The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, September 28, 1922, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE OMAHA BEE: THURSDAY. St:r!?.tat&R 2. 1022.
Taxis Operated
as Blind for Done
'Ring, Is Charge
Two Companies Implicated by
Ewdenre Ci cn at Hearing
He fore U. S. Commissioner
Held for Conspiracy.
How two tnxlrab rominnI" r al
Irxl to have bran operated m ft lllnt
for dun ring waa revealed yesterday
afternoon sihen flv msmlicra of the
Higed rlnir were hrurd lief or l'nltd
kltutes CommiMiionrr lioehler ami held
. on ft conspiracy charge under 12.000
bund Mill.
On i f the rmianlra la th Cray,
Hlte-nth and IMVtnHrt streets, and
Ilia other la neislilmr concern. Harh
oieruted two cura.
J. A. Manning, imfotlf nnt, Bent
ft deputy lo the "tnKlinb mrner" to
negotinta f'r dnia. anil testimony
offered before the commissioner
showed I Iik deal waa Consummated
frlday n Ik hi na follows:
I'eld IJO fur Irain.
Una man took 120 in puyment for a
drum of the ilruc. anolhrr lid liltu to
th corner, a third auld, "lt In tlila
inr," fourth drove htm to a hA
near the now Technical hlrh school
building, anil another, after tha agent
had waited several moment, drove by
In ft motor car and threw to him a
package containing the drug.
"Kven then urresta would nut have
been made Immediately." Manning
said yesteriluy, "hut one of my special
gents wns recognized ami tha new
aoon was flying through tha under-
world. We had hoped lo fizt avery
car operated by tha taxi concerns, but
had to act qulrkly and consequently
ttd not get three of tha nuirhlnae nor
several suspects."
Ton Arrenlfd Monday.
Ten alleged dope vlotatnre were ar
rested Monday nlsht aa a finale to tha
drive and are being arraigned sepa-
rately before Fioehler.
The five held for trial yeeterday aa
members of tlio alleged taxlcub gang
Kftve their namea on George (Dutch)
Volker, Earl (FUu-kle) Noyea, George
(Doddle) I)f)d. Arthur Wllllama, allaa
I ted tha Itough, and John Ppeckler,
owner of the Cray Taxi company.
Disposition of the motor car seized
will be decided when the prlaonera are
tried In federal court .
LTo Here
Coiestomffon
cr motdby S!da
Want den; btJOtf
PCA VOL I WWHUg I
Mntr toob-
fur
CAB TIB'S JfniTTLf?'
aSSSJ IpYllG
ctjM rem- if v
Jj Far hmOSSSTvSi
Doctor Dislocates Own
Joints for Osteopaths
..... -rv t i
0 H
v
' Attendunta at the 1 3d annual con
entlon of tha Nebraakft Onteopathlc
enunciation, 'meeting yeaterday morn
ln In Hotel Fontonnlle, were thrilled
and tnatrurted by demonatratlona of
Dr. Kllla Whitman of Montreal, a
man of rare phyalcal abnormalltlea.
The Cflnadlan, who wa brought
here by Dr. J I. A. Fanner of North
I'latte, Neb., dlelocnted hla own ahoul
dcre In alx different waya and die
located hla hlpa four tlmra. He also
ahowed four dlnlocallmia of hla own
aplne. With brief lnatructlona he per
mitted other to reduce the dlalora
t.'ona with a few movement of the
handa. He explained that the prac
tical ue of hla di'monut rations waa to
ehow that it la poaalble to correct dis
locations without the uae of anesthesia.
"Can you move your ears?" some
one naked.
Not quite." the doctor replied. He
la 35 years old and has developed hla
nrange physical condition sine he
waa 5 yea re old. The doctor la ft
practicing osteopath.
Yesterday mornlng'a session of the
state osteopaths waa opened with ft
report of Dr. C. H. Atxen, who attend
ed the Los ' Angeles convention of
oateopatha lust June.
