e-". ff ) Masons Convene Pi Nte for 65th Annual ' Communication v, Over 100 Rrprcicntaiivei Nebraska Lodge Expected to Attend Session in Omaha. i 1 he largest grand lodge srisiou in the history of N'ebraka iton con vened at Masonic temple, Nineteenth .14 l)nnslai yesterday wonting for the . o.mIi annual communication. Grand . Secretary Francis E. White estimates llut over 4(W rcprcM-nta-tivcs from Ntbrska lodge will be present at the meetings, which con tinue through fhuraday. One hundred and seveniy-five ma ten-elect received the patt master'i degree at a ipecial session Monday evening. A regular school of in .miction alto was held Monday morning by assistants to the grand custodian. In the afternoon oeorge XV. Liningcr lodge No. -'08, Omaha, exempliiicd the conferring of the master mason degree on an actual candidate. Yesterday's program consisted of the opening of the grand lodge by licputy Gravid Matter Edward M. Wcllman, a reception of all past grand masters and the reception of the present grand matter, Lewis E. Smith. An address of welcome, the ad dress of Grand Master Smith and ( .I'ports of the grand officers con rviunea ine morning program. At 12.30 the dinner of the Ne braska Veteran Freemasons associa tion was held. The afternoon and evening were given . to business sessions. ' Business meetings will occupy' all day today and Ihursday morn' ing. Installation of the grand of ficera will be held Thursday after noon. .' .. i Labor Denies Bigelow Dictates Its Politics Lincoln. June 6. (Special Tele gram.) Havelock local federation of 1 . labor post No. 1, in resolutions adopt ed denies the right of Anson- H. fligelow, Omaha, and Frank Coffey, Lincoln, to speak for labor and say labor is opposed to the Wray-Nor-tou combination for United States -'senator and governor respectively. ; The resolutions assert that this is i the only practicable combination to win at the polls and condemn alleged " derogatory statements relative t the , , character of Arthur G. Wray. ':. Continuing, the resolutions assert that if the fight on Wray and Nor ton is continued in the third party ranks political control of state ma chinery will be vestea in the hand3 of one of the old parties, Exjjert at. Bakers' Meeting ' I Showi Cooking Methods An expert baker, giving demon strations of the best way to make the best things to eat, is a special ture of the annual meeting ot the braska Bakers association at Hotel Castle. More than ISO master bakers from Nebraska, Iowa and neighbor-j ing states are present. ! Sam T. Getz is eivinsr his short course in .baking- under auspices of the American Retail Bakers associa tion. The short .course and conven tion follow a three weeks' period of training, at which 42 embryo bakers were present. , - The convention will continue until Thursday evening, ending with an outing at Krug park. . Graham Declares Wife Hid Illness Before Wedding Howard B. Graham, president of the Graham Ice Cream company, in an answer filed yesterday to his wife's suit for divorce, alleges that she was in ill health when ho mar ried her, but that she concealed this fact from him. He spent thousands of dollars trying to cure her, he says. He asks . that she be allowed not more than f 100 a month and that he be given custody sof their son'.' ' Mayor Talks at Convention. An address by Mayor Dahlman marked, the ninth annual convention of the Retail Harness Dealers Asso ciation of Nebraska at the opening meeting Tuesday afternoon at Hotel Rome, t David Larson, commissioner of the- Omaha Chamber of Com merce, ! also spoke. A ; banquet, at which John W. Gamble, vice presi dent of the First National bank, was scheduled to talk; was held last night. Funeral Directors Meet rhe opening session of the 37th annual convenh'o of the Nebraska Funeral Directors association was called Jo order yesterday morning by President E. D. Ltindak, of Pierce, in, the