Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 28, 1921, Page 5, Image 5

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    'Itlti BKK: OMAHA, MONDAY. NOVKMBKK 2tf, 1921.
5
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YrTIME TALES
THE TALE OF
CHAPTER II.
f Dog Spot'i Plans.
Somehow old dog Spot and Miu
Kitty Cat never became good friendf.
By the time Mini Kitty Cat ar
rived on the fann in Pleasant Val
ley, Spot had lived there leveral
From the first day he met Mid
Kitty in the kitchen Spot hadn't
liked her. Yet he claimed at the
time that he was glad to nee her.
She made an odd hissing noise, which
amused old Spot tfreailu
He said that he could tell at once
that he was going to have great
sport with her. He knew it would
be fun to chase hcrl
, Inside the farmhouse old Spot
was careful how he behaved. The
moment Miss Kitty first set eyes on
him, she scurried under the table,
where she crouched and glared at
him. That was scarcely what you
might call a friendly greeting. And
Spot would have barked at her had
he dared.
Since he didn't, he only whined a
bit through his nose. You couldn't
have told what he meant by the
sound.
Miss Kitty Cat didn't like his
whining. . She ' even opened her
mouth wide and said as much. She
made an odd hissing noise, which
amused old Spot greatly. And he
told Miss Kitty, in what was almost
a growl (except that it wasn't loud
enough for one), "Wait till I catch
you' out-of-doors, my lady! I'll
have some fun with you."
Then Farmer Green's wife opened
the door and told Spot to be gone.
"You ought to be ashamed of
yourself" she scolded "teasing a
a poor little cat I" ' ' '
. Old Dog- Spot tucked his tail be
tween his tegs and crept through the
doorway, keeping one eye on the
broom that Mrs. Green held in her
hand. And as soon as he was safe
ly outside he gave two or three
sharp yelps, telling Miss Kitty Cat
that he would watch for her the very
first time she set foot in the yard.
; Somehow Miss Kitty Cat wasn't
specially worried. ' , She knew a
thing or two about dogs; and she
didn't intend to let old Spot bully
her. It took her a few minutes to
get over her anger.. ;i And then she
came out -from beneath the table and
lapped up the milk that Mrs Green
had set temptingly on. the floor, in
a saucer. " t :'
When Miss Kitty had finished her
meal she washed , her face a duty
that she performed with great care,
for she prided herself on . , always
looking neat.
Watching her, no one would ever
have guessed what was in her mind.
"I'd like to wash that dog's face fcr
him." Miss Kitty was saying to her
self. "He'd have some reason then
for yelping and whining." '
Having completed her toilet Miss
Kitty jumped into a chair that stood
in the sunshine, near a window. And
there she composed herself for . a
nap. When she was well fed and
well warmed, she', liked nothing
better than to curl herself up and
doze and dream.
Meanwhile old dog Spot was tell
ing everybody in the farmyard about
the new cat and the fun he intended
to have with her.
"There'll be lively times around
here when she comes outside the
house," he chuckled.
(Copyright, 1921, by Metropolitan News-
paper Service.)
Common Sense
ri It t'n
ii i vi i
2
By J. J. MUNDY.
Have You Traveled Clean?
'Perhaps you have often asked
yourself if it pays to be honest.
You may think if you were a little
less scrupulous you might be enjoy
ing for yourself and your family
many comforts you want, in fact
need. ' . .
At such times, when your mind s
all but convinced that it is foT your
family you should be solicitous to
the extent that you get what you
need, you think of some scheme
which is. not exactly honest, and you
come near falling for it.
Perhaps you have accepted the op
' portunity to get what the family
' reeds by this dishonest route.
Do you really enjoy what you get
as a result of being crooked?
Ever since your dishonest act ypu
havj had a weight on your mind,
have you not?
' You have not felt free for one
minute.
Waking or sleeping, you seem to
have it before youx, you start in
your sleep and you cast an eye be
hind you when you walk.
There comes a time in the life of
cvtry man when retrospection steps
in and brings up the past clearer
than the events of today.
With those who have been honest
and fair in their dealings there is no
regret, but the mental anguish of
the dishonest is keen.
ICopyrlght, 121. international Feature
Service. Inc.)
Parents' Problems
Can table manners be taught to a
child of 2 1-2: if so. how?
A child ol 2 1-2 can be taught
table manners; and can best be
taught by a little precept, nd a
great deal of example. .
. i
What are believed to be exten
sive petroleum deposits have been
discovered on islands in the Gulf of
California, .-f
Where It Started
"A Feather In His Cap."
A man who does something note
worthy is aaid to have "a leather In
his cap." The phrase originated
during the crusades, according to a
MS of 1399, which states that "none
L .. 1 .1 ...... . ...I . !.. L. '.. .
auvum wear a jruicr 111 nip lap
but he who had killed a lurk.
