The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, December 20, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    Klan Wizard Not
Impressed by Allen
Texas Alan Says He Cannot
^ aste Time With Gover
nor to Disruss Empire.
Washington. Dec. in.—Emphasizing
* that he had not sought the conversa
tion be had yesterday with Governor
Allen, Dr. H. W. Evans of Dallas,
Tex , imperial wizard of the Ku Klux
Klan. said today he had "listened to
Mr. Allen two or three minutes In
which ho said he was In hearty sym
pathy with the klan principles, hut
tegistered seine objection to the klan
legalia."
The klan mask will never be taken
off. he asserted, saying it was part of
the organizations lodge regalia ami
never would he abolished.
"I came to Washington on impor
tant business,'' said Dr. Evans, "anil
had no intention of wnsing any time
with Mr. Allen. It makes little or
no dlfferenre what Governor Allen
says, and what he does means even
less.”
Tbs new imperial wizard of the in
visible empire held confab with klan
officials in his hotel here today, hut
no hint of what was considered was
disclosed. lie was accompanied to
AVashlngton by a group of high offi
cials of the order.
“The spirit of klan craft," he said,
"lias enwrapped the United States In
a mantle of love for country which
designing and ambitions politicians
cannot break, and in a few brief years
the Influence of the klan will have
so engulfed the thought of the country
that we can expect intelligent legis
lation from the congress of the Unit
ed States which will drag down the
white flag of supine inertia from our
legislative halls and raise in its place
t he militant flag of red, whiteand blue,
whleh means the thing nenrest the
heart of every real American.”
Parents’ Problems
Should children have few or ninny
hooka and playthings?
A normal child In good health
should not be sated with playthings,
as more enjoyment can lie obtained
from a few. A few well-chosen play
things will teach the children to create
as well as to preserve, while many
will develop the most natural trait in
children—to destroy. . As to books, a
child cannot have too many, but they j
should be rhosen with great care. |
Thay should bo very simple; but '
above all try to avoid developing the
mind faster than the body.
Pins of metal were made by hand In
the Sixteenth century, and were very
costly.
"Pete” Gone: Doctor Mourns
Omaha Surgeon Believes English Setter, Brought
Here for Hunting Trip, on Way Back to Cherry
County Ranch.
"Pete" Is gone and Dr. J. E. Sum
i mtrs, his owner, is w rapped in
I gloom.
“He's such a wonderful dog. and so
I affectionate, an’ everything," the
noted surgeon nius^d as he sat at his
I desk in his offices in the Rrundeis
: theater building yesterday morning
i and showed koda i pictures of “Pete "
pointing prairie chickens, retrieving
! and just sitting with his lug ears
j hanging down.
“Pete" is an English setter. As the
advertisement in the lost and found
I column of The Omaha Hee says:
Lost—black and "hits setter dog,
earn black. face white, large black
■pot on back, aired 7 yeafs. Reward.
Call T. J. O’Brien, HA. 1094
Breaks Chain.
Dr. Summers and some of his
j friends were going quail hunting In
Missouri. So the doctor sent for his
dog, which he keeps on his ranch !n
Cherry county. When “Pete" ar
rived he was tied up in Mr, O’Brien's
barn, 31)10 Barnaul street.
Bast Saturday bo broke his chain
and departed. He didn’t care for the
lug city and probably turned his
nose westward for his home, 400
miles away.
"I really believe he’s on his way to
Cherry county,” sail! the surgeon as
he passed his hand over his eyes.
"And that dog is just smart enough
to cover the 400 weary, frozen miles.
Why he used to run after a Hudson
ear from Rushville to the ranch. 44
miles, and tin • lie fresh to go right
out on a hunt. He’s a wonderful dog.
not worth much in money, perhaps,
but just smart and affectionate and
everything. He’s a great favorite
with Fred Hamilton. Nets Fpdike.
Dick Stewart and Bert Carpenter, as
well as with me. Nels has his half
brother.”
False Alarm.
Monday a man called up and said
he had found the dog. Pr. Summers
leaped into his big^ car and rushed
to the address.
“But it didn't look any more like
‘Pete' than a cat," he said sadly.
And so the doctor sits and hopes
and pictures the faithful "I’» ■'■ plod
ding the tveary miles town f Cherry
county, guided only by lliaii mysteri
ous instinct of the canine family.
lie prays that ."l’ete" will arrive
Rifely or that he will be found and
returned.
A liberal reward awaits the person
who finds poor "Pete" and notifies
his owner.
