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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1924)
Fliers’ Freedom of Air Is Upheld by St. Paul Judge f ^ - HiiIps Property Owner Can Not Get Damages After Plane Made Forced Landing. Hy \ s.iilitl 1 Pd I'rm. St. I’aul, March 8.—The old com limn law maxim, "whose the soil is, ids it is from the heavens to the depths of the earth,” was overruled in h decision by Judge .John 1.Michael, of (lie District Court of Minnesota, in a suit for damages brought by a lo cal property owner after an airplane made a forced landing on his prop erty, The plaintiff sought also to en join the defendant from flying over his property regardless of the alti tude of such flights. "The upper air is a natural heritage common to all of the people and its reasonable use ought not to be ham pered by an ancient artificial maxim of law," the ju^ge declared. The decision is regarded as nf great importance, according to L. K. Bell, secretary of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce, which repre sents some 1,200 commercial aircraft operators in the United States. It may be interpreted as a specific dec laration of the freedom of the air whereby aircraft may fly over prep erty without being guilty of trespass, he said. ■'Condemnation of air lanes is not feasible because ^aircraft can not ad ~ ere strictly to a defined course,” Judge Michael's decision said. "The air, so far as it has any direct rela • tion to the comfort and enjoyment of the land is appurtenant to the land, but to contend that it is part of the realty, as affecting the right of air navigation, is only a legal fiction, de void of substantial merit.” Judge Michael said that while there was some danger to persons and property from aircraft, accidents were infrequent and "this hazard is infinitely less than encountered in every walk of life from various other causes.” While granting the plaintiff dam ages tile judge, in refusing the in junction said that modern progress and great public interest should not lie blocked hy unnecessary legal re finements. Snow Plows Do Damage to Rougher Highways Snow plows are doing considerable damage to the highways, in the opin ion of several road experts. This may be true, but the point is, what kind of roads do they damage? Surely a smooth plow over a smooth road can do no harm if competently operated, and if a road Is all bumps and holes what does the snow removal prove but that a new road is needed? A lit KltTISK.M I'YT. M CLEMS I ’ 5TUFFEJ-HP HEAD Instantly Opens Every Air Passage—Clears Throat. If your nostrils are clogged ami your head is stuffed because of nasty catarrh or- al-eokl, apply a little pure, antiseptic cream into your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage, soothing and healing swollen, in flamed membranes nnd you get in stnnt relief. Try this. Get a small bottle of lily's Cream Balm at any drug store. Your clogged nostrils open right up: your head Is clear; no more hawking or sniffling. Count fifty. All the stuffiness, dryness, struggling for breath Is gone. You feel fine. ADVERTISEMENT. 13 MM Kidneys cause bkckache! No! Your backache is caused by lum batto, rheumatism nr a strain and the Quickest relief Is soothing, penetrat ing .St. Jacobs OIL ' Hub it right on your painful back, and in stantly the soreness, stiffness and lame ness disappears. ’ Don't stay crippled! (let a 3i cent bottle ’ of St. Jacobs OIP I from your druggist. A moment after It Is applied you’ll won der what became of the backache or lumbago pajn. In use for 65 year* for lumbago, backache, sciatica, neuralgia, rheu matism or sprains. Absolutely harm less. Doesn’t burn the skin. ADVKKTIR KM K N T. Chew a few Pleasant Tablets —Stomach Feels Finel Instant sftmach relief: Harmless. The moment “l’ape's DlapepsJn" reaches Hie stomach all distress from s«.-Id stomach or Indigestion ends. Im mediate relief from flatulence, gases, heartburn, palpitation, fullness or stomach p ensure. Correct your digestion for » few rents. Millions keep It handy. Drug gist jp recommend it I Bill Maupin Prowls Beef Barracks With Athletic Club Experts; Draws Verbal Hailstorm When He Asks About Frying Beefsteak The roast heed of Old Knglainl lias nothing on the mast beef of the Omaha Athletic dull. Selecting beef for the club's cuisine has become a rite. Those hi charge of the selection view the beef on the hooks before it is eut. The up|»er picture at the left shows representatives of the club viewing meat at the Soutli Omaha market from which they plan to make