The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, August 31, 1923, Page Four, Image 4

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    Legal Notices
AMOS P. SCRUGGS. Lawyer.
220 South 13th Street.
NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANT.
To Lora Dean Hayes, defendant:
You a/e hereby notified that on th«
Twenty-seventh day of March, A. D. 1923
Henry Hayes, as plaintiff, filed his peti
tion against you in the District Court ol
Douglas County, Nebraska; the object «nc
prayer of which is to obtain a divorce
from you upon the grounds of cruelty anti
adultery.
You are required to answer said peti
tion on or before the Fourth day of Sep
tember, A. D. 1923.
HENRY HAYES,
4t-7, 22. Plaintiff.
H. J. PINKETT, Attorney.
NOTICE OF PROBATE OF WILL.
In the County Court of Douglas County.
Nebraska, in the matter of the estate
of Alfred G. Marshall, deceased.
All persons interested in said estate are
hereby notified that a petition has been
filed in said Court, praying for the pro
bate of a certain instrument now on file
in said Court, purporting to be the last
will and testament of said deceased, and
that a hearing will be had on said peti
tion before said Court on the 18th day
of August, 1923, and that if they fail to
appear at said Court on the said 18th day
of August, 1923, at 9 o'clock A. M., to
contest the probate of said will, the Court
may allow and probate said will and grant
administration of said estate to Alfred
G. Marshall or some other suitable per
son, enter a decree of heirshjp, and pro
ceed to a settlement thereof.
BRYCE CRAWFORD.
3-t—7-27 County Judge.
ED. F. MOREARTY. Attorney.
700 Peters Trust Bldg.
NOTICE OF SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION.
To Alberta Crossley. non-resident de
fendant:
You are hereby notified that Homer
Crossley, your husband, and the plaintiff
herein, filed his petition in the District
Court of Douglas County, Nebraska, on
the 19th day of February. 1923. to obtain
a divorce from you on the grounds of
wilful desertion for more than tw'O years
last past. You are required to answer
said petition on or before the 17th day of
September, 1923.
HOMER CROSSLEY.
4t—8-10-23
H. P. PINKETT, Attorney.
Room 19, Patterson Block.
PROBATE NOTICE.
In the Matter of the Estate of Alfred
G. Marshall, deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the
creditors of the said deceased will
meet the executor of said estate, be
fore me, County Judge of Douglas
County, Nebraska, at the County
Court Room, in said county, on the
26th day of October. 1923, and on the
26th day of December,, 1923, at nine
o’clock a. m., each day, for the pur
pose of presenting their claims for
examination, adjustment and allow
ance. Three months are allowed for
the creditors to present their claims,
from the 22nd day of September,
1923
BRYCE CRAWFORD,
4t-8-24-23 County Judge.
For Rent
ROOMS
FDR RENT—One nicely furnised room
in modern home. Gentleman pre
ferred. Call evenings. WE bster
1058.—3-t-8-31-23.
FOR RENT—Garage. 2530 Maple St.
Reasonable rent. Webster 6876.
FOR RENT—One furnished room on
car line for a gentleman. Webster
3567.
FOR RENT—Neatly furnished room,
suitable for couple, with convenien
ces of kitchen. Mrs. J. A. Drake,
1823 North Twenty-third street.
WEB. 5372. 4t. 7-22-23.
FOR RENT—Modern furnished rooms.
Steam heat. Close in. On two car
lines. Mrs. Anna Banks, 924 North
Twentieth street. Jackson 4379
FOR RENT—One large front room.
Call evenings. Webster 4432.
FOR RENT. Neatly furnished
room. Gentleman preferred. One
block from North Twenty-fourth and
Dodge car lines. Webster 5652.
' FOR RENT. Nicely furnished front
room for gentleman, with meals.
Webster 3105.
FOR RENT—Modern furnished room
in private family. 2870 Corby street.
Webster 5853. -5-18
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished mod
ern rooms, one block from car line.
Webster 3567.