On yesterday's program ware Ir.
A. K. Moss. Kimball, Neb.; Dr. C. K.
Btrubble Hasting; Dr. If. H. Chris
tenaen, Tender; Dr. J. H. Tllden, Den
ver; Dr. E. M. Crnmb, Lincoln; Dr.
F. L. Bixby, Klrkavllle, Mo.; Dr. Har-
old A. Fenner. North Platte.
Bpeakera on the afternoon pro
gram were; Dr. G. C. Wldney,
Lexington, "Nerve Conservation;"
Dr. George F. Flercy, Superior, "Oste
opathy."
Officers of the association are: Dr.
N. J. Hcgland, Central City, president;
Dr. A. E. Valllor, Columbus, vice
prealdont; Dr. Lulu L. Crumb, Fair
bury, treasurer; Dr. Byron 8. Peter
aon, Omaha, secretary.
Natalie Talmadge Fails to Appear,
but Buster Insists She's With Him
Prouder of hla neweat title, "Dnd-
die," than of hla movie laurels, Buster
Keaton, diminutive film idol, spent ft
half hour at the Union station Tues
day evening, en route east to set the
world aeries.
His wife, Natalie Talmadge, and
their S months' old' son, Joseph,
were not seen during hla brief sojourn
In Omaha.
"My wife's on the train but she's
putting the baby to sleep," Keaton ex
rlained. Train porters said they had seen no
baby. .
Passengers reported a woman with
pink satin Russian boots in the Keaton
party.
Mrs. Ed Klein, wife of Keaton's di
rector, was the only woman seen In
the Keaton stateroom. "I don't know
where Natalie Is," said Mrs. Klein.
Calls Baby 'The Pest"
Anyway Keaton Is proud of his heir,
though he nicknamed him "The pest."
Told that an Iowa baby uttered the
word "mother" five minutes after its
birth, BuBter exclaimed:
"That's nothing. My buhy did a
somersault an hour after he was born.
He looks like me and he's going to
take after me In the movies."
Grabbing a 10-gallon milk can off a
nearby truck, Keaton started Into the
Pullman car with it.
"Baby'a milk," quoth he. Klein res
cued the can.
Calls Hart "Crazy."
Hollywood movie folks sympathy Is
entirely with Mrs. Hart in the Bill
Hart separation suit, according to Kea
ton, "Hart's crazy," was his laconic com
ment. Keaton said he appeared In Omaha
In vaudeville with his father In 1901.
He was then 6 years old.
A large crowd of movie fans were on
hand to greet him, also local moving
picture film men, Including W. E. Cof
fin, Sidney Meyer and Edward Alper
son and their wives.
Ftgey Joyce of milllonalre and-mar-rlage
fame, was on the same train, ac
cording to train attaches, but she re
tired, leaving word not to be disturbed,
they said.
Why q Gray
SViop
For the Inst several years
liana Brother liave realirej
the importance of fitting wom
en who wear large garment
in tfeomins? atyks that are
irraeeful anil useful, ami, aft
er several jean of attuly, we
have now openetl shop that
U tlevoted exclusively to thif
type of figure.
Throiichout the emmtr
many store advertise "Stout
lpartme," ltaa Uroth.
em have ojwre.1 an ee!nMv
shop, distinctly apart from
their "Average Women'
Shop," where the llnra of
women requiring garmente of
lirf proportion are InlelU
cent!? iMtiti!, thi aMiirtn
h le of the atautt-r type that i
they w, revive p-i il aten
i km fey U!!-I atun.U'.t wh
V,no what thy ihouM wear.
