Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 31, 1921, Page 10, Image 10

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THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1021.
My Marriage Problems
Allele UtfTtaua't rtiaf f
"REVELATIONS OF A WIFE"
Th Way Mr. Cotgrovt D!ighi4
Madge.
Mri. Cosgrove looked tt m, be
wiliJermrnt in every line of her fee,
when I aiked her (or the loan of
one of her discarded old-faihioned
long ikirlt. Then I uw amuel
coniirrhrnion dawn in her threwd
eve, knew that the had a pretty
rlrar inkling of my little scheme, an.J
knew also that ine would ro.ke no
comiruni which would betray her
knowledge.
"Of coure you ean have any one
of tlim you like, he laid heartily
"Hut." with a dubious intonation,
"you know they II wrap around you
three tinicn, oont you.'
I lauiihrd at her pernlexed expre
ion. Mr i. Coigrove ii a coodish
wav pat the half-century mark, and
in Dieky'a parlance "carriei weight
her own size, a. I have noticed, dt
all itout women who have finally
given up vanity on the subject. I
wondrr aomrtiiuet if it it not a kind
of armor which they put on. fling
ing out a jot at their own expense
to ward off the only too ready jokes
ui incir lammci ana iricnas.
A "Find."
"Vou forsret the modern walmline.'
I said. "Your skirt probably will
just fit."
"Yes, no doubt you'll have to let
out the band," she retorted dryly,
, and the next moment she had taken
down from a spare closet a skirt
which I seized eagerly, for it spelled
in every line exactly the effect 1
wished. Black, rather full, and bear
in? in every stitch the mark of an
unskilled country dressmaker. 5
visualized myself in it with a mental
chuckle.
"This fs perfect!" I cried enthu
siastically. "May I have this one?"
"Of course. And, it doesn't in
the least matter if you tear it or
spoil it. I think I shall cut that
skirt up for rug rags. There arc
other better skirts here if you would
rather have them. That was the
first to my hand."
"No, indeed." I c'utched the old
fashioned garment tenaciously.
"You'd have to get a platoon of state
troopers to get this away from me
now. But tell me, haven't you a
jacket somewhere of the same vint
age as this?"
She turned to the closet and took
down a coat such as I had not seen
for 20 years. I guessed that it was
at least that old, and I took it from
her hands with lively gratitude, for
1 saw in it the successful fruition of
my mischievous little prank against
Dicky.
"This ought to fit you pretty well,"
Mrs. Cosgrove said. "I was more
your size 20 years ago. Slip it on."
I did so, found that it was, indeed,
a fair fit, and with a laughing ex
pression of thanks to Mrs. Cosgrove
I wrapped the clothing in a com
pact paper-covered bundle, sped
back to my bungalow and gained my
bedroom without- Picky seeing me.
Jack and Jill
"Oh. whal a stuoid novel.'
And Jill chucked the offending
book on the sola beside her.
"Most of 'em are, these days,"
said Jack, sympathetically. "I never
read 'em any more."
"And it's too cold to go over to
the movies tonight," she complained.
"Well, for goodness' sake, honey,
don't propose that we go calling on
any of the neighbors, because I
wouldn't change my slippers for my
shoes for a million dollars."
"Well, it's too early to go to bed.
It's only a few minutes after 8.
Jack puffed contentedly on his new
Christmas pipe.
"Let's play "
"Oh I'm s'ck of cards," Jill groan
ed complaining. "And, besides, Jack,
you don't know how to play. You
are always making; mistakes when we
T'lav cards."
"Oh, alt riht." He lapsed into a
brown study and seemed content.
"Where's that checker set Aunt
Eva Nichols sent us for Christmas?"
she demanded suddenly.
"Oh, I don't know. Out in the
kitchen, maybe." .
"A checker set out in the kitchen,"
said Jill scornfully. "That's non
sense. " I'm sure it's in the front
room." And she went to investigate
this presentment, which proved cor
rect for she returned with the board
and counters.
"Come on here, old fellow, and
play me game of checkers."
He sighed and they rested the
: board on his knees.
He nodded in agreement.-
"I can't put my mind on games,"
he admitted.
She w.'ped out his first three men
in four moves.
"Oh, come. come, wake up," she
said imoatiently. "You know you
can do better than that."
He tried to make a counter at
tack, but lost another man in the
operation and Jill smiled.
"This is a clever game," she said
calmly, "provided one- has a keen
mind to see the moves far enough
ahead."
Jill's next four moves won four
more men and gave her two more
kincs. as well. .
. "Mercy, but you are a stpid check
er player, dear, she said sweetly,
i Tack srrunted.
Then suddenly something happen
ed. Jill never did quite make it out,
although Jack s only king maoe tne
rounds slowly" and with maddening
methodical oositiveness. lhat ter
rible lonely king of his just wiped
out six counters while Jill looked
on in amazed surprise.