Help Wanted
WANTED—Colored men to qualify
for sleeping car and train porters. Ex
perience unnecessary, transportation
furnished. Write T. McCaffrey, Supt.,
St. Louis, Mo.
Miscellaneous
Madame A. C. Whitley, agent for
the Madam South and Johnson hair
system, wishes to announce to her
many friends and patrons that she
has moved to 2724 Miami street Tel.
Webster 3067.—Adv.
THOROUGHLY worthy used furni
ture of every description is offered
for sale at very reasonable prices in
our warehouse, between the hours of
1 p. m. and 5 p. m. week days. 8th
and Capitol Ave.—Orchard A Wilhelm
Co.
WILL CARE FOR CHILDREN during
day. Webster 6660.
Use DENTLO for the teeth. Large
tube 26c.—Adv.
Have you paid your subscription
for The Monitor?
j sMfrukwSik
BauTwobe guarani^elT
BENJAMIN A THOMAS
Pfceie Web. 5M4—1415 No. 24tfc
s»^* A m
ROOMS FOR RENT—1406 North!
Twenty-second street.—(2t-8-17-23) j
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room
for couple or men. WE bster 3576.— |
8-31.
WANTED TO RENT—Two or three;
furnished rooms for light house
keeping. Tel. WE bster 4584.
FOR SALE—6-room modern house,
half block from Twenty-fourth i
street car line. For information call
WE bster 2179, until 9 p. m.; after
that WE bster 1373.
FOR SALE—Rooming house by owner.
Strictly modern with hot water heat.
Price reasonable. WE bster 4769.
Mrs. Lena Errin, 1702 No. 26th St.
2-t-8-17
Wanted—Wide awake boys to sell
I'he Monitor every Saturday. live
ooys can make money by selling
ED. F. MOREARTY,
Attorney-at-Law,
700 Peters Trust Building. ,
NOTICE OF SERVICE BY PUBLICA
TION.
To Anna Stewart, non-resident de
fendant :
You are hereby notified that Cleve
land Stewart, your husband, and the
plaintiff herein, filed his petition in
the District Court of Douglas County,
Nebraska, on the 15th day of January,
1923, to obtain a divorce from you on
the grounds of cruelty and willful de
sertion for more than two years last
past. You are required to answer said
petition on or before 15th day of Oc
tober, 1923.
CLEVELAND STEWART.
(4t-8-31)
PROCLAMATION
Office of the Mayor, City of Omaha,
State of Nebraska.
To the People of Omaha:
It has been brought to my atten
tion that the week beginning Septem
ber 2nd, 1923, known nationally as
Paramount Week opens the greatest
Movie Season in Nebraska.
Inasmuch as the motion picture has
come to be known as the great Amer- !
ican entertainment and has developed
into a national institution, it being
the center of civic enlivenment and
pillar of community progress, I here
by urge that you lend your support to
the observance of Paramount Week
and the Greater Movie Season.
In my judgment, it is the duty of
our people to support and encourage
theatrical industries and the pleasure
derived from their wholesome enter
tainment will amply repay those who
give that support and encouragement.
With the current announcement of
bigger and better pictures during the
Paramount Week and the Greater
Movie season, I urge your support of
the celebration.
(Signed) JAS. C. DAHLMAN,
Mayor City of Omaha.
The Motion Picture has become a
fixed institution both for entertain
ment and instruction. Millions of men,
women and children witness these
productions nightly. Any movement
that tends to better, artistically and
to raise morally, the tone of the
movies, should receive hearty encour
agement and endorsement. It is,
therefore, with pleasure that the
Monitor lends its whole-hearted sup
port to the observance of Paramount
Week and the Greater Movie Season.
Our local theatres are presenting pro
grams which should gain generous
patronage and win the approval of all
patrons. Both as an editor and a
clergyman, I heartily endorse this;
movement.
JOHN ALBERT WILLIANS. I
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH
At the morning service the pastor
preached to a large congregation on
“The Crucial Test” from the event in
Abraham’s life in which he was
railed upon to sacrifice his son
Isaac. At 8 o’clock the Rev. Samuel
Barrett, of Des Moines, formerly of
Omaha and enroute to Los Angeles,!
