Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 3, 1916, Page 11

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Part Two EDITORIAL SECTION Pages Eleven to Twenty. THE Use the telepnone 1or Bee Want Ads. Tyler 1000 Seven trunk lines. Intelligent ad-takers. One cent per word. OMAHA DAILY BEE. VOL. NISS ROSIE GALENEC FINDS HER FRIENDS Young Austrian Woman Coming | From Wyoming Meets Fellow | Slavs and Happiness, “ANDY” FAILED TO APPEAR| XLV—NO. _ 301. Rosie Galenec is in the hands of | her friends instead of wandering about ‘ a great city among people she didu'l‘ know and who didn't speak her lan- guage, | For this Rosie can thank the young | woman who found her at Thirty-third and Leavenworth streets yesterday noon, weeping and seeking the Bur- lington station; she can thank IJe-" tective Van Dusen who, by his knowl- | edge of the city, guided her to the very house in which her friends were | awaiting her, | When the young woman who found Rosie heard her story and brought her down town it looked like a white | slave case. she came from New- and was to meet one| Andy Kovicevic here on his promise to get her work. But he failed to meet her, Three other friends were | coming, she said, arriving Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, Detectives Lend Aid, Van Dusen was sent down by Chief | of Police Dunn in company with the | young woman and a reporter, The three didn't arrive on the train from Newcastle. But Van Dusen | knew a man who, he said, would know | about this case, So to the saloon of | Mike Brunski, 1214 South Thirteenth street, went the party. Mike is a sort of “king” among Qmaha Slavs. Mike found that Rosie came from the same part of Austria that he came from and he spoke her language. The | conversation flowed like a Niagara, | And when Mike heard that she came | here from Newcastle he said: “Three other people came today | from Newcastle. They are here now. | I will see if they know her. Then | Rosie was brought into the presence of the three, a man, his wife and Andy | Kovicevic. And Rosie ran and threw her arms around the woman, and kissed her, and wept and kissed her again, and wept some more. And she babbled in her native Slavic lan- guage, and she told the detective how much she thanked him. Come to Find Work. In Newcastle Rosie worked in a restaurant operated by a Chinaman. This heathen Chinee didn’t believe in the eight-hour day and made Rosie wait table, wash dishes and do every- thing else about sixteen hours a day. So when her friends started for Omaha they told her to come along and they would get her work at better wages and shorter hours, because Omaha was a great city with plenty of work at good wages. (Wise people, are Rosie’s friends.) They all have plenty of mone: Rosie will have -her ochoice- o eral positions. T. R. Wants Boss And Employe Sleep In Same Dog Tent Newark, N. J., June 2—Returning from his middle western trip, Theo- dore Roosevelt stopped here tonight on his way home to Oyster Bay to deliver an address at the Industrial exposition held in connection with the celebration of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Newark. He was greeted by thousands of persons who heartily ap- plauded him. Before he entered the exposition building, Colonel Roosevelt stopped to address briefly a company of &'cw Jersey National guardsmen. | “I do not believe,” he said, “in words or weasel deeds. I and sev- weasel How to Prevent Rabies On Trains, at Hotels, News Stands, ete., be WANT SULLIVAN OMAHA, SATURDAY JUNE 3, PERSHING CONFERS MORNING, 1916. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. chairman of the national committee, will open the meeting if Mr. Me- Coombs does not arrive in time. hours and was adjourned to be re- sumed late today. While it was known that the military situation in e northern Chihuahua was discussed in Among the important matters to be WITH GEN GAY]RA detail at the preliminary conference, YIGE PRESIDENT considered at tomorrow's meeting are: =y . neither chieftain would divulge the I'he apportionment of tickets, the == — details. _ assignment of delegations in the con- = Discuss Plans For Co-Operation Be-| When l""'“ ral ’I'\}'valu: vvlmuml Headquarters Established in St.|vention );"'” ;\m‘l lhr" sclcclmu[.of ter?