:...v... !! f M "if THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 12, 1920. 6 A ( Grain Man Named Ak-Sar-Ben King By Jingle Writer James Trimble Is Nominated In Bee Contest by a Schulyer, Neb., Man. T James Trimble, a grain imh, is jominated for king of Ak-Sar-Ben by the winner of Friday's prize in The Bee's Ak-Sar-Ben jingle con test, E. W. Zerzan, Schuyler, Neb., who jingles as follows: Unfit, jlntrl. merry Jlnrlt, tt us boost for "Jlmmle" trlmble, What a pltuur to u men r hav htra crowned King- Ak-Sar-Ben. AVrite a jingle about some man or woman whom you would like to see made king or queen of Ak-Sar-Ben. You may win one of the grand prues awarded at the end of the contest, as well as the daily prize of two tickets to the Ak-Sar-Ben car nival shows. These are the rules of the contest: 1. No governor of Ak-Sar-Ben or any member of hjs family is eligible to compete, nor any em ploye of The Bee or his relative. Anyone else may contribute one or more jingles. 2. The guess must be embodied in a jingle, either a "King's Jingle" or a "Queen's Jingle," .It must be written plainly andSenclosed in an envelope addressed to the Ak- Sar-Ben Jingle Editor of The Bee. 3. Each jingle must be on a separate sheet of paper, the "King's Jingle" on one and the "Queen's Jingle" on another. 4. The author of the best jin gle each day will receive two tickets to Con T. Kennedy's Ak-Sar-Ben carnival shows. 5. The person who guesses correctly the name of the king will receive any $10 article in any Omaha store; the person who guesses correctly the name of the ?iucen will receive a second order " or $10 worth of merchandise in any Omaha store. 6. In case two or more persons make the same winning guesses, tha author of the best jingle will receive the first prize and the au thor of the second best jingle a aeparate $5 prize. 7. The contest will close Sep tember 22. Fillmoe County Fair To Be Best in History Geneva,. Neb., Sept. 11. (Spe cial.) The county fair to be held at Geneva September 15-17. will, ac cording to Secretary S. E. Ralston, have the best exhibits in the 45 years of its history. The manage ment is worried about lac kof space O Fine Arts hall and for housing of 15 blooded stock. An addition has it-, -been made to the grandstand for v- '" spectators, which is considered ade quate. . Harness races ate already well filled and many entries made for county and chariot races. Daily ball games and high-wire performances are on the program and the wrest ling match on Wednesday and box ing contest on Friday by local men will be put on as a new feature of the program. In the evening a stock company will put on plays under canvas on the grounds and the fair manage ment has arranged for a display of fireworks. Officers of the Fillmore County Agricultural osasciation are Jacob Weis, president; S. E. Ralston, sec retary, and R. A. Lynn, treasurer. Grand Island Minister Serves Church 25 Years Grand Island, Neb.. Sept. 11. (Special.) Rev. H. Wilkins, pastor of the German Lutheran church here, was surprised by members of his congregation and a delegation from his former charge at Minden on his completion of 25 years' serv ice in the ministry. Eighteen pas tors from the district, conference were in charge of the celebration. Rev. Mr. Brommer. president of the Nebraska' synod,.in a brief ser mon at the church, invoked divine blessing. and felicitated the pastor on his long service. Grand Island is Rev. Mr. Wil kins' second chrge, he having served eight years at Minden and 17 years here, tie was presented wurr an office desk by the congregation -and a chair by the conference. Mullen to Co-Operate In Nebraska Air Derby Mullen, Neb., Sept. 11. (Special Telegram.) The Mullen Commer cial club will co-operate and do all in its power to make the first air plane race in Nebraska, from Oma ha to the Tristate fair at Crawford, a success. Use of the landing field here, which is located half way be tween Grand Island and Crawford, lias been offered free of charge to the aviators contesting in .the race. The club offered the use of the field cither as a control stop or for the use of aviators who may have engine trouble: Supplies will be at the field for any aviators entered in the derby who signify their desire of making a stop here. Railway Commissioners . Attend Chicago Hearing Lincoln. Sept. 11. (Special.) Railway Commissioners Taylor and Browne have gone to Chicago to at tend a meeting of commissioners from 12 or 15 midwestern states, ; called for the purpose of taking con certed action in litigation pertain ing to 2cent fare laws. The Illi nois law on that subject is now be ing attacked before the Interstate Commerce commission, which makes a test case for all states. It is expected: the Interstate Commis sion will declare all 2-cent fare laws invalid and proceed to fix the intra ' state rates itselt- or call upon the .respective railway commissions to act with it in doing so. Beatrice Woman Named Yorlc Home Supervisor Lincoln. Sept 11. (Special.) The State Board of Control has ap paointed Mrs. Nellie Mumford of Beatrice to the position of house su- Fervisor atfthe woman's custodial arm at Yrk. She succeeds Mrs1. Hastings, who resigned. Letters From Home-Made (Father to Son BOOKS ARE ALL RIGHT IF THEY SHOW A PROFIT. By Ed. Streejer. Deer Sun; , I got yure leter inclosin the quest shuns you say every edicated man ought to know. It seems to me you yung fellos in eolege spend too much time figgerin out when other folks did things insted o when yure goin to do somethin yureself. I never could see how it was goin to get you anywhere to know who rote Bee thoovens1 Sonaty or where the Batel of Waterlou was fought. Theres always been an idear that to be an interestin man a fello had to be able to tell if Shakespere was born in 1492 or if that was the year Benjumin Franklin discovered the kite. We had a man in Faducah onct that was edicated along those lines. His name was Finian Fish. You dont remember him. He died soons you was born. Outside o his name an his 'adums appcl the only tiling that stuck out of Finian was his niemury. .He could tell how many inches it had rained fer twen ty years back