Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 09, 1920, Page 8, Image 8

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    9 WO. jH
V
THE
OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST
flrwiNsroRiKl
fitch vecans r 5
Iriih Twins Co to Church.
The next Sunday 11 the McQueen
family went to masi and Mrs. Mc
Queen wore her new shawl. The
chapel was quite a. distance away,
and as they walked and all the
neighbors walked, too, they had a
pleasant time talking together along
the way.
Dennis and the Twins walked to
gether, and Larry and Eileen told
Dennis all about the fairy and about
selling the pig to the Lady Kath
leen, and "Begorra," said Dennis,
"hut that little pig was after bring
ing you all the luck in the world,
wasn't he?" ' Y
All the other boys and girls want
ed to hear about it. Most of them
had never been to a fair. So Eileen
and Larry talked all the way to
church, and that was two miles and
HOLDING A
Adele Garrison's
relations
The Reason Rita Brown "Asked
How Madge Felt.
' When I awakened it vas tXthe
consciousness of Dicky's race clse
to mine, his arms still clasping me.
Some one his mother most prob
ablyhad piled pillows behind him
to relieve the strain of his position,
and his eyes were closed.
I guessed that when he had
- finally seen me sound asleep he
had dozed off himself, and '-I de
bated for a moment upon the ad
visability of waking him. ,-lhe
thought of the strained arm muscles
which must be his from the. long
vigil quickly decided me. and 1
stirred in his arms, spoke softly:
."Dicky!" .
His eyes flew open instantly, and
he started convulsively. Then he
looked anxiously at me.
"What .is if, sweetheart? ,ln
pain?" . , L t. 'a
From the couch where she had
been sleeping my mother-in-law
sat tip, fluickly.
"Whars the mutter? Is she feel
ing worse?" she demanded.
For an instant I reveled in the
luxury of being the -object of so
much solicitude, then answered
cheerily and truthfully: t
"I am feeling ever so much bet
ter. But F am hungry."
Dicky consulted, his watch.
Mother Graham Commands.
"It's after 11. I'm' sure the diner
.must be on by this time. What
do you want?" . .
"It isn't a question of wnatMie
.wants," mv mother-in-law struck
in firmly. "It's what she can have.
You order a pot of weak tea and
two slices of dry toast without but
ter, and tell them to put a talt cel
lar on the tray. If she stands that
all right we'll see about something
else after a while."
I knew better . than to question
her dictum, even if .1 had cared
for more substantial fare than that
which she had outlined. When
Mother Graham is in charge of a
sick room she is a martinet whose
.lightest word must be obeyed.
Dicky savs she is more rigid than
"any trained nurse . who ever
steoned." T
"That sounds very tempting, 1
aid cheerilv.. but Dicky snorted as
with infinite care he raised nim--elf
from his cramped position and
put me tenderly back upon my
pillows. . . . .
"Ye, about as tempting M old
jvhat-do-vou-cal1him's teed of
prathf. one thev tell about in
the Bible." he said ironically
rNcbuchadnezzar?"I ventured de
murely. . , ,
"That's the guv." my husband
said. "Gee. but you've got the ong
tongue and memory, Madge, to 'he
able to spiel that collection - of
sneezes off like that." .
i'Ricliard!" his mother interposed
st'ernlv. ''don't be irreverent."
vr'Who's irreverent ?" her son -demanded.
: "What did that lad etf
do to be treated with lowered breath
and- respfetful accents?" , '1
"He's in the Bible," his mother r e
plied, but I saw the corners of her
month, twitch,, and I knew that her
protest was onlv the perfunctory
one she felt called upon to make
whenever DicVv alluded in any man
ner to the Scriptures. It was a sort
of - automatic brake, which froi
long experience, of, Jier . son s cafes
less speech, she applied involun
tari'v. . ,
"So's the devil," Dicky began ar
gumentatively, but his mother cut
him'short. : - '
"Will you go and order that tea
and toast or.must I?" she demanded
)
acidiy.
..! H 3tVi1 tn the door
dramatically, turned and grinned
immidentlv at. us both. t
"Sure I can't: make it a little
steak?" he said insinuatingly.
I shook my head weakly at htm,
but his mother snorted, and Dicky
scuttled out ef.the door.