Auditorium. . The! convention is" combined with an exhibit of motor hearses, ambulances, caskets and all ki.nds of funeral' supplies. Union High to Go on ' Parents in school districts Nos. 1 and 5 'of Sarpy county defeated a measure to abandon the Union High school in Bellevue at a meeting Mon day night. About 250 were present. i a Nowhere By RUBY M. AY RES. ImU4 frees lel4a,) f, MM If feet Mevlf i ft, I, (e stelfciew abas In Ike ra km aet Road Conditions (Fornlahed' by tha Omaha. Auto Club.) Lincoln highway, nit: Roads food to Cedar Baplas. Call at Cedar Rapids Mo toring; Association for ; best road from there to DeWitt. Lincoln Highway, west: Roads fair to grood to Chyenne, O. Ik D. highway; Good through to Iener. - In leaving Omaha Omaha take Dodge Street road to lft miles, then south into .Millard. 'ornhusker highway: Good. V . O Street road: Good. 8. V. A.: Good. - maha-Topeka highway: Good to state line. Omaha-Tulsa highway: Good to the state line. No report front Kansas. Meridian highway: Fin through Ne- braska. George Washington highway: Good te Sioux City. Black Hills trail: Good to Norfolk. River to River road: Good to Set Moinea. Outer Battlefield highway: ' Good hroagh Iowa and South Pakota, Xxcel- it is atretch.n. King of Trails, north: Road good te Moh City with exception of a short V stretch this side of Sioux City,: where grading ia being done. , King of Traits,. south: Roads good te Hiawatha. CMeago-Onaha Shortltne: Roads a lit , tie rough at Atlantic; being dragged to day. - Otherwise road fine with exception of a six-mile stretch east of Newton. Ia. I. O. A. Shortline: Good. Bin Grass road: Good.... ' i Weather reported clear and warmer at rery point, with ladice.tkma for continued dear and warmer, . mio. who is tmk Toar. tweet tnglrer. areme gjagiua liiaaaa eareei eluska Utile a I is Mewe e mm4 aalrklr Iraaeva eitea PI well slreee and tee) leeae awe. - In " ek-ee ya tha ralui kseauiare aaui eaMliail ' fee to pay fee M. hoi te Mag billy W4 lie Ma inat eke to mm peg. gat. Wllk I hie rekatf mm hM ay and tMee prereede eee t ma lata a snalae aeeldeat la whir a, fleaer tewuia wlih a IHIIe aaby be ia bt arm. . rmm aee by lbs ear. .New wHa the aiwyl She thought of the aturdy little boy who had Hood o patiently efineinn' to the woman't akiru. tuck ing a thumb, and eyeing the crowd o solemnly, Un, it couia not, couia not be hef She forced her way through the crowd. fl the center lying in the wet road.. lialMiipported by the uronsr arm of a kindly policeman, lav the white-faced flower teller. The tray of violett was strewn all around her. Down her ghastly face ran a flow dream of blood. Her lips were parted, her breath came in gaspi. The green-painted car had come to a standstill just behind her. The chauffeur wat leaning forward from the wheel. He looked pale and agitated. A tall man in evening dress, wearing an eyeglass and a flower in hit coat, pushed his way past, and stooped over the fallen woman. Is she much hurt, constable?" he asked. His voice was deeply concerned.-' The fair-haired girl looked at him mechanically. It was the man who had trodden on her hat, and afterwards offered her rr.ojiey. ... . The child was crouched on the ground by the side of the injured woman cobbing1 with fright. Mum Mum Mum he sobbed. He pulled at her torn dregs with tiny fingers. The woman opened her eyes-r-she made a feeble effort to draw tiim to her, but failed. The tall man stoop ing above her leaned nearer perhaps the saw the kindly concern in his. eyes she made him a breathless ap- lake care ot mm on, take care of " her voice trailed away into eternal silence. The constable rose to his feet, pressing back the crowd. The tall owner of the green car stood looWng down at the dead woman with dazed eyes. For moment the chili, ii forgotten. Tin girl with the fair hair crept nearer 10 hi in. Timidly the put her hand out and touched him. lie look td