Cal., was a welcome visitor and j
preached an instructive sermon on
“Christian Sacrifice.” There was a
good attendance, many out of town
visitors being present. Mrs. Wynn
was awarded a $10 purse as winner
of the popularity contest, as she re
ported $49 for votes. The pastor
leaves the last of this week for the
National Baptist convention at Los
Angels, Cal.—B. S. Sutton, Reporter.
Henry W. Black, president of the
Omaha branch N. A. A. C. P., left
Wednesday night to attend the Na
tional Conference of the N. A. A. C. P.
which meets in Kansas City, Kans.,
August 29 to September 5.
GIRL USES HER HAT AS BANK
Can Draw Against Depository on the
Top of Her Head Any Old
Time She Likes.
It was already time to start for the
theater. But Kathleen took her best
hat down from the crowded closei
shelf and frantically began to rip at
the lining.
“But, my deur,” her friend remind
ed, "there isn't time to make over
your hat tonight. What are you
doing?”
By this time Kathleen had got nei
hand In under the lining and had ex
traded—a $5 bill, relates the New
York Sun and Globe.
“What an amazing hat,” remarked
her friend. "It seems to be like the
miraculous pitcher In which there was
always sustenance."
But the girl who has lived two years
In a New York apartment and whose
salary is given her In a little seuled
envelope on the 1st and 15th of
each month, explained: “You see. 1
can't possibly afford a bank account.
There Isn’t any burglar-proof place
In this apartment. 1 always lose my
pocketbook. And I'm always running
out of change In the most heartless
places. So there came the Idea of
making ray hats depositories. I keep
$5 or $10 in each chapeau. In this
way I always have money with me.
And what robber would think of look
ing there for loot? And, best of all, 1
often forget how much I have and
think It Is all gone—when, lo, I find
$10 ,in the fur edge of some lining."
"The only objection Is once I gave
a hat away without examining the
crown. Anu ever since I have been
about $10 short.”
RICE IS JAVA'S MAIN CROP
Cultivation of the Staple a S/pw
Process, All the Work Being
Done by Hand.
Rice is the most important of all
crops in Java. The most productive
method of cultivating it is by means
of "sawuhs'’ or wet fields. The sa
wahs consist of plots of ground sur
rounded by little dykes which allow
water either to be run In or off. Where
the land is sloping the fields are
formed into a succession of terraces,
causing tlie wuter to trickle from one
to the other.
Rice Is sown by tlie natives by hand
After sowing, tlie fields are flooded li.»
day and drulned by night for eigbi
or ten days, says the Detroit News,
in about six weeks the spikes are
replanted in groups of two or three
stems together, each group being
stuck into tiie muddy soil at a dis
tance of about one Inch apart. Tlie
soil Is then flooded and drained eiery
two or three day* Hnd at tlie end of
the fourth or fifth month, after re
planting, tlie crop is ready to be
gathered.
The harvest is gathered stem by
stem, the natives stunding and cut
ting them at a height of two feet eigiit
inches from the ground.
The rice, after being stacked in
bumties and dried, is put Into a
trough and a stamp or pestle Is used
to separate the grain from the straw.
The grain Is husked by means of a
large mortar In which disks of stone.
Iron, or wood are kept moving either
by buffalo traction or water power.
Wa« Late With Her Gossip.
Mrs. Doherty was the gossip of the
suburb of Wlmhlesyead, und whenever
any of her neighbors met her they al
ways prepared to receive a nice tit
bit of scandal about some of their
friends.
Mrs. Gadabout loved gossip nearly
as much as did Mrs. Doherty, and so
she was extremely pleased when she
saw the latter lady coming along in
her direction one morning when she
was out shopping
“Did you tell Mrs. Newlfe that you
saw her husband In town with a
strange woman?” Mrs. Gadabout asked
when they had exchanged greetings.
