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“Townsend's for Sporting Goods. Electric Fans $7.50—Burgess-Gran- den Co. Have Root Print It—New Beacon Press. Half Karat White Diamonds, $75— Edholm, Not only the name, but the mark of service—The Bee Bullding—the building that is known to all. Files Suit for Divorce—Nellie Smart has filed suit asking divorce from Ed- ward L. Smart, charging nonsupport. Two Ask for Divorces—Mable Ald- rich flles suit asking divorce from Orin, and Bertha M. Terry wishes to be released from Fred C. “Today's Movie Program,” classi- fled section today. It appears in The Bee exclusively. Find out what the various moving picture theaters offer, Gets Ninety Days—Roy McGuiggan, Twentieth and Ames avenue, was sentenced to ninety days in the county jail for nonsupport and beat- ing his wife, who is in a delicate con- dition. ‘Watch is Lost—Mrs. D. Delone, 305 Lyric bullding, informs the police that some time Tuesday she became sep- Y arated from a valuable diamond set| Ushered in by the Ak-Sar-Ben cor- :V"“S‘";ol:‘p'fe“ch;d to the timeplece Was | onation ball, the special season’s Autos Stolen—Christian Jensen, | OPening event will also include a {)“21 Ngl;tfih]}‘we:qreth street, and Mllck supper at the Omaha ciub, following avis, orth Twentieth street, in- q ; formed the police that their sutos the crowning of the king and queen. were stolen Tuesday evening from |One month later, on November 6, the do;vntopv:: yl.rkrlng &l’m‘lcfa i club will be the rendezvous of its pa- o pare for Convention—T. L.|, i ; g ComabsinastiprealasntioriinsiAmaric triotic rflembers, v}'hen election re can National Retail Jewelers' associa- | turns will be received there by pri- tion, has gone to Chicago to assist Na- | yate wire. tional Secretary Anderson of Wiscon- N BAAY, s sin on the proposition of exhibits for ew Year's eve, which falls on the national convention at Minneap- | Sunday evening this year, supper will olis the last week of August. be served at 11 o'clock, with a con- Shenandoah Man M -Frank . PP 5 Staples, Shenandoah, la., has been|Cert until midnight—and dancing missing fro;‘n hl; l}o;{\amulncemuondty thereafter. morning, when he le s residence to s go across the street. His wife of two 'The annual meeting ?f members months asserts that he wore no coat [ will take the form of a dinner, Satur- or collar, when he left the house and day, January 20, and one week later t he may have been affected t % 2 2 :f,.(;.' :}‘,‘: heat oryhgvg met with foul | there will be a large dinner-dance at the club. But it is Monday, February 19, 1917, to which the {ashionablc set is looking forward with interest. That is the date set for the Mardi Gras ball, a masque such as the local so- cial world has not enjoyed for many a moon. Masques will be off for the midnight supper. George Washington's birthday will be observed as it has been each year. There will be a dinner and a num- ber of addresses. With the calendar already studded with these Ilalri}lliant eve}r:tshwhle&] the 1 J mercury sti irts with the -de- with the Omaha commmee.ld he | B7C€ mark, it is augured that the com- The.meetmf is to be held at the ing season will be one of unsurpassed Council Bluifs Commercial club resplendence, 1 rooms Thursday afternoon at hz It is admittedly a wise stroke of o'clock. Those const}:tutmg b' e diplomacy for the entertainment com- Omaha committee are the members | hoe"so to calendar its projected of the special bridge committee of the | ;oonee "1y Wil enable members fo new L‘C""l‘“l;’s c.i.’l;"m'"“ ‘% flf)c %‘,’-’fi' avoid conflicting arrangements, an mercial club. ney are W. . WAL | annoying feature of last year's sea- iams, chairthan; Anan Raymond, M. M. Hep!lgnlkt{all and Ig BA Raapke. | O™ George T. Morton an yron Has- tings are also members of the commit- A'Mflr:pgy I,-:ogoe:tg:u:;ncrtained e tee by virtue of being chairman and vice cflairman, respectively, of the new | members ‘of the Rockford College activities committee, under which the | Alumnae association at luncheon at GLUB FIXES DATES FAR IN ADVANCE Omaha Olub Has Announced Many Affairs for the Winter Months. IS TO AVOID CONFLICTS By MELLIFICIA—August 2. A brilliant winter season is fore- casted by the entertainment commit- tee of the Omaha club, while we, with less forethought, brook no plans for the morrow. play. Omaha and Bluffs Men to Confer On Free River Bridge Right on the heels of the appoint- ment by the Council Bluffs business men of a committee to confer with Omaha with regard to getting a free bridge over the Missouri river comes an arrangement for a joint meeting special bridge committee works. Happy Hollow club today. Those ‘) T R T present were: oy Government Report of TR o) g Crop Conditions for Week |, F Croo Hal ushy Misses— Misses— Following is the summary of weath- er and crop conditions in corn and wheat region for the week ending BTN August 1, 1916: . : b g ‘Washington, Aug. 3. Miss Alice Rushton and Miss Ruth e maatista s rcea i iiie roptin soathc | L MEECAId entertiinedt At Bl Roiclock tward to northern Texas. The drouth|luncheon today at Happy Hollow 15 “most severs In Kansas and Missourl, | club for Miss Clara Wright of Chi- where the damage is great. Corn Im-)cgagq who is the guest of Miss Ger- !:L‘llii',,.'".;fi'..‘.‘.‘.2‘,’,".,‘.'.‘:‘::?.7“‘: d':':.':'. trude Porter, and for Miss Katherine seling well to the northern limits of the|Crocker of Cedar Rapids, Ia, who Country | Boesslvarhsatiingtheiosn d|grrived this morning to spend a northern _districts delayed harvesting : orning Anfavorably aftested spiing wheat from the|month with Miss Fitzgerald. The Dekotas eastward. Spring wheat s greatly |tables were charmingly Qecoragcd damaged by black rust in the Dakotas and | with Japanese flower Lowls filled with x:f{'e;:c.‘:,‘,z":;nm,;n&:;:: Gt n—'}')..m::‘.i Japanese lilies and sweetheart roses in cesslve heat hastened the maturity of oats|rainbow colors. Birds and butterflies in the extreme north and caused poorly|perched on the brims and hovered flled heads. Flax and buckwheat made 2 ! Rye 'dnd bvarley harvest is |above the flowers and asplaragus.fern.‘ nearing co! fon. Pastures, meadows, po- | Tiny birds on the water glasses serv- tatoes and gardens were unfavorably af-|ed ag place cards. fected by the dry, hot weather in the cen- 5 wn tral districts, Tobacco needs ratn in Wis-| OWing 'f" h'h° absence :’3:3 '?m | consin and Ohlo; some damsge was_done|of many of the younger set only fifty by excessive raln In Virginia and North|of the eighty invited guests were City Tim present. Picnic at Lake Manawa The city ticket offices of all the railroads will close at 1:30 Saturday afternoon to enable thedagex;‘ts tohcolz- BieE lect their families and take the : o'clock car for Manawa park, where | cimoree o Swab, AT Helen Patterson, Helen Curtiss, Alice Redgwick. At Carter Lake Club. Dr. L. A. Dermody entertained a| party of graduate medics at dinner at the club last evening. Covers were | they will have their second annual|c.M. Harlan, }; 5.52";‘. picnic and enjoy the swimming, boat- | C. F. Ulrich, ko A. Byrne, Miss Anne Sorenson had three uests at dinner last evening and Mr. ing, dancing or other amusements be- fore th_f_hbig fl}lasket dfinll‘-nexbin t}}lxe lgvc- ning. e officers of the Omaha Pas- senger Agents’ association are: W. E. ?05 C. Peplfif h'g fg‘"'h H 4 Bock, president; W. H. Rowlands,| Mr. and Mrs. .M'"G “'}"0:“' vice president; V. M. Baker, secre-|Mr. C. F. Rise and Miss Grace Jo A f about 100 |were the guests of Mr. Roy Hart. ;)::)s’onsAi: e:::ee;i:lr.lce of. aboat 100 The Cottagers’ Kensington had —_— luncheon at the club today for Postal Clerks to Give forty-six members. This afternoon they attended the performance of the Dance at German Home The United National Association of summer girls' minstrels. Mrs. A. G. Jaeger had fourteen Postal Clerks will give their annual |guests at lunc}unn today and Mrs. dance and entertainment at German | Nate Mantell four. Home Saturday evening. The new postmaster, C. E. Fanning, will be Mrs. Leo Smith and Mrs. F. A. Perdun and Master Dave Hartman present and this will be the first func- tion at which the clerks will have an are the latest persons to swim across Carter lake. The two women went opportunity to meet the new post-|across and back without stopping. master, as they have been on duty at the other affairs which have been The high score at the meeting of the Cottagers’ Swimming and Bowl- held. Mayor Dahlman has also been invited. ing club was won yesterday by Mrs. Officers Stop Matching H. J. Hackett. Dinner and Dance tor Visitors. Game With Victim Ahead Bert Campbell of St. Louis and a Miss Marjorie Wilkins of Des Moines and Miss Clare Louise Wright | companion had annexed Bill Deveries, Towa farmer, and had taken him east of Chicago, who are visiting Miss Katherine Gould and Miss Gertrude of Tenth street near St. Joseph hos- pital, where they were teaching him Porter, will be honor guests at din- ner given by Miss Mary Fuller at her home this evening, followed by the indoor sport of matching dollars. Bert