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THE BEE: OMAHA', TUESDAY, JUNE I, 1920. JOINT MISSION URGES MORE PAY IN POSTOFFICES Increase Totaling $38,000 000 Effective July 1 if Recommendations Are 3 Passed by Congress. Washington, May ' 31. Increased salaries for postal employes amounting to approximately $33, 000,000 for the first year, effective July 1, were recommended in a re port to congress today by a joint congressional commission. Increases of from $150 to $250 an nually for postal clerks and letter carriers, with $400 for supervisory officers, were recommended. No in creases for first-class postmasters receiving above $5,000 a year were proposed, however. ' Estimates by the commission place the increase of the postal pay roll at about $38,000,000 for the sec ond year and $43,000,000 for the third and fourth year. Rural Carriers' Increase For rural delivery carriers, the commission recommended $1,800 for a 24-mile route and an additional $30 for each mile in excess. Motor route carriers, covering 50 miles or more, would receive not in excess of $2,600. The pay of village de livery carriers would be from $1,000 to $1,200. Should recommendations of the commission based on hear ings held, be adopted, clerks at first and second-class postoffices and city carriers would be divided into five classes, with those in the first class receiving $1,400 annually and $100 added for each class. Substi tutes and temporary clerks would receive 60 cents an hour while spe cial clerks would be paid from ", $1,900 to $2,000. Watchmen, mes sengers and laborers would be di vided into two grades, the first re ceiving $1,350 and the second, $1,450. Clerks in the postal maii service would be divided into six classes with those in the first class receiv ing $1,600, those in the sixth; $2,300, and the others graduated between. Eight-Hour Day. Services for all clerks, the com mission's report recommended, would be on an average of eight hours a day, 306, days a year. Di vision superintendents in the postal trail service, under the commission's recommendations, would receive $4,200 annually,' assistant superin tendent, $3,200; chief clerks. $3,000, and assistant chief clerks, $2,500. Pay of postoffice inspectors would range from $2,300 to $4,200 with an allowance of not more than $5 a BEAUTIFUL AMERICAN PRINCESS TO WED BRITISHER Princess Olga Hassan, formerly MisssOlga Humphrey, of San Fran cisco, whose marriage several years ago to Prince Ibraham Hassan, then cousin to the khedive of Egypt, gave her a chance to occupy Cleopatra's throne, is to become the bride of an untitled Englishman, according to a report from London. .Her life with the prince was short but turbulent She left him six months after their marriage and later sued for divorce. . in I day for expenses while- traveling. Clerks at division headquarters oi tVe postoffice inspection service would receive from $1,600 to $2,600. Postmasters Get Raise. A graduated increase was . pro posed for first-class postmasters " receiving- less than $5,000 annually, ranging from $200 to $400 for post masters now receiving $3,000 to $3, 700 annually; from $400 to' $500 for those now getting between $3,700 and ,$3,800 and $500 and, $600 for those whose pay now" is between $3,900 and $4,000. Second-class post masters whose present salary ranged from $2,300 to $3,000 would receive an increase from $100 to $300. As sistant postmasters would receive $50 for each grade up to $2,150. Third-class postmasters would : br ircreased $300 from basic salaries e.ch, the salaries ranging from $1,000 to $2,200. The commission also recommended fourth-class post masters be allowed 140 per cent on cancellations of $75 a . quarter and less: 115 per cent from $75 to $100 of cancellations a quarter and in ex cess of $100 a quarter. 100 per cent on the first $100; 75 per cent on ti e next $iuu and OU per cent on th remainder, f Organize Legion Auxiliary. Plattsmouth, May 31. (Special.) A woman s auxiliary of the Amer ican Legion has been formed here and is increasing its membership rapidly. Lighting Flxieres. Burgess Gran den Co. Adv. HERO DEAD OF SIX WARS HONORED BY ENTIRE CITY i Parade of Veterans Precedes Municipal Program at Auditorium All-Busi-',. -hess Is Suspended. Omaha revered the fallen service men yesterday by suspending bus iness and participating in various forms of patriotic and religious ser vices. The parade led by veterans of the civil war coursed through the dwn tworf section at 2:30 to the auditor ium where the municipal Memorial Day services were held. Graves of the hero dead in the various' cemetaries were decorated with flowers. Many patriotic ser vices were held in various parts of the city, participated in by women, children and boy scouts. . Rev. Smith Speaks Old Glory, whose past makes the proudest chapter of history, never will be .permitted by any future generations to trail in the dust, the Rev. Frank Smith, pastor of the First Central Congregational church, prophesjed to veterans of three wars in ah address at the Memorial day exercises held in the Municipal auditorium under the direction of the G. A. R., Spanish War veterans, and their auxiliaries, yesterday af ternoon. - , "What of tomorrow?'1 Mr. Smith asked his audience, of former serv ice men, of the Civil war, the Span' ish war, and of the World war. "The great motives that have never corned that flat into a war tor sell ish reasons, but have ever placed it on the side of right and freedom, are alive now, and will never die. No political difference or other fleet ing question can change the funda mental national character, and as long as time endures, our flag never will know the dust from which it has so far been preserved." Desire for Liberty The national beginnings and sub sequent expansion grew out of a desire in human minds and hearts for the enjoyment of four great prin ciples, which have become the very foundation of Americanism, Mr. Smith explained. Those four prin ciples he named as religious liberty, social equality, civic democracy and industrial opportunity. They were the cause of our first war, which led to the establishment of our re public, and have been the motives behind every Conflict the nation has engaged in since. An historic background, which described old world conditions in the seventeenth and eighteenth cen trries, was drawn in explanation of the founding of a nation with liber ty as its backbone. There was no place in Europe for men possessed of the ideas that led to the Decla ration of Independence, 'Mr. Smith explained, so the ideas embodied in it and the ideals behind them, were brought to the western continent for their development Refers To Civil War. Great questions not settled when the constitution was adopted led to a sharp division in 1861, he said, and four years of strife established the tenets of religious liberty, : so cial equality, civic democracy and industrial opportunity stronger than ever. Members of the G. A. R. left their normal pursuits then, he "re called, to offer all they had that the country might not become di vided. Many made the supreme sac rificc, he reminded his audience, but through their efforts a stronger union, nobler nation and better peo ple emerged lrom the turmoil. Unselfish motives, with no hope of indemnity or territorial expan sion, and without any desire for ma terial gain, impelled this nation to take up its arms in 1898, Mr. Smith continued. In that brief conflict many of the country's best man hood gave their lives, but each knew that it was for the betterment of the world. Again in 1917, Mr. Smith declared, autocracy's greatest challenge to democracy was hurled at this country, and the finest army of youngmen ever assembled,, won bloody victory for the side, of right. And every man who, fell was jtivincr his greatest possession for the ideals the United States first sounded, and will always stand for. Parade to Auditorium The memorial exercises followed a parade down Fifteenth street from Capitol avenue to the auditorium. A squad of police headed the march ers, followed by the Central high school cadet regiment, members of the G. A. R., the United Spanish American War veterans, auxiliaries of both orders, world war veter ans and Boy scouts. The high school band and the Omaha Fife & Drum corps furnished music for thi march. . ; , The exercises opened with music by the drum corps, followed by an invocation by the Rev. Ward L. Austin. General John A. Logan's orcier to memoers ot the u. A. K, dated May 5, 1868, establishing the custom of Memorial dav. foa rail by J. S. Davidson, member of ueorge irook post. Ihe roll oi honor, containing the names of vet erans of the wars of '61 and 93, was read by Perry Miller. Anan Raymond read Lincotn's Gettysburg address, and an appropriate recita tion was offered by Miss Maybells lhomas. Musical numbers were furnished by tMrs. Otis Spickler, V.mro T.nnr and S MrTntcli Tfc Rev. W. H. Underwood pronounced a benediction. Immediately before his prayer the assembly sang "America." A scant 500 attended the ixr.. cises, aside from the occupants of the reserved sections. English Girl Training ; To Swim Across Channel London, May 30. Mrs. Arthur Hamilton, daughter of Sir Charles Farlie-Cunninjrham. is now training for an attempt to swim the English channel in August. '1 am doing a five-mile swim every evening before dinner," she says. Mrs. Hilda Willing of Rochester, Kent., is also to attempt in August to be the first woman to emulate Captain Webb. Gage County Man Dies After Prolonged Illness Beatrice, Neb.. May 31. (Spe cial.) Reuben D. .Radebaugh, an old resident of Gage county, died Saturday m,orning at the home of his son, "George, who resides southwest of Batrice. He was 74 years of age and had been ill for some time. Wife of Former U. P. Assistant Auditor Dies of Heart Disease Mrs. C. S. Stebbins, 74 years eld, died early Monday at her home, 1230 Park Wilde avenue, of acute dila tion of the heart She was the wife of the former 1 assistant to the auditor of the Union Pacific railroad. Mrs. Stebbins died in the same house in which the family had lived during the past 46 years. She had been a resident of Omaha for more than a half century. Her husband, two daughters and a son survive. They are: Miss Eunice Stebbins, a teacher in the Omaha Central High school; Miss Millicent Stebbins, teacher in the Chicago public schools, and Dr. Joel Stebbins, professor of astronomy at the University of Illinois. Funeral services will be held Thursday. i Thieves Steal Cut Flowers Bought for Memorial Day Atchison, Kan,, May 31. Mors man $juu worth of cut flowers, as sembled at the First Baptist churcf here for use in decorating gravel of veterans, were stolen during th night The flowers had been pur chased by public subscription. It ti believed they were hauled away bj thives in a motor truck. French Occupy Aintab. Paris, May 31. A French columk has occupied the town of Aintab. Syria, it was announced in a Havat dispatch from Beirut dated Frida The French took many nrisoners. is reported 1,200 Turks were killed c 3 Over all the hurdles! ' c ' Spur Cigarettes were bred for competition. V Put out all the hurdles, widen the ditches:- Spurs will clear them all. Bred for the course, trained to win. Ask the man who has smoked all kinds. He knows Class. ; He will pick Spurs eVery time. . There was room at the top for Spurs because Spur is not merely a new brand but a new and better cigarette. s Spurs are crimped, not pasted. That is neta and makes them easier-drawing, slower-burning. Blended in a new way to bring out the good old taste of American and Imported tobaccos. Smart "brown-and-silver" packet, three-fold to preserve Spur's delicious taste and fragrance. A Charge for Alterations Blouses -.v . . , III I ffTVS ?.? it t . - III- I U - i s: i ' ill i V t , JK ; j ZZzzezr y Women's Spring Apparel Has New Low Prices in June The Glearaway Brings a Reduction in Prices which will be especially interesting at this time All Sjping Apparel Included JSvery garment is from regular stock, . " ; .The reductions are all genuine. Spring Suits Spring Coats Silk and Wool Dresses " The Hats for June 1 $35.00 to $55.00 $59.50 to $75.00 '$79:50 to $98.50 $105 to $129.50 $135 to $150.00 $155 to $195.00 Garments, Garments, Garments, Garments, Garments, Garments, Tuesday $ 28.75 Tuesday $1,7.50 Tuesday $ 61.50 . Tuesday $ 81..50 Tuesday $10.50 Tuesday $124.50 ' ' . ' i All Sales Final THE new and fashionable in millinery is displayed just now on the fourth floor. Hats that are of Thompson-Belden quality are offered at'the price that ap peals to you with an adequate variety in each group. Suit Hats Ceorgette Hals Sport, Hats Organic Hats ' Ribbon Hats ' Leghorn Hats Taffeta Hals Transparent Hats $5 $7.50 $10 Millinery Fourth Floor The June-Clear away ette Includes all of our finest models, lac trimmed or hand embroidered, in a wide range of colors. The de signs are charming with the touch of originality that dis tinguishes the showings of the Store for Blouses ( For the Followinf lm port ant Reductions: $15.00 to $18.75 Values : $32.50 to $39.50 Values $11.95 $21.75 $19.50 to $22.50 Values $42.50 to $49.50 Values $32.75 $25M to $29.50 Values $52.50 to $65.00 Values . $18.95 $42.75 The Store for Blouses : Third Floor Sale of Silks THE June clearaway brings a reductipn on silks of exceptional quality and on silks of the sort one desires just now for sports clothes, for afternoon frocks and. for all of the lingerie, blouses and the like that avacation wardrobe demands. $10 Sport Silks, $4.75 Dew Kist, tricollette, and baronet in ' white and lovely colors, values to $10, are offered in the clearaway for $4.75 a yard. $4.50 and $5.00 Tub Silks on Sale for $3.50 and $3.95 Attractive '. tub silks for blouses, dresses and men's shirts, exceptional , for $3.50 and $3.95 a yard. $4.50 and $5.00 Printed Geor getts Reduced to $2.49 a Yard A very good quality and a desirable . assortment of patterns. The new price is exceedingly low for Tuesday; $3.50 Plain Georgette is Priced Tuesday, $2.49 Yard To be had in white and in colors. The qualities are unusually fine and can be made use of in numerous ways in the summer wardrobe. A Table of Silks, Values to ' $5, for only $2.49 a Yard An assortment that includes satins, taffetas, crepes and Georgettes. t White Silks Ate Reduced You will find that the white silks in many desirable weaves have been priced remarkably low for this sale. Silk Section Main Floor JL 1l . ' . i .