The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, September 24, 1922, Page 10, Image 10

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    10 JC
THF. SUNDAY ' r.KK: OMAHA. SKPTKMIU.'R Zi. 1022.
England Alarmed
Over Carrying of
Guns by Lawless
I'liarmffl Police IVe Menace
in Postwar Aciiiition
of Weapons ly
(Tool i.
Grim-Faced Peasants Guard Crown Jewels of Romanoffs
By JOHN STEELE.
(I hira Trtfaati trM( Km rt.et
I i imIi.ii - I he gunn.an I14 mmr
to LngLttd Im inc. ly !;iUm jri'l l
l.rrn'i mi the (41 1 Jli.it her minimi
(flird lui.f oil W ill 4I0I tunning
It ill Oil l"HT Jitlll li4t nil IJIUflUl J
lur wat adequately aide lo ftr 4I
with l! nil. Note tlir war the rrnitl
lul h4i Ij'.cii r tlir gun 4ml new
itiution tut futi.
It it one nf Ihr hjf.trvt t ' 1 i i K
imtguiabtt for 4 rrpuuble I'.ritnh
mum t ohtaiu 1 miniiiin of fire
arm All !r4liri 111 mini itiiil am.
lnijliit.011 t f hienm! Mini artfully
intpn led, 'i hr y are nut allowed In
r It wtapoii any otic without
I'trriiit Ir 1 ii Id.: poln e, wlinh !
tprulurt I he i4lility ni Ullitlllllll-
lion that may be told A record
inuit In In jt of l r kin 1 of weapon,
Iiumif4i tij-er't iHimhrr, and other
j 4fin uUif, awl tlir in w owner may
Hot paft Willi It W.tlloilt pollie per-
riuiori. Nut h bnlie 41c vi ry dif
lit. tilt la get 4ii'l arc "iily i.MM'l to
mil persons 4 banker, lrademrn
in rough neighborhood who are 111
rlsngrr ( bring robbed, and me
seugrt who 4ie in the habit of
tarrying Urge units of money.
This does dot prevent the crook,
however, from obtaining hit revolver
snd smiiiumtiou, smuggled from
Germany or America ami told at
trice romineniutale with the risk
run lv the smuggler. The remit ii
that the unarmed policeman i now
t a serious disadvantage ami (lie an
thoritics are worried. They do not
with to arm the oolite, and (lie po
lire thrmtclves are opposed to tlie
idea of tarrying firearms on the
theory that in a country where the
police are armed iritnes of violence
are more frequent than in F.ngland.
A hou!e to home search lor lire
situs has lircn sugKeted, hut that ll
impracticable. What i happening
i that magistrates and judge are
now stiffening tP etitcitcr on
armed triminal and thus trying to
convince them that gun toting it not
a paying game,
Bolshevik Monopoly
Boosts Fur Prices
Jlraao Tribune Krl New Rrrrle.
L'crlin, Sept. ii. Pur experts here
predict that, ai a result of the bol
shevik government's monopoly of
Jtusu'i trade in raw skin, fur
prices in America will be 1 50 pr
ernt hi'Kher next winter.
The Kutftian govrrnmcnt i today
f')t largest owner of raw pelt in the
world. Through its fur commiar it
rjrrie on a hiiice trade, exporting
throiiirh Jia and Keval, and at the
l.ut Leipzig fur nalce practically
dominated the market.
I'nder bolnhevik rule, however,
Kuihia and Siberia arc not produc
ing their usual quota of fur. Be
fore the revolution Kusia supplied
more than one-half of the world's
fur, but today fur experts arc ftill
25 per cent under the prewar figure.
niiMderiiiK furs one of the best liq
uid assets, the bolsheviks are keeping
jirices up, and thii fact, coupled
with the "fur bortaf(e, hns already
jumped wholi'nalc prices 75 per cent
fincc the Leipzig fair.
White fox has risen 100 per cent,
Mtie wolf 50 per cent, ermine 2C0
jier cent, fitch 15 per cent, and sable
100 per cent. Good sable m now
being bought by dealers at $140 a
skin. American buyers in Europe
(ire slill purchasing the bet pieces,
but France and Holland arc today
the largest buyers in the fur market.