an the weights o all the winnin vegatabels at the County Fare- . " :u : He might a done'furst rate if he hadnt fallen in the hands o a smart book agent that sold cyclopedias. After this fello had been workin on him fer a coupel o weeks Finian be gan talkin about how few peepel was recly edicated. He allowed there wasnt a person in town that could talk inteligent about anything but bisnis an not his own-at that. Then Finian quit goin round at all. We could see him nights sittin in his house studyin in the cyclopedia till the mussels o his brain stood right out an his forhed. After a time folks forgot all about him. Finian Comes Back Noisily. Bimeby he commenced droppin round agen. He had a queer look an there was some talk o'' his bein' loose. He's sit cn a craker, barel fer hours without openin' his mouth. Then he'd say so: ?thin' like "The Magna Carta was s -.ed in 115, or "Winney Churchill's the. Pry MinisV ter o Ingland He always looked "Lookin' for a job as a day laberer." disappointed when he found nobody cared. There wasn't nothin' useless that man didn't know. An whatever you said reminded him o' somethin'. Like Pooch Frisbec was remarkin' one day on Harry Thaw, the poplar murderer, havin' been sent to Matawan, Finian' chimes right in an says: '"Speakin' o' Matawan, Mata pan is the most southermost point in Urope." That's the way he is. I remember one night he was sit tin' on the stoop with me an yure muther an Squire Freeman. Yure muther says, "Didn't I hear it a thunderin'?" An Finian says, "Sound travtits 1,088 feet a second." Then he glared over at the squire like he dared him to contradick it. "An that ain't all there is to it," he says after a minit "It ojly does that when the themomcter reads 34 degrees Fairanhigh." Then he rocks back and forth very fierce for a while. "An it increases, in veloci pede one foot fer each two degrees o' temperment," he says at last look in' hard at the squire, like he was thinkin' o' figtitin' him. Now cordin' to all the book rulep Finian had got to be one o' the most interestin' talkers in the country. There was one thing he hadn't banked on. though. ' He didn't have nobody to talk to. When he'd try to work up some excitement about the discuvery o' Icelandi there wasn't no one that cared a hanp. Evtn Pooch Frisbee, that usuly has a comeback for everything, looked foolish when Finian says o him, "The arc of a circcl is ekal to pie R square." Bimeby tjie boys got in the habit o' slippin'. out the back o' the store when Finian come in the front. He used to tell peepel how Pooch's bis nis must be fallin' of cause you never could find nobody in his store. This didn't hurt Pooch none 'cause by that time the only peepel that Finian could get hold of to tell was very old folks that couldn't get over the ground fast or childrun what didn't know any better. It got so he spent moft o' Iiis time tellin' his stuff to ol' Capen Juniper' what's so deef he wouldn't hear a fire cracker if you lit it in his ear. 2ffobody'd bothered to talk to the Cajpenfer years au' it flatter ed him. ; Finian always did all the talkin' himself so he used to fer get the ol' man was deef. In that way they got on right well. All o which goes to prove that everybody don't agree on what's in terestin'. I'd much ravher hear how Minton Pebbel's heiftr chocked to deth on a straw than how some ol' Greek poysened hisself. When you come right down to it anout the only interestin' things in this World is what interests you pusson ally,.tho I know that don't agree with what the book fellos say. Wanted No Share in Losses. Byron Hames was over last week. He's the one that has the big can nin'vfactory over in Milford. It's closed now. He says he's lost most o' his muney an all his confidence in human jiater. Byron used to have 1100 in Loot Taken From Two Alba, Neb., Stores Grand' Island,., Neb..' Sept. 11. Special Telcgranr.The R. H. El lis general merchandise store and the Alda Specialty store of Alda, nine miles west of here, were bur glarised and $100 in loot obtained. The thieves escaped i mm 1 1 "Then he rocks back and forth very fierce." a thery that a man would never have no trubel with labef if he told 'em what was goin' on and gave 'cm a share in the profits. He used to go out in the factery an read 'em the balenie sheet ebery munth. Then he'd hand 'em all an extry check. They'd always give him a cheer an' every birthday a gold watch. Byron used to write artickles fer maggu zines about it. Then he, began . to lose muney. He read 'em the balance sheet just the same but he left out the check. After a while the men came to him and says why hadn't they had no ex try, pay in some time and they wasn't goin' to be done in like that. So they ast, Byron fer twice as much Eay as they'd been gettin', and dub el pay fer over time an' all the time they worked was to be over time. - , ' Byron told 'em he giiessed they hadn't paid much tenshun to the last finanshul report. That was one o' the few times he was right. He offered. to get out the books an' show 'em how he hadn't made a nikkel fer a year. They says they didn't care huth in' about the books not bein' liturary fellos. What they wanted was more muney. , Then Byron says if they'd stick he'd run the bisnis fer a year with out takin' a cent o pay fer it, an' at the end o' that time they'd all 1 .1 ' 1". aiviae tne proni. Thev savs thev didn't want any o' that kind o' munkey bisnis. What they wanted was more muney. Byron's dander was comin' up. He says they wasn't worth what they was eettin.' but he'd get out an' give 'em the bisnis fer a year.iThey could del what they liked with it an' keep the change. They told him not to come any o his smart tricks on 'em but to give 'em more muney. So Byron got mad an' shut up shop.j Now they're suin' him in cort fer closin' his bis nis in restraint o' laber. He was over here in Paducah lookin' fer. a job as a day laberer. He says he wants to make some muney an' at the same time get a little rest befoie he goes back to the job 6' runnin' his own bisnis, - There ain't no other news cep tin' 1 got the lumbago an' yur mother has a touch o' rumatism. It comes at a bad time 'cause the hