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About The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1921)
I! ) WATERS } ] BARNHART ] f. POINTING CO. } — S3 | , OMAHA s | i * i i 4 Paradoxical "Tiler* is h coninidictory sort of an 'f*rri*e|iieM Hi the pH |>el ot this big iiisiii^s ttnn “What Is ft?" “It Is I summary of their winter stock.” NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PART NERSHIP OF CRAWFORD AND COMPANY Notice ia hereby given that the partner ship heretofore existing and doing busi ness under the name style and title of Crawford and Company, and which was composed otf John D. Crawford. Robert B. .Mien. L-ovejoy M. Crawford, . Saybert C. Hanger and Orlo V. South, as partners, said organization having been organized on the 25th day of August. 1920. was on the 28th day of July. 1921. by action of ihe partners, dissolved and terminated for nil purposes whatsoever. Dated at Oma ha Nebraska this 8h day of August. A. f 1921. CR.WVKORD and COMPANY. ^Partner ship Per JNO. D. CRAWFORD. President. t in? filed in Co. Clk's. office and published four • r'l’lvp weeks in a le gal newspaper. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUG LAS COUNTY. NEBRASKA In the Matter of the Estate of Otto A. Ifempel, Deceased. Doe. No. Order. On this 20th day of August, 1921. this <-<iisf coming on for hearing upon the ^■Htion of Mary T Hem pel. administra trix. praving for a license to sell I*ot Six «fii. Block Thirteen M3), in Park Forest Addition to the city of Omaha. said property being a part of the above es tate for the payment of debts allowed against said estate, and unpaid for want of personal property with which to pay same. It is therefore ordered that all per sons interested in said estate appear in >;ft Room Number...in the Court House in Douglas County. Nebras ka. on the 26th day of September, 1921. hi nine o'clock A. M. to show cause, if any there be, why a license to sell real Old £ngliai Superstition. An aid Sussex (Eng.) cure fnt whooping cough Is: Borrow a donkey, place the patient on its back with his ■ or her face towards Its tail and lead , It to a certain spot fixed on in your I jwn mind three times running for three J succeeding days. Wedding Days in Holland. In orderly Holland, where every thing happens by rule, the different classes of society choose different days of the week on which to he married. For some unknown reason Monday is society's day and marriage fees for that day amount to a sum approxi mate to $-4. On Saturdays Ihe ■barge Is or nothing at all If the ample do not wish a separate cere mmv. and are willing to join a group ■ f '.’ll couples. At these group mar iages. the clerk reads the service once, ili the couples making the responses n chorus. I sd| The Circlet is Self-Adjusting, and I has neither hooks nor eyes. It I simply slips over the head, clasps I at the waist and smooths out ugly I lines. 8 If your dealer can’t get It send I actual bust measure, name, ad-1 dress U SI,H0. We’ll send then Circlet prepaid. Side's 34 to 43.1 Nemo Hystienic-Fashion Institute I 120 E. Id St. Mew York., Dep’* M. I j: • 3 :■ Tai Monitori] re aches Ithe Colored :■ :j pople of’Omha and-Nebraska and :j ■: has a wide circulation in every state ;i :■ in "the union. > S ' V •! :: It has taken Six Years to build up \ :• this circulation and we are still grow- i; i\ J Merchants who desire to reach the ji best buyers in the community use 3 ■i The Monitor. •: i t .■.■.VAV.V.V.VV.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.’.'.'.'.V.V.V.V.'.V/.VA'.'/AV :: USE \ IDtMTLO! £ The Pyorrhea-Preventive Tooth-Paste ^ None Better < \ 5 "• MANUFACTURED BY THE 5 j: Kaffir Chemical Laboratories NEBRASKA^ *» ir !>-*-*• ' -- SIX YEARS IN FROZEN NORTH Canadian Mounted Police Cor poral Returns From Arctic With 2 Eskimo Murderers. PATROLLED CORONATION GULF Expects to Return to Solitude After Short Holiday at Home—Punish ment of Criminals Makes Natives Respect White Man's Law. Montreal.