Fishermen Battle
With Huge Octopus
Mro Tribune Korrt(il Nr K..rll.
London, Sept. 23. The thrilling
f;Kht with an octopus that forms cue
of the most dramatic scene in Vic
tor Hugo's novel. "Lea Travailicurs
tie la Mer," has just had a counter
part in real life. Jersey fishermen,
it was reported yesterday, were haul
ing in a trammel net near Tailors
reef, off Corbier. when two htiRC ten
tacles suddenly appeared from the
sea.
One gripped the mast of the boat
nd the other coiled itself round the
'eg of one of the crew. Frank Diiha
mel. The man struggled in vain to
free himself from the deadly coils,
and he wa just being dragged over
1 oarrj by the monster when the other
Vhrrman came to hi assistance.
They began a furiou assault on
the oitonin, running the tentacles
with kni've and eveuluallv forcing
it to relinquish it prey. Even then
the other tenude remained coiled
round the mast. Plow front oar
were Mined on it, and at last the
monstir was driven bark to the
depth from which it had come,
AtHtKTI! ttr
Kidney and Bladder
TroublesConquered
or Money Back
n'fi...Y-rt; c s 'AA y .iL. ; ' Ala.. ie) ra aiv .p ;
III . .J i- 'A jSJS."'.4.vf it Jil'JZ i't . ..V " t . ,L' f 7sf V t f t v' t i -'
" - i
i
Cost of Building
Down in England
IIou p Ituilt at HaIf ',M',
I ml Tnit-e Sfr Arr
tyi-inping I'p in tlir
Kiiipilom.
Ij.ii.I.mi. Sept. JJ.- J louses budt ft
'half the co.t jnd twice the sp.-d
ii . .... ..i i
;illi( ng up in an n wi i
Mid
p.e l. wbi.h reduce !..(: ly V"
i.t ol I he building. i seilut
! tailor t'l the pruditilioii i
ibr-prr boiiw, il.rapir inati-ruU 1"
ii. g the i- nI (actor
i I he gf .tt (all in the l ( lniuea
! i Hot been e .iitmi d l' one or two
npe Wliil' b. al n.iiiiuU ute find
' ii ic it pou'ld.- lo place icinlrai Is at
'W ir hour ..i blinks 'l '
j iiiin' hoiiirt. the liih man who ian
rffford lo spend 4ut thing from 5'o0
)lo iip.iii h. bui.ic i j o be
i ing riiioutaiiid lo build by lower
pi ires.
j All round building "i houses.
whether (or tub tit poor. i the urrst
solution ' ' he housing ...M. m It
iV, ill nuke riup.iiyini til I ; winter
i and (nip In relieve the t:iir of
j the dole now p4id In so iii.oh u rn
i ii' the lunming traoes.
' IVople who have been willing for
rc4on,ible prut aie rniniiig o us
g.iiil." said a k ,ri i i, .live of IVil
i h It's Ltd, Ijindoii, who build house
lor well-to-do ilu nt, m both towit
: arid country. "They rognie that
a level ha been nailnil, both in ot
U ( materialt and labor, which will he
maintained now for some tune, cer-
I l iuily we think until next March,"
Kleririially operated ttulrs ban-
I been itivenlrd that prevent mote
.lli.ni a ileiird amount of drv
grmrrirs being pound fioiu bins in-
to receptai e.
i:...... I...I I .. f ....(.. i i . i . ,. . . . ... .
.-"""' i y grini-i.nrii pi jsinn, 10 vwioiii u-w rouuies used to uc a lornuie, vii.t iwissia treawire House, crown tewiU ol the K"in:i:io!K iilioi M-r iolie'l l.r Ihe lust time, rerneger. I rcn Ii nw l i xiu rl. apprai-ci
me naiionai tiein ot l lie i-niteej Mates, in tne center is me car s crown, made lor Catherine 11. It contain the
turir value at tune
diamond, believed to be the (irand Mogul.
There are 13.0(H) stones, valued at $45,000,000, in the coat pocket made for l'aul I.
massive uuuit llalat rtihv, brought hum I'ekin in the lili crniurv,
The famed Shah diamond, as larj'e a a man's fist, is in ihc ( ollci in.u.
i-xperl.
In the sirptrr is a huge
tl opy right. VKJ.)
Germany's Hopes
Dead. Assertion
of Chancellor
Nation Heatling Toward Aus
tria" Fale, Sot ial Hevolu
lion, Dec larrs Jodcpli
Wirtli.
Uerlin, Sept. J.).--"W'c of the (ier-
mau republic stand at the deathbe-i
of our hopes. Germany is heading
under full sail on the way of Aus
tria. What comes next is not politics;
it is social revolution."
In the marble pillared hall of a
palace on Wilhehnstrasse, where,
J'rincc liismarck once ruled the em
pire's destiny with blood and iron,
Chancellor Joseph Wirth, man ot
the common people and leader of the
new Cicrman republic, wa telling of
his country's plight. Half bitter, half
pleading, he spoke of the collapse
of industry, the disintegration of af
fairs, the hopeless, futile struggle in
the vortex of wcltpohtik that is today
hurtling a nation of 60,000,000 people
to destruction.
Outside the plush curtained win
headlines of the evening extras: "Die
dollar ist 1060. Die dollar is 1060."
What does it mean? When the
leaders of Germany talk of collapse
and chaos, of dry rot eating the
heart of their country, of possible
famine and revolution in the spring,
what is the background against
which the fantastic, insane pitcure. of
a bolshevik Germany is painted?
Industrial Fabric.
Imagine a huge, colossal machine,
more intricate in its intermeshed
htccl gears than a mammoth print
ing press, more interwoven in its
swift flying parts than the flashing
shuttles of a mighty loom, more
subtle in its imbedded intricacies
than the multiple tangle of wires
behind a great telephone .switch
board. This machine is the industrial
fabric of the Gorman nation. Its
foundations go down into the soil, to
the wheat fields of Hi aiuknburg, the
forest of Thuringen, the iron mines
of Westphalia, the pitheads ot the
Ruhr. Its smooth running pans
are the teeming factory towns ot the
Khiuclaud. Saxony and the Prussian
plain. It draws its energy an.t me
front the complex interdependences
;,,iriif,ti.ii:il trade, export and
import, trade balances, the exchange,
the cabled flash of the morning
openings on Wall street, the bulletin
of Chicago's wheat quotation.
ISy the vt bidden ramifications ol
this machine bve Hans Schmidt,
trudging homeward wuh his dinner
pail along the drab, twilight street
of Doitmimd or hssen. knowing
nothing ot wcltpolitik, knowing only
that 50 mark docs not buy a pound
of but'tr any ni'r
Mchin Intact.
The nuchme i"''- Tl" '"'.V1'
,l,.e, not change; the factory , walls ,
Mill stand, Sixty im'dion pair ol j
l,.n,U .nil work, Uut I he rlectrilv-;
mat cm iunf ,.nii
and with the possibility imminincnt
the (jermr.it industrial machine in
sanctions, Germany has become a
bad account in "the eyes of world
business. No one Vant the mark,
that France may claim vital parts of
and Germany is therefore forced to
give larger and larger bundles of her
currency in t.thaiigc for the dollar.!,
pounds and Swiss francs she must
buy to carry on essential trade, to
meet reparations, to get imports ol
such necessities as wheat and copper
which she cannot provide within her
own borders. With all her asset
already mortgaged she can only do
thi by printing more unsecured
money, thus depressing the mark
still further. A dollar hill is the first
mortgage on the gold reserve? of
America, It is worth just so much
gold. An unsecured mark is worth
only what ouc cares to give.
Such is the process of decay, the
process by which the machine's elec
tric current has been gradually weak
ened. The shrinkage of this power
has gradually curtailed Germany's
field of activity; gradually cut off its
foreign ramifications. The time has
now come when the mark is practi
cally worthies as a purchasing agent
outside of Germany.
Vital Parts Worn Out.