Mother Graham bathed my face
and hands, rearranged the covers of
mv berth, lifting from me the wn
.jWful cloak belonging to MJ.
Grantland. whjch with my returning
st-eneth and tfie inrreasiri": warmth
of the room hrcominc a" hit
- -.4ive, snd 1av'nr"it ?cros the
t of the berth where it could be
a half of talk the shortest way yu
could go.
Just as you neared the church,
what should they see but Grannie
M alone, coming in grandeur, riding
on a jaunting-car! Beside her was a
big man with a tall hat 011 his head.
"Tis her son Michael, back from
the States!" cried theTwins. "He
said in a letter hewas coming."
.They ran as fast as they could to
roach the church door in time to see
them go in. Everybody else stopped,
too. they were so surprised, and ev
erybody said to everybody else,
"Well, for dear's sake, if that's not
"Michael Malone come back to see
his old mother!" v
And then they whispered among
themselves, "Look at the grand
clothes on him, and the scarf pin
the bigness of a ha'-penny piece,
ind the hat! Sure, America must
be the rich place, entirely!"
And when Michael got out of the
cart nd helped out his old mother,
there were- many fTands held out for
him to shake, and many old neigh
bors for him to greet.
"TKU U a nrniirl dav for VOU."
Grannie Malone," said Mrs. Mc
Queen.
"It is," said Grannie, j'and a sad
day, too, for he's after! taking me
back to America, and 'tis , likely I'll
never set my two eyes on old ire
land agaiif, when once the width of
the sea conies between us."
She wiped her eyes as she spoke.
Then the bell rang to call the people
into the chapel. It was little the
congregation heard of the service
that -day, for however much they
tried they couldn't help looking at
Grannie's bonnet.
(Rights Reserved by Houghton Mifflin Co.)
Monday Irish Twins, Hear About
the United States. .
HUSBAND
New Phase of
oj a Wife
reached quickly if I experienced an-
nther chill.
- "I hope Richard will make tracks
with that tea, sne saia worrieaiy.
"You ought to have something hot
without delay."
"He'll get it here'-in the earliest
possible time," I said confidently,
and, indeed, it was but a short time
before he came back followed by a
waiter bearing a tray4. At his knock
Mother Graham opened the door,
and Dicky took the tray from the
man's hand.
At the Door.N -
"I'll attend to this." he said.
"Come back in half an hour for it."
."-Very well, sir," the man respond
ed respectfully.
As he left I heard Rita Brown's
voice hurriedly accosting Dicky.
"Oh. Dickybird I" she said sweet
ly. "The missus must be better if
you've ioined the waiters' union. I'm
so glad."
"Yes, she's better." Dicky An
swered curtly. "What's on , your
mind, Rita?":
His tone was smoothly imperti
nent, but it didn't affect the com-
posure of. Rita Brown. '
"Why, I thought perhaps she was
through with the coat Maj. Grant
land lent me," she said with assur
ance. "It's terribly draughty in the
corridor out here, and I'm afraid I'm
getting a chill."
- ' . 1 (Continued Tomorrow.)
' I'M THE GUY!
I'M THE GUY who monopoWzes
the bathroom in the boarding hdise.
When I take a bath I like to take
plenty of time at it. I like to soak
in the tub and imagine I'm in swim
ming. Aiid when I'm shaving or wash
ing 'I- like to give myself oyer to a
leisurely enjoyment of the task a
hand. '
That half a dozen other boarders
ire waiting for me to finish are lined
up for a dash to the door when I
come out doesn't hurry me a bit.
If they're in a hurry, they're also
in hard luck, that's all. I'm not. I
never am. Ask any one of 'em. I'm
just as much entitled to it as they
are and I mean to make the most A
my privileges. And I do. -
(Copyright, 1:'0. by Thompson Feature
Service.) - ,
It 'the- Thistle -the Emblem of
- Scotland?
(Copyright, 190. By- the Wheeler
Syndicate, Inc.) t.
Jne;of he, military rules of
the early Danes was that it was
cowardly to attack - an enemy
during the night and, because of
this, the Scotch did not consid
er it necessary to keep a watch
during their encounters with the
invading army -from Denmark,
Sunset was supposed to mark
the close of all hostilities for
the day, in "spite of the fact that
unions and the 8-hour-law were
unknown in those days.
