The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, March 20, 1923, Page 2, Image 2

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    WE SOON FORGET.
, YOU CANT SMILE AND
\ THINK.
PRAYERS FOR SALESMEN.
^By ARTHUR BRISBANE^
This is the anniversary of
Grover Cleveland’s birthday. He
would be 8(5 years old this morn
ing How little that means to
90.000,000 of 110,000,000 living
Americans.
Those that took interest in
Cleveland’s defeat of James G.
Blaine in 1884 are getting old.
Blaine seems part of “old Ameri
can history.” Cleveland’s action in
the Venezuelan incident will give
him a paragraph in real histories
—perhaps. In 14 years will come
a few short paragraphs about the
100th anniversary of his birth.
After that, silence.
You must do something real to
be remembered. Merely getting
into the White House is not
enough.
Three of all presidents mean
something to the world. Washing
ton, Jefferson, Lincoln. The others
are mere names in books and
Jefferson would be forgotten ex
cept that he wrote the Declaration
of Independence, and democrats
find him useful to quote—espe
cially when they are unlike him.
We are soon forgotten, even
those that, for a moment, seem
big among us. Let that comfort
you, if you hate the thought of
oblivion, under the grass.
An important Chinese official
'ays to Mons Andre Gide: “You
Europeans everywhere have on
your faces an expression of sad
ness and care. You know every
science, except the science of hap
piness.”
Mons Gide says: T admired
his tranquil smile as he said this.’’
Back of that tranquil smile are
hundreds of millions that have
seen no progress for centuries,
women in millions that work like
beasts of burden, carrying coal on
their heads to supply British ships.
Back of that smile are regions
periodically cursed with starvation.
Lueky for countries, including
nut- own, in which European races
rule, that their able men are care
worn and sad. The world needs
men that take its troubles serious
ly. A “tranquil smile” is pretty, on
a Chinese or other face. But you
cannot smile and think at the same
lime. Smiling stops thinking, think
ing stops smiling. Tell that to the
man who has “keep smiling”
pasted above his desk.
Nature is kind to us when we
are old. She keeps us from want
ing what we cannot have, usually,
and turns our faces toward the
past, beautified by the setting sun
•ind away from the ominous future.
“Uncle Joe” Cannon, retiring
after 80, tells the Washington re
porters: “Why bless you, I have
plenty to do. I will roam around
my farm, read and perhaps write
-ome. AND THINK OF THE
GOOD OLD DAYS.”
Some men worry about the fires
of hell as death comes near. Others
mourn possessions that must be
left behind. Charles the Fifth left
all his power, retired to a
monastery—and lived there worry
ing. Women, too many of them,
waste the happiness of old age in
grieving over beauty departed—
and never very valuable.
Lucky th ';!d that can find
peace in com mplating “the good
old days;” still more fortunate
old age that is content to replace
action with thought and contem
plation of the universe and of the
magnificent future of mankind on
this planet.
We arc a practical race. Ask the
Rev. Dr. Fosdick, head of New
York City’s biggest Presbyterian
church. He strives worthily to con
vince Americans that immortality
is real, that this life is not what
Balfour said must be “a brief and
discreditable episode on one of the
minor planets” to one denying
immortality.
Dr. Fosdick tells you that he
once wrote “a little book on
prayer,” of which a great corpora
tion head ordered 500 copies.
These were given to the chief em
ployes of that corporation, with a
message from the chief, “if you
can get a real grip on a faith like
that IT’S GOING TO MEAN THE
GREATEST YEAR THIS COM
PANY EVER HAD.”
Isn’t that deliciously business
like? The “little book on prayer”
was not to land the 5O0 salesmen
safe in heaven. It was to give that
• corporation the biggest year it
ever had, by giving the salesmen
“faith” to go out and sell more
stove blacking, or whatever the
corporation had to sell. That cor
poration head will die rich.
Ireland, with ail her sorrows,
was paying as much as $0 to see
the black Senegalese Siki fight
the Celt McTigue. And the Free
State troops were out to protect
the prize fight from the "repub
licans” that wanted to break it up.
On this side of the Atlantic, the
police were out to protect, the St..
Patrick’s day parade from the
Irish republicans that had “served
warning.” The Tory English that
always said the Irish could not
govern themselves are quoted by
Bernard Shaw as “much elated.”
Forty French soldiers are re
ported killed in the Ruhr -more
trouble. .
£ • lull aaiiaaaaaaaaaiaaaaa • •
I Buy Easter Styles
N-O-W
- Best Prices Obtainable
- IHI5 I ur mu
I A
Cold Spell Broken
ill Nebraska-Iowa
(Continued "from Pas* One.)
train stalled near Arlington from Sat
urday evening until early Monday
morning.
