The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, September 15, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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WATERS
BARNHART
PRINTING CO.
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Before and After.
Before he gets tier he says; “How
womanly 1” when she does anything.
But after he gets her he says: “That's
Just like a womun I" when she does a
thing.—Cincinnati Knquirer.
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PART
NERSHIP OF CRAWFORD AND
COMPANY
Notice is hereby given that the partner
ship heretofore existing and doing busi
ness under the name style and title of
Crawford and Company, and vtHiich was
composed at John I). Crawford. Robert B.
Allen. IxtveJov M. Crawford, Saybert C.
Hanger and Orlo V. South, as partners,
said organization having been organized
on the 25th dav of August, 1920, was on
the 28th day of July, 1921. by action of
the partners, dissolved and terminated for
all purposes whatsoever. Dated at Oma
ha Nebraska this 8h day of August, A.
D„‘ 1921.
CRAWFORD and COMPANY, a Partner
ship. Per JNO. D. CRAWFORD.
Presldenh
To be filed In Co. Ctk’a.
office and published four
. ■■ -(-rutlve weeks in a le
gal newspaper.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUG
LAS COUNTY. NEBRASKA
In the Matter of the Kstate of Otto A.
Hempel, Deceased. Doc. No. Order.
On this 20th day of August. 1921. this
cause coming on for hearing upon the
petition of Mary T. Hempel, administra
trix. praving for a license to sell lx»t Six
(6t, Block Thirteen 03). in Park Forest
Addition to the city of Omaha, said
property heing a part of the above es
tate, for the payment of debts allowed
against said estate, and unpaid for want
of personal property with which to pay
same.
It is therefore ordered that ali per
sons interested in said estate appear in
Court Room Number....in the
Court House'in' Douglas County, Nebras
ka. ,on the 26th day of September, 1921
at nine o'clock A. M to show cause, it
any there be, why a license to sell real
The Licensed Falsehood
Every man, if he catches his son
In a falsehood, will at least reprimand
him. But the greater the falsehood the
man's favorite statesman tells, the
more apt he is to vote for him. and
bothers others to vote for hint.—K. W
Howe’s Monthly.
Diplomatic Youngster
Harold was often allowed to visit
ds grandmother, hut was always told
he hour he should return home On
rrlvtng at his grandmother’s one
pnrning he was asked how long he
tould stay. “Well, grandmother. I
lon’t remember wherher mother said
•en o’clock or three o’clock, hot I’ll
jt> home after dinner and ask her"
Siberian Bread Substantial.
The small ringed bread of Siher
1 is declared to be the most substantia
•of all the hardtack breads of the tin
J verse.
_ . I
The Circlet la Self-Adjusting, and
has neither hooks nor eyes. It
simply slips over the head, clasps
at the waist and smooths out ugly
lines.
If your dealer can't get it send
actual bust measure, name, ad
dress ££ SI .SO. We'll send the
Circlet prepaid. Sizes 34 to 43.
Nemo Hygienic-Fashion Institute
120 E. 16 St. New York., Dep’t M.
I^gWAWSWWWWWWWWWWWWtfWWWMWWWWWVW
i JThe Monitor reaches the Colored :*
^ people]of Omaha and Nebraska and j;
has a |wide circulation in every state ;i
in the union. i
It has taken Six Years to build up ij
i this circulation and we are still grow- i
I* ?
ing. :j
Merchants who ’;desire to reachjhe
best buyers in the community use jj
The Monitor. 5
■:
$ USE l
|DENTLOj
£ The Pyorrhea-Preventive Tooth-Paste $
5 . None Better £
5 MANUFACTURED BY THE J
•: Kaffir Chemical Laboratories NEBRASKA Jl
vwvvwwv‘jvvwwwv‘jvj‘rj,jvjvwvw,.rj,^jvj,j,.vj‘.rjv.rj,ji,uv
DANUBE IS OPEN
TO ALL NATIONS
Internationalization of Famous
Rivor Completed by Action of
Interested Ail ed Powers.
BARRIER AND BATTLEGROUND
Danube Has Long Been Chain Upon
Which Romance and History Have
Vied With Each Other to Hang
Interesting Traditions.
Washington.—The completion of the
Internationalization of the Danube by
rhe recent fontml action of the Inter
ested allied powers, announced In
Paris dispatches, Is the occasion for
the Issuance from (lie Washington
headquarters of the National Geo
graphic society of the following bulle
tin, descriptive of the famous river.