Feature Transactions
of Livestock Exchange
Two loads of shortfed yearlings
were brought to the Omaha market
yesterday by Fred Nollet1, farmer ami
feeder of Mankato, Kan., which were
Bold for $7 a hundred.
This is the first trip Mr. Noller has
ever made to Omaha wim livestock
and he said he was quite pleased with ,
the prices he received and the profits i
made.
"I have quite a number of cattle in
my feed lot and butcher all the beeves,
marketing only feeders and stockers,"
said Mr. Noller, who is a butcher at
Mankato as well as a farmer and
feeder.
A consignment of 17 head of well
fattened light steers were brought to
the stockyards by John Bruhn from
Neola, la. The cattle averaged 1,128
pounds and brought $10.50 a hundred.
Besides the 17 head, there were also
two steers of the same weight that
sold for $9.50 a hundred; two year
lings, a steer and a heifer, that sold
for $9 a hundred and one choice cow j
weighing 1,550 pounds that sold fori
an even $7 a hundred.
-
1
& CHRISTMAS
Fruit Cake
Specially packed in Japanese Lacquered
box, weighing about a pound and a
quarter, for—
$125
A tasteful dainty—a pretty gift.
Cakes and Pastry for your holiday table
can be obtained here—and they’re sure to
V just the thing to complete your dinner.
. Diihtgpjones
BUTTERMIUC 8HOP llllfl
lilt. .illlfll
NOFTHVUST CORNi* FAKNAM JTS,
Think!
Before You Buy
What kind of a car does compare with
Cadillac at its present price?
Check up other fine 8-cylinder cars
and some fine sixes, with the present
Cadillac.
Think of this present 1923 Cadillac at
1917 prices! What service and what
car are equal to Cadillac?
Now, isn’t it much better to buy a really
good car at the right price, and receive
complete satisfaction in the long run?
Don't you think Christmas Morning
delivery would be a wonderful sur
prise and a lasting joy to the whole
family?
J.H.Hansen Cadillac Company
Omaha
Lincoln
Sioux City
| Grand Inland C. of C. Will
Employ Rail Rato Expert
Grand Island, Neb., Dec. 19.—(Spe
cial Telegram.)—By unanimous vote,
the board of 25 directors of the Cham
her of Commerce had adopted the re
port of a special committee favoring
employment of Railroad Hate Expert
Edward Tryan by the chamber, such
services to be available to all mem
bers of the chamber during any ship
ping period. The board of governars
is proceeding at once to perfect de
tails of the arrangement whereby
Grand Island will present a solid front
in efforts to obtain equitable rates.
All Bids on Bakery at
Beatrice School Rejected
Lincoln, Nob., Dec. 10.—(Special.)—•
The board of control rejected all bids
on n $15,000 bakery building at the
Beatrice institution for feeble minded
and called for new bids January 2,
construction work to be started April
1. The lowest bid on the structure
without light, heat or plumbing was
$14,870, presented by .1. F. Koeser of
Exeter. A hospital building at that
institution will be ready for occu
pancy within 60 days.
Pharaoh’s Tomb
Seen by American
Magnificent Equipment Re
veals Wealth and Splendor
of Imperial Age in Egypt.
London. Dec. 19.—The archeologl
cal treasures of the recently discover
id tomb of King Tutenkhamon in
the Valley of the Kings were describ
ed today by the American exyptolo
gist, James II. Breasted, in a tele
gram to the Cairo correspondent of
the Times from Luxor
"I sjient an hour in Tutenkha
mon's tomb this afternoon, “ Dr.
Breasted said in his dispatch. "The
impression is overwhelming. The
dispatches but feebly suggested the
marvelous reality, it. is a sight 1
never dreamed of seeing.
"The antechamber of the Pha
raoh's tomb is tilled with magnificent
equipment, which only the wealth
and splendor of tlie imperial age of
Egypt of the fourteenth century be
fore Christ could have wrought or
conceived and with everything stand
ing as placed there when the tomb
was last closed in antiquity.
“Two facts are evident: First, it Is
clear that the place is Pharaoh's
tomb, and no mere cache. Behind
the remaining unopened sealed door
way we must expect to find the burial
chamber where the Pharaoh still lies
in royal magnificence. Second, we
have here a royal burial very little
disturbed, in spite of the hurried
plundering it suffered at tho hands
of the ancient tomb robbers.
"In mere quantity of furniture
found it far surpasses sli precedent
In quality It is an astonishing revela
tion of the beauty and refinement of
Egyptian art at the culmination of
its development in the imperial age,
quite surpassing anything I ever
imagined.”
