The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, November 21, 1924, Image 9

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    \ —
f Today
Biggest Day, Yet.
^ Cheerful Predictions.
Wanted a Firm “No."’
A Law for Savings.
By ARTHUR BRISBANE,
v _._/
Biggest day so far, in the stock
market yesterday, 2,400,000 shares
was the turnover. Wild buying in
the morning, eager selling that
pulled down prices in the after
noon.
As one buys somebody else sells,
and that should be remembered.
Many, apparently are willing to let
stocks go, and do not agree with
the idea that there is to be no top
to this market.
However, be careful how you
sell short. Some of the bears were
grunting sadly yesterday morning,
trying to buy back what they had
sold.
It is said that Durant, the auto
| mobile wizard, has gathered up sev
eral millions since the boom started.
The stock market interests even
>those that never buy, sell or gam
ble, for in its own wild way the
stock market is prosperity’s barom
eter.
It tells what capital, which
means business intelligence, thinks
of the immediate future.
Leonard P. Ayres of the Cleve
land Trust company, predicts for
1925 increasing, expanding busi
ness, and a prosperity boom “ap
proaching the speed limit.” He
foresees low interest rates, much
building and higher wages. All
pleasant predictions.
British financiers are worried
about our outlook, which is kind of
them. They fear inflation in this
country. But they need not worry,
with Mellon in charge of national
finance. He understands that job,
won’t permit inflation, and won’t
be scared into hurting business by
making money tight.
The British are cheered by one
thought. They believe they will
get from the Germans in repara
tions through the Dawes plan £30,
000,000 a year, just enough, each
year, to supply what they, the Brit
ish, must pay to the United States
on account of war debts.
The British ask the league of
nations to hold back on their world
conference provided for in the fa
mous protocol. It is hoped that
Uncle Sam will be persuaded, even
at this late date, to come in and
1 make himself generally useful.
Two things should make Coolidge
send a friendly, firm “no” to that.
First, the size of his vote,, which
was a vote aginst any mixing up
with European agreements.
Second, the sinking of the unfin
ished battleship Washington on
whch the people of this country
have spent $35,000,000. If we were
persuaded into such nonsense as
that at the Washington conference
heavens know what would be done
to us if they lure our half-baked
statesmen to a conference on the
other side of the water.
The Indiana supreme court up
holds a law compelling a man to
support his father and mother, if
they are poor, and he is able to
take care of them. Mr. Lundy al
lowed his father and mother to go
to the poorhouse, offering as ex
cuse the fact that he was buying
an automobile on the installment
plan and needed all his money. The
installments now will have to wait.
It is hard to' believe that any
man, not an idiot, should refuse to
care for his father and mother.
But, remember, how close we are, in
years, to the theory that people too
. old to care for themselves ought to
| be killed and eaten by younger peo
ple, including their own children.
Among savages still living the old
expect to be killed when they be
come useless, and if* you could find
Esquimaux far removed from the
influence of white men, you would
see them putting an old father
or mother in a little house made of
ice blocks, with a small amount of
food, then sealing up the entrance
to the house and leaving nature
Now Showinf—1 -3-7-9 P. M. '
JOHN
BARRYMORE
in
“Beau Brununel”
An exceptionally artistic photo
play in 11 reels with superb sup
porting cast.
tdmlsaioni Matinees, 35c; Evenings,
50c
Sis Days, Starting Unu Q/l
MONDAY IMVMTe Sfc*»
MATINEES Thanksgiving 3:00 p. m.,
Saturday 2:30 p. m.
NOTE—Wednesday's Performance Sold
to Tangier Temple
ADMISSION—Evenings 50c, *1. $1.10
and $2; Matinees 50c, $1 and $1.50
LAST KEEh c“'/.‘w.".;
This week is “Can Your Prejudice
.Weak”—In a word, go see “TAKE
" A LOOK” nt the Gayety and realise
how you’va misjudged Columbia
Burlask.
Ladies' 25c Bargain Mat., 2il5 Week Days
Bun. Mat. and Wk>—"MONKEY SHINES"
[ The Daily Cross Word Puzzle
Horizontal.
1—To mako solid.
3— An oarsman.
7—Point (Portuguese).
10— Into or on (prefix).
11— Definite article (French).
12— Upon.
13— Bone.
14— Commenced.
15— A sweet salt.
16— Of (French).
17— A preposition.
18— Scatter irregularly.
20—To bring upon onesself.
23— Quebec (abbr.)
24— Inorganic substance.
25— Umbrella flower.
27—Walking sticks.
29— Ewe (Old English).
30— I would (abbr.)
31— Those who telephone.
Vertical.
1— Aborigines. Central America.
2— To wipe out.
4— Part of the abdominal cavity.
