The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, February 02, 1923, Page Four, Image 4

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    PLAN AIR LINES
IN UNITED STATES
New York-Chicago Will Be First
of Dirigible Routes.
AIRSHIPS WILL BE SMALL
Combination of German Technical
Skill and American Capital Back of
Scheme—Will Provide Modern Com
forts and Can Travel at 87 Miles an
Hour—Service Can Easily Be Ex
tended to Any Part of the United
States.
A plan for the establishment of
numerous new air lines in the United
States with the combined technical
skill of Germany und American cup
Ual was brought buck to Berlin re
cently by Herr Schuette of the
Schuette-Lanz dirigible works, one of
the most extensive concerns of the
Germans during the war.
Herr Schuette declares that plans
are practically perfected for the open
ing of a line from New York to Chi
cago with a craft of German design
having capacities of from 110,000 to
150,000 cubic meters. Working out of
euch craft in Germany was for
bidden after the war by the treaty.
Hence the proposal to build and wp
erate them In America would result
both in the development of American
air lines, which Is much desired there,
and at the same time preserve Ger
man interest in continuing the devel
opment of air navigation.
Herr Schuette declured that the air
ships of the capacity planned for the
New York-Chicago line are as small as
can be built and still give satisfaction.
They afford passenger space enough to
make the business a paying one und
give room on board for all modern
comforts. The plans show restaurants,
smoking rooms, sleeping and living
compartments, baths und promenade
decks. The speed is reckoned at 100
kilometers per hour and could be in
creased to 140 kilometers or about
87 miles.
Can Extend Service.
Herr Schuette declares C:ut the ser
vice can easily be extended to any
part of the United States if the proper
repair shops and landing stages are
constructed. The methods he proposes
would permit landings in the center of
cities by overhead stages. He said
that once a country with the resources
and Ingenuity of America takes ad
vantage of the steps attained hy the
German builders, transatlantic lines
would be within the reulins of possi
bility and round-the-world lines would
be the next development.
Until recently when at the inter
national air convention restrictions
were withdrawn flying had suffered j
greatly in Germany. Now, however, 1
planes can pass over countries of
powers represented at the convention,
but building of the larger types is still
forbidden by the rules drawn up at the
conclusion of the war. Airplane lines
developed greatly in Germany during
the summer and. while many of them
did not connect with outside lines,
they did much to keep the interest of
plane builders alive.
Perhaps the biggest development
was the establishment of the route
from Koenigsburg to Moscow. This is
considered so important that It will
be kept up throughout the winter
while many other lines are abandoned.
The London to Berlin line, just now
being got into shape for operation, Is
another big achievement of the year.
To Connect With Other Line*.
“What we have lacked heretofore,”
said Major von Tsehudi, one of the
most Important figures in Germany's
air activities, “was connections with
other lines. This lack was not alto
gether due to political reasons. It is
true that flying over some countries
was forbidden, out, as in the case of
the Berlln-Moscow line, the distance
from Berlin to Koenigsburg was not
made by air because it was considered
more convenient to passengers. A
number of reasons lay behind the lack
of co-ordination among the various
countries, including lack of subsidies
for opening routes through territories
where good connections could be made.
The way is in sight now, however, for
connections with the French line from
Paris to Warsaw, touching Prague and j
Strassbourg und with the line front i
Breslau to Budapest via Vienna. The
idea of state subsidies has been recog
nised by the German government, but |
thus far the service has not been given
great impetus by the money received.
“Good organization and connections
with lines to other countries, however,
combined with improved planes, will
make vast improvements in coming
years.”
COWCATCHER GETS DEER
Engineer Speeds Locomotive Mile
After Buck Fleeing on Track. ,
The crew of the sole combination
train on the Carthage and Adirondack i
branch of the New York Central rail
road got a deer on the last day of :
the bunting season by running it i
down with the locomotive.
As the train was running between j
Benson Mines and Oswegatchie, N. j
Y„ It approached a large buck st&nd
ing on the track. The buck started |
to run up the track and the engineer.
