The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, December 02, 1924, Image 7

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    T v. day
* Quite a Business.
A hove the Banditti.
/ he Czars Did It.
Cheaper Sufiar, r I ease.
By ARTHUR BR'SBANE.
Every week a firm on I,onf
Island sends a $5,000 payroll tc
New Jersey by flying machine. The
idea is to keep above the bandits,
In due time bandits also will gel
flying machines, just as they have
got high powered automobiles.
A flying machine properly made
Is cheaper than an automobile as
well as safer. Once you get off the
ground, and start through the air,
you do not wear out tires, or rattle
machinery over the bumps.
Those that used to see young
Mr. Vanderbilt rushing around in
his imported automobile called “the
white ghost" did not realize that
in a short time farmers and
mechanics would use automobiles
to save time and money.
It is hard for us now to realize
that before babies in the cradle
are full grown, we shall be talking
about “the old days when men took
long slow journeys by railroad.”
You read that the bolshevik
government sends helpless men and
women to die inside of the Arctic
circle. Members of the Romanoff
family, and their sympathizers,
leaders in the Greek church, educat
ed men whose opinions do not
suit the soviet government are sent
to what is sure death. All that is
horribly cruel and brutal. In the
days of the czars, larger crowds
were sent to die of cold in Siberia,
linner brutal punishment. No royal
ties were sent, but educated men
and women were sent because their
opinions did not suit the czars. That
also was brutal.
Brutality breeds brutality.
President Coolidge is considering
tye tariff on sugar. That tariff so
high, is a hardship on our friends
ii? Cuba. Cuba complains that it is
higher than it need be to give profit
to sugar growers in the United
States.
Sugar is necessary to the health
and growth of children, necessary
also by the way to those that obey
the constitution and do their dis
tilling inside of their own bodies.
The president undoubtedly will
settle the sugar question having in
mind our friendship for Cuba, and
;he needs of millions of American
mothers, as well as fair protection
for American sugar interests.
The railroads of the United
States are quite a business—big
enough for the people to notice, if
they had anybody to represent their
interest.
Earnings for October Just pub
lished show that the class one rail
roads, leaving out the smali fry,
took in for the month $540,838,601.
The month's net operating income
was $159,215,481. Not so bad.
A gross business of six thousand
million dollars a year for the big
lirst-class railroads ought to make
some profits possible, with reason
able economy and modern methods.
However, it is much easier V>
raise freight and passenger rates
than it is to economize or keep up
to date, especially when you have
no real competition.
May wheat has passed $1.64. It
will sell higher. Farmers are rush
ing their grain to maket now, feel
ing that these prices will do. You
will remember that this <>!pmn
ADVKRTINI'M l.\T.
Qironic coughs and persistent colds
lead to serious lung trouble. You can
stop them now with Creomulsion, an
emulsified creosote that is pleasant to
take. Creomulsion is a new medical
discovery with twofold action; it soothes
and heals the inflamed membranes and
kills the germ.
Of all known drugs, creosote is rec
ognized by the medical fraternity as the
greatest healing agency for the treat
ment of chronic coughs and colds and
other forms of throat and lung troubles.
Creomulsion contains, in addition to
creosote, other healing elements which
soothe and heal the inflamed mem
branes and stop the irritation and in
flammation, while the creosote goes on
to the stomach, is absorbed into the
blood, attacks the seat of the trouble
and destroys the germs that lead to
consumption.
Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac
tory in the treatment of chronic coughs
and colds, bronchial asthma, catarrhal
bronchitis and other forms M throat
and lung diseases, and is excellent for
building up the system after colds or
the flu. Money refunded if any rough
or cold, no matter of how long stand
ing, is not relieved after taking accord
ing to directions. Ask your druggist,
Creomulsion Co., Atlanta, Ca.
' AU\ KKTl&r.M!<vr.
Tet Dr.Edwards’Olive Tablets
That is ili« joyful cry of thousands
win a In- Edwards jiroduced Olive
Table!*, the Hubstltute for calomel.
Or. Edwards, a practicing physician
or 17 years and calomel's old tune
»nemy. discovers the formula for Olive
Tablets while treating pullenls for
rhronlc constipation and torpid livers.
Or. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not
contain calomel, but a healing, sooth
111— vegetable laxative.
So griping Is the "keynote" of these
little sugar-coated, olivecolored tab
>cts They cause Ihe bowels and lb er
to act normally. They never force
them to unnatural action
If you have a "dark brown mouth"
-bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—
• Irk headache—torpid liver—constlpa
tion. you II And quick, sure and pleas
snt results from one or two of Dt Ed
wards Olive Tablet* at bedtime
Thousand* take them every night
Just to keen right. Try them. 15c
and 10c
Beauty of Omaha Women Catches Eye
of N. Y. Police Captain on Visit Herej
Secretary to Enright Inspects
Headquarters ^ ith
Dnnn.
