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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1923)
Cottage Love Dream Facies Newlywed Confesses He‘« Not Laborer as He Pretended lint Millionaire. New York. Jan. 18.—Pity the poor working girl. She marries an equally poor working man ml awakes to find him not what he seems, but the wealthy son of a millions re. All her toinanee is destroyed. Nr. longer can r e dream of love in a cottage. Hence forth love at iJcIniorlco’s and In a i oik li'cr.tte apartment is all she can look forward tc. The roer working t;Ir’. w*as Miss <' lthct li.e O'Brien of s'uranac Lake, N Y. until she married the hard working, u-v haven, roughly clad Gas ton toil's naull. jr.. the only son of tile wo-althy inventor of the dicto graph and president of the Boisson ault Manufacturing company, went skylatklng at Saranac Lake some weeks ago, deserting his plutocratic home at Hewlett, L. I. Works as Laborer. Young Boiaaonault got a job one naming after a tarty and started to votb ns a common laborer. In this (iiphf'ty he atlricted the attention of Miss O'Brien, resident of the Adi rondack resort. Ilia handsome appear-* FT- SAT MAT * 1 ■ • EV'NG I _ ONE DAY ONLY 5 i l>Ai\ 1 w aus£R PRESENTS 'The Book of Jab’ i Auspices Drama League of Omaha Nights, 33c-$2.50. Mat., 50c-$2.00 EBMia 3 Mays Mein, ihurs., Jan. 25 I America's Greatest Annual Revue Greenwich Village Follies with TED LEWIS ! Jce E. Brown, Eva Puck and Sammy | White, Bird Millman, Marie Holly, O'Hanlon and Zambouni Nights, $1 to $3. Sat. Mat., 50c to $2.50 BRAN DEIS tosT5HT GRACE ABBOTT’S Children I Comedy (idnight Follies of 1923 MATINEE DAILY EVERY NIGHT 2:15 P. M. 8:15 P. M. NOW PLAYING Herbert— —Hilda WILLIAMS & WOLFUS In “From Soup to Nuts” I red Galletti St Mabel Kokin MONSIEUR ADOLPHUS VAL A ERNIE STANTON Royal Gascoignes — Fawley & Louise Topics of the Day — Aesop* Fables Pathe News__ MR. LEO BEERS MAT! NEfco 15c to 50c i nus U. S. Tax rsiUHTS 15c to $1.00 NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS GRAND - - - - 16th and Binney ALL-STAR COMEDY CAST in "A Small Town Idol” HAMILTON . • 40th and Hamilton SHIRLEY MASON in “Little Mita Smilea” 1 AST IT V V VTI L.AST •£KS uMMvJ T£,“ “NINETY and NINE** “OMAHA’S FUN CENTER'* MAT- 4 N,TE TOOAY PRE-WAR PRICES Tbe Piquant. Parisian Novslty bubble-bubble ska A Colossal Entertainment IftC* CCLTH of Unusual Merit with IvfcrnfcUff Klara Hendrix, Rutn Gibbs. Wm. Crowning Ladles' Tickets. ISc or 25c at Dally Mat., 2:19 hat. Mat. A Wk: AI lteeica and ilia Beauty Show (ADV KHTISKMKNT.) Good Health Secret ot Beauty Beauty lies In the care a woman be stows upon herself and in keeping at bay those dread ailments peculiar to sex. which drag her down and Have telltale traces upon her coun tenance. Sparkling eyes, the clastic step and a clear complexion never accompany organic troubles. Dis tressed expressions, a sallow complex ion, dark circles under the eyes, las situde, headaches, and mental depres sion are the tell-tale symptoms of women's ailments. Women so trou bled should not lose a day in taking l.ydia 1*3. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and herbs, the most successful remedy known to overcome women's ills and restore health and beauty. ADVERTISEMENT. Mother-To-Be, Read This— Here Is a wonderful message to nil expectant mothers. When the Little One arrives, you can have that moment mure tree irum but* ferine than you have per nan s imaciued. An eminent physi cian, expert In this science, baa (shown the way. It was bn who first produced the (treat remedy, ‘•Mothers Friend. Mrs. C. J. Hartman, Scranton, Pa., says: “With my first two children I had a doc tor and a nurse and then they had ts use instrument*, dui with my last two children I used Mother's Friend and bad only a nurse; we bad no time to Itet a doctor because I wasn’t very edck—only about tea or tiiteen min utes.” Vote: Writ, for rslualile nee lllu-lrend Sock. '.Motherhood and the Baby." containing Important a jthorUative Information which every expectant mother should have, and at! about "Mother’* FnenJ.