THE UEl: OMAHA, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBEK 27. 1921. Merchants of Tekamah Want TrainsVut Back County Attorney Rhoadt Re- tract! Couipiracy Charge. Wlien Petition I. Smt CommUsion. Lincoln, Sept. 26. (Special.) The state railway cornmif'on it in receipt of a "I diJn't mean what I eeme4 to ay" letter from Herherl Khoadei, county attorney of Hurt county. ' Rhoadet wrote a letter of prote.t againit taking off two traim on the Chicago, .St. Paul, Milwaukee and Omaha railroad and in hi letter Mated he had been informed that the merchant! of Tekamah had connived r 'ni the railroad company in setting the two traim annulled in order to thut the trade away from Omaha. The letter a pulili.hcd. J he merchant lielt an nuliiination meeting and invited Rhoadei at their gueiit. Following the meet inn lh merchant a unanimously finn ed petition asking for rotoration of the aervice and at the bottom of the petition Rhoadea in a n'gncil statement aiurcd the commisiion he didn't believe the merchanta en tered into audi a conoitacy as wa ihargrd again! them. Petition protrnting agiiiiht dis continuance of the traina also were, received by the commission today from Craig and Oakland. At the tame time a letter was re vived from Earl C. Eurdic, cash ier of the l'lateau State bank. Her man. Neb., stating that the only way to get a reduction in freight rules was to permit the railroads to curtail useless expenditures and that information which guided the com mission In permitting the discon tint'ance Of the trains slicved the operation of the two trains was a liflcss expense. Another hearing on curtailment of the two trains will be held at the Omaha Chamber of Commerce. October 4. Scottsbluff Pastor Has Novel S Jieme to ' Assist Unemployed More Truth Than Poetry Br JAMES J. MONTAGUE' SONG OF EX-KING CARL I'm a haughty and dignified monarch, I know now to lit on a throne, A ruler adepter at twinging a tcepter Hat probably never been known. I ought to be cheered by the people Wherever 1 happen to go, But instead they pursue me and hi at and boo me And order me roughly to blow. Whenever I pause at a tavern, They ruth to the stable and loosen the cable At forth on a journey I jog, That leashet the tavagest dog. Whenever I stop in a city In quest of an evening of peace The whole population in wild consternation I'honet down to call out the police. I've got the bum't rush from Geneva, The gendarmes have chased me from Berne At two in the morning the mayor gave warning - To park and get out of Lucerne. And when, with my suite and my baggage I took up my travels again Word came "Ve will pinch him and probibly lynch hiin If ever he shows up in Spain." The people won't have mevin Taris, I can't find a haven in Rome, They're keeping a cooler to house their late ruler If ever he daret to go home. They've wired that they'll blow me to atoms If I sail for Hong Kong or Kwang Chow, And all these conditions awaken suspicions That I'm not very popular now! PROVED ., - . If you had any doubt that Jack Dcmpsey is a great fighter it will be removed when you see him try to act. - ASTONISH I KG I How amazed the film stars are going to be when they discover they are expected to obey the laws just like other people. NO MORE CAUSE FOR ALARM We are glad to learn that stamps will not be raised to three cents. We were sure the other cent would have gone to the profiteers. (C'opfrliM, I3JI.' lr Til. BU Sjnidleite. Inc.) Jack and Jill .coiisoiurr, xseo., aept. o. tape cial Telegram.) At a meani of re lieving unemployment in this valley, Kev. Osborne, pastor of the Presbyterian church, has proposed that an auto road be built to the top ot bcbttsbluff. overlooking the val- ley. He would have 500 people in this city and 250 in Gering give a dime a day to pay the costs of the work. At the top, on the highest 160 acres in the state, he would have erected a building to house relics of prehistoric men to be' found in this region and to be a museum of Indian trophies. ; JTbfi. view from the top of the bluff it magnificent arid it said to be om of the finest in--the country. - To ascend now it is necessary to follow m VlCtf OUU Vlll ft l.m.u v...." "tr can reach the summit. , Manager of Table Rock I Farmers1 Union Quits Job Tabfe Rock, Neb., Sept. 26.-(Spe-cial.) Andy1 Peterson, who has been manager for the Farmers' union in TaMe , Rock nearly six years, has severed hit connection with that or ganization and has gone to Hum boldt; where he will- superintend the aale of a stock of farm implements for the John Deere company. ' . Auditing of the Farmers' union ' books showed that since the first of the year there has been a profit of over $4,000. Directors . have not 'choten a successor to Mr. Peterson. Oscar L. Wiar, who has been assist ant manager for nearly aeyen years, is temporarily in charge. ; Potato Harvest Under Way; , Hay Springs Growers Busy Hay Springs, Neb., Sept. 26. (Special.) The potato harvest here is in full) blast, and the railroad , yards resemble wholesale districts in cities with their truck and wagon loads 'of potatoes. The quality is . good and yields from 75 to 200 bush els an acre. The price is around $1 - a bushel. It is estimated that $1,000,000 or more will be paid to the potato growers of Sheridan county this year. Of this amount Hay Springs will share equally with the four, shipping points of the county. :. ' r .V , .