5— To evade.
6— Regeneration.
7— Famous Ottawa Indian chief.
8— League.
9—Pain Inflicted.
18—To crouch.
13—Seditious person.
21— French statesman of the XVII
century.
22— Reposes.
2G—Female lamb.
28—Own (Scottish).
The Solution Will Appear Tomorrow.
Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle.
and starvation to take their course.
At least the Indiana man let his
father and mother go to the poor
house. He did not kill them.
It is announced that the national
democratic party is to be “thor
oughly reorganized.” It needs it,
what there is left of it. When you
consider that Senator La Follette
ran ahead of Davis, who ran third,
in many of the northern states, you
realize that democracy needs some
kind of strong medicine.
The people are tired of a demo
cratic party that is kept on ice by
the financial interests, and trained
in “safe” ways, in case an accident
should bring it into power.
Many believe that A! Smith of
New York, who carried his state
by running a million ahead of his
ticket, will demand and get the next
democratic nomination. If he does,
it will be another kind of a fight,
and an interesting one.
The Rev, Dr. Sheatsley of Ohio,
whose wife was found burned in
the family furnace, now accents
the theory rejected by the police
that the unfortunate woman crawl
ed into the fire, shut the furnace
door behind her, while the flames
were raging, and burned herself to
ashes.
Her 14-year-old daughter says
her mother was much moved by
her husband’s sermon about heaven
on the preceding Sunday, and had
expressed a desire to go to heaven
and see it for herself, but to go by
way of the furnace seemed a
strange plan. And the situation is
complicated by the fact that a bot
tle of poison is missing.
You would have said that every
possible explanation of mysterious
death had been suggested already.
But this Ohio case is new. A
strange detail is that the woman’s
16-year-old son, seeing the body in
the furnace, but saying nothing for
two hours, because he “preferred
to have some one else discover it.”
President Coolidge warns con
gress and the people that the for
ests must be protected and a way
must be found “to bridge the fatal
gap between cut and growth.” This
nation, after wasting with fire and
ax, cutting down millions of mag
nificent trees to use the bark in
tanning and leaving the tree trunks
to rot, is nearing a timber famine.
The supply of timber left
amounts to 745,000,000,000 cubic
feet of lumber. The nation uses
25^000,000,000 cubic feet each
year, while the annual timber
growth is only 6,000,000,000 cubic
feet. It takes little arithmetic to
show what will happen.
If the forests are to be replaced,
as they are used, the work will have
to be done by national and Atate
authority. Private individuals have
neither money nor inclination to
provide for the future.
TOMORROW
ON THE STAGE W
17th INFANTRY 1
REGIMENTAL BANDS
38 of UncU Sam's Finest i’i>
1 WHEN IN NEKII OF HEI.I*
THY
OMAHA BEE WANT AOS.
-I
1 '1
LAST
DAY
ANTONIO MORENO
/HELENE CHADWICK
EYS
weighbdfhodd tmeatet
LOTHROP.24th and Lothrop
Reginald Denny in "Sporting Youth"
BOULEVARD - - 33d and Leavenworth
Viola Dana in "Revelation"
HAMILTON .... 40th and Hamilton
Milton Silla and Alice Lake In
"Environment." Alao "Into tha Nat"
GRAND 16th and Binnay
Betty Compton in "Tha Enemy Sax"
Charter Members
at 68th Division
of Omaha Masons
Seven Veterans of Consistory
Here Presented With Re
membrances; 1,800 at
^our-Day Session.
The 68th reunion of the Nebraska
consistory of the Ancient and Accept
ed Scottish Rite Free Masonry, valley
of Omaha, came to a cloae Thursday
night after a four-day session, at
which degrees from fourth to 32d, In
clusive, were conferred on a class of
125.
Among the 1,800 member* attend
ing the reunion were John Gilbert
Taylor of Minneapolis, Frank P. Zim
mer of Lincoln, J. J. Points of Platts
mouth and Charles p. Huntington of
Omaha. These four men are charter
members, and were presented with
remembrances, as were three other
living charter members who were un
abl to attend. •
James Robert Cain, jr., 33d, presided
at the consistory banquet. Rev. Elmer
I. Goshen, 32d, of Salt Lake City, past
grand chaplain of the supreme coun
cil, was the principal speaker. Music
was furnished by the Scottish Rite
mixed quartet and orchestra.
The reunion marked the 10th anni
versary of the occupancy of the tem
ple at Twentieth and Douglas streets.
27 Chinese Caught.
Boston, Nov. , 20.—Twenty-seven
Chinese stowaways were taken off the
steamship President Van Buren as
the vessel left for New York. It was
said the Chinese went aboard at
Shanghai.
