The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, August 28, 1923, CITY EDITION, Page 2, Image 2

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    Today
Coolidge Lacks Jealousy.
No Substitutes, Please.
See Lloyd. George.
Whisky Drinkers Lose.
^By ARTHUR BRISBANE^
A little man shows his littleness
in his little jealousies, and so does
a big man, for that matter.
President Coolidge shows free
dom from small jealousy, when he
puts Gifford Pinchot in charge of
coal negotiations.
Next to Hiram Johnson and
President Coolidge, Pinchot is the
most likely candidate for the re
publican nomination. Successful
handling of the coal problem
might add greatly to his strength.
But, as governor of Pennsyl
vania, the hard coal state, Mr. Pin
chot is the man for the coal job,
if President Coolidge does not
feel that he can settle it himself.
And so the president appoints
Pinchot, regardless of politics. A
good sign and creditable to the
president.
President Coolidge's friends will
advise him not to tell the president
that soft, coal instead of hard is a
solution of the coal problem.
They want hard coal, and do not
care to ruin their cities and their
tempers by taking lessons in soft
coal burning. The coal is in the
ground, easy of access. It belongs
to the people, as the private “own
ers” will discover, one of these
days.
It will not help the president
or his party to offer soft coal, or
the refuse of culm banks as a sub
stitute, while mine owners and
workers fight it out. It’s too much
like that Frenchman of the revolu
tion advising the people to eat
grass, if they lacked bread. They
wanted bread, so that Frenchman
learned, later.
The president doubtless knows
that through all last year's coal
famine, our good Canadian friends
were kept supplied with American
hard coal of first quality. Our
mine owners did not want to lose
their Canadian trade, or force
Canadians to develop Canadian
coal, so they kept Canada well
supplied. They had no need to
worry about their United States
trade, it always comes back. If
Canadian newspapers advertise
this winter, as they did last, "Unit
ed States hard coal, any size, any
quantity, immediate delivery,”
while this country burns substi
tutes, that will not help the repub
licans.
Lloyd George will be here in a
few weeks. You will see and hear
a real man, when he comes. With
out him, to manage England and
her allies in the big war, putting
England’s armies under Foch, sup
plying the allies -wfith money and
ammunition, William of Hohenzol
lern would probably be still kais
er, "on a bigger scale with a newly
captured throne” for each of his
sons.
See and hear Lloyd George, if
you can. He is the greatest demo
crat that Europe has produced
since Cromwell, and history will
say so. whatever tories may say
now.
A Boston labor union complains
that wicked men have sold poi
sonous bootleg liquor to men on
■trike, killing several of them,
making the others unity to win
their strike.
That’s enlightening, for union
men, and they ought to think it
over. If-you read that Indians
out in the hills, or savages in the
Congo had been defeated by en
emies using whisky as bait, you
would understand it.
While union workmen might as
well realize that as long as they
combine whisky, bootleg or other
wise, with their industrial strug
gles, they will lose, and their op
ponents will win.
Mothers all over the country
»re made miserable by fear, be
cause of a most dreadful and wide
>y advertised kidnaping in New
York City. The case is unusually
*ad, the child, an infant of four
months, in delicate health, might
lot survive the parting from its
mother, even with good care in the
ddnaper’s hands.
Nothing can be said to comfort
he father and mother of that
•hild. But other mothers may
end relief in the fact that the kid
laping was in all probability the
esult of sudden impulse, in an
unbalanced mind. Some mother
made insane by the death of a
voting baby may have taken the
lost infant from ita cradle, without
r ealizing the nature of her act. It
is probably not the work of inten
tional criminals, the parents of the
child being very poor.
It i§ not a danger that threat
ens the average child. It happens
not as often as once in a million
rimes. To an infant in its rradle
the danger from kidnapers is far
less than the danger of fatal ac
cident to its older brothers and
sisters in their ordinary play.
For one child kidnaped, 10,000
die of contagious diseases, be
cause Ignorant parents allow them
to play with dogs and eats that
carry disease germs in their fur,
and flies that bring disease from
•utside filth nrc intln1'0'v mm-c
dangerous than all the kidnapers.
(Copyrif jt, *J 92S.)
Filling Station
Pumps Defective
Inspection Shows Over Half
of Pumps in State Need
Adjusting.
Special Dispatch to Tile Omaha Bee.
Lincoln. Aug. 27.—Fully 50 per cent
of the 200 gasoline filling station
pumps tested in Nebraska during the
last month by the state department of
agriculture have needed adjustment,
and 25 of these pumps were condemn
ed from further use, according to
Grant L. Shumway, secretary ( of the
department.