John McCormack of Watertown,
chased the deer a mile, struck It and
knocked it into the ditch. The engi
neer and flreruan will divide the dew.
_
8eaman’s Belief.
# Ton will never And a sailor man al
lowing a glass to “ring” without put
ting out his hand at once to stop it
They say that when a glass Is struck
accidentally, and rings, a man is
drowning at sea. To put out your
hand to stop It saves him I
Must Never Be Malicious.
Wit losea Its point whan dipped !t
Kill lice.—8b widen
10C MONTH PAYS RENT
EW JERSEY HOMES
Free Firewood Is Also Furnished
Tenants at Weymouth, Near
Atlantic City.
Ten cents a month for rent, with
free firewood, sounds like Action; but
' it is a fact. These profiteerless rents
i are quoted not in some South Sea is
j land, but In Atlantic county, New Jer
sey. *
The houses which rent at these
i dreamlike prices are at Weymouth,
about six miles from Muys Landing.
| They are owned by the water power
company. When this company bought
an estate it took over title to a score
I of houses adjacent to the old paper
mills. Tenants had lived In these
houses for many years, some for a
I lifetime and others for so long that
they had come to regard them, in a j
way, as their own.
This provided an instance in excep
i tlon to the old saying that corpora
j tions are without souls. The new
owners, not wishing to disturb the ten
ants, but finding it legally necessary j
j to charge a rental in order to protect J
I their title to the property, fixed the
1 rents at 10 cents a month and leases
; to this efTect were duly drawn up and
! executed. Under the terms of the
i leases the tenants are permitted to
cnt all the firewood they need for
their own use.
BERRY FIELDS DESTROYED
Yakima Indians Indignant Because of
Sheep Grazing There.
Yakima Indians are highly incensed !
because sheep grazing on Mount '
Adams huckleberry fields in Washing
ton have destroyed their age-old nat
ural resource.
The red men who every year make
a trip to the wild berry fields of the
mountuin regions have appealed to
Governor Hart to protest against the
pasturing of live stock In certain parta
of the national forests where the wild
fruit thrives.
Klickitat and Yakima Indians from
the earliest traditions of the tribes
have annually trekked to this sweet
meeea of Huckleberry mountain, as
they affectionately call the former
volcano. Here also is the old-time race
track, where horse racing and other
athletic contests were stuged by inter
mingling tribes, following the end of
a successful berry harvest.
UNAWARE OF END OF WAR
1 Seven Thousand Soldiers Are Prison
ers in Siberia, Is Report.
Seven thousand soldiers in the
world today do not kBow that the
World war is ended. They are im
prisoned in South Siberia, living a
life of utmost misery, unable to escape
or to communicate with their own
countries. These statements are made
by a newspaper in Home, Italy.
The information was taken to Home
by a German naval officer, who de
clared that he himself was a prisoner
in Siberia. He managed to escape
and reach Italy after a series of hard
ships and adventure, he said.
A large number of Italians are aald
to be among the unfortunate prises
ers, who number men from virtually
e\ery country In Europe. The pub
lishers of the Home newspaper vouch
for the good faith of the German who
told about ttie prisons and prisoners.
FIRST BROADCASTING ON ISLE
Guernsey's People Hear Sunday Ser.
mom by Phone Last 24 Ysars.
The small Island of Guernsey in the
English channel has been enjoying a
unique telephone service the last 24
years. Every Sunday morning tele
phone subscribers sit at home and
listen to the sermon from the church
over the wires, and in summer they
are entertained with band muaic. :
They simply ask central for the neces
sary connection and a transmitter at
the pulpit or the band stand does the
rest. Guernsey developed this system
In 1898, when broadcasting was un
dreamed of and telephones were few.
There are eigtit telephones to every
100 Inhabitants and the service is said
! to be the cheapest in the world. The
j system has always been a paying
! proposition.
BEARD TOO LONG, LOST JOB
Berlin Court Awards Old Man Three
Months' Salary.
A court in Berlin awarded a gray- .
haired old man three months' salary
because he had been discharged for
having too long a heard. The em
ployee was once a ooctor of medicine,
but was so reduce'] In circumstances
that he was obliged to seek other em
ployment.