se lections. At the right arc Steward Hntim.in and Chef Xagre with their purchases. Itelow, Manager Hausen is explain ing how to select a side of beef sure to satisfy particular people. By Wll.l". M. MAl l'IN. Author of .Sunny Side I'p. Buying a steak for family consump tion ami buying steaks and tilings for a, thousand people, are, believe you me, two very separate and dis tinct jobs. Being a family* man. or woman, you either drop into the meat market and say, "Gimme a couple o' pounds o' .good steak." or you saunter over to the telephone and after working the dial and getting your favorite butcher you careldfcsly say. “By the way, I guess you'd better send me a nice tenderloin." or porterhouse, or rib roast, or rump roast, or boiling piece, as the case may be. Then you wait until you set your teeth in it before you really knoyv what you have purchased. It’s Different. It's different when you have tv Chicago Matrons | Carry Revolvers -. • - j Society Vi oman Totes 6-Giiii —Practices on Cans to Im , prove Her Aim. Chicago, March 8.—The Alkali Ikes of Chicago do not pack six gun* around with them so much as simple folks over in Urgent street and sauce manufacturers in Worcestershire be lieve. But It's getting to have quite a vogue-among the city's women. Mrs. Frank Townley Brown and her daughter, Mrs. Gerald Grupe. who live out along the exclusive north shore, are the proof. •Mrs. Brown paused, as she wa.* about to enter her motor ear on the v.ay to attend a concert by John Mc Cormack. and showed an interviewer her weapon. ' It's just a llltle .38 caliber six gun,” she said with an air of •Well, what of it?’ She said she had heard that it was quite the thing for chi engo's society woman to pack gats uround with them. "She and her daughter have the permission of the rhief of police to go armed. The servants, ton, in the Townley homo carry weapon*. "Mrs. Townley owns a farm near Chicago. On dull afternoons she spins out there and Improves her eye popping tomato cans off fence tails with her six-gun." Champ Riveter 111 in Hospital Belfast, March 8.—John Muir, a shipyard riveter, who some time ago by a wonderful! feat of endurance broke the world's riveting record, lies ms helpless as a child In a hospital in this city from over exertion. In sn effort to save his life fel low-workers have given tlieir hloml. which surgeons transfused Into Moir. hut h» still lies critically III. »_ Poker in (lliina; Mali Jong Iliri' Philadelphia. March 8.—Poker ia .1 more common grime In t'hlna than the well-known mah Jong, according to a Chinese atudent at the I'nlver slty of Pennsylvania, wlm spoke will) the feeling that "it Is high time ful some Chinese to point out a few of the extravagances that marvelous press agents have Indulged in while popularizing mah jongg." Famous Australian to Make Tour of America Melbourne. March 8.—William M. Hughes. Australia’s prime minister from WI5 to lit".", has entered Into u contract to make a lecturing tour in Amerli/h on Australian development. He will leave for the I'tilted Stem* during February. Success. Success In motoring Is (lie ability to keep working for lho Improvement of the oar and your skill in operating it. purchnfc ihe steaks and roasts and bolls and other kinds of meat for from 800 to 1.00# men who knowhow to voice disapprobation when their teeth anil tasters don't eommend your purchase, lu that event -you don't casually drop into a moat market and order so many pounds of this or that. Neither do you call up over the tele phone and trust it all to the meat market proprietor. Far be it from so. You don your outdoor habiliments, hop into your flivver and bit the paved highway for a wholesale meat market, which in this rase means the packing house. Then, with from 1, 500 to 3.000 beef carcasses to select from you can. if you are worthy of the position you hold—and you have to be if you hold It long—you get just about what | you and your patrons want. If you don't, you'l* hear from several hundred people, pretty soon. That’s the Way. That's tlie way meat is purchased for consumption by "those who dine at. the Athletic club, and at other large clubs where meals are served regu larly. Two or three times a week Manager I’. Hausen notifies the chef. It. Naeger. and the steward. T. Ban man, tHat the supply of meat is get ting low. Then the three of tht^ hit out for a place where they know good meat is obtainable, and where they have plenty "of opportunity for selection. In th'< particular Instance they went over to the Hold Co. plant Certainly they had a wide