A spark plug, with two firing ends,
has been developed that claims the
three advantages of a spark lntensi
fier, a tell-talo and an extra plug.
SAVE 25 to 50%
on Any Kind of
Typewriter
We sell all kinds, guar
antee them to give 100%
service and back up our
words with action.
All-Makes Typewriter Co.
20S South 18th Street
At Our
Cost
14.50
At Our
Cost
8.50
to
14.50
What could be a better
gift than one of the fa
mous Bradley-Hubbard
Bronze and Art Glass
Table Lamps?
We have a limited number of these fine lamp*
tq, offer at the above low prices. These will
not last long, so make your selection early.
Was Your Bedroom Cold
This Morning?
A Welsbach Ga« Heater would make it toasty
warm. Also fine for bathroom*, cold
kitchens or anywhere extra heat is wanted.
SPECrAL PRICES:
Were 12.50, Now 9.00
Some Shopworn at 6.25
During Christmas Week Our Sales Floor Will
Remain Open Until 9 P. M., Ending Satur
day, December 23.
Open Every Saturday Afternoon
GAS DEPARTMENT
1509 Howard Tel. AT. 5767
__i
Mrs. Keeline Given
Divorce and Alimony
Selma B. Keeline was awarded a
divorce decree against John B. Kee
j line. Council Bluffs sportsman, capl
I t:ilist and chicken fancier, in district
! court in the Bluffs yesterday.
She also was awarded $$.500 ali
mony. In her petition she asked for
$50,000 alimony and accused her hus
band of extreme cruelty.
Descriptions of a raid on the Kee
! line home, when two women were
I found there by Mrs. Keeline upon
her unexpected return from the west,
i tended to make the divorce hearing
j sensational.
Chicken Thief Convicted.
Beatrice, Neb., Dec. 19.—(Special
Telegram.)—The jury in the case of
I the state against Francis South,
charged with stealing chickens from
John Evans, farmer living: north of
the city, returned a verdict of guilty. I
Tom Day, alleged pal of South, is
being tried on a similar charge.
Attacked by Rheumatism
in Damp Jail; Asks Damages ,
Lincoln, Dec. 19.—(Special.)—Wil
liam Jurgenson, who spent two,
months in the county Jail on t
charge of having failed in his legal
duty to support his dependents, now
wants $5,000 from the county be
cause the jailer allowed the water to
stand for five days in a basement.
As a result. Williams says, he suffer
cd an attack of rheumatism that has
caused him much distress and from
which he is destined to suffer for a
long time. The claim lias hern re
jected hy the county boanl and an
appeal is threatened.
I Sixteen hundred pictures per second
is the newest achievement in taking
cinematograph photos.
(PleosH?%lmi
Here Are Useful Gifts for Men
Silver Buckled Belts
anti Phoenix Hosiery
Both Malt*
Splendid La»t
Minute Gifta
“Every Man Knows
Our Quality Clothes’’
Buy Gifts tor Men
in n Man's Store
S. E. CORNER
16TH A HARNEY
ji
ess-Nash Com
tjfie C/ivistmas Store for 6vert/J5odtf
Not Too Late to Have a
Grand for Christmas
We have just received a few late shipments of
Chickering and Fischer Grands
We urge’you to select while complete stocks make it pos
sible for you to choose with greatest satisfaction. We will ar
range the terms that are most convenient to you.
Piano Shop—Fifth Floor
Christmas Records
In selecting rec
ords avail your
self of our ap
proval plan that
permits you to
play them at
home.
Other Gift
Suggestions
“Victrola Book of the Opera.”
Record Gear Repeaters.
Children's “Bubble Books.”
“Bobolink Books.’ ’
Health and Reducing Records.
Phonograph Shop—Fifth Floor
WE WILL DELIVER
NEW EDISON
FOR
_Any Amount
Fill In Your Own First Payment
i
Balance on Terms to Suit Your Convenience
Edison
Invented
It
Edison
Manufactures
It
The Edison
Has No Needles
to Change
Plays
All Makes of
Records
Even Records of All Other Makes Sound Better When Played on the Edison
HEAR THE NEW MODELS
W e have just added a new line of popular priced Edisons.
These new models make the Edisori the least expensive
high grade phonograph in the world.
CONSOLE MODELS (Flat Top) $135.00, $175.00, $295.00, $325.00
UPRIGHT MODELS, $60.00, $75.00, $100.00, $145.00, $200.00, $245.00, $295.00
Don’t
Delay
Shultz Brothers
Buy
Now
“THE EDISON SHOP”
16th and Howard
Open Evenings ’Til Christmas
16th and Howard