And the final swirl of Jack's king
cleaned the board of all her counters
kings and commoners alike while
four of Jack's odious black men re
mained on the board.
"Ohl" she cried and she drew
back, the board falling from Jack's
Knees, ana nis counters roiling on
the floor.
"Ohl Why. that was just horried
Of you. Jack, cried rvs Jill-girl.
Jack yawned and lighted a match
for his pipe.
"Some dav I'll teach yon chess.
kid, he said, with irritating kind'
ness.
Can't men be just too aggravating
tor words?
(Copyright, 1111. Ttinqm Feature
When I had caught my breath and
had enjoyed quiet little anticipa
tory laugh, 1 gathered up Junior's
right thing i and went over to Lil
lian's bungalow, where he was to
sleep for the night, and where ne
had gone with Marion dirertly after
supper.
Climb on Your Shelf."
Marion greeted me rapturously
from a big old chair, in the depths
dt whirh she and Junior snared a
large illustrated alphabet book, one
which my son a adoring' grandmother
had given him, and which he
prized highly.
"Oh. Auntie Madact" she cried,
"Junior can say almot all of his
alphabet. Tell mother, Junior. Get
down now and stand up."
My small lad slipped from his
seat, put his hands behind him, and
straightened himself to his lull baby
height.
"A, B, T, D. E. F. P." he intoned
proudly, when Marion interrupted
anxiously:
"He can't say C and G." she ex
plained apologetically, so he calls
them 'V and 'U.' But he knows
them. Go on, Junior."
Junior went on, finished the alpha
bet in triumph, and then, as if hyp
notized by his own achievement, be
gan at 'A' and went through the
whole thing again, this time at a
gallop. A he finished the "Z,"
Marion, with an anxious schooi
ma'am air which convulsed her
mother and me, said authoritatively:
"That will do. Junior."
But Junior had tasted applause
and would not be squelched. A third
time he began his rattling list, and
was highly indignant when I swept
him up from the floor and stopped
the recital with a hug and numerous
kisses.
"Dooner doin read bid book " he
announced proudly, and Marion
looked up an answering pride in her
winsome face.
"He's so smart. Auntie Madge,
she said, "that I think it's a shame
not to improve the time with him.
You don't mind if I teach him, do
you? It'll be awfully good practice
for me, too.
Lillian grinned appreciatively at
me. for she knew my pedagogical
theories as tt the proper sequence
of topics in child training. s
"The younger generation, sne
murmured mischievously. "You
must be served. Better get ready to
climb on your self, lady.".
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The rorerolnr quotation ll Imllar to
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gist haa it or ean get It from hla jobber.
ADVERTISEMENT
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Stomach & Bowels
If you wish to be permanently relieved
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Baalmann'a Gas-Tablets are prepared
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tin The Popular Skin BeauUfler
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Tonight cleanse the skin with warm
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Black and White Beauty Bleach has
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Black and White Ocaming Cream at
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Hess & Swoboda
FLORISTS
1415 Farnam St.. Pastoa Hotel,
OMAHA
Pbona DOuglas 1501
Members Florl'ts' Telegraph Delivery
Aasoeiallon. We del.ver flowers on
short notice anywhere la the U. 8.
or Canada.
mack) asxt i
Spaca Icateel for long or short terms Rate quoted upon request.
svtaaaaBBil
. MOTOR
TRUCKS
City Salea Room 816 S. 24th St.
Service Station 815 S. 25th St
TELEPHONE AT LANTIC 3332
International
Harvester Company
of America
Branch House 714 S. 10th St.,
Omaha, Neb.'' :
Ford Transfer
' and " ' j
Storage Co.
813 Douglas St., . 1102 S. Main,
Omaha. ; . Council Bluffs
'Prompt Service
Reasonable Rates
suaansTTTr
'32323 9
Omaha Lace Laundry
, EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS ,
Curtains, Panels, Cretonnes,
Lace ' and Austrian ' Shades
4716 Cuming St. . Tel. Walnut I3S1
Ladies' Plush Sailors' and Velour
Hats Cleaned and Reblocked ;
JiMSER;
. 215 South 14tb Street
" TRY US FOR
French Pastry Fancy Cakes
KUENNE'S '
Bakery, Delicatessen and
: Lunch Room
3 504 South 16th St.
2916 Leavenworth St.
Order Your Personal
Xmas Greeting Cards
.f NOW ; ",' ''
Omaha Stationery Co.
307-309 S. 17th St. Jackson 080S
M raevi Ml
WRECKED CARS
REBUILT
Fender, Top, Body Work
Repairing of All Kinds
NICHT AND DAY
Western Motor
Car Company
Farnam at Blvd. HA rny 0S68
Reliable Service
A specialty on Auto Topi, Winter
Curtains and tailored Seat Covers.
