XhejQmaha SukdayBeb IS TttYft jf 7h K niitintf'with d 12 B OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 8, 1919. Talking With Hands O.K., But Not If It Hinders Traffic Traffic Policeman Sanko Likes to Listen to Officer Burgorowziski's Tales of Home Grown Radishes, But Talking With Hand Interferes With Traffic Regulation. Tft IL JL JT u if - t- C7m a m 11 11 n - !i ii jjp"j ii ii ii ii ji ff u f f u if . . r j. - 'HI" Somewmre.a vw - , , ; r r . . . "iM. i nniAi rt i.r irn it r i 7 f . u . i ri i i i i itii j r r. jjuh ii rii ii . frr. Ksts-j' m i -vi ' n " tj x im wwuwi' s x . i. ir ink i -t v ii i i i i iutittii n i i in i r Pea f 'Estate adent can fib like a recruiting sergeant. Information bynrug. (With Apolnfle to "Buii" Ber.) .The 'two greatest problems in the public eye today are house hunting ' ind prohibition. It s difficult to com bine the two; peace hath her wound stripes as well as war. After aim ;ing a sad eye at a yard of 'house ads, , the goof is entitled to go and drink enough pop to float a battleship. A real estate, agent can fib like a recruiting sergeant describing the joys of army life to a boob who lives so lac out in i ne tan grass mat tne owls elop with the guinea hens ' and wolves and rabbits use the same tooth brush. If the houses get any smaller, the mice will think- they are traps, and if they get any scarer, we will have to park ourselves in a foolish gar age. In another year they will be renting them in sizes like shoes, and hats. Can you blame a bird for get ting dizzy after trying to grab of f a house that won't' raise bunions on his elbows?- . Suffering From Rent Shock. . We know one. sap that rented a house which had a collection of rooms that would make a box they crate eggs in, look sick. . He is now suffering from rent-shock and is trying to raise a, mustache of some spongy substance that will stay damp after thevcoun,try goes dry. One advantage those small-room houses have, is that you can lick any 'burglar that's thin and short enough to squeeze in. The landlord must have grabbed his idea of rents from the judge who handed down a decision from a mail order catalog; he'd fine the guilty anywhere from a toothpick to a piano, all according to where he happened to ppen the book of installments. Maybe they You cast your optics oyer a yard or house ads, get their dope from a dream book; tney sure Know now to massacre a guy s wages. ' Built on Special Plan. All houses are built on the straw hat plan; good only in the summer, and then you have to hunt another when it gets cold. The agent shows you a house that has a batch of rooms looking 'like a collection of pill boxes. This is your five-room bungalow, alt folded up like an ac- cordeon. It has all the modern con veniences, including hot and cold folding doors, cemetery plumbing. indecent lights, folding bath tubs, etc. - . . The kitchen sink is a combination davenport and player piano; the bath . room is so small that you have to back out to change your mind. . , The other rooms are of the form fitting kind, buttoning up in the hack and opening like an evening dress. Living in a five-room bungalow in Umaha is like parking yourself in a sparrow's nest waiting for your mate to bring you a worm. In winter the cracked bungalow gets colder than landlord's heart and you have to park yourself around the gas stove and watcK the trick gas meter, like a pas senger in a taxicab watching the price on the taxi meter. , p Weston Laurels In Danger If Federal Judge Keeps in Trim Federal Judge J. W. Woodrough would rather walk than 'eat. He admits it himself. He dnce walked to Columbus, Neb.f and received much valuable exercise and pub licity. Although possessing a car, the judge often walks to. the federal building from his summer home at VfRcal Efideetieni sur knows how to salary , massacre a euvs Ralston. He studies nature during his pedestrian sojourns, and should he encounter a robin making a nest he is apt to pause for a moment. He usually is on time, but oc casionally MDn a bright spring day last week a group of lawyers'' waited with characteristic impatience for court to open. Their impatience grew as the moments passed. "The, judge must have had a puncture," growled one worthy member of the