As an advertising solicitor, he al
leged he was barely earning a living
when he was suddenly discharged for
refusing to trim his beard to an or
dlnary length.
Hall 8o Big It Cracked Watermelons.
Hall stones so big that they “busted
watermelons right open," according to
natives, fell recently during a shower
at Raleigh, N. C. The hail stones cov- j
ered the ground a foot deep In some j
places. Growing crops were consider- i
ably damaged b7 ‘he hail.
Homeeick Teacher Cloeee School.
Declaring that sne was made home
sick by the quiet of the place, Miss
Helen Wills of Belle wood. Pa., closed
the school at Strodes Mills. Pa., and
went to her home.
Squirrels Supply Brushes.
Tlie camel has nothing to do with
the camel hair brushes so beloved by
artists, for they are made principally
'rom squirrel’s hair
“Drugging” a Forest
The scientists have discovered that
they can change the color of trees to
two nights, by an aniline dye Injec
tion. By this process it may be possi
ble to change a forest to any color
desired.
SCibvCE BARES SECRET
Cause of Gravitation Is Discov
ered by Professor See.
Problem Has Baffled Scientists Sines
Newton Established Law of Grav
itation 235 Years Ago—Re
sult of Long Study.
San Francisco, Cal.—The cause of
gravitation, which has hurtled scien
tists since Newton established the law
of gravitation 233 years ago. has been
discovered by Prof. T. J. J. bee, gov
ernment astronomer at Mure island,
according to an announcement made
by Professor See in an address before
the California Academy of Sciences.
Professor See announced he had dis
covered the cause of magnetism and
of universal gravitation, und lie said
i he was also able to prove that the two
magnetic poles were at unequal depths
j In the earth.
In completion of 40 years of re
search on magnetism and gravitation.
Professor See .declared that t lie cause;
[ of magnetism lay in the action of ether ;
waves considerably longer than those
of light and heat, and asserted there
was a connection between magnetism
and universal gravitation which defi
nitely proved that gravitation was
also due to similar waves in the ether I
traveling across the heavenly spaces
with the velocity of light.
The processes of attraction under ]
the wave action of magnetism and of
gravitation are totally invisible, said
Professor See, whose explanation of
his discovery was substantially ns fol
lows:
The lines of force around a magnet
! were first studied by the celebrated
' English natural philosopher Faraday
nearly a century ago; and while Fara
day believed that magnetic Inductive
action might he conveyed along these
curved lines of force, he could not
prove it. Action of physical forces In
straight line-, has therefore, contin
ued to be adopted by all authorities.
Including Gauss himself, author of the
celebrated "Mathematical Theory of
the Earth's Magnetism,’’ 1838.
But now, 84 years later than Gauss,
Professor See proves that the mag
i netlc lines of force are vertical fila
ments in ether, and thus are the ro
tation axis of the whole body of
waves proceeding from a magnet.
Professor See suhmlttted experi- j
mental demonstrations of this wave |
theory of magnetism, showing that
when a small magnet Is suspended hy
a thread near a larger one the small
magnet Is pulled bodily toward the
nearest pole of the large magnet.
WHITE CHILD VOODOO VICTIM
Body Found in Cuba With Heart
Torn Out by Witch Doctor*,
Say Authorities.
Santa Cruze del Stir.—Discovery of
the mutilated body of Cura Gonzeatez
Uses, the five-year-old white child
who disappeared a few days before,
and an autopsy performed later, dis
closed that the little girl undoubtedly
was the victim of witch doctors.
Ttie authorities express the belief
that the child was kidnaped and her
heart torn out to lie used in voodoo
practices. They assert they have evi
dence that the crime was the result
of negro sorcerers’ attempt to cure
the wife of one of the employees of
the sugar central, Yamaque.vesk, lo
cated near here, of tuberculosis. One
of flip half-dozen suspects being held
In Camaguey, a Haitian. It Is added.
Is suspected of being the voodoo
leader.