"From the Black forest to the Black
sea, over a course 1,800 miles In length,
the Danube has long been a chain
upon which romance and history have
vied with each other to hang Interest
ing traditions and recurrence*. Geog
raphy. too has done Its share, and
although the Volga exceeds Its rival
in length, and although the Rhine In
Thackeray and Hood has had better
press agents, the Danube Is large
enough and beautiful enough to rank
In Interest with the great rivers of
the world.
Last a Highway and More a Barrier.
“There was a time when the Dan
ube was symbolized by an old-fash
ioned waltz. But since the World
war began, nothing but a hesitation
typifies the place the river has held
In the economic life of the countries
through which If runs It has been
less a highway and more the harrier
than In prewar days. Not yet does It
-erve to hind the various nations
through which 1t pusses Into a friend
ly and co-operating group. It hns
been officially open to ships of al! na
tions since the forming of the Danube
commission In IWkt and Ihe various
stales interested long co-operated to
Improve the navigation facilities, es
peciaUv In the toe »r reaches of the
river; hut political conditions have
done much to weaken the economic
link which once bound J,1nz and Vi
enna to rhe great grain shipping een
ter of Bralla. to which ocean-going
▼easels can steam, snd to the Black
sea ports themselves.
“Charming villages, beautiful mead
ows. picturesque hills crowned with
mined castles, princely palaces, ec
clesiastical plies and two of the
world's most fascinating capitals are
strung along the lengthy and winding
river. Thriving Industries raise their
smokestacks beside the stream whose
legendary color Is blue hut whose true
tint varies from a dirty green to s
mutlfly yellow. More tragic than the
encroachment of factory smoke has
been 1n late years the sad sight of
countless chimneys from which tie
llfe-hreeth of Industry seemed to have
expired forever.
Hohenzollem Castle on Banks.
“Near Its source at Donancselr'iicen.
the river passes between the castle
which gave Its name to the late ruling
family In Germany and a war monu
ment to the Hohenzollem men who
fell In the Franco-Pro- - an war
Farther down It passes through the
oncefrond capital of Austria-Hun
gary. where the fine government build
ings stand to the despairing Inhabi
tants as a mocking reminder of better
days, and beside the Pra*er, once a
deer park and Inter a pleasure garden
noted for Its Viennese gayety.
The Danube.
“Still farther along Its conrse Just
after entering Hzerhn.Slovakia, at It*
Junction with the March, there Is a
towering cliff spired with a monu
ment erected to celebrate 1.000 vears
of Hungarian nationality. This 1s
Dgccho-SInvaktnn territory now. and
there last summer the Stars and
Stripes were draped on the occasion
of the visit of a large group of Czecho
Amerlrnns to the newly freed land of
their father*.
“Brnfislaya. now Pzecho-Slovakla’s
river port, was once the city In whose
dignified cathedral the Hungarian
kings tvere crowned. H*he boat sta
tion there reveals the changes which
history has wrought. Over the cen
ter of the landing the present name Is
given, hut to the left one can see most
of the letters of the German name
•Pressbiirg’ and to the right there la
the Hungarian name ‘Poszonv.’
Budapest Not War.Torn.
“Vienna, brooding In Its lovely
parks, which lack the care that was
once lavished on them, and contem
plating with cynicism the motto 'SI
Vis Pacem. Para Bellum,’ whose gold
en letters decorate the walls of the
ministry of war Is a sad sight. But
Budapest, still militant, still haughty
In the consciousness of It* beauty,
seems to have been less troubled by
»np riw«sage of war,
iCua it n\v x'U.it it‘it..it' :i|rt>X:-x 'kW *Ot it'it it'it^iPi&iPitiit'iCit’iin;iCii,)Cl( 7>?'H^2X!W!fc1fc!wft£X!XIXWfii
Nebraska Civil Rights Bill 1
Chapter Thirteen of the Revised Statutes of Nebraska, Civil Rights. Knarted in 1893.
Sec. 1. Civil rights of persons. All persons within this state shall be entitled to a
fall and equal enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges of
inns, restaurants, public conveyances, barber shops, theatres and other places of amuse
ment; subject only to the conditions and limitations established by law and applicable
alike to every person.