bar at last, giving vent to his impatience. "When did the judge begin in flating his rubber heels?" inquired another attorney who knew of the judge's pedestrian feats, with much sarcasm. What Do You Mean, "Would?'' (Ord Quiz.) I, Woods, the U. P. mail clerk, is taking a few days' lay off on full pay and putting in most of his time fishing. He says lots of the fish would weigh five pounds. A Hard Life. "Arabella," the gob softly whispered to her, "I am goUlK to tell you something. I do not know Just how you will receive It, but hope for the best. For some time It has been In my heart to tell you of It, but I had not the courage. Ara bella ' "Yes, yes, go on,'' the girl murmured, the third finger of her left hand itch ing perceptibly. "It's this, then: The last electric leaves here In three minutes, and If 1 miss it I'll have to walk back to Great Lakes." Great Lakes Bulletin. JAefiobo don't .worry over. vfiere ie vtJ roost . They tell this one on Traffic Offi cer Nick Sanko, and down at head quarters he 'has to stand for it, willy-nilly. Nick has been credited with being a linguist in seven lan guages and is now taking a corre spondence course in Esperanto. He also is versed in the sign language, which helps him directing tralfic in the four ways'of the compass. Nick. can keep the intersection at Twenty fourth and Faxnam streets free of entangling vehicle alliances as long as he is by himself, but when his old college- friend, Officer Johan Btigorowziski, comes along for a morning "conversazione," then it is a different story. Nick and Johan attended the same school somewhere in Kurope long before someone told William Ho henzollern that he could whip the world. So when they meet now and then they become reminiscent and confidential. Emphasizes His Words. The other morning, about the eighth hour of the clock, Nick had planted his feet firmly on the center of the intersection and was getting the morning traffic into an orderly arrangement, whren along came Jo han, reminiscent and radiant. Jo han skidded over to his friend's sta tion in the center of the intersec tion.. Nick continued to communi cate his signals to the morning mo torists and all went lovely until Jo han began to emprasize the incisive ness of his words by flapping his arms and hands like trained seals at fish time. Nick's sagacious- signals and Johan's fafctidious flappings began to affect the traffic in an awful manner to behold. At one juncture of the scene Nick was pointing east and west and Johan was pointing toward the stock yards and Fort Omaha. The result was that there was an ensemble of traffic in the intersection; it was chaotic. Some of the motorists believed a new system of double traffic direction was being inaugurated in Omaha and that Twenty-fourth and Farnam streets was the training ground. Nick finally observed that some thing was wrong and his troubled mind began to realize that his fc-iend was the cause of the trouble. ' Nick grew so wrathy that he be gan t6 argue with his old college friend. Fears for Worst. "Johan can't you talk without ' using your hands, so much? Can't you sec that voir are interfering with the traffic? I like to have you stop and tell me that you had radishes from your own garden last niglit lo supper. And 1 am inter ested in the fact that you put $4 in the bank last month, hut I have got to get this traffic through here or the sergeant will put me back walking a beat. Have a heart, Johan," said Nick in wild despair. In the meantime 1,000 horns were blowing and exasperated drivers were clamoring for clearance. A street . car moved upon the scene and added to the din. Johan surveyed the wild scene with aggravating calmness and then turned to his friend and asked: ' "Nick, tell me, do you wont to go away from here? Is that what you want? Have I offended you?" , "No, just slick around as long as you like. This looks like a very busy corner. You are some little business getter," Nick replied. The congestion was piling up from four directions when Detective Hag erman, attracted from afar by the mobilization of motor cars, vushedi into the center of the intersection and helped Nick unscramble the mass of traffic. "I hope Johan will keep His hands in his pockets the next time he comes around here with an earful of information," said Nick to Hag erman when the routine of the day's work had been restored. Scandal. Frofessor Benjamin Sriow, Of the University of Wisconsin, sayi That scandal travels 1,000 yards a . second, Flattery travels 500 yards a second. Truth is slowest, traveling Only about two yards a second. Perhaps that explains the news " We have been receiving from The vicinity of Paris. If the professor's figures Are correct, how long will it take For the truth to get here? Quick, Watson, the adding machiael Bouquet of Live, Human Interest Stories About People When They Wooed and Won gy E We have read oijfrt man who got the right stat near the organist svhen he -sang in the choir, and we liiive heard of the man who made a ir.sting impression on account of ''is athletic prowess his abilities as , an . acrobat at an icre cream lawn i festival in Omaha many years, ago. I ' Some nien when they would i-courting goharge up to the front p gate on a foam-flecked steed, or in a flivver, or it may be on a bicycle, - as" the case may be. . There is not tiiuch romance in a bicycle, and a ; 'J girl's heart would not be appreciably ' affected at the sight of a bicycle at the front gate. Anyway, some suit .,.ors are impulsive; they take things . for granted, propose after 'a few 'months' acquaintance and frequent- ; !y receive affirmative answers to. their declaration pf intentions. Slow and Sure. There " is another class that , be " heves that sure and slow go far in a day, or a month, or a year. .They ? believe in, getting thoroughly ac f quainted with the objett of their af fections; learning at least the first names of her kin and of otherwise , becoming established in the graces I ; ; J 1 kti ;$F of their - orosnertivp m-lawc TYiA you have a long or short courtship; a lone .or snort entraeement'1 Thomas A, Fry, whose picture at the age of about 21. is flashirl the screen today,, was in the oyster t e -y t r - i uuhiness lor years, trom 1879 to 1912. He started in this business three years after the Centennial ex position at rniiadelphia, and quit just one year Detore the big wind in Omaha. Loner association with h oyster taught him the lesson that it pays to De cairn and collected; to maintain an even temper, and never 10 get rumed. in all of his ex- peuence xof a third of a century in the ovstpr husiness - h ,ri t,. VJiever observed an oyster that was nervous or excited. Just Took His Time. When a St. Louis young woman went to Lawrence, Kas., years ago io visit ner aunt, Mr. fry looked over the situation in a calm and deliberate manner and took coun ael unto himself. He took her to church affairs and to parties, and all of the time acted as if he had all summer or all winter. He went along two or three years n that way, so he said, before he spoKe nis mind to this young woman from St. Loin's.' Hp uve there in no use hurrying things even during tne courtsnip and engagement pe riod. "Just take it easy, my boy," is his advice to the young man who gets the matrimonial bee in his bonnet. : Strand Is Stranded : : When Life Savings t . Vanish In Thin Air 'All the years that Walter Strand worked on a farm near Sycamore, III, he dreamed of the time when he would have $1,000 saved up. . He arrived in Chicago recently , with the $1,000, deposited.it in a bank, took ) modest room, and be gan to look around for attractive in- Vestments. - a , . The stranger he met was a Mexi can although he told Strand he could speak four languages. ' His father had died and left him a great fortune in Mexico mines, gold and set. urines reacning into millions. He sobbed as he told of the death of his father, ind his sorrow increased as ne Drought out the fact that with 'SO much"" wealth at hU A -- w U.JfVl iiC -, dion-t have ftioney enough to go and 'VVliat's the fare' to Mexico?" askea strand. : ,rAbout K000'" the stanger" said. If somebody would give me that thousand I'd return $3,000 in a month. I'd give him my entire herit age as security. I'd put it in writ , -ing." v ' .