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LAWYER EJECTED FROM COURT ROOM Attorney Arthur Rosenblum Forei- | bly Ejected by Bailiff After Altercation with Judge JUDGE ORDERS THE ACTION Arthur Rosenblum, attorney for A. L! Welnstein, who was in police court charged with was foreibly ejected from the court foom by Ballift Hans by "order of the judge, after had engaged In an altercation the magistrate. The scene occurred after the case had been dismissed. The judge sald that the charge of Nielsen he with embezslement was not sustained, but remarked that there was a probability that action might be taken on some other charge Weinstein was charged with embezzl ing $5.80, the premium on an insurance poliey. The complaint was filed by Ab raham Weinstein, 247 Dodge street “1 object to you acting both as judge and prosecuting attorney, Rosenblum interposed as the judge was making his remarks after deciding that the charge was not sustained 3 to be “It there's any new complaint flied Jet the prosecuting attorney file it The judge warned Rosenblum to de- sist in his remarks, and threatened to have him arrested for contempt of court After exchanging words for a minute, the judge pointed his finger at Rosen blum and sald: “That's all I want to hear from you." “I don't Intend room until—"" At this juncture at the judge's sugges- tion Balliff Nielsen's muscular right hand gripped Rosenblum's coat collar and the curtain descended on the one-act com- edy-drama. Movie Men Offer to Rebuild Auditorium to leave this court and Give it to City > A proposition ‘to rebulld the municipal Auditorium and give it to the city at the, end of a certain period of years is to be made Monday to the city ecouncll by the Rialto Amusement company, which wants to spend in the meighborhood of $260,000 making it into a movie theater of the same type as the Rialto and Strand in New York. The plan as outlined at present is to add another floor to the Auditorium, where conventions could be held. The lower floor is to be used for.a pioture theater. It is understood that two wealthy Omaha men are backing the venture to the extent of $360,000. Slgmund E. Schaeffer, who promoted movie theaters of ltke type in Minneapo- lis, Mllwaukee and elsewhere, Is the di- recting genius of the plan. Mirror Factory Opened in Omaha| s of rought Another new manufacturing firm has | And thebaby embezzlement, | ject of hatred A clothing manufacturer on the East| Side of New York received a call from a salesman representing . notlons, | button house. The visitor | ad out his samples. up! Put ' sald the in A ness man I wouldn't care to look at nothing | “But, Mr. Cohen—'" “S'nough! I won't look! Please go away! Thoe salesman gazed at him admiringly Mr. Cohen,” he sald, “I only wish one | thing—1 wish' I had fifty customers like | | to do In old times)—Seattle Post-Intelll- | gencer. A Distinet Loss. miss old John Rasp, ife the other day. ¥i o went,” confessed old P. G. Pester He was my bitterest and most depend able enemy, and a man whom I could af ford to hate unreservedly | ter knowing that 1 could trust_ him to fall to give me cavse and oc I always knew that he would in Iy oppose on general principles tever [ advocated, and unfailingl w with alarm i | | "1 greatly who de | parted this 1 | b | caston anything with whic | pointed with pride. In turn he knew that he could depend on me to go my length ising him 1 his ch found the other and trustworthy ob And now that he is go in deridin, theories. a perfectly I8 we reliable 1 suppose I whall have to try out a g many andidates before 1 hit upon s tisfactory enemy as old John s ~Judge fty Wor d Be Enough. you. “1 told you 1 aldn’t wi what you got Sure you to see nothing | Aid, and that's why T said T wish I had fifty customers lke you. In stead I've got 200!"—Saturday = Evening Post. Trou in the Sanctum. The printere’ foreman entered the ed- Hlorial sanctum and was surprised to find the editor's face Had a fall man No, {t's our acca mith’ wedding, ‘Miss Smith’s formed a Jones badly brujsed downstalrs?" asked the of the ought to dimpled, shining pleasant contrast with strong, bold physiognomy.’ “'And this Is how it read: ‘Miss Smith's pimpled, skinny face formed a pleasant contrast . with ™ Mr. Jones' etony, bald lognomy.’ Send that proofreader to me at once,” he continued, ithrowing one blood-stained handkerchief in the wastebasket and searching for a clean one, “‘there's a fight left in me yet."—Pittsburgh Chronicle- Telegrapl Tiny Pin Halts Court. Pine are loat and disappear, but not all the lost cnes figure in such important af- fairs as court eames. Justice Mullan, in supreme court, Bronx county, had been forced to see several cases adjourned and he was becoming exasperated. Then R. Donovan, counsel fn a suit again rafiroad for damages, asked that his nt which Jones. read, face Mr. o 8 Rut over. ‘What good reason can counsel give for further delay in this case? asked Justice Mullan, shortly, "My most it witness inadvert- ently swallo pin, you honor,” Mr. Donovan replied. Thcm-nm was adjournsed.