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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1923)
ONE OF OURS ISy W1IXA FATHER. Famous Nebraska Author. I (Cuntlimed from Yesterday.) I UI’MN. Claud* Wherlcrr, son of a Nebraska rancher, is disappointed in wedded life with Enid Koyce, religion* dimgliter of •Vasnn Koyce, I'runkford, Nebraska, miller. After » year and a half together she goes to China, where her youngr sister. Caro line. a missionary. Is ill. Claude goes to officers* training camp and is commis sioned a lieutenant. During three years at a smull denominational eollege in l-in eoln tie beeuine a friend of the Erlich family, mother widow with fixe sons. Claude has friends In Ernest llavel and Eeonard Dawson, young Nebraska farm ers and neighbor* of the Wheeler family. He has an elder brother, Hayii*s, in busl ness In Frankfort; lii* father. Nat. and a younger brother. Ralph. Ill* mother is prideful of her sons. While home on leave from camp Claude finds he love* <(!ady* Farmer, high school friend of hi* wife. Claude lea\es with his company for Europe. On board the trai»s|M»rt lie makes friends with Victor Morse, an avia tor; Albert I'slier, y oung marine from Wyoming; Private ltert Fuller. Lieuten ant Funning ami others. An epidemic of “flu** breaks out on shipboard and Claude Is kept busy caring for the sick. Several men die and are buried At sea. The trans port docks at a French port. Claude places Lieutenant Fanning, ill, in a hos pital and gets his first glimpse of the horrors of war when a trainload of wounded American soldier* Is lirought In from the front. BOOK FIVE, CHAPTER IV. Deeper and deeper into flowery France! That was the sentence Claude kem, saying over to himself to the jolt of the wheels, as the long troop train went southward, on the second day after he and liis company had left the port of debarkation. Fields of wheat, fields of oats, fields of rye; all of the low hills and rolling uplands clad with harvest. And everywhere, in the grass, in the yel lowing grain, along the roadbed, the poppies spilling and streaming. On the second day the boys were still calling to each other about the pop pies; nothing else had so entirely sur passed their expectations. They had supposed that poppies grew only on battlefields, or in the brains of war correspondents. Nobody knew what the cornflowers were, except Willy Katz, an Austrian hoy from the Omaha packing houses, and he knew only an objectionable name for them, so he offered no information. For a l*>ng time they thought the red clover blossoms were wild flowers—they were as big as wild roses. When they passed the first alfalfa field, the whole train rang with laughter; alfalfa was one thing, they believed, that had never been heard 6f outside their own prairie states. All the way down Company P» had b^en finding the old things instead of the new—or, to their way of think ing, the new’ things instead of the old. The thatched roofs they had so < ounted upon seeing were few and far between. But American binders, of well-known makes, stood where the fields wrere beginning to ripen and they weve being oiled and put in order, not by “pea^nts.’' but by wise Jooking old farmers who seemed to know* their business. Pear trees, trained like vines against the wall, did not astonish them half so much as the sight of the familiar cotton wood, growing everywhere. Claude thought he had never before realized how beautiful this tree could he. In verdant little valleys, along the clear rivers, the cottonwoods waved and rustled; and on the little islands, of which there were so many in these rivers, they stood in pointed masses, seemed to grip deep into the soil and to rest easy, as if they had been there forever and would he there for evermore. At home, all about Frank fort. the farmers were cutting down their cottonwood* because they were “common.” planting maples and ash trees to