Mr. Shumway believes as large a
per cent of pumps in Lincoln und
Omaha need adjustment. There are
three inspectors in Omaha and one
in Lincoln, who make tests separately
from the state department.
In only a few of the defective pump
cases was it found that the public
was receiving more gasoline than
entitled to, and in most cases they
were giving too little gasoline, Mr.
Shumway said. He also called atten
tion to the fact that tank wagon op
erators should not use their five-gallon
measures for more than a few
months, because dents in the meas
ures cut down the amount of gasoline
the measures should hold. One dent
can cut down the capacity of the
measure 10 cubic inches.
Lincoln Men Guests
at Ak-Sar-Ben Show
Lincoln night last evening at King
Ak's den show was attended by a
delegation of between 600 and 700 of
his majesty’s subjects from the state
capital. Mayor Frank Zehrung of
Lincoln was the speaker of the
evening.
The Lincoln delegation, which was
led by Harvey Kendall of the
Nebraska Farb Journal, arrived
at about 7:30 p. m. by special train.
It was met at the station by Sam
son's reception committee and special
street cars, nad taken directly to Ak
Sar-Ben den.
The last den show of the season
will be given Tuesday night of next
week when the national convention
of the Abstract and Ttitle Men's
association will be guests.
Two Men Held as Suspects
in Shooting of Officers
Special Dinpatcli to The Omaha Bee.
Grand Island, . Neb., Aug. 27.—
Central City authorities arrested two
men suspected to be members of the
quartet, one of whom fired a shot
at Officer Roy Herndon, inflicting a
tlesh wound in his shoulder and neck.
They were brought to Grand
Island, but Herndon could not iden
tify either as having been with the
quartet that got off a train and were
being searched when the shooting
took place. The two men arrested
said they came from an extra gang
at Kim Creek. They are being held
for further inquiry. The officer's
wounds do not keep him off duty
Farm Home Near Grand Gland
G Destroyed by $5,000 Fire
Special Dispatch to The Omaha Dec.
Grand Island, Neb., Aug. 27.—Fire
last evening destroyed the farm home
of E. E. Veeder, near Cairo, with a
loss of $3,000 on the building and
$2,000 in furniture. *
Mr. anil Mrs. Veeder were In
Grand Island at the time. Neighbors
who discovered the fire saw a flash
similar to an explosion. The fire
appears to have started in a clothes
closet.
Alberta Wheat Yield.
Edmonton, Alberta, Aug. 27.—Al
berta will harvest ft total wheat crop
to 142,956,000 bushels, according to
latest figures issued by the Depart
ment of Agriculture. The total acre
age has been placed at 6,956,461
acres, making an average yield of
24 bushels an acre.
Gus Hyers, Former
to Be Candid
Friends Urging Him lo Run
Against Talkative Jacolty for
Representative From
Havelock.
K.v P. C. POWH1X,
staff ( ormpendrnt The Omaha Bee.
lancoln, Aug. 27.—Next summer
promises to find one Gus A. Hyers,
former state sheriff, chasing votes as
ardently ami diligently as he chased
bootleggers, auto thieves and all sorts
of criminals.
Friends of Gus are urging him to
| become a candidate for the legisla
ture in the Havelock district against
Gus's old and ancient enemy. I. W.
Jacoby, the representative who did
80 per cent of the talking last win
ter in the lower house and lost his
false teeth in the midst of an oration
almost daily.
Gus, after the advent of Brother
Charlie into the governor's chair, re
signed. Gus wasn’t a "lame duck”
a single second.
The day after his resignation, he
moved bag end baggage to Have'ock,
tho town from where he started in
his career of criminal chasing. He
originally was a mechanic in t he
Havelock shops.
An hour after his arrival a sign
appeared in the front of a vacant
Havelock offlte building. It read
GUS A. HYBBS,
Beal Estate.
Tlieie you will find llyers early
In the morning and until late at
night, wotking as energetically and
tirelessly as he did when In the state s
service.
Citizens of Havelock know the Gusi
of today is the tame Gus of old,
secretly seeking a fight and excite
ment. and they see in a race between
Gus and Jacoby a political contest
extraordinary.
Years ago, when the Havelock shop
men staged Gus on his career first
as a candidate for sliciiff of Lancas
ter county. Jacoby was his demo
Mother of Seven
‘‘Female Fagin ’
Police Charge Woman Uses
Daughters for Thievery
from Stores.
Mrs. Lena Wyatt, 3S, mother of
seven children, was arrested by Spe
cial Officers Finn and Cody in Hay
den Brothers' store and is declared
by the officers to b« a "female
Fagin.”
The officers declared that Mrs. Wy
att was using her two oldest daugh
ters, Eleanor, IS. and Gladys. 17, a*
"blinds" to cover up her thievery.
