlaya i aailaaW. Of, ill oal naka 0 ai.iaa.i. aior Oiaawiko la taai.iau.l t m.m Adai.M laltai M aart of Iko feto, I0rihi: Dr. Foster submitted the following contrib.: lar Husker: Our 6-vear-oId daughter came home from school yesterday and sang part of "America" at follows: "Land where my father died. Land where the Pilgrims cried." There are many versions, but this is not so bad. Ked iLit- , . BUT THEY HAVEN'T. -ALL. GOT. WORK. , I tell you -what I think about The Soldiers" Bonus Bill. 'Twill make some fellows worthiest' ' That could be something at will;' . Few fellows work when dollars come A floating 'round the. place. And I just tell you, old man Work't The only saving grace. Carol 'Rickcrt. . CHIRPJNG A CHINFUL. There isn't a minute in a man's life that two couldn't be used tbta better advantage. Espe cially is this so wbetj being chased by a motor cycle cop, or running to eaten tne last street car. t i nree-in-vne. Persons who have missed their calling: Rev. Vfnnivmker of Benson.- And. I ask to know, why do not Mr. Hallawav of the Brandeis Stores and Mr. Hallback of the Nat. , Fur Co. start a taxi ine? : '. ;. waque. . Guv at the Methodist conference at Atlantic City. N. J., declares that sin is .the-real cause of the high cost of living. Well,- we ve always contended that profiteer ing is a sin. w w - ISNT IT THE STUFF? Fine feathers may not make fine birds, Nor anything like that, But they make a nifty showing on A flapper's new spring hat. ooo UNIMPORTANT ITEM. Adam was a model husband, but he never had to accompany his wife to a church supper. ',o "Prohibition is working fine," optimistically chirps a "dry" campaigner. J v Yeah, and tnanic goodness, so is xnc naiu uuer, o .-'. .' THE POOR PAY MORE. We see one of those rich old gents Whose coin sure makes a hit, He tips the porter lcents And gets away with it. AF'KER-THOUGHT: The umbrella dealer sees the silver lining in the .darkest cloud. . - . .... ...... PHILO. HEALTH OF FOREIGN BORN. fine .,!. hi fur the imr'.iiiiit'y htstl iIkuiIi litta if -fiti mrr ii Mii ii( im, a sHiria. fey the p- I't-iia on irtoiUa. u i ho iii.'ri-auis iiMi'Hia ii f ur ln'Piilalicni In-. Iiiiiins In two k-roupa in wii; 1Iua horn abroad and tho ililldrrn ir Hie fir nn born. In Sew York elate tli two tiottpa limho up n.ily two llili.ta of th )iiiul.itiiiti: In tviinasl- .11114 nearly nucha If of It. tublln fuuiil Hint pcnplrt of ttieao twu aruuii dio on earlier than to thf nutlvv. At rnialn Ufa tit death rt of trio toman Imrn and Ou-lr children I more tlutn 60 per crrif hik'hrr limn that of tho nmlvea. Thin information led liulilm to iinly (ho health of certain forrlmi emu pa more rlnoely and (hit article i hemic wriin-n to let tho meirbero or tliuM! truupa know wn.vt rut been lOllllil out. lift tho rent of tnv raJr ntiit hero end turn to tho aponlriK page nil the aranrttW column. Tho Kiiclltfh. Sooti-h and Welah lifive ahnut threo ymr' )m Ilfo ex- lrttmy than io the rollta In th old rountry. Their- expoi'ttntey la about the rame amount below ttmt Of nnilvo born Americana. They aro eanoi-lMlly aubjvrt lo cannr-r. heart fliKi'iiKp, pneumonia and vlolrnce, Of thiae, by Improvement In thlr llvlna; Imbltt, thy can make Kulmtiimiiil Improvement fn . the heart dlm-aae and pneumonia rat. They have lea than the avaraee amount of ronaumptlnn. Maybe inoir from air Habits help them in mat nem. An Trleh child 10 veart of -ace. Ilvlnp In tlila country, haa a llfo ex pectancy or only B.7 yeart. which la 14 veara lest than that of a native American. No other radii 1 arotin In America haa bo low a life expectancy. The death rut of the Irian la high from every principal cause of death, but tney ufror eapeclalty from consump- ion am pneumonia. Our fellow citizens of Irian birth and Irlxh parentage ahould keep out of crowiia; leaii open air lives and avoid colds and support tho con- unifitlon cruaadea vigorously. Tho life expectancy, of the Ger. mans In thla country is three and a half years leva than that of the members of tho native atock. They ufror greatly from heart dlseafar nd Blight's disease. They will do well to look to all those, habits and customs' which tend to inereaae the wear on the heart and kidneys. The Italian man seems to fit Into American life better than the Ital- ittn woman. The life expectancy of the Italian child is almost as good as that of tha native born. The Italians In America are quite subject to pneumonia. They can Improve matters in that-field materially. They are not very subject to con sumption, cancer, heart disease and rsrignts aisease. . Our campaigns for weighing and measuring school children , must take into account the natural short ness of stature of the child of Ital ian stock. The Russian Jews have a longer life expectancy than the native