The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, September 09, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Events and
Persons
Mrs. J. H. Smith left over the Bur
lington for Chicago Wednesday, Sep
tember 1, at 6:30 p. m., and will visit
her son, Henry (>. Smith, and rela
tives in that city.
Clem Brushwood, 1105 North Nine
teenth street, will leave Monday for
Denver and other points in Colorado
to visit friends and relatives. Before
returning, Mr. Brushwood will spend
a few days hunting and fishing with
his brother in Thermopolis, Wyo.
Mrs. Larry Peoples and the Misses
Frankie Watkins, Ruth and Florence
Jones returned Monday evening from
a ten days’ stay at Lake Okoboji at
the Y. W. C. A. North Central Field
ramp.
Holst Pharmacy lor drugs. 2702
Cumin,g street. Harney 681.—Adr.
Mrs. Lida Singletary and daughter,
Louise, with Mr. R. H. Hill left Sun
day morning for their home in Kan
sas City, Kans., after spending a very
pleasant ten days with Mrs. Fstella
Craig on Twenty-seventh street.
Miss Mable Peoples and little sister,
Lucille, left Sunday night for their
home in Independence, Kans., after
spending several weeks visiting their
aunt, Mrs. Walter Stephens, 2720 Cor
by street, and their uncles, the Peo
ples brothers.
Mrs. Kstella Craig entertained at an
informal party Monday evening com
plimentary to Mrs. Fdlla Taylor of At
chison, Kans. The evening was spent
in music and games.
A. P. Scruggs, Lawyer, 220 8. llth
sL D. 7812. CoL 3811,— AdT.
Mrs. Lee of Niagara F’alls, N. Y.,
who has been the guest of her daugh
ter, Mrs. R. T» W'alker, 2121 Maple
street, left for her home last Thurs
day. She was accompanied by her
grandson, Mr. Howard Lee of Ro
chester, N. Y., and Mr. Myron Sutton
of Niagara F’alls, Ont.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Brown anil
daughter Gladys have returned from
a very pleasant trip to Chicago and
.surrounding towns.
Mr. Weldon Solomon entertained .it
a farewell dancing party in honor of
Messrs. Howard Lee of Rochester, N.
Y., and Myron Sutton of Niagaia
Falls, Ont.
Miss Georgia Miller of St. Paul,
Minn., is making a brief, visit to the
city. She is stopping at the home of
Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Williams.
Monitor advertisers want your bus
iness; that’s why they advertise In
your paper.
Mrs. Hemy Wilson of 2535 North
Eighteenth street who has been very
ill with heart trouble, is reported a
little better.
Mrs. Florentine Pinkston will re
open her music studio on September
20th.
Mrs. M. Craig of Atchison, Kans.,
returned to her home this week after
spending three weeks with her chil
dren, Mrs. E. G. Scott and Messrs. Ar
thur, Walter and Eddie Craig, of this
city.
Miss Genevieve Paris left Monday
morning for Western university to re
sume her studies.
Mrs. Ella Bradd, 919 North Twen
tieth street, left on September 2 for
Brit, la., to visit her father whom she
has not seen for fourteen years. She
will be gone about a month.
E. F. Morearty, Lawyer, 600 Bee
Bldg. Douglas 3841 or Harney 2156.
Among the many parties that were
given in honor of Miss Mable Peoples
was the lovely dancing party given
by Mr. and Mrs. James Peoples at
their residence, 3237 Miami street.
About fifteen couples were present.
The Mises Viola Brown, Joscphins
Smith and Louise Taylor left Sunday
for St. Louis, Mo., to attend St. Rita’s
school.
Miss Mollie Gerald of Emporia,
Kans., is the guest of Mrs. Marie
Denman of 940 North Twenty-seventh
street.
Mrs. Emma Britton has returned
from a week’s visit to Kansas City,
Mo., and with her sisters in Leaven
worth, Kans. Mrs. Britton attended
the Elks’ convention.