- He burst into tears again. At this! point a man walked up. , Tve heard your story, pardner," he said. "11 let you have the thou sand." ; . v "No chance,", said Strand, "I saw him first I'll Tet him have it" , - The weeping Mexican nodded. ; Strand rushed to the bank, got the money and returned with it to his new-found friend. Before, his eyes the stranger wrapped the money in . handkerchief and put it in his j pocket. Then he appeared to change his mind. "I'm not going to leave until to morrow," he said. "There's no use carrying all this money around with me. Somebody might steal it. Chi cago is full of sharpers, you know." "I know," said Strand. He took 'the handkerchief and went home. When he .opened it a lot 61 blank; paper fell out, It takes a long time to save $1,000 on the farm. Police are looking for a weeping Mexican, and Strand is almost stranded. Canadians to Gve - Commissioner From France Moose Head Memories of his recent visr to Canada will be keot fresh for flen Paul Pau by a giant moose 'head which will soon decorate the walls of the veteran's home in France, according to a letter received here. I he head is the . finest taken in Canada during last winter's hunting season. The horns have a soread of 53 inches. The trophy, beauti- fullv mounted, hac inct - heen . ww J " " ' 0V111 to the French commander as a pres ent from Manitoba. The moose was killed in the big woods between Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba on the Canadian National railwav alin tit 'Ion rr'Amf J ww. w UIIIV, northwest of Winninecr - Tt bought at Moose Horn by James Henderson. When General Pau toured Canada and the United States as heart nf the Pr.nrk ; , si'on; he saw the head at Winnipeg auu Kcaujr auiuirca it Well Known Bachelor Gets Bill for Baby Shoes And He Admits Charge! I.'B. Zimman, who was indexed and catalogued recently as one of Omaha's eligible bachelors, was in a Derolexintr situation last Wednes day morning, when he scanned his monthly bills for personal accounts. One of the bills was for $2.75 for a pair of infant's shoes- Mr. Zimman couid not recollect that he - had bought any infant's shoes. He had no infants in need of shoes," nor nad ne purchased any juvenile foot wear aurmg tne last month as, tar as ins memory served mm. He tailed up the shoe store whose name appeared at the top of the bill. The shoe store said thev wnnlrl look it up. When they checked up uie nem tney tound tne shoes had been purchased and charged to Mr. Zimman They telephoned back to Mr. Zinfman's Stenographer and in- lormen ner mat 'Mr. zimman had been -regularly charged for the shoes and that the bill was correct The stenncrranhei. tnM f v 7irMmnM who then became so confused that he turned crimson. The answer was that Mr. Zimman, had allowed a member of his family to buy the shoes and chaise them to him, but he had forgotten the incident when the bill was received. BY A . STIWQBIO Jl 1 . V2 Wives and Flivvers. (From Jim Shanahan, Police Reporter for The Bee.) uear air, atinger: A tellow in cagie urove, la., has ottered a re ward of $10 for the recovery of his iosi wue. ine bulletin ottering the reward at the police station is head- eu: MISSING WIFE ' J $10 REWARD! (I SUDOOSe he foreot to arid "NTn questions asked. ) ihe bulletin just below it on the board at the station offers $7$ fnr the recovery of a stolen Ford. Later. Dear Sting: Remember that little note I left for you about the miss ing wife? h (Yes, Shanahan, of course we remember. Proceed, please.) Well, here's the description nf the wife you can't miss her "Age 24; weight, 125 pounds; hair cut short at collar; right arm crooked between elbow and wrist; both hands have double knuckles; on eye blue and one eye grey; loves children and works at housekeeping, taking care of children or picking chickens. Likes to dance very much; her 'mind is slightly unbalanced." Wonder if the dancinar unbalanced her. JIM SHANAHAN. Mav we make hntrl tr tirnnHer Jim, whether it is not possible that beinfif slichtlv unhalanreH is what makes her like to. dance very much. The Dramatic Mirror. (.Hazard Happenings in Sherman County Times.) Our town this week has a surplus of entertainments. Thursday night the Loup City octet which was well attended; Friday night Mr. Bashore of . Pleasanton with his movie show, fair house; Saturday night the "Saphead" Company, but the sap had been used up and they only got the1 drippings, pretty light. Why not charge the