—Philadelphia Recot A ymm’ married couple decided that, because of the immensity' of their love for one another, they oould be haj & desert islo or within the walls of bungalow. Accordingly the nck Agal selves gently to sever the had connected them ith soclety, wi their church and with their relatives. To themselves they justifieq thelr wi Adraw; n the grounds that soolet; porficlal; that the church is ran gant and hypocrisy, and that relatives are e they felt vindioated and or & i happy. But It wasn't long beforo the; began to discover flaws and to -.u;r‘te{ that their souls were not perfect ties. After considerable perplexity and suphrimall PR BT e wi from one another. % b d_not be sh, . ~Judge. s su- with married people_shoul even though they feel D e — Eduncating the Baby. turmoll fm‘: the nureery LRI "SRR ATl er_mind, dear,” she sald, comfort- Baby doesn't know how much 1t Five mi Capitol avenue. This mew flrm manu- | pronr® MiTutes lnter soveral wild yolls factures mirrors and reslivers old mir- rors, making a specialty of the Ilatter business. Mr. Wilson, who Is general manager of the new concern, has been connected with the glass making indus- try for many years and s thoroughly experienced in all fta detalls. HOW INDIANS GET THEIR DYE Nearly Every Hue of Ralnbow Ob- tained from Earth and Trees by Indians. Manufacturers all over the country are complaining of the shortage of dye clothing makers are threatening to dress us in garments white as snow; the time s coming, say the ink makers, when we on the red fluld made famous n Kidd and othor pirate bands ‘want to -write check, but better knowfi as “‘Steve,” an In- n and a manufacturer of British Co- lumbla, worries not. Chem goes calmly on, using the dyes that his tribesmen, Clayuquots, have used for generations. #He makes his own dyes, and Whether any more are ever imported from Germany, or whether American chemists solve the secrets, are allke matters of supreme in- difference to hig. So long his klutch- man and his tenas, or in English, h's wife and daughter, vetain- thelr strength he will pose as & manufacturer and turn put the same mat and basket goods, having the same bright colors the utensiis his forefathers used as berry cohtainers and cooking veasels when the foot of the whit man was foreign to these shores, Chem and his women hold forth at Ploneer place every Monday and ranged about them on the sidewalk are thelr manufactured articles for sale. may be found cedar barked mats, striped with alternate black, yellow and brown water-tight baskets, blushing coyly In red and pink; grass baskets of ey and description, from the small ome fit fc & thread basket, which sells for moxt i i H y sor (35 cents) to the lurge ones, three foet acr with conventiona! desigrs of wolves and dogs racing around the i which retail wholesgle for $ to % or as much more as the chechake Is will ing to give All these specimens of the handiwork of the women shine forth in gay celors and all colors are obtained by the kluteh men, according to the simple proceas known for thousands of years. The black and It is & black that will not fade tained by covering the rus or bark with the black mud of swamps. which gives a lusting jet to any imported dye, the from the bank of the alder, pink from weaker solution of (he same bark, brown comes from the famillar tanbark of the hemlock, and yellow is bolled out of the root of the Oregon grape. Then, in addition to these colors. is ob 5. Erasses th there is the natural color of the material which | 80 frequently is used for the mats or baske grasses and rushes can be dried so the green tint remsire, other krasses turn white, and the brown of cedar bark s well known. Also, there are differ certaln the cedar. 1f the tree Is old and the Sark s near the surface It is dark in color taken next to the tree, it is a de'lcate combination df gray and brown ner bark of sray. | hatr ““Dye, 4 Chem. “Nika klutchman mamook como- |&nd evenly, way iktas coqua ahokutty.” (Dye? I { | There |88 for their elder | nursery, ™ #he exclaimed, “What 16 the maiter wWith h.blgr sald Billy, with he; & % y, with a cheruble how much oth e, “only now he knows &ull!n' h hurts."~Youth's Compan~ n, For the tht_lg Ones To Keep Their Digestion Perfect, Nothing Is Quite 8o Safe and Pleasant as Stuart's Dys. pepsia Tablets, FRAEE TRIAL MAILED ON REQUESY. Thousands of men and women have found 8tuart's Dyspepsia Tablets the safest and most reliable preparation for any form of indigestion or stomach trou- ble. Thousands of people who are not sick, but are well and wish to keep well # Xeep Them Well. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets meal to Insure perfect digestion and avold trouble. These Tablets are just as %ood and wholesome for little folks Little children who pale. thin and have no appetite, or not grow or thrive, should use the blets after eating and will derive great benefit from them every s Dyspepsia 1l druggists for 5 cents, and no parent of this safe r and bowe! troubles child 1s troubled with indigestion or non-assimilation. Send coupon below o trial should neglect the us m or all stomach Free Trial Coupon F. A Stuart Co., 201 Stuart Wldg.. Marshall, Mich, send me at once, by re mail, a free trial package of t's Dyspepsia Tablets. State e ——————————————————— j TODAY'S BEAUTY HINT It Is not necessary to shampoo guite It your batr cleansed each time by The caslest to use and drying shampoo that we can is propecly §00d shampoo quickest made thess articles as the Indians used | cking as and consls- | after | use of a really | recommend to our readers may be pre- ! > cheaply by disso shades of browns found in the bark of | PAT®d very cheaply by IYE 8 tad { spoonful of canthrox, obtained from your druggist, In & cup of hot water. This rubbed into the scalp creates a thick cottonweod s a peari | as well as very beneficlal to scalp and After rinsing, the scalp ls fresh halo niks cumtux dye,” sald | and clean, while the hair dries quickly developing & bright luster and & soft fluffiness that makes It seem don't know what dye is. My women | very heavy.—Advertisement. The in- | '8ther. sothing and cooling in its action, | THE OM!/ SMUVGGLERS MAKE TROUBLE FOR HOLLAND SOLDIERS (Correspondence of The Associated Press ) THE HAGUE, Feb. 2, ,1"7? of war, reporting The Dutch min in the second chamber of the Duteh Parliamen say that 3,67 persons were prosecuted for smug- gling goods Into Germany last year, Forty | Hugh [ thousand soldlers were empl. yed to pre vent smuggling, but because of the 0 miles of frontier they had to patrol, many of the smugglers ware able to do a brisk business with the people ncross th border. The wiles of the smugglers ar many and the ingenuity which they brin to their trade, it is sald, would fit the for all the higher reaches of diploma Leather was smuggled inside harrel of mussels, balls of rubber Inside 1h outer shells of onlons and bags of mea KOt up tp represent sleeping bables wer ent over the border. Hundreds of thon sands of the frontler population after th beginning of war, engaged in lighter forma of the prescribed traffi Eribery of the frontler guard is said t have beeh the method tried quently. The strip of country along the frontiers is now declared In a state of slege and the military commanders order the whole life of the community. They the the most fre vario {have resorted in some regions to banish ing all undesirable persons. T aber thus deprived of thelr right of residence last year is 1,297, A bill passed recently limits supplie for the border towns to quantities tha were normal hefore the yar. The authorities carry out the anti. AHA SUNDAY B Good morning, Sherlock Holmes,” we | ehirped, as we breezed into the office of Mills, gov'ment secret service sleuth. Huh, Bherlock Holmes!" snorted Hugh Mills, with supreme contempt We wera disappointed see a gaunt, pale man, wearing a two- peaked cap and a smoking jacket and xamining something with a magnifying glass Instead, wo saw a plump, well-fed man In business dress, sans cap, sans smok- jacket, sans mag. glass, sans every- ing Sherlock Holmes-y We werg further disappointed We expected to We ex- pected him to look up dreamily and re- mark Ah, 1 see your great-grandfather's step-sister was walking in the neighbor- hood of Hanscom park and that you ourself do not ltke Hungarian goulash,"” and then tell us how he knew it ‘Getting the crooks isn't done with magnifying glasses,” sald the con- | temptuous Mills. “It's done by patience and hard work. 1 remember one coun- terfeiter in Kansas City by the name of smuggling laws In a most drastic way, realizing that the traffic was endangering the country’s oversea supply by awaken ing the distrust of the allies Fall Cures Weak Eyes. Henry Traver, jr., an insurance and real estate broker, fell on an jey mide MARCH 1916. Gov’ment Secret Service Sleuth Here a Corker; Eats Like Others Jackson that I got after three months of work. He ‘stalled’ as a vegetable ped- dier. Used to come out with a one-horse wagon and peddls for three hours, with me dodging befifhd bulldings, and ash barrels, and trying to keep on eye on him. Then, suddenly, he’d whip up his nag and go llke a fire engine around corners and, as I 4idn't have a motor cycle, I 'd Joss him. But I kept on his trail and finally bagged him with his whole outfit. He spent nineteen years out of twenty-six in prison.” Mills 18 one of the government's best stleniths. He was nine years in Birming- ham, and there, in one year, he and afnother agent sent fifty-two men to prison. We were doomed to more disappoint- ment as we departed. We expected Hugh to lay down his ‘“Monograph on Velvet and Tuxedo,” push home the hypodermic needle, and then play a weird, wild, dreamy rhapsody from Bach, opus XIV, canto 5, on his violin Nothing doi§g. Hugh merely remarked like a regulaF man, “Guess it's time to feed.” walk, landing on his head and neck. For meveral years Mr. Traver has worn slasses, but upon returning to his office after the fall he discovered he could see better and could read without the v m. M "l‘n\{-r does not urge this method of Grlxanh:om for falling eyesight. —Boston Solld Oak, Guaranteed Spanish Imitation Leather Upholstering. m"""i"'.a""-.:.".:‘.""