Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BRIEF CITY NEWS “Townsend's for Sporting Goods.” Lighting Fixtures—Burgess-Granden. Eave Root Print It—Now Beacon Press. Clan @ordon's celebration of Burns at Swedish Auditorfum, Jan. %, \C0ST OF OIL GOES UP; BURNERS 0UT {Those Who Failed to Make Contracts Fire, tornado, automobile, burglary in-| for 0i] Find It to Be a Great surance. J. H. Dumont, Keeline Bldg. Expense Now, Garvin Buys Frame Building—Pmma | | Taylor has wold to Naney M. Garvin the | I§ COSTING SOME $2 PER DAY‘ frame bullding at 2112 Burt street for .000, “Today's Movie Program” classifiel | The advance in the price of ofl is something that has brought grief to section today. It appears in The Bee | EXCLUSIVELY, Find out what the va-| & |8T6¢ number of the people of rious moving plicture theaters offer. | Omaha who installed oil burners last | Gets Divoros and Allmony — Mrs. | (211, and this fact alone has cnuledf Katerine Dufek was awarded a divorce | & Ereat many to go back to burning | from Joseph D, Dufek on grounds of | coal in their furnaces. | cruelty and non-support and $2,000 ali- mony in district court. | U Y L VSN (Se craze for installing oil burners was at the top notch, representatives of | By $heié Batercs the ofl companies followed the men re En —W. A, Plel, 1802 Farnam street, informa the police that | " 10 "Ore putting in the burners and his drug store was broken into Monday | T08de contracts with consumers at night, the place ransacked and a quantity | 4% cents: per gallon for the distillate, of cocaine and morphine stolen. the by-product, to be used in the Garvey is Convelescent—Charles M.|burners. All at once the companies ‘arvey, manager of the Puritan Laundry | ceased making these contracts and company, who has been critically 1ll With | ng 114ividuals who falled to got Olan Gordon's cel:bration of Burns at Swedish Auditorium, Jan. 2. R neumonia at his home, 443 North Thirty- eighth avenue, is now convalescent Three Are Fined — Frank Degan, ‘Twentieth and Clark streets, charged With keeping a disorderly house, was fined $25 and costs in police court. Gust Sfamadas, 7 South Thirteenth street, charged with the same offense, was fined $10 and costs, and Mrs. H. Harding, 1121 Douglas street, $25 and costs, suspended rentence. Heold for Having Opium—Bessie Wii- son, Mamie Moore and Jess Nolan, all colored, were bound over to the federal srand jury after a hearing before Com- nulssioner Singhaus on charges of having 100 grains of opium and yen shee in their Dossession. Tney were captured by clty and federal officers, together with their vipes and opium conking devices, Their honds were fixed at $1,000 each. Clan Gordon's celebratio: Swedish Auditorium, Jan. Uncle Sam Offers to Give His Aid to of Burns &t / Smaller Merchan_ts ' The small grocers, butchers and small manufacturers of Omaha are manifest- ing Interest in a standard system of busi- ness accounting which the federal gov \ crnment has worked out for use in such cstablishments. The federal trade com- mission at \WVashington, realizing the small retaller and manufacturer does business at a disadvantage because of a lack of some method in accounting that will enable him to keep an accurate ac- count of cost and selling prices, has worked out this standard system. The government has offered to furnish the ‘ system to the emall business man with- out cost. : J. J. Cameron, secretary of the Omaha Retail Grocers' association, has received A letter from the federal trade commis- sion offering to supply data on this new system, and reading in part as follows: “The small manufacturer, the country store keeper and the retall merchant often do not get at the banks the credit they ought to receive, owing to the fact that th re unable to present balance sheets in accordance with good business practice. These men, as a rule, are just as good business men, in many respects, as those of larger operations.. They have brains, ability, knowledge of their wares and of their customers, but they do not speak the language of the banker in that they are not able to present a state- ment showing their true assets and lia- bilitles.” 'CONNELL URGES BETTER CONRERGRTS "FROM DOCTORS Health Commisstoner Connell has ad- dressed to all physiclans of the city cir- cular letters calling attention to the par- ticular need at this time of reporting all cases of scarlet fever or suspected scarlet fever to the health department. The doctor states there are cases where a physician is called in once or twice and incomplete or uncertain dlagnoses are made, some patlents developing scar- b none the less dangerous on account of the mildness. The health department wants to enforce temporary quarantines on such cases untll the exact nature of the diseases have been determined. TAKES SHOT AT BARKEEP IN UNDERWORLD SALOON Mina Wilson, colored, and an unidenti- fied ‘‘gentleman friend.’ quarreled with a bartender of the Underworld cafe, Ninth and Davenport streets, and when requested to go outside and cool off, they did so. Upon leaving the place one of the pair took a shot at the bartender, disarranging a mirror in close proximity to his hat-rack. Mina was arrested, but the “gentleman friend” is still roaming the plains. The woman in the case will be held until her mysterious escort is found, or is given up for lost. Mina says REDSKIN LOADS UP AND TRIES TO SCALP HIMSELF louls Twian, an Indian of Valentine, Neb., loaded up on firewater and acted in the usual manner ascribed to intoxi- cated redmen, with a few . variations. Twian was inhaling a little soup in the Drexel hotel cafe when he suddenly leaped to his feet, let forth a few whoops and fell over backward, scalping himself on the hard tils pavement. Several stitches were taken in the wound by police surgeons and the self-massacred ‘ warrior was allowed to slumber in the in- terior of the city jall dormitory. ONE YEAR IN THE PEN FOR TOTING HIDDEN WEAPON Marion Hermandes, who pleaded I'!l“f'! fo district court to & charge of mn-y.\ fng concealed weapons, was sentenced | to one year in the peniteatiary by Judge Estelle, - M The Habit of Taking With many people taking habit, but fortunately ome that ls easfly broken. Take a cold sponge bath every morning when you first get out of bed— not fce cold, but a temperature of about | % degrees F. Also sleep with your win- \ dow up. Do this and you will seldom { take cold. When you do take cold take | Chamberiain's Cough Remedy and get rid of it a5 quickly as possible. Obtain- able everywhere.—Advertisement. ol that | let fever in perhaps a mild form, but | under the wire with contracts found themselves at the mercy of what they have since termed a monopoly. Along in November the distillate was jumped up a cent a gallon, and a little later it was pushed up to 6% ocents, a price that is still maintained. With the distillate bought at 4% cents per gallon, people who have been using {1t in their ofl burners figure that the | cost is about 10 per cent more than for | the best grade of coal. | Since the price of distillate has been | pushed up to 6% cents per gallon, there are some who are using it who estimate their fuel bill to be around §2 per day in | not_extremely cold weather. | Those who have burned the distillate !and who have kept a strict account of {the cost assert that by practicing or- ! dinary economy, prior to the last eold snap, even if the distillate was bought at the lowest price offered during the sea- son, the tuel bill was about $30 per month. | 1t is asserted that the foregoing esti- mates are made by men in whose homes the ofl burners were working at their Lest and in furnaces where the combus- tion was perfect. In other furnaces where the burners would not convert the distillate into gas and where the oil in- stead of the gas burned, the cost was considerable more, it being recognized as a fact that the distillate when burned did ot throw off nearly as many heat units per gallon as did the gas generated. Unidentified Man Found Dead in Rear of Pine Street Home Mrs. J. A, Mayers, 501 Pine street, dis- covered the body of an unidentified man lying to the rear of hear home this morn- ing. The body was that of a fellow about % years of age, and an empty bottle, ‘which had contained strychnine, lay near his hand. No papers were found in the colthing, and Coroner Crosby will hord the body to see If rriends or relatives can not be located. ihe body was well dressed, light complected, smooth shaven, welghed about 180 pounds, wore a blus suit, brown .overcoat, brown soft hat, white silk shirt with pink stripes and was about six feet tall, also had two gold teeth on right side of upper jaw. DEATH OF E. L. LOMAX IS SUDDEN AND UNEXPECTED Letters written to friends of the family here indicate that the death of E. L. Lomax, passenger traffic manager of the Western Pacific in San Francisco wi sudden and unaxpected. Mr. Lomax Lad left the hospital and was at his home. His condition had im- proved materially and he was up and about the house. The day of his death he had seemed in the best of spirits and haa about recovered from the stroke of pa- ralysis. He had eaten dinner with the family and afterward had gone to a/ lounge in the living room of the home to | take . He seemed to be having a restful p. A few moments later when his wife went to see If he were sleeping she found him dead. It is thought that death came while he was asleep. OMAHA FIRM IS SUED UNDER ALIEN LABOR ACT Charging violation of the allen contract labor law the United States filed suit in federal court against the Goodrich Drug company, manufacturers of toilet prep- arations, perfu: , ete., with head offices at 1308 Harney street. 