—In May, 1915, Corporal Cornelius of the ltoyal Northwest mounted police left Edmonton for Hergchel island. He departed quietly, witiiout any flourish of trumpets. He returned Hie other day to civilization again for tite first lime, as silently as lie had left it. Over six years of his life has been spent in the Arctic wilder ness, four of them in the sole com pany of two Eskimo murderers, sen tenced in 1914, and freed hy order of the government later. Two years were passed at Fort Mc Pherson, where the big supply of pits visions and building material were dis posed. comfortable winter quarters es tablished, and patrols of the surround ing country undertaken. The two Eskimo murderers who were taken out by the corporal and offered their freedom were so much taken with tile ways of the white man thm they asked permission to enter the service of the police, and were both engaged, much to their delight. They tendered great service as guides anil Interpreters, and the white mail's lew has never had a better advertisement In the Arctic circle titan that given to It by these two tnen, tried, punished and released by its oflictals as a warn ing to others. Two Years in Wilds. „ In 1917 Corporal Cornelius was Joined by Constable Brockie and the two set out foi Herschel Island where they spent two years with frequent patrols in the far corners of the un charted wilds. Their next move wag along the shores of the Arctic to Coro nation gulf, a dog-sled trip of some soO miles, where another two years were passed in patrols to Bathurst inlet, Kent peninsula. All points on the south and west sides of Victoria island to Victoria Land and Prince Albert sound were made during that period. The filial trip was taken from Coro nation gulf via Bear lake to Fort Nor man. down the river to Fort McPher son. then north to Herschel island, and hack hy the coast to Coronation gulf once more, with another return trip via Herschel Island through Fort McPherson up the Mackenzie river Hnd home hy the summer steamboat. This 'alter trip eat-. T;T;,,i !it (log so*d, a distance of 1.100 miles being covered. The total patrols by dog sled last win ter ran around 2,o00 miles. New headquarters were made at Fort Epworth, the patrol, aecoinpanled I by Staff Sergeant Clay, establishing j fills post. The party lived in snow , lints for the greater part of rids time, and subsisted on tit- imple diet of the wilds eked out by such rations as they were able to carry on sleds. They built a wooden but at Fort Kpworth however, and enjoyed a mild taste of civilization. Two Are Acquitted. In 191S. two alleged Eskimo mnr derprs were brou.lf n by the const route by Sergeant Conway. These two tnen. Kayugana and Kotuuk. had been tried hy Inspector Phillips for the mur der of an Eskimo woman, whom both i of them claimed a- wife. They were however, acquitted, owing to lack of i evidence, and Clay. Cornelius and Brockie took them back by way of Herschel island and the Arctic to Coro nation gulf, where the two were al lowed to rejoin their tribes Corporal Cornelius says that the trial of tlie four Eskimos bad had an excellent effect on the general con duct of the tribes as a whole, while | conduct of the four principals has boon j most exemplary. Kayugana and Ko . milk were seen several times on later I patrols, their bnnd« being usually i found on the ice at the head of the Coppermine river, and each time Hie patrol received a warm welcome. Despite their ysars of isolation and hardships both Corporal Cornelius and Constable Brockie are looking forward to a return to the North In the near future. They will now enjoy a well earned holiday, and both are leaving at once for their respective homes, Cornelius going to Halifax and Brockie to Winnipeg. Curious Msste-pleces. Literary masterpieces have been written on strange medium* Smart's i poem “Song to David ” was written 1 with a key on the watts of a mad house Coleridge one** wrote » run dpi ,e a ...*■ "f -eiweed grssRWJ; g>rx « « x&ncHvibFm I Nebraska Civil Rights Bill I 1 Chapter Thirteen of the Revised Statutes ol Nebraska, Civil Rights. Knarted in 1893. Sec. 1. Civil rights of persons. All persons within this state shall be entitled to a full and equal enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges of inns, restaurants, public conveyances, barber shops, theatres and other places of amuse ment; subject only to the conditions and limitations established by law and applicable alike to every person. Sec. 2. Penalty for Violation of Preceding Section. Any person who shall violute the foregoing section by denying to any person, except for reasons of law applicable to all persons, the full enjoyment of any of the accommodations, advantages, facilities, or privilege* enumerated in the foregoing section, or by aiding or inciting such denials, shall /or each offense be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined in any sum not leas than twenty-five dollars, nor more than one hundred dollars, and pay the costs ol the prosecution. ^ "The original act was held valid as to citizens; barber shops can not discriminate against persons on account of color. Messenger vs. State* 25 Nebr. page 677. N. W. 838.” "A restaurant keeper who refuses to serve a colored person with refreshments in a certain part of his restaurant, for no other reason than that he is colored, is civilly li able, though he offers to serve him by setting * table in a more private part of the house. Ferguson vs. Gies. 82 Mich. 358; N. W. 718," HAUNTED YEARS; VICTIM IS ALIVE Missourian Meets Man He Thought He Had Killed in Quarrel 14 Years Ago. LIVES IN PERPETUAL TERROR | Man Fall* From Train During Fight Which Resulted From Disagree ment Over Dice Game and An tagonist Thought Him Dead. Kansas City. Mo.