Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 24, 1916, Page 9

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! THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 24 BRIEF GITY NEWS 'The Secret .. Submarine IS GREATT0 YOTE, Dismond Engagement Rings—Ddholm tiragists \e polls | : L M Bnd-Piind ToeNow Bascon Prees. | “The End of the Trail,” “Fighting in Flanders,” “The Road to Glory,” “V T:':" :‘Ml h""“ i ' : & 3 "' | " ete. Copyright, 1018, by E. Alexander Powsll. . Miss Lillie Starr Tells Omaha| FlVE HUNDRED BR!T‘SH l’lzmt bU“JS now o list it with J. H. Du- | | mont, Keeline bailding | “Heard of Dr. Burke?” chuckled)books. As he was idly turning over Women of Her Experiences at FISHERMEN LOSE LIVES i B . “Today’s Movie Program,” classifled see- | the sailor, “Why, Lord love you, sit "'r pages of a treatise on chemistry the Illinois Polls P anc hd\(’ continuous tion today, It appears in The Bee exclu- | ['ve heen doing odd jobs for the doc "ljv';-l‘ door opened to admit Doctor : l l ; sively. Find out what the various moving = FHAULLS, g, S 2 1 "y STRYL XS toe_ever e he and his .'L.u‘g»m;”m,,, are very welcome. Mc OMAHANS TO MARCH IN PARADE [ the war by ¢ ummer biooming came here to live. And when he heard | Hope,” said the, old man, peering at 08, S WAL gi¥er Ny Resort Keeper Flned—Ed Farber, oharged wpe A elitind Baaeinl i P Q Y O' PO W it e et oy “ve"ose |that I used to be in the navy he gave | his_ visitor thrdkigh a huge pair of The first time 1 voted ‘ Ackland, financial sec plants. Easily grown North Sixteenth street, was fined $15 and [me charge o' putting the engine in | :"y"::‘e”v‘y"‘l“ll\:“l spectacles. “Very wel A crowd of Omaha suffragists lis- | "¢'& piatl A o 1 A R tod Desth -(n pelios Bowd that old submarine hull he bought a{ “I am thoroughly familiar with the tened enviously as Miss Lillie Starr of | [iyeq these vessels was 500 ana are variegatec To Give » Dancing Party—Emma B. Man- | while back. By the jumping Jehoso- | theory of your discovery, doctor,” | Chicago,and thereforea woman voter,| Fishing has gone '8 usual, within ; chester grove, No. 166, will give a dance at|phat, I'll bet that's what brings you[said Hope.” "My instructions from |told all about her experiences at the necessary re in color. Our second its hall in Continental block, Fifteenth and | to Valdavia, lootenant-—to get the se-|the de ] ] p A t " partment are to witness a polls, Monday afternoon at he 7 2 Douglas streets, Friday night cret o th submarine!” practical demonstration and to apply Young Woman's Christian associa BRITISH FARMERS MUST an(l last hl}: Shlp- Fowler Bound Over—Jess Fowlor, colored : "’Huok, laughed the officer, “your | the customary tests. If it can pass| . J HIRE FEMALE LABORERS bound ¢ to the d ) nder | deductic ould do ¢ Sher- ) 3 i Y e g R 7 : was bound over to the grand jury under [deductions would do credit to Sher-|those tests there is but little doubt “It's a great experience to vote and ment ()f th(‘SQ ('h()l(‘(’ $750 bond by United States Commissioner | lock Holmes. ['ve come out to have |that the government will take steps I Charles McLaughlin, on a oharge of violat- |a look into Dr. Burke's invention. |to acquire it." will | London, May 23—Francis Dyke hope the Nebraska women Ackland, financial secretary of the soon share it,” remarked Miss Starr bulbs while they last ing the “dope” law. Now )8 3 ¢ - s PSts ! .