The N. A. A. C. P. will meet Sun
day afternoon at St. John’s A. M. E.
church at 3:30 a,“d will be addressed
by Mrs. Frazier of Dallas, Texas.
“BEARCAT" WRIGHT LOSES
Edward (Bearcat) Wright stayed
ten rounds with the Boston “lar
Baby," Sam Langford, and lost on the
decision.
Wright is only 24 years of age and
hails from Galveston, Texas. He
k served four years in the Ninth cav
* airy, three years in the Tenth cavalry
and was champion of the Mexican
border. He is a promising coung
man of the heavyweight class, and
•bids fair to contend for the champion
ship in that he Is a clean liver and
well thought of by ail who know him.
He is making his home in Omaha with
his mother.
f*
Al TOMOBILES IN COLLISION
Occupant Thrown to Street—Slight
Injuries Sustained—$200 Damages
Done to Car.
Monday .morning an automobile
owned and driven by Hairy Leland,
clubman and prominent citizen of this
city, was smashed and virtually de
1 molished by another car approaching
from the south on Twenty-fourth at
the intersection of Twenty-fourth and
j Cuming streets.
Leland, his wife and a friend, Mrs.
Estella Hays, were in the automobile
i at the time of the accident, turning
j east from North Twenty-fourth street
when a car going north on the same
street hit hend on, turning Leland's
; car up on its side and throwing Mrs.
Hays to the street. Both of the
j women sustained minor injuries and
were treated in the Hill-Williams drug
store, Twenty-fourth and Cuming |
streets, and are very much improved.
DAVIS— RECTOR
Wednesday afternoon, September 1,
i the marriage of Miss Celia Rector,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Rec
tor of Little Rock, Arit., and Mr. Wil
i liam E. Davis, a young business man
I of the South Side, was solemnized in
! the church of St. Philip the Deacon
by the Rev. John Albert Williams.
I The bride belongs to one of the most
prominent families in Arkansas. The
groom is the son of the late William
1 E. Davis, a prominent Texas family,
his mother being Mrs. Eugene Mc
! Gill, now a resident of Omaha.
HE WARD STREET PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH.
Our attendance and membership are
, both increasing. A drive for more
members was inaugurated last Sun
day and will be vigorously pushed by
pastor and members. The sermon
topics for Sunday will be as follows:
Morning, "Spendthrifts for God.”
Evening, "Camouflage in the Garden
of Eden.”
You are urgently Invited to these
services.
RUSSEL TAYLOR,
Pastor.
Piets and Scot*.
In his Dictionary of Phrase and
Fable, the learned Rev. Dr. E. Cob
ham Brewer, writes upon Piets and
Scots: "Piet Is not the Latin plctl
(painted people). As Piets and Scots
are always mentioned together, there
Is no reason why one name should be
Latin and the other Gaelic. Scot ta
the Gaelic 'sgod ( a dweller In woods
and forests), and Plct Is the Gaelic
plct-lst (freebooters), the two being
equivalent to foresters and free
booters.”
Would Please Him.
Lindsey had the little hen fast and
was trying to bring her head close to
the ground. "What might you be try
ing to do?” exclaimed her father com
ing upon the small girl In the yard.
“I’m trying to make this hen say her
prayers.” “Well,” said the parent sad
ly, “I hope she’ll eay: ’Now I lay me.’ ”
WHO IS HYPOCRITICAL I
Mr. Cox asserts that "the man who
says the League of Nations means war
is hypocritical and he knows it.”
Well, let us look at this assertion
without hypocrisy and see what it
comes to.
Article X of the treaty provides that
the members of the league “undertake
to respect and preserve as against
external aggression the territorial in
tegrity and existing political inde
pendence of all members of the
league," and it directs in case of threat
of aggression the council shall "ad
vise upon the means by which this
obligation shall be fulfilled.”