RAT ATTACKS SLEEPING MAN
Infuriated Animal Makes Wound in
Man’s Neck Within Half Inch
of Jugular Vein.
Wilmington, Del.—William W. Wind- j
sor was the victim of the attack of i
an infuriated rat while sleeping In the
rear of his photographic studio the
other night.
Windsor was first awakened by a
noise and. flashing a light, saw a rat
dragging away an apple which had
been taken from a hag In the room.
He placed the apples in a safe place !
and then hung the apple which the1
rat had, striven to make off with ;
from string from the ceiling, hut
out of the animal's reahh.
Later he was awakened from his '
sleep hy a stinging sensation In his j
neck and. brushing his hand across
his face, touched the rat, which had
inflicted a flesh wound. The wound
was within a half inch of the man's
jugular vein Mr. Windsor’s daugh
ter died several years ago after hav
ing been bitten hy a rat.
Sauerkraut’s Pal Hard Hit.
Washington.—High prices for hot
dogs have hit Germany, the Commerce
department has been advised by Con
sul John A. Scott at Dresden. The
consumer places the hi time on ths
butchers, he says, while the latter
condemn the slaughter houses. Beef,
mutton and pork have risen more titan
100 per cent in the last sixty days,
while slaughter-house fees have risen
200 per cent.
Saved Choking Child.
Marlon. O.—A piece of turnip,
lodged in the throat, choked Albert
Allen, a child in Marion county chil
dren’s home. He was brought to
Marion’s new hospital, but the neces
sary instruments to remove the obsta
cle were not in the equipment. The
child was taken 18 miles to a Dela
ware hospital, where an operation re
moved the throat obstruction.
Horse* Have Musical E«n.
The musical acuteness of horses is
demonstrated by the rapidity with
which cavalry horses learn the signifi
cance of bugle calls.
No Place for a "Has Been.”
In Africa among the native tribe*
there la no place for an ex-king. The
minute a chief sh-ews any si*.! of
weakness or sickness he must go off
and commit suicide.
ROMANCE OF 20 TEARS
UNITES TWO ITALIANS
Sweethearts in the Homeland
Are Married Now in the
United States.
.
—
A romance of childhood and the
atory of u love that has survived
through 20 years has come to light
with the marriage in Leominster,
Mass., of Savario Billotta and Miss
Coroline Fragili, who have carried out
their childhood pledge to have a home
in America some day, a promise that
was sealed with a kiss at the little
railroad station lr Bianco, Italy.
The Billotta and Fragili families
owned adjoining p aces in Italy and ;
the children of each family were play- I
mates, particularly Snvarlo and
Coroline. In 1903. Savario, then hut
fourteen years old. bade his friend* j
and family good-h.i and started for
the New World. 1 last promise to
little Coroline was that some day she I
would come te America to be his wife.
Since that time they corresponded
regularly until the letter which told
Coroline that Savario was ready to
fulfill his promise and would be wait
ing at the pier for tier.
Savario met her at Ellis island. He
brought her to Leominster and today
they are huppy in each other’s love.
FILIPINOS TO PRODUCE SILK
Superior Grade Being Manufactured
on Small Scale in Province.
The production of silk in the Philip
pine islands for export is likely to be
revived soon, after having been aban
doned about seventy years ago be
cause of lack of labor, in the opinion
of Dr. Charles S Banks, former en
tomologist in the bureau of science in
Manila, wh'o bus returned from Nueva
Apollonla, a province of oriental
Negros, where he supervised the plant
ing of a targe trail In mulberry trees,
and where, be sa>s, a superior grade
of silk is being produced on a small
scale.
“At Nueva Apollonla conditions are
in every way suited to the Industry,"
said Doctor Bank "We have some
forty acres of mulberry trees and ure
producing silk that is superior to the
grades that for many years have been
imported from China and sold at a
i high price.”
Nearly 150 years ago silk-worm cul
ture was taken up in the Philippines
Hnd the industry grew to consider
able proportions.
HID JEWELS IN DREAM
_
i
Wife Also Took Money From Hus
band's Trousers and Hid It.
Walking in her sleep. Mrs. E.
