Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1919)
10 A THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: DECEMBER 7, 1919. -7-"- WIELD WON'T PERMIT RAISE IN GOAL PRICE "Fuel Head Says He's "Sick v And Tired of-Proposals to Make People Bear Ad ditional Burdens." Washington, Dec. 6. The coal strike cannot W compromised vith the conslnt of the federal govern- ,, ment in any fashion that will mean an advance in the price of coal ' to the public, Fuel Administrator "j. Garfield announced Saturday. Declaring himself "sick and tired of the proposals to make the people I' bear additional burdens," Dr. Gar field said the Fuel administration alone had the authority to increase coal prices necessary to pay wage advances in excess ot the 14 per cent proposed by the government. , ;4 So long as he was fuel administra, tor he said, no advanee in the prke to the consumer for this purpose . would be allowed. , i' i . "The cabinet stands back of me rton the principle involved," Dr. ?!' Garfield said, "though I am re . sponsible for the presentation of the facts which moved their decision.' ! ! Compromise Proposals. ' . The Fuel administration's state ment was made aftec a day spent ., '., in hearing compromise proposals 'from delegations of business men and others from various parts, of 3j10 the country. Using the most em-1-,,g .". phatic language, Dr. Garfield left " ,i( ' no doubt that he regarded com promise proposals as a "monkey .,',!' wrench" thrown into machinery, --''.which he belives . will operate to ,' adjust the situation with justice ,t , , both to the 'public and the mine workers. ' t The position 61 the government ."is that no wage advance in excess " of 14 per cent is possible under "the price of $2.35 a ton, mine run, fyi'i fixed on coal by the fuel administra ' tor. At the same-time it was pointed : ,qut that the government had no r 'authority to fix wages and that no i , objection could be interposed if operators, favorably situated, agreed -'it to pay more than 14 per cent ad vance from their own profit with out charging the imcfease to the - 1 - public. It is not the opinion of if .,' the Fuel administration, however, 1 ti'that enough mines to supply the! m, country witn coal can be operated .ft--:! on this basis. ' Production on -Increase. " J Discussing restrictions in the use v v-of coal, Dr. Garfield said that local .differences in the severity of the "; application of the curtailment orders v soon would disappear under rneas I ures now being taken by the Rail- - .' road administration which is acting : ft ajithe Fuel administration's agent f,s; jn distributing coal. He said furth--sb -cr. that the production of coal had increased -every day this week and indicated his belief that a major at ty of miners would sooner or later ' accept the settlement basis which ,the union leaders have rejected. ' Another sten was taW Fuel administration to restrict coal consumption by resuming the fixed prices on coke established during the war. Distribution of coke al ii .a: so will be reflated. ' Gas coke, .V however, Nvill not be affected. y Prosecute Oil Men. v Attorney. General Palmer con- I' f erred with President Wilson on the ;i general coal situation ad took steps i-'v' to prosecute ' oil producers in the west who are charged in a complaint " made by Senator Capper of Kansas --."-with increasing the price of oil from $1 to $4.50 a barrel since the coal -v., strike began. . ?V The railroad, administration au nounced an embargo on oil, effective r ..Monday, which is designed to make U 'available a full supply for indus- 'tries in the west and thus make it v.? ' necessary to haul less coal to that ' '"section from the east. Factories in b, the east using oil toav obtain their supply as heretofore through a per mit system and shipments in transit oion order will not be affected. Officials Optimistic. Reports on coal production served to increase 'the optimism-of officials handling the fuel situation. Addi tional mines were said to tie in op eration now and production was steadily increasing, though it con tinues less than half of normal. Figures made public by the geo logical survey showed that despite fM :l j t ir t.j inc i nauKsgivmg uay layorr, miners f,r remaining "at. work since the strike began produced 5,429,000 tons of . , coal during the week ended Novem f ber 29. This was about 45 per cent s-t orf normal and 1 per cent greater i than the, output the week before, v .: Total production from the begin 5S. ning,of the strike on November 1 to t the end of Novemberwas placed at v 18,815,000 tons, compared-with 56, 5; (270,000 tons in October, 'or about " ..j , 33 1-3 per cent. Charges ot the American V holer-sale Coal Dealers' association that . the railroad administration was re fusing to pay for coal confiscated or diverted were denied at administra ' tion headquarters. Officials there said there had been some delay in making payments, but that this had ' been obviated by the plan of arrang ing credits through the federal re-, " serve banks. Wins Matching Dollars; but looses on Betting $100 Bills Wesley Brought, From Hamburg, la., Meets Man Who Offers Him Easy Job, Which He Accepts Wes ley Had $200 in Bank at Home Did His ".Em f plover" Get It? He Did. ' v Easy money I Two confidence men "cleaned up" ?200 yesterday at the expense df Wesley Brought, Hamburg, la. I One of the pan who styled him self Harry Lea, accosted Wesley at Sixteenth and Frnam streets Thurs day afternoon. ' Remarks about the snow, the cold weather and finally about employment were passed be tween Lea-and Brought.