struggle along in their stead. Never mind; the cottonwoods were good enough for France, and they were good enough for him! He felt t belt v*a;e a real bond between him aniRthia people. When B Company had first got their orders to go into a training camp in north-central France, all the men were disappointed. Troops much rawer than they were being rusneu 'o wie . front, so why fool around any longer? j But now they rere reconciled to the delay. There seemed to lie a good ^ deal of France that wasn't the war, i and they wouldn’t mind traveling 1 about a little in a country like this. j Was the harvest always a month later I than at home, as it seemed to be this ! year? Why did the farmers have rows j • of trees growing along the edges of 'every field-didn’t they take the | strength out of the soil? What did j the farmers mean by raising patches of mustard right along beside other ' crops? Didn't they know that inus , tard got into wheat Helds and stran gled the grain? The second night the boys were to j spend in Rouen, and they would have the following day to look about, j Everybody knew what had happened | at Rouen—If any one didn't his neigh : bora were only to eager to inform ; ' him! It bad happened in the market , j place, and the market place was what they were going to find. Tomorrow, when it came, proved i to be black and cold, a clay of pour 1 ing rain. As they filed through the 1 narrow, crowded streets, that harsh | Norman city presented no very cheer- ! ing aspect. They were glad, at last, 1 to find the waterside, to go out on the bridge and breathe the air in the j | great open space over the river, away from the clatter of cart wheels and the hard voices and crafty faces of these townspeople, who seemed rough and unfriendly. From the bridge they ' looked up at the white chalk hills, i the tops a blur of intense green un* • der the low, lead-colored sky. They j watched the fleets of broad, deep-set , liver barges, coming and go.ng under 1 their feet, with tilted smoke stacks. Only a little way up that river was Paris, the place where every dough boy meant to go; and as they leaned on the rail and looked down at the ! slow flowing water, each one bad in his mind a confused picture of what it would be like. The Seine, they felt sure, must be very much wider j there, and it was spanned by many bridges, all longer than the bridge over ! the Missouri at Omaha. There would be spires and golden domes past counting, all the buildings higher than i anything in Chicago, and brilliant—. dazzlingly brilliant, nothing gray and shabby about it like this old Rouen. 1 They attributed to the city of their desire incalculable immensity, bewild ering vastness, Babylonian hugeness and heaviness—the only attributes they had been taught to admire. I,ate in the morning Claude found himself alone before the Church of St. Ouen. He was hunting for the cat he- ( dial, and this looked as if it might be the right place. He shook the water from his raincoat and entered, ! removing bis hat at the door. The , day. so dark without, was darker still within; . . . far away, a few scat tered candles, still little points of light . . . just before him, in the gray twilight, slender white columns ir. long rows, like the stems of silver poplars. I he entrance to the na\i- was closed by a cord, so he walked up j the aisle on the right, treading Softly, passing chapels where solitary women i knelt in the light of a few tapers. Kxcept for them, the church was em pty . . . empty. His own breath ing was audible in this silence. He moved with caution lest he should wake an echo. When he reached the choir he turned^and saw. far behind him. tlie rose window, with its purple heart. As he stood staring, hat in hand, as still as the stone figures in the chap els. a great bell, up aloft, began to strike the hour in Its deep, melodious throat; 11 heats, measured and far I apart, as rich as