and his friend, as is the usual custom, had allowed Devries to win a couple of dollars, when the strong arm of the law, in the form of Officers Wade and Cooper, swooped down up- on the festivities, Campbell was fined $100 and costs, and Devries is in $2. Jay Burns to Join Bakers For Salt Lake Convention Jay Burns of Omaha, president of the National Association of Master Bakers, will join a large party of castscm b;kera, which will rencfh 'I:“i. ha Saturday morning enroute for their national co’r’wenlion at Salt Lake Cit; OMAR s next week. The Union Pacific wifi run a special train to accommodate the party of about 150 bake shop pro- prietors. Pireproot. Buropesa HOTEL LOYAL 16th and Oapitol, l = « + NEBRASKA Rooms, $1.00 and $1.50 With Bath, $1.50 and Up Cafe the Very Best Popular Prices STOP AT THE LOYAL A Good Cough Remedy. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey will ease your cough, soothe the raw spots and prevent serious lung allments. 26c. All drugglsts. Society dancing at tke Field club. The six- teen guests will be seated at two ta- bles decorated with a basket and a centerpiece of pink roses. Pleasures Past. Miss Bess Watson entertained at her home last Tuesday evening at a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Margaret Anderson, who is to be married in August to Mr. James Nicol of Quill Lake, Saskatchewan, Canada. Those present were: Mesdames— Mesdames— John McTaggart, Robert Galt, | Willilam J. Gunn, Janet Anderson, Algxander McKle, Margaret Falconer, Robert Henderson, Jean McPherson, James Henderson, R. G. Watson, George Patterson, Misses— Misses— Helen Cameron, Margaret MoTaggart, Janet Henderson, Ellzabeth Henderson, Margaret Anderson, Rachel Henderson, Jennle Galt, Bess Watson. Temperance Meeting. Mrs. W. W. Widoe will entertain the South Side Women's Christian Temperance union at her home, 2209 1 street, Thursday afternoon at 2:30. Election of officers and important business relating to the next season’s work will occupy the meeting. Omaha Colony at Lake Madison. Lake Madison, Minn,, is a popular summer resort with Omahans this year. Mr. and Mrs. John W, Towle and Miss Naomi Towle, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bucholz and son, Fritz; Mr. and Mrs. A, W. Jefferis and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Root, Mr. and Mrs. John P. Davis of Council Bluffs | and W. R. Wood are included in the list. S. E. Smyth, assistant secretary of the Omaha Automobile club, who is also at Lake Madison, writes that the bathing is fine, but he says that, while there are no sharks in the water, there are plenty in the garages. He mourn- fully recites that they charged him $3 for cleaning an automobile and 24 cents a gallon for gasoline. Most of lthl: Omaha colony motored to the ake. L} At the Country Club. Mr. A. H. Sibbernsen will have a dinner party for eight at the club this evening. Mr. C. K. Denman and Mr. Harry Koch each have small reserva- tions. Mrs. George Redick will have a party of eight. A DAGGER IN THE BACK That's the woman's dread when she gets up in the morning to start the day's work. “Oh! how my back aches.” GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules taken today eases the backache of tomorrow—taken every day ends the beakache for all time. Don't delay. What's the use of suffering? Begin taking GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules today and be relieved tomorrow. Take three or four every day and beipermanently free from wrenching, distressing back pain. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL. Since 1696 GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has been the National Remedy of Holland, the Govern- ment of the Netherlands having granted a special charter authorfiing its preparation and sale. The housewife of Holland would almost as soon' be without bread as she would without her *“Real Dutch Drops,” as she quaintly calls GOLD MEDAL’?mhm Oil Capsules. This is the one reason why you will find the women and children of Hol- ol WEDAL® are "t origi are the pure, inal Haarlem Oil Capsules imported direct from the laboratories in Haarlem, Holland. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL. Look for the name on every box. Sold by reliable drug- gists in sealed packages at 26¢, 50c and $1.00. Money refunded if they do not hel, you. Accept only the GOLD MEDAL. Arl others are imitations.