** to Bradfield Regulator Company. BA-23, Atlanta. G*. ‘’Mother’* Friend'* t* *old by drug gtet* everywhere ance and gentlemanly manners en deared him to Miss O'Brien, even if he was Just a common laborer. So They Were Married. So they were married and Miss O'Brien, after the first flush of the honeymoon, settled down to be the every day wife of an every-day work ingman. But she reckoned without her husband. A few days ago, on their way to a southeri> resort for their honeymoon, young Boissonault con fessed who he was, told of his fa ther's wealth and station in life. Picture of shocked but forgiving young bride. Telegrams of congratu lations showered In by rich parents. Telegram of shock to O'Brien par ents at Saranac Lake. Curtain. Jackie Coogan Must Pay §260,720 for Income Tax Los Angeles, Jan, IS.—Of the $500,000 which Jackie Coogan, child film actor, la said recently to have received as a bonus for signing a contract with Metro Pictures corpora tion, $260,720 will go to the govern ment in- the form of income tax. ac ccrding to figures made public by Hex E. Goodcell, collector of In ternal revenue. The collector explained That his estimate did not include the tax on Jackie's reported salary of $1,250 a week, that of his father at $1,000 a week, or his 60 per cent share of the net profits of films In which he is to be starred ’Prince Fxiled From Creece Arrives in United Stales New York, Jan. IS. — Prince An drew- of Greece, who was sentenced to perpetual exile after his superiors in the Greek army annihilated by the Turks bail been put to death, arrived on the Olympic, accompanied by his wife, Princess Alice, cousin of tho prince of Wales. Prince Andrew, a brother of the late King Constantine, said the present government of Greece was a military dictatorship and declared it could not long avoid a general election in which, he asserted, it probably would be over thrown. , The visitor was met by his brother. Prince Christopher, whose guest he will be in this country. The Titanic memorial marble statue by Mrs. Marry Payne Whitney has been purchased by the French gov ernment for the Luxembourg mu seum. Freshman Shoots \\ ould-Be Hazer So Coart l. Decides Hazing Hereafter Must Be AX ith • Consent of “Hazee." Los Angeles, Jan IS.—"Denatured'' hazing, as Dr. Itufus It. Von Kleins mid. president of the University of Southern California, termed it, or huz ring with the consent of the "hazee," is the only kind which will be permit ted at that institution hereafter. That announcement came close nfter a meeting of faculty and stu dent authorities which considered the case of Phillip Johnston, sophomore, who was shot in the heel when he and a number of others attempted to haze I’. A. Banks, freshman, who had previ ously been "warned” by upper class men not to appear again on the cam pus without his green-aiid-red class cap. Banks, a resident of Riverside, Cal., 20, and married, was held by the po lice on a i hhtge of assault with a deadly weapon. Police surgeons pro nounced Johnston's wound slight. "Hazing as now carried on here, it was agreed by faculty anil student representatives, contains certain de ments of danger, despite the good feel ing between the lower and upper classmen,” said Dr. Von Klrinsmid. "Therefore, it must go. Hereafter, no lower classman will be hazed, if he expresses disinclination to the pro cedure." The procedure used by the upper classmen, who sought to haze Banks, was to bind the victims witti ropes, turn the hose on them and then give j them "mud baths,” it was stated. Jewish Leaders to Diseuss Reconstruelion Problems Chicago, Jan. 18.