Is it hypocrisy to hold that this
means war?
On this point Senator Harding cited
a significant incident in his speech
last week on foreign relations.
"A few days ago,” he said, “a dele
gation of an organization whictk calls
itself a Society for the Prevention of
War appealed to the premier of Great
Britain to unite and use the powers
of the world in defense of Poland,
Armenia, and the Dardanelles. The
British premier replied, according to
his remarks quoted by the news
papers, to the effect that, while the
formation of 'an international army’
would be ‘an ideal solution,’ it could
not be accomplished because tjie
European nations could not furnish
the troops and the United States had
withdrawn from co-operation’ — a
polite and diplomatic phrase, and more
exactly meaning, of course, that the
senate of the United States had not
completed the partial obligation as
sumed by the president to do that very
thing—that is, to ‘furnish the troops.’ ”
Was Mr. Lloyd George hypocritical
in his remarks to the delegation or
has he a different understanding of
the meaning of Article X from that
which Mr. Cox would like American
voters to adopt?
If there is a difference of opinion,
wouldn’t it be wise to have it cleared
up by an explicit reservation to our
agreement to this “obligation,” as pro
posed by the republican senators,
rather than to dodge, as attempted by
Mr. Cox?
Besides Article X, the covenant
which Mr. Cox proposed to ratify with
out reservation, there is in Article XI
the following: “Any war or threat of
war, whether immediately affecting
any of the members of the league or
not, is hereby declared a matter of
concern to the whole league, and the
league shall take any action that may
be deemed wise and effectual to safe
guard the peace of nations."
Does this mean what it Bays, or is
it mere hypocrisy?
Article XII provides that in the
event of the failure to carry out the
award of arbitration provided by the
covenant, “the council shall propose
what steps should be taken to give ef
fect thereto.”
Article XVI provides that should
any member of the league resort to
war in disregard of Its covenants un
der Articles XII, XIII, or XV, “it
shall pro facto be deemed to have
committed an act of war against all
The Bio OTAH OTnnr DryGoods
Department X ■ fl|f^XIII§£&° Shot*.
Store Where | f\|\ 0 I UI\L Clothing
You Save Floor
Money. 1831-33-35 No. 24th St Covenng.
Girls’ Dresses for School Days
at much less than other Himes In Omaha asks for
them, of fine ginghams in Htripes or plaids. Very
pretty styles, in sizes 6-8 10-12-14 years.
Values to 45.00.
This Week’s Price $1.95 and $2.95 g
School Shoes for Girls and Misses
in brown or black, at a saving.
$2.95, $3.95, $4.95, $5.95
in sizes from 8% to 11, 11% to 2, 2% to 7.
BOYS' BLUE SERGE SUITS
With Lined Pants. 411.50 Value.
Our price O Q C
this week. . vO» vO
BOYS’ CORDUROY SUITS
Of Heavy Weight. Lined Pants.
Our price Q C
this week....
Little Boys’ Brown Suits
Sizes 3 to 7 Years.
Our price d*0 Q C
this week. 'P^evO
Sturdy School Shoes for Boys
Black or brown at a saving this week. In
every wanted size.
$2.95, $3.95, $4.95
. PQPP Rubber Balls—China Dolls
■ riEwtcor Flying Tinker Toys.
FREE—To children who come with their parents. No purchase*
lecessary to get these. ij
STAR.STORE ^ Parker I
other members of the league,” ami
that "It shall be the duty of the coun
cil in such case to recommend to the
several governments concerned what
effective military, naval, or air force
the'members of the league Bhall sev
erally contribute to the armed forces
to be used to protect the covenants of
the league.”
It may be hypocrisy to hold that
these provisions mean war, in view
of the fact that war in defiance of
them is at this moment being waged
In Poland, threatened on the Albanian
frontier, and smoldering throughout
eastern Europe and Asia Minor.