McKelvie on Trail of ,
Democratic Speakers
Lincoln, Sept. 28. (Special.) Gov
ernor IcKelvIe donned his warpaint
Wednesday and atartcd for north Ne
braska on the trail of the democratic
state committee. The governor talks
Thursday afternoon at O'Neill, Fri
day afternoon at Ainsworth and
Saturday at Valentine. Ho proposes
to defend his administration from
the charges made against It, and has
armed hlmsejf with facta and figures
that he proposes to quote to the tax
payers. Feeling himself reHponslble for the
much-maligned and misunderstood
rode system of government, Mr. Mo
Kelvie propones to explain and tell all
about It. He said. Just before leuv
Inn, that once th teoplo understand
tho operations and objvet of the rode
Ytem opponltlon to It will vanish.
He declared that when Candidate
Bryan declares It to be expensive and
autocratic he does not know what
he is talking about, and still yearns
to get the candidate in a Joint debate
to prove this.
I. 0. 0. F. State Secretary
Will Be Buried at Fremont
Fremont, Neb., Sept. 27. (Special
Telegram.) Funeral services for I. P.
Gage, 77, secretary of the grand lodge
of 1. "o. O. V. of Nebraska, will be
held )n Fremont at the Congrega
tional church Sunday afternoon at 2.
The deceased, had held office of sec
retary of the Nebraska organisation
for 30 years. Ho waa a pioneer of
Nebraska and a civil war veteran.
Death came while he waa working at
hia lodge dutiea at his office.
A plant hae been dleeovered In In-
,11a whlrh Is fin fff(iv rpmwlv fnr
'miliaria and bUckwater fever.
Haas Brothers
'Gray $'oj'
.en IWe
lr.ee iUI ! 4 NsU
Due to many requests from thoe unable to get
b&Uoona during Saturday ' tale we offer
While They Last
22 Inch, lelf aealin;
AIRSHIP BALLOONS
with each
EDISON MAZDA LAMP
i re b !. tii r!y voiir aotna ft Be Unsi
er and ynur atddla tll e 4ti(hta4 wttH
pse of tfeM bl. rgttly color4 Vallni,
NobraskdilPoworG.
Seeker of Third
Term in Senate
Talks on dry Law
Shallenlierger Fails to Men
tion Beer iinj Wine Pro
gram Deflation I
Diacuiacd.
Franklin, Neb., Sept. 17. (HU1
Telrgrtim.K-On the second day tit hi
ramitalgn for ft third farm In I'nttwl
Btatva senate, O. M. Illtchcork again
stressed the lliiuor issue In eoi-ti of hla
atMwrhra, but a on the first day, tha
audiences failed to glv tha alight est
encouragement to hla stand,
Hiweches were mad today by the
aenator At Huperlnr, Had Cloud and
franklin. A. C. Phallenberger, demo-
cratlo candidal for congress In the
Fifth district, joined the Hitchcock
party at Nelson and la to continue
on the tour throughout Th. district.
Although Hhallenberger nominated th
aenator at th Han Francisco convention
two year ago, at ft time when he
waa running on ft light win and beer
program, the congressional candldatu
mad no mention of th liquor ques
tion. Deflation Discussed.
Democratlo deflation and th tariff
occupied th senator' attention after
devoting th first part of hi address
to the liquor problem. At Superior,
th renator changed th date of th
beginning of deflation from Just prior
to, or at tha time of th holding of
the republican national convention, to
a time In the fall or winter of 1020
1921. He said that there had been
great Inflation during the war under
a democratic national administration,
and that he fully understood that un
due expansion could not go on In
definitely. "The trouble with th deflation poli
cy adopted by th federal reserve
board was, that Instead of moderate
curtailment of credit and currency,
the board with on blow brought on
drastic deflation, and It waa this that
hitfught on depression," said th
senator.
I'ralse Underwood Tariff.
Speaking of th tariff, he said that
although the new tariff bill would
bring return to the government of but
$400,000,lH)0, th people would pay
enormous Increased price for their
goods, such as woolens, cotton goods,
hardware, and In fact every article to
be purchased. He praised the Under
wood tariff law, enacted under the
Wilson regime.
In rhif aa a Maryland dt letloli of
tha woman nUf rori tone; "Mart h
Ing Thruugn tiaoigia."