around ptteously. "Mum-Mum-" The girl caught him up in her arms and held him fiercely to lie r. The long line outside the theater had begun to move in.a People were scattering to their butiueta. After all, there wat nothing particularly in teresting in a dead flower girl tt wat her own fault for running iu front ot the motor, The girl with the fair hair stood for a moment looking around her. No body teemed to have noticed that the picked up the child. Suddenly the turned .and ran across the street, holding the boy in her arm. He clung to her neck with tin v hands, his wet cheeks pressed to ners. . . . Mie ran on. on. on. Mie teemed to glut strength, from the contact of hi. little body. She never stopped until they reached a quiet street some distance from the theater, Then she paused and looked around tier, but there was nobody in stgnt, She kitted the soft check against her; own passionately and walked on. Presently they came again to a busy thoroughfare.' The girl hailed a bus and climbed inside, the boy in her lap. His head nodded drowsily against her. She took off his ugly hat, smoothed his brown curls, and pillowed his cheek comfortably. When they left the bus she still carried him. They were in a poor neighborhood now, with rows of ugly, uninteresting looking houses on either side. I he girl stopped at one, a house with' a flight of stone steps up to the front door, and a glaring gas jet in the fanlight, which showed the figures of a painted number U. She felt in her pocket for a key, opened the door and entered softly. A short, stout woman with one eye met her in the narrow hall. She carried an armful of washing. "I didn't expect you 'ome so soon," she said tartly, seeing the girl. "I 'ope you've brought some money." "No . . . " The girl came forward. The woma.i caught sight of the child in her arms. Her one eye grew wide with amazement. , ' Well. I never. Oose?and where on hearth did 'c come from?" A The girl lauehcd. She stooped and kissed the flushed face of the sleeping boy. Out of the nowhere,' she said tremulously. "Out of -the nowhere that's where he came from, Mrs. . Mrs, Higgt kept lodging house at No. I J. 111 the quiet, dreary: subur. nan street, where all the nouses looked alike, Tha prices of the roonu varied ac cording to the degree of comfort and cleanliness, and the houe was year ly always tilled witl) float sam and jetsam ot lite; derelict men and wo men who bad no homes and no money. Mrs. Higgt jiever asked for a ref erence. Possibly the knew that if she got them they would be worth iest. She took a week's rent in ad vance and shut her one eye to tha various drawbacks her lodgers in variably possessed. (twetflaaew iaTb Bee Tomerrew.) Common Sense Art You Thinking Too Much for Your Children? "It Is the hardest thins? in the world," said a mother, the other day, "to know exactly what to say to a child to have the right effect in after Corns? just say Bluejay to your druggist Stops Pain Instantly The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain in stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out Male in two forms a. Colorless, clear liquid (one drop does it I) and in extra thin plasters. Use whichever form you prefer, plasters or the liquid the action is the same. Safe, gentle. Made in a world-famed laboratory, bold by all druggists. fVswf RVi( Bautr A Black. Chieaeo, Depf, i far voitiaMe too. " Correct Care oftkt FfW lite. "All my life I have suffered because those who might have ex plained things did not do it.' As toon at my daughter wat old enough to undmtand words, I told her to come to me always and ask about things she could not understand. And now she won't think things out for herself calmly leaves it all to me," That it rather hard on a mother who wants t be fair to her child. So frequently was the idea borne In on the child's consciousness that "mother would explain," that now the child