Snowdrifts as high as the locomo
tive made an impassable wall. Sun
day a crew of more than 100 men at
tacked the drifts and the passengers
were returned to Fremont the same
night, continuing eastward over the
Union Pacific.
The Union Pacific, Burlington, Mis
souri Pacific. Chicago. Milwaukee &
St. Paul. Rock Island and the Chicago
& Northwestern reported their
trains were running only slightly be
hind schedule Monday.
Omaha Recovering.
Omaha, with the cold wave broken,
proceeded about business yesterday
morning. Schools were reopened and
Clto-Cho, health clown, will resume
his program in public schools today.
Fairacres looked down from its
Dodge street heights yesterday, cut
off from the rest of the city by deep
snowdrifts. Tractors began work to
force paths. Many of the homes will
suffer want from lack of food and
fuel if openings are not effected soon.
Train Reing Dug Out.
Officials at the weather hureau of
fice said Monday the heack of Omaha's
cold wave is broken.
Steadily rising temperature is pre
dicted with continued sunshine. Tem
perature of 21 degrees abov e zero was
recahed Monday afternoon.
Railroad traffic, which was virtual
ly paralyzed Sunday, made giant
strides toward recovery Sunday night
and Monday was rapidly approaching
normal. Tito Great Western alone re
mained a severe sufferer and was
operating no passenger trains.
One of its freight trains was still
stalled in snow at 11 near Clarion,
la., where the road suffered most, and
400 laborers were digging it out. The
relief brigade took food to the train
crew.
Rock Island train No. S. the Rocky
Mountain Limited, from Denver, ar
rived 10 hours late at 6:3S Monday
morning, with 52 passengers, after
having been stalled Sunday at Jan
sen. Neb. Officials said the train was
kept warm and supplied with food.
Omaha schools were open Monday
with tlte exception of the two-room
annex at Fairfax school at Forty
fourth street and Kansas avenue. The
building was virtually snowed in.
Beatrire Hard Hit.
Beatrice, Neb., March 19.—(Special.)
—As the result of the blizzard yes
terday highways leading to the city
ate blocked with snow and railroad
traffic is hard hit. No trains reached
tfce city yesterday, but today the
Burlington managed to get a train
through to Lincoln. The Union Pa
cific annulled trains between here and
Lincoln this forenoon, and the Rock
island was also out of commission.
It will be at least 24 hours before
lines through here will be opened for
traffic. Much damage resulted to tele
graph and telephone lines. The storm
was especially severe on stock.
Falls City, Neb.. March 19.—(Spe
cial Telegram.)—Falls City Is shiver
ing today in the coldest temperature
registered here in 15 years, the mer
cury falling to 9 degracs below zero
at 7 a. m., a drop of 69 degrees since
Saturday afternoon. Sunday's snow
fall here was over three inches.
Heavy Lo§8 of Livestock
from Blizzard Reported
Lincoln, March 19 —(I. N. S.)—After
12 hours of disastrous activity, one
of the worst blizzards of years began
to abate late yesterday evening. Low
temperatures, high wind and snow
combined to make it serious for trans
portation interests throughout the
state and stockmen in the range coun
try to the west reported a heavy live
stock loss, the exact amount of which
I could not be estimated until they were
able to go on the range.
The record at Lincoln was a 60
: mile wind, four inches of snow and
■ seven degrees below zero. At 7 o’clock
Monday morning the temperature w»s
| 1 below, but the skies were clear and
I no snow was falling.
Farly Day Stockman Die«.
Beatrice, Neb, March 19.-—W. T.
Gore, farmer and stock raiser of Lib
erty. Neb., who bought stock along
the southern division of the Burlington
in an early day, died suddenly last
night, aged 70 years. Three brothers
survive.
Lou Tellegen Described as “Don Juan”
of Stage and Seashore in Divorce Suit
Two ‘‘Strikingly Beautiful”
Women Named as Corespon
dents by Witnesses for
Geraldine Farrar.
New York, March 19.—(A5)—Lou Tel
legen, actor, who is being sued for
divorce by Geraldine Farrar, former
Metropolitan Opera star, was described
as a "Don Juan" of the stage, seashore
and ghetto, by witnesses testifying for
the diva before Referee Thomas B.
Mahony.
These witnesses named two "strik
ingly beautiful" young women as co
respondents. One was Miss Lorna Am
bler, an Australian actress. The other
was referred to only as “Miss L,” an
American actress who played in the
same company with Tellegen in 1911.
A third woman, said to he known in
San Francisco as Bessie Clifford, was
named in the complaint, but no no u
tlon was made of her today.
Describes "Month of Bliss.”