- Brought said he was looking for work. , "Do -you understand he care of horsesV queried Lea. "Yep," responded Brought. 'Tit give $130 a month and ex penses if you'll travel around the country with me. I'm an extensive horse-trader and I need a man to travel, with me." Brought accepted the offer. Lea Short of Funds. Rut T.ia wa chnrf rf funds illftt then and -he needed a "couple 'hun- Brought, he became highly incens dred dollars" to clear up a hay bill because of his friends' lack of fun here before he could go to St. Louis on a horse deal. . Beine now Lea's partner. Wesley volunteered to donate the 'couple. hundred dollars. He had to go back to Hamburg to draw it from the bank. He agreed to meet Lea at 1 o'clock Sat urday afternoon in the Paxton hotel. Brought hurried to Hamburg and brought back his savings, $200. He had amassed the fortune picking potatoes. They met at the appointed tryst intr place. Lea had a sick friend in St. Clare hospital," however, so4 Lea suggested they amble out to see the sick 'friend. "She's a nice young girl," he added. 'Matching Dollats." The two went west on Douglas street. At Twentieth street, "Bill" Jones, a friend of Lea's hailed theni Lea invited him to go with them to the hospital. On the way the trio got matching dollars, "odd man wins," arid Brought was odd man 25 consecutive times! Oh, it was easy money. Hamburg, Iowa, never saw money come so fast! - Suddenly the worm turned, how ever, and Brought began to lose. Instead of matching dollars they were- soon "matching $100 bills. When Lea had acquired the avail sble cash of both "Bill" Jones and nsed ds. He was so enraged he decided to call the police and have Brought and Jones arrested. . Jones suggested that both and Brought flee, and flee in different toward Council Bluffs. He was stilt fleeing late last night when over taken by his cousin. Fred Asbury; 283,5 Avenue G, Council Bluffs. Asbury reported the matter to the Omaha police. Easy money I ' IOWA FOEL HEAD UROES CITIZENS TO UTILIZE WOOD Declares People Should Take Care ot Themselves In Fuel ShortageMay SeJJ State V Hospital. .if in i, -! 31 wv VI . Coal Shortage Is Blamed. For Crime Wave" In Chicago Chicago, Dec. 6. Criminal com plaints increased with the shutting off of street and bther lighting as a coal conserving measure, according to the record for the last two days, made public today by John J. Gar nty, chief of police. Yesterday, the first of semi-darkness, the report showed 56 criminal complaints-16 burglaries, 10 robberies, 20 larcenies, t jon jointly o the board o 1 safe blowing, 2 murders and 7 . and board of education with miscellaneous, as against ot crimi nal complaints ,the, preceding 24 hours, when-approximately normal conditions prevailed. ; Danley New Secretary ' - To Congressman Andrews Washington, Dec. 6. (Special Telegram.) R-. H. Danley of Axtell, Kearney county Nebraska, was sworn in as secretary to Congress tr - rriaB Andrews. Mr. Danley, who is Des Moines, la., Dec. (?. (Spe cial.) In his state-wide closing or der issued Friday State-iuiel Ad ministrator Wheeler declares it is up to the people" to take care of themselves in the way of providing fuel insofar as they are able and advises all who can to cut wood. He says "wood cutting bees" should be organized in every community. The state administrator referred to the federal Department, of Justice a complaint from Eldora that a candy merchant there had refused to com ply with the closing hours. The de partment will make an investiga tion. Administrator Webster has re quested Arch McFarlane of Water loo, state representative" and speaker of the house during the last session of the legislature, to accept a com mission to represent Iowa at Chi cago to secure (shipments of fuel here. McFarlane has been innhe wholesale coal business for several years. Have Enough Wood. (The "ministers of Shelby county have formed an organization to se cure enough wood for the county so that it will not be necessary to use coal, Mr. Webster was informed Governor Harding Friday received a communication from the Chamber of Commerce of Kansas City asking that he join in a protest against the tlarge shipment of oil to the east and