the colors in the window, then silence . . . only In his memory the throbbing of an un dreamedof quality of sound. The rev elations of the glass and the bell had come almost simultaneously, as if one produced the other; and both were superlatives toward which his mind iiad always l»een groping "r so it seemed to him then. In front of the choir the nave was open, with no rope to shut it off. Several straw chairs were huddled on a flag of the stone floor. After some hesitation lie took one, turned it round, and sat down facing the window. If some one should come up to him and say anything, anything at all. he would rise and say. “Par don. monsieur; je ne sals pas »• est defendu.” lie repeated this to him self to he quite sure he had it ready. On the train coming down he had talked to the hoys about the bad repu tation Americans had acquired for .slouching all over the place and hutt ing in on things, and had urged thefn to tread lightly. “But. lieutenant.” the kici from Pleasantville had piped up, “isn't this whole expedition a butt-in? After all, it ain't our war.” (Maude laughed, hut he told him he meant to make an example of the fellow' who went to rough housing. He was well satisfied that he hadn't his restless companions on his mind now. He could sit here quietly until noon, and hear the hell strike again. In the meantime, he must try to think: Ths was. of course, (lothie architecture: he had read more or less about that, and ought to he able to remember something. Gothic • That was a mere word: to him it suggested something very peaked and pointed—sharp arches, steep roofs. It had nothing to do with these slim white columns that rose so straight and far—or with the w ndow, burning up there in the vault of gloom. . . . While lie was vainly trying to think about architecture, some recollection of old astronomy lessons brushed across his brain—something about stars whos^ light travels through space for hundreds of years before it reaches the earth and the human eye. The purple ami crimson and peacock-green of this window had been shining quite as long as that before it got to him. . . . He felt distinctly that it went through him and farther still . . . as if his mother were look ing over his shoulder. He sat sol emnly through the hour until 1?. his elbows on his knees, his conical hat swinging between them in his hand, looking up through the twilight with candid, thoughtful eyes. When (Maude jotned his company at the station they had the laugh on him. They had found the cathedral —and a statue c.f Richard the Lion hearted. over the spot where the lion heart itself was buried; “the identical organ,” fat Sergeant Hicks assured him. But they were all glad to leave Rouen. (Continued in Tli# Morning Bee.) Birth# and Death#. Births. Clarence anil Myrtle Gooch. 2124 Lo cust street, girl Ben and Bertha Jones hospital, girl. Raymond and Agnes Hawthorne, hos pital. girl. William and Antonie BJessie, 5102 South Twentieth street, boy. Joseph and Anna Foster, hospital, boy. Joseph and Mary Sempek. 431* South Twenty.seventh street, boy. Martin and Mary Zamiatata. 3924 South Thirty -ninth street, girl George ami Edith Conklin. 3211 Leaven worth street, boy George and Ethel Jackson, hospital, girl. • <m1 fred and Barbara Hartung. hospital eirf. r .1 and Klala OJIligan. hoapUal. giG Jaraslav and Anna Galda, hospital, girl Chari** Gndfry and Barbara Hartung. hospital, girl. . „ . John and Virgil Newaome. 2619 L afreet, P Sehastiano and Grazia Millngagl, 604 Woolworth avenue, boy. Beat ha. Joseph I.ewls Haynes, infant. 430* South Forty-second street. W B Baker. 29. hospital. Mike Kranovich. 44. 6703 Sou'h Thir tieth street. Stanley Oaslnskl. 62. 4626 South Thirty third street . John McCarty, 69. Bellevue. Neb Frank Won ak, 48. 4420 South Thirty second street. ... 4W Mrs Ethel Rosenthal. 67, 1424 North Twentieth street Mrs Mary Murphy, 76, St. Regia apart 171 Katherine Christof fersen. 