4 It is alleged that one Jessie Fisher was | hired in Canada and came to Ohio and acted as a demonstrator for the defend- ant’s goods In drug stores there. The government asks a fine of $1,000. RASH ONFACE SOREAND NFLANED Developed Into Serious Eruption That ltched, Caused Annoyance, Lost Much Sleep. HEALED BY SUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT n Sample Each Free by Mall With 32-p. Skio Book on request. Ad- THE BE OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JANUAR Nurse Tells Startling Story of Conditions at City Hospital The following startling story is told The Bee by a trained nurse who just completed serving as a partment of the city’s emergenoy hospital. This woman h specia] in the soarlet fever de- nursed for a number of Omaha doctors, who speak highly of her, and we give her statement, withLolding her name for the present. “I was called in to a special case at the Emergency hospital, where I fin'shed last Saturday. While there 1 agreed to help on general duty, seeing they were short of nurses and plainly in need of more assistance. On entering, I asked for a disin- fectant, and was told by the head nurse of that department that they didn't use any. I sald, ‘Well, I cannot stay without a disinfectant for mywself," whereupon the head nurse ridiculed me and went down- stairs, but returned with a basin containing a hypo solution. I used this disinfectant until the day after, when I found that some one had thrown waste into the basin so that I could not use it any more. Another nurse, a Clarkson graduate, who was specialing a case in the next room, told me she had come in the day be- fore 1 did and that they were using no disinfectants. “I was horrified when I learned of two erysipelas cases on the same floor and saw the dressing from these patients thrown into open-wire mesh waste baskets along with the gause and cotton used for cleansing the ears, mouths and noses of other patients and left in these open receptacles for half a day at a time. The general waste of the hospital, or, at least, this department of it, was thrown into the toflets and hence to the sewers without heing disinfected. “I protested more than once against the treatment of the patlents, especially those who were delirfous. I heard de- lirous patients stormed at and scolded when what they needed was a cool drink or an ice bath, or something to reduce the temperature. 1 remonstrated by say ing, ‘that man is delirlous and does not know what he is doing.’ One case, where tho patient got out of bed and started downstairs, especially attracted my atten- tion, and I asked the nurse not to scold the patient, but to apply the lce-bag and &ive him a bath. He had just come in tle night before and his temperature was 104% then, and after the nurse had been persuaded to follow my suggestions, he went to sleep and rested quietly for some time, “'On Saturday a 3-year-old hoy, Jesse Cornwal, lay wet in bed all day and fretted, and I asked the head nurse to let me bathe the child, but she re- fused. A woman patient, in the next bed told me Jesse had not had a bath for a ‘week; that she had been in for week and she knew he had not had a bath since she was there. “Another lttle girl, Martha Lippett, about four years old, was whipped twice for crying for the bed pan. The whip- ping was done by the head nurse of the department. ““Yes, the patients have medical atten- tion. Most of the ocases are apparently ¢ity cases and Dr. Connell is there every day, dbut I do not belleve he knows what goes on during his absence. Natur- ally, the nurses while working there would not tell him, “It should be understood that the nurses from the other part of the hospital and the superintendent seldom come into the scarlet fever department. “Whpn I left Saturday there were fifty-three scarlet fever patients in the scarlet fever wards, of whom nine or ten are little ohildren, and five are nurses from other hospitals, two of them, however, being convalescent. No, I don't mind having my name used if it is neces- sary to change these conditions, but for resent 1 would rather not use ASKS $20,000 FOR ALLBGED ASSAULT| " Woman Sues Auctioneer in District Court—TFiles of the Case Are