JUny veterans aung their g4
Imits between cruii'hee and ana, un
willing to rvlegat htmsl( tu In aut
muhtla aertion, mad lb (rip In a
whel chair.
'ollo.iig th parade, mmiWrt of
the various auxiliary urganltattona
allied with th Q. A. It. held busl
nM mtinge, but In mnt Ineuncw
confined their ai-uvitlv today to rou
tine affaire, leaving tha nmre Import
ant questions for tomorrow.
Interpretation of Law
on Compensation Asked
Uiu oln. Hept Huclal -Htat
Oomitensallon Commissioner Ken'
nedy (lied a petition In Intervention
In auprem court In tha controversy
between Jack Frost, Injured Lincoln
worker, and th t'nlled Mttes Fidelity
and (iuaranty company, which tha
district court ordered to pay Froat 13
ft week for the rest of hi life. He
la now but 13 years old. Mr. Ken
nedy had ordered Froit to submit to
surgical operation. He refused and
the lower court said be did not have
lo do so.
Mr. Kennedy want the supreme
court to answer, for hi futur
guidance, two questions. One la
whether he has the power to deny
compensation to ft worker who re
fuses to submit to an operation rela
tively simple In character and which
will probably restore him to useful
ness. The other is whether an In
jured employe, who has suffered
partial permanent disability, to the
extent of two thirds of hla rapacity
In both legs, .Is entitled to compensa
tion on th basis of the percentage
the dlenblllty bear to th amount
alkiwed for permanent total disability
or twite the amount allowed for one
leg.
Grand Inland Merchants
Plan Novel "Dollar Day
Grand Island, Neb., Sept. 7. (Spe
cial.) -October t has been designated
as "Dazzling Dollar jlay" and "The
Island Fete" by the Grand Island
merchanta, each of whom will put on
some unannounced bargain on thai
day In th denomination of ft dollar,
No previous advertisement of th
bargain Is to b? made. Each mer
chant will display It In hi window,
the curtains of which will be raised
at a certain hour. A parade Is also to
be given In the morning for which
over 60 float have been pledged.
Death Mars Parade at
G. A. R. Encampment
(Continue! From Pass One.)
made famous during the Civil war,
the Spanish-American war and by the
world war. Thousands upon thou
sands of Iowans and others cheered
the heroes as they passed along the
line of march, richly decorated for
the occasion.
MacXIder Is Guest.
Commander-in-Chief Pilcher had as
hia honored guest today, National
Commander Han ford MacNIder of
the American Legion.
One Grand ' Army man, and only
one in the entire organization, wore
the olive drab regulation uniform of
a veteran of the world war. He was
Nicholas O. Vansant, who fought
through the Civil war side by side
with his brother S. R. Vansant, for
mer governor of Minnesota and past-
commander-in-chief of the O. A. R.,
who was under fire as a Salvation
Army worker at St. Mlhiel, France,
during the world war.
Commander-in-Chief Pilcher' love
for flowers, unwittingly displayed, re
sulted In the parade being held up
a moment. After Commander Han
ford MacNIder of the American
Legion had vaulted from his seat In
the automobile as It stopped before
the reviewing stand to open the car
door for Commander-in-Chief Pilchel
of the Grand Army, he stood respect
fully at attention awaiting General
Pilcher's descent from the tonneau.
But Commander Pilcher smilingly
pointed to a huge spray of multi
colored autumn flowers on the run
ning board that had been flung there
by admiring spectators and asked
Colonel MacNIder to lift them so that
they would not be crushed. Com
mander "Jack," as MacNIder is
known In Iowa, his home state, placed
them in the car and General Pilcher
joined him, allowing the parade to
move on.
Wheel C hair In Une.
Veterans of Rockford (111.) post No.