-. . ; Prominent Rancher Held . On Manslaughter Charge Sioux City, S. D., Sept. 26.-(Spe-ciat Telegram.) Paul Grimes, a prominent rancher of the Aliada dis : trict, is under arrest on a man slaughter charge resulting from the death f Myrt Goes, an employe. The men had a dispute and Grimes claims he did not fire the fatal shot until Goes made for him with an up- : Scottsbluff Holds School In Unfinished Building - - Scottbluffs, Neb., Sept 26. (Spe cial Telegram.) Bryant achcol, the . newett and most modern structure tn this city, has been opened with three classes while 'workmen are finishing the rest of the structure. The school house cost $36,000, and is the first unit of the new school building pro- gram'' for this city. - nr l T lriai OI JUTS. JjUCV iicai j , i Po6tDoned Until iMovemDer . Auburn, Neb., Sept 26. (Special Telegram.) Trial of Mrs. Lucy Neal, held to the district court on a charge of murdering her husband, Ben Neal, found dead on the bed in their home near Peru, Neb, has been postponed until the November term. -Farmers Protest Rates ; . 'Hemingford, Neb Sept 26. (Spe i cial.) Present freight rates are such that it takes ZU per cent ot tne i money received for cattle to trans port them from Hemingford to Omaha, fanners say. High freight rates oa potatoes are alto discourag Dog Hill Paragrafs By George Bingham jenerson rouocKS tooK up tno suspenders today and slack his m p. 3? -fn'f-"- usirrr now walks without dragging his feet. .' Siie Kildew was at Bounding Bil lows this morning and bought a can of cove oysters. He says he always imagined they taste like traveling on the ocean. '.' , Clab Hancock says it is a good thing that smoke -does evaporate right away, because if it didn't the world by now would be so full Of smoke all the cars would have to use fog horns. Copyright, 1921. Oor M&ttbtw Adami. Common Sense By J. J. MUNDY. - Cultivate Real People. Really well-bred persons can never be classed as '"snippy." ' , Worth-while men and women do not estimate your, worth from the amount of money you have nor from the pinnacle of your social position. Of course, a big majority judge from a financial standpoint, but the real "blue blood," as some have catled the true-blue aristocrat, places char acter and congenial companionship above everything else. , - jf . ; When you have met certain per sons of high social and financial standing you have been surprised by1 their commonplace manner, their simple, everyday human characteris tics. ' It is because they are real people. not shams. They do not have to be superheat in any way. There 'is something back of them which establishes them on a firm foundation, and they do not have to assume any sort of charac ter. They are big and strong and independent enough to be and ap pear truly what they are. Those persons who are mcst en trenched by. strong admirable family ties, connections and traditions are the least assuming. They are the ones who value you for just what you are. Copyright, 1931, International Feature , . Service, Inc. The slump in the demand for dia monds has caused practically all the mines in Africa to shut down and all the natives are idle and on the verge of starvation, -.".'i "Mildred Moore" begati Jill ex citedly. "Yep, I know," uid Jack, Inter tupting her. "I read it in the paper coming home tonight. "Un't it wonderful, Jack? I'm to glad for Millie's take." They were talking of a girl in the neighborhood who had served .In the motor corps in the great war fn France and who had just been decorated with the military medal of the French government. "It thowt that women are jr.it at Lrave at men." taid Jill. ' Jack thought upon thit for a mo ment, the connection teemed fo ob tcure. "Oh, I tee what you mean, putt," he taid tolerantly. "Sure they're as brave at men in tome things." "What do you mean tome things?" demanded Jill, tuspiciuusly. "Oh, things like nursing and driv ing ambulance! and all that. But j' think how a woman screams ai jumps lor a chair when a mouse tun across the room. "I'm not afraid of mice," said Jiil calmly. "Most women are, though." said Jack, with an authoritative wag oj his head. "Women are awfully brave in big things, when -t great crisis comes along, but they arc frightful cowards in small things." "For example, suggested Jil. "Oh, they go all to pieces if the steak is burned. They weep oceans of salt, salt tears if they can't get the orange ttam out of a shirtwaist. They even go into hysterici if they can t make their hair stay in curl. Jul eyed him steadily and he felt he:1 stiRcn. "Well, mister know-it-all. where