field of c hoice, for the big cooling rooms were full o' the choicest carcasses from the pick of Nebraska’s big eornfed steer output. Maybe von think meat is meat, but it Isn’t. .Some meat is Incipient rub ier. or Imitation leatherr- or some thing equally hard to chew. , By tlie Hand. Steward Bauman takus Chef Naeg ci by the hand, and tin* two saunter down the long rows of carcasses hanging on the elevated tracks. “Here's a good one,” says Bauman. "Books good to me.” says Naegor. “Well, what's the bloomin’ differ ence between ihe one you Just ac cepted and that one over there that you rejected"’’ queried the onlooker i * .. whoso only method of testing beef Is by the molar process. Then Bauman points to th# ends exposed when the carcess was srplit along the spine and proceeds to eluci date. "Notice how the ends of those ribs look. The ones in the half section accepted show up red and compara tively soft, with 'the upper end, or button, showing white. The redder the inside and the more white show ing at the top, the younger and tend erer the meat. Next we take a look at the outside, if it is yellowish and rough lookiog we may have some doubts, but if it is nice and white, and smooth of surface, combined with the kind of bone Inspection t ex plained, then we know we’ve, got the makings of a mighty fine steak or rsast. “One reason why beef is allowed to hang in the cooling pooms down here for two or three weeks is that such hanging breaks down the mus cular tissue and the meat becomes tiriji. After we buy it we let if hang iti our own cooler for a week or two and by the time we are ready for it the meat is in prime condition. It cuts smoothly, broils or roasts dust the wav we want It to, and it doesn’t come back to the kitchen smplling of brimstone furnished by the guest.” Any Choice? "Is there any choice between corn fed steer* snd steers fed on • some thing else?'' queried the onlooker, who depends upon his molar# for meat Judgment. "The steers properly fed on corn, other things being equal. Is always our choice,” declared f'h»f Naeger. "The flesh Is firmer, of # better col or and cures better.” That point being settled the on looker wanted to know another thing or two. "Well, with the steward, who has the handling of the meat, snd tile chef, who has to prepare It for the table, what'n thunder do you want to bring Manager Hausen along for?” CTief Naeger looked at Steward Bauman, and Steward Bauman looked at Chef Nnegel, hut neither one seemed willing to express an opinion. "I come along because I'm the man wlro keeps tab on the number of jicople we average a day. keep tab on their likes snd dislikes snd have to stand for whatever complaints i^ay lie filed. 1 reckon that gives me some voice in the matter,” declared Mr. Hausen. ''Besides, I’m ths man who tins to so* to it that ths money is ready when the meat bills come in, to say nothing of having ready ^he «veek|y wages of these two fellov *.” The explanation was perfeetjy sat isfactory to the onlooker. Mr. Bauman entered upon a rathei $i| yit home or on iht road DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN Hefs him in good health Clogged-Up? Here’s Quick Aid NEVER mind what you are using now for constipation. For all you know there is a better remedy I l'he next. Cine you am dogged up try Dr. Caldwell's Syrup1 Pepsin, a laxative sucess fully used for 30 years, the largest wiling liquid laxative in the world. Mrk. John A. ( Joins of Butlerville, Ind., constipated all her life, her stomadi injured from years of pill taking, is now functioning daily since taking Syrup Pepsin; and Mr. David O Connor of Can ton, Ohio, Buffering steadily foe three years, got relief after a few doses. The list of successful users of Dr. Caldwdl’s Syrup Pepsin is naturally large as over 10 million bottles arc sold annually. Formula on Every Package (let yourself a bottle at a drug store, the cost being less than a cent, n dose. Take a g|xtonful at. iM-dtime for a few nights and • week and in that way keep the bowels regularly open. Dr. Cald well’s Svrun I’cpsin, unlike harsh physics surh ns calomel, "candy cathartics.” salt, waters and pow ders, is a simple vegetable laxa tive composed of Egyptian senna and pepsin with tasty aromatics which arc entirely harmless. Tbit Remedy Guaranteed It has been accurately pmvrn that a constipated person is only 75 per cent efficient. It slows you up: makes you dull and lazy. 1 ake Syrup Pepsin tbs first day you do not have Complete bowel movement, 'lake it.