?fi“m" ; He e AN EXTREMELY COMFORTABLE IS Pull e tachabl " seat, def o mhhr-snr stuffed up- holstered back, covered in tapestry. [ to be appreciated. Suit- able for living room or sunroom. Specially priced for this week at this very low price— ol el ver roomy The BED DAVENPORT— rely of solid oak, with ENUINE QUARTER AWED COMBINATION G 8 BUFFET—Has two doomy hina compartments, nd glass doors, two wa! rs, mpartment fitted with bent top ia French beveled plate mir- o! = A DECIDED BARG. LARGE SIZE, WE DRESSDR- ted with two large and two small drawers arge size French beveled plate mirror Made entirely of American guarter sawed imitation oak, den H-m\'é scroll $8.85 A »omy B N METAL BRD-— r. set in artistic fram claw hed in_golden $1 Guaranteed Porcelain Top Kitchen Cabinet $13.50 TWO-INC! VERN- ade with ten hrn\‘{' 1-inch fillers, and \ 1-inch sy T 191¢ Spring and Summer way, a wonderful exhibition. It m ugs, Oarpets, eto, and is on a scale characteristic of & Ourpet Company. Probab! oare now a vast exhibition ground, and invest a dollar for Purniture. It is ished In either fumed top, four heavy , five full box ish leather. One arm chair to ly no stock of furniture was ever selected or subjected to so many tests before 'BS—Bullt of H. 4 ...:”.;2.,."{ mach $31.50 t chief performers in the heater of war are presented in several New BOOkS Lord Roberts, V. C. fleld ' ; of Timely Appeal |« Bt o Be ccore igf Added to Library is & frontisplece taken from the paintin Several interesting works of timely ap 8ir )t Lord Roberts by Sargent - —1 ) The is in the Fragrance peal to the reading public have been | added to the non-ficton list at the Omaha public library in the last few days The present dye-stuffs problem in this country has caused a “run” on books treating on this subject. Recent addi- tions to the library are about twenty works covering a wide range of sub- jects on what might be called chemical echnology. Many of the books tully the making of dyes and inks. A book of business appeal 1s “Writing An Advertisement,” by 8. Roland Hall The work ls an analysis of the methods and the mental processes that play a part in the writing of successful ad- and kb, Beauty of Flowers Radindranath Tagore, by Basanta | Koomar Roy, I8 an extensive treatise nn: The full suggestion of Out- the life and writings of the famous of-door happiness is reflected Indian poet who won a Nobel prize for | in flowers. “";;:“::Ielohlnlrnphv of Maharshi Deven. | . “ |8 Send c770w@r)6 John H. Bath ranath Tagore, the poet's father, ana “The Oareful Florist, -3 one of the most famous men in India, also has been added to the library 1804 Farnam St., Omaha. Phone Doug. 3000. Joy cover shelves, | ‘A History of Travel in America,’ by | | Seymour Dunbar, 1 a work showing the | development of travel and transportation | from the erude methods of the canoe and | dog sled to the highly organizea railroad Jl\‘!leml of the present day. It is in | four votumes. The iife and career of one of the pr in both and fin- Hartman it o duty or 181 vy . and 9-inch « x12 TAPESTRY Bifuslue at OND" 8. tiful new spring dest IGH GRADE ALBX SMITH & BTN RUGS—9x12 . $11.98 APESTRY .. $13.98 A SOLID OAK MISSION- STYLE ROCKER — Strongly \\| constructed, decidedly mas- \\\ sive in appearance. Has il roomy seat and broad back, NEll and upholstered in guaran- I} teed Spanish imitation leath- e er. Front posts are exceedin ly heavy, s curely braced ) nitary pure partmen utensil Flour complete one. $1 #c0Q cluded. No kltel Spec! 3.50 t b r oughout. Finished in fumed only Our low price for this week, only— T8e O e & Month SED BA AY'EA “ \\“wr’f\si‘\?"\‘" 11 tub stee! - wheels, heavy e W natural Upholat it e ered in Bedf cord to mateh. Fully worth §35 spiienst o, 913,59 93,00 Cash, $2.00 » Month. PATTERN E DOOR SOLID GENTLEMEN'S CHIF- FEROBE Genuine quarter sawed oak front, polished golden. Roomy wardrobe fitted with sliding coat hangers, 8 individual drawers and French beveled plate mirror. A beau- tiful plece of furmniture and a remarkable value at, only ... ¥LI5 Cash, 5150 & Month orcelain flour bread com- s, divided drawer. hen withou! fiatsadon ek Tog 1lll‘ tted m———t 1414 - 16 - 18 DOUGLAS ST.