Miller of Chicago hid $2,000 worth of
her jewels so well that even she can
not find them. She laughs at her hus
band's asaertlon thHt burglurs carried
off the gems.
Mrs. Miller is h sleep walker. He
cently she dreamed that burglars were
stealing her Jewels. When she woke
up. an Ice pick was sticking In the bed
before her, the jewels were missing,
and the front door of her home was
wide open. Money was also stolen
from her husband’s trousers pocket.
The front door of the home evident
ly was opened from the Inside, as the
key was In the lock and there were no
marks of violence. Mrs. Miller be- |
lleves she walked In her sleep and hid !
the jewels. But where, she cannot
tell.
“CORPSE” OFFERS TO FIGHT
Man Run Over by Locomotive Is in
Belligerent Mood.
John Coy, of I’ort Allegany. Pa., had
as close a call from death the other
day as seems possible.
A Pennsylvania railroad locomotive
Avhlch was hacking into the station at
that town passed completely over hint.
Coy was walking on the tracks and '
1 fell Jnst as the engine was on him.
The engineer did not see the man,
but the fireman saw him. The emer
gency brakes wore applied, but the
engine stopped over him.
Horrified, the engine crew ran to j
the hospital, which is nenr the scene,
and summoned a physician and
l brought a stretcher. When they ap
proached Coy, i he supposed corpse. !
suddenly Jumped to his feet and of
fered to thrash the whole crowd. He
had been somewhat dazed by his fall,
but hud escaped all Injury.
SAWDUST ON FIRE 13 YEARS
Hugh Pile of Waste Broke in Flamea
Recently.
Smoldering quietly-for 13 years a i
gigantic sawdust pile, a relic of waste
ful days of lumbering, and which
partly bunted in 190b. broke out In
liatnes again recently at Seattle. Sev
eral hour*' hard fighting subdued the
1 fire, after which the pile was soaked
for 10 hours. There are 5b,000 tons
of sawdust and lab ends plied at the
foot of Charles street and efforts to
conquer the Internal fire have been
j futile. Ordinarily a thin haze of
smoke hangs over the sawdust pile.
Pastor Preachee in Overalls.
When he fell Into an old well on his
way to church, the Rev. J. H. Lane, of
Hurdland, Mo., went to the home of a
neighbor, obtained a pair of overalls
and a shin and kept his appointment.
Bull Doesn’t Lika “Rada.”
Lady Curtis Bennett drives a red
car. Perhaps that la why her car was
recently charged by a bull as she
drove through the countryside in Eng
land.,
Poison Gas is Solidified.
“Poison gas'' (tan be made so solid
that each soldier could carry a canis
ter of It In his pack.
Dally Thought.
't’s easy finding reasons why other
toll.* should tie patient. — George
ffiliot.
Coal Output In United States.
Existing coal mines In the United
States can produce from 700.0bO,bdO to
.‘lOO.biSMHSi tons year.
I
(<£>. 1222, Western Newspaper Union.)
We are always interested lu fall,
when the new teachers coiue to Ban
hurg. Bess and 1—Bess is my churn—
like iheui young ami pretty and laugh
ing. We have enough of sternness
from what we cull the ‘old guard”—
those who remain in authority, year
after year; these teachers are regular
Buuhurgers. I’uul, that's my minister
brother, Is always anxious for fear the
right persons do not have my disci
pline in charge. You see poor Paul Is
my only guardian since my molher,
who wi>« his young stepmother, died.
And i must say that Paul has had a
hard time of It with the criticism from
his congregation and all that. 1
couldn't even have my hair bobbed
when Bess did—because they thought
It looked hoyilenlsh In u member of u
parsonage household. Well, when we
suw the new teacher who was to un
dertake much of the responsibility of
our minds and morals—Bess and I
grinned, then we sighed.
"Not.” remarked Bess mildly, "Just
what one would cull pretty.”
“Decidedly,” I contributed.
“Why, ' pleaded May Sales, “will she
wear those mammoth rimmed glasses?
‘Glasses Is glasses,' hut 1 fall to see
why one should shriek them.”