born Americans. They have a compara tively low consumption rate. On the other hand, they are more prone to Bright's disease and diabetes. . . , Sonilq Dementia. Mrs. L. TV writes: ''Is. a man past SO who sits and talks to pictures, also tries to feed them, demented, or 1s. this dne to old age? . "Is he liable to become violent, as A3 VV iB Keep Faith With Middies , While it is a necessity that congress cut ex penditures to the bone this country is not yet so far gone that it can not fulfill the engagements which in honor it is bound to fulfill with the young men of the graduating class of the naval academy, who have given four years .of their lives to preparing themselves to defend their country upon the high seas. They should he given their commissions and ' put to duty and thereby perfected in their training, perhaps thereby giving as' many older officers a well earned rest with their families on shore pay. To fail in commissionirfg these young men is not the square thing. The Chronicle has frequently declared its earnest desire to see all machinery of war on land or sea scrapped and the books and blue prints burned. But everybody knows, that it; would be stupendous folly to assume as' yet that there are to be no more wars when there are senators, even in this country, who' are op posing the ratification of an agreement' which is the first Itep toward an assurance of peace. It takes years to produce trained naval officers. For the present we should conserve our supply. San Francisco Chronicle. . s ' A Way to Clean the Slate- Why not figure up the per capita war debt and then let each man pay up his share. or .w ork it out? Then he wouldn't have the worry of it on' his mind. Los Angeles Times. '-" -j. ; (Tho Bm offers Ita eolnmna freely to Ita readrra who rara to diacnta any public question. It requests that lettara be eaaonabty brtef. not nvar toft tvnrria. 1, alo Insiata that the noma of the wrlt.r accompany each letter, not necetsarflr for. publication, but that the editor muv liiiow n-ith whom be la deallnr. The Bi-e does not pretend to endorae or accept vietra or opinion eTpreeaed by corre apondenta In. the Letter Box.) Sugar Beet Questions. Morrill, Neb., March llf To the Editor of The Bee: An advertise ment appeared in the Morrill Mail, signed by the Great Western Sugar company, which was printed to in duce farmers to grow sugar beets for the season ot 1922 at the schedule figured out by themselves it is very interesting. . And I would like to have you gather from any source available the following information so that I can in turn inform growers that are kicking on the contract: 1st. Why should their averago sale price.be $4.53 per cwt. for the 1921 beet crop when trie lowest fig ure at which we as an organization have i been .able' to purchase sugar that they- manufacture,' hauled di rect from their warehouse to the store by truck (20 miles), has been $6.72? 2nd. Why in this district where their advertisement states the beets contained 16.76 per cent sugar or 33512 pounds per ton do they wish the farmer to-grow them for $5.28 (according to what it would be un der their schedule at the price they really say they received) when the tariff on the lowest sugar entering the United States- (from Cuba) is $1.60 per cwt. or $5.3632 on the same amount of sugar as is obtained from a ton of beets in this section? 3rd. If the grower (or other con sumer) pays 8.32 cents more on each 335.2 pounds .of sugar by reason of the tariff on sugar than the Great Western Sugat- company pays the grower for a ton of beets which con tains 335.2 pounds of sugar, what would be the value '.of raw sugar in New YorJc? (Please do not take into consideration the freight on raw sugar from New York to Scottsbluff, which is an added- tariff, nor the market price of raw sugar In New York, which still has to be refined before if is a marketable product. You might be giving the grower the advantage, an advantage in argu ment not due him.) 4th. Are the good people of the United States justified In paying 8.32 cents in tarift on sugar on each 335.2 pounds of sugar! (one ton of beets) than Jne Great Western Sugar com pany.is willing; to . pay the grower who raises this sugar in the raw? 5th; Are the salaries of their of ficials as high as they should be whenjou take into consideration the efficiency maintained? 6th. -Of what -value Is the beet pulp and molasses from a ton of beets? ...'. . . 7th. Are growers justified in ask ing that the Great Western Sugar company halve, the price of raw sugar in New York 'plus the tariff for the protection of 'the American grower? ' ? 