\:nppl se you show me where he It will pass any test that you may |ucpicazo women know how and for | treasury, sa d in the House of Com Adivens, Wine: " Siotii-ctunderion ey ives impose, Mr. Hope,” declared the in A e siild=dioo Laelk 2 " what to vote and they appreciate their | mons that farmers woulc op ¢ Lotes 8t Colo-Matohing Gmme—yames [ At the very edge of the town where | ventor. “1 did not communicate with | S0t S0 S SR E AR T S8 T prejudice against the employment of at 2 dozen for ( Whittaker, who lives near Des Moines, | the street became a country (n.nl,l\‘\dshnlklnn until 1 was positive that | gie 0" the ballotalso stimulates | female labo A breakdown in home = came to Omahs to Mquidate bis bll, and [8tood a weatherbeaten two-story | there was no chance for failure. The | yoyien 1o greater philantiiropic ef- | supplies was only avoidable if the in the vielnwy of the Umion station met |frame house. As Hook swung open |purchase of my discovery by the gov- oo ©L il e aninion of Miss Starr. | 1abor situation did not grow worse two strange gentlemen who Induoed him [the creaking gate a young girl sud-|ernment means more to me than you Mrs. William S. Stahl of Chicago, to mateh lrnh\l“ Jnn;:l nm«e"l:::‘fmm the d’ex.lli\ nlnrh-xl’ .|}rul|n:|‘ the corner of }n“'h-:y;:f L 1t means l"“;”""‘ a former South Side teacher, reviewed ~ . game minus ah, consiating o the house and then, catching sight of { for me, ope, in my declining | ¢ 200 arguments and told of pla Em'l('h Th() B]()()d '.-u Giving Stove Demenstrations—0. R. Gre- | Hope, stopped dead, like a startled | years; it means leisure in which to g "0 bie" ffrage parade June ham of the A. B, Stove company of Battle | fawn. She was a very beautiful girl conduct research work; it means food | 4 outIak a 'y etgad i satah . iatan Onasts siving soeoial | indeed; straight and slender as a boy, |and clothss and education’ for my .",’;'.h'”\'\,,,,"v,, i S e T'. Hood's Sareaparilia, a Spring Tonic-Medicime, demonstrations at Milton Rogers & Bonw’ | with a skin like creamy satin and a [daughter Cleo.” rade. Mrs. W. E. Barkley, state suf fs Necessary . Clean, wtore on Harney street. Milton Rogers are | great crown of ruddy hair which “What did you do for workmen?” frage 'l.‘,,m..“ who was the third Kverybody |s troubled at this season with . putting on & special sale In connection with [ turned to molten gold when the sun inquired Hope, inteiesiedly. “Where \p" r o at v‘n'a' suffrage meeting, lo t lity, fallure of appetite, that . Handy, this demonstration, struck upon it. So lovely was she |did you find men who had sufficient | gtaieq that a number of Nebraska foeling, or with billous furos dull - S35 Durable, Drinks Bay- Rams—fndra Lewis, coloved, |that Hope stood staring at her; | engineering knowledge women will stop in Chicago en route | headaches, indigostion and other stomach s ' who resides in closs proximity to police | Stared until a rosy wave of confusion In that respect | have been for-|home from the biennial convention | troubles, or with plmpies and other arup % 2-quart hendquarters, 18 in a 'serious condition as |SWept over her from brow to bosom. |tunate” was the answer. “My chief | of the General Federation of Women's the face and body. The resson i . permit me to intro-|assistant, and the one on whom I clubs to take part in the suffrage 4 fs Impure and impoveriahed ¢ s 1) Agms the result of drinking & quantity of bay | ' Miss Cleo, ice Lootenant Hope,” said Hook. | have placed the most reliance, is a | demonstration one-armed man-o’-warsman named Miss Ida Robbins, Mrs. H H. | mente u relleves