They testified in police court Monday
mornlng that the mother was steal
ing clothes from the counters.
Mrs. Watt's husband testified he
had warned her on several occasions
to stop stealing. She said she needed
clothes for her smaller children,
Letha, 10; Johnny. 9; Donald, 7; Ralph,
3, and Mary Ellen, 1.
The mother was given a 90-day
suspended sentence and warned by
the Judge that If brought before him
again she would be forced to serve
every day of It. The Wyatts live at
1488 South Sixteenth street, moving
there four years ago from Beatrice.
Neb. The husband works for Swift
ft Co.
Iowa State Fair Exhibits
to fie Displayed at Lincoln
Special Dispatch to The Omaha Bee.
*Iancoln, Aug. 27.—E. R. Danielson,
secretary Nebraska state fair, is at
tending the Iowa state fair at Des
Moines for the purpose of arranging
for numerous Iowa exhibits for the
Nebraska fair which opens next
l Monday.
Gangway for Sheba!
Between dates, daiues
ami rhirhen dinners,
our Sheba (there on the
earner) slighted her
shopping.
Voit she's just tearing
The Buttermilk Shop
with pastries for dinner
Handsome llarold
gives her right-of-way
at Farnani and 16th.
For those few who don’t know . . . we'll say that
The Buttermilk Shop is located on the Northwest
Corner of 16th and Farnam—right in the heart of
Buttervillc. It’s a store dear to the hearts (and
palates) of discriminating people who like abso
lutely fresh pastries, cream, milk, sandwiches,
butter, eggs, etc.
lOrthjjipJaiiQS
S^TE^>L1C SHOP
Northwest Corner, 16th and Farnam Sts.
1
State Sheriff,
ate for Legislature
crati? opponent. Gus wiped up the
earth with Jacoby.
Since that time Jacoby lias, tlil-ough
letters to the newspapers, in cam
paign speeches and on the floor of
the legislature, attacked everything
Hyers ever did iri a public way, in a
relentless manner.
Gus has hundreds of friends in
Havelock. They wish to see him vin
dicated in his home town.
Hence, the Hyers boom for the leg
islature.
• Bank Closes.
Phoenix, Arls , Aug. 2"—The Citi
zens Bank and Trust company of Bis
bee was ordered closed this morning
by State Superintendent of Banks A.
T. Hammons. Two state examiners
are on the ground and further than,
ordering the closing of the institution
the state superintendent of banks re
fused to comment.
Western Nebraska
Farmers Optimistic
iCnnllitiiMl From rose One.)
little burg where everybody looks for
ward with great hopes of the future.
The pioneer spirit of faith and ag
gressiveness is nowhere better ex
emplified than in this remarkable
little town located on the headwaters
of the Keya Paha river, which is a
fertile valley unexcelled in an agricul
tural way by no other country.
' [ drove from Mission to the Rose
bud agency, which is to the Indians
the capital of the Rosebud reservation.
With the Indians in their tepees and
lamps in and around the agency, it
cannot help but bring one back to
the early days and life of the Sioux,
lie is now peaceful and law-abiding
but he clings tenacidusly to his old
way of living. Even where, they
possess fairly good houses they spend
most of their time in their tepees
nearby. The advancement of civiliza
tion and the rapid settlement by the
white people in that country, has
wrought wonderful changes In the
general landscape of the whole Rose
bud reservation, and nowhere is this
more noticeable than the territory
around Mission.
From the Rosebud agency I drove
south to the state line Just north of
Urookston, »N'eb., and from there into
Valentine. From Valentine I drove
east to Springview , and I cannot help
but mention that 1 traveled over the
most wonderful road In the United
States from Valentine east to the
Keya Paha county line. The improve
ment in the roads throughout that
entire country in the last five years
lias been marvelous and where th :■
tax burden has been perhaps a little
heavy, I nevertheless feel it was
worth all they spent because practical
ly every rancher and farmer owns
an automobile and makes use of their
roads. „
Rosebud Crops Wonderful.
"The crops in the Rosebud country
are simply wonderful, especially the
corn. It is my Judgment that the
corn production from Gregory county
west to the western line of Todd coun
ty will average between 40 and 50
bushels per acre I never before saw
such an abundance of grass and hay.
It might be interesting to know that
I That’s why Velvet Tobacco
is so very mild. It is fine in
your pipe and topnotch for
cigarettes
I loof-rr A MtrMTnlu.roCfl
that country since it was opened to
the while settler several years ago,
has never had a crop failure. I know
of no body of land in the United
States where crops are so sure,
especially corn, or where corn ran
be bought as cheap as In the Hose
bud country. It is true that they
have shared with the entire civilized
world in the business depression, but
their spirit of optimism Is remarkahle.
