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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1922)
r .ft T THE OMAHA BEE: TUESDAY. JULY 11. 1922. Children Give Fireworks Cash to Milk Fund 'Ve Sivfd Monty for Poor Little Babiri Who Ned Milk and Utr Say Letter. Either. Harold and Raymond Dahmt and Mafdelen and Clyde t'antrell art mil enjoying their I-'ourth of July celebration hecsuse they celebrated by giving their "fire work! money" to The Bee Free Milk and let fund. ' We aaved it for iht poor tittle babiet who need miilc and ice," aayt their letter. Yet, indeed, there arc ro many ot these poor little babiei, suffering in the very poor home a of Omaha thi minute. L'nleii the fund i supplied with money, iom of these babe will have to be neglected. The hot weather without pure milk may spell the end of tome little lives, scarce begun. This is a very serious work, Wi can't afford to overlook it. friends Some tiny mite of humanity is on the list waiting tor your contnbu tion. It may mean his or her life. Just send or bring what you ran to The Bee office. Every cent of it will be used for the poor babiet. , BRINGING UP FATHER l. 0, rlBl Offtr. (EC JIGGS AND MAGCIK IN fUU. rACt or colors in the sunday Drawn for The Bee by McManus tCyrmt 111.) n r if .res REALLY ? Ltra co TMCRC- IM I HrrHarare eraaewMsad SAM SI i.rmaap I. rea l.i llm K. FmIvt. .Nrbnuka City.... l.i H. K. P s.oo Iwm. Merjerle a Ml Martoa llra.lr.. S 00 K . rem 1.00 Ulnar, HaraM. Stair moad Uahrn. aatf Magalt aaa Clyde CaMMll t.tS tin. B. A. tUUtr 1.M Total Mil Strike Is Deplored in Draft by C. of C. A resolution protesting the "inter niption of the country s transport tion," and deploring "every retort to violence whether by intimidation or otherwise to prevent the return ot workers to their places of employ ment." was drafted and passed by the Umaha Chamber of Commerce exec utive committee, at a special meeting yesterday. "Such interference is not consis tent with a desire to settle disputes whether industrial or otherwise by an appeal to reason rather than to force and is actuated by motives not unlike those which produced the late war, a repetition of whose horrors an anxious world is trying to pre- vent through restoration of the reign of reason, continues the resolution. . In closing the resolution says: "We subscribe to the sentiments express ed by President Harding in his Ma rion, fourth of July speech, when lie said: 'A free America has the right to labor without any other's leave, and Liberty is gone in Amer ica when any man is denied by any body the right to work and live by i,av nu; it. Dr. J. P. Connolly Loses Custody of 3 Children Dr. J. P. Connolly, jr., lost his bat tle to gam custody of his three chil tiren from his divorced wife yester day when District Judge bears gave Mrs. Conjiolly custody of them. Mrs. Connolly was granted a divorce by default and $75 a month alimony. Dr. Connolly, the decree states, may see his children at various times, Women Democrats Urged to Vote for Charles Bryan Women democrats were urged to vote for Charles W. Bryan for the nomination for governor in an ap peal issued yesterday by 37 women democratic leaders. That Mr. Bryan supports the Sheppard-Towner maternity bill is stressed in the appeal. Man Found Dead in Kitchen. Edward kettelt, 4722 North Thirty third street, was found dead in the kitchen of - his home Monday afternoon. The "police believe he was aiphxiated while trying to cook a meal in the absence of his family. The body was 'found by a friend, George Harris, 4910 North Twenty fifth street. i , .( Eberstein Chief of K. C. Department of Justice Marshall Eberstein, former Omaha chief of police, who resigned when the Dahlman administrttion went into power, is now chief of the De partment of Justice in Kansas City, according to word received from that city. ADVERTISEMENT. MONTHS OF SUFFERING Hew a Baltimore Girl Re covered Her Health R1H mora. Maryland. "For sev- eral months I suffered with severe DacKacne ana gen eral weaxness. t could not sleep comfortably at nignt I or pains in my back. I found tout book at home ion day and af ter reading it be gan at once to taice iyaia c. Pinkham'a Veg etable Com- bound. I have had very good re suits and some of my girl Znends are taking it now. uunjr , use this letter to help other girls, as , the letters in your book helped me. Rose Waionxk, 3018 Boeeland Place, Baltimore, Md. i That is the thought ao often ex- pressed in letters recommending Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound. These women know what they have suffered, they describe their symptoms and state how they were finally made welL Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound is a medicine made from medicinal roots and herbs, and without drugs, to relieve the sickness women eo often have, which is indicated by backache, weak feelings, nervousness, and no ambition to get anything done or to go anywhere. It has helped vvny dpi try iw K J I H 1IU tv lure PtATUMt fcovict- Inc. aaTeB?a?a"aTTSaTaTTaTaTaTaTaTaaTaTa"SMf a TOR COO ONE fa a A OO "YOU HAVE TOOK. . Marriage of Barry Wicklow By RUBY M. AYRES Copyright, 1922. Iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiili II3 II I CHAPTER I. "And so, dear old thing, I really can't come. I do hope you won't be very wild with me. I really am most awfully disappointed, but what would be the useof my coming when I am nearly blind with headache.' Write me a line or, better still, come and see me one day soon, as a sign that you forgive me for turning you down at the last moment Yours, "AGNES DUDLEY. Barry Wicklow threw the letter down on the table and swore. He might have expected something of the kind, he told himseit savagely, his luck had been dead out for so lone. Of course, she couldn't help hav ing a headache, but all the same it was a confounded nuisance, just when he had got a box, too; he might as well have chucked the money in the cutter, after all. He was bitterly disappointed; he flattered himself that he looked his best in evening dress. Barry swore again; he lit a cigaret and walked over to the window. A September evening was draw insr to a close, the streets were gray and rather depressing. It seemed to suit Barry Wicklow s frame of mind. He pushed the window wide and leaned his elbows on the sill. It was a rotten world, he thought, pessimistically. He wondered if the luck would ever change and come his way for a bit. He was fed up with his own com pany: he had counted so mucn on this evening with Agnes, and now she had turned him down because of a confounded headache. It was not much fun going to the theater alone, and there was nobody else whom he cared to invite. He wished Norman was back in town; he was a bit of an ass in some ways. but they got on all right together in spite of it. He raised ' himself and yawned. bhould he go, or should he notr The box had cost 4 guineas it seemed a shame not to use it. He went out of the room and took his coat down from a-peg. Might as well go, after all; it would pass the evening, anyway; he let himself out of the front door, slamming it alter him. The driver of a taxi hailed him. but Barrv shook his head. He could not afford the fare for himselfras a matter of fact, he could not afford it for anyone else either, but, of course, they would have had a taxi if Agnes had come. He threw his half smoked cigaret away angrily. Dash it all! surely she could have managed better than have a headache today of all days. He wondered if she really meant to marry him. Sometimes he thought that it was all right and that she did, and then at other times tonight, for instance. He shook his shoulders to eether with a sieh. He was hanged if he could understand women. He wondered if she had really got a headache or if it were only an excuse with which to put him off. He frowned as he looked down the srrav street. If only he had got Nor man's money. It was the very deuce of a job to live within one s income when one's income was so very much under four fieures. If only his father had managed to eet born before .Norman s lather, what a difference would have made in his life.l It seemed rather hard that because one twin had been in rather more of a hurry to have a look at the world than the other, the son of the one should be a millionaire, and the son of the other poor devil struggling on something under 600 year. Not that he grudged it to Nor man actually, but nis tnougnts broke as he reached the theater. A line of carnaces and motor cars were drawn up outside; the usual crowd jostled one another at the pit door; inside the foyer daintily dressed women with immaculately dressed escorts stood and chatted. Barry scowled. It only Agnes had been here! If only "I beg your pardon." He had bumped into a girl who was turning KEEPa WELL An M Tablet ( vegetable a pari tot) takra at olf bt win blip kaap you wan, br teniae and traocthtninc your di- oet a 25 Chips off The OU Block M JUNIORS Little NU OaaMra turn ragular deaa. Mada of tba an taeraaiaota, tbaa candy aatsd. Per chUdraa and adalta. Sherman 6c McConaell disappointedly away from the box oince. She glanced up at him disinterest edly and smiled. "Oh, it's all right, thank you." She turned at once to her companion, an elderly woman dressed in a black bonnet and cloak that were obviously of country make. "Not a seat to be had," she said disappointedly. "Oh, isn t