The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, September 12, 1922, Page 4, Image 4

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    im OMAHA I5EE: TUESDAY, fEPTEMHER 12. 1922.
Silver Attacks
McKinlcy's Stand
on Muscle Shoals
Farm Bureau Representative
Says Attitude Result of Long
Association With Public
Utilities Work.
Washington, Srpt. II, Opposi
ion bv Senator McKinhv. renuh.
liran, Illinois, it Henry Ford' of.
irr lor the development rf the
Muicle Shoal federal power proj.
ttt, was drclared by (iray Silvrr.
Washington representative of the
American Farm Jlurrau federation,
to le founded on "a lite-long aso
ciation" with the development of
public utilities from which he had
been uruMe to divorce hi mind."
Mr. Silver' statement wa con
tained in a letter to the tenator in
reply to the latter a expreitioti on
the. Muicle Shoal question made
public early in August.
I'olicice advocated by the senator
reflected hi former association with
the public tervice corporation, the
letter laid, and were based not on
a program of furnishing cheap pow
er, tt pn one- of obtanlitg for 11 '
lluiflt MuuU power, "ail that te
public i alilc tt) pay," Mr. SiScr
intnrmrd the senator Out the tedir.'
atwn proposed dcvelojHisent of tht :
properties to supply power at the
lowest possible cct and favored a
frogram that would remit "direct,
y or indirectly" in benefit to the
rntirt people.
'Taps to He Sounded Today
for Private Peteraon-Katin
A firing quad and bugler will
sound the tail rite over the xrav
ot I'nvate Alfred J'etrrton Kaun,
2110 Landon court, at J this after
noon in We.t Lawn cemetery.
I'rivate Tcterson-Haun died last
Friday of heart disease, lit was th
rhirf witness aeainst Lieut. (Hard
Boiled) Smith at the latter I court
martial on Governor i Island lor
cruelty to prisoner in France dur
ing the war.
New Kill Building Plana
Approved by Grand Hoard
Mans of the new F.)l' building to
te erected at Eighteenth and Dodge
street have been approved by the
board of grand trustee of the order
and by J. K. Master, grand exalted
tuier.
The building committee of the local
lodge will now proceed to prepare
specification for submission to con'
tractor to offer bid.
Head Every Word
of what liim Autumn Meid, motion picture critic of Oma
ha World-Herald, laid about
NORMA TALMADGE
in the Drama Magnificent
"The Eternal Flame"
Now
Plavintf XVaWtfJ
At the
ids En
rie
C HIT
.
a to th
which
the
, men's
patron
d Is to
f th'i
and
ed
- -;tU.
, dmedi
..ew to
Ik Orth.
1 heal
tney ', acet
5 of
.a the
roubles
es and lu
horus of
grotesque
Codes
using.
-.htoh
vx 7rv,
aaO
uxcnwfAmuAuK
Like Norma Any Time
bat She'a Wonderful Here
The culmination of years of hard
work and study, of practice and per
severance In acquiring the. very high,
est dorjee of charm and grace and
adorable personality, Is found in
"The Eternal Flame," at the Strand.
Norma Talmadge has never bad a
role for which she was better suited.
It fits her better than the proverbial
glove. Her art aa an actress, her
beautiful matronllness, her petite
glrllshness. Is given full play, and
sne goes majestically through the
plcturea, never losing for a moment
her queenly place. We do not be
lieve this picture better than "Smll
ln' Througut," but equally as good.
They don't make them better than
either picture. The producers dared
to make a costume play when cos
tume plays were waning, but so mod
ern Is this plot of Balzac's that you
forget the period It portrays. And,
unlike many costume plays, they left
out the spectacular, leaving a con
sistent, logical and meaty photoplay.
Even when Norma, as the duchess,
pretends a headache as a vamping
ruse, sne does It with a simplicity
and dignity that Is remarkable. Only
blind men could fall to fall for her
vamnlde. And her close-ups are
more exquisite than ever. It Is nee i- er .
less to add that the costumes, the1
settings and the casting are the very
best Conway Tearle, with his look A
of secret sorrow, is an Ideal support. A
Bullfighter
he Cat's Whiskers
town
I T) Z Nights Balcony, 40c ; Main Floor, 50c.
I .rriCtJS Matinees Until 6:15, 35c
Now Showing
HODOLPH
CrSVALENTINQ
The Wonder Pic
ture of the Year
Pricest
Daily Matinee ..HSt
Evening 50
Marie Mikova
PIANIST
IN UEC1TAL
r RAN DEIS THEATER
ThTRSnAY EVENING
September 14 a ti
Tws . . . . lua. Its
i ai hm at a- Wfwa
riTE BEI I.S OF JOT
"GRANDMA'S BOY"
1 9
jm ftn a t wm JW '
now SHOWING
"Arabian Love"
JOHN GILBERT
0VflCUlaRCUIT V AUDI VI III
M.. r.lr, I IS r,y N iyh. :lt
HARRY CARROLL
4 Mamy IS k
v..i.t .. ,i my
i-l f I ." t s.m
STAN STANLKY
'...1. W,U'-
H C. IIIU UM
M. . IS, l 04.
ltuTd on Thtetophy
at. . lattsa a rtnrt
.Uy, Jt pi. H. U at
1aut.!Ky an 4 m R! .f.
t I' fin,1
Ta. K.pt I J, Jl .
' K p. irfMa
t hTiti; La-M-a- "
-, M M
t !
rt at w tMii
A Queer World
Moior Hike Ilit!r Sjiemla
7 Daya Covrring 10
Mile Hurglar Hrruove
Music From Home
Attrea. Dinitiherited, In.
ftirm World She IWsti't
Care.
SOULS for SALE
By RUPERT HUGHES.
an I-rancueo, !rpt. II. A ntO'
torrycle trip ol IJ.Ouj mile through
i ttr km cnniiilcti'd when Clar
ence A. Kugglrs, JS, o Atlanta, ta.,
rode inti sit Francisco. Th tour
la.trd IS week anil during that
time he nerr slept under a rooi nr
ie food other than that pri pared
ty liimseli along the roadside, he
said.
The trio cost me about one cent a
nine, Kuggie asserted, "and it con
vinced me that there is much to he
done in the matter of good roads. In
one place it took a werk to cover
10 mile."
Not a Sound.
San Francisco. Sept I!. Burglars
removed at night a pisno snd a cs
nsry bird from the horns of Mr a. Het
t Hansen without awakening any.
one in tht Hansen household, the
police were informed today.
Not Worried,
Chicago. Sent. It. Informed that
he had been disinherited in the wilt
of brr late father, Richard C. Libber
i .toruKh, t,onn.. j'auline rrrd-
erick. stage and film star rt tiie
world know today that she wasn't
bothered by the provision of the
will.
"I didn't know he had anvthins? to
leave anybody" she aaid. "but I
wouldn't take a Penny of hia monev
u ne naa a billion dollars."
MlM IVcilrr'ck cliaractrri?rd her
late father a a hannv-sro-luckv
pendthrift. who didn't know the
alue of a dollar, adding:
1 trues I tn like him in that re-
pect. "
The actres laid lie had een her
father only three. or four time since
her mother divorced him 25 years
ago. i nc last meeting, she aid, was
in .aiilorina, several years ago, when
she declined to meet his second wife.
My mother has always been both
mother and all the father I have ever
had to me," she said. "I owe my
r.iomcr everytning.
aikorai
Ta (Mr pmt la ia eharrh ml lb
r.rv4 Itow ia.lm m ik lull
Ml t (altarl. livM M.l.lo kait
Hrt r nu,.uis 4rtw, put m lni
lb rl4 mmm lulna p r. a a imih
m4 l M mhhiiii IM 4r mslil k
Iwi4 la S)im n lit io . th
M.tr. Ill ft It i Kl, SWkpr M4
Sua. alr4 la IK rhalr. Ummi k
wuM I. M ialrt, hoh a rhIH.
Id In fc wamii iMr, Ml tsrmky,
a tus Muii a wt Ik iaa
pwu.1 mimii drk,a. Tkf km a
MwrH afckk U lriiB buifc.
When the choir was not singing
openly and alior board, it was usually
tiusily whispering. tven Mwood
I arnany had to Iran ovrr tonigm
and whisper impoitant news to Re
member. He was not permitted to
call at' her house or to beau her
home after the service. Singing be
side her in the house of God that
was different. He told her now
what he bad just learned, that the
factory where he wa employed
would close down the following week.
Ktwood had worked his way up un
til he had been made a foreman a
few month before. He was to have
been promoted to superintendent
soon.
His firm made the adding machine
t('wMla4 ItM tinr.)
than a mere deferment of bliss. She
had been trained, indeed, to regard
Liu as by no mean a right of her.