Withdrawn, ATTORNEYS WILL NOT TALK Minnie D. Miller has brought suft for $20,000 damages in district court against James L. Dowd, president and treasurer of the Dowd Sale and Auction company, for an alleged phy- sical attack upon her, Mrs. Miller's petition was filed by E. T. Farnsworth and C. Z. Davis, attor- meys representing her, who withdrew it by permission of the judges. The attor- neys refused to reveal the identity of the plaintiff or the contents of the pe- tition. It waa learned, however, that the petition charges that Mr. Dowa made a physical attack upon her, for which she is asking 320,000 damages. The case is listed in the records of the clerk's office @s a damage suit for “‘assault.” Mr. Davis declined to make any state- ment regarding the case, pending nego- tition for an “adjudication.” He sald: “Tomorrow 1 may be able to give out all detalls of the case, but it may be best for all concerned that nothing be sald about it.” Mr. Dowd is well known in business circles in Omaha and in the surrounding territory, having conducted aution sales in many cities and towns. His residence is 1319 South Thirty-second street, HOLDUPS OVERLOOK BIG SUM IN VICTIM’S POCKET D. C. Gatchell, 1814 Corby street, reports to the police that he was held up at Fourteefith and Capitol avenus by two negroes, who robbed him of 5 cents, but overlooked $50 which he had secreted in an inner pocket. City Prisoners on rike; Refuse to Work; Put On Diet Ten prisoners in the city jail who are members of the squad of thirty-five men that has been at work on South Sixth street grading project under the direc- tion of Captain Haze, rofused to go to work Tuesday morning. Commissioner Jardine at once ordered them put on diet of bread and water. This is the first “strike” at the city prison since the in- mates have been placed at work on the streets. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR Let Me Prove Free That You Can Get Rid Of It Positively, Without Pain or Injury. Free Coupon Brings You Quick Melp. For years I was in despair becauss of & hideous of uous Hair. 1 had Hair unknown amoog native women of Indla, a fact which is well- 1t was 80 successful in my own 10 longerhave th trace of formation and complete in- structions #o that you cen 1:| n:‘ho‘ir B tied f n Eng acted "with leading officlals thers yidow of o promiaent Offtesr in (be itish Army, ite her with entire confidence. e Tias opened an office merioa for the bene- 0t of et address fs, Mrs. Hi " No. 8 North Main Street. Attleboro, Mam. DO YOU WANT TO GET STRONG? Feel Well and Look Weli? It you are ailing. nervous and rundown, send for a free box of the remarkable food-tonic preparation CERTONE. Hundreds of men and women have writ- ten telllng how they gained health and strength and feel better and lvok better, giving WE the credit and praise. NEB consists of nourishing tonl extiacted from food essences, concentrated and com- bined to tone and feed the blood, the nerves, the hody and brain. True, safe materials and highly successful methods for men, women and children, in place of harm- ful, useless drugs and injurious, worthless medicin See the Improvement EAT CERTONE FOR ¢ DAYS FREE Provided you have never eaten any of this grand food-tonic preparation, you shall have a regular 50- cent box of CERTONE delivered free to your home, 1f you will cut out this notice and send it to us with your name and address and four cents to pay mailin expense. We maks this liberal offer to show ¥O how excellent CERTONE is, or you can buy OBE. TONE through your druggist i 'ou_prefer. Send for your 50-cent box of OERTO! n&-. Eat it; ‘watoh foraim rovem;n.t, note yr.ml"f e s — § recommen to your friends, ( free box to a person). ' o CERTONE COMPANY, 542 Twelfth Ave, Dept. N20, New Yok, N. Y Whiskies-Wines-Liquors For the Home From the finest and most complete stock in the city. Standard Brands at 95c Full Quart Pure California Wines, 25¢ to 50c Weship in plain sealed boxes. Free delivery on 2 gts. or more to Council Bluffs or So. Omaha Write for Price List, Luxus Mercantile Co. 100-111 North 16th Street. Phone Douglas 1880, Opppsite Postoffice. Mail Orders Promptly Filled. dress post-card **Cuticu: ton.” ns, then please | [HORE INSPECTION FOR THE SCHOOLS This is Urged at Meeting of Com- missioners—2,700 Children | Are Now Absent, {FOR A MODERN CITY HOSPITAL | —— | The city council adopted a motion by Commissioner Hummel that | Health Commissioner Connell confer with the Board of Education and en- deavor to agree on a plan for better inspection of schools, for the sup- vprsnlon of the scarlet fever epl- demie. Clty commissioners and