Instead Of howling for the Impossible
through legislation arid freak thedres,
they have gone to work with renewed
energy and confidence and If hogs
and cattle will remain at the present
level of prices, they feel thut they
will make money and continue going
ahead as they did before deflation
took place. The freight rates are ex
cessive and handieap them on raising
grain for sale, but even with these
high rates they can feed their grain
to their livestock and prosper. If
wheat remains around its present
low level, there will not be much of
it produced In that country. They
are simply going to get away from
the small grain fainting except for
feeding purposes, and if their appar
ent resolution to continue adherence
to this polity is followed by other
sections of the United States, wheat
production will not be burdensome
und the producer wjll, without doubt,
enjoy better returns from his labor.
"The Hosebud country is made up
of young and middleaged men from
all sections of the United States who
went In there to take advantage of
the homestead act for the purpose of
C-l-o-s-i-n-g O-u-t
SWEATERS AND SKIRTS
Clearing the Racks of
All Summer Dresnes
COME EARLY TUESDAY j
181! f arnam t
building up homes. Their leadership
has seemed to lie of the constructive
kind and everywhere murks of in
telligence and good fellowship are in
evidence.
County Attorney Held
in Raid on Moonshiners
Fort Worth, Tex.. Aug. 2fi.—Texas
ranger* force* climaxed flieir twodny*
drive on moonshiner* and bootlegger*
in the woody hill* of Somerwcll coun
ty today with the arrest of County
Attorney Eddie Roark. Six other men
surrendered Sunday to ranger*, bring
ing the total number held by slat*'
forces to 30.
- ---—■—•
1 _ MqBoiiMfen&Ca
The New Alice McDonald
Bed Spreads
How attractive for the
bedroom done in rose
shades is the rose and
cream combination in
these new crinkled bed
spreads. It is long
enough to fold over the
pillows, so a bolster
isn’t necessary. The
crinkle is unaffected by
washing and they re
quire no ironing. Also
comes in all cream, blue
and cream, and laven
der and cream.
I nusual tonal bargains
arc to br found in tltr
August sale of linens.
Ma in Floor
Single bed size.
72x108 inches—
$8.25
Double bed size.
90x108 indies—
$9.75
Only Five More Days
Hurry if you want to save $26.75 on this remarkable washer Only 5 more days—and perh^s
only 4—for our supply is very limited. As soon as it is exhausted, they cannot be duplicated at
this price. »
Was $95 Now $68.25
From the Factory of the "Herachel” we were able to
pick up a limited supply of these Electric Washers; first
class in every way; made to serve you faithfully for years.
This it the lowest price at which thia Wather wat ever
told. Why not tave $26.75 NOW?
MOTOR t4 h. p., “Guaranteed in Writing 2 Years”—
Will Run Washer and Wringer.
GEARS Big and Strong. Made to Last. Also Very Quiet.
TUB 1*4 -inch Seasoned Southern Cypress, Won't Warp,
Will Keep Water Hot.
WRINGER Swings Over Your Tubs, Will Run With
Washer.
CONTROLS With Foot or Hand, Very Safe and Easy to
Use.
FULLY GUARANTEED
By the Factory and Us
, h\try part in tb a«her bu h np -i>. and p r ■ a « ap
Washer, bu' a Good Washer at a Lew Price, made possible by our
lucky purchase Not an '•OuflaW nor "Orphan" but cne for
which w« can gre* parts if needed ,
Only
$3.25
Down
1905 Farnam S».
•The Wa.her Man"
Only
$1.50
a Week
AT Untie 1011.
Right down the street is
the Royal Cord Man
IN nearly every town in this country
there is a legitimate tire dealer who
displays a yellow and blue sign reading—
“United States Tires—Sales and Service
Depot.”
He sells Royal Cords—the industry’s
United States Tires
are Good Tires
i
leading tire—and has subscribed to the
Royal Cord way of doing business.
This means that he has agreed to carry
a complete stock—maintain adequate
service facilities and give an honest dol
lar’s worth.
There is a greater reason than ever now
for getting acquainted with him.
He is the only man who can give you
the benefit of the three new U. S. Rubber
Discoveries; i. e., Tires made of Sprayed
Rubber and Web Cord by the Flat Band
Method of building Cord Tires.
These are the greatest contributions tv'*
fine tire making since the advent of
cord tires.
These discoveries can be had only of
the Royal Cord man. He is right down
the street.
U. S. Royal Cord Tires
United States © Rubber Company
OlKJUnlttd Suit. Kubb« C*. N. T.