il thess ail Piashnr, rum. Burgeons who attended her helleve 4 relinble medioine that she will recover, although w oconsiderable | “Lootenant, this is Miss Cleo Burke quantity of the stuff was imbibed Dr. Burke's daughter.: You've hearn | Barnacle—the -same, in fact, who!Wheeler and Mrs. F. M. Hall of Lin- [has stood the teat of forty years—(hat Like Use “Tex.Tile" 8hin Sunderiand’s. me tell o' the lootenant before, Miss | brought you here I'hen have a|coln and Mrs. P. T. McGerr of Falls | makes pure, rich, red blood--that strength / Cleo, an' how he saved my iife in!young Japanese named Satsuma City are planning to be in the parade every organ and bullds up the whole M L B t Pago-Pago.” “A Japanese, you say?” said Hope | according to Mrs, Barkley om. 1 ix the all-the-year-round blood auna Loa bursts “Not the Mr. Hope who dove into | quickly. “Isn't it a little unwise to| Mra. E. M. Fairfield, chairman of | purifier and health-giver. 1t embodies the C the harbor and saved you from the let a foreigner become familiar with the city central suffrage committee, |careful training eriance, and wkill of 3 Mineral wool filled, -qugrd with FOI’th 01106 MOI‘e shark?” she exclaimed, breathlessly, the secrets of your invention?" presided at the meeting Mr. Hood, a pharmaciat for fifty years, In the sanitary, removal food open admiration in her eyes. "Hook Mesdames George Blight, Mary Car- | /t» auality and power to cure racks; this refrigerator, like ecut, Ask your Aruggist for It today Adv ) > % " In Huge Lava Flood |mas" oid"ws that" story s hundred| (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) | mack, W. F. Burdick, Thomas Brown times, Mr. Hope. Why, it was quite Honolalu, May Zi—Mauna Los |, bravest thing I have ever heard volcano, which was in eruption last |~ Lp, " ( week, has broken out again. A flood of - Believe me, Miss Burke” said : . ope lava, which buret forth last night at an elevation of 7,000 feet, is flowing down the mountain side traveling southwest at the rate of about a mile an_hour, The flood of lava has divided, fol- lowing two channels, The glow il luminates the entire landscape at night Newspapers can be read by its light many miles away. The course taken by the lava is that followed by the last eruption about nine years ago. The sea is about fifty miles from the mountain in this di rection and there is little property of value in between, 8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M. Saturday Till 9 P. M.a (BURGESS-NASH COMPANT “EVERYBODY'S STORE" Tuesday, May 23, 1916. STORE NEWS FOR WEDNESDAY. Phone Douglas 137, And Now Comes the New and Fashionable in Women’s Rain Coats,Sport Coats,Dressy Coats at $5, $5.95, $10 and up to $25 HIS is decidedly a coat season; every woman and girl must have one or more if she is to keep pace with fashion, and under these changeable weather conditions they are really indispensable. Rain Coats Slickers, rainproof tweeds, fine cravenettes, silk rubberized, rubberized poplins and mixtures. Priced $5.00, $56.95, $10.00, $12.50, $15.00 and up to $25.00. Coats for Sport Wear Silk and wool jerseys, angoras, silk stripe blazers, golfines, silk stripe novelty effects, pongees, chinchillas and other pretty fabrics suitable for sport wear. Prices range $12.50, $185.00, $19.50 and more. Coats for General Wear Pine covert, gabardines, wide wale coatings, high-grade tweeds, poiret twills, novelty coatings; warm heavy coats for motor wear; fine serges and mixtures, Priced, specially, at $15.00, $19.50, $25.00 and others up to $40.00. Coats for Dress Wear Pretty silks, satins, gros de londres, broadcloths and novel ties at $25.00, $35.00, $45.00 and up Burgess-Nash Co.