On one accasion, however, the
Danes deviated from "their rule
and determined to launch an on
slaught against one of the Scotch
strongholds. On they crept,
barefooted,: noiseless, unobserved
until one of them set his foot
upon a thistle and cried out with
pain. The alarm was given, the
Scotch fell upon the invaders and
defeated them with terrific
slaughter, shortly afterwards
adopting the thistle as their em
blem and adding the motto, "No
one wounds ine with impunity."
The date of the "thistle battle"
is not precisely known, but it far
antedates the founding of the
Order of the Thistle, also known
as the Order of St. Andrew, and
the thistle is mentioned as the
national emblem of Scotland in
the inventory of the effects of
James III of Scotland, and ap
pears upon the coins of James
IW V and VI.
Tomorrow Why Are Diamonds
Sold by .the "Carat?",
WHY?
Service
at the
Union Stock
Yards Co
of Omaha
.
The Live Stock
Market of
Good Results.
Often
193 m ME ijEMWfct
yjUi ),. V Guaranteed
UOn. 10 years.
PIIUHI, ' 1M.K1 I
Swartz Light
Guaranteed 8 years.
Thew & Carley, Iru
OMAHA, U. S. A.
- "Service and Satialaction"
'HARD
e-o-A-L
ALL SIZES
GENUINE BERNICE
. OZARK LUMP
(Semi-Anthracite)
These Coals Willi Store With No
Danger of Combustion.
ROYER . VTA N IMURAN
LUMBER T COAL CO.
CALL COLFAX 80 FOR PRICES
2
ORTMAN'S
New England Bakery
214 No.. 16th x
Branches at Central Market, Hayden
Bros, and Table Supply.
THE AUTO TOP AND
TRIMMING CO., Inc.
"Better Work"
Perfect Tailored Seat Covers and
Tops.
420-22 So. 13th St., Omaha, Neb.
Douglas 7114.
BEMIS BRO.
BAG CO.
of Omaha
MOTOR
TRUCKS
aaaasasMBBaBK
rPHETE is not a drop of water in
International Harvester common and
preferred stock. Financial authorities
will tell you there is more than a dol
lar of value in International Harvester
properties for eery- dollar of capital
ization. .-
rpHAT means that the products of
International Harvester factories do
not have to provide a single dollar .of
excess revenue. It means that in the
price of Inernational Motor Trucks
there is not one penny of inflated
value. 1
The International
Harvester, Company of
America
Omaha Branch: 714-716 So. 10th St.
Si'
mi
7
WELDED
OIL STORAGE TANKS
HORIZONTAL orVERTICAL
Capacities-r-2,000 to 20,000 Cations
Shipment 10 Days.
Writs nr Mrs Ui Your Orser.
NEBRASKA and IOWA STEEL
TANK CO.
1300 Wlllli Aw.. Onshs.
Everything for the Office
We engrave visiting cards, wedding
invitations aad . announcements
The Omahi Stationery Co.
307-309 So. 17th St.
Phone Douglas 805. .
First!
saw 4s v
Iliggins Packing
Co., Inc.
36th aiid L Street;
oik
Beef and Pork Products, Butter,
Eggs, Poultry and Cheese
Sausage of All Kinds.
Our Motto ,.
"Quality and Service"
U. S. Gov. Insp. Abbt. 643.
Phono: So. 4995 Tyler 4467
Chiropractic
Makes You
Well
Keeps You
Well
LEE W:
EDWARDS
CHIROPRACTOR
24th and Farnam Sts.
Douglas 344S.
Carpenter Paper Co.
Wholesale Distributor!
PRINTING PAPER, WRAPPING
PAPER, PAPER BAGS, BUILD
ING PAPER, FANCY
STATIONERY.
glass;
MIRRORS,
PAINT
PITTSBURGH
PLATE GLASS CO.
11th and Howard Sts.
(2H333II
'unman sunt; tamc3;
BUEHLER BROS
v MARKETS
Special on Quality Meats and Provisions
FOUR STORES:
212 No. 16th St. 4903 So. 24th
2408 Cumin; St.
634 Broadway, Council - Bluffs
urn
The handy pig trough
f
Wm. F. Roesigg
OMAHA'S RELIABLE AUTOMOBILE
PAINTER.