—Advertisement. = - - e TE: During the month of August our store will close Saturday evenings at 6 o’clock. Our many patrons will assist us materially by shopping early in the day, especially during Saturday. THE BEE, OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 38, 1916. NO BURGESS-NASH GOMPANY, “EVERYBODY'S STORE" STORE NEWS FOR THURSDAY. This Second Annual August SALE OF FURS Affords Saving Opportunities of 15 to 25 Per Cent Over the Present Market Price THE success of our fur sale this season has been far more pronounced i Save 15 to a saving of from 15 rather than later on, You Can Save 15 to 25 Per Cent IF YOU will make your purchases during this August Sale of furs you can effect the very low prices which will be in effect after September 1. Therefore, it is not investment to buy your furs at this time y the offering. than we had even anticipated. But the remarkably complete showing of authentic styles, together with the unusual saving advantages, has induced our patrons to profit very piece of fur represented has been proven worthy of the Burgess-Nash guar- antee of quality, to insure the entire satisfaction of every customer. be sure that every fur piece sold will be exactly as represented and Back of Every Piece of Fur Sold Is the Burgess-Nash Guarantee of Quality, Authenticity of Style, and Thoroughly Satisfactory Wear. 25 Per Cent Furs Stored Till November 1st. to 25 per cent under | mant of only 26 per cent of th HOULD you desire, you may make your selection and we will carefully store them for you until November 1, upon pay- eir value, You thus not only secure first choice from our large stocks, but take advantage of only economy, but the very best sort of an these extraordinarily low prices, without the necessity of making full payment for the furs until they are actually needed. on Your New Fur Coat Now Every new style effect is represented from the jaunty 30-inch street coats to the long, graceful 50- inch models. Hudson Seal Coats, $85.00 to $400.00. Marmot Fur Coats, $69.50. Water Jap Mink Coats, 40 Inches Long, $175.00. : Leopard Skin Coats, Marten Collar, $250.00 ¢ Silver Pointed Fox Sets, $100 to $150. Cross Fox Sets, at $100 to $175. Natural Mink Sets, at $75 to $250. Red Fox Sets, at $35 to $80. Black Fox Sets, at $30 to $85. Silver Wolf Sets, at $75. Black Fox Muffs, at Blue Fox Muffs, at $45 to $65. Blue Fox Neck Pi Red Fox Neck Pieces, at § at $38 to $78. Natural Mink Neck Piec: Red Fox Muffs, Natural Mink Muffs, Jap Mink Muffs, at $12.50 to $38. Jap Mink Neck Pieces, $10 to $30. Water Mink Muffs, at $6.50 to $15. Water Mink Neck Pieces, 5 to $12.50. Black Marten Muffs, at $30 to $48. Black Marten Neck Pieces, at $12.50 to $35. Black Lynx Muffs, at $18.50 to $80. Fur Muffs Mink Coats, $75.00 to $115.00. ! Individual Fur Sets l Ermine Sets, at $50 to $210, Hudson Bay Sable Sets, $120 to $200. $15 to $45. Black Fox Neck Piages, at $12.50 to White Fox Neck Pieces, at $35 to at $8.50 to $48. Hudson Lynx Muffs, at $5 to $12.50. Hudson Lynx Neck Pieces, Kalinski Fur Muffs, at $30 to $40. Kalinski Fur Neck Piec WGheldly, August 2, 1916. NOTE: During the month of August our store will close Satu i many patrons will assist us materially by shopping early in the day, especially during Saturday. Black Lynx Neck Piec rday ng. n 6 o’clock. Our Therefore, you may . $45 to $60. 80, at $15 to $80. 3 to $8.50. at $20 to $125. Burgess:Nash. Co.—Second Flosr. Phone D. 137, BURGESS-NASH GOMPANY. “EVERYBODY'S STORE" STORE NEWS FOR THURSDAY 1 e —Advertisement, Women's Serge and Silk Dresses That Were to $15.00, at $5.00 Women’s Wash Dresses That Were to $6.00, Now at $3.95 Announcing for Thursday:--- A Remarkable Clearaway of Women’s and Misses’ Coats, Suits, Dresses and Skirts| DOWN STAIRS STORE ' ' N the next three days we expect every single garment of women’s and misses’ ready- to-wear in our Do It's our policy to not carry over merchandise from one season to another and in or- der to effect a decisive clearaway we offer what we believe are the season’s most re- markable values in ready-to-wear. Nine groups:— Women’s Coats That Were to $10.00, Now at g Th 75¢ In the Big wn-Stairs Store to find a new home. - $5.00 | ‘Women’s Palm Beach Suits That Were to $15.00, Now at $5.95 Misses’ Wash Dresses That Were to $3.00, Now at 50c Women’s Suits | Women’s Silk Dresses at Were to $15.00, Now at| That Were to $19.50, Now at $7.95 ' Women’s Palm Beach Skirts Phone D. 137. That Were to $6.00, Now at $3.95 Girls’ Wash Dresses That Were to $1.00, Now at 59c NOTE: Owing to limited quantities, it is advisable to be here early Thursday morning to insure best choice. Burgess-Nash Co.—Down-Stairs Store.