For four years the machine has
been d:sintegrating. Vital parts have
become worn out, vital parts have
Chinese Believe
Prayers to God
Halted Drouth
dows newsboys screamed the black Lceased to operate. The breaking of
one set of gears has set some parts
into frantic motion, made certain cogs
revolve at Inch erratic speeds. The
nonfunctioning of these same gears
has stopped other parts completely
The broken parts have not been re
placed. Now, part by part, the machine
becomes idle, rusti, disintegrates.
What does this mean? It ir.e::r,s,
for example, that with the mark at
1060 to the dollar, Germany can no
longer afford to buy wheat in foreign
markets. But the new Germany, its
area clipped by the peace ireaty, is
now dependent on thesa foreign mar
kets for three days' food supply in
every week. It is also dependent on
foreign markets for coal and topper.
By frantic manufacturing and export
ing Germany has managed to keep
her people employed and to maintain
a trade balance that has brought I t r
foreign currency. Hut when she can
no longer buy foreign currency lo
secure capital for importation ivcd
ed to carry on mauuu'cturiu t, pro
duction will be lowcre I, instituting
a vicious circle that w:ii completely
paralyze trade.
Crisis Here.
With lens trade, less production,
less employment, and an increase r.i
cost ol living due to dirrtd.e of food
stuffs that cannot be bought ("broad,
the inten al value of the mark will
soar to it.T external value.
And Hans Schmidt, trudg-ng home
ward with his dinner pad, v. ill find
that a I'ouud of butie,' costs 600
mark-., o.' just about the 60 icnt he
would ha-' lo pay for il anywhere
ehe in tht world. And I lain with
Grrniany' industrial machine stop
ped for mt of the rleitivov of in
ternational exchange won't hive the
Ml cent.
1 his is the situation llu1 Germ in
M.ttriiiirn forcer tor nest winter.
They U'e that the 1 1 l!ape b t i come,
That the cnn i, h tc; lint its man
!'et men Will b" obvHiU, " 'bin 4
4 .. 4 V !. ... I .I ,1 .1,,,,,, 4,,,,.
-.in that wa both the i"'! "' 'M
l ie t4.rk ol h'' ilium's iniUiti u j f..w month u not mtcU.
ituchmr, Iso lwt K power. WU i l(, lV thry ;.ie ticni I'y r
I., niark. ii.irnulW four lv the '-; m, iboul what II ft -wlu m-dt-r
'Ur,
Dowiipoiir Follows Prayer
Service Iiy SoMiera of Chris
tian General, Feng
Yu-Iixiang.
Peking, Seiit, 2.1 The drouth in
Honaii province which had threaten
ed a repetition of the famine condi
tions of 1920 has been broken, and
the Christian community attributes
it entirely to the prayers of the un
paid, but faithful soldiers of the 11th
division, commanded by Gen. Feng
Vu-hsiang, the Christian who is now
acting as governor of llonan and
i.i slowly bringing order out of chaos
in that bandit-ridden province.
Owing to the drouth and the dis
ruption of the railway traffic inci
dent to the civil war, food prices
of lfonan had soared to an almost
prohibitive point. Farmers who had
not already suffered from bandit
l aids were disposing of their animals
;:iid thc;r furniture in an effort to
buy a few pounds of grain and rap
idly were approaching a condition
where an appeal to foreigners for aid
was being considered. When the
matter came to the attention of Gen,
Fcnjr he sent invitations to the va
rious Christian missionaries in the
province requesting their co-operation
in his appeal to God for de
liverance. Also he invited more than
H00 Christians of various denomina
tions living in the vicinity of Kai
feng, the provincial capital, to join
his troons in a prayer meeting to
be held on the parade grounds,
A review of the troops was first
held, and afterward more than 10,-
l000 voices joined in singing the na
tional anthem. Then, when Hsu
Sien-pu had read a few verses from
the Bible, Col. Chang Chi-chiang
made an address stating the object
of the meeting and pointing out the
necessity of the confession of sins
before expecting deliverance. Fol
lowing this, all joined in singing
"Onward, Christian Soldiers," which
by the way, is the battle hymn of
the 11th division.