Mie had rather got the idea that bli
a pretty sure to be indecent in.
Marriage had been preached to hrr as
a lofty duly, a kind of hiuher ordeal.
Her father would have abhorred the
thought that even it rjtr gave any
franchise to rapture unrestrained.
Wedlock to him was a responsibility,
not a release from pruderies, a sol
emnity, not a carnival.
And now she was to be denied even
that ombcr, laboriou suburb of
Paradise.
CHATTER II.
Flwood had expected that the ba
news would shock hrr. Out he could
not understand the look of ghastly
. , .
lerror sne gave mm. lie lorgoi i
in hi own bitter brooding and di
not observe the deathly white that
blanched her pallor.
let he had noted that she wa
paler of late and had added that
worry to hi backbreaking toad
worries. 1 he unet rrnnion wa
gone from her cheek and her cheeks
were thinner than he had ever een
them before. She coughed incessantly,
cleverly trade-marked as the Kalvcrly , too ,n( fc,pt putting her hand to her
Kalkulator, or "K-K-K." But peo;
pie had suddenly ceased to buy add
ing machines. The world's chief
business was subtraction and cancel
lation. The last of the uncanceled
orders for the K-K-K would be fin
ished in a few days. Mr. Seipp, the
bank president, would not advance
the money for further production.
fcven the contribution baskets that
were passed up the aisles during the
services felt the omen. Those who
had flung in folded bills laid silver
chest at if it hurt her there.
Her counh annoped her father
he preached and made him forget
some of hi bet point. But his er
mn annoyed her. too.
He wa putting himself on record
with fatal hatred of sin, and she
wished be wouldn't.
A smile twitched her tip and dwelt
there at the mockery life wa heat)'
ing upon hi oratory. He wa oe
nouncing moving picture as th
source of all evil. Yet his daughter
in silver dropped copper with
stealth. Doctor Steddon could see
the leanness of the baskets from his
pulpit, and it meant further privation
Ii
NOW SHOWING
SI 1 NOW
JJLUi A HIT
RCXXo
In His First Great
Fall Production
.d'lSI
r
MCON
ADMISSION PRICES
VrlT THE PUI$.
5.
down quietly. Those who had tossed had never seen one. Vet again that
had not saved her from
A white brat wave drove the wan
calm from her check, and a tcarlet
war ensued in her veins.
She wa the daughter of Eve and
of Adam and of all of the Eve and
Adams since sin began. But to hear
her father talk, it miiiht have been
moving picture machine instead of
the sernent that tempted Eve to
knowtede and started the eternal
fjaradc- of wickedness.
To hear her father talk, this tittle
town of Calverlv had been a pre-
Satanic Eden before the Los Angel
esian movie crawled in. l et even
this voting woman colild remember
that be had preached almost thu
same sermon against a long series of
other amusements. He had never
found the town anything but
moras of wickedness.
She felt a mad impulse to rise and
crv down at him across the brass
rail:
"Fapa, don'tt For Heaven's sake,
stop!" ' .
For the sheer sake of true trutn,
she was tempted to protest against
the folly of such a crusade. It was
bad enough in a newspaper. It
seemed peculiarly heinous that such
. . . I . .. , , I--
oau logic ana sucn recKiess .,iaie
hood should be shouted gfrom a
pulpit.
But of course she made no sound,
except to cough.
The climax of her father's appeal
was a jeremiad against the desecra
tion of the Sabbath. '
The town's two little picture houses
had proved so much more popular
than anything ever known before,
that they had ventured to slip in. per
formances on Sunday nights without
interference from the indolent police.
The theater managers had claimed
that, according to their creed, ithe
true Sabbath did not fall on Sun-
AK-SAR-BEf
FIELD
Beginning Tomorrow
September 12
RACES
1:30 P.M.
Harness and Running
SMILES OF '22
7:30 P. M.
Musical Eatravasansa
MIDWAY
25 Shaw, and Rides
Admission 10 Cents
Scats Now aa SU Bcatoa
Driif Co . Fatten Haul, Fan.
UIU Hatl, BrM-Nash
Ca., Cackaaga Bld(. S. Omaba
or him.
To his daughter the new that EI-
wood would have no job in a week
and would know no place to look for
one had more than a commercial In
terest. It was the alarum of fate.
She loved Elwood since thev were
children had loved him all the more
for his rags and the squalor of his
home. He was the son of the
town's most eminent drunkard, old
"Fall-down Farnabv." a man whose
office had been any saloon he could
stand up in. Then prohibition ar
rived and he had lacked headquarters,
but not potations. An ineenuitv and
an assiduity that would have made
him a great explorer or a great in
ventor kept him supplied at a time
when there was no leeal liouor at all.
and when what il' ii liquor there j
wa to be had was expensive that
even cneap moonshine whisky cost
more man natea champagne had cost
ocrore.
Amonor the slipshod children nf til.
uuunicu iamny ill wood had some
how managed to acquire ambition.
He had struggled no throutrh a
of woe to a manhood of shackled
promise. He had latterly supported
ms mother and a pack of brother
ana sisters. He had even been able
to afford to eo to the war. had seen
f ranee and won the mierdon of
wound or two that made him glorious
in Kemember Stcddon s eves and i
little more lovable than ever, not be
cause he won praise for a hero's little
while, but because his wounds added
to the burdens that she lonecd to
divide with him.
Her father, however, had been un
able to tolerate the thought of his
daughter marrying the son of the
town sot. Doctor Steddon felt that
he was proving his love, his loving
wisdom toward his daughter bv for
bidding her even to meet voune Far
naby outside the choir loft. He was
sure that her love would wear out.
He did not know his daughter.
Who ever did?
The great danger about the whole
business of saving other people's
souls seem to he that life keeps
mocking the noblest efforts with fail
ure as it mocks the most high minded
playwrights. It is baffling to find
that nothing is more effective in de
stroying certain souls than the at
tempt to save them. Such souls
must be like caged birds that go
mad with fear when the kindliest
hand is thrust into the cage. They
dash themselves against the bars;
and if they escape from the tender
est palm, they flash away to the
wild woods.
Doctor Steddon was never more
devoted than when.he warned his girt
to avoid young Farnaby. When she
refused his advice he forbade her
to see the boy. She felt that she
obeyed a higher duty when she se
cretly disobeyed her father. She met
the young man secretly whenever
she could steal away.
Her mother had neither the cour
age to oppose this stealthy romance
nor the courage to inform her hus
band of it. The two lovers made an
unwilling accomplice of her. and she
was assured that they would marrv,
the moment Elwood could afford to
add her pretty lips to the mouths he
was already feeding.
The factory had promoted him
twice in its heyday of high price and
the time had seemed near when they
could afford to announce their ap
proaching marriage.
And now the chance wa gone.
And this meant to the girl far more
AT 40,
aa
HOW rtAVIMJ
A .hs - Ml tit
3 Big Features
Lillian Durkhart
Ru!oa Ballet
Noodle Ftfan
m ' i .
a.l
AIH rHTKKKNT.
I'OH Ki-.H.1USI
URIC ACID
TRY THE WtLMAVIS
TREATMENT
85 Cent Bottle (32 Doiei)
FREE
! .l. ( if ! (.'
M l . . -' ' ,
Im Mi ll lht
f It .! "'
u : ,-.. i k e N j
to. ,i4- .... 4 r i
... . .. l. . '! -!
. .
... I tft . I - l'"
4 '. k ' .i. l
ARE IMPERILED
Four persons out of
every five past forty,
and thousands
younger, contract
Pyorrhea. Bleeding
gums are the danger
signal. Heed it for
the sake . of sound
teeth and health.
Brush your teeth with
FOR THE GUMS
More than a tooth tastt
it checki Pyorrhea
35c and 60c in tubas
t
1. .s tl T W"r
4 f'"
k' - rf -S' Ml
a -sj u M '
i -t 4 ,1. Ik ) B) s1 .
k W ft
ToiwrfOivAlrlftti)
if
Tatty
anovrtasJaoJ
tirJ tyttam a ntgtil ol
laftashtngraMaivdabHcht
orootruM a tha wi of M
SaM.l. NaluiVtR MJykM
k4y aiiwtlons lafwtae, ttBpf4) !
ppui, ! tvtmiiftim.
&4
lkk x t
iiiisa Ma
la
h w.'.v
a
-a. "
day night, but on Saturday. Of
course they did not close on Satur
day niktht. either: but then, thev said
they could find nothing in Mote
against movies. This plea was re
sented a a heathenish impertinence
by the orthodox.
Doctor Steddon called upon hi
congregation to make a stand against
the "continental Sabbath" and to save
the American home from the danger
of the new invasion. To Doctor Sted
don the American horn wa a flar
ing failure except when he used it a
a contrast with foreign homes.