it a shame!" Barry Wicklow was staring at the girl admiringly; she was very young, but her face was so pretty that for a moment at least he did not notice that she, too, had a country cut to her clothes, and that neither she nor her companion looked as if they wanted to pay half a guinea for stalls. There was Irish blood in Barry Wicklow's veins; Irish impulsiveness that often made him butt in headlong where he was not wanted; he took'a quick step toward the Rirl. i "I beg your pardon." He spoke with a rush, the words tumbling over one another in his excitement "But I heard what you said just now about there being no seats, I mean, and Ive a box, quite a large box, with room for four people, and there's only me to use it. If you would be so kind 1 should be de lightedawfully delighted, if you and your mother. . ." This last was a random shot, but by the smile that suddenly appeared on the elder woman's face he saw that it was also a lucky one. "We ought to have booked," she told Barry confidingly. "But we so seldom come to London, and my daughter was so sure we should get in all right; it does seem a pity that we've come all this way for nothing." "If you'll share my box I shall be only too delighted, Barry said again; he looked at the girl all the time he spoke, but she flushed and shook her head. "We're not in evening dress it would look so queer." Barry pooh-poohed the argument. "It doesn't make any difference you &n take your hats off. If you only knew how I was hating the idea of my own company all the evening. Please say yes! The girl and her mother exchanged glances. "It's very kind of you," the girl said, doubtfully. "But" Barry struck while the iron was hot. "Then that's settled," he said cheerfully, "t shall enjoy the piece ever so much more with someone to talk to." It was surprising how much hap pier he felt; he almost wished that Agnes could see him and know that he had not been left so utterly strand ed aftJr all. As he turned to lead the way across the foyer a lady bowed to him,, glancing curiously at his companions Barry returned the bow and smiled, he loved being unconventional, and he knew for a certainty that Mrs. Baring would be sure to tell Agnes she had seen him with a girl - a very pretty girl, too and that Agnes was inclined to be jealous, "I've never been in a box before. the girl told him as they took their seats. Barry had placed her so that she was facing the stage; his own chair was a little in the background.' The girl had taken off her hat and the country-mad?, coat; she looked prettier than ever, Barry thought ad miringly; he was quite proud to be seen with her; when the curtain went up he drew his chair a little more forward. This was an adventure if you like, he thought with a little chuckle; he wondered what Norman would say if he ever heard about it; Norman was such a stickler for convention. He turned to the elder woman. "You don't live in London?" he asked. "No ... we live right down in the country. It's rather quiet for my daughter, I'm afraid. I wish, for her sake, we could move, but I've been there all my life." She fumbled with a not particularly smart handbag on her lap. "You must please let us pay for our seats," she said, with great dignity. Barry flushed crimson. "Oh, please I beg of you. He was un comfortably certain that they had not got the price of a couple of stalls between them. He was horribly dis tressed. "The chairs would have been empty if you hadn't come," he rushed on. "I shall be only too honored. But he knew he was making his ap peal in vain. "We couldn't think of allowing vou to pay for us," he was told. "It's very kind of you to let us share your box ... if you will tell me how much . . . ." Barry told an agitated lie. "The box is 20s. and there are four seats so your share is half . . . but I do wish you would allow me . . He broke off. He had to pocket the money, without further protest The girl's mother closed her bag with a snap, and leaned back more comfortably. "Now I can enjoy myself," she said. The play bored Barry. Perhaps he was not in the mood for it, or per haps he found the girl at his side more attractive than the leading lady on the stage, for he cer tainly looked at her a great deal more, and the mora he looked, at her the prettier he thought she was. Barry had all an Irishman's suscep tibility. Before the first act was fin ished he had forgotten his disappoint ment about Agnes Dudley. Before the second act was finished he had made up his mind that this chance acquaintance was going further than the door of the theater. He wondered if he might ask their name. He wondered if he might ven ture to present them with his card. He felt in his waistcoat pocket, but he had no cards with him. The girl was very quiet. She was entirely engrossed in the stage. "Do you like the play?" Barry asked her once; he was a trifle piqued at the little attention she gave him. , She turned starry eyes to hint for an instant. "Oh. I think it's lovely I Do you know that it's my ambition to be an actress?" Barry frowned. "You'd hate ft," he said bluntly, it s a rotten uie. She amiled disbelievinglv. "It is! 