—Reuben E. Hall of Paris. Mo., met fuce to face in a Denver (Polo.) street a man whom he thought he had killed 14 years ago and the memory of whose alleged death hud haunted him ull these years. A letter telling of the remarkable case came from Denver to 1. H. Mhutzer, manager of the Tool Specialty company. It was from Shatzer's half brother. Reuben K. Hall. Hall a young farmer near Purls, Mo., went to the Kansas harvest fields to work in 1'.h)7. He disappeared. 'The letter received by Mr. Shatzer was signed with a strange name, Hurry E. Thomas. It contained this story of the disappearance of the new name: In Perpetual Torment. For 14 years Hall, under the name of Harry E. Thomas of Denver, has quaked at the sight of a police officer. He has avoided aU persons he knew when lie was Hall. He has spent wake ful nights, fearing arrest for murder. A wife arid then a child served to add to his anxieties. What. If they should j discover he had killed a mau? Rut the worry is over. Thomas was walking recently on a Denver street. He met the man for whose murder he believed lie was hunted, the letter state-.. The two recognized each'other ■ at ttie same time. The “murdered" man held out his hand In greeting, i "1 thought I killed you.” Thomas gasped > "Land, no.” the “victim" replied. “I ! was only bruised a little." In the 14 years since his disappear ance Hall's family has mourned him , as dead. Relatives after a diligent search, took steps to collect his Insur i ance. but lacking proof of death, were 1 unable to do so. Of what happened after Hall, with $175 In wages left the harvest fields the letter has this to say: “1 got into a dice game. I won $750. One of the heavy losers was John Wil liamson. He and I fought over the 1 game, then patched up our differences. Friendly, we climbed into a box car to go to Kansas City. We quarrelled j again, fought, and Williamson fell from the train In the fight. Not Guilty of Murder. “The next day I read in a paper , that the body of an unidentified man had been found on the railroad right of way. I was not guilty of murder, hut to prove It was a different thing Others had seen us quarrel. "I went West, changed my name to ; Thomas and grew tip with the country. Finally I settled In Denver, was mar ried ami now have a daughter six i years old. “You cannot imagine the relief now. Williamson went home wilh me. and we told my wife and daughter. 1 an; i the happiest man In the country. We are coining to see you and all the rest 1 „f the folks right away. I can hardly wait." YANKS RUN PERU'S SCHOOLS Entire Educational System of Country Under Direction of American Professors. Lima. I*eru.—Virtually the entire educational system of Peru Is now un der I he direction of American profes sors who were called upon here recent ly to complete an educational reform movement begun ten years ago. The foreign educational exjwrts are to develop the system, from (he pri mary glides .to the university, in bc cordarce with the special needs of each section of the country. Dr. Harry Erwin Bard, formerly sec retary of the Pan-American Society of the United States and formerly connected with the Philippine educa tional mission, was chosen hy Presi dent I.eguia to direct the reorganiza tion. Dr. Baird hHs been appointed general of education, and under him are more than twenty American pro fessors. AIR ROUTE OPENED TO BAGDAD Regions Isolated by Deserts Made Accessible by Aerial Transport. London.