asking that-oil be placed under an administrator to equalize its distribu tion the same as coal. Crude oil is reported to have advanced in price at an alarming rate since the coal strike came on and most of it is be ing shipped east. Because of the in ability of the railroads to move ability of the railroads to move heavy. trains and a scarcity of cars; stock shippers,' grain men, farmers and others are making complints to the ping stock anld grain. Elevators are full of grain wliich cannot be shipped out it is said. Farmers and feeders are encountering difficulty in making shipments. With the inebriate' hospital at Knoxville closed for lack of patients, the' state board of control and board of education, to whom the last leg islature referred the matter of the future use of the institution, have decided to recommend that it be used for,a school for the feebl minded, or sold. This recommenda tion will be made to the Thirty ninth general assembly. The board of education has re fused to consider using the institu tion for: a state normal school be cause of its plan to concentrate that, work at Cedar Falls. ' Both the board of control and board of edu cation declare there is a serious need for additional room to take care of the feeble-minded children of the state, the institution at Glen wood proving entirely too small to meet the growing demands made upon it. Wanted. Normal bchool. The control board will operate the farm in connection with ' the Knoxville institution nexR year and possibly the brick plant, which has been a paying business. The legislature last year had the matter ot the disposition -of this institution before it most of the ses sion. Proposals to make it a place to care for the feeble-minded brought strongopposition from the people of Knoxville. They favored making it a normal school. The final decisioruof the Thirty eighth general assembly was to refer the disposition of the institu- f control th instruc tions to recommend to the next legislature some plan of action. Soldiers Challenge Statement by Robins j Of Mutiny in Russia ''tadison, Wis., Dec. 6. A gath ering of more than 500 persons, who jammed into the Engineering Auditorium to hear Col. Raymond Robins tell about soviet Russia, were pulled to their feet in excite ment during the closing minutes of the meeting V'hen soldiers who had served at Archangel hotlv challenged a statement by Robins that as an indirect ..result of the iillies' policy in failing to recognize the bolshevik governnient, Ameri can spldiers. in Russia had mutinied. "We demand to know the author ity for that statement," exclaimed Capt. John Commons, son of Prof. John R. Commons. "We served at Archangel and there was no mutiny. "I have it in the affidavit of three American soldiers, including an of ficer," replied Colonel Robins, who reiterated that he had proof not only of mutiny in the American army, but mutiny of British soldiers at Dover, French soldiers at Brest and Italian soldiers at Genoa at the orders to proceed to Russia. Atitiifisuggestion of one of his hearers, Colonel Robins said he woiild not include the mutiny charge in further presentations of the Rus sia situation until he had had original informants. DOUBT WHETHER MEXICO OBEYED ' DEMArWOF U. S. Release of Jenkins Came After Friend Supplied Bail Money, Dispatches Assert. Czar's Slayer Executed. ' Copenhagen, Dec. 6. The soviet authorities in Russia have executed the individual held immediately re sponsible for -the slaying of former Emperqr Nicholas and his family at Yekaterinburgjn June, 1918, accord ing to a dispatch to the Politiken from Kovno today. M. Jachontoff, a member of the Yekaterinburg a graduate of the Mate Agricultural soviet, has been condemned to college, will specialize aong these j death and executed at Perm for ines while with Mr. Andrews. ordering the execution. Beatty Selects Title Of Baron of North Sea London, Dec. 6. Baron Beatty of the North Sea, the official title se lected by Britain's first sea lord, rather infers that THAT place is not a German lake, as the ex-kaiser intended it should be. What's more there's no German navy of conse quence to contest Admiral Beatty's annexation. " Baron Beatty has outdone all his compeers in choice of an extensive territory for his title. The most moderate estimate of the North Sea's are.a is 140,000 square miles. Sucks 72 Raw Eggs, Then Trots Off. to Band Practice Du Quoin, 111.. Dec: 6 Rov Webb. a husky farmer boy, has a digestive apparatus that knows no hounds. On a wager he sucked 72 raw eggs, ex hausting the visible supply. After accomplishing his feat, Webb hooked on his bass drum and trotted off to attend a band rehearsal. Webb is equally versatile in dis posing of other delicacies. He has eaten two dozen bananas and three quarts of ice cream as the trim mingSTo a Sunday dinner. s Will Use Silver Dollars To Stabilize Exchange Washington. Dec. 