Two of the witnesses, W. F. Beers
and Louis Malthaner, owners of bun
galows In a colony on Long Beach; de
scribed a “month of bliss" spent in
July, 1921 by Tellegen and Miss Am
bler in a cottage facing the sea.
Mr. Beers said he rented one of his
bungalows to a man named Rankin,
said to b^Teliegen’s secretary. Ran
kin snd his wife spent several days in
the bungalow before Tellegen and the
other young woman arrived. Mr. Beers
sair he did not pay much attention to
the occupants of the house, but that be
knew they lived there. Several times
he saw them on the beach.
Wore Bathing Suits.
Malthaner declared he didn't know
who Tellpgcn was even after he had
been told his nam», but that he talked
and hobnobbed with him on occasions.
Tellegen and the girl, he said, made
dally excursions on the water in Tel
legen's boat. Tellegen always left the
cottage first and vent to the dock and
tlie girid would follow later by another
route. Most times they wore bathing
suits.
Beers and Malthaner Identified s
photograph of Tellegen and the girl
as the couple who spent the month
at the Long Island resort and de
parted after Tellegen had received a
letter from his wife's lawyers.
When Tellegen returned to New
York, testimony showed he was trailed
night and day by detpcti\es In Au
gust Mrs. Ambler went to live with
friends in a studio apartment on the
top floor of a house on West Thirty
seventh street. Norman Fitzsimmons,
private detectivp, said he followed
Tellegen to this house on numerous
occasions and that the actor met tlie
girl in the vestibule. Invariably, lie
said, they embraced in tlie shadows
and then went for long walks, wind
ing in and out side streets and often
into the ghetto on the lower east side,
where they sopped in Italian tea
taurant for midnight suppers.
“They seemed very much taken
with eai li ether." he testified.
Divides Attention.
In September, after the opening of
Don Juan with Tellegen in the title
role, the actor began dividing his
attentions between Mias Ambler and
Miss “L." according to Fitzsimmons
Immediately after the performances
he would hall a taxi and take Mias
“I, ' to her home on Riverside Drive,
sper.<3 a moment or two with her In
tl.e hallway and then go down town
to meet Mies Ambler.
One night In September. Fi'zsim
rnons continued, he followed Tellegen
and Miss “L" to, a bench overlook
ing the river in' a dark place on
Riverside drive.
At this point the referee asked
newspaper men to depart, as Samuel
l ntermyer. counsel for Miss Farrar
thought the testimony to come would
be “unfit for their ears.”
Damage in Storm Is
Figured in Millions
<<»ntimird From rag* One.)
morning but later in the day the
temperature rose to 10 *bove.
Nearly 100 fire alarms were sound
ed in Chicago for the 14-hour period
ending tonight. Most of the fires
were in cottages and flats, duo to de
fective heating apparatus. Many
families were forced to flee from their
homes in the cold.
Heath* Hue to Storm.
Among the deaths traceable to the
storm and cold was that of George
Clark, a bank bookkeeper of La
Crosse. Wis. He attempted to cut th‘>
ice that threatened to crush his hous"
boat In the Mississippi river, when he
stepped Into a hole ahd was swept
under the Icc by the swift current.
At New Virginia. Ia . Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Brainerd, more than V year*
of age. were burned to death when
their home caught fire.
Two men were frozen to death st
Rockford. III. A woman was frozen to
death in Chicago. She was found In a
snowbank, where the authorities be
lieve she fell exhausted, as a bllzgard
raged last night.
Four persons were report'd dead
from the cold in Colorado, three of
these being children who tost their
way In a blizzard while going to a
mall ho*
H ore* of town* throughout the m.d
Children's Diseases
usually respond readily to our methods.
If you are in doubt about your case, you can
investigate in safety, as no qualified practitioner
will accept a case he cannot help.
The Thomas Chiropractic Offices
1712 Dodire Street Gardner Bldf. AT lantic 1293
A WORD TO PATRONS OF
THE BEDDEO CLOTHING CO.
Our Main Floor Office is
Open as Usual to Receive
Payments on Accounts
The same spirit of progressiveness that is responsible
for the remarkable growth of this store, is again in
evidence directing the work of readjustments forced
upon us by the damaging fire of Sunday morning.
SELLING OF MERCHANDISE IS
TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED
We shall be in a position to serve your apparel needs
within a few days.
Watch Papers for Future Announcements
Beddeo Clothing Co.
| 1417 Douglas Street
i
dlewest were cut off from w re com
munlcatlon today arid It was feared
the number of casualties would he
greatly Increased when reports from
these points have been received.
Freezing weather extended far down
In Texas and Oklahoma. At San An
tonio. Tex. the Oisnt and WKltw Sox
ball teams were forced to postpone a
s.-heduled practice game boos ts* of
the cold.
Former Omaha
Physician Dead
IJr. P. JI. Mr^arthy Succumbs
After <)peration —Widow
Was Miss Julia Stafford.
Butte. Mont,. Mutch 19 -'tSpeclal j—
Dr. II. I’ M't'arthy. who (lied nt
Rochester, Minn , following nri opei i
tinn. formeily practiced in Omaha. He
was born In Hancock, Mich., remov
ing with his family to O'Neill, Neb.
After his graduation there he went to
Colorado, where be worked In thi
mines. Coming to Butte, he worked
in the mines until be had provided
himself with funds with which
he entered Creighton Medical c-olk-g*
in Omaha in 1898, graduating In 1902
with the M. D. degree, lie became
professor of chemistry and physiology
at the Fremont, Neb., normal sehool.
In 1903 he became an interne at the
Presbyterian hospital at Omaha. A
year afterward he returned to Butte
to take up the practice of medicine.
lie was married in 190r> In Omaha
to MBs Julia Stafford, daughter of
Michael Stafford, superintendent, of
construction of the Chicago A North
western railroad. A daughter was born
to them in 1910,
When the war broke out Dr. Me
Carthy offered himself f--r enlistment
and was finally accepted given tin
rank of captain and assigned to th<
development battalion at Fort Ben
jamin Harrison, Indianapolis. When
the war ended he was made president
of tho demobilization board. He was
mustered out of service in December,
191*.
Besides his wife and daughter, he Is
survived by bis mother, Mrs. Mary
Hanley of Billings, ard one brother,
two half-brothers and two half sisters
Burial was In Butte.
Hardware Store Robbed.
Diller. Neb., March 19 —(Special.)—
The Runke hardware store at Jansen,
a small town north of in re, was rob
bed Friday night of nearly J100 cash
and goods to a like amount, prim ipally
pocket knives, firearms and ammuni
tion. It Is thought to lie the work of
tramps Sheriff Tippens is on the case.
Would you give
freedom and fortune
to remain in an insane
asylum with the wom
an you love? Irvin S.
Cobb answers in his
story, “The Eminent
Dr. Deeves”
in APRIL
(5sjnopolitan
at all news stands
Two Men Overcome by Oas
Kuines from Motor Iruek
T. S. Cntlschalk, 1!*33 South Fifty
first street, and O. It. BUg, &14
South Twenty-third street, were over
Co me l.y fumes from the exhaust Ol
a mot or truck on which they wen
working in a garage belonging *'
Fames It. Rrainly. They were db
covered by Rrainly, who carried then
outside. Both recovered.
&mpn Mtm & (Co.
(,I\E Ii EH HOSIERY I OR EASIER
Fine Table Linens
Specially Priced
Hemstitched Damask Sets.
1 cloth 54 by 54 inches, hemstitched,
tj napkins, 15 by 15 ins., hemstitched.
$12 a Set
Damask Breakfast Sets.
1 cloth. 45 by 45 inches, hemstitched.
6 napkins, 15 by 15 ins., hemstitched.
$10 a Set
Pure Irish Linen Napknis.
A heavy, snow-white, sturdy quality
of pure linen damask in most attrac
tive designs, 20 by 20 inches.
$4.75 a Dozen
Introducing a Smart New Sandal
and Slippers for Dress Wear in
Springtime Footwear
Some women simply will not wear high
heels, so for those desirous of the very
low flat heel we offer this new sandal
with the patent vamp and beige suede
quarter. Another outstanding feature
is the broad instep strap, which fastens
with two buttons.
Price $9
For Dress Wear—A new model is shown
in patent and satin, with two narrow
straps and Spanish heel.
Price $10
These models hare the new
short ramp and round toe.
I I
THE FOUR-PASSENGER TOURING
Now the days begin to lengthen.
Soon the birds will be singing and the
open highways will lx* coaxing you.
Then, Hire many another, you will feel
the lure of the open car.
The Pierce-Arrow Four-Passenger
which is illustrated, appeals especially
to the nun or woman who desires a
personal car, yet with capacity to per
mit the companionship of family or
frienda.
Center arm rests divide both front
CWd Car*. *7000
and rear seats into two individual
armchairs, deeply cushioned, finished
like fine furniture and supremely com
fortable. These rests are removable.
This trim, smart model is mounted
upon the standard Pierce-Arrow
chassis. Power is furnished by the
Dual-Valve. Dual-Ignition, Pierce
Arrow- Six-Cylinder engine.
We invite you to inspect and test
this and other current Pierce-Arrow
open cars.
Op«n Cars. $5250
At HitfaJo. Hot 7ai Additional
Fred C. Hill Motor Co.
21 *t and Leavenworth Streets Omaha, Neb.
JA ckson 4250 ,