1. the first organization of veterans to
pass the court of honor in the column
of the parade proper, stiffened and
braced In snluto to their commander-
Crossing Watchman la
Requested at Long Pine
Lincoln, Sept. 27. 8peclal.r-An
Informal complaint waa filed with the
state railway commission by J. K.
Paddock, city clerk of Long Pine, on
behalf of the city and business men
against the Northwestern railroad".
He says that the Main street cross
ing I dangerous, and that no watch
man Is on duty half the time. He
want an order for 24-hour watchman
service. Several narrow escapes are
narrated.
Woman's Hair Burned Off
When Comh Catches Fire
Nebraska City, Neb., Sept. 27.
(Special.) Mrs. William Gunn, wife
of former Chief of Police William
Gunn, had her hair almost burned
off when some water from a ket
tle she wa lifting off an oil stove
fell onto the flame and the blaze shot
upward and ignited a celluloid comb
In her hair. She auffcred sever
burns alwut the face.
Heavy Grip Leads
to Booze Arrest
Federal Agent Haid Soft
Drink Parlor in "Littlo
Italy" Several Nalhed.
Knrout to "Ijtile Italy" to raid
several soft drink parlors ytoicribty,
fedrrol agents observed I'hurUa It.
Htewart carrying a grip that appeared
to I suspiciously httvy.
They halted Kwwurt and found the
grip contalni d moonshine whlaky,
ittentart wua arretted.
Two plarea, run by Nick Vranrse
and Paul Molonl, one at th Pierre
and the othi-r at IV'" Koulh Kialh
atreet, were nldcd. Hlxtern pints of
whisky, two pints of alcohol, 7 but
tles of horn brew and 10 gallons of
mash were found.
At John Kiulro'a, 101 South Twenty-ninth
street, officers found on half
I illon of whisky In ft water pull,
Several pints of liquor were confis
cated at Will Chadwlrk'a place, 13:1
Pierce street.
Prohibition Agents Hnnnlng, Lynch,
flat mi. Hancock and Vogel iniuln the
arrests.
Judge Stop Divorce
Suit to (live Youth
Lt Hson in Etiquette
New York, rpi, :7.-iupirm
Court Juattta t'Mlkkltan atoppo-l ft
divoiva Itmriiig In HtouUyn for few
minutes t"day and taut lit eU in
nmit rt quette, the obJtt leamn to
tng a young man, rpl' i, drill in n-w
fall i. iili, who forgot la take off In
UtlUutil)' Mitt! hat.
Th v.ctini, arati-d in a front row of
the courtroom with hi new hat
wnlir. on load at a iikilt
!e. did li" lit-l ..' JutU falLifchsl)
loiiy stare, Wlii-n lh Jiiine akd
tuiit t" "ii'iu I'M lie!," h Mu.ln-d
'and Started 10 teliio his hat(ar,
"No, k- It wi," aid JUMii'a Cab
LishMii. 'He ft prr-tty snappy tut.
Come up her nd let all lk,"
Violently blushing, tha youth sat
t,eule the Jiidk-m until tb courtroom
had Ita f.II of g'UKle at Ma expense.
When lie was allowed to regain hi
seafj
An auiomob l. imcked lii knocked
down form, was sh.pd from Detroit
to Cleveland by a-ruil freight.
Wjniore Youth I Shot in
Leg Ly City ConstaMc
liaatrlcs. Neb., Kept. 27, (Hie
clal Telegrsm.) Glen Orr, 1J, was
shot In th leg at Wymore by Con
stable llat'kler, a ha attempted to
rci!M after he had teen ordered to
stop, The boy was brought to a ho
-itul her. According to Hackb-r. he
discovered a crap game in a Wy
more horn Ha demanded admission,
but waa refused. )Je waited and fin
ally two men came out., They were
ordered to bait, but they fled. Hack
ler aays he shot low to frighten them,
and believes the bullet struck a ce
ment wall and glanced off.
Nonpolitical Candidate
Speake at Falls City
Falls City, Sept. 27. (Special.)