6. Silver dol lars, now "free in the treasury," are to be put to work to stabilize Amer ican exchange rates in silver stand ard 'Countries of -the Orient.' The federal reserve board announced that the silver would be delivered against other forms of money until further notice through the division of foreign exchange of the board, the New York reserve bank and American 'banks -with Oriental branches. Korean Bolshevists Break In and Steal Dynamite Tokio, Dec 6. A Seoul dispatch says that a powder magazine at the treaty port of Chemulpo was broken into recently and several cases of dynamite stolen. Tht offenders are believed .to be Korean bolsheviks. Neurologist Sees Wilson. Washington, Dec. 6. Dr. F. C. Dercom.V the Philadelphia neurolo gist, made the weekly visif to the White House today. He said he found the president's condition good, but that he would not give out a statement as planned, as Sen ator Fall of New Mexico,, who con ferred with the president , yester day, had done that for him. Warning Against Saccharin. New York, Dec. 6. A warning against the usev of saccharin as a substitute for sugar appears in the current issue -of the weekly bulletin of the Department of Health saying that it has no food value and that its use as a sugar substitute in food will be considered a violation of section 139 of the sanitary code and criminal prosecution will result. Washington, Dec. 6. Develop ments today left it still in doubt whether Mexican officials really complied ' with the request 'of the United States in releasing William O. Jenkins,' the American"consular agent, whose imprisonment at Pu ebla brought relations between the two governments to a .critical point Press dfspatches that the release was accomplished only after bail was furnished were not covered in official advices to the State depart ment, which said that Jenkins had reported himself entirely ignorant of the manner in which he was liber ated and that htf was making an in vestigation on his own account. Upon the answer to this question seems to hinge whether the sharp diplomatic correspondence on the subject-to be renewed, or the in cident permitted to pass into hi tory. Meantime the fact of the release itself apparently has relieved much of the tension of Mexican affairs both at the State .department and in the senate, where uneasiness over recent developments had produced a determined movement to ask for a severance of diplomatic relations. Consider Break. The resolution of Senator Fall,' republican, New Mexicor requesting a diplomatic break was considered at an afternoon conference of re publican members of the foreign re lations committee, and .it was decid ed not to press the proposal for ac tion until President Wilson had sent to the committee a memorandum of the advice he promised Senator Fall yesterday at the White House con ference. It was indicated that there was some difference of opinion among the republican senators as to the ex nediencv of the resolution and that if the president expressed disapprov al, it might. not he pressed for ac tion. A full committee will meet again Monday. Run Down a Clue. In trying" to establish the facts behind Jenkins' release, the State department is running down a sus pected connection between J. Salter Hensen, said to have turnisnea Dan for the consular , agent, and the Mexican government. Officials said Hansen was reported tO'have had some association with Luis Cabrera, Carranza'si finance . minister, and ttjat bail. might have been forward ed to Puebla as the least embarras sing method by which the Mexico City officials could -extricate hem selves from the situation. While the department investi gation is proceeding, officials here still are waiting for Carranza's re ply to the last American request for Jenkins' release. Reports ; some days ago indicated that it was in preparation, but tonight it had not been received at the department. Says Crisis Passed. Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 6. Bene dict Crowell, assistant secretary of war, said in an interview today that the crisis with Mexico is over. Mr. Crowell came to attend the launching of a Hog Island ship which his wife christened. '"As a matter of fact," Mr. Crow ell said, "so far as the army's inter est in the Mexican situation is con cerned, no mobilization orders were given. "There is no truth in the rumor that troops have been ordered mobilized at Camp Meade, Md. Of course, we are enlisting men right along, forming them into groups and sending thejrf to southern' train ing camps.' v - At the present time the army is not sufficiently large to cofie with an emergency. We, are down' to something like 220,000 men. Almost 20,000 of these are in Europe. We also have forces in Siberia and our island possessions." Denver Deputy Is Determined to Take Clairvoyant New angles have developed in the Denver clairvoyant case, in which