Followed a sermon by the Rev. Pu
Li-tch, who urged the people to have
faith in God, who ever answers the
prayers of his children when offered
up in confidence, concluding with a
prayer for rain. After the assemblage
bad sung "Praise God F'rom Whom
All Blessings Flow," five soldiers
were asked to offer individual prayers
for rain.
Then Gen, Feng Vu-hsiang, who
thus far had remained a simple par
ticipant in l!ie meeting, stepped for
ward on the platform nnd otfeicd a
supplication which a missionary ha
translated for The Omaha Bee cor
rcpondei't a follow:
"11 Gild, just and benevolent, thou
Tokio Starts Fight
to Decrease Prices
Tokio, Sept. 21 The city of Tokio
has entered the field actively to les
sen the burdens of high prices for
the poor people. Like food ami
clothing and other things the rents in
Tokio continue unreasonably high;
in many rases higher than at any
time during the war boom.
It is in this way that the city hopes
lo give the greatest help lo the
laboring people. 1 wo large rooming
houses already have been constructed
in the fcltini districts, Kach will house
about 20(1 persons and the price is
only 5 sen (about 2'j cents) a night.
rood also is served at cost at these
places. In nearly every ward the
city has also established municipal
markets, where rice, lislt and the
vegetables and pickles that form a
part of the Japanese meal may be
purchased cheaper than elsewhere.
The city bath houses, however,
have made the greatest bit with the
people; a reasonable price for the,
daily bath appears to be more ap
preciated than cheap food.
Diamond Helicvcil Crown
Jewel for Sale in London
London, Sept. 23. Hattou Garden
the diamond market of London
had a thrill recently when it was re
ported that the famous Hope dia
mond .owned by Mrs. Fdward B,
McLean of Washington, I). C, had
been placed upon the market.
The rumor proved to be untrue
but it was disclosed that a large (Ha
inan d resembling the Hope diamond
had been placed in the hands of a
Hatton Garden dealer for, sale.
Gordon Hatton, owner of the dia
mond, is of the' opinion that this
newly displayed stone came from
one of the famous Russian czarist
pieces of jewelry.
Persons Entering Kunsia
Now Must Stale BiiMiiess
Moscow, Sept. 2.1 Business men
who want to enter Russia henceforth
must supply exact information as to
what business they intend, to engage
in, their technical qualifications and
financial responsibility, according to
terms of orders sent out to attaches
in foreign countries by the people's
commissar of foreign affairs. The
object is said to be to curb specula
tion tinder the new economic policy
recently adopted.
Brisk Business
in Hollow (lanes
Walking Stick of Pint Capao
ity Popular Willi Yank
Tourihlii.
The liquor is contained iii a metal
bottle whiih fits inside the cane. The
cxtirior tiiii.sh of Ihe lane is so lial
mal that one would never suspect
that it was load'd with liquor.
"J he demand for these hollow
cams has become so brisk that one
can find tli'-ni exhibited in a doeu
windows around the Opera and the
Palais Royal."
The practice of the tourists has ap
parently Ik en to load up their prize
walking s'icks just before entering
the three-mile limit at New York,
Paris. Sept. 2.1 A surprising nuni
her of hollow walkimr sticks, su.ta
blc for Ihe secret transportation of I and then twirl them under the very
liquids, arc being purchased in Paris
by American louriMs,
"W have just discovered that the
manufacturer of these canes ha so'd
more than 5.0HO this spring," said an
American customs service agent. "He
used lo make hollow canes contain
ing rapiers or rifle barn Is, but his
new line of canes for American tour
ists is keeping his factory so busy
that he has abandoned his old lines.
"The whisky ranes arc so heavy
that they have a capacity of one pint.
eyes of the customs officers. The
cam s are made in various styles and
a tourist might have several others
among his luggage.
The trick is now doomed, how
ever, as the customs agenls at Paris
have already tipped off the customs
service at New York, which will
probably be drilling holes in all sus
pected canej soon.
Notice
IE;
Special
Te teacher
and families
without mmic.
FOR RENT
AT LOWES :
PRICES
80 axccllrjit uprights ami
grand piano.