-guaranteed, for constipation. torpid liver.dya pepsia. biliousness, sour stomach, nendnrhe, lark of appetite, A spoonful at the first sneeze nr sniffle will kill a cold overnight, lialf the ailments of winter start with constipation followed by a cold. we guarantee that the moat chronic consti pation will be relieved, or refund your money. A few doses in auecoH sion soon train the stomach muscles to net for themselves. Many, however, take it once ••••<11 Ym Tibi is Try It Free Bakers la lias "Srturripila."il7 Waahia«toa 81., Meallrallo, llUsaia. / ntod a good laaafiaa and whU lib !• ym ubl you nr about I* CeMi l irrup /'.yam kr actual tc.t Stnd mo a /raa trial boUla. Addrtu la Aasia... Addrtu.,,,,.. Not mwi lhaa ess tram trial'koula lo a faraily _ Al>< IK I'hKMKNT Simple Wap to Get Kid of /UackheadH There is one simple, tare and sure way that never fail.; to k*» rid of blackhead . (hat Is to dissolve them. To do this eel *o ounces of calonite powder from any dm* store prin k le a little on a h<*t, •ret cloth rub over the blackheads hrl kly wa-h the parts and > .111 will be sur prised how the Mack beads have disap peared. Ilitr ldackhead<, little blackhead <, no matter where fehey arc, simply His olve ami disappear. Khi.-khcuds are sim ply a mixture of dust *»ml illrt and eeere ions that form in the pores of the skin The calorpte po\vdt>r and the water din •olve th#*f blackhead* *-«• they wash ripht alt, IcuvitiK the pore* free and clean and in their natural conditio ECZEIA'SUFFERERS ANEW DISfOVERy 7/ 'eo ~Pt 'oofofUs AMAZINQ POWKRS WRITE TODAY PARAMOUNT PROOOCT5 CO DfP! o 601 60? USNATl BANK BIDS JtNVIR - COLO Immbmmmmmbmmmm technical description of the various cuts of meat, She most understand able part to the onlooker being that which explained that ths tenderest parts come from that section of ths beef critter that Is subject to the least exercise. That’s why the loins yield the tenderest cuts, and the neck the toughest. That’s where we get the expression rubber neck,' supi>osedly. Then, when you begin cutting down on the hindquarter, from whence you get the round steaks, the lower down you go the -tougher the meat be comes. Draws the Torrent. "But there's as much In the cook ing as there is in the meat," asserted Chef jaeger. "A good cook cun make even a tough steak tender and palatable, and a poor cook can make the tenderest and juicest cut resemble a section of automobile tires.” "When you fry a steak—” But the onlooker ^ot no farther. Chef Naegel threw up his hand and spluttered like an almost exhausted soda fountain. "Fry steal;. It is impossible. I* is criminal. It is disrespect to the nooie beef. It —'* But the thef's vocabulary was in sufficient to express his opinion of any cook who would fry a beefsteak. The next time you buy a steak or a roast, make the man on ths block show you the top ends of the ribs. Book for the reddish bone, and the white button on top that will be bone when the riditer gets old enough. Korean Students | Flee From Japan Murders and Mol» \ iolence After Earthquake blamed for Absence. Toklo, March 8.—Tlio schools of! Toklo probably will 1»> without the usual contingent of Korean students, if present indications have anything to do with it. Prior to the great earth' quake virtually every school of Tokio had its group of Korean studs,its, young pepplo sent to this country by their home districts foe higher edu cation. In the days following the earthquake excitement in the capital and elsewhere ran high, and hun dreds of Koreans, charged with poi soning wells and attempting to spread discord, were murdered in cold blond by members of the young men's associations tmj by groups of ex cited youths. In many cases Chinese and even Japanese, mistaken for Koreans, met death at the hijnds of the half-crazed mobs. The ontbreuk of tlie Japanese mobs raused a wholesale exodus of Koreans from the capital, as they felt their lives would he constantly in danger here, and as a consequence when schools opened again the Korean attendants were missing. Reports in Toklo are to the effect thwt very few of the Korean students who returned to their homes may be expected to return here. Here's How Your Auto License Fee Is Speut Forty-eight states collected SI 52. 307,023 in 1922 as receipts from auto mobile license fees. The cost of col lection, the cost of the plates them selves, and other expenses was less than $4,000,000, so that a total of $148,750,00 wa sleft as the net receipts to be spenj on highways. This sum la divided into approprla tions for state highway dejmrtments, I $16,000,000; federal aid funds, $34,000. 