—Second Floor The Well-Gowned Woman and Her l;parable “Striped Sport Skirt” ¢ LREADY a decided preference is shown for striped mate- rial sport skirts. Wherever you see the woman of fashion —flitting about the lakes, on the golf links or tennis courts— -that sprightly dash of color will be pleasingly evident in (W] her picturesque skirt of la jerz silk, taffeta, khaki kool, tus- sah and awning striped pongee, gabardine and canvas cloth, These, together with smart white wash skirts, we feature, at, $3.95, $6.00, $5.95, to $19.50. New Riding and Hiking Suits $16.50, $19.50 and $20.00 , embarrassed in his turn, "I did nothing that any man would not have done in my place. Hook greatly overrates my services to him. It would never do to let as good a sea man as Hook become breakfast food for fishes.” “You—you haven't come to see my father's invention, have you’ You haven’t come in answer to his letter to the secretary of the navy?” “That is precisely why 1 have come, Miss Burke,” said Hope “Oh, Mr she said anx- iously,” “I pray with all my heart that the government will take it. It | has been my father's life work. Its _—— acceptance will mean so very much S tB k 0 to him—to me—to both of us. It ergeain uc n would be a dream come true. [1'll tell him that you are here” The Job in New Marine [icon" o which e ied Hope was ( Recruiting Office : The United States marine recruit- ing office was opened in Omaha yes et wik T mui ko) w Sergeant Fran uck, who has ' had charge of the recruiting office Ofl'y at Duluth, Minn., for three years, ar rived in Ornnha yesterday morning about youl' dlges“ve and, as the sergeant is 3 man "(g 'ar troubles, sick headache, tion, he no more than had arrived be- fore he had opened an office at 1312 tll'ed feelmgprconstgpatlon. Douglas street and was busy hust-| 1he depression that induces ling for recruits to (ake up the fas- worry 18 prwably due to a cinating career of “soldiers of the & ed 1 : gea” in'a week Buck will be joined | disorden iver, anyway. by another man and recruiting will COlTeCt stomach ailments begin in earnest. . (K)maha had a marine recruiting of at once by mwy takmg fice four years ago, but it was aban- At BEECHAMS T | Junior Pioneers Hear Baker Speak PILLS They aid digestion, regulate A stag social given by the qu'w]v‘-: the bile, gently Stimulate Pioneer league at i's rooms in : L Swedish auditorium lust night was at-| the liver, purify the blood fondec by w‘,f:,d’,"‘,“‘,‘,',“‘jl,jdf:‘i[L their and clear the bowels of all deville and a_luncheon featured_ the | waste matter. Safe, sure, evening, and John Anderson, a, char-| . e ember was presenied with an | Speedy. , Acting both as a engraved watch charm on the occa- | gentle laxative and a tonic, sion of his fiftieth bwthday Beecham's Pl“S help to Preceding the program President Robert Houghton announced -}n.ri . the league had a membership of 450, ng t e whose chief object it was to promote | the best interests of the city' of w Omaha and the state of Nebraska. | e e rong nor prohibitionists were eligible to M‘dlnldu--&.w..u. membership. All members are re h'm Ia bones, 10c., 28¢. Folding Steamer 4-Passenger Lawn Chair, like cut $1 50 Swing, lfke cut. $4|95 Have Us Figure Your Furniture Bill, Tours East Frglr Omaha ? Circuit Tours to New York % ROUND TRIP, ONE-WAY via Chicago, Niugara Falls and Albany; OTHER WAY via rall lines (via V\uuhlnnom Chicago or 8t. Louis. ...... .