Copyright, till, Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.
Lady Victoria Murray, aistcr of the
earl of Dunmorr, has entcrei busi
ness as a dairy farmer.
KidcBes' Colds Can
Be Eased Quickly
Dr. King's New .Discovery will id
that very thing, essily and quickly.
Don't say, "Poor little kiddie, I wish
I knew what to da for you!" Khta
the cough first comes, give a little Dr.
King's New Discovery a directed, and
it will soon Se eased.
It's a good family cough and cold
remedy, too, Lootens up the phlegm,
clears up the cough, relieves the con
gestion. No harmful drug. For fifty
years a standard remedy for colds,
coughs, grippe. At your druggists,
60c, a bottle.
Dr. King's
New Discovery
For Colds and Coughs
Constipated? 1 Iere"aRclief ICleaase
the system, with Dr. King's Pills,
They prompt free bile flow, stir up
the lazy liver and get at the root of the
trouble. All druggists, 2 Sc. ,
D PROMPT! "WON'T GRIPE
. r. Kings Pills
ADVERTISEMENT,
IF K
DNEYS ACT
BAD TAKE SALTS
Says Backache is sign you
have been eating too
much meat.
When you wake up with back
ache and dull misery in the kidney
region it generally means you have
been eating too much meat, says a
well-known authority. Meat forms
uric acid which overworks the kid
neys in their effort to filter it from
the blood and they become sort of
paralyzed and loggy. When your
kidneys get sluggish and clog you
must relieve them, like you relieve
your bowels; removing all the
body's urinous waste, else you have
backache, sick headache, . dizzy
spells; your stomach sours, tongue
is coated, and when the weathei is
bad you have rheumatic twinges.
The urine is cloudy, full of sedi
ment, channels often get sore, water
scalds and you are obliged to seek
relief two or three times during
the night. . .
Either consult a good, reliable
physician at once or get from your
pharmacist about four ounces of
Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for
a few days and your kidneys will
then act fine. This famous salts is
made from the acid of grapes and
lemon juice, combined with lithia,
and has been used for generations
to clean and stimulate Sluggish kid
neys, also to neutralize acids in the
urine so it no longer irritates, thus
ending bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is a life saver for regu
lar meat eaters. It is inexpensive,
cannot injure and makes a delight
ful, effervescent lithia-water drink.
DANDRUFF REMOVER
SHAMPOO
REJUVENATES ANt) NOURISHES
ilLEIT CLEANSES
The Perfect Shampoo. No exceta oils, fata,
cauttica or alkali to leave the hair gummy,
stringy or sticky.
Two aizes: 75c and $1.50
After shampooing, us
fitch's quinine
tonique'superbe
a an antiseptic and astringent, giving
new life ana luster to the hair. Ask
your druggist.
MEDICINE
The safe family
medicine, for Colds
and Coughs.
Builds new strength
NO DRUGS
SAFE AND SANE
for Coughs y Colds
Tax jfnf Is eifUrtei (rea sD nVtti.
Cuticura Soap
Imparts
The Velvet Touch
Ba.0bitat.Tfcaa nVsiau a. Twi
Sm: Cturr ljrtr hpll Milsse Mix
NEURALGIA
or bawlaxba rat) the forehead
melt and infaal tbe rapon
y VAPORUO
1 II W . I .an SHHSiaiHIl r-- I ! . .1
I II UJL. I H :'.TS7 jJ "II.
nd Say It With OURS
Hess & Swoboda
FLORISTS
1418 Farnam St., Paxton Hotel,
OMAHA
Phone DOuglas 1601
Members FlorUts' Telegraph Delivery
Aooclatlnn. We dri ver flowers on
short notice anywhere Id the U. B.
or Canada.
aafay' aeSBBrKBBr BaW
Space leased for long or short term Rates quoted upon request. '
MOTOR
TRUCKS
City Sales Room 816 S. 24th St.
Servica Station 815 S. 28th St
TELEPHONE AT LANTIC 3332
International
Harvester Company
of America
Branch House 714 S. 10th St,
Omaha, Neb.
Ford Transfer
and
Storage Co.
813 Douglas St., 1102 S. Main,
Omaha Council Bluff
Prompt Service
Reasonable Rates
iinpiiiitann
Omaha Lace Laundry
EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS
Curtains, Panels, Cretonnes,
Lace and Austrian Shades
4716 Cuming St. Tel. Walnut 13SI
Ladies' Plush Sailor and Valour
Hat Cleaned and Reblocked
RAMSER
218 South 14th Street
TRY US FOR
French Pastry Fancy Cakes
KUENNE'S
Bakery, Delicatessen and
Lunch Room
804 South 16th St.
216 Leavenworth St.
Order Your Personal
Xmas Greeting Cards
Now
Omaha Stationery Co.