Th» Omaha type of woman im
pressed Oapt. John J. O'Connell o(
the X»w York pollee department. He
believes that Miss Omaha is the
apotheosis of feminine qualities that
please the eye and mind. He averred
that Onmha women have pulchritude
plus.
The captain Is on a tour of cities
to promote an interest In an interna
tional police conference next May In
the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, to stimulate
a wider adoption of the international
police code and to increase co opera
tion among the police departments
of this country.
And He Means It.
Among his observations here on
Sunday he noted that Omaha women
ha’te splendid countenances and walk
with an assurance not seen In eastern
cities, the New Yorker said.
“I mean what I say of Omaha
women. I nm not saying this In
every city I visit,” he captain stated.
F.nright's Secretary.
The captain Is married, lives on
Long Island and Is one of the hand
some men of the New York police
department. He is secretary to Po
lice Commissioner Enright.
Commenting on the beautiful
m . — -uw... 1 ■ .
—Photo by Dowell.
Omaha weather, he referred to recent
zero weather experienced at his home.
Pollen Commissioner H. W. Dunn
accompanied the visitor Monday
morning to the city hall and central
police station.
predicted $1.50 wheat when the
price was below $1.20. Unfortu
nately, gamblers have probably
made more than farmers, although
the farmers, for whom this is writ
ten, have also profited, those that
held their wheat.
Dr. D. E. Gerin of France, on
his way to America, should have
as warm a welcome as we usually
reserve for princes, and others, that
never did a day's work.
Dr. Gerin comes to demonstrate
a new method of treating pneu
monia, before the. members of the
New York state physicians’ organ
ization. With this new method, 600
cases of pneumonia were treated,
without one death. Dr. Gerin also
treats pernicious anaemia, without
blood transfusion.
The British go through, when
they start, if they can. They have
gone through the Sudan group of
Egyptians that killed an English
man or two and decided not to
evacuate the Sudan in spite of Brit
ish orders. 4
It’s wonderful what machine
guns and flying machines can do
used energetically. Two British
officers are killed, eight men
wounded, but the “rebels” have
given in. The British, accustomed
to dealing with “inferior peoples”
all around the globe, have discoy
| • RADIO
v_J
Prograirf for December t.
(Courte y of Itadlo Digest.)
It> Asswi • ted Press.
WSB. Atlanta. Journal, 429- 8-9. sing
ing convention, colored jubilee singer*;
10;45. Kadiowls.
WGX, Chicago. 370: 4, organ: 1:30.
concert: 8, concert; 8:30. classical; 10*
orchest ra.
VVMAy. Chicago News. 447.5: 6. organ.
6:30, orchestra; 8, book review; 1:20, con
cert.
\V raft If, Chicago. 370: 7. orchestra,
soloists; 9, theater; 11, orchestra, songs,
pla nist.
KYW, Chicago, 536: 4:35, story; 7.
concert; 7:30, stage review; 8, musical,
8:20, speeches; 8:50, musical; 10, orches
tra,
WIJ, Chicago. 3 45: 6:30, organ: 7
10:30, entertainers, soloists. orchestra,
farm program; 11, glee club. 1-, review,
organ, orchestra.
AVLW. Cincinnati. 423: 10-1 2. musie.
AV I AX. Cleveland News. 390; 6:30,
bedtime; 7. entertainment.
WKAA, Dallas News. 476: 8.30 9:30.
Cuilom sisters. banjo quintet; 11-12,
organ. Palace theater.
YV AV J, Detroit News. 617: 7:30, pro
gram.
KNX, Hollywood. 337 : 8:30, music; 10,
da nee.
AV'H P, Kansas City, 411: 8 10. musical
program.
AVDAF. Kansas City Star. 411: 6-7.
story lady, ensemble; 11:45-1, Night
hawks.
Kll.f, I,n* Angeles Times. <395), 8.30,
children; 10, features; 12. orchestra
AVHAS, Louisville Times, (400), 7:30-1,
concert.
AV>IC, Memphis Commercial Appeal.
< 50ft i, 8:30, concert, orchestra. 11, mid
night frolic.
tvCCn, Minneapolis £t. Tsui, (417), 9.
musical.
CKAC, Montreal (425 ». 4. stories- 4:30.
coh'-ert; 7.30. ffllklnre; 9-3*. orchestra.