Sec. 2. Penalty for Violation of Preceding Section. Any person who shall violate
the foregoing section by denying to any person, except for reasons of law applicable to
all persona, the full enjoyment of any of the accommodations, advantages, facilities, or
privileges enumerated in the foregoing section, or by aiding or inciting such denials,
shall /or each offense be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined in any sum not
less than twenty-five dollars, nor more than one hundred dollars, and pay the costs of
act was held valid as to citizens; barber shops can not discriminate
i account of color. Messenger vs. State! 25 Nebr. page 677. N.
a colored person with refreshments in a
son than that he is colored, is civilly li
a table in a more private part of the
. 718,"
“Food Is the main reason. Hungary
I redtteed as It Is, still contains some
of the heat land In Europe. Vienna.
Its Industry stopped, can do little to
earn the food it needs. During the
summer of 1920 all traffic between the
two capitals was stopped by mutual
boycotts and although steamers piled
the Danube from I.lnz to Budapest,
no through passengers or freight were
received.
“To the casual observer. Budapest
is the same proud city as of old. The
fine parliament building and the lm
posing palaee on the heights neros
the ri'er. where Admiral llorthy no"
rules, seem as attractive as before
[ the war. The upper river la still
crowded with bathers and with canoea
and rowboats In which charming
women and stalwart men do their beat
to attain a spin loos coat of tan. Along
Franz .Josef qual, the promenade adda
a lively touch of color to the drab
scenes to which the beautiful blua
Danube has become accustomed,
Celtic Fortress Still Stands.
“From Zemun, once the last Hun
garian port on the Danube, a short
trip between low hanks brings one to
Belgrade the capital of the new king
dom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
where the steamer rounds the base
of the ancient fortress which dates
back to the time of the Celts, the Ro
mans and the Franks, and come* to
Its dock g little way up the Save,
which here enters the Danube front
the south.
“About four hours sail below Bed
grade the wide plains give way to
hilly country where ihe Transylvanian
Alps curve down toward the Jum
ble of mountains which extend to
Montenegro and Greece. It Is In this
region that the main obstructions of
the river occur. But the most fa
mous obstructions and the finest
scenery come at the Kazan Puflla and
the ‘Iron Oates.’ where the river has
collected a gruesome toll.
“At ftustrhtik, the railway traveler
from Roumanla ferries across a broad
and sluggish stream to continue his
Journey to Sofia and Constantinople;
and here the hanks of the Danube tre
lines! with huge barges, many of
which are still Idle. Below Slllstrla,
the river curves to the north snd
passes through Roumanian territory
throughout the rest of Its length. At
Corns Voda, It la crossed by one of
the longest railway bridges In the
world, the last of the many bridges
which cross the stream, some of
which are now destroyed na a result
of the war and post-armistice fight
ing.
“Bralla. 12-1 miles from the three
main mouths of the Danube, Is a port
for the grain and produce of a rich
agricultural region. In prewar days
its wharves teemed with life and Its
huge grain elevators bulged with the
rich products of Wallachia and Po
hrttdja, which has seen great develop
ment since Ihe Russians gave It to
Roumanla Instead of the morp valu
able and fertile tracts of Bessarabia.
From Galatz to the se* the Danube
hHs alreadt been under the control of
an InternaMonal commission whose
duty has been to tame the river and
the many nationalities to whom the
river Is highway or harrier, aceordlng
to the tides of human passion and na
tional life.”
BLAME BLISTERS ON KISSING
Health Board in Pennsylvania Town
May Put Ban on Osculation
to Stop Plague.
Unlontown, l’a.—-Kissing is blamed
by physicians of tills city for the
spread of an epidemic of blisters,
which has now grown to such propor
tions that the board of health may he
called on to place a ban on oscula
tion until such time as the disease
has abated or disappeared entirely.
I.ocai physicians are authority for
tlie statement that there are hundreds
of cases of a skin disease here which
spreads in a maimer similar to noxious
weed poisoning. The disease has the
nature of an eczemous rash, and has
been found very difficult to control
and even more difficult to eradicate
once It has taken hold on a person.
While not all the persons affected
with the “blisters" are in their teens
and early twenties, a great majority
of them are at what Is known as the
“kissing age.” -
Ttie hint dropped that the hoard of
health might he asked to declare kiss
ing taboo until such time as the “blis
ter epidemic" has subsided has aroused
a strong protest from sll over the
city.