women a small fee to vote and then have bar gains on certain days. No woman could have resisted the appeal, "Reg istration fees reduced from 10 cents to 7 cents, Tuesday, June 3." It would have brought out 98 per cent of the feminine voters. The Lnih of Nations. This .wondrous league of nations Is the latest of creations To banish from this sphere All ftlrna nf hut anil mnptal tm To put a stop to war . And all the Ills our lives may mar To chantre this human thins;. Anil haul th VAnnri n aman, i To cure all ills since Adam fell And abrogate the use nf H.ll Holy Smoke! It's TobaGco in Pews Now for England London. The netit bers of the congregation of St. James' Bermondsey that smoking be allowed in church has brought a Storm of discussion. "Holy smoke 1" commented an American soldier, "all the comforts of home." It seems to be the general opinion that the unusual request harmonizes with the clergyis campaign to make the church more attractive. Further more, it is agreed that ' smoking would reduce the sleeping evil at services. ' " ' It IS recalled that TV P,.r rerti- larly smoked in the vestry before nis sermon, while the congregation was singing. , - 'Mv oeoott like lone hvmns." he said, "but I prefer long clays." Francis Misson, a Huguenot -minister, wrote a dscrintion of Kn eland wherein he noted: 1 ' Tobacco makes profound theolo gians, for no men in the world en- mv a nine hetter than Km crlich clergymen; and everybody knows mat .cngnsn tneoiogy is tne most profound of all" The suceestinn nf nermittine: A soothing smoke with the sermon is meeting with considerable support throughout the country and some of it IS rnminor frnm ennrrett where ev. pression was unlookej .for, CONTRIBUTED. A. W. Lang, 4309 Corby street, qualifies as second assistant editor of The Bumble Bee by sending in these two gems: Even Home Made Eggs. In describing a luncheon given the boys of the th at Lincoln, Decoration day, a Bee correspond ent stated in part: At the state house grounds the soldiers were each given a box containing chicken sand- , ... wicnes, eggs, dougnnuts, pie and coffee, all home made, even the eggs." Were They Benefited? , "Rev. P. S. Henson of Chi cago will deliver' a lecture on "Fools" at the Baptist church, Fifteenth and Davenport streets, for the benefit of the Omaha Baptist Missionary union." Thought for Today. Sacra intra nos spiritus sedct, malorum bonorumque nostrorum observator ct custos. SENECA. WE ALMOST WEEP. Wliat is so touching as the plea of a "smut" show or picture for the "moral" which it teaches? Two New Commissions. (Beaver City Times-Tribune.) Wallace Lutton received his commission, ' last Saturday, as the regular mail carrier on route No. 3, vice L. N. Merwin, re- ' signed. Earl Prideaux has also received his commission as car rier on route No. 1, succeeding V, Blackman, deceased. Germans Find Them Rather High. Sir: Can you tell me what are the rates at the "Hotel Trianon" where the peace conference is being held? A Cemetery Sexton. (Madison Star-Mail.) Notice A meeting of the Fairview Cemetery Association will be held at the Fairview Cemetery at 2:00 p. m. on Wed nesday, May 28.' 1919 .Mrs. Myrtle Sexton, Secy. -Appreciation. (Loup City Times.) The people of Loup City de serve to be congratulated on their re-election to the office of city clerk of Mr. Peter Rowe. Having done business with the City Clerk's office during the many years in which Pete has filled that thankless position with skill and efficiency, I am moved to publish this brief tes timonial to the value of his services. Clifford L. Rein. Eligible Omaha Bachelors Are The Bee Comics Fully Appreciated? They Are . "Do you love comics, of course you do," Then the "Daily Bee" be sure to look through Such funny pranks of "Bringing Up Father," With Maggie and Jiggs Trying tor be priggs. And father's old friends at Dinty Moore's rendezvous "Jerry on the Job" he's there alway Giving his orders all have to obey 'Tad's Sports Indoor" ' Will make you roar. . These comics will drive all gloom away "Abie the Agent, ' that funny little Jew, . Is an easy mark for an I. O. U. "Over There" with a crowd Will make you laugh loud Little Jimmy and "Us Boys" you can't outdo To drive away care, accept a suggestion Read The Bee comics 'twill help your digestion. Cartoonists the best Their skill manifest Subscribe for The Bee, it will settle the question. MRS. J. M. JOHNSON. 