Engdahl's Auto Top Co.
Douglas M77 1718 Cats St.
tifiiiiuaiwiiBi
1 1 r a jones st.
OMAHA
Merchandise
Storage and Distribution
ivr.i. f. roessig
OMAHA'S RELIABLE AUTOMOBILE
PAINTER
CADILLAC BUILDING
2570 Farnam St. . Hamer 1448
CADILLAC
A Permanent
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"Always Onward"
J. H. Hansen
Cadillac Co.
Omaha
Lincoln
Bring or Send Your
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Pleating - Buttons - Hemstitching
Embroidering ' Braiding
Beading - Button Holes
(deal Button & Pleating
Company ?
300-308 Brown Bids, 16th and Douglas
Opposite Brandeis Stores
Phone Doug. 1933 . Omaha ,
900 separate fireproof, mouse
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Come and See for Yourself
Motor Vans for Removah
Bekins Omaha
Van and Storage
806 S. 16th St. Douglas 4163
Paxtdn-Mitckell Co.
27th and Martha Stt. Harney 1662
Manufacturers of
Brass, Bronze and Aluminum Castings
Standard Size Cast Iron Bushings
in Stcck
Closing Out
THEIR ENTIRE STOCK
Paints Millwork
Lumber
. At Rock-Bottom Prices
Now Is Your Time to Get Bus
C. Hafer Lumber Co.
135 W. Broad war
Council Bluffs
"OrMVAtRD
'W.l.S.lltll
Ml I W I I
' ii i;
BusinessGod's Creation
By JACK LEE '
"When God created the world he also created busi
ness. He knew that business would be just as necessary
for its success as man. Therefore He made rules which,
while governing man, also governed business, and, while
man, through the centuries, has ignored many of the
laws of God in private and business life, the laws still
stand, as He made them, and meant them to be, a
panacea for all ills."
This was the answer Gipsy Smith, the great evan
gelist, gave me when I asked him if it were possible for
a man to be religious and succeed in business.
He looked at me with a sort of pitying5 expression
in his brown eyes and as though remembering my youth,
the pity left his' face and interest took its place. I, with
the same youthful brashness, asked him another ques
tion which he perhaps thought uncalled for, but which
he answered.
"Is it possible for a man to be honest in his religion,
carry out his religious teachings in all his business deal
ings with his fellow business men and become rich?" I
asked.
"Absolutely," the Gipsy said.
"The only way a man can succeed in any business
is to stand by his religious teachings, which call for a
square deal to every man and honesty above all.
"It is just as easy for a business man to be honest
as it is for wheat to grow honestly, for millers to grind
it honestly and for salesmen to sell it honestly.
"The great trouble is that men do not want to make
just a little or even a fair profit they want to make a
lot, and there they transgress the words of Jesus, who
also was a business man and understood business
principles.
"Jesus said, 'Do ye as you would be done by.' The
best things I know in the Bible to guide a business man
on a straight career, and a successful one, is the sermon
on the mount and the Ten Commandments. If all the
business men just for 24 hours would take these precepts
and follow them closely they would think the millenium
had come.
"They would get such results and feel so good over
real honest treatment that they would never go back to
the old practices, but would continue with the new.
"Because of His knowledge of business Jesus taught
men not only to. live righteously in their private lives,
but to do the same in business. The cleansing of the
temple, when He drove out the grafting money changers,
was a good example of what He thought of honesty in
business."
I know there are some good hard-headed, common
sensed business men who will say after reading this:
"That sounds all very pretty from an evangelist who
knows nothing of business, who talks so prettily of
theory. If I practiced the golden rule one day in my
store I'd be ruined;"
- Gipsy Smith may be an envangelist, but he has had
dealings with business men on five continents in his 35
years as an evangelist, and for good, sound business rea
soning he can attract the attention of any business man
worthy the name.
But, granting that the evangelist is not engaged in
a commercial business, here's what a man who has his
fingers on the pulse of the business world of America
says. And when he speaks "Big Business" listens.
"The greatest need of the hour is religion," Roger
W. Babson, nationally known writer on business affairs,
declared recently.
When a man who is actively engaged in business,
who watches it from all angles and all corners of the na
tion and who is able to make a diagnosis and prescribe
what medicine is needed to keep it healthy, the local
business man is bound" to take his word as worthy of
consideration, and not passive consideration at that.
In his recent book, "Making Good in Business," Mr.
Babson says: "There are many men in business who
lack moral and spiritual development. Temporarily some
of them make good, but over a long period no man will
ultimately succeed who lacks religion."
