Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1919)
T i THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1919. 1 "BAYER CROSS" ON " ' GENUINE ASPIRIN "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin'' to be , genuine must be marked with the ' safety "Bayer Cross." Always buy tan unbroken Bayer package which contains proper directions to safely relieve Headache, Toothache, Ear ache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents at drug stores larger packages also. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicyl icacid. Adv. WOMEN.'W MOTHERS! ' DAUGHTERS! .. You" who tin easily: arc ele, luffwd awd won; no. jrousoteritsble; jwbo are subject or the '"kliet" get lyoir blood icuauaed for J " Mm 14 trea taken three 'times a day her meals will ,in'ciee yew strength end en dvaoce is two weeks time in maajr case WeTCanand Kmc, M. U. KT ft m 1 "1 . mars the oerfert I appearance of her com f plexion. Permanent and temDorarv skin troubles r concealed. Redurn natural color and corrects isv skins. Hichlv imIomIi. .. . 5r . "K"- lusca witn Deneiiaal results as curative agentfor 70 years. SAY GIRL WAS THROWN OUT OF CARINTOGUTTER Police Fail to Heed Call to Act In Drunken Brawl Between Several Men and Two Girls. People in the vicinity of Twentieth street and St. Mary's avenue are much incensed at the slowness of police to respond to a call Sunday night during a drunken brawl be tween several men and two girls in a large touring car. The car stopped at Twentieth street and St. Mary's avenue at 10 Sunday night, and the loud voices of men, mingled with the screams of the two girls, attracted a large crowd of neighbors to the scene. One of the girls was thrown bod ily from the car and rolled in an un conscious condition into the gut ter, according to witnesses. George Adams, 2007 St. Mary's avenue, called the police. The party drove around the block six times, and a man then dragged the girl who had been thrown out back into the car and drove away. Some time after the party had gone, two plain clothe men walked leisurely up and asked what the trouble was. "They seemed to resent having been called." said Mrs. Sadie J. Car roll, 2007 St. Mary's avenue. "The girl who was thrown from the car was not over 17 years old. It was dark, but her companion seemed to be much older. , "The people who watched The af fair would have interfered but they were afraid the men were armed and depended on the police to ar rive in time." . Boy, 13 Years Old, Held for Three Days by Kidnapers Two unidentified men kidnaped Egnar Hansen, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Hans Hansen, 407 Bancroft street, Friday, and held him captive in an old moving van Ut Thirty-first and Leavenwortn streets for three days, the boy told police Sunday. The lad's condition showed he had been abused. He told the police he managed to escape while the men had gone to get him some food. "They said that if I attempted to escape, they would kill me," the boy said. "They tied my feet and bound my hands behind my back all the time they had me in custody." Police were detailed to search for the men. My HEART and My HUSBAND Adele Garrison' New Phase of Revelations of a Wife What Dicky Demanded and Madge Refused. Dicky is the most courtly gentle man I know when there are no jangled chords in his brain. But under the stress of any sudden elemental passion he can be as primi tively brutal as any man. I saw that he was in the grip of such a passion whenTie demanded to know the reason for my emotion over reading the newspaper, and I was at my wits' end for a moment, how to deal with it. I longed to tell him the whole mis erable story of the unpleasantness I had endnred at the, hands of the jealous wife of my principal, but I knew i that he was not poised sufficiently to listen to the tale with out misinterpreting it He would imagine at once that it was interest in Kenneth Stockbridge which had kept me teaching at the school it was an old fancy of his which Lillian had effectively laid but I didn't care to run the risk of arousing it to life again. But I must do something, and that quickly, for I saw that he was rapidly working himself into one of his rages and that spectacle is one I do not care to contemplate. There was but one recourse left for me, the rather contemptible trick of feigning ignorance and indignation. "I understand neither your words nor your behavior!" I said icily, rising from my chair, and stepping quickly to one side. "If you do not care to believe what I have told you I have nothing more to say. And if you will kindly excuse me I will go back to my room." Dicky's face whitened, and there came into his eyes something which I had never seen before, a sort of a deadly coldness, utterly foreign to his races. "Do you mean," he asked, thickly, slowly, "that you are going to give me no explanation of this weeping business over a newspaperf The newspaper is there, I re torted disdainfully, pointing to the floor. "You are at liberty to search it if vou wish. But I shall give you no other explanation. Your asking it is in itself an offense." I had reached the door by this time. My husband stopped me with a phrase, its syllables metallic. "Just a moment I" I turned my head, looked at him steadily and waited for him to speak. To all outward appearance I was calm, but there was not a nerve in me but what was trembling, ting ling. "It is. of course, your privilege to do this thing if roa wish. But it is also mine to resent it in my own way. And if von refuse to give me the explanation I have asked I must ask you not to address me upon any other subject You will receive no answer if you do, -wor shall 1 speaic to you again until you have come to your senses. Why Madge Refrained. I felt an insane desire to laugh at the vision which suddenly rose be fore me of Dicky and the going through our daily routine of life without speaking to each other, of the wrath of my mother-in-law, the amazement of the rest of the tamily. But mv husband's white face, his coldly wrathful eyes effectually pre cluded any idea ot mirtn, even though his threat was childish melodrama. "That rests with you," I told him stiffly. I shall follow my cue what ever it may be." I waited for no further answer but walked out of the door. I had gone but a step or two before I had heard the rustle of paper, knew that Uicky was searching through the news paper I had dropped for some clue to the agitation l naa displayed after reading it. With my spirits at rero I went upstairs to my room, locked the door behind me, and sat down to consider the new dilemma which Dicky's anger had thrust upon me. I knew very well that his pride would prevent him from carrying out the threat he had made. He would never