—Regions that would have to wait litany years before they could be traversed by railways are now quickly mastered by aerial transport. News comes from the air ministry : that a new air route has been opened up across the desert between Pales tine and Mesopotamia. Notification has been received of the arrival at Bagdad of three airplanes of the royal air force which have flown over this route. The new route ia about 590 miles long, it starts from Ramleh, passes through Amman and Kasr Azrak. where landing grounds have been pre pared, and proceeds thence in an al most straight line across the Arabian desert to Ramadie on the Euphrates, and thiqice to Bagdad. Moor's Holy City. Shfshuun, in Morocco, la one of the few cities left In the world whose street* have never been trodden by a white man. It Is the holy city of the Moors, and Is so Jealously guarded that no European explorer ha* ever been ible to enter It Ph—sant Hatcheries. The state of Massachusetts mains tains three pheasant hatcheries, one •t North Wllbrnham. one at East Sandwich and one at Marshfield THE MOHITOR CLASSIFIED COLUMN ATTORNEYS PIATTI & WEAR ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Rhone Dougins 4508 1017-20 Cily Nat’l Bank Bid-. I.am bolt. Shot well & Shotwell ATTORNEYS Omaha National Bank Bldg. Phone Ty. 89? Notary Public In Office N. W. WARF ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR at w AW Practice In Both State and Federal Courts HE A IT Y PAKL0K8. CLOTHING C. J. Carlson Shoes “Same location 31 years” 1.311 N. 24th St. (('or. Alley.) ________.._ DRUG STORES .. Liberty Drug Company != B. Robinson, Mur. i — £ ; 1901 N. 21th St. Webster 03*6 FREE DELIVERY r r i 1 iiiiuiifMiHiiiMtiiiiiMimtiiimiiiMmiHiNtiiHiimHMHKiiiimiiiiiMiiimiimnmiui MELCHOR-Druggist! The Old Reliable Tel. South 807 482H So. 24th St..* ..... FOB SALE -Two beds, springs and sanitary couch cheap. 2917 Grant St. FOR RENT—Neatly furnished rooms —Good location on car line. Web. 32+7.—Indef. FURNITURE FURNITURE. STOVES, FITXURES Second hand or New Repairing Hauling Everything Needed in Home WEST END FURNITURE CO. R. B. RHODES, Prop. 2522 Lake St. Ml sic. Records Exchanged, 15 cents. Lat est Mamie Smith records alwa>t on hand. SHLAES PHONOGRAPH CO. 1404 Dodge St. __ ELECTRIC SUPPLIES lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllll^ Hughes Battery Station i 24th ft Seward Sts. Web HOf = f FREE SERVICES = Batteries called for and de- E E livered. We carry all the = = makes of batteries. Re- E E pairing and Recharging. = H Omaha Garage iTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii GROCERIES AND MEAT MAR KETS The Burdette Grocery ! T. G KELLOGG, Prop. Full line of Groceries and Meats Quick Sales and Small • Profits Our Method j 2216 No. 21th St. Web. 0515 HARDWARE Petersen & iHichelsen Hardware Co. GOOD BARDWARK 2408 N St. Tel. South 161 LAUNDRIES v Eliulm E. AT. Shermar Standard Laundry 24th, Near Lake Street Phone Webster 130 t EMERSON’S LAUNDRY j j I h>- Laundry That Suits All I | 1301 No. 24th St. Web. 0820 j Q-*-» 0 > I O >i 9 -w-w-w-w—*• t KVA NS MODKI. LAI'NDRY 1 t Forty-five years in the business j j 11th & Douglas Douglas 0242 j PAINTS, ETC. Best Paint Made For Less Money Mullin Paint Co. 313 S. 14th .Street I... A. F. PEOPLES PAINTING PAPERHANGING AND DECORATING EntimateH Furnished Free. All Work Guaranteed. Full Line of Wall Paper and Sherwin-Williams Paints and Varnishes 2419 Lake St. Webster fi.Wi I L PRINTERS ESTAURA || Eagle Cafei Lake and 27th Street \ « SPECIAL CHICKEN DIN-! NERSUNDAYS AND | THURSDAYS Phone Webster 3217 \ » 5 . Chas. Hemphill Prop. * ' KiHiJuy.-tsCXixjjtJK « SPORTING (....v .... ? Sporting, Outing and Athletic i (rfMttl. t 1514 Fa main St. Douglas 0870 SEED STORES *"*'" * * * * * * * •••••• +•- m m m m We Have a Complete Line of FLOWER,GRASS AND GARDEN Bulbs. Hardy Perennials, Poultry Supplies Fresh cut flower* always on hand Stewart’s Seed Store 119 N. ltith St. Opp. Post Offics Phone Dougla* 977 .... • --- .j UNDERTAKERS ■MtNMIlMItlllllllHlUMIIIlMIMIIIHItllltinilHtllKtlHIUlHUllitn,, in.Mil A Allen Jones, Res. Phone W. 204 5 § JONES & CO. FUNERAL PARLOR 2314 North 24th St. Web. 1100 I-»dy Attendant j i r ^/.yAAy.v.v.v.v.v.*.v.v.v.‘ £ The Western Funeral Home ? ■I Pleases ^ Je And will serve you mgtil and day % a* iMSI.akeSi. Phone Weh. 021* ? f SILAS JOHNSON,’Prop. £ S FUNERAL DIKE C l OKS af /W.VVAV.V.V.V.VA’.V.V.v Lodge No 9915. Meeta every tecond and fourth Thursday nights each month at 24th and Charles Sts J. O. CRUM, N. G. M L. HUNTER, P N. F „ .. „ w B TURNER. P S Q. U. O. OF O. F., Missoirl Valley SCHOOL DAYS ARE HERE •j‘ J I Parents, Buy | *♦* . #j* £ Your Children's School Leather Built Shoes £ | , ' i / | rhey’re Built for: % f Endurance - Comfort - Service £f ’ I I ' THE FAMILY SHOE STORE | , if Friedman Bros. Prop. j| 1504 No. 24th St. | f I - t ANNIVERSARY SALE / Continued Friday and Saturday l at | ZUCKER’S DEPT STORE j 1615-17-19-19& No. 24th St / )