—"Jewish reeon 1 struction problems in Palestine will l>e discussed at a conference of mid dlewestern and Pacific coast Jewish leaders, to be held at Denver, March 6 and 7, it was announced, following a meeting of Jewish leader^ here. Five hundred delegates are expect ed to attend, and senate leaders who favored the resolution passed there favoring Palestine as the homeland You’ve Had SAFETY WEEK HEAL TH WEEK And Many Other Kinds of “Weeks” But Next Week At the Sun Theatre Will Be Co-Starring ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN and CONWAY TEARLE A Blazing Romance of a Golden Butterfly who learned more about life in “one short week’* than in all the other 20 years of her frivolous career. Today—Last Time* KAJIYAMA Vaudeville—Photoplays TOMORROW All new six-act bill with Prosperft Maret Sensational Collegians Kennedy & Rooney Famous Comedy Couple 5 K1RKSMITHS Youth, Beauty and Charm SOSMAN & SLOAN “Between Dances" Lillian’s Comedians Mebelle Phillips Herbert Rawlinson —in— “Another Man’s Shoes” Romantic Mystery Play Shows Saturday and Sunday, 2:00, 4:20, 6:45, 9:10 WHEN IN NEED OF HELP TRY OMAHA DEE WANT YUS. NOW SHOWING Ifoehard Barthelaess <wi*h Dorothy Gish V L — ft . UNUSUAL—and more! It mirrors a boy who wouldn't believe all women bad and a little Lime house slavey who knewr most men were. And a Real Comedv— LLOYD HAMILTON in • THE EDUCATOR” EMPRESS NOW PLAYING "TWICE A WEEK," featuring OCTAVIA HANDWORTH BLUM EROTHERS Hand Balancing Act - COLLINS A DUNBAR Stylish Steppers in "Daintiness” CREEDON A DAVIS In "I Could Smash You” "THE OLD HOMESTEAD" With Theodore Roberts, George Few cett, Fritei Ridgeway of the Jewish race will he invited to speak. The states to be represented at the | convention are 1 w,i, Minnesota, Ne braska, Kansas, Texas, Arizona. ' New Mexico. Colorado, North Dakota South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, ; Idaho, Utah. Nevada, California, : Oregon ar.d Washington. Mail Bandit Captured in Attempt to Holt Train Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 18.—A ban dit was shot and captured last night in an attempt to rob the mail car of eastbound Santa Fe train No. 6 be tween Lawrence and Holliday, Kan. , The bandit entered the mail car, from j the blinds, according to mail clerks. I and ordered them to "stick 'em up.” Chief Clerk Jud Marvin fired twice, j both shots taking effect. French Ambushed in Morocco Paris, Jan. is.—A report that a French detachment had been am bushed at Taza. French Morocco, was confirmed by the ministry of war to day. The losses were two French officers and 12 men killed and nine men wounded. The French troops were attacked by surprise in a ravine by a band of insurgents. \ Big Combine of Theaters Brews Lrlauger and Shuberts in Deal to Merge Most of Houses in U. S. New York, Jan. -IS.—Tho biggest theater combine ever attempted in the United States has been virtually completed, according to a statement last night. A vast majority of thea ters in New York and throughout the country will pass under one control, thereby creating something like a monopoly of houses in which legiti mate enterprise can find homes. According to A. L. Erlatyfer, who admitted the deal was under way the principal factors in the combine will be himself and the Shuberts. The talk in the theatrical district was of an even more sweeping merg ( r of interests whereby some of the few remaining independent theater ners would be found allied with Erlnnger and the Shuberts so that the would be producer would find STRANP--SUNDAY The Greatest Film Show on Earth DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS PRICES ON THIS PRODUCTION NIGHTS