The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, April 05, 1923, Page 11, Image 11

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    Red Oak Farmer
, Finds Feeding
Corn Profitable
spring Planting la Held Back
Due to Unfavorable Weath
er—Ground Ear Corn
Urged as Feed.
Two loads of cattle, made up of
Shorthorn and Herefords. were
brought to the Omaha stockyards by
Adolph Tiarks of McClelland, la. Of
ihe shipment 19 head were well fin
ished steers averaging 1.372 pounds,
md sold for $9.20 a hundred. In the
'■onsignment six steers averaged
1,101 pounds, for which he received
an even 39 a hundred. He also had
six choice cows that sold for $6.T5 a
hundred.
Profit in Feeding.
tied Oak, Ia^. was represented on
lie Omaha.livestock market by C. E.
Alarquart, who came in with two
loads of 2-year-old steers averaging
1,060 pounds that sold for $9 a hun
dred.
According to Mr. Marquart, com
fed to cattle this year is bringing bet
ter than what it sell* for on the mar
ket. He said corn In Ills section was
• selling for 63 cents a bushel and that
he bought corn last fall for 55 cents
a bushel.
"We had a heavy corn crop tills
year and there is plenty of grain left,
hut farmers holding it. Spring work
has been held back by the unfavorable
weather. This is the first year that I
have been farming that I did not
plant my potatoes on Good Friday,
hut the ground was frozeijr so hard
ihat It was absolutely impossible.”
Lightweight Hogs Sold.
A nlcely-flnlshed load of lightweight
hogs was brought in from Amherst to
the Omaha yards by G. M. Eldredge.
There were 91 head In the shipment,
and they averaged 195 pounds, being
sold to an Omaha order buyer for
sS.05 r hundred.
Feeds Ground Ear Com.
A. J. Price came in from Elliott, la.,
to the Omaha market with two loads
of steers. He said ground ear corn
went further as a feed than either
shelled com or ear com. He said the
roughness furnished by the cob takes
the place of alfalfa, does not scour
cattle and makes a Bavtng of half on
hay. March storms evidently scared
the feeders out and made stock move
out more rapidly than usual, he said.
ITodies of 5 Boy* Found
on Crater of Volcano
Br Associated Press.
Wailuku, Island of Maui. T. H .
April 4.—The bodies of five young
Japaneae, members of a party of hik
ers. lost on the slopes of Halcakala
volcano last Sunday, were found today
below the rim of the crater. Ail of
them apparently had died from expo
sure.
Two of the bodies were found early
today about two miles below the rim
of the crater and the remaining three
were discovered a mile away. Search
of the mountainsides by cowboys, po
lice and others in an effort to rescue
the five missing hikers had been un
der way since they disappeared gun
da j'.
Train Conductor Cremated
in Cloverleaf Freight Wreck
Toledo, O.. April 1.—J. Flickinger.
conductor of a terminal tank train,
is believed dead and his body incin
erated beneath a mass of burned
v reckage following collision of a
Cloverleaf freight train and a termi
nal train made up of oil tankers.
Three other trainmen—J. Walding, a
dayman; A. TV. Thomas, engineer,
and TV. Farris, fireman, were prob
ably fatally injured as the result of
scalds and other hurts. The wreck
occurred when the Cloverleaf freight,
traveling at high speed, plowed
Hi rough the wooden caboose of the
1 orminal train.
Lausanne Conference
to Be Resumed April 15
London, April 4 —The Lausanne
conference will probably be resumed
April 15, in accordance with the Turk
ish proposal. Lord Curson, head of
the previous British delegation, will
not participate, 8ir Horace Rumbold,
British commissioner in Constantino
ple, taking his place.
Constantinople, April 4.—The Turk
ish delegation headed by Ismet Pasha
will probably start for Lausanne the
end of the week.
t '■ ■■■■ -. ..—
Earl of Canarvon Making
Hard Fight for Life
Cairo. Egypt, April 4.—The earl of
Canarvon’s friends virtually aban
doned last night any hope of his re
covery and the family gathered
around the bedside anticipating the
worst hut he rallied, never losing
consciousness. Today his tempera
ture was 101 and ho maintained thc
slight improvement noted last night
He was still weak but less depressed.
His physicians regard the fight for
life he is making as remarkable.
* Syracuse City Council
Make* Plans for Paving
sperlal Dispatch to The Omaha Be*.
Syracuse, Neb., April 4.—The vil
lage council passed an ordinance
forming paving district No. 1 for the
i,it—*r*<*ss flistrlct of the town, which
will be paved this summer. An engi
- er was employed.