HOOCH HOUND FINDS LIQUOR
Dry Agents Would Buy Terrier Named
William Jennings Volstead,
but Owner Refutes.
Huntington. VV. Va.—Bernard Staley
has a dog that la worth a million
which he has refused to sell to the
state prohibition department. Hla
name is William Jennings Volstead,
they call him Bone Dry for short, and
he's a hooch hound
Bone L>ry is a rat terrier and be
has a red nose, and his nose got that
way digging for liquor. The prohibi
tion authorities want him. but they
can't have him. In two days Bone
Dry has urn-ached two quantities of
buried hooch. His master, hearing
him hark at a stump in a neighboring
field, Investigated and dug up several
quart bottles of very fine moonshine.
His other escapade of the 48 hours
wag the recovering of several gallons
buried in a creek bed.
Staley has refused fabulous offers
for the dog, ft Is said.
♦•****.**»r..
\ Big Feet No Help in J
* Killing Rattlesnake J
* — J
* James Klernan, Tusten, N. Y., |
a nearly lost a battle with a four- *
* foot rattlesnake because his feet a
* were too big. Kiernan got both *
{ feet on the rattler, but was un a
J able to club It to death as he J
! could not hit the spake without a
J bruising his own toea. He was J
a nearly tired out before he man- a
J aged to get In a blow which ,
a stunned the make so that be a
J could get off and finish the job. t
a *
* ..*.*
THE MONITOR CLASSIFIER COLUMN
ATTORNEYS
PI vm & WEAR
VITOKNEYS aS'D
COl .NSELLOR.S AT LAW
Phone Douglas 4508
1017-20 Cily Nat'l Bunk Bid”.
Lambert, Shotwell &
Shotwell
ATTORNEYS
Omaha National Bank Bldg.
Phone AT lantlc 5104
Notary Public In Office
and Counsellor
IN. W. WARF
Attorney at Law
Practicing in Both State and Fed
eral Courts
111 South 14th St. Omaha. Neb.
BEAl'TY PARLORS.
CLOTHING
C. J. Carlson
SHOES
1314 X. 21 Hi St.
“Same Location 31 Years”
(Cor. Alley)
DRUG STORES
Liberty Drug Company
B. Robinson. Mgr.
Webster *I!IHII.
1904 X 24th St.
FREE DELIVERY
i 1
■ <MIIMI4MimiHIIDIIMIMIimtlllimH|IHIIHIIIIIIJMIIIimiMIDiDHtl'tDmtHIMIUIIMt<
Phone AT lantlc 5104
S. W. Meigs & Co.
REAL ESTATE, RENTALS
AND INSURANCE
111 South 14th St. Omaha. Neb.
A Real Boy.
Rllly h-iil h -ilk «ult with ruffles ou
he collar Mini cuffs tic fusse.i every
line lie tiinl to wear this suit and when
iskeil why he disliked It fcc suid “It’s
ou much girl."
Old English Superstition.
An old Sussex (Eng.) cure fur
whooping cough N: Borrow a donkey,
place the patent on ns hack with his
or her face towards Its fall and lead
It to a certain spot fired on In your
ywn mind three times running for three
succeeding days
Curious Masterpieces.
Literary masterpieces have been
written on strange mediums Smart's
poem. "Song to David." was written
with a key on the walls of a mad*
hou-e Coleridge once yvrote a son
net mi a scrap of seaweed
Prussia’s Barren Area
The area of barren Inrid yet to he
found In Prussia alone Is estimated at
pot less than 3.705.000 acres. Between
1850 and 191k approximately 1,970,000
»cre« were brought under cultivation.
A further 2,703.000 acres of rich soil
is yet to be obtained hv drainage.
{mELCHOR- Druggist!
The Old Reliable "
I Tel. South 807 4826 So. 24th St.t
KOI! SALE—Two beds, springs and
sanitary couch cheap. 2917 Grant St.
FOR RENT—Neatly furnished rooms
—-Good location on car line. Web.
3217.—Indef.
FURNITURE
FURNITURE. STOVES,
FITXURES
Second hand or New
Repairing Hauling
Every thing Needed in Home
WEST END FURNITURE CO.
R. B. RHODES, Prop.
2522 Lake St.
>n sir.
Record* Exchanged. 15 cents. Lat« ,
est Mamie Smith record* alwa>g |
on hand.
SHLAES PHONOGRAPH CO.