CADILLAC BUILDING
2570 Farnam St. Harney 1448.
Carboh Coal & Supply Co.
WHOLESALE COAL
1905 HARNEV ST.,
Grain Exchange Bldg.
J OMAHA, NEB.
PAXTON - MITCHELL
COMPANY
Manufacturers of Brass, Bronze and
Aluminum Castings.
A specialty made of soft Gray Iron
Castings. 1 .
Omaha Printing Co.
OMAHA, U. S. A.
HAMIUuN. ILLINOIS sn LL6IN WAlCHtS
Special Prices This Week.
' ' ' xa&WKgm). Carter Sheet Metal
1 'sP" '3th a"iCt
NEW SOURCES OF
CAPITAL
By SAMUEL
SAVING is not merely a pastime; it has nothing to
do with the eleemosynary spirit, but unless the re
cipients p'f the largest aggregate income of the
country that is, the wage-earners return a portion of
their funds to industry that is, acquire an interest in it
and remove themselves from the strictly proletarian
or propertyless class, industry must languish for want
of capital and thus" languishing will not be able to pro
vide the goods out of which wages are paid. Hence
wages must decline and the propertyless class grow in
stead of diminish, and the moment that those who have
no stake in life reach the majority we shall have refo
1 lution and an overturn of society. In all fairness, if re
cannot so order our economic life that increasing oppor
tunities are open to all and being propertyless is a mat
ter of choice and not of compulsion, then a revolution
should come, for the present system will then have dem
onstrated its failure and some other system"has a right
to a hearing. .
I incline to doubt that We can reasonably exp&et co
operation toward a better system until the exact eco
nomic meaning of thrift is understood. It is necessary
to emphasize the employer's part in any investment plan
for wage-earners on the ordinary business principle that
a concern will rarely succeed in selling its product if -the
heads of that concern do not believe that it is a good
product. It is an axiom that anything njay be "put over"
for a while, but it is refreshing to know that nothing is
"put over" for long. Any successful employer counting
over those among his acquaintances who have succeeded
largely will quickly realize that those men have .been
successful in the degree of their belief in what they
make and sell. Take any of the remarkable personal
successes. The National Cash Register Company has
hada really marvelous career, but as far as John H.
Patterson is concerned, his chief interest has not been
in selling a machine, but in removing those who harfcITe
money from the temptation to theft. The primary in
terest of Henry Ford is in providing fast and che'ap
transportation so that the poor may have more leisure.
He thinks more of the. transformation that he has
brought about on' the farms than he does of the great
sums of money that he is incidentally accumulating.
,
Properly understood, .from this standpoint, there
is no reason that an employer shouldyiot have a positive
passion for the stimulation of hrift. Many successful
employer's haveithis passion. 'The most prominent ex-,
ample is probably Mr. George F. Johnson, the vice
president of the EndicotWohnson Company, who em
ploys more than 13,000 people and in his 30 years of
experience has never had, a strike. When he talks of
thrift he is talking of something that he practices and
when he makes an appeal it gets across. He ties, up
saving not with deprivation, but with getting more.
Here is a letter that he recently wrote to his people and
which is in many respects a model talk: "Please learn
as early as you can in life (and, having learned, keep it
constantly in mind) that it isn't what you get, in the
shape of financial returns for labor, that makes you any
better off. It's what you KEEP. Getting it and not mak
ing good use of it makes you poorer and much worse off.
It would be better for you to work for smaller wages
(so long as you had enough) than it would to get big
wages, and fool it away, and
and do you real injury, physically and mentally
It is comparatively easy to promote a thrift cam
paign. It is not difficult to engender an unusual desire
to save if with the desire is also the means of saving.
The idea can hardly be sold in abstract; it has to be
sold in connection with a dotted line -that is, in con
nection with a written promise to save.
- . '
Giving something that represents money in . return
for a laving is merely making easier the path to saving
by conforming to instead of running against the pqpular
idea however ureasonable that idea may be.- , A
"W. a AHM
W. L. Wilcox, V. Prss.
W. A. Smith, V. Pres..
ilar:
Tyjer 5188
Tear
iiiiii
1 n
Omaha (El
- , - ; ; - . ' - . '
Council Bluffs
Street Railway
Comp
CROWTHER
buy things which harm you
'
ANSON, Pres.