Hi daughter wa so distraught
by the larcaam of reality that the
felt it a (acred duty to rise and pro
claim her secret to every gaping lis
tener there. But, of course, the de
nied herself the relief of expression.
Whn her father completed his di.
course with hit tremendous thunder
against Los Angeles, he sank into hit
tall chair. The choir rose for the:
final bvmn. After that came the ma
jestic benediction. I
On the way home under the
watted magic of the rising moon, K
member did not walk a usual be.
tween her father and mother with
hand on the arm of each. Tonisthl
she kept at her mother'! left elbow
and clung to tight to the fat, warm
arm that her mother whispered:
"What the matter, honey f"
"Nothing, mamma." the (altered.
"I'm just a little tired. I guest."
tier father felt a bit lonely, insu
lated from hi child by hit wife; and
he had the orator't afterthirtt for a
draught of hit praise, lie mumbled:
How was the sermon, Jltnii
They called her Mem (or short. "You
haven't told me how you liked the
ermon."
"Oh. it wa fine." the id. per
fectly fine. It ought to do a tot of
good, too." She added to herself,
Hut it wont" Then be tell to
coughing so hard that her father and
mother nad to tton by a tree and
wait for her to be able to go on.
The big old maple sheltered them
like a t umbrella a moment. Then
their rye were blinded by a gtt
fierce light.
it It 'all4 Twmsw-I
Bee Want Ad art tha best busU
nets boo.ter.
DRESSES
N.w Arrival Daily at
MODERATE PRICES
JmlmsOrkin
l312-DoulAa St
B im iWifW i In it liiiM in I li In il III Kit 1
Armstrong's
Linoleum
Jbr Every Floor in the House
How a bit of dried paint
led to a new invention and
gave to you and others a
better kind of floor.
NEARLY everybody has seen a
can of paint that has stood
too long exposed to air and light. A
. thick coating appears on top of the
paint and it becomes useless for
painting.
In 1865 a man named Frederick
Walton stood looking at the thick
film that had formed on a can of
exposed paint. He saw what many
'others had seen, but he did a little
thinking as he looked.
What Walton Discovered
He pried off this film and ex
amined it. He found it was tough,
elastic, and smooth. It had an even
color. Further experiment proved
that it would withstand wear. It
was durable.
Mr. Walton knew what this film
was. It was linseed oil that had
oxidized and turned from a liquid
to a semi-solid, elastic material.
He took some of this oxidized lin
seed oil that had been exposed to
the air and mixed it with cork
"flour," or powdered cork. Then
he took, a strip of strong tough
burlap and pressed the composi
tion into the mesh of the burlap.
He Named It Linoleum
Here was made for the first time
a new substance which was named
i,inoVjji after linseeJ oiL
Mr. Walton has lived to see hi
invention become famous through
its value as a floor. Great milt in
F.urope, the British Islca, and
Anietka annually product millions
of yards of linoleum for the floors
of homes, offices, business places,
public and semi-public buildings.
Linoleum is a strong, sturdy ma
terial that can be printed with col
ors and designs, or the color may
be put in during the manufacture,
in which tase the colors run all the
way through to the "burlap back.
This, as your wife knows, is called,
"inlaid linoleum."
Linoleum makes such a good
floor that scores of shiploads of
cork and thousands of barrels of
linseed oil are used every year in
its manufacture. It makes a good
floor because it is firm, resilient,
quiet, smooth, and permanent. No
other floor is so easy to clean. There
are so many different colors and de
signs in linoleum that women who
have good taste in interior decora
tion make linoleum floors a part of
the color harmony of their rooms.
How to Identify Linoleum
When you buy linoleum, remem
ber what linoleum is. It has a bur
lap back that you can see. It does
not tear easily. Some floor cover
ings are mistaken for linoleum that
re not linoleum at all. They con
tain no cork and are not pressed on
burlap. To be sure you are ft tting
genuine linoleum, look for the Cir
cle "A" trade-matk on the burUp
back. This identifies the genuine
Armstrong's IJnolcim, a high quaU
tty product made in colon and de
tigns suitable for any romn in any
Wuse.
AaJMTftOHQ Coat Cpmsmmt, I tHtHICM DlTIrO?
Chicago Office--1 206 I rywortlt fluilding
f A
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! MIXMI .!'