To substantiate his statement that there is a need
of religion Mr. Babson has devoted several pages in his
book to this discussion. For instance, in a chapter headed
"Constructive Aids" he has given over a portion of the
chapter to the discussion of "Spiritual Development."
"As already indicated, the most important of these
preliminary qualifications is spiritual development. The
basis of permanent success is a well-grounded spiritual
development. Such a development is far more important
than the physical, mental, industrial or recreational.
Moreover, I say this purely as a business man and statis
tician. This aid is far more essential for individual suc
cess or making good in business than any other above
enumerated. Thirty per cent of our prominent business
men of America are sAns of minsters and farmers. It
(an investigation previously mentioned) showed that
success comes to those who have been reared in a family
where religion and hard work made up the program.
"Spiritual development is especially necessary as a
foundation to the two I's, Integrity and Inspiration.
Integrity is the Ten Commandments boiled down into
one word, while Inspiration is that faith which comes
only to those who are imbued with a desire to serve.
Integrity is the keynote of the Old Testament, while
Inspiration is the keynote of the New Testament and is
that feature which differentiates Christianity from other
religions." : ; .
And then he clinches this splendid argument a few
paragraphs on with this statement: "Business enter
prises and civilization are the products of religion."
Here we have the ideas on the same subject of two
men widely separated in life. Their ideas coincide and
agree. Gipsy Smith, the man of God, and Roger W.
Babson, the man of the world of business, who has not
made Business his god, but still clings to his spiritual
guide. .
Gipsy Smith is not the only man of God who will
declare the possibilities o success to an honest business
man. Any minister will take the same stand. Roger
W. Babson is not the onjy man of the world of business
who will take a similar stand. Any business man honest
with himself will take the same stand. He will declare
without reservations that it is absolutely possible to prac
tice the teachings of Christ and be successful in business.
Omaha business men, why not all give Christ a
chance in your business? ' - .
TEETH
vines
Omaha1
rra wk K I a .-i-! a-i . I - vv.e. jr-wwuj ill e iic.sR.yi.f.u.r
? McKenneyDentists
14th and Fa.rr.am Streets
JAckson 2872
a3sas , i hi nii.u i an .ii '-..,. nt., i i
iiikmm I la
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Contracting Painters
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Special Attention Clvea to Mall Orders
CHARLES JARL
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1703 Leavenworth Street
ETHEL THRALL MALTBY, D. C.
!S CHIROPRACTOR
tEa PALMER SCHOOL GRADUATE
W C 4 Fl FIL. Rise.
1303 Douglas Street
8,000 Homes in Omaha and
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Northwest Ready
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L. Rlefenberf, Mgr. .
HArney 2574 3122 Leavenworth
Thirty years of experi
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PflELCHIORS&SG'N
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Use Western Bond Paper
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Wholesale Distributors
Carpenter Paper Co.
OMAHA
Welding ' Cutting
Reinforced Brazing
General Welding Works
"WE DO IT RIGHT"
We Specialize in Automobile Welding
1508 Webster St. AT. 4459
RESTAURANTS
There's one near you. Highest quality
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Cyl in der Grinding
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Try us for,
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Puritan Mfg. & Supply Co.
Atlantic 3753 14 Izard
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PFEIFFER
253S Leavenworth Street
Eat. 1888
JA cksoa 3072
1 G
WITH A
PERSONALITY
Phone AT. 4683.
Li
O. L. Wiemer
Wall Paper, Paints, Glass,
Painting- and Decorating
1708 Cuming St. - - Omaha, Neb.
Phone DO uglaa 8753
The
Careful
Florist
OF NEBRASKA
15lh and Dodge Sts.
OMAHA
Modern Policies,
Carrying
Full Protection
E. M. SEARLE, JR., Pres.
FALL RENOVATING
of
PILLOWS AND BEDDING .
Feathers steam renovated and hot
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when we renovate.
OMAHA PILLOW CO.
1907 Cuming St. Jackson 2487
Sherman ftlcSonnell
" Drug Co.
All the Drugs and Toilet Articles for
all the people all the time. 6 Good
Drug Stores in Omaha.
We Furnish Clean Linen
FRONTIER TOWEL SUPPLY
J. M. JENSEN, Prop.
Phono Doug. 6291 1819 California
Send Your Clothes to Be Cleaned
DRESHER BROTHERS
Dyers, Cleaners, Hatters. Fur
riers, Tailors and Rug Cleaners
2217 Farnam St, Omaha
We Pay Return Charges oa
Out-of-Towa Orders
Alexander Munroe
Sheet Metal and
. Furnace Works
1718 Cats St. Phone J A. 406S
All American epical Co.
Chemical Manufacturers
and Jobbers
Phone Doug. 4864. 1208-10 5. 16th St.
We analyze and manufacture anything.
Give Us a Call
I
Ii ' "V7. HA
I "JIM K I
I