AND SUNDAY MATINEE Balcony, 50c Main Floor, 75c Box Seats, 99c WEEK DAY MATINEES UNTIL -5 O’CLOCK All Seats 50c, Exr^t Box Scats, 75c WEEK DAY BARGAIN MATINEE, 11 to 12 o’clock, 35c It’s “Good-Bye” Tomorrow LAST LAST TWO TIMES DAYS SAT. Harold Lloyd in “Dr. lack" Send the “KIDDIES” to the Matinee Tomorrow. CHILDREN 10c Now I'luying 'KICK IN' Betty Compsoiv Bert Lytell, May McAvoy. himself forced to seek ill a single office an outlet for his productions. Mr. Erlanger volunteered the in formation that Charles P. lulling hum. with his three big theatres, the Hippodrome, the Gayety and the Globe, is expected to be a party to tlie realty merger. The plan has three new features, the greatest innovation being that the public is to be let in on it. The amount involved in the deal' it is said, will reach approximately $50, 000,000 and to finance it the public is to be let in. No details of the stock selling feature of the enter prise were available last night, but both Mr. Erlanger and Lee Shubert admitted the public was to bo in vited to invest freely." Mr. Shubert minimized the asser tion of Mr. Erlanger that the deal virtually had been completed, lie in sisted the Shuberts had not audited their books as yet to determine the (xtent of consideration they would demand in return for participation in such combine. Ship Searched for Rergdoll; Two Members of Crew Held Jacksonville, Fla., Jan. IS.—Depart | nient of Justice agents who yesterday boarded the German steamer Deutsch feld as It passed the bar here In search of Grover Cleveland liergdoll. draft evader, are holding two of the members of the crew as "suspicious i characters." The men gave their names ns Ern- | est Threckow, 43, and Albert lloer stell. 37. Their finger prints and photographs | were taken and forwarded to Wash ington for comparison with Bergdoll's tine of the agents said he did not he /*HE$T COLDS ■ Apply over throat and cheat —cover with hot flannel doth* lieve either would prove to lie Itera tion, but lie w taking no chances. GOOD ja BYE 5: CHAPA * j DAME ^ NATURE SMn Improver CREAM end* chap roughness. dryness. Make* work ing hand* smooth, soft, flexible attractive. Keeps all s'-in chapless all winter when ether things fail Prevents lines by preventing dry ness Keeps children s hands free of chapped grime A healing, soothing smoothing bless ing Druggists or Dame Nature Co. i*7 Well, lug ton Street, Chicago, U5c, double size 60t» She revelation of a cruel jest that 1 cost them their happiness and shadowed their young lives » * - . The mysterious man of the east supplied the key that brought them bacle jrom desoair.- - - Starts Sunday A Tom Forman production -* >0 V/£> r IIS he greatest story ever told in bictures adapted from Wilbur Daniel Steele's famous priie s tory/Chin g, Ching Chinaman t Portrayed by bon Chaney Harrison Ford Marquerite de la Motte Walter Long John Sainpolis Buddy Messenger MY WATCH /S GOOO /OLA ! /’LL CALL _A WHEEL / /FOU/IO \ MY ' WATCH Don’t Say “Lost”— Say “AT lantic 1000” Nothing is lost until after it’s been advertised for in “Lost” and “Found” column of The Omaha Bee “Want” Ads. After that, it's generally not reported among the missing. We wouldn’t be telling you this if it weren't for the unusual results that these little “Lost” ads are accomplishing all the time. Quick returns, unexpected returns, returns in cases that the losers thought were hopeless— that’s the sort of everyday “miracles” that are being performed through the “Lost and Found” column of The Omaha Bee “Want” Ads. No wonder we say the word “lost” doesn't mean as much as formerly. Find out for yourself. Next time you lose something, don’t worry. Put an Omaha Bee “Want” Ad on the tr&il. TELL THE TELEPHONE-AT lantic 1CC0 / * - Li * . _„ 9k? OiMaka. Morning IW~ THE EVENING BEE