“Yes," was the reply, “and I wish
I hadn't now. She Just smiled at me
In her wise way and said: ‘Yes, I
knew all about that. My husband suw
you and knew you'd come straight hack
to tell me. so he telephoned the news
to me himself.”
Hoist by His Own Petard.
A working sens.- of fun Is a good
thing to [sissess, for sometimes If the
humor of a situation cannot take the
place of cash there Is no compensation
at all. A case In point Is that of H. It.
Traill, Hn Kngllsh litterateur. One of
Traill’s earliest Journalistic commis
sions was to write a series of articles
In a paper edited by a lady well
known years ugo as a strong advocate
of “women's rights," as the phrase
went, on the anomalies and Injustices
of the British law relating to woman's
property. The articles were duly writ
ten und published, but the remunera
tion agreed upon was not forthcom
ing. After repeated but fruitless de
mands for payment Traill brought a
suit against the lady, who successfully
Invoked against her contributor the
law she had engaged him to attack.
TENNIS BALL KILLS HIPPO
Cincinnati Zoo Lose* Largest Speci
men in United States.
The person who threw the tennis
hall Into the cage of Zeekoe, gigantic
hippopotamus at the Cincinnati zoo,
caused the death of that animal, fa
mous us the largest in captivity In
Wnerlcu.
The tennis ball was found wedged
n the animal's stomach, where, un
ible to pass further through the nar
row opening, It formed an ohstruc
ion, which resulted In Zeekoe’s death
nfter four days of suffering.
The animal, which weighed about
two tons and a half, was valued at $5,
NH), but was considered as being worth
many times that sum as an attraction
at the zoo.
Zeekoe's life wus Imperiled on a pre
vious occasion by some thoughtless
visitor permitting him to swullow a
woman's mesh bundling.
In nddltlon to the tennis hall a
number of pennies were also revealed
In the stomach.
BEES STING HORSE TO DEATH
Swarm on Backs of Team Until They
Are Sprayed Off.
The bees mnde a mistake. They
thought the backs of Chester Patter's
t^pam a good place for their swarm
to settle. And there was no pond In
which the horses and their driver. 1
Lee Watters, could take refuge.
The swarm came drifting Into nn
orchard near Rochester, N. Y., where
Watters was harrowing. They Ignored
all the apple trees and picked out the
worst possible place. Watters tried
scraping them off by driving under
low branches, but that didn't work
and he tried breuking up the swarm
with a pole. That was his mistake.
The bees took up their weapons and
went to wur. Watters and the horses
tried to leave the field of battle, but
the bees stayed right with them until
some one thought to get a hose. Then
before the bees could be chased away I
one horse was stung to death and the
other severely hurt.
WILL CLEAN BIGGEST FLAG
Vacuum Machine to Be Used on Pos
tal Department’s Banner.
The biggest Hag in the world is go
ing to get a thorough cleaning shortly.
It hangs In the court of the Past
Office department, its sheer length of
seventy feet and four Inches falling to j
dll the great space In which It is dis- i
played.
A vacuum cleaner will be applied to 1
Its wool folds, and the dust which has |
accumulated upon It whisked out. The
banner is said to be the largest free
hanging flag.
The hig flag, which has a breadth of
37 feet, would present quite a diffi
cult problem If It were washed, so
“dry cleaning” is resorted to, It having
been cleaned several times before in
similar manner.
I PATRONIZE THE STATE FIMITIIE C8.
Corner 14th and Dodge Streets Tel. JACKSON 1317
Headquarters BBIIMBIIfllllf Phonographs
for Dnllngnlvn ;>nd Record?
L Levy, Druggist
21th and Decatur Streets
WE bster 5802
We are as near as your
, telephone.
HARDING S ICE CREAM I
_
j SEEDS j!