307-309 S. 17th Su
Jackson 0806
mmmmm
at
WRECKED CARS
REBUILT
Fender, Top, Body Work
Repairing of All Kinds
NIGHT AND DAY
Western Motor
Car Company
Farnam at Blvd. HA racy 0868
Reliable Service
A speolsllr on Aoto Tops. Winter
Curtains and tailored Seat Covers.
Engdahl's Auto Top Co.
Douglas 5677 17JS Cass St
II V JONCS ST.
DMAHA
Merchandise
Storage and Distribution
ivr.i. f. noEssiG
OMAHA'S RELIABLE AUTOMOBILE
PAINTER -CADIU-AC
BUILDING
2570 Farnam St. Harney I44S
CADILLAC
A Permanent
; Value
"Always Onward"
t.:. :
J. Hi Hansen
Cadillac Co.
Omaha
Lincoln
Bring or. Send Your
Dress Goods to Us for
Pleating Buttons Hemstitching
Embroidering - Braiding
Beading - Button Holes
Ideal Button & Pleating
Company
300-308 Brown Bldg 16th and Douglaa
Opposite Brandeis Stores
Phone Doug. I93S
Omaha
900 separate fireproof, mouaa
proof, dustless rooms for
' furniture.
Come and See for Yourself
Motor Vans for Removals
Bekins Omaha
Van and Storage
806 S. 16th St Douglas 4163
PaxtonMtchell Co.
27th and Martha St.
Harney 1642
Manufacturers off
Brass. Brans and Aluminum Casting
Standard Six Cast Iron Bushing
in Stock -
Call, phone or write us for a
sample of our Sheetrock Wall
Board. Sheetrock is the most
durable, strongest and longest
lasting board there is. It comes
in sheets 4-ft wide, 4, 6, 8, 3
and 10-ft. long.
C. Hafer Lumber Co.
Council Bluffs, la.
IQanQxDQ (test)
"Olwapid
m - aW ar m " eu m ma. ii i i mi v -w- wr.'i lasfO hi jr- i vVLin
,, , . . lNANrg i .... -J S 1 . m m - m
Making Good In Business
By JACK LEE
"Making Good in Business," a-recent book by
Roger W. Babson, head of Babson's Statistical Or
ganization, Wellesley Hills, Mass.; may be likened
to a small shell, filled with high explosives, power
ful enough to give a good-sized city a thorough
shaking up. It will shake anybody who reads it.
On the 175 pages of this little book there is
enough good common sense, plain philosophy, old
fashioned religion and advice to carry a young man,
yes,, and an old one, through life and to success, if
taken to heart.
Being an expert on business matters, one would
naturally conclude that Mr. Babson would deal only
in terms of business. In fact, business as we know
it has a very small place in the book. If adhered to,
the advice in Mr. Babson's book would not only in
sure success in commerce or finance, but in any po
sition a man might assume in life.
There is great encouragement for the young
sters just starting out. Young men of today are
prone to lament the scarcity of opportunities. Mr.
Babson says they are greater and more numerous
than in the days of our fathers. Then young men
have a faculty of concluding that men who make
great successes have special genius for those things
in which they have succeeded.
, He offsets this by this substantial advice : "If
you could look into the lives of any of our great in
ventors or captains of industry you would find the
outstanding feature of their career to be hard
work." And Mr. Babson all through his book makes
the willingness to work a decided factor in success
as well as happiness.
Youngsters also believe in luck, that many suc
cesses have been due to luck. Mr. Babson, as
J. Ogden Armour did once, says that "luck may
place a man in a good position, but it cannot keep
him there." Both men agree that long and con
scientious preparation and application fits a man
to hold the position after he acquires it through
luck. .
The backbone of the book is the six "IV
which the writer declares to be the absolute qualifi
cations for a successful career. They are industry,
integrity, intelligence, initiative, intensity and
inspiration.
Of industry he quotes an old adage, "Industry
does not wish, and he that lives upon hope will die
fasting. There are no gains without pains."
Of industry he also says, "The greatest universi
ties in America are the wood box, the dishpan and
the cornfield."
Of integrity he says, "Civilization really dates
from the time that people began to respect the
rights and property of others."
"Intelligence does not mean mere book learn
ing," Mr. Babson says. Intelligence is "judgment,
which is the ability to think clearly, justly and cou
rageously." ' Initiative is the faculty of going after a thing
and doing it without being 'driven to it. Intensity
means close application to one's particular line of
endeavor, in an effort to know more about ft than
anybody else. Inspiration is vision by which the
foregoing qualities may be put to use. Every word
of it taught in schools and at mother's knee, lessons
to be carried all through life, but which often are
cast aside with the school books and the goodby to
mother.