makes no effort whatever lo think or do things for herself. It might have been better if the thought impressed on the child bad been, "Make every effort you can, first, and then atk the Lord to help you. If you are in earnest, maybe He will let me help you in answer to your prayers." Children should be taught to use their own gray matter. Not all children have it to eaty as the cue mentioned. It is perfectly logical to a child to take all it can easily, but if it wants a thing hard' enough, it will work for it, and that is the spirit to culti vate. (Copyright, in: ) Read the Bee Want Ads next. Oraabi Capitalist Must Pay $18,000 far Oil Firm Stock Paul llorbach, Omaha capitalist, mutt pay $18,000 more on a ulock of stock he purchased in the Okla n.ade Oat and Ctaremort Oil com panies, according to a verdict di rected by Federal Judge Woadrough yesterday, Horbach, with several others, bought the stock in the halcyon oil days immediately after the war, exe cuting contract. He refuted to make the latt payment of $l5,7eO, charging fraud in the sale of the stock. The remainder represents in terest on the amount due. Attorneys for Iforbarh filed notie of an ap peal to higher courts. UorbaeH bought the stock front r-d J, Coyle, EUasser and Rylaudrr File for State Legislature A. W. EUaaier. South Ninth street, filed yesterday afternoon for the democratic nom.uMion tor state representative from the Thirteenth district, C M. Ry Under. 11 10 North Thir. ty-sixth street. 'riled for th repub lican nomination for state senator (torn the Sixth district. II. if. Claiborne, 5J0 South Twen ty-hfth avenue, filed for tha repub. bean nomination for county attorney. J i Had Your Iron Today? ' ; r - ' s . Let's Have; f . ..... - Raisin Br ead Tonight HOW long since you've' had delicious raisin bread since jou've tasted that incomparable flavor? V v Serve a loaf tonight No need to bake it. Just, telephone your grocer or ' a bakery. Say you want "full-fruited bread gener ously filled with luscious, seeded, Sun-Maid Raisins." The flavor of these raisins permeates the loaf. A cake-like daintiness makes every slice a treat Serve it plain at dinner or as a tasty, fruited breakfast toast. Make delicious bread pudding with! left over slices. Use it all. You need not waste a crumb. x Raisin bread is luscious, energizing, iron food. So it's both good and good for you Serve it at least twice a week. Start this good habit in your home today. But don't take any but a real, full-fruited genuine raisin bread. , - .Your dealer will supply if if you insist SUN-MAID Seeded RAISINS Make delicious bread, piesy puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send for free book of tested recipes. .. Sun-Maid Raisin Growers MimbershipUfiOO DEPT. N-376-2, FRESNO, CALIF. . rn everydodyS store- Every Wednesday Is Housefurnishing Day at "Everybody's Store." We list here a few of the Many Household Needs That Are Attractively Priced. Soap Specials Lucara Bath Tablets, earna- tion, geranium, elder flower; 3 Sot 28c. . Lamoa Craarn Soap, doz., 69c. Palm Olive Soap, 3 for 25c. Rota, Buttermilk and Glycerine Toilet Soap, dozen, '50c. Auditorium Bath Soap, 3 for 25c. Bocabelle Castile, 3 for 25c. Haskins Hard Water Castile Soap, Sbars for 25c. Buriesi-Naah Msla Fleer 000 Vestees : Collars Pretty and fresh looking when made of fine laces or of sheer organdie that is of Quak- . cr plainness or vivid with a dash of color. Very tgood values. Priced, 75c . Collars Cuffs Collars, 'cuffs, vestees, and dainty corsage bouquets made of ' satin ribbons will be dis posed of at clearance price. Many qualities and sizes in cluded. Each, 10c French Veiling A very good quality of French motif veiling with col-' ored dots in all shades; priced, Yard, 60c Burtesa-Naah Mala Fleer " o o o New Forsythe Blouses Priced $3.00 Summer weather demands many just such blouses as theseblouses that can be tubbed