1404 Dodge St.
ELECTRIC SUPPLIES
IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllHV,
Hughes Battery Station
= 24th & Seward Sts. Web MM =
J FREE SERVICES
= Batteries called for and de- =
E livered. VVe carry all the =
= makes of batteries. Re- E
r pairing and Recharging. =
= Omaha Garage
Mlllll.Illllllillllllllllllll.I.I
---
GROCERIES AND MEAT MAR
KETS
The
Burdette Grocery
T. (J. KELLOGG, Prop. j
Full line of Groceries and
Meats
Quick Sales and Small
Profits Our Method
2216 No. 21th St. Web. 0.V 1 r>
HARDWARE
r.. ............. . ......
1 Petersen & Micttelsen'
iiardware Co.
GOOD HARDWARE j
2408 N St. Tel. South 162 •
* - T . . 1 1 ■ ■ - ■ T 1 ■ , < , . ■ I . ■ .
LAUNDRIES
V Elnim E. W. Sliermar
Standard Laundry
24Ui, Near Lake Street
Phone Vlfebster 130
| i . : ' V : ! A UNDRY
J I hi- Laundry That SuiU All
i 1301 No. 24th St. Web. 0820
i |
Q-e-e V^-e-»-.e--e-e-e.Q 1
.« .»■ » m • I
t EVANS MODEL LAUNDRY
! Forty-five years in the business 1
11th & DAugla.-t Douglas 0243 !
■I
PAINTS, ETC.
Best Paint Made
For Less Money
Mullin Paint Co.
313 S, 14th Street
A. F. PEOPLES
PAINTING *
PAPEKHANGING AND
DECORATING
Estimates Furnished Free.
All Work Guaranteed.
Full Line of Wall Paper and
.Sherwin-Williams Paints and
Varnishes
2419 Lake St. Webster 6366
I
PRINTERS
liSTAURAt
| Eagle Cafe;
Lake and 27th .Street i
I SPECIAL CHICKEN DIN-’
£ NER SUNDAYS AND \
THURSDAYS
Phone Webster 3247 i
Chas. Hemphill Prop, j f
UMmaxaaasxmmimaivasasBaaSm
SPORTING Go^rS
t t t -as i t | | | !
The TOWNSEND GUN CO.
Sporting, Outing and Athletic
1514 Farnam St. Douglas 0870
SEED STORES
;—..\
j We Have a Complete Line of j
j FLOWER,GRASS
{AND GARDEN j
Bulba, Hardy Perennials, Poultry
Supplies
Freib cut flowers always on hand
Stewart’s Seed Store
119 N. 16th St. 1 Opp. Post Offioa
Phone Douglas 977
..r i , j
UNDERTAKERS
«M*r»*IIMimi«|MIHIMH|MimiltilMJMlMltim»tnHltnilUtfMt4IMHtlMm»tMMIIM*H
Allen Jonea, Rea. Phone W. 204
JONES & CO.
funeral parlor
2314 North 24th St. Web. 1100
I'ftdj Attendant
W.V.VAVW.V.V.V.V.V.'.V.'
DRESSMAKING
•l Children's Clothes a Specialty £
I* Mrs. .Munioii V
•j. -•'»< >• 2»th St. Web 5415 £ *
.■.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.vav.v
MOUaW 11, St «». . .
Ay.v.vAvw.v.v.v.v.v.v,"
£ The Western Funeral Home £
£ Pleases j.
Jt Ami will terse you mailt and day ^
JJ 25IH l ake St Phone Web. 1124* C
f SILAS JOHNSON. Prop. 5
a; FUNERAL DIRECTORS aj
.W.V.V.V.VAV.V.VAV.v.V
Lodge No_ 9915. Meets every tecond and
Jhu«daif night, each month at
24th and Charles Sts
J. D. CRUM, N. O.
M L. HUNTER. P N F
_ .. „ w 8 TURNER, P 8.
G. U. O OF O. F., Mitto irl Valley
•
*.MWWTVWWWMOWWMrtM ■«■■))! mt)l(n
SCHOOL DAYS ARE HERE
| Parents, Buy f
I Your Children’s School leather Huilt Shoes. I
| They’re Huilt for: |
I Endurance - Comfort - Service :: *
THE FAMILY SHOE STORE
Friedman Bros. Prop.
1504 No. 24th St.
— .11,,,,,, r—TT, ...::
. . ■ 1" 1 ‘ k.
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