19. hoapsta! .lake K. Burl 49. hospital John Nr F .arson 28. hospital NN'alker James Webb. 64. hospital. Frank E Roscoe. 33. hospital Anna Artis, 60, hospital. Silas Artis. 60. 1411 California street Llovd Robinson. 22. Iiospital. You can now buy the famous genuine GARLAND FURNACE for the same price as the ordinary furnace Special Prices, Special Terns for 7 Days Only We want every home owner in Omaha and vicinity who has been putting up with the inconvenience and discomfort of stoves and other inefficient heating systems to know how much more healthful, comfortable and economical is a GARLAND FURNACE. Now Is the Time to Buy While the price is low and the terms are so liberal. Plan your home clean ing this spring from the cellar up. Begin with the furnace. Take down your old stove for the last time this spring. Resolve to quit carrying coal and ashes over your living room carpets. We are making this special induce ment this spring to urge you to buy early. Pay next fall if you like, but place your order now. PAYMENT •B $15.00 A MONTH This is $10 per month under our regular terms. Terms that will prac tically make your furnace self-paying and next fall you will be able to welcome the oncoming chill of winter with a clean slate and the assur ance of home comfort with less fuel than you ever used before. Contractors, Notice: We are making extraordinary offers to contractors and architects who specify the famous Garland Furnace. Ask about our co-operation pur chase plan. If you are building a house let us mail you our plans on how a home should be heated. Phone AT lantic 4289 and ask to have one of our heating engineers call on you. His expert advice costs you nothing and all we ask is the courtesy to let us submit our figures. Mid-Western Appliance Co., Inc. 411 South 15th Opposite Orpheum AT lantic 4289 Our Children Tooth Time. The spring is the right time to take 'lie children to the dentist. Nobody likes the job and of course the chil dren like it least of all. Still it is something that must be done if they are to have a chance to grow as they should. The mouths of the children of the public schools are shocking. It makes one ill to think of the poor little things chewing food with such teeth, polluting every mouthful they swal low' It fills one with commiseration to think of the pain they endure with abcessed teeth. It fills one with rage to think that grown people will stand by and see children suffering horribly, losing their teeth, laying up diseases and un fitness for adult life—and not lift a finger to help. ' ] can't take him to the dentist. He won’t g" for me!” Now Isn’t that too silly fur words? We bear that day after day. The de ctiying teeth keep on decaying and discharging their Impurities inlo the life stream of the child. "I've had him to the dentist and he says they are only temporary teeth and it won't pay to mend them. He save when he's 12. bring him back." Of course the dentist who said that didn't want to bother with the child. He could do work for an adult In the same length of time, have no battle such as he would have with a pro testing child, and be paid much more for doing it. One can scarcely blame hint for that. Still, the little ones' teeth have to be kept clean and filled, and healthy, and someone has to do it. There are such people as dental hygienists whose business it is to at tend to that sort of work. They are beginning to appear In the up-to-date Schools They do only the simplest form of dentistry and that under the supervision of a dentist. That Is all that is necessary for the youngest children. If the dental hygienist is part of the children'-* school life they will soon accept her and let the work be done cheerfully. In this way they are broken in for the major work of the dentist later on. Failing the hygienist, the family dentist will have to be rajoleil Into caring for the youngsters' teeth and teaching them to go to him regularly. Spring is the time to attend to all this. Get the children’s teeth cleaned and filled so that they w ill not be laid up with toothache. If they are being graduated and about to start to work, they won’t lose time by illness the first thing. If you are going to take them to the country with you have them attended to so that you won't wake up at 2 o'clock in the morning with a suffer ing child 50 mile* from help. («'opy right. 1923 > Auditor Will Fay O'Brien Salary Attorney (ieneral% Office Rulos Fish Commissioner Is Entitled to $1,200. $pecifil IH*imtrli t»» The Omtthft Bcp. Uncoln, M.iv IT—W. J. O'Brien, superintendent of the state fish hatch ery at Gretna, is legally entitled to the $1,200 claim for back pay allow id hint hy the legislature, according to an opinion by Assistant Attorney Gen eral Oeorge \Y. Ayres presented to State Audltoi George \V. Marsh. "That means the end of the con troversy, so far as I ant concerned Mr. O'Brien will get his money:” Marsh said The $l,20u represents the difference in actual cash paid O’Brien during tiie last four years and the appro priation set aside for his salary. The legislature four years ago set aside $2,400 annually for O'Brien while the secretary of agriculture under whom O'Brien worked, paid him only $2,100 r. year. Governor Bryan at first approved the claim, but yesterday, following a statement to the effect that O’Brien could not live in a private home he hail built for himself and must re side in th« home provided for him at the hatchery, the governor asserted Jit- didn't believe O'Brien should get ' the money, ami he was laboring un ci r a misapprehension as to what the i laim was for w hen lie approved It. O'Brien, who is a witness in a law suit at Dakota City, Neb., was reach ed by long distance telephone today and was asked whether he intended to comply with the governor’s ultima turn. "As I know nothing about the de tails of th<- affair, I don’t Care to dis t uss it until I can reach Lincoln and have a talk with the governor,”, O’Brien said. \pply Sulphur as Told When Your Skin Breaks Out. Any breaking out of the skin on face, neck, arms or body is overcome quickest by applying Mentho-Sulphur. The pimples seem to dry right up and go away, declares a noted skin spe cialist. Nothing has ever been found to take the place of sulphur as a pirn pie remover. It is harmless and in expensive. -lust ask any druggist for a small jar of Bowles Mentho-Sulphur and use It like cold cream. IMVKKTIftKtlK.N’T. SAY “BAYER” when you buy Aspirin I'nless you see the name "Bayer" ( on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twen ty-two years and proved safe by mil lions f*ir colds, headache, toothache, 'earache, neuralgia, lumbago, rheuma tism, neuritis and for pain in general. Accept only "Buyer'; package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve taiilets cost few* cents. Druggists also -cell Duties of -4 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticicl dester of Salicylic acid. Two Hours and Two Quarts Make It Like New Do it Friday. Drive it Sunday. Folks will sure enough think you have a new car. Costs hut little for the much it does. 1 No trick to use it. Stands wear and tear. SEND FOR THIS BOOKLET Called ‘'The Diary of the House in the Woods.” by Katherine and Edward McDowell, who themselves designed and built the house, then Mellotoned and Mello-Glossed the walls. Ncptunitcd the floors and woodwork, and did various other things, odd and interesting to make their home cozy and attractive. Send 10 cents for it direct for our Dayton (Ohio) Office. The Lowe Brother* Company 1 AO .111 ^Aiilli T.nll. 9lraal Courteous, intelli gent want ad service is given you when you phone your want ads to The Bee. SLowe Brothers Paints - Varnishes soi l) IN OMAHA BY ( . O Hurd. Hrn*on William* Ymini lUrdwat* C©„ *20 South 24th St. Mryrr H<i»dw«r© Co., 2ftl5 Ltavtnwarlh 5t North NiHo Hotcfworo Co., 4112 Noi th 24th St. M (J. Simon. 5302 South 30th St SScho#nin| lUidwir# l". 7(Ml Wo*t Bioadwajr. Council Bluff*, la Amusement Park Closed Hprt-litl l>l>i>Ht<li «<i (l>« 0«wh» Hr,. Falls Clly. Neb., May 17.—Crystal beat-h. Falls City's amusement resort, will not be opened this year. Marriage Licenses. Marling* |.« enaea were Issued to th* fol lowing couple*: _ _ Edward Glcajion. 21. Omaha, ana Helen Miller. 21. Omaha Leon Carter. 22. Omaha, and Anna Hautsmger. 23. Omaha Frank G Dieterich. Jr., 21, Omaha, and Lillian Ka van. 21. Omaha John H. J’epgra*. over 21. Bennington, Neb and Clara M. Hutchison, over 21. Omaha. George L. Anderson. .14. Omaha, and Ossie Madison, 21, Omaha Lavoftka Johnson. 21, Omaha, and Ber itf< ** Payton. 19. Omaha. Will Wallaea*. over 21. Omaha, and Lorraine Idndberg. over 21, Omaha. William oconnor. 21. Otnaha, and Marie f>ophe|«je. 21, Carroll, la._ BEE WANT AD RATES l;»c per line each day. 1 or 2 daye ! 2c per line, each day. 3 to 6 days. H'e per line each day. 7 daya or longer. The above rates apply exclusively to Want Ada which are commonly termed ’•public wants. and do not Include adver tiaeraenta of individuals or concerns ad vertialng or exploiting their busineig**. Tb**e rate* apply to The Sunday Omaha Bee aa well a- The Morning and Evening Bee All week day advertisement* appear .n both morning and evening editions at the one (.oat CLOSING HOURS FOR WANT ADS Morning Edition.-• P- m Evening Edition.11:30 . m Sunday Edition .. . t n. m. Saturday Want Ad* accepted at the following offices. Main offir* .17th and Earnam S»* South umhlo N W. cor. 24th and N Sta Council Bluffi... .1* Scott St Telephone ATIantlc 1000. Call tor “WanC *d Department. An Aper’enced -Want" ad taker will receive your ad and a bill will mailed later The rate* quoted above apply to either charge or cash order* THE OMAHA BEE reserve* the right t* (designate v.hat con»Htuie* & public want THE OMAHA MORNING BEE. _ T HE E V E NIN G BEE. ^ announcements ^ Burial Vaults . * DMTiNCTIVI fcatarM, eee ij«m»n»tr*tio» at factory. Automatic Sealing Concret# Burial Vault. Insist upon your under raker using no other. Every vau t atamp^ ed; watch for name In I d. Manufactured only by the Omaha Concrete Burial Vault Co. £210 y. loth St. Omaha. (Vmf teriee, MonumrnU .. • 'Visit Forest Lawn Today Mak# a special trip to Forest Lawn to dav or tomorrow and see ’he magnificent lilacs. forest Lawn has a m*w beauty with each changing season The * houses contain thousand- of * *lK|] will soon be placed or. family Iota Ton are Invited to sc® them office at ceme tery (north of city limits), and ..e Brandela Theater. - CEMETERY LOTS FOR PALE. Many lota and single graves for sale beautiful Prospect Hill cemetery. -3rd end Parker str-eta. Call superintendent a officeWE. 2404. Florist# . * LEE LARMON JOHN BATII l»"4 K.rn.m- JA, I»»«. r HENDERSON. 1»#7 Farnam JA HU - ■ —g~= 1 ——~ Funeral Director* . JJ F. J. STACK Jb CO., Omaha » best undertaking caiabtishmenL AMBULANCE s„lRV£f Thirty-third_and_Farnam. HEAFEY&HEAFEY, Undertaker, afid Embalm, r*. Fbone H A 62t3 Office HU F»run < ESTABLISHED SINCE 1 All J_ Crane Mortuary Co., CONDUCTED BY LADIES ONLY. SIS Soulh 20,h St. AT 28‘> and AT 2t»A Hoffmann Ambulance Pod.-e at 24th Funeral Direct ora J A. SMI CRCSBY-M00RE ^Vwin “"LARKIN BROTHERS, FTNERAL, DIRECTORS. 012 SO. 24TH. KCRISKG ,M 22d «rd O Sts. _ UjS s tstb St. HULSE Sb RIEPEN, Funeral Directors. 2224 Cuming JA. IfM H. H. Kramer Tar?art'& Son John A. Gentleman 3,us.^;rm BRAILEY L DQRRANCE Funeral Nolire? .. • MORMRlTf’Mr. Mary, age 13. »unr;y*4 it iwo daughters. Mr* J. Duggan and Mrw JiniM Hartnett, and 3 *oiu. Eugene and Thonm of Omaha and Reverend V. . f Norfolk ! j ? a! Situ J*' at 4 4.* * m from the residence of her daughter Mr* James Hartnett. 33Z Park A\** . 