AVEAF. New York. (492). H 30. orche*
fra: 7. Columbia yoiversity, 7:10, Na
tional Carbon company.
AVHN. New York (160), 6 10. employ
ment. 8.3t>, or<he*vra; 9, dance; 10:30,
munlc; 11, orchestra.
WJ4 New York. < 455). 4. "Poi5«i" 4:15,
orMiOatra: T, AA’al! Street Journal review;
7:10. talk.
WOK. Newark, (405), 4. orchestra;
6:30, sports
KGO. Oakland (312), 4. orchestra; JO.
comedy, KOQ players; 12, fiance.
AVAAAV, Omaha. <286). 8-9. a.mg hits
AV 1)A It. Philadelphia. (395), 6:30, talk;
4:5n. ofehestra
WEI. Philadelphia, (395). 4. talk; 7,
cop'vrt: a, concert; 9:05 play
HVAK, Pittsburgh. ( 442), 6 30. Um-li
Knybee; 6 4 5. special; 7. concert* 8.
Eve ready entertainers; 9:.30, entertain
ment.
KlikA, Pittsburgh, (326), 4:1 6. chil
dren; 7. feature; \ ;;o. concert
K< 1 AN’. Portland, <4'«:') 7. children; 10.
/iyji. nil oral lecture; 10:30, concert
wk.Wj. Poi to ItIco. (300), 11-12:30,
| Jazz. band, talk, musical.
kPu, Had Era «t cisc«*. (4 ”3). 4:30. or
. lu -tni: 7:20. rtories; 9. music, 1 o, arui)
band* 12. band,
WOV. heiiectadr. (380). 4 4 5. drama
talk; 7,* organ; 8, program, address; 10:26.
organ.
KK<>\. Seattle. (238). 8. reports; 9.
bedtime; io, orchestra: l?. orcheatrs.
WHZ. Springfield. (337 ). « 05. bedtime;
6:30. orchestra; 7:16, ballet music, 6:30,
K.8P, Sf Louis Post Dispatch, (544), 4,
enfvert; 9. snnminced.
WRf. Washington. 469). 4 45. a*
noun< ed 7, talk: 7 15. snnonn'-ed; 8.
talk. * 20. rnnirrt; 9:15, orchest is.
ered that firmness is the one great
thing.
They tried it on some of’our
rtatesnien at Washington, in that
famous peace conference about the
Pacific ocean. And there in Wash
ington it worked perfectly. As a
result we are scrapping 27 battle
ships, and insuring Europe’s posses
sions in the Pacific.
(Opyright. 1924.)____
WO AW Program |
i --- - ■—J
Turedny, December 2.
n p. rtf.—"Ads lee to Lovelorn” period
conducted by Cynthia Orev. editor of
; PJegse ^elj Me” colupin of nmaha pail)
X e w *
#;:25 p. m —Dinner program, trap*
[muted from H'lUWi atutfio. in th* Ma>
'•opr! nnd Nursery compnnv building.
Shenandoah, la. Aijapti «•* Hannan-Van
Lrlint company, H* >nl dealere
* p. in Merry Mual> *1 Maldi of Hotel
Fop ty tif 11 e
Popular Numoer ".Vlo'rnlnK".
Turk and fMljfr
Ogrhead i a.
Vocal Holo—"Love M**nd* a Little Gift
of Koaea".Openshew
Dorothy Kotg|*r
Popular Number "Tig Juana".
.Pavla, Lew la and Roan
Oroneetra.
'’oral purl --"Indian Love T. yrbe" Finden
Mlaaea Rotaler end Hchobel.
popular Number - "Bugle Fall Hag”..
. . Srhoebel
l |r rhe.nl ra
Vocal Duel- "H it rarolle." from "Tales
of Hoffman-'
Mlaaea ffchobel and Moran
SH^ctlon* from "Madame Butterfly”.
. ... Puccini
Orchestra
; Popular Number—"Go ‘Long. Mule".,
Quartet Altsaea Jones Rotsler,
fo hobel end Mor in
Instrumental Trio—"Sleeping pesuty”
. Trchalkowsk’
Mlrte* Jon** Henman and Schobel.
Fox trot arrangement of .Melody
. Gen Vharlea llt*ti
1C p m —Th* original Cits'* Vaga
bond* of Fairmont Minn Placing at
L mpr**a Ruatl" garden December .1
10 <n p it) HnlM frolic M Fran!'.
HodeU, 1r and hta umsh* Nightingale*
Trsnamltted from Wowl ITooai at Roe*
land gardens.