>: OF KNOWN QUALITY f
!; 1 "■ ;l;
S* Flower, Grass and Garden
£ Seeds !•!
j* Hulhs. Hardy Perennials $|
Poultry Supplies
|* --See Us for Your
£ Fresh Cut Flowers X
l y
£ Always on Hand X
[ Stewart’s Seed Store
S; 119 No. 16th St.—Opposite |
Postoffice — JAckson 0977 1j
FRANKLIN THEATRE
24th and Franklin i
THE BEST PICTURES AT
ALL TIMES ,
mmma^mmmm*
A NEW BLUES SINGER
With a Thrill
Clara Smith
Columbia Record No. 3943
“EVERY WOMAN’S
BLUES”
“I’ZE GOT EVERY- .
THING”
Be sure to hear this rec
ord. You will want it.
Other New' Blues by
Bessie Smith and Sarah
Martin just received. Come
in and hear them!
RECORDS DELIVERED
ANYWHERE
No Extra Charges
S. LEWIS
24th and Parker Streets
WE bster 2042
Bonds Furnished to Relisble Persons
NOTARY PUBLIC IN OFFICE
PHONES:
Res., Web. 6618; Office, At. 5104
Res. 2863 Binney St.
NOAH W. WARE
ATTORNEY and COUNSELOR
AT LAW
HOURS: 9 A. M. to 12:00 Noon; 1:80
P. M. to 5:30 P. M.
Ill So. 14th Street Omuha, Nebr.
A Nice Complexion
Is a great asset to any wom
an. You can have one at a
nominal cost. To be sure,
use only the original and
genuine ROBINSON’S Skin
Whitener and Freckle Re
mover. Sold at the Liberty
Drug Company. 1904 North
24th Street. Web. 0386.
| EMERSON’S LAUNDRY ;;
$ The Laundry That Suita All < >
r 1301 Now 24th St. Web. 0828 j;
♦♦♦♦♦
t———
LE BRON ® GRAY
ELECTRICAL WORKS
Expert Electrical
Engineers
Motor*, Generators, Electric
Elevator* Repairs, Armature
Winding, Electric Wiring
PHONE JACKSON 2019
116 South 13th St„ Omaha
. ...«... i
DeLuxe Cafe
JIM BELL, Proprietor
Has Removed from
2120 to 2202 North 21th St.
New Central
Cafe
1916 Cuming St.
Special Chicken Dinners on
Sunday
35c
Meals and Lunches at all
Hours
Open 5:30 a. m. to Midnight
F. M. McCORLEY, - Prop.
You have the opportunity fora grand review of 1923’s
achievements and a pre-view of the great Paramount
Pictures coming.
Celebrate Paramount Week at your own theatre as mil
lions have during five previous annual Paramount Weeks.
"It’s Paramount Week at your theatre now! ”
/LAYERS LASKY CORPORATION
AIV1 oho j°*ns ™ national demonstration of the better motion pictures
will fill II All this week—Paramount Pictures will be shown
September 2-3—“RACING HEARTS” with September 2-3—“THE GHOST breaker”
. with Wallace Reid
Agnes Ayres and Theodore Roberts September 2-3—“THE ORDEAL” with AGNES AYRES September 4—“MISS LULU BELT’ with
| September 4-5—“THE WHITE FLOWER” September 4—“THE YOUNG DIANA” wHh MARION DAVIES Septembers “LAW AND THE WOMAN”
with Betty Compson September 5-6—“NICE PEOPLE” with WALLACE REID a wi*{> Betty Owni*** 4 mT D 4 ^
September 6-7—“THE MAN WHO SAW TO
S/nt/mh/r 6 7 “NOBODY’S MONFY” with September 7*8—“ON THE HIGH SEAS” with DOROTHY DALTON and MORROW” with Thomas Meighan
September 6-7 NOBODY S MONEY with JACK holt September 8—“HER HUSBAND’S TRADE
| Jack Holt MARK” with Gloria Swanson
I Playing at the DIAMOND THEATOE Paramount Week
Playing at the ALHAMBRA THEATRE Playing at the HIPPODROME THEATRE
Paramount Week Paramount Week
1-^ it’s a Paramount Picture it’s the best show in Town '