123 North Thirty-third street. He has a car. he stands high in his profession, he has a fortune said to reach into six figures, and he isn't married. Does that sound attractive, girls? Yes? Well, then, read on. His name is Jdfin A. McKenzie, member of the law firm of Sutton," McKenzie, Cox & Harris. He is a man. without guile and with brains. What the A. stands for de ponent sayeth not. In some lan guages it is the initial letter of the word that means "work." And that is or ought to be John's middle name. Gosh, but this man does love work. Morning, noon and night he is at the office or dashing over the country in his automobile, hunting up witnesses and evidence. Sun days and week days, summer and winter, spring and fall are all the same to him. .They all consist of golden hours which lare useful in which to crack the shells of hard legal cases. He Thrives On It. All work and no plav doesn't make John a dull hof. He thrives on it. lie loves it. He was born at Silver City, la. He absorbed the learning dispensed in the country school and high school and college, and then went east to Yale university where he packed .his brain with more knowl edge and then learned all the law school had, to teach. He came on to Umaha about 15 years ago, ana ne s Deen on tne legal job ever since. Those who know him say he was stung" on a real estate deal early in his career. This, they say, caused him to specialize on fraud cases. But the real estate deal mentioned, thev do sav. has caused him . to look .with suspicion . upon all con-, tracts, including the marriage con tract. Then again, others allege that tin cause of his bachelorhood may well be lack of time to get married. Likes Vapor Baths. .The day after the Athletic club opened the other men in the firm were astonished to .see John leave the office at 5:30 in the afternoon," They decided that his watch must have been fast. But the same thing happened the next day, and the next. Then John's terrible secret leaked out. He had joined the Athletic club and was taking vapor baths over there every day. He has de veloped this hobby now and spends much time telling his friends how fine they are, how they build up the epiglottis and all that sort of thing. His friends allege that every time a woman throws a vampirish smi!e towarH him he runs over to the Ath letic club and takes a vapor bath, and thus seems to preserve a per petual immunity from the darts of Cupid. He even lunches at the Athletic club now, but they say he never takes more than half an hour away from work for his lunch. ' , Being first duly sworn, they de pose and say that John never goes to the theater or movies, doesn't play golf. tennis or other games, that, while he used to. play base ball over in Iowa sometimes, he has not done so for some time; that he does not dance. An interesting case, Watson. Street Car Conductor, Left Behind, Pursues Motorman In 'flivver Motorman K: C. Thomas of the Cuming street trolley line was ex tremely busy. During the ehtir trip to the barn he had been unable - to properly discharge his duties be- cause of a defective bell cord. He would misinterpret the conductor's signals and stop and start the car at ' various uncalled-for places. Arrived at the barn, he determined to correct the troublesome cord. So engrossed ' was he in repairing it that he forgot all about the conductor. Suddenly he heard the starting signal. The work being nearly com pleted and believing that he would run behind schedule if he delayed longer, the energetic motorman started the car. After running serenely for more than a mile he became uneasy. He had received no signal from his con ductor. Looking back he saw the conductor in a Ford about block behind the car yelling and motioning madly for him to stop his car. The surprised motorman and the thor oughly angry and sputtering con ductor were finally reunited. After due deliberations it de veloped that the motorman himself had pulled the bell cord while re pairing it. . - Say So! That doctor should Not be at large j . Who does not like k To overcharge! " PjtPPfiS Magazine.