8th. If they cannot pay the grower more than the tariff on the sugar is their existence Justified? ' Are their officials efficient? i 9th. Should the Rocky Mountain Beet Growers' association stand to gether -as a solid body that the growers as a wholp get a little more lian Oie UrlCJ 03..JU,rOKTSR, ho gri try rviied at timea? MioiiI.i ho t.n iiiiiit-r reairaint or iiii-iii.ei i,n,M(ii..n - I l,lkt it he Iuim fu. , .It qi,ie III the iciluy f ,i, , fi,, tm4l tttih'. r'rluluil Bid i.-Mlt i Hiukt furtiiB of hiMniuiy. Tlua tuait'a ut tii.il.ea a dhifnnaia ilf nil d.nioiiu i.itilmlile. for. bomb wiih una tmiii of brain I rouble! ,-. . n-M-a1!,!, na a, iiur, mp out ,r no iu. 8. K will.: What l tho nor nul dejlh rate for pneuinmilit ? innan, H'li4t .r-r -.-iii of ,4e reault finally V" ItKfl.V. Yatiin very tnu. li in different opl. deiulta, In different ea.ro, In differ. 'lit ce IH-rloila, and will, Dm differ- rut Mima ot piHMII.mnl I. Aienifiiinr Ii, f ihime who have U,UlliOiim Unit 10 dennlle rttoiiKh lo be riH-ccnu.-ii mb mii Ii, uhout one llfjti dl and four-fifths recoer. Miit Tnul lUtl Wrtiliia:. c. K. C. writem "l have a boy of i j who iiiib iit-fti unable, nt Inter- vuib, an ma lire to control hit water. "itecciitly thla wenkner appear inoMt every night while a!eeu. n appears to bo in sood health other, wine," UKrLV. When bed wettlnor terhli brvnnd piiluriy, there i generally some 1'hyt.liul or nientul fault, and thla should be diagnosed and treated. Among caiiaea urf stone. iiarayiieH. congenital deformity, disenae of tho Pituitary noiiy. fecb em ndadneaa. ci ci i main, , Harmonize Your Home with a Ikautijul Brunswick "Console" ' (Playt alt makes of Recordi without apociol attachment.) c have them in all Tcriod types and wooJ.. Queen Anne $225.00 Colonial . .' 250.00 Stratford 300.00 Cambridge 350.00 (Pa ymiDli to meet your r." quiremontt a e copied.) NOTICE We will lake your olil-fanhloncd Vjirijtht rhoiioKrniih in trade at prettnt day value. The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Street USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULTS ELDREDGE-REYNOLDS CO. The. Store of iBpecUtty Shops. SMART TAILORED BLOUSES $.95 Spring FOOTWEAR to fit all requirements WHETHER it be for sport wear'or:for dress, you may be assured that we . have the newest styles. Here are two spe cials for Saturday.- - . - One popular model a " clever looking: patent, one-strap pump with Hat heel. . Priced Sat urday, at ' $6.00 Black' patent and 'gray suede are combined in a one-strap pump, with Spanish heel. Priced at $8.00 Shoe Shop :Main Floor BLOUSES, too, have followed the path of tailored styles and are. to be found in a large variety of at tractive styles. The hoavy crepe de china moiicli with high neck: tucked fronts, low neck with round, tuxedo or V shape; or plain tailored with liny tucks and narrow plaited edge, are very low priced for Saturday at $4.95, Included at thia price are a few lace trim med models in white, bisque, navy, and black. Bloute Shop Main Floor Toilet Goods Specials to Please Milady Single mesh hair nets 49c dozen. Double mesh hair nets 69c dozen. Coty'g Poudre Lorigan 72c a box. : Bocabelli Castile Soap 3 cakes 25c. Bocabelli Castile Soap 3 small cakes 25c. Palm Olive Soap 3 bars 25c Haskin's Hardwater Castile 3 bars 25c '' Djer Kiss Face Powder 39c: Gillett Blades 6 for 37e. , ........ Toilet Goods Shop Main Floor SILK S WEATERS AVE"RY. special purchase enables us to offer these notable values at $22.50 to $35.00 Fashionable models In dip-on and tuxedo etyles. Excellent quality, shape-retainin silks, ill a wide variety of the most favor ed colors, including black, white, 3ockey , ' and brown as well as the popular Navajo weave in black and white or navy and white. This i your opportunity to secure that silk sweater' you have wanted for ao lonjr. ., .Sweater Shop Main Floor SILK HOSIERY . . Have you ever worn a pair of . Gotham Gold Stripe hose? If you have, you will be glad to know we have a new shipment for Saturday; and if ou haven't, you should surely tr a pair. They are full fashioned, not just ordinary silk hose. Ask to see them. They ore priced from $2.00 up. SILK HOSE, $2.95 Pure silk hose, ailk feet, with pointed heels and silk to the top. in lace effects, shadow stripes and lace insets. Colors of black, hrown.' navy, white and Russian calf. Regulsrly priced up to $440. SILK HOSE,' $1.59 Corded lsce hose, lisle hem top, in alt the new -shades, including; sand, nude, taupe, brown, piping rock ehsdes, f-,T . . j J1 :-- Hose Shop Main Floor SPRING HATS $7.50 $10 A LL set for Fash- J ion's Spring Fes tival. - Hats so gay and colorful that they seem like Spring themselves. V Soft crushable sport; models of felt, straw, tweed, and ribbon ; smart little turbans of silk or visca braid; flower banked hats in fact, hats to suit every fancy. . - Special Saturday, in two ' groups- 1 ; $7.50 and $10.00 . t - Hat Shop Seconal Floor V ) If