Mlsa 13. rtuth Pyrtle, nonpolitical can
didate for stato iuierlntendent, met
with a group of club women her.
She addressed the Fall City High
school assembly. Miss Pydtle 1 well
known here aa an educator, club wom
an and war-welfare worker. Mis
Pyrtle expressed her gratitude for
the splendid vote cast In the Richard
son county primary. She was ao
componled by Mrs. Vila P, Sheb
don of Nehawka.
They are ifi&
GOODl
It Costs fJothing to Look
Accept This Tip
Don't buy any Piano anywhere at any
price until you see our wonderful values.
SEE ALL TEST ALL
Then Come Here
16th and
Howard
N Metric Co.
419 S. 16th
Omaha
The Only ONE-PRICE, NO COMMISSION KCUSE in Nebraska
$98.50 Is Such a Little to
Pay for a Fur-Trimmed
Winter Wrap
There is a graceful softness about the
new winter wraps which makes them
unusually appealing. Yet they are fash
ioned of rich materials with trimmings
of luxurious furs, so you may be sure
they are warm enough to keep the cold
out on the bleakest stormy day.
Lovely fabrics such as marvella, cache
mire duvetyne, gerona and tarquine,
with attractive fur trimmings of beaver,
squirrel, fox and mole, are
Priced $98.50
Third Floor
fr-A-ii - u agiyva- ji ii aa - owja-w jm hw turn1 sr- wvTy
f rfl-n,rTr"ll-M-r,",rTul
Coin'
Fait
- 1 -w
B"SI
gppajstMgajHSHMIgBBftJfthJP
n,iwy
o"i-
2fUHBjSftataafehdft)SjBfeH 4
rC!TMIiTTTsfcfcsesa
We invite you in to $c if any costly cus
tom tailor could produce anything finer
than our
HirshWickwire
S a fact, very few cm esccl in material!
r fine nrcJle-work, They are hand-built.
Many v( the fabric are imported. Yet,
withal, they cot nu more than you'd ordi
narily pay fur an ordinarily goud lutt. In
wide iMortment at $s ,n4 up.
"F.(tuuvi rut
iwr
UlK rJ Hfty
f I
14
tit
i rcHii-.;. it nr .
' uv-wwiw am. i
If n-ikins ' yj5!
f Purposn
For
Bakinf
Purposes
J erf
.r4
Malt Extract Is Only As
Rich As the Malt
4 8UIT ot clothes Is only as good aa the cloth that
goes Into It. If the wno Isn't theif . the cloth lno't
there. The cl"fh dfpend upon the and the tsllnr
depends upon the r!"
A Malt eitriwt is only as rich as the n and the hops
thai to Into It. And the rrs.il Is ouiy s rl- h sa the
hsri-y II is made out of no be sure and aide for
' I'uiiim" If you want rraitlta.
With Puritan you can hare rour choice of two products.
You cao et lha pla.o '-t-p !i t (rsr label).
wh!rh!thrlrtt malt ua-t nwlt with to wparsl
pw-kaa o' h" Uul am if-wt n keep m-m rriw ;
or rou ea t rl tha ptng fly tl vi-rrj ij iXU
grx a libsl; ul h U the ssmo !' tt imut nutcl
ait.tf lUeoeMi with taipurted Dohtauao Uope.
A ftHKl -" !.,
PURITAN MALT
rtvTlarI PUia tsliect WMli
HvtU Sftup V' f'raH Pral Haft
f et &s ml Atf CsW er
rinr t iti I a
JlRrr. COMMISSION
Osssaa. NW.
CO.
. v,.
f M -J
fieri Li - '
it
Hring the Family
l .a.a. t-5 s.4 M
D.aast , ,,", tU0 J T.'C
MELUA GRILL
t lawa . Owk.
Culicura lcum
Always Healthful
II II lilt l. r r
H -- -(, i XI - . aJ '' 4
) J-.-ajaikaJ 4B .- '.i i t 4 M t
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