members of the Board of Bducation discussed the situation. A report was made that 2,700 school children are absent and that twenty-five schools in Omaha proper are affected by scar- let fever. The health commissioner contended that the homes of all absent children should be carefully inspected and the absentees | observed until their allments Kave been definitely determined. Urges Medical Examiners. Dr. Conmell told the officials that twenty physiclans and ten more nurses should be engaged for thirty days and he advised an adequate staff of medical examiners for schools at all times. There are flve nurses now working In the schools. "I think the Board of Rducation has complied with all of the requests of the health commissioner to date and we are | Willing to go to any reasonable expense to check the epldemlc. We would like to have some rances that efforts are belng made in other directions as well, such as the moving picture shows and street cars,” stated F. H. Wooldand, #peaking for the achool officials, The health department recommended a regular staff of five physiclans and fif- teen nurses for school inspections. All public night school attendants were examined Monday evening. Urges Co-Operation, Dr. Paul Paquin, director of public health, Kansaa City, addressed the joint meeting and ufged co-operation between the health department and school offl- olals for the general welfare of the com- munity. “'The state compels the child to attend public schools and the state should iike- wise guard the health of thdt child," stated the Kansgs City visitor, The city council extended the Board of Bducation a vote of thanks for a will- ingness to get together on this situation. —— Read Bee Want-Ads for profit. Use them for results, Broken and rompers, Kour groups: for ages 3 to 7 years, All new but Heavy quality galateas, cham! T | Twenty-Two Below Zero, He Still Uses Sleeping Porch; Major Oxygen O Osone has nothing on Sylvester R. Rush, special assistant to the attorney general, when it comes to | love of fresh alr. | Mr Rush's favorite Indoor sport Is tleeping on the sleeping porch, which s an important part of his home in Dundee. | If he had to part with the sleeping | porch or the furnace, he would unhesi- | tatingly renounce the furnace and keep | the sleeping porch. He loves the gentle breezes play about his massive brow as he {s wafted into the arms of Morpheus. Even 22 below sero can't | scare him off that porch during the stum- | bter hours. i to have | Sylvester's favorite outdoor sport is telling conductors on the Farnam line | that they ought to keep the ventilators of the cars wide open even in the coldest | weather. “Hyperborean fricidity is no adequate decroe nial for utter exclusion of ventila- tory atmosphere from the public convey- ances commonly called or denominated street cars,” he remarked to one con- | ductor. The conductor is reported to have pro- tested that just because he happened to Now Lookat Him “It don’t bother me nonc except In cold weather when I havp to stand Inside.”” Mr. Rush, himself, sidesteps all the wicked liitle germs by standing on the back platform. He says he would rather smell the fumes from the cigars that some men smoRe than to inhale numberless germs with every breath inside the trats- portation wagons. It certainly agrees with Sylvester. Just look at his rosy, healthy complexion. Fresh air does it. A little lively music professor. Thank vou. We will now bust into song and melody in honor of Sylvester's very excel- lent, germless, germicidal, anti-germ platorm It you'd escape the deadly germ Inslde the cars you must not go. he seegar smoke may make you squirm, But 1t is germless—that you know. (Applause.) PUNISHED BY HU;BY AND JUDGE FOR HIS INSULTS When James McGuire, South Side, in- sulted a woman on a downtown street | Monday night he did not notice that her husband was just a fow feet to the rear. Store Hours, 8:30 A, M. to 6 P, M, Saturday till 9 P, M. BURGESS-NASH GOMPANY. ‘ "EVERYBODY'S STORE" Tuesday, Jan. 25, 1016, | A Feature of the Clearing Sale Wednesday ! Boys’ Wash Suits A Maker’s Samples Together With N OPPORTUNITY mothers with little fellows 3 to 8 years cannot afford to overlook. An oppor- tunity to secure at extreme reductions an entire season's supply of these cute little wash suits Boys’ Rompers, Good Values to $1.00, Wednesday, 45¢. Made of white and fancy chambrays, ginghams, tissues and crepes, Boys' Wash Suits, Including Values ‘to $2.00, Wednesday, 69¢. Broken lines and samples of 1 and 2-plece wash suits, of galateas, chambrays and crepes, for ages 3 to 8 years; plain white or fancy. Boys’ Wash