$62.10 ~WAY via Chicago, ‘lln‘uru Falls, Hudnon River; OTHER WAY coast steamer to Nor- folk, thence home via Washington, Cincinnati, Chicago or 8t. Louls vawas s A ONE-WAY via (hicago, through Canada and Mon- treal; OTHER WAY steamer to Norfolk, thence via Washington, Cincinpati, Chicago or 8t. Louis .. $68.25 ONE-WAY via Chicago, Detroit and Buffalo to Montreal, rail lines to New York: OTHER WAY via rall lines to Washington, thence via Chicago or St. Louis ' .. $65.55 Circuit Tours to Boston ONE-WAY via Chicago, Niagara Falls; OTHER WAY via New York and ratl (via Washing ton), Chicago or St. Louis. (Sound steamers $1.26 less) $69.15 -$62.10 Atlantie Oy, N0 BART. 00 | Alevandris Bay 845,00 k quired to have lived in Omaha twen ‘ ONE-WAY via Chicago or St. Louis, through the ty-five years | " ras " ose fr > P 2 re g Virginias to Norfolk, steamer to Boston Benjamin S. Baker tief] Homneseds don } . T'hree models to 4.hlir e from; n‘ln' has the l’t gulation di I | OPRER WAY vis Buffalo and Chicego $65.70 speaker of ove Py P i e | vided skirt with coat; another has coat, riding breeches and | ONE-WAY via Chicago, Cincinnati and Washing "‘r:nghl;-,'l»'\h d "‘-‘ L \'I'}l"”‘ | knee-length hiking skirt; the other has special patent adjust ton to Norfolk, steamer to Boston; OTHER mention of politics. He said the ] ment for the divided skirt for riding WAY via rail to New York, thence rall: via pioneer” meant a great deal to Ne- | PRI P e g el Albany, Buffalo and Chicago $69.35 hraskans, because was the | ONE-WAY via ( n-nu or 8t Louts, Olneinnati who had m state what and Washi y Norfo stoamer to New o Grorge "Otrom. "who' s’ e Every Active Young Woman |FUR STORAGE Fora il o Boston, GTHI WAY m said the greatest surprise A pr 9 ‘ ¥ ten s : 05 ) maint Iy FaWAN cago or 8t Louls, Cincinnati Ore., as & suburh of Oma etains the beauty of your Port hroush Canada Montreal, De 0. Holmburg also a furs. Telephone Douglas 187, our trot Chieng $70.45 AR . | ol All these routes may be roversed. The above are SIS e RGK N H COMPANY standard line rates There are alsa many clrealt tours via MAIL CAR ROBBED BY -|‘;¢.4.,....,.| Hoes which will save from S4.00 10 84,00 per BANDIT IN SOUTHWEST ¥ . 5 w h ekt ew Wit (omforl . . . \ ”f“* “ Use a Standard Rotary | D"ect Rou'u ¢ ' M . : 1 1) ‘ - 1 Commencing June 1st i PORTLAND | L { ) - | use - '! CBMENT | Now York S50.10 | Tematn O v 49.48 *New Youek #1580 hrtland, M 88K Ashury Park 850,00 Puriiand, Me 'u=5d.&i Aabiry Vark ah | nn [y 54, - Raotary Standard . voal Pabyan, N W Homton, Mas Hango, Me ** Moston, Mass “.. Bar Marker, Ve s FRED FITZGERALD GOES T0 g for il outdoos srersie = e T 'J.'.'".‘.':"'.'.“.' JERSEY CITY FOR CUDANY Middy Blouses at $1.28 i s, ¥ -‘!’» 18 | ieton, o o SR varey | wonie, | 0 Hh “ ul‘lnb\.l Hombon A Palffabe, N ) . tMhey o Ty < “ . ' . Ry 537 50 Shuftale, NN mm;‘u.: Homton Miogorers. Limits 80 days Thess tours ase vamples w by hers, Incinding M. Laws vemee Hiver i Mudaon Hiver, Sound sionmers, wb Lake Bomis, ot Cull, welie or inlophons: Sent on Terma of “w 3 | [ | Middy Blouses at $1.00 10 $3.50 88 Dows and 81 & Weeb | Rove The wantarras “Sanday lwnui Burlington| Bk R B ot we help pon plan the ‘ : o $16.50 Route e el 1o e Uhe et iraenve tour a4 Seap ‘h J . CITY THORET o Farsam and 1600 Sia Phones . 1 1048 1 A58 S —— s Rurgess:Nash CocBEverybody's Stare— 16th and Harney

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