“And her hair.” went on Bess, "It’s
so straight combed back, I really don’t
see how Miss Holt can open her eyes.”
“She’s plain shy, that’s what she Is,”
put In the Sales child. “If you ask
me, I’ll say she has never been out of
her native village—wherever It may
be. When I tried to walk with her
after school the other day she seemed
not unpleasant—just sort of diffident
—and at the teachers’ meeting, Dad
said, she was afraid to open her
mouth.”
"All the better for us," laughed
Bess, ns they jumped to their feet, and
departed.
I’attl came out of his study. “I
would not dismiss my teacher In that
manner. Isobel,” he reproved. “I heard
all you said. It might be better to ex
tend a kindly hand to a new and per
Imps lonely little teacher."
This was strange from I’aul, who
usually mentioned only respect due.
“Have you met Miss Holt?" I asked
him.
“Yesterday," he replied, “I had a
few moments’ conversation with her."
Next day the finest looking young
man came to Danherg. lie was to be
at our tennis match in the afternoon.
I almost wished for the name of the
school that Margaret Holt would not
come in that horrid best brown poplin
of Iter’s. But she did and sat far hack
under a tree. She kept her eyes, rude
ly, I thought, on her book when I’aul
went kindly over to talk to her. The
stranger, who turned out to he an Im
portant lawyer from the city, for
tunately did not see our teacher at all.
In the evening. Miss Carruth came
down the bridle path on her pony,
“Nick," and Miss Holt enthused so
over him that Miss Cnrruth was
tickled, and asked Miss Holt If she
could ride. We giggled at the thought
of our teacher up on Nick's back. In
her long prim poplin—but in a Jiffy
she was there and off down the road
on a gallop. When she came hack
there were only Miss Carruth, the
stranger, and Bess and myself waiting.
“Will you look at Margaret Holt!”
cried Bess—and I looked. Mercy ! She
was different.
“That was like old times,” she be
gan. then stopped as If frozen at sight
of the lawyer.
He went forward to assist her to
alight. Then with a how he took Miss
Holt’s arm, and went walking off at
her side. Miss Carruth rode home.
“What does It mean?” I asked Bess.
“The shy Miss Holt looks like one who
has lost her disguise, while the stran
ger and she seem well acquainted.”
I was still more mystified when Bess
had gone, and I sat meditating near
the hedge. Supper had not been called
and I was waiting. Miss Holt and the
strunger seated themselves on the op
posite side of the hedge, and l am hon
est in saying that I did not mean to
eavesdrop.
"And you thought you could hide
here behind a pair of spectacles?” the
man usked.
"I did not try to hide,” our teacher’s
voice replied. “I only desired to be—
forever more—a plain nobody; I only
wanted—peace.”
“And you have found It?” the man's
tone was sharp.
I was surprised at the pain In Mar
garet Holt's voice.
“Can a murderess know peuce?” she
asked him.
“A murderess! You take things too
tragically. Was It your fault that a
love-rmtd hoy killed himself because
you refused to marry him?”
"I could hear her stifled sobbing.
"Oh. the pity of It,” she murmured.
"And i determined that I would never
again cause Innocent suffering. I with
drew Into myself—I was dull—ugly.”
“But, nevertheless, love came again,”
the man spoke brusquely. "Is It not
so?"
“I—It Is the young minister of Uan
burg thnt I have dared to love, John,
but I sent hlrn away unknowing. My
love Is too great to link his name with
scandal."
I did not wait to hear more—I was
running toward Puul’s atudy. I found
him there, his head bowed In his arms.
“Paul,” I cried, incoherently at first,
“■he does love you—little Margaret
Holt; she Is out by the hedge. Go
quick, brother, and bring her in to
supper. Between ua we will coax her
to stay here—forever."
Rat Costly to Jamaica Planters.
Bats destroy, annually, at least one
twentieth of Jamaica's sugar cane
crop, causing a loss of about u million
dollars.
Call for a Decision.
A Chicago woman, seeking a divorce,
presents the queer plea that her hus
band threw the dog at her. Hasn't a
husband a right to do what he wants
with his own dog?—Detroit News.