endure Katie's wide eved amazement, Jim's furtive looks, .my father's silent disapproval, his mother s voiuoie ana caustic criti cism of the course he had outlined for ns. , But, on the other hand, I knew that his stubborness would keep him from receding in any way from the ultimatum he had given me. There would be but one thing that he could do. I was sure that he was even now planning the details of a sudden, apparently natural summons which would entail his staying in the TEXAS NEGROES DECLARE RAGE PROBLEM ACUTE Monster Conference Adopts Resolution Denouncing In termeddling of Northern ers In Their Affairs. Austin, Tex., Sept. I. Two thou sand negroes and 100 white persons met here yesterday and discussed the race question, which speakers termed acute. Negroes here said it was the be ginning of a statewide movement. State Superintendent of Public In struction Annie Webb Blanton and former Ma,yor A. P. Wooldridge were among the speakers. The meeting, which was held at the in vitation of the executive board of the St. John's Missionary , Negro Baptist association, witha member ship of 20,000 negroes in"ll counties surrounding Austin, was opened by the reading of a resolution adopted by the executive board of the asso ciation. In part the resolution said: "We discourage and emphatically declare our opposition to people of the north who do not understand conditions in the south, intermed dling without relationship . . ..If we are left to ourselves, we will in time adjust all our differences for the good of all concerned. "We tender our services to local and state authorities in allaying this nervousness and uneasiness now existing between the races." city for a while or his taking of some trip in connection with his profession. The thought brooght with it a certain relief. I felt that I could fare whatever developed in the Stockbridge case much better if Dicky were 20 miles away. (Continued Tomorrow.) Police Unsuccessful In Attempt to Break Up Prowlers' Gang Police are still making unsuccess ful attempts to apprehend the gang of house prowlers that has been visiting many homes during the past few nights. Three more burglaries were re ported Sunday night The office of the Nonpareil laundry, Seventeenth and Vinton streets, was entered and ransacked early yesterday. Nothing was taken. Neatly cut holes were made in plate glass windows of the Marsh pharmacy, Twentieth and Lake streets. The burglars were fright ened away before entrance was gained. A valuable locket was stolen from a bureau in the home of Mrs. R. Wilson, 2416J4 South Sixteenth street. Investigations by the police in the various burglaries during the past 'week have resulted in nothing but mere reports of the jobs. Sev eral of the victims of house prowl ers declared they have employed private detectives to work on their case's. All Preferred Stock of Omaha Refining Co. Sold The Omaha Oil and Refining Co. has no more preferred stock for sale, according to an announcement made Saturday. A" the stock has been sold. They say you can't get the tone In violins today that the old instruments haJ " "I understand. Even the making of squeaky shoes seems to be a lost art." ftany Ex-Service Men Take Advantage of "Y" Courses Thousands of ex-service men are endeavoring to take up civilian life again in occupations that will keep them out of doors, according to a survey comprising several thousand returned men recently completed by the Los Angeles Y. M. C A. Edu cational courses at half rates have been offered by the association and hundreds of returned enlisted men have taken advantage of the offer, with the larger percentage enrolled in automobile and mechanical courses. Scores of ex-service men enrolled in automobile courses are planning to take up tractor operation, which is now being offered in response to the demand. It is said that num bers of the returned men are inter ested in the aeroplane as a commer cial possibility and are asking for training. REMOVING BUSHING. When it is found impossible to drive out the spindle bushing of a Ford car, try cutting through the. bushing longitudinally with a hack saw, in two places. When this has been done it will be found easy to drive out the two sections of the bushing. FAT WOMEN Cat Rid of That Bund.. f Ofcesity TWa Vary Summer. Hera is a chance II lit Fat Womaa t try recipe for auperf luoae fleeb, vita the guarantee of a reliable firm that i will not coat roa penny unless H ra duces your weight, while If it doea na yon of fat, the expense is trifling. Simply get little phy-no-la (rat Beaton Drug iCo., 16th and Farnam: 1 Sherman MeConnell Drag Stores, or any draggiet, at small cost and nso aa direct ed. It is entirely aafa as it reduces fat Ik the natural way. There ia no dieting, at strenuons exercising, no annoyance, Jua' a few grains of phy-no-la fonr times a da: and in a short time your weight should b reduced to normal on all parte of the body Be aura to ask for ana get the ganulsw phy-no-la. It usually ooreee in litth sealed packages that are plainly marked, "phy-no-la," but the outside of the package -doea not aay it ia for taking off fat, sc He sure and get the real phy-no-la. Ad WBGK) iff SEPT. 7tb f a package before the war a package during the war and V.- c a package now THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! if V1 0 I X 15 T I 1 Ht n fT fl , t, fl Tan ! m I act ei us a.ieioel mmmm'r S5m2SSEmEStiSm f TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CI CARE TIES Camels are a Cigarette Revelation! Most critical, exacting smokers declare that such smoothness, such mild, mellow body and such refreshing flavor as Camels supply so generously never before have been put into a cigarette! Every puff on Camels proves a greater delight! Your fondness for Camels continually increases; they never tire your taste! That's because Camels have the quality and because they are an expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos. Camels blend is so unusual, so appealing to your best cigarette desires you'll prefer it to either kind of tobacco smoked straight! Compare Camels with any cigarette in the world quality, enjoyment, price to realize that Camels are made to meet your taste. And youll appreciate Camels freedom from any unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste or unpleasant cigaretty odor. x Once you know Camels youll certainly prefer their qua.y to coupons, gifts or premiums. 1 8 cents a package Camels are sold everywhere in scientifically sealed pack' ages of 20 cigarettes; or ten packages (200 cigarettes) in m glassi nc-paper-covered carton. We strongly recommend this carton for the home or office supply or when you travel R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Wuteten-Salam, K C.