I'rea tuning. Frea iniuranca.
Cltoica of 20 different high
grade make. Finest stock in
city lo select from.
Rent allowed if purchased.
Schmoller & Mueller
ISI4-IS IS B TsLphon
Dtdtt st. nano co. do.
Add a little salt to gisolinc before!
you clean your clothes with it. I
SPECIAL
Sunday Dinner 'JQ
Bring lha Family.
Melba Grill
203S Farnom St. Omaha.
DV-. J a.
iT'eSl
AIVKiiTit.MlKVr.
u-els rf the wo. Id tid k V' '1",1 i
i.y, i n ! potent I'utt t'ir .
lit. ", I
l,f ftl ltlit4 fc I
. . . i i.i.ij.. kn .i a,,! w irsl mini'
I l... ..i i.J ftoia .! .ln I Mil,,.,,,,,,,, tiu.lnr.r ill III H
. . .. ' '"' , ii,,.. i, no iioihiy '". wl (!,(
,. IM. ' ,,,,, 1. iMe.t i.i.t 4k-
.1. 1 ( il -s. I ia) s..11ir. .1 .1 - . ' 1 .. 1 . . 1 1
luuv jO hi i. " muni no: n n im " 'ihhhi - .i i i
-M t n 1 1 iim. '
RUPTURE
EXPERT HERE
SEELEY, FAMOUS IN THIS SPE
CIALTY, CALLED TO OMAHA.
V, H. Seeley of Chicago nnd Phil
adelphia, the noted truss expert,
will personally he at tho Puxtn
Hotel, nnd will re main in Omi'hii
this Sunday tmd Monday only, Sep
tember k'4 25, Mr. Seeley' say:
"The Spermatic Shield w ill imt only
reUtin any ess of rupture perfect
ly, but contracts the opening in 10
days on th average- case. Being h
vast H'lvanenii'iit over all former
method.! t'ltmphfyinsT instailtane-
1 Punisli mr f' f the sin and crime . elfeets biinii'diately aptri -eiahlo 1
a! t'ie proptr ot 11011411, ion spaieiami w iiniaiiuiiig any stium or po
tht ill, O I .rd' l't tlir lo piece jn l ltMOI no matter th ! or I
cuttir mv hr to the wmd. I dut , tom. Litrgi or dl'liutt c-ise. or in.
'i'iii t i v 1 1' ' n l lo I for lha iitiunal ruuturet ( fulljw liiir i.pera-
in iiiul vvuVrliifi ol my '-O) te,j tmh ) SpeclMlly llclted. I'll ln-
in 1, iii.ifi I I will puinc il'y ,iuiii I'rimriit rctiv th only avtsrei
punislieit sin
and wickedness with
luiiual ialamit.i. We do not come
to utter our complaint, but we hum
b!y implore thy merry. O, have mer
ry upon mr, Feng Yn-hsi.itiK, mi
tf.iUr mnnir Punish me alone and
iiMif !l Ihe people (A Ihe province.
MOTOR CAR FINISH
I nrgrtt 1 1 i its lto.it in
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Brush on the finish that
takes off the years
ON the road, the age of your car fa
a secret. It is judged by its looks 1
Are you proud of it? Has it a dull
dingy appearance ?
Why not make it glow and glisten
again as though it never had a birth
day? You can do the job yourself
and at small cost with Devoe
Motor Car Finish.
This product is self ' leveling and
"sets" so smooth that the car looks
"professionally refinished'Extremely
durable rust-preventing made in
standard automobile colors.
Devoe Products are time-tested and
proven, backed by the 168 years'
experience of the oldest paint manu
facturing concern in the U. S.
Founded 1754.
Soli by th Vo h yomr rommunity
Devoe Raynolds Co., Inc.
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C, C. JOHNSON
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Kl NWOOtJ DKUG CO.
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W. J. MAN5MIID
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DUNDrC PLUMBING
AND IIAKDWAHK
10th nU arnm Sis,
HUNT A I LINN
191 1 tV ft,
VINION IIAKDWAKE
COMPANY
2310 Vinlar ?l.
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