Mn and Mrs. Dodd of Denver allege that the clairvoyant, who gave the name of Dickinson after arriving in Council Bluffs, got $1,600 in cash and jewelry from Mrs. Dodd in a fortune-telling stunt. Mrs. Dick man put up a $2,000 cash bond and it was immediately attached by the Dodds. Yesterday afternoon Deputy Sher iff J. W. Ronaldon of Denver re turned from Des Moines with his Colorado requisition honored by Governor Harding, but prior to this something that appeared to be in the nature of a settlement had occurred. This left the way open for the return of the woman to Denver, but the proceeding was stopped by habeas corpus proceedings institued in su perior cour before Judge Capell. The hearing is set for Monday. A" new bond of $1,500 was posted. The Denver depuy sherijjf declared that his office was not to be made a collection agency for bad debts. He said he would fight the habeas cor pus proceedings to the limit. May Decide to Call Off Strike at Steel Mills! Youngstown, O., Dec. 6. The fate of the steel strike will be decided at a meeting of the national strilfe com mittee at Washington December 13, when the presidents of the 24 inter national unions involved will vote directly on the proposition of end ing the strike, it was stated here to day by an organizer of one of these unions, who said he had been sent to check up on reports made by the I liauuuai auiitc lumuu lice Airman Reaches Italy. London, Dec. 6. Capt Howell, who left the Hounslow flyine field. just outside of London, Thursday on nis Hignt to Australia, arrived at Pisa, Italy, Friday. Capt. Howell is attempting to win the prize of 10.000 pounds offered by the Australian government Victim of Gruesome Trunk- Mystery in: Michigan Home -- . sj &l 1W I,' ?- - - -K WANTS LANDING FIELD HERE FOR LAWSON PLANE . N Inventor of Giant Airship . Writes Omaha for Defi nite Data. Body Is Mummified From Thyfee Years' Repose In -Salt. fe&wton, Mich., Dec-. 6. (Special Telegram.) The latest photograph of. Maude Faith Tabor, whose dead body -was found pickled in salt in an old trunk here, has been released for publication, The trunk in which the body was found was iit the basement of the Tabor home under a pile of shingles, where it had lain in secret for .three years. Tlie body is in a mummified condition. :The dead woman's mother, brother art'd former sweetheart have baen held for evidence. There had been family-trouble over the estate, it is said. (Editor's Note: This picture was sent by the new wonderful invention of telephotographs, exclusive rights to the publication of which for Omaha are held by The Bee.) Fire on Obregon Forces. Washington, Dec. 9. Private ad vices received here today from Mek :co said Carranza troops at Pachuca, state of Hidalgo, fired on the fol lowers of General Obregon while the general was making a public ad dress in the interest of his candidacy for the presidency. No details were given. I W. A. Ellis, "assistant ' commis sioner of the Chamber of Commerce, is in receipt of a letter from Alfred W. Lawson, inventor of the giant Lawson plane, which indicates that when the Lawson transcontinental airline begins operation Omaha will be one of its main stopping points. Mr. Lawson asks for definite data on the- type of landing field which can' be secured for his giant planes. and whether a factory building suit able for a repair shop can be se cured. Ellis will take the matter up with the aerial navigation board of the chamber at an early date and furnish Mr. Lawson with definite information, he says. The aerial main hangar at the Ak-Sar-Ben landing field, Sixty-third and Center streets, will be easily completed by December 20, accord ing to 'reports received at the Cham ber of Commerce, and aerial mail service from Chicago to Omaha is anticipated before Christmas. A drive for funds used in building the hangar, which has been delayed by the existing coal shortage, will be starred shortly, it is said. Hearings Open on Bill For U. S. War Industries Washington, Dec. 6. Beginning hearings on house tariff revenue bills designed to protect American industries built up during the wa, the senate finance committee today received requests for increased ta r!T on magnesite to prevent influx cf the Austrian products. Roy N. Bishop, vice president of the North west Magnesite company, Chewe ah, Wash., told the' committee Austrian magnesite manufacturers were .able to produce magnesite much cheaper than it could be produced here. Hearing on dye, protective tariffs will be held by the committee Mon day. Fifty More Boys Enlist To Chop Wood for City Fifty woodchoppers enlisted yes terday in a fight in Council Bluffs against the fuel famine, and when the Chamber of Commerce closed they were still coming in. There were so many applications by lusty boys that George F. Hamilton, chief recruiting officer, organised a juvenile corps entirelyoutside the Boy Scouts and