'o St P*ter hur h at * a m Interment. Holy Sepui* ,ii?r Direct inn of IDale^a H^afe_ WHELAN—Michael. age 3> residence t*|i, So 1fth St Wednei»day a. m. Deceased <ni a member of A, O H , di vision Ns 1 Funeral *-r\. es Friday. M^y If. 4 9 a m. from ll'afcy * Healey chap*l to St. Phllemera chur h at » a. m Burial. Holy Sepulcher cemetery I .oat and Found . 8 LORT--&X? plate^eatner*. Sunday between 41 and Harney and Miller par-? Kinder t rs.-c can HA 733> or L'ntversfly of Ne braaka. Reward.____ ! LOST—By widow. Mark purse, containing money, In Brandtia basement. Call . H \ l r, i ]. R e «i rd___ STRATEI^ratr blue-roan horaea Call WA. llib FT. Personal* .'• THE SAI.VATION Army Industrial hems anlldta ™ur eld clothing, luroitura. mags alnea 'V* colloct We distribute Phon. JA- IDS and our w.gon will call. Call and Inspect our o»« homo, 1118-1111*1111 l>odg* street.______ HjK—50c p*r To lbe . 3?th and I,eaven oorth. Drlv# over Open 1 a. m. to 8:38 p m. City 1c? Company_ -Tn: VtkICAI, historical masuua «• ,umca lor plaja and parties, at Lleben a. Jmaha.__ ^ automobiles""*^ ASM lor Sale ... .*...IS Ford Sedan We h*ie iwo good Ford Sedan* r»Alv to delDer whirh are priced for quick action tods' One is nearly new snd the prh e tag reads 34*’“ lbe other is S little Oi.l.r snd pii. ed at $23* Com* m and r,«|»c. t the*# two bargain* at cn> e We will be i nl to demonstrate. Guy L. Smith V SKdVars V r \ H VRil UN Ford < a»a and trucks. $■'• ai'd up. Ford bod leo and winter tops. Cara sold o» term* to reliable parties. viOLDSTROM ALTO SALKS CO. Central • image Open Day and Night 1 \ "444 ROME bargain! In used frerda vtompt delivery of new Forda MCAFFRKT MOTOR AT'.. Tha Hardv Ford Servlca Station. iMh and Jackson Sta. At till NEW sn.t u*rd For da. cssh or tOTOMk C. M PACT SON MviTiiR IB . Author tied Ford and Lincoln Dealer* SDtb end Arne* Ave. Ke Ota* 1U’B K ’»!». pa-*scng' r coupe, paint like uni j tunl tire* Splendid mechanical . .»p,noon A bargain at RH caah No trad** AT. I'm__ ISF.D OARS rilAT CAN BK I SKD NKHUASK \ OLDSMOWILE CO. Howard at IMh At lTTh. __ ISKD CARR O. N Bonney Motor Co. r;?.>4 l arnam I Si:T> parts for aB makoa of nn Ford i».d parts *t half price. Neb. Auto Parta Ja 4*SI DODOK tNHTK-lL' I •*' ?"tS RcdB-k Av Plion* hi’ o'*’ PORT tiiui ing. g»«*d condition, cheap w a 11>4T &$'.! Burden# Si HOt I,V eaoert auto thm'nw S<tb \ul«»? Wanti-d . 18 flXv I rue 88 cars N.n, I 88 i up nu s: .v l»th vi rhoua n »«<s ( AUTOMOBILES ^ Trucks, Tractors ft Used Trucks Not Abased If vou are In the market for a truck be aur» anil give these cara your Inspection. H21 Ford truck, good tires and mechanically O. K as our me chanic did the overhauling 1160. JS.’l Reo truck. A-l abape. rum and looks like new; this (ruck must be seen to know Its rea. value. 1608. A bargain, 1*20 Overland ,1us overhaulen good tires and also good paint 1ob; goes at 1160. I-ook at this 1*21 Ford truck, lust th<- truck you have been looking for; we have overhauled turned it out In first-class shape: only tl6* CASH OP. TERMS OPEN EVENINGS Ask Fof Jack Smith SJRGFRIED MOTOR CO AT. 1793. 2416-20 Farntm. Republic 2-ton with *xpr#i*«i body. . .$110 t’ommer<» 1-ton with exi*r»r-s body Ford Model T with pone! body !f'» Two 2-ton Republic, er h 109 Andrew Murphy & Son, 14th and Ja».k»tin St*. ^ BUSINESS SERVICE^ Arrordian Pirating .Zi ACCORDION, SIDE, kn,r« . boi pleBtlB* covered button*, all atyiea; bemat itch lng. buttonholes. Write Ideal Button A Pleat lng Go., 208 Brown Block. Omaha, Neb. Telephone .FA. 19’6. NEBRASKA PLEATING. Hemstitching. Co\*red Buttons. 1101 Fa mam. ae-'-'md floor. JA. 5679 ftirildrrs, Contractor* .22 M. A ZONA, cement contractor, do an; kind of concrete work at a real low price, such a* bas*-:nnet floor*, sidewalk*. g» rage floors, driveways, cement steps, city « r country. Phone MA. 0198. CALL HA. 5427 or MA. 06*4~for ex per sodding, adding, hedging or trimming. MIDCITT LANDSCAPE GARDNERS. PLASTERING, stucco and cement work New and_repair work. WA._4517._ Dancing Academies . 