Stop and Take Stock. ^
It Is a good plan now and then to *■
take stock of ourselves to make sure !j
we are as reasonable as we expect j
other folks to be. .j
Evil in CurioGity. 1
Oh, this Itch of the ear that breaks j
out at the tongue 1 Were not curiosity J
so over-busy, detraction would soon
starved to death.—Douglas Jerrold.
FIrst-Ciass Modern f urnished Rooms jj
—1701 No. 26th SL Web. 476#. Mrs. j
L. M. Bentley Erwin. i
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1 ALL WORK GUARANTEED t •
I BENJAMIN & THOMAS 3
J Phone Web. 5084—1415 No. 24th j '<
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Bonds Furnished lo Reliable Persons j
NOTARY PUBLIC IN OFFICE j
PHONES: !
Res„ Web. 6613; Office, At. 5104
Res. 2863 Binney St.
NOAH W. WARE
ATTORNEY and COUNSELOR ;j
AT LAW
HOURS: 0 A. M. to 12:00 Noon; 1:30 j
P. M. to 6:30 P. M. Ij
111 So. 14th Street Omaha, Nebr. i,
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F.Mittleman j
& Son I
2624 North 30th St.
Phone Webster 0171 j;
GROCERIES and MEATS ]j
Vegetables in Season
FREE DELIVERY]:
If Our Goods Don’t Please JJ'
You, Your Money Back ^
v/e Sell SKINNERS ::
the highest grade Macaroni, ;
Spaghetti, Egg Noodles and *•
•thar Macaroni Products. ! I
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Star Grocery and f
Meat Market i
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N. W. Corner 80th and Pratt Sts. X
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THE STORE OF COURTESY £
AM) SERVICE 'ff
7; SKINNERS |
: Ibe highest grade Macaroni, J
. Spaghetti and Egg Noodles, .j.
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Allen Jones. Res. Phone W. 214
JONES & CO.
FUNEKAI. PARLOR
2814 North 24th St. Web. IIM>
Lad* Attendant
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The Diamond Store |
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3121 N. 30th St. Web. 3158 Y
THE STORE OF GOOD QUAL- A
ITY AND LOW PRICES
Come In and Give Us a Trial !j!
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MRS. JACK PINKSTON’S
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Pupil of Isidor Philipp (Paris, France)
i.raduate of New England Conservatory of Music, Boston
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I CAPITOL POOL HALL I
I 2018 North 24th Street—Phone Webster 1773 1
I CIGARS, TOBACCO. CANDIES and SOFT DRINKS I
| CIIAS. W. SOUTH, Prop. 1
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PATRONIZE THE STATE FURNITURE CO. f
Corner 14th and Dodge Streets Tel. JACKSON 1317 j
Headquarters DDIIIIC1AII#^lf Phonographs
f°r DnUlldfVllm and Records l
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I GOOD GROCERIES ALWAYS j!
| C. P. Wesin Grocery Co. ;;
£ Also Fresh Fruits and Vegetables II
I is SkinnehS i!
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2001 CUMING STREET TELEPHONE JACKSON 1098 j;
A. J. Glenn
2426 Lake Street
We ^«r» if mr rfC ^ H4«h«^ c«<*«
8*41 a1>A ' r« 1U1 f-»l *••«»••. Spaghetti and ;
’ athar Maaarani Praduaaa
FULL LINE STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
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i AMAZING VALUES j!
j: in Groceries and All Food Supplies •;
Wt frkrftMIBtWC Tha Highest Grade Macarani
? tall I W W iidlMj Needles. Spaghetti and
f ' * atkar Maaarani Pradu.M j!
| We Deliver to Any Part of the City-TeL Douglas 3940 ! j
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> 30 YEARS—ESTABLISHED IN OMAHA—30 YEARS >
\ LIBERTY DRUG CO. %
f B. ROBINSON, Manager i
< EXPERT SERVICE FREE DELIVERY f
5* 1904 North 24th Street Phone Webster 0386 i /
■£ (At 24th and Parker Streets) f
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