Winners in Dramatics.
-ii-cisl Dispatch to The Omaha B**.
Geneva. Neb.. April 4.—First place
iri the dramatic class was awarded
.Maude Kumscy in the high school
contest. Her selection was “The
Little Rebel.” Rose ePterson was
liven second place on her reading
i-f "Within the Law." In the humor
ous class Velma Kuhns won first place
with "The Matinee" and Ralph
ReenAts second with “Jimmie Butler
md the Owl." The district contest,
which the winners enter, will be held
i Geneva April 24.
Dies on 88th Birthday Eve.
Special Dispatch to The Omaha Be*.
Falls City. Neb.. April 4. —
John Kloepfel, local pioneer who
vv Ith his Wife Inst Friday observed
their 61st wedding anniversary, died
<-f pneumonia this morning after an
Illness of but three days. Ib would
have celebrated his xsth birthday in
morrow.
►
Kin of William Henry Harrison
Runs Chicken Farm Near Omaha
- -- —— «
William Henry Harrison, III, uitli some of his chirks and Airedale pups?
William Henry Harrison, III. great
grandson of the ninth president of
the United States, is a chicken farm
er on the Dodge street road nine
miles west of Omaha's postoffice
building.
Today—the 82d anniversary of the
death of ills presidential forebear—
he is lord of 90 acres.
The lure of the soil was so great
that he turned aside from law class
es to enter agricultural college at
Lincoln and spent two years becom
ing a tiller of land..
He’s up with the sun every morn
ing and often is not finished with
his day’s work until midnight; incu
bators must be examined, the eggs
turned and heat made right, or eggs
must be fitted into trays and packed
with paper to keep them from fall
ing when they are turned mechanical
ly in lieu of the rolling they would
get were a hen to undertake the job.
Itlood Tells.
"Blood tells In chickens as well as
in men,’* Ilarrlson declared.
So he hatches nothing except eggs
from accredited flocks—those In
which the hens In their first year lay
no fewer than 95 eggs each.
The chicks he produces are sent by
mall in packages of 25 or 100 to
points scattered over all Omaha's
trade area.
His farm is now producing chicks
at the rate of 1,200 a week or 02,400
a year. Mail orders take care of the
output.
Twenty cents is the usual price for
a chick, and Harrison's figures show
that each costs 11 cents the day it
$50,000 Distillery Is
Seized Near Sioux City
Sioux City, la.. April 4. — Three
monster stills were seized by dry offi
cers in a raid conducted by police,
deputy sheriffs and Federal Agent
Striker on the farm of W. F. Pritch
ard, four miles southeast of Hin
ton, la. The plant, officers estimated,
cost In the neighborhood of $50,000.
One of the stills seized was of the
2,000 gallon variety. Another was
capable of producing 1,000 gallons of
hootch each day. and the third had
a capacity of 100 gallons.
Two men. \V. F. Pritchard and
Frank Hoffman, were arrested.
Eleven officers took part in the raid.
Lightning Fires Home.
Special Dispatch to The, Omaha He,
Geneva. Neb.. Aoril 4 ——Lightning
struck the ch.mney on the residence
of James Wvthers and set fire to the
roof of the house by burning out the
electric light meter and wirep. The
fire was extinguished before making
headway.
Cozad Stockmen Winners
in Salt Lake City Exhibition
Sperinl Phpttch to T'ne Omaha Ilee,
Cozad, Neb., Apr], 4.—With seven
carloads of fine stock from the vicin
ity of Coaad on exhibition at the Salt
Lake Clt>'o>tock show this year, the
N. Brownfield & Son won a first and
grand champion on aged steers; P.
Sf. Griffith and P. D. Balaton, second
and third: German and Anderson
first on hogs. O. J. Brownfield, second
and third. N. Brownfield A i^on also
won the grand champion prize on
single entry with a full-blood Short
horn steer less than « years old. All
other cattle entries from this com
munity were of Hereford breeding.
DR. ALLWINE
Specialist in painless (to the r*atient)
extraction, with gas and oxygen and
nerve blocking, and restoring lost teeth
by methoda—hrldge work and
teeth that fit and look natural. Ripe
experience in both.
412 Securities Bldg. AT 6663.
is delivered. That shows a pi of it of
41.241 on a year's output.
‘‘I’ve been four years getting
started,” Harrison said. "As my
reputation grows, the business and
profits, of course, will increase.
Breeds Airedale Dogs.