high siool lads. C. A. Beno, charged with the re sponsibility of securing wood chop ping tools, had. a section of the Chamber of Commerce stacked with axes and saws, and there will be no lack of tools. GOSGROVE AGAIN .OUT OF PRISON ON $2,0(10 BOND Mrs. Clara St. Clair of Omaha Advances Cash for Appeal Bond to Supreme 'Court. Jimmy Cosgrove, who has shocked Omaha and Council Bluffs police departments by pulling off a number of sensational stunts, and who is now serving a three-year sentence in the Anamosa prison, started a new attempt yesterday to regain his freedom. He ''filed notice in the dis- , trict court, Council Bluffs, of appeal - I to the supreme court from the judg- mi hi ui luuti mat cunsigiea mm 10 prison, and put up a $2,000 cash bond required by law. The money, all in $50 and $100 bills, was taken to Council Bluffs from Omaha by Mrs. Clara St. Clair. She was ac companied by an. Omaha lawyer. Cosgrove got into prison by vio lating his parole. In the Septem ber term of court he pleaded guilty to the charge of raiding the Roden burg farm home near McClelland, representing himself and five others with him as Iowa officers searching: for liquor. On the advice of his attorney he pleaded guilty, took a three-year sentence and paid $1,000' fine, upon the condition that he would be paroied at once. He violated the parole when he drove. an auto mobile SO ) miles an hour through Omaha and over the bridge into Council Bluffs, where he was stopped after a dozen shots had been fired into vulnerable parts of the car. His parole was revoked and he was at once taken to Anamosa. He will be released from prison pending the hearing iof the appeal. Mahaska Farmers Are Indicted for Arson in Dutch Community Des Moines, la., Dec. 6. (Special Telegram.) Roy Elfin and several prominent Mahaska county farmers have been indicted by the grand jury in connection with arson cases investigated by the state Department of Justice in recent months. The Dutch farmers of New Sharon have suffered fire losses for more than a year, for which men indicted are charged with being responsible. A Dutch church and school were among the properties burned. Snap fasteners 4'ke '.hose on gloves have been invented to hold rugs on floors or tapestries on walls. 0 s Hudson Records Are A Triumph of Type It Keeps the Mastery in Speed, Power and Endurance Through Exclusive Control of the Super-Six Motor "N. How completely Hudson's supremacy is acknowledged. Its records are not held by hairbreadths. They overshadow all others by conclusive margins. They bespeak the mastery of a type; That is clear to all. i -Consider that Hudson's leadership is not divided. It is not merely the fleetest of cars. It holds all the worth while power and acceleration records, too. v But chiefly it is famous for endurance. No other car has ever shown such en durance proofs. Look at the , records. Even more importantobserve how 80,000 . Super-Sixes now in service, confirm all the fine qualities Hudson has proved in scores of .tests. Hudson fs Finest Qualities Are Exclusive The Hudson is a triumph of type. AH it has done is due to the "exclusive Super Six motor, which minimizes vibration and increases motor power by 72, without added weight in size. ' That principle accounts for Hudson's unequalled endurance. It accounts, too, ' for its great advantages of speed, hill climbing and power over any other type. And unless Hudson consents no other maker can use the principle of the Super Six motor. It is the only supreme feature ever controlled by a single maker. Such record as the double trans continental run of 7,000 miles in 10 days and 21 hours would have been impossible without it. Again its endurance was re vealed in speedway racing. For time after time Hudson special racers, embodying the Super-Six principle, defeated swifter rac ing machines, some of which cost upwards of $40,000, simply because the Hndsons kept running, when the terrific pace forced others to the repair pits. It is noteworthy that Hudson records have stood for almost five years. In other fields five years have seen practically all records topple. The Hudson retains su premacy, because it has the exclusive right to the Super-Six motor. 1 It is the Most Wanted Fine Car Its sales prove that Ever since its famous tests proved Hudson the greatest endurance and speed car, it has been the largest selling fine car in the world. Now more than 80,000 are in service. " The demand has always been in excess of supply. In some seasons thousands have waited for months for delivery of certain models. That condition, we have every reason to believe', will be repeated this year. Therefore, if you intend to get a Hudson, you will save disappointment by ordering ahead of the desired date of delivery. Open From 10 A. M. to 5 P. M. GUY L.SMITH SERVICE FIRST 3503-5-7 Far nam St. OMAHA, USA. PHONE: DOUGLAS 1970 ii- - -N-H. H if -tVi