- === p i | to canip he confined his discussion o PR porary officers for the convention, In e tween Their Forces in Pur the conference to a brief statement| Louis to Boom Illinois Man |y} "Jheence of Mr. McCoombs the 3 suit of Bandits. issued to newspaper men For Second Place. committeemen who are here decline A = VAT \‘\*i‘»‘,&_\//—_\_\\“—*’ oo “General Gavira and 1 had a very pleasant and profitable talk,” he said “We went over plans which I am not at liberty and will meet again at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Gen eral Gavira outlined what he proposed we discussed the situation simply as it affects us.” Asked in view of the new Carranza note if there was the slightest note of to disclose the names of the men un- der consideration for the temporar; chairmanship, although Senator Wile liam Joel Stone of Missouri has been mentioned as a possibility. No attempt will be made to frame the party platform until the conven~ tion meets, according to J. Bruce Kremer of Montana, secretary of the national committee M'COOMBS WfLL ARRIVE TODAY THEY MEET IN PRIVATE CAR to disclose | Colonia Dublan, Mex,, June 2. | (Via Wireless to Columbus, N. M.) | Plans for the co-operation between | American and Mexican forces in |northern Chihuahua were discussed jtoday at the first meeting between | General Gabriel Gavira, constitution cstablish Vice President” headquarters and the ar- 2~The Sullivan tor St. Louis, Jur ment of “Roger Ito do and working rival of a quorum of the members of the subcommittee on ar- f ¢ belligerency in the positions taken rangements of the democratic national ) ‘lfll'“ ‘"""'|”"““‘_!“ “I' ”""”;‘”",‘ h;"”" by the Mexican conferees, General | committee, were the principal events o Ships Sunk. it hin g Ll . Sinder” | Pershing declined to make a reply. |in pre-convention activities here to-| Lendon, June i—Lloyds repert that the aror British ste edmouth and Julla Park, both unarmed, have been sunk, McCoombs of | The British steamer Lady Ninian s re- failed to ar-|ported sunk { Amercan expeditionary commander The two generals met in General Gavira's private car, shunted out half way between the American field base and the Carranza camp at Nuevo Casas Grandes. Only the commanders, The | their chiefs of staff, interpreters and stenographers were present The conference continued for Nor was it known here whether the ! day conferences would be concluded to Chairman W, M, F night or whether they would be con- [the national commitree tinued tomorrow rive, having stopped over at Detroit, Mich., but it is gxpected he will be Movements of Ocean Steamships, Port Arrived Salled, {hers in time for the sub-committee ! LIVERPOOL, . Baltic / ' o pe ¥ 1o ro « e 8T, MICH Regina d'Ttalla ock | meeting tomorrow morning. Homer | 87 aquarterly pre-| S Cummins ot Stamford, Conn,, vice- | oA\ "\WG iy cent { Allix-Ch pany at New dend of 11 pei in nddition to t ferred dividend of Madonna. " ! two Andoma 5 JOHN A, SWANSON, Pm———-@ Our Great Mid-Season Exposition Presenting Entirely New Styles Young Men, and particular dressers—we’ve assembled a mid-season showing of the finest Rochester, N. Y., WM. L. HOLZMAN, Treas. ke>c'r;1itingA bffice of “Home Affa irs”’ Gets Flustered A large specimen of the “genus homo” was being examined by Dr, Francis B. Cochran, surgeon at the local recruiting station, said specimen desiring to partake of the glory of being called one of Uncle Sam’s fight- ing men and incidentally draw the pecuniary emolument appertaining thereto. The large specimen stepped upon the scales. “Eight and a half pounds,” called out the doctor to Hospital Appren- tice Osiek, who was noting down the plans and specifications of the large | specimen upon a blank prepared for that purpose, “Huh!"” exclaimed the specimen, “What's s'at!” cried Osiek. The doctor blushed—blushed right out loud. Strong men averted their faces from his embarrassment. Women would have fainted if there Month of May Was One of Extremes The monthly meteorological sum- mary issued by the weather bureau of the U. S. Department of Agriculture shows that May was a month of ex- tremes, the temperature ranging from | 36 degrees on the first to 90 degrees on the twenty-fifth. The mean atmospheric pressure for | the month was 29.83, the highest, 30.19, on May 12, and the lowest, 29.35, on May The total precipitation for the thir- ty-one days was 4.57, the greatest in twenty-four hours being on May 31, 1.81. The prevailing direction of wind don't believe in letting ‘George do it |in May was northwest, the total move- Jut 1 do believe in preparedness, I am glad to greet you men who rep- | resent prep: Iness. “I do not believe in the kind of | preparedness where the patriotic em- | ployer tells his employes to ‘do it.’ I believe the employer and the em- should sleep in the same dog if we are to have effective pre- paredness.” In his formal address in the ar- ory Colonel Roosevelt declared a cctive tariff is the barrier behind h American industry can be de d in safet | asserted that such a f is created the 1 States will face economic dis | Road So Rough Nitro Explodes; 2 Missing Tulsa, OkL, June 2—A roug I nnt AY it . AR window Tulaa away. The explosiy as being . n & truck 1o a storage mag . N ira lie ayne } N and Pa N harge aft STUDENTS' REUNION BANQUET OF OMAHA UNI LAW SCHOOL . i « astimast S Were ma g A ' } Hrad be. D Jo s and Harey O, Py ks s MR GCcason o N ation meetings tha A . ment being 6,232 miles. The average Captain New York National League Club —leading hitter of the National League for the season of 1915 —like all who are prominent for brains and ability, Larry is a staunch believer in { . f ar brames encorage subatitul 'S ) THE COCA-CoLa Co Nuania, Uas Surgeon Thinkir;g:‘ - “Larry” Doyle, Hand-Tailored Clothes ever brought together by any Western Store. Such styles and such values as you would P expect to pay $20 to $35for, but thanks to phe Greater Nebraska Idea, a guaranteed saving of $5 to $10 Ohe awaits you e Extrz:k\J):alue and-ailor P[5 Saturday in Suits these Mas- 15, $20, $25 had been any women there, Children would have cried if there had been any children there.. Fortunately there weren't any there, The doctor soon had himself in | hand again, | “One hundred and eighty-seven pounds,” he said.” “Gosh, I thought T must a’ shrunk,” said the large specimen. | The doctor kept himself firmly in | hand until his duties were performed | and shen he held forth once more to | a circle of admiring comrades and friends upon the beauty, amiability, weight, complexion, eyes and so on of Miss Cochran, juniorist of the Coch- ran family, who has just arrived at his home, 3522 Lincoln boulevard. Bruce and Betty and the baby are | the other Cochran children, | (Special notice to friends: Cigars ill be handed out tomorrow.) terpieces of Craftsman- ship, at— $15.00, $20.00 and $25.00 Young Men’s and Men’s Models, full of the distinction and fine hand workmanship that worth-while clothes must have. Easy roll sacks, different lapels, unique pocket treat- ment; half lined, quarter lined, full lined; true forecasts of future styles, $15, $20 $25 Compare $20 to $35 Values Elsewhere. hourly velocity was 8.4, The maxi- mum velocity, 39 miles per hour, was on May 10. There were thirteen clear days in May, nine cloudy days and nine days partly cloudy. There were eleven days on which .01 inches or more of pre- cipitation occurred. MOOSERS RIDE WITH sTUDY REPUBLICAN DELEGATES Good News Always for : gLk Washington, June 2—A special | “Hard To Fit” Men. 1 TaRAY train carrying the repubhca}? and pro- COMPARE gressive delegates of Washington to : 2 ” . 3 o R L Yes, we are equipped with most wonderful selec i also twenty-four sightseers, left to- | tions of special sizes for men of all proportions. Scien- ALWAYS day for Chicago. The Oregon dele- gates will join the train at Pasco and tomorrow the Montana delegates will be picked up. The republicans and progressives will occupy separate coaches. tifically designed models for stout men, short stout, tall slim men, short men, in between sizes, all sizes. If you’ve had trouble getting a fit, bring your trouble here and get unheard-of satisfaction at $10, $15, $20, $25, $30, $3 and $40. Sport Suits, $10, $15, $20 No ordinary “Pinch-backs” here, but strong, characterful designs from America’s leading mak- We save you $5 to $10. Our prices $10, $15, $20. Your Straw Hat —Now is the time o —Here is the place —Largest selections the city ers. Minute ~—— Store Talk ce” means organiza It starts buying prestige this house enjove, and ends only when yo —Lowest in prices. but one rule to Customer First Panamas, genuine Ecuadorian $3.95 to $10.00 Bangkok Hats, the featherweights $3.50 to $5.00 Men’s Finest Shirts Manhattans, Bates Street, Yorke, the larg- oo : o “‘.00 to $3.00 est selection in the west, Silks, silk mixtures, leghorn Hats, Aristocrats, at imported madras, oxfords, stripes, plaids, $2.95 to $5.00 high colors, $1.50 to $5.00. Silk and Madagascar hats and caps, 50¢ to $1,50, bands, $1.00. B0¢; with fan Main Floor, Women's White Felt Hats Sport Shirts, new ideas, Man- 3] sl 50 o East Alsle hattan, Bates Street, Yorke ’ 4 - Hie 'M $1.50 Sh Men's Union | ens 1 . 2 lrts’ Neck Gal, e | A special purchase of 50 dozen " - Suits, 50¢ to $5 | oA by nev sirive axford Such choice In Necks gy ! g y~ ancy *. . A wear is a revelation _ Greatent display . hirts, neat patterns, soft cuffs l. 1ese Thousands of fashion sas .""-“ o Bk . shirt ill give a world of «.uh_l.u‘lnl‘) service, All leading summer silks BV, D, Corwith. Get jus izes, 14 to 1T Special for Saturday, at 98¢, new shapes—new colop what you ought to have and y gyt ‘ 3 effects, in endless pro« e e = g g l Men's $1.00 Soft Cuff Negligee Shirts, 65 fuslon; 80e to $1.80, wear headqua . | special for Saturday, at $1.00 Union Suits 2 68¢ Union Suits A " - ( 15¢ . b Cromher Wi 50¢ ") W L RO AR Sy v 4 ™ LEN AN NN

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