and come .through fresh and lovely. Made as y o u J i ke them, with "V" neckline or Pinafore collar. . For trimming there is narrow pleating of self material or in color. Un trimmed models are made with mannish bosom front. Sizes 32 to 46. Burfflia-Nasli BIoum ShopThird Floor Notion Needs Oceea Pearl But teas, also Orioatal Pearl, all sites, per, card, 5c to ISc. 0. N. T. Crochet Cettea, bale, 7c. Hair Net, double mesh, cap and fringe, 3 for 25c . Salco Sanitary Napklas, dozen, 39. Dr. Parker aad Hickory WaUts,. ages 2 to 14 years, each, 39c. Hair Rolls, each, Sc. Rick Rack Braid, bolt, 10c. Btirfees-Neeh Mala Fleer OOO' Household Needs Floor Mop Triangle ' shape, with wide spread. Cleans and polishes with same stroke. Priced 57c "X Floor Wax ".; Johnson's one -pound can . Special, 59c Floor Broom Made of selected corn, sewed four . times. Smooth handle. ' Each, 45c Bdrfess-Naak Fourth Floor : Mm - I3 ooo Chinaware t Low Prices Iced Tea Sets . Set of six colonial ice teas, six coasters and six sippers. i . Set complete, $1.50 Covered pitcher, 6 fancy 12 oz. glasses, vintage etching. Set complete, $2.95 Our Bridal Sets Our short sets from open stock patterns have proven eo popular that we continue to offer this cozy arrangement for two. Two dinner plates, 2 fruit plates, 2" bread , a n d butter plates, 2 tea cups and saucers, 1 gravy boat, 1 platter, 1 vegetable dish. Tinted Breakfast Sets -' Attractive new breakfast sets are decorated in colors to match the breakfast room: Shades of green, yellow, blue, and rose. 35 Pieces, $16.50 ; Burges-Nash China Shop Fourth Floor Curtain Needs Hemstitched Voile Fine quality of this "much depended on" curtain material in white and ivory, 36-inch width, 2-inch tape edge on sides. Yard, 39c Blocked Voile : , Various sizes of dainty white voile in the popular blocked pattern. An unusual value. Yard, 39c Curtain Shades Oil opaque shade on Harts horn rollers are priced at $1-05. Dark green shades, a splen did quality, 36x6 size, $1.05. Small charge for cutting down. Tuscan Panels Beautiful patterns, trimmed with 6-inch motifs and 4-inch ' brillion fringe at bottom. Each, $3.95 - urteee-Nash Fourth Floor OOO Household Needs Lawn Hose Of best qual ity corrugated rubber. Is -inch size i 12c ft H-inch size 14c ft. ; -4-inch size 16c ft Couplings free on 50-ft lengths Galvanized Pails Extra heavy 12 quart pail, with wood-grip handle. Each, 33e Burfess-Nash Fourth Floor OOO Our Special Refrigerator $33.50 One Minute Washer, 44' Wear-Ever1 Aluminum Preserving Kettles Limited Six-quart size & 1 OQ Ti'mo (Cover 30c extra) P X eeSeJJ X X, , - Eight-quart size Utter (Cover 35c extra) $1.49 We especially feature a 100-pound side icer, made' with oak finish case in three door style. White enamel provision chamber. Burgess-Nash 4th Floor Buy One Today All Our "Wear-Ever" at 20 Off Burfess-Nash Fourth Floor " Vial -VOL"! You may select one of these popular elec tric washers at most moderate pricing. Easy payment terms, too, may be arranged fo your convenience. $79.50 to $128.50 Burfess-Nash 4th Floor ' New Summer Footwear Smoked Elk Sport Oxford Smoked elk oxford with brown calf saddle. Soft toe and red rubber sole and heels. Pair, $7.50 Elk and Patent Oxford White or pearl elk with tip anft lace stays of black patent. ,, Flapper heel, heavy leather ' sole. Pair, $9.00 White Nile Cloth Oxford ' For street or business wear. Narrow or wide toe last Flat indh heel or Cuban heel $6.00 to $8.00 Burteea-Naeh Shea Shoe Main Floor '- w 150 Dress Lengths Each, $1.85 i npuh pretty 8Umm material for a dress at 51.85. One -may have many pretty, cool-looking dresses at such alittle cost. A choice of thesf serviceable materials - Imported Scotch gingham : Two-ply dress voiles Very fine embroidered broche in newest designs and colors a rare bargain. No C O. D.'s No Refunds No Mail Orders Buraaa-Naeh Reel Arrow Booth Downstairs Store I