Sleeping Sickness
Fatal to Surgeon:
111 Only 10 Days
Doclor Who Came to America
From Sweden Dies Here;
Funeral Services to Be
Held Tomorrow.
Dr. C. L. F. Swanson, 48, practicing
physician and surgeon in Omaha for
25 years, died Monday at 10:30 a. m.,
of sleeping sickness at his home, 1043
North Thirty-fourth street. He was
graduated from the o‘ld Omaha Medi
cal college In 1897. Born In Sweden
he came to America with his parents
when 5 years of age.
He retired from active practice four
years ago on account of Illness. He
did not become seriously ill until 10
days ago.
Dr. Swanson Is survived by his
widow; a daughter, Lois; two sisters,
Mrs. Anna Eskelson of Omaha, and
Mrs. Gertrude Patterson of St. Law
rence, S. D.
Rev. Oliver D. Baltsly will officiate
at the funeral services at 3 p. m.
Wednesday at Kountse Memorial j
church.
Active pallbearers at Dr. Swanson's
funeral will he Conrad Johnson, A.
G. Swanson, Carl Carlson, G. A. San- i
dell, Olaf Rasmussen and F. Hagelin.
Honorary pallbearers will be Drs.
W. F. Milroy, J. C. Iwerson, T. R.
Mullen. Alfred ,T. Brown, Rodney
Bliss and Clyde Moore,
Christmas Trade Gets
Early Start at Columbus
Columbus, Dec. 1.—That "shop
early" Christmaa trade campaign of
other years are having a decided ef
fect Is the declaration of merchants
who say Christmas shopping is 200
per cent heavier at the month’a open
ing than ever before.
• , ■„
c:
Q Q
Plump, meaty green
olives give flavor to
SOUPS
• I*: sotJP* too? Indeed, yes! Meaty
slices of green olives give a new won
der to chicken soup. And the tangv
Davor places cream soups on a new rjj
pinnacle of good things to eat. 1 here ri
are many unusual ways to serve green
olives. Write for free folder of recipes.
Attmeirnimm AMERICAN IMPORTERS
P. • f ml Sprnmink Grmtm Olitrt
JUfltllSH 300 Fi,'*> Ttsnt. ?( Yark Oil
GREEN OLIVES
"All qmrtm mlittt mm,i ilmfrA mlirmt trt Smtmiik Grmtm O/iees
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Colds Headache J
Pain Neuralgia !/ /
Toothache lumbago ^'SI ®
Neuritis Rheumatism
Accept onlv “Payer*' package
whicn contains proven directions.
f Htndr ‘'B»Ter’’ box?* of 12 Mbleta.
# Alao of 24 and 100—Druggiata
AtplrU U U»a trio* mark of Bajar Uauu/anura ot UouoaoatlcacMaataa tl lallerlicaeU
f REBELLIOUS 1
YOUTH/
IHtoday— it's a wise Parent who knows
his own Child
YOUR sons, your daughters
and their friends,boys and
girls of high school age,
everywhere, are indulging in
an orgy of revolt against the
accepted order of things.
In place of your ideas and
ideals, they have substituted
theirs—ideas and ideals as far
removed from yours as yours
are fromTut-ankh-amen. Your
codes are codes of twenty
years ago. Youth has found
them insufficient for a genera
i tion raised on automobiles,
\ aeroplanes, movies, radio, so
they have made new ones —
and they have not consulted
you about it. You are slow,
youth flies with this age of
speed.
Life has speeded up. Youth
has kept pace. You and your
generation have stood still. To
their way of thinking you are
an old fogy sitting on the side
lines. Youth is in the saddle,
but it has not yet learned to
! control its fiery steed. Youth,
intoxicated with the heady
wine of independence, is riding
to a fall that will shake this
nation to its very foundations
if it is not checked in time.
Judge Ben B. Lindsey
tells you the facts
Denver is a typical American city. The
people of Denver are very much like
people everywhere. Though Judge Lindsey
thinks they are better, the youth of Denver
are neither better nor worse than the youth
of New York. Chicago. San Diego orPainted
Post, and you may be sure that what is
going on among the youth of Denver is
going on in exactly the same degree right
here at home.
Already the revolt of youth in Denver,
which is like the revolt of youth every
where, threatens changes in our social and
family life. The exact detail of t he manner
in which they are questioning the institu
tion of marriage and our social code may
surprise you, but you cannot doubt their
truth nor blind your eyes to their signifi
cance. Thqy come from no less an author
ity than Judge Ben Lindsey, who knows
what he is talking about.
Regarding hi* source of information.