"r resided In Washington Severn!
years before I went to school at Lin
coln. If my Washington friends could
only see me now! They call me
'farmer,' hilt I'm everything—I paint,
plaster, cement, dig wells, doctor
livestock, repair machinery, and I
don’t know what; a man Just begins
to do things when he turns fanner.”
Besides nursing incubators late into
the night, one a machine capable of
producing 4,fi00 chicks at one hatch
ing. Harrison breeds Airedale dogs,
rhiefly for pleasure. He Is becoming
interested in the livestock Industry
and is putting in purebred hogs.
William Henry Harrison, I. planned
to become a doctor. He quit his
classes to join an Indian war army,
rose in rank, became a general In
the war of 1812 with power grealer
than any held by any officer since
the days of Washington, and was
elected president after a campaign in
which political mass meetings were
originated and some of the campaign
"fodder” was "log cabin and hard
cider."
Buns in Famllj.
A similar switch in educational
plans has made William Henry Har
rison, III. a farmer, but will he re
main contented?
"Politics runs in the family,” he
said, "and I occasionally feel the fires
burning In me. I'm content with my
choice, but on nights when work is
rot so heavy I turn to my law books.
We have all been politicians, and I
may some day run true to family
form.”
Harrison has named his farm Kal
orama and galls i; a chicken hatchery.
Qratn Eat.
I JBfw iftpowder oakts
gfvDCMMnV’** FosiiM*
90“ Avoid Imitation!—Substitute*
| “Mend your speech
1 Lest it mar your fortune”
I SAID SHAKESPEARE
Distributed by*
THE OMAHA BEE
1^ EW, Authoritative, Complete
Simple guide to comet use
of today’s English. Needed daily
in. home a nd office.
GEO. J. SiAGAR, Blurb CBM
CONTRIBUTIONS BY '
PERCY W. LONG. A.M.PV.D CLARK S. NORTHUP. Pfc Dl,
Harwfi UniiaaitT Coraafl UntramSy
rORREST S. LUNT. AM. MORRIS W. CROLL, Pk. D.,
CaJamki. Uarraraty Prmcafoa Uni-ar.it,
JOHN C. ROUTE. PV D..
Uw-wiity af Paaaqkaab
Oar nominal I
offer makes it
almost a gift
Yours for
Only 3
C«Vom ml
Mail Orders on Terms Explained in Coupon ■
Clip today's Coupon From Page 6. I
Inexpensive to
Beautify Home
Walter Murray, Expert Interi
or Decorator, to Give Demon
stration April 30 to May 5.
Would you like to see kitchen, din
ing room, living room, bedrooms fur
nished piece by piece with curtains,
rugs, draperies, chairs, table, pictures
and everything else selected and ar
ranged by a man whose expert knowl
edge of home furnishings ranks him
as one of the leaders in the United
States in this field'*
These are some of the things Oma
ha people'can see by attending the
lectures ami demonstrations given in
connection with The Omaha Bee Bet
ter Homes exposition during the week
beginning April 30. The expert who
will build up the rooms on the stage
! before the eyes of the audience is
I Walter Murray, who is conceded to
be a foremost authority on interior
decoration. He was for several years
prominent as an extension lecturer
for the Chicago Art institute, lectur
, ing before hundreds of audiences in
northern and southern states. He
also was formerly director of the New
York School of Practical Decorating.
Vses Ordinary Materials.
Mr. Murray accomplishes his re
suits in transforming ugly and unat
i tractive homes into beautiful ones by
I the uso of furnishings and the mate
| rials that are readily available to
I everyone In town. Except for painted
' backgrounds to represent the walls of
j his rooms, Mr. Murray brings noth
ing with him, but uses In these dem
onstrations furniture, draperies, lamps.
] pictures, vases, rugs and other acces
sories from local business houses.
This is one of the great practical
values of Better Homes shows and of
these demonstrations—that of proving
to everybody that ail of the things
necessary to make a beautiful and
artistic home are right here at hand
"It is nor. necessary to spend $100,
1000 for an imported tapestry or a
painting by one of the old masters |
to make the home beautiful and artis
tic,” says Mr. Murray. "The essence
of true art Is simplicity. The first
essential of a piece of furniture, a
i rug or a decoration Is that It must
be useful—adapted to serve the pur
pos» for which It is Intended. Art
.Is simply the harmony of everyday]
things properly grouped to make
them serve their everyday purposes
best.
Question Box.