Spiritual development is absolutely necessary,
as is ood health, good habits and a happy home,
he writes.
"The biggest thing in business is not machin
ery, materials or markets; but, rather, men. The
biggest thing in man is not body, mind or muscle;
but soul," and this may be designated as the key
note of the whole book. .
He makes a plea for patriotism, a defense of
the ideals on which our nation was founded and
condemns mad rushes to the support of all radical
"isms." He defines very clearly woman's position
in active business as well as in the home. In the
home she is really a silent partner as careful of her
husband's business career as she is his home life.
ah a"
McKenney-Dentists
14th and Farsam Streets
JA ckson 2872
r
Staying
Surface
S
URE
URFACE
G.A.SteinheimerCo.
Contracting Painters
"Jarl's National Brand
Solid Copper Oil Cans"
All solder on the outside of the can
with a 6-Inch screw cop. Airtight, nan
iploeive and fireproof Pricce: 4-sl.,
19.00; S-irni., Ill 00: ft-e-al., tlS.OO.
10-arnl.. f 18.00, lA-gal.. 121 00; 25-unl..
$36.00: 60-gal.. (61.00. ,
Special Attention Given to Mall Orders
CHARLES JARL
& Company
1703 Leavenworth Stmt
ETHEL THRALL
CHIROPRACTOR
PALMER SCHOOL GRADUATE
Second Floor Elk Bids;.
1303 Douglas Street
8,000 Home in Omaha and
Council Bluffs Are Covered
With Our
Ready Roofing
THERE IS A REASON
Call us and let us explain. All work
guaranteed. Easy term.
Northwest , Ready
Roofing Co.
l RIefenberg, Mgr.
HArney 2574 3122 Leavenworth
3fcJ& BSL' JE&t I
Use Western Bond Paper
For Your Office Stationer
Wholesale Distributor
Carpenter Paper Co.
OMAHA
Welding Cutting
Reinforced Brazing
General Welding Works
"WE DO IT RIGHT"
W Specialize in Automobile Welding
1508 Webster St. AT. 4459
RESTAURANTS
There's on near yon. Highest quality
foods, with quick service.
Cyl-in-der Grinding
Is Our Specialty
Try us for
"Better Service"
Puritan Mfg. & Supply Go.
Atlantic 3753
1614 laard
XT
ttor durable toecauat preotMl
Cmm a tfnclc ahrt oa our
lM)-to trim. 11 ort saltarr
twcauM tber at do aoldemJ
Jrota Ut ceitect food sn4 H
can't b ttrveU BJrt 12iS4i4l-l
'NEBRASKA 4 tOWA STEEL TANK CO..
O ttia, Nc.
EE?
mm
.m I I faV. SM .
SIDE CURTAINS
are mldhty hand on stormy days. The
kind we make are wind-tiuht and easily
put on. Prices reasonable.
Superior Workmanship
PFEIFFER
2S25 Leavenworth Street
Est. 1S88
MALTBY, D. C.
JA ckson 3072
1 5
WITH A
PERSONALITY
Phone AT. 4683.
Mm
O.L. Wiemer
Wall Paper, Paint, Glass,
Painting and Decorating
1708 Cuming St. Omaha, Neb
Phone DO uglas 753 -
THE
Bee
CLEANERS AND DYERS '
Main Olllca and Plant 1941-43 Vlntsa it
JAokion 1440
CHRYSANTHEMUMS
Never Better . ,
JOHN H. BATH
THE CAREFUL FLORIST
1804 Farnam Street
OF NEBRASKA
15th and Dodge Sts.
OMAHA
Modern Policiess
Carrying
Full Protection
E. M. SEARLE, R., Pre.
FALL RENOVATING
o(
PILLOWS AND BEDDING
Feather steam renovated and hot
air dried. All your own feathers back
when we renovate.
OMAHA PILLOW CO.
1907 Cuming St.
Jackson 2467
Sherman & McDonnell
Drug Co.
All the Drugs and Toilet Articles for
all the people all the time. 6 Good
Drug Stores in Omaha. (
We Furnish Clean Lines
FRONTIER TOWEL SUPPLY
J. M. JENSEN, Prop.
Phone Doug. 6381 1819 California
Send Your Clothe to Be Clean
DRESHER BROTHERS
Dyers. Cleaners, Halters. Fur
riera. Tailora and Rug Cleaner
2217 Farnam St, Omaha
W Pay Return Charge aa
Out-ol-Town Orders
Alexander Munroe
Sheet Metal and
Furnace Works
1718 Case St Phona JA. 4065
Al! American Chemical Co.
Chemical Manufacturers
and Jobber
Phone Doug. 4364. 1208-10 S. 16th St
We analyse and manufacture anything.
Cir Ua a CaO
1 1