Judge Lindsey, for tw enty-five years.Judge
of the Juvenile Court of Denver. Colo.,
says, “I am in constant confidential touch
with scores of boys and girls of high school
age; they tell me things; and they don't
stop with themselves. They tell me about
others like themselves who need my help;
and I can follow the thread from case to
case at any time ns far as I may have the
time and physical strength to go, and still
it travels on and on. From any ordinary
ense. selected at random, I can uncover a
thousand.”
Why Children fear to tell
their parents
A • weet and beautiful high school girl from
oneot Denver'smostrespectedfamili-ssum
med up the attitude of youth toward par
ent* and teachers*hus; "You see. Judge,”
she said, after freely admitting acts that
would have sent her parents into nervous
breakdown, "they don't know much about
us. They tliink they do. but thev don't, and
it wouldn't do to tell them! I wouldn't have
them know for the world whit I have been
telling you because all the kids would get
expelled!”
“'Don't you think they might help you?”
he inquired.
‘‘Help!” she exclaimed with unutterable
scorn in her voice. ' Help nothing' Why if
they found it out, we'd be just ruined!"
So serious does he considrr the situation,
so imperative the need fir an immediate
awakening of parents and teachers to the
sc-ial ar.d moral change that is fast being
brought about, that he has written a series
of arti lesthat shock you into a realiza
tion of the truth.
Facts from actual cases
He deals in facts, facts and more facts.
While never revealing a single identity, he
quotes real cases. You cannot doubt the
unbelievabh- things he shows you because
the proof is there too plain, too positive to
be denied.
But he goes further. He does more than
paint a pi :ture. He points out the remedy
-explains the methods that he himself
has developed during twenty-five years of
dealing with rebellious youth, methods
that have been gloriously successful, that
hsve made him loved and trusted by the
youth of an entire city, and his name a
household word throughout the country.
Asa parent, a teacher, a responsible citi
zen, you owe it to yourself, to vour children,
to posterity to read The R-volt of Modem
Youth," by Judge Ben B. Lindsey, and to
do your part in restoring the equilibrium
which must be restored if calamity is to be
averted.
It is the privilege of PAvsica/Cu/furato
place Judge Ben B. Lindsey 's great series
before you the handwriting rn the wall
that will warn a nation. "The Revolt of
"Modem Y'outh" begins in the December
issue, now on the newsstands.
AND THAT’5 NOT ALL! I
a Million Dollar
Vatao In Condition
Amali'a Oalli-Curcl prohibit livM ■
more urrnuoui life than moat men
— yet the famous puma donna i$ al
wave able to give of her heat. And
aha aeva proudly**MNo doctor haa
ever looked down mv throat." An
interesting atory that you'll read with
S rant iiitnlion. Pair 3 S.
Reducing Walst-Llns
and Increasing Salary
Ruih 1*1 ne (»t chef*’* on fee
ling around that J just plain tat. So
the Director of The Miracle hired
her to p!*r the part ot a peasant
woman. She reduced her waul lint
hut increased her salary. And she
tells how she did it on page 37.
Read it.
Can One Eat One • Way
Out of Constipation?
AnJ thr antwer it Ye*—a molt em
phatic Yft. Milo lint-np telit how
to cure on* of humanity’* frcefett
ailment* in the tint wav. A com
plete luting of proper food* for cur
ing con*t»p*tion, • helpful artule
that will keep many a man and wo
man out of • hospital. J*ee page 4U.
DO TOO BtllfTS
in Miracles?
Here's one. Erelya Usr, srarofZief
fe’d Folhe« was once ■ 'hin, menni
A<U- Doctors uiJ she cou «.n*t Use.
ioJav she Joea th** m.**t difficult of
acrobatic dan. e steps with ease. How!
— see page S3*
I These are hut some of the other arresting features ih»it niulu* the IJecemhci issue of Physical C ii/ititf Mujatint I :
I surely—"Anulher Qreat Issue" t-*3|
i MACFADOFN
I PUBLICATIONS. Inau
| Ma.'faddan Build
I s ltd* Broadwav. N*w York
I M y \ *m *n£''01Mn* ll.WY Pt*a**
* m y m M / *nt*t my nam* for a an mon-ha*
4 zf St O'!* \ J.'l"/) re / B C Q1A 0 f / introductoty aubactiptton to Physical
| ' l i‘ Is $ v/C^ / JM-C, y Cullur*. beginning with yoaif Dacambar
I * y numhat. If tou prafat a aaat'a aubacriptioa
| y chack hat* ( ) and ancloaa $.',5P.
, ^ Nam*....
Addrata ......
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