But our notion of hypocrisy is that
displayed by the democrats, who pro
pose that we enter the league of na
tions, not with frank, open, and ex
plicit reservations, but without intend
ing to carry out wholeheartedly and
to the full the obligations it prescribes
and imposes.—The Chicago Tribune.
BASEBALL! BASEBALL!
at Rourke Park
ARMOIRS vs KANSAS CITY MONARCHS
MEMBERS OF tNE NATIONAL COLOREB LEAGBE
Featuring the Famous Donaldson and Mendez
Saturday, September 11 - - Game called at 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 12 Double Header - Game called at 2:00 p.m.
Music by Armour Band
BASEBALL! BASEBALL!
-
yyyyyyy yyyy nfVVY y vrwyir-yvy.•T'rvrw-4—r ▼ -«- r x »- «- »- r •' • »»»» » * » » » » ▼» » » * * » ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼
♦ £
❖
4 . #
T
Y
:: \
Y
:: |
! ► i\
« *
41
X
x
X _ - *
Have You Tried It Yet? I
4 » ^‘* • *..*.■ ^ *
The face cream that is positively guaranteed to remove all grease, shine and perspiration. < j
< > COOLING, HEALING, SATISFYING. 3 3
| 50C Manufactured b, jqc |
| i iap Kaffir Chemical Laboratories i up f
| scents 815 North Sixteenth St. scents V,
X postage Doutrlas 7074 POSTAGI i>
1 I!
•\ Sold by Pope Drug Co., 18th and Farnam Sts.; Williamson’s Drug Co., 2306 North 24tMSt; Melchor Drug X
3*3 Co., 4826 South 24th St; The People’s Drug Store, 111 South 14th St; Holtz Drug Store, 2702 Cuming St; J;
£ Toben Drug Co., 2402 N St; Jones Cultural College, 1616 North 24th St.; Unitt-Docekal Drug Co., 1626 Farnam. < >
| Mrs. B. A. Bostic, 2124 Clarke St.; Mmes. South & Johnson, 2416 Blondo; Mme. C. C. Trent.
5 30th and Erskine; Mme. A. T. Austin, 4911 North 42d; Mrs. A. Hicks, 2716 Miami; Russell 3 3
3*3 Barber Shop, 1916 Cuming; Gordon Drug Co.. 2120 No. 24th; Mrs. William Murphy, 2705 ;;
•{• Corby; W. G. Macon, 2420 Lake; Miss Alice Marshall, 1835 No. 23d; Whiteside & Son Gro. X
* Co., 5623 So. 30th; Whitby Drug Co., 2917 R St; Mrs. A. McFall, 2722 Franklin; Mrs. L. 33
53 Wheeler, 2321 No. 27th; Mrs. J. W. Shields, 2307 No. 27th.
Y X
♦> 5*
| A,v& Yours Friends— f
t x
Y The refined credit service we are extending to the readers of this paper crowded X
♦:♦ V
^ our store every day—Surely, you should take advantage of this great sei-vice when ♦♦♦
you can be well dressed at less than cash store prices. Y
Y X
4 The Leader Service Is Different t
Y Y
Y 1
x Charming Silk Dresses |
j* Stunning New Fall Suits %
* Beautiful Fall Millinery |
X Stylish Fall Coats
❖
At a great saving—Open a LEADER Account—Clothing, Shoes and Furnishings
Y for Dad and the Kids—Underpriced during this Sale, Y
Y Y
Y Y
Y Y
Y Open an Account—You Will Like Our Service v
Y Y
Y - Y
Y Y
♦♦♦ SOUTH SIDE’S MOST PROGRESSIVE STORE ♦♦♦
I THE LEADER I
Y Y
4727-4729 SOUTH 24TH ST.—OPPOSITE POST OFFICE ♦»
•> Y
4X^4X44X44*44X44X44X44X44X44»44»44X44X44X44X44X44X44X44«44»44i44X4v
f