22 LEARN to dan- * for 14 at KEEP S 1818 Fiman. Classes Mon.. Wed. and Err nights Dancing Tue*., Thura., Sat. ard Sun nights. Private leasons by eppolnt nient* JA. 1474____ DWm-Hvb Agencies .24 RELIABLE Detective Bureau, Sunder land Bldg. JA. 2054: night, KE, 3812._ JAMES ALLAN. 312 Neville Blk. Evident# secured in a; F case* AT. 1124. _ (iarage Buildera.!5 GET our price* on complete garages. Mor rison Lumber A Coal Co. WE. 8541. Movine:. Storage ...2€ FIDELITY "STORAGE A VAN CO. MOVING PACKING STORAGE SHIPPING. Household Goods. Pianos, Office Furnltu-e 1 |AT -1' HOW ARD ST. JA. ‘ I EXPERT Chios, furniture packers, fire proof storage. Phone JA. 1504. Th« Terminal Warenouae Co.. 702 South l&tfc St., corner Jones, on Viaduct. ESTIMATE fart on packing., mov. and storing Contract* taken by job or hour Ginbe Van A Storage Co. JA- 4558. AT 4230. Grossman A Sona, own era. Mo-, ing—Parking—Storaga. Gordon Fireproof W’arehouae A Van Co. fl9 N 11th St. Phono JA. 843*. WE MOVE LONG DISTAN- B _PHONE AT. 5454 BEK7XS OMAHA VAN A STORAGE 14th and Leavenworth S-s. Packing, mov irg. storage, shipping._JA. 4148._ V* O’ING. hauiing, city or country Asbe^ rubb*h removed. Cinder* WE. 2127.^ Milliners, Dressmaker* .27 fiRESSMAKrrt class dressmaking * x ;ears New York experience, one year m Chicago. WE 4495__ Fainting. Papering .J* WALL PAPER~CLEANED Bv expert cleaners. Price* reasonab;* Phone AT MU_ PAINTING, pa; **rhanging. Hour* repair ing of all kind*. Prewar prices. WE. 1974_ WANTED-—Pa'ni.nir papering and w* k r ?<n. iapkrin'1. painting, wallpapef; v I.K \ N1NG. i ALL HA. 7474 Painting, pupcrhangmg. Kellogg We. C9C4 STUCCO paInting. paperhanging WE. 99*' ....... ..- ■■ . - Fatent Attorneys .J9 J~ W MARTIN. Pa’ci.i Attorney. 1713 Podge, room 294 Al*« Waahingtoa. V. C^J_Jie p inventor* sell Uietr patent* _ Kodak Finishing It A FILMS DEVELOPED FREE. On.-day .*rvic— Si.-, and price of print. 1S.!4.3c ( . 3’,x3H.1c , Hx4H.ft :sx»v,. s^xs-..(t K.SB teTL'DIO Sit N.vtlla B!k Omaha FILMS DK.VEl.OPSD FRKE. Th» Kr.tfcn Co. S»»« I^ay.oworth Printer,. FngraTrrn . 31 FOOT Pri'm!nT~ry».. ill S U -at JA. IIH ProfmsiunaJ Sernce*. X-Raja .S3 PRESCRIPTIONS e*r*fa onponM ,« .ha 1 Sb.rman A Mr'onn.it Drac Store. Dental X Ra>».StA PENTAL X-ray 40c each; 91 full *ex fit Securities Bldg.. 19th and Farnam ■ «- i-s—=. — l1 ■ r- . L. !—— -r Senior* Offered . II VIA NIK* Rlpr typed for J$ crnta pc' 1,00* " oc\i*. no butge of ■*<* tha t I other typing at higher rare* Box W-Ji. *ima ha 1W___ _ *■ ah: ubber> HA Mil. W J Buyback Al’TO pa.ntmg; good work. John Dr. bek. f:*I S I Hii M Omaha. Call J AJIM. IIAVI INii a them, rubb h fum ;ur* TOO' - ■ imh K1 99 gas < • * at eves i and r- gulated end connected JA 9991 ^ EDUCATIONAL ^ Rutmn, I nHrtf, .. 3' DAT Si HOOL—NI-'.HT S.'HOtU. Complete course* in accountancy, ma chine bookkeeping vomptometry. shor; - hand and typewriting railroad and wtre • c«a telegraph'. et\tl aervice and a! Krs Itah an.! commercial branches W' e. call or phona Jackson 1499 for large illus trated catalog Address HOTLVS CO I LEGE. Ro\ le' Rida Omaha. Neb. EIGHT t« 12 n.eka prepare you for e fine office 1*0*1: on Va" AT 7774 or write Ameri- an College 1412 Vamam VAN SANT SCHOOL OF BVSINKKS S K O Nineleem h and IVviglaa Ja. 449'* Trade School* . 4| w ANTED---Hen lad.en and bo's to lear-x barber trade; btg demand; safea whi!s leerning strictly modern. Call or wrtto « l>cdge St If, C ■' Barber Vo. eg* MOL1 K B A n r KR Cv »1 .LEG K 119 K 14th St Write fo* -ntalog Help Anted—Female . .... 44 t for down* a » work o' -ookm* Vi!\ reference* result red. Vo Uundn oHo * b age s W \ 44'. ■ H 4NTRI> v good * It e ma’d With rof. >\ HI pcs' go,Hi " age W A. 9744 BAN k 04 Ex • Mlor I .a un<t t > t .,*7 Cap tc Aw W■ HITI u b-'times* No Wasti ng i'e rab e pu*Hioo HA S*T7 W AMKI* A omu' "b e « il lot go era I hnuaenork t'»! i\ A t4if v.JRL lei arue.ai hvuatnmh. HA 9911.