000; maintenance of federal aid roads $32,000,000; construction of other than federal aid roads, $6,500,000; mainte nance of other than federal aid roads, $21,500,000, and given os aid to coun ties, $25,500,000 New Hampshire collects the largest revenue per individual car or truck, getting »n average of $25.73 each, while Arizona is easiest upon car owners from the license standpoint, obtaining but $5.69 each. Drive Close to Passing Cars to Escape Splash When trying to avoid getting splashed with mud most drivers will get e* far away front a passing car as possible. This is just the reverse Of what one ought to do t» avoid such nuisance. When the ears are :feet or so apart any mud that is splashed is sure to strike the body of the other car, whereas, if the tnn eY.ines are closer together, say three feet apart, mud that is splashed will only strike the wheels and the under sides of the fenders. What mud would ordinarily splash on the doors is much more likely to he caught under the running hoard when the ears pass closer together. Building Ships Shows Declin'e Iejndon, March**. Shipbuilding sta tistics for 1 #23 disclose worldwide de pression and heavy declines in output. Britain for the second year in sue cession leads, with a total output of 082.000 tons, which, however, is about as much as the prewar output of the Clyde shipyards alone. Germany takes second place, with 415.000 tons output, and the i'nited States third, with 220,000 tons. Japan is fourth, with 181.000 tons. Ilarland & Wolff take precedence over all other shipbuilding firms, with a total output of 102,000 tons. An American firm is second, while two German firms come third and fourth Japanese Athletics Advance, Claim I.ond' n. March S.—According In Professor WUden-Hart, well-known authority oil Japanese athletics and professor emeritus at the Imperial Japanese university, the avergo stature of the Japanese had increased half an inch during the last 20 years, and the health of the nation improved 43 per cent. Japanese athletes now compete in international games, and soon'there will be a likelihood of their-capturing some of the world's most famous sports trophies, said the professor in a. recent lecture. Ohio Man of 85 Still Is Good Shot Lima, O.. March 8.—W. O. Wallace, 81, recently took his shotgun and three shells and strolled into the woods. He returned with two squir rels, and one shell still unused. "My eyes are not quite as keen as they used to lie, but I can still see good enough to shoot pretty straight,” Wallace said. /7v,r\ 'Queen Anne\ Shop n 1710-1712 // a st fr^ Announces the Arrival of the New Spring FISK HATS and additional styles in Popular Priced Hats “They Are Different” P. Armour & Co. Dr. Burhorn’s Chiropractic Health Service | Call or writ* for fre# booklet on tho icicnct of Chiropractic. Results alone is keeping Chiro practic in the world. If you are sick or ailing, it will not cost you one cent to investigate what Chiro practic adjustments will do in your particular case. Headaches, nervousness, neuritis, sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, liver, kidney, stomach and bowel troubles respond quickly to our methods. Office hours 9 a. m. to/8 p. m. Sundays 10 to 12 M. Adjustments at the office are 12 for $10 or 30 for $23. Office equipped with 12 individual adjusting rooms and complete X-Ray laboratory' for «pinograph analysis. DR. FRANK F. BURHORN, the Chiropractor Suit* 414-26 Securitie* Bldg. Cor. 16th and Farnam Sts. Phone JA 5347 X-Ray Laboratory Lady Attendants II F The Fire-Peeeenger Six-Cylinder Touring f You are in vit e d to in spect a com plete line of latest Buicks. 19th and Howard ALL THIS WEEK Open eveninjrs until 10 P. M. • I Buick Character Makes Buick Value Buick value is something more than appears on the surface. It is more than the excellence and beauty of Buick design —more than the greater riding comfort, power and safety • that Buick provides. Buick's value comes from the sum total of all those Buick qualities and traditions which together make up Buick character. A Buick owner fully appreciates Buick character. He knows the dependable, satisfying and trouble-free transportation which Buick gives, however long or however far a Buick owner may elect to drive his car. rwiisp Nebraska Buick Auto Co. 19th and Howard Streets LINCOLN OMAHA SIOUX CITY H. E. Sidle*, Pr#*. i.#e Huff, Vic# Prei H. R Harley, Mgr, —OMAHA RETAIL DEALERS— NEBRASKA BUICK AUTO CO. H PF.LTON l#ih and Howard Si*. 2019 t arnam Si. When better automobiles are built. Buie k will build them