did you gather this priceless in formation about women?". Jack ignored her question. "Now with men it't different," he said, tapping the table with his spoon for emphasis. "Men can stand about anything. If the trouble is trifling they laugh it off. If it is big stuff, they just grit their teeth and buckle down to it. Jill smiled quietly, "Like Arthur Fanning did when his business went to smash," she r minded him. "Let's see, he started drinking then, didn't he? And wasn't it somebody who went to the front and finally put hint back on his feet?" "Oh, you mean his wife," said Jack "Well, that was one case where the woman was stronger than the man. Fanning was a moral coward." "And there was Philip McCund er," went on Jill in a dreamy remi niscent i way.-' "Wasn't it his sister who finally got him out of that scrape " Jack shrugged. "Why pick out these unusual cases?" he demanded with some heat. "Anyway, those two cases were things that would break the spirit of any man. In the regular t very-day tmng that come up, a man will UugH away hit venation,' He left the table and pretut'y Jill heard him busying nimseU nun his shaving thing in the bath room. Suddenly the heard him gap and then utter an angry clainttKn. "Holy mok." he cried, "why In the name of Old Nkk itn'l my lay" he t houted It "where ait m razor blades? Good heavens, Jill, don't you know I can't ttand here all night with my face all lathered and no razor? Why don't you" but the rett of It was lost to her. He had viciously slammed hinitelf Into the bath room, having discover, ed th-miing blade just where he had placed it In the medicine cabinet Do Yon Know the Bible? Lots of go and get there em The starter . blows his whistle when he sees a man ' " wearing THE LANPHER HAT rJm 1F8MI "Hey, buddy, come and get it!" Curette " ; ' and for cigarettes ..' z-'r ' Virginia tobacco is the best Liggett & Mmi Tobacco Co. PIANOS TUNED AND v REPAIRED A. HOSPE CO. All Warb CatflilMi 1S1I Dm1m St. Tet Deaf. MM A headlight leas has a Value natest tae bulb behind it is properly adjusted. Primolite Lens IWgUy Focus Finder llon a4 if y emit niuw.r lii.iu. Tb.n look at la anaa la m. II .an r tifht Follow These Quettioni and An- twert At Arranged by ' J. WILSON ROY. 1. Why did Jetut refer to Caper naum as "His own city?" S. What was Daeon? 3. What is tometimcs referred to as the "cursing" psalm? 4. Who wat Pemetriiu? 5. To what town did Paul and Barnabas flee after their espulion from Lyttra? 6. What positions did Ahilud and Zadok hold under' King David) Antwers. I. Some ' of hit most wonderful works were done there, and he deli vered tome of hit most pointed dis courses. 2. A celebrated idol of the Pliilis tines. 3. One hundred and ninth. 4. A maker of silver imaset of Diana and Ephcsus. 5. Derbe. 6. Alihud was recorder and Zadok was scribe. 2 Samuel viii. 16. (Copyright, 131. WhMtor Hyndlcatt, Inc.) A motor driven knife has been invented for skinning animals. The Ideal Time TO VISIT EUROPE tml Britain ant Tht CMtlMut An Mod AttraetlM la tht At Salllnf Evarjr Few Day from Mob traal to Llvarpaol, Southampton, Lon don, Claagow, Havr and Aotwarp C. P. B.-K O. T. 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They have always likened it to high priced cars in performance, in lasting endur ance and in the sort of reliability that rolls up tens of thousands of miles without even a day's absence from service. ffote How It Proved Its Supremacy . - ". , ; . : t,' ; ' Such endurance and reliability as it showed in setting the 50-hour mark of 3037 miles, and in four times .breaking the transcontinental record is given multiplied confirmation by the experience of. nearly 60,000 owners. . Thousands of those owners have driven their cars above 30,000 miles with an actual maintenance cost of only a few dollars. Think of These! Advantages for $1373 Essex does not, of course, take rank with the finest, high-priced cars, without duplicating or excelling their design and workmanship. This is evident in every feature of its struc ture. Devices to provide for longer wear, or to take up wear at small expense are Essex advantages shared only by a few of the costli . est cars. Its frame, for instance, is sturdier than that of any other car, except one, for the weight carried. Why It Matches High-Priced Cars These are some of the, reasons Essex cars, remain smooth, economical and quiet. Such features appear to special advantage when men compare old Essex cars to old cars of other makes. ; - It is in such comparison in the past that they have placed Essex value many hundreds of dollars .beyond its cost. , And the lower price today on Essex cars is not made at any sacrifice of quality. ,To be sure of securing the model and body style of your choice, be Bure to place your order in advance of the desired delivery date. Touring, $1375. F. 0. B. Detroit Boadster, $1375. Sedan, $2230. GUY L.SMITH Cabriolet, $1880. aUG5-5'7 fMNAM St. -SERVICE FIRST Omaha. IL&A. PHONfDOOCUS ma ing the farmers. - ' f