Tiniest Girl Among
Players at Empress
\ ___
- •>
The tiniest member of the Empress
players and perhaps the largest In
point of popularity la Olive Wlntner,
appearing In the musical play,
“Clouds and Sunshine.”
When she sings "You're My
Daddy" to Rudy Wlntner, who Is her
"daddy” In real life, there Is more
than Just the mere singing of words
with Olive. She puts her whole heart
and soul into It, and as for Rudy he
Just beams* all over.
AT THE
THEATERS
Ruth Budd, a feature of this week's
Orpheum show, Is a disciple of the
modem doctrine, "Smile, smile,
smile." She smiles In her work and
she smiles In her play. If. as some
body has said, "A smile Is a ray of
sunshine," she has done more than
her share In dispersing clouds. Miss
Budd's smile has become so much a
part of her that she Is called "the giri
with the smile.” Furthermore, she
lias talent and versatility.
Making up a splendid vaudeville hill
at the World, starting tomorrow, is
the Lee Marshall Revue, In "Pep and
Syncopation;" Bernivlcl brothers and
company In "Moments Musical;"
Renee oNel and Walter C. Petclval
in "The Egg in the Bag;” Kraft and
Lamont, Kelley and Brown and
George Moore are the other attrac
tions.
"The Woman Hater," a modern
farce comedy, with musical trim
mings is what the Empress players
offer at that theater starting tomor
row. It deals with the love affairs
of a mere man who thinks he can
get along without the ladies. How
he is fooled makes a stage story that
is replete with funny situations. Ama
teurs are an added attraction this
evening, starting at 8:30.
Many times it Is not the born-and
bred offspring of a race that can see
the oddities of character acting and
the twist of words with a comical
effect. In this respect, however, what
ever truism there is to such an ob- j
servation is cast aside so far as Sal
vatore Zlto, who has a prominent part
in "Take a Look,” playing at the
Gayety this week, is concerned.
WhatMore Could
You Ask for in
Motion Pictures
1 REX INGRAM
I Screen’s foremost director, creator of
■ “The 4 Horsemen” and “Scaramouche”
oL RAMON
^ NOVARRO
The screen’s perfect lover
Pr ALICETERRY
2 The screen’s most beautiful woman
A story of a handsome sheik who had romance in his
eyes and the devil in his mind—and a girl who was
lost under the spell of the desert moon.
IT STARTS
y TOMORROW
I TONIGHT :: %f£E&£3i 1
8 Creighton Nite I
Ljf Football Team Will Be Gueata of ^heater B
jjS Creighton- LAST Neb.-Notre ^
fS Okla. Aggiea SHOWING Dame Foot- |m;
jH Game TODAY ball Game
-One of the Seaaon’a Fineat Productiona- I
I “TESS OF THE P’URBERVILLES” I
Augustus Pitou, Inc., is presenting
May Robson at the Brandela In her
new play, “Something Tells Me," writ
ten by Miss Robson, on Monday, next,
to remain throughout Saturday, with
a special 3 o’clock matinee on Thanks
giving and the regular Saturday mati
nee.
“Something Tells Me" has a new
strain of comedy and sentiment
woven Into It which Is a decided nov
elty and original.
A daintily handled psychic strain
la uppermost In the play and with a.
nucleus of rich comedy portrayed by
Miss Robson snd a company of clever
people, "Something Tells Me” Is arous
ing the greatest enthusiasm,
' 0 4
7 Days A Great
Starts Holiday
Tomorrow Bill
* 4
“Everything in Entertainment”
“ MARSHALL REVUE
DANCER
With lee Marshall and five [
stars of the “Liza” company
in “PEP AND SYNCOPATION”
!■% ■ ■ ■ aa ORIGINAL
Bernivici Bros. gsgSft s
With Mardo Kahen in “Moments Musical”
Renee Noel & Wa Iter C.Percival
in a delightful comedy romance by Damon Runyon,
famous sports writer
KRAFT & LAMONT KELLY & BROWN
“Put Up the Lights” Songs, Dance, Laffs j
GEO. W. MOORE ARTHUR HAYS
“Bits of Tricks” Original Comedy Solo
• I 4
A Distinguished Cast of Players in a Photoplay
of Remarkable Interest
“BEHOLD THIS WOMAN”
with
Marguerite de la Motte
Irene Rich Charles Post
Harry Myers Anders Randolf
i Today—Last Times:"]
LSEVEN-ACT BILL!
GH-KJ I-,
“The Reckless Age”
I Starting Tomorrow
“The. Stranger
of the North”
In the land of timber and big snows
this story is staged. You will be
thrilled at the many scenes of daring
by the men who ruled by gun and a
ready right wallop.
S The Spat Family %
? “A Hard Boiled Tenderfoot” y |
" i