'Pon my word it Is!" Barry assured her. "You ought to go round to the back of the stage, you can't judge at all from what you see this side of the footlights." But she was not listening; she was looking at the stage again, and carry reiapsca imu silence. hart never seen anvone so pret tv in all his life, that was what he was thinking; he had never seen any one with such beautiful hair, sucn dear little chin, such long lashes. He liked her mother, too; in spite of the home-made severity of the clothes she wore, he recognized that there was a sort of quiet dignity about her; oh, he was certainly not going to lose sight ot them wnen me evening was over. Rut Barrv's rotten luck still held he had no chance to ask any of the ouestions that were burning his tongue; the crowd in the passage out side the box prevented conversation as they were leaving, and when they reached the street it was pouring with rain. "I'll o-et a taxi if vou'll wait." Everyone was calling for cabs Commissionaires in white mackin toshes, shiny with rain, hurried to and fro. Barrv dashed out into the street he could at least drive with them wherever they were going, he told himself: he had to go some yards before he could find a disengaged taxi. He drove back with it in style, His hat and coat were wet, but he did not care; the crowd had thinned somewhat now. He looked eagerly toward the spot -where he had left the girl and her mother, but they werfi no longer there. He went into the theater again; he searched everywhere; finally, when he was almost the last person left in the theater, he had to give up and drive awav alone in sulkv state. Wonder if they did it purposely? he thought with sudden suspicion. "They might have waited." He squared his shoulders. "Well, I don't care; I'll find 'em again if I have to search every corner of London. Jovel that girl was a beauty! He let himself into his flat with an irritable hand; the old depression had fallen over him again; he considered that he had been treated very badly; first Agnes and now this girl. He shut the door hehind him with RESTFUL BLEEP IN HOT WEATHER; Horaford'l Acid Phoaphate In yvater at bcdtlma Inducaa natural tleap, In fruit Juices, makea delightful, cooling anna. Advertisement, ADVERTISEMENT. Pimples Keep Young Men Down! They" Make Woman, Too, P turtle! How S. S. S. Steps Slda Eruptions Positively. Pimples and skin eruptions have a price, you pay tor every pustule, black-head and pimple on your facjw Pimples produce prejudice and prevent prosperity. Tour heart may be fold, . i. 8. 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The larger etee fcs the mora economical. a slam and went on to the sitting room. A man was sitting there in one tf the armchairs, hit feet stuck up on another. Barry stood in the doorway look ing at him. (Continued la Tba Hae Tomorrow.) Two Auto Racers Killed. Covington, La., July 10. Fernand Clement and Henry Baker, amateur drivers of New Orleans, were killed instantly during an exhibition auto mobile race hcere yesterday when their car overturned. Phantom Nance Found After 2-Year Search asMBaSaaaBBaaaai The "Phantom Nance." for whom a nation-wide search has been in progress for two years, wst found in Wausau, Wis., yesterday by Pos tal Inspector V. N. Coble of Omaha. . C. Nance is under indictment in the Missouri Valley Cattle Loan case for conspiracy to use the mails to defraud. So well did Nance cover his tracks that for a long time Coble himself and other investigators doubted (he identity of any "Nance," believing it to be a fictitious name, assumed w hen necessary, by other officers and pro moters of the now defunct company. "Nance in custody and admits identity." is the bare news furnished in a telegram from Coble received Sunday night by J. C Kinsler, United States district attorney. A lovely powder box is nude of glass. A big rose serves as the handle, and to the under side of the rose instead of a stem there is a soft, fluffy powder puff.' Dori let skin trouble spoil your good time Kesinol heals sick skins " I can't have any (un I I ant such i ftwlih this reiema that people svoid ma wherever I go. And the iUAitig torment! me so that I don't get sny pence, anyhow." 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