James E. Foster, Sec.Trcas.
Merrick . Lease, Asst. Sec.
Barker Block
any
t ' I C
8,000 imttrtif '
Guaraot.e VVlbTyV Vf
iMI Ijk
Cornhusker Tires V
NEBRASKA TIRE & ll A.
- RUBBER CO.
3167 SPAULDINQ
"BUSINESS is coop thank voi
Ea.t
,'. Nicholas Gasolenes
Purity
c J POWER
Sausage
Purity Provision Co. Ly NICHOLAS OIL COMPANY
2424 Q St. South 2404 v ""
GASOLINE SAVER
All kind of fUroring extracts.
HOLCOMB FOOD CHEMICAL
PRODUCTS CO.
91S No. 16th Tyler 4904
PHONE TYLER 4a
WALNUT 3
Geo. A. Roberts
Grain Co.
Receircrs and Shippers
GRAIN HAY
. SEEDS
Consignments' a Specialty
230-31-32-33-34 Grain Exchange
Omaha, , Neb. -.
WM1 isTafal
i tat 5wtsr
EFFECTVE EFFICIENT
OIL AND COMPRESSION TIGHT
GILL PISTON RING CO..
x 1923 Farnam St.
American State Bank
18th and Farnam
SOLICITS YOUR BANKING
BUSINESS--
Phone Tyler 80
mm
Whistle Bottling Co.
Tel. Web. 2131
RADIATORS t
and Radiator Cores for Automobiles,
Trucks and Tractors
MADE AND REPAIRED
Send" your radiator by express. Gusr
anteed work, prompt service and rea
sonable charKes.
OMAHA AUTO RADIATOR MFG. CO.,
1819-21 Cuminf St. OMAHA.
SCREENS AND CABINET
WORK
Residence Phone Walnut 4633.
. Business Phone Tyler 632.
A. C. LESSARD SON
. Remodeling and Building
Contractors.
' 2021 Cunin St.
JOHN DEERE PLOW CO,
Agricultural Implement
Jobbers
Sioux Falls -Sidney -Omaha
RALPH DeLNG
Common Brick
Yard on C. B. Q. R. R.
312 KARBACH BLOCK
Tyler1 4348..
Attention Mr. Automobile Owner
We overhaul your car, rebore the cylinders, make piston snd rinjs or any
parts you might need.
P. Melchiors & Son Machine Vorks
417 South 13th St.
General Automobile, Machine and Blasksmlth Repair Work.
ij 1
"Little Red Wagons"
Cradinf Contractors' Equipment
TRACTORS
STROUD & CO.
Colfax 2098. 20th and Ames Ave.
KOPAC BROTHERS
Automotive and Shop Equipment
Holt Caterpillar Tractors
V Tires and Trucks
Wholesale Branch Norfolk. Neb.
Main Office Omaha, Neb.
Norfolk David , Citr Columbus
Schuylsr, Neb.
Not only Lumber, but Millwork, Hard
ware and Paint.
WE PAY THE FREIGHT.
C. Hafer Lumber
Company
13S W. Broadway
Council Bluffs, la.
Distributors of Quality.
ELECTRICAL
MERCHANDISE
and Supplies.
Omaha Sioux City
"Omaha Liberty Fire
the Height of
Perfection"
"You SHARE IN THE PROFITS
while haying PROTECTION."
OLD LINE STOCK COMPANY
Paid In Cash Capital. . $200,000
Surplus Paid in Cash.. 200,000
' Remember it costs no more
to Insure your property in
OMAHA LIBERTY than in any'
other 'responsible company and
you share in the profits.
Insurance against loss by fire,
lightning and tornado.. Auto
mobile and hail insurance.
Home -Office: 1817 Douglas St.
Phone Tyler 2621.
FAIRBANKS MORSE
&CO.
OIL ELECTRICAL
ENGINES MACHINERY
FARM ENGINES SUPPLIES
WIND MILLS
FAIRBANKS SCALES
!M3
10 cttaarx-63
The
HUGH MURPHY
Construction Co.
PAVING CONTRACTORS
D. 834. , 206 Karbaca Bldff.
CM
I
1'
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