Suits, Including Values to $3.00, Wednesday, 95¢. Made Junior, Tommy Tucker, Balkan styles, for ages 3 to 8 years. Best wash- able fabrics, colorings and patterns. Boys’' Wash Suits, Including Values to $3.95, Wednesday, $1.45. washahle materials, for ages 3 to 8 years. Jun- for, Middy, Balkan and other pretty styles, 70-Inch Table Damask at $1.25 McGuire recelved several surprises for his action at the hands of the latter and Mr. Rush then used words Which the | Wwas fined $16 and costs in police court. conductor understood and that worthy [H. R. Gelseke, 1814 Chicago street, ap. replied: }purm in court sgainst him. ;l“Hint to Motl;-e;s of Growing Children bé & conductor was no reason why he should be called names. ‘ A Mild Laxative at Regular Intervals Will Prevent Constipation A vital point upon which all schools of medicine seem to agree s that normal regularity of the bowels is an essential | to good health. The importance of this 18 impressed particularly on mothers of | growing children. A very valuable remedy that should be kept in every home for use as occa- slon arises {8 Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- sin, & compeund of simple laxative herbs that has been prescribed by Dr. W. B. Caldwell, of Monticello, 1il, for more than twenty-five years, and which can now be obtained in any well stocked drug store for fifty cents m bottle, In & recent letter to Dr. Caldwell, Mrs. H. C. Turner, 84 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y., says: “I bought a bottie of Dr. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin for my baby, Roland Lee Turner, and find it works just like | should be in every home. A trial bottle you sald it would, It is fine for the free of charge, can be obtained by writing stomach and bowels." to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 44 Washington A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin | St., Monticello, 1l STORE NEWS FOR WEDNESDAY, Phone Douglas 187, Lines From Our Own Stock samples, and some are slightly solled. Middy and brays and other Mrs. Moulton and H border, chrysanthemum, tulip a plain center chry value, at, yard, $1.25. EAVY quality, 70 inches wid vm; a beautiful linen finish. In designs of Lily of the Valley, themum border, and snow drop. A splendid Satin Bed Spreads, Each, $3.00 Staff Will Cut, Fit and Pin FREE of charge any material you pansy, key stripe and rose nd stripe, plain center key border, Burgess-Nash Co.—Main ¥loor. PLENDID satin bed spreads, size for double ‘beds, prett. Wednesday, at $3.00 each, All sizes, well made and s Speclal, $1,00 per suit. under the coat. Made of Regular $2.50 values, at, 81.25. All Automobile ;{725 Per Cent hundred distinct different plain $18.00. present day prices, 25¢ Cotton Batts, 18¢, The famous Governor batts 16-ounce roll, ton, 26e¢ values, at, roll, 18¢, Men’s $1.50 Union Suits at $1.00 N Vurmr'tmam of men's part wool imlon suits, gray and ecru color, Men’s $2.50 Sweater Coats, $1.25 0()):7W'Arm sweater coats for men Under Market Price UR ‘omplete line of automobile robes, including silk and cotton, plush, all wool and some interlined. plaids; also Navajo designs, fringed or felt bound edges. choose from. Former price range, $3.98, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00, up to Wednesday, in the basement, at exactly 25 per cent under size Tx3% feet, two sheets, full striped dimity, full 25 inches | decorations; were formerly ced best quality cot- | wide: regular 18c value; spe- | to 46¢c. In the basement, cholce, | clally priced, at, yard, 6)}ec. at, 15¢c, . Burgess.Nash Co.—Basement. | Burgess-Nash Co.—Besement. urgess-Nash Co.—Everybody’s Store—16th and Harne; may purchase at 98¢ the yard or over. Mrs. Moulton and staff are from the well known Keister Dressmaking School, and are experts in this character of work. To Out-of-town Customers Special attention will be given all out-of-town customers. Fit- tings will be given them the same day as material is purchased. scalloped and cut corners, suitable y designs and speclally priced for jurgess-Nash Co.—Main Floor, nug fitting. Formerly worth §1.50. Burgess-Nash Oo—Main Floor, Very desirable for wear a splendid quality worsted yarn. Burgess-Nash Co.—Main Floor. BURGESS-NASH BASEMENT Useful Pieces of Dinnerware Worth to 45¢c Wednesday 15¢ SPECIAL assortment of din- nerware, just such pieces that are always in demand, including 8-inch napples, S8-inch bakers, large platters, large size pitehers, covered sugar bowls, ete., gold Robes Wednesday Scotch and American About a and colored style combinations to 18¢ Dimities, 6} ¢, A An assortment of checked and