Just how this is done in the ar
! rangement of the different rooms of
the home is the chief theme running
through these interesting talks and
demonstrations by Mr. Murray.
An especially valuable feature of
| this series of lectures is the question i
box which will be opened on the last i
evening of the ahow. Everybody at
tending any of Mr. Murray's lectures
who wishes to ask a question of any
kind relating to home furnishing and
decoration Is Invited to write the ques
tion on a slip of paper and drop it in
the question box. This box will be
opened before the closing lecture of !
the series and all such questions as j
are of general Interest or relating to
problems which come up In a large
number of homes. Mr. Murray will
endeavor to answer from the platform
at the close of his final lecture.
Prominent Odd Fellow,
Former Mayor of Huron, Dies
Huron, S. D., April A.—Harvey J.
Rice, grand secretary of the Odd Fel
lows of South Dakota, and six times
mayor of Huron, died Tuesday after a
long illness. Rice was a past grand
master of Masonry In South Dakota
and served as state railroad com
missioner under Governor Melleme.
Youthful Veteran
Dies by Own Hand
0
Soldier Boy of Adair Second
of Ilis Family to Suicide—
Feared Insanity.
Special IHspetcb to The Omaha lie*.
Atlantic, la.. April 4.—Funeral
service* were held today at Adair for
Guy Dickey, 20-year-old world war
veteran, who ended his life in Des
Moines. The first report stated that
he had shot himself. * Later develop
ment* are that he swallowed strych
nine with suicidal intent.
Guy was the second of hjs family
to take their live* in the recent ]>ast.
His sister, Mr*. Liakerlnk. killed her
self and baby.
The lad left two note*, one to his
mother in Adair. He said an injury
to hi* head while in ramp during the
world war wan responsible for the
deed. He feared insanity. He was
lx>rn in Adair and rnlieted in the
army when this country got into tli*
world war. He wa* not oversea*. On
the signing of the armistice he re-en
listed and only recently was dl*
charged from the service. Hi* pa;
enta are Mr. and Mrs Lou Dickey of
Adair.
Man Held Guilty of Fraud
on Women Mining JO Years
Atlanta, (ja.. April 4.—Victor E.
June*, charged with defrauding the
Nelm* slaters through tho mail*, sat
found guilty by a Jury In federal court
and sentenced to serve fn* years in
tlie penitentiary and to p.-.r a line of
t2.000. Innes' alleged victims—Mr*.
Eloi* Nelms Dennis afid her sister,
F-eatrice Nelm*—disappeared from
their home in San Antonio. Teg.. 10
year* ago
When do you i
really waheup'
in the morning/
Do the golden morning hours find you
wide-awake and fit, or do they find you
sleepy and tired ? %
Coffee is a common cause of sleepless
nights, which bring drowsy days with
their usual train of neglected oppor
tunities.
Why not get a new, firm grip on
yourself, by leaving off coffee for awhile
and drinking Postum, a wholesome, de
licious, mealtime beverage, with a fine,
full-bodied flavor you will like.
You can enjoy Postum any time, day
or night, without interference with
nerves or digestion.
POStlim FOR HEALTH
“There’s a Reason”
Your grocer sells Postumintwoforms: Instant
Postum (in tins* prepared instantly in the cup
by the addition of boiling water. Postum
Cereal (in packages) for those who prefer to
make the drink while the meal it being pre
pared; made by boiling fully 20 minutes.
Made by Poetum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Michigan
jXe@maAat$e(
" Wcutf'Gcl—
a speedy means
of delivering your
message to over 70,000
subscribers~
(
You Can Obtain the Service of This
Little Messenger Reasonably
Wing-footed Mercury—the Mythical God of Speed
—could not surpass the rapidity with which your
“Want” Ad message is delivered to the more than
72,000 subscribers who read The Omaha Bee.
Distance to Omaha Bee “Want” Ads is but a mat
ter of minutes. No matter what you want—to sell
a farm or business, hire help, etc.—no matter whom
you want to reach—these live wire messengers race
with your message interviewing thousands of poten
tial prospects—buyers, sellers, renters, traders,
borrowers, lenders, workers, etc.—for you each
day. They work for you morning, noon and night.
It matters not whether you are seeking one man or
a multitude. To them there is no such word
as “can’t.”
These messengers work at small cost, as you will
observe by the table of rates at the beginning of the
“Want” Ads. One of them is at your beck and call
—ready to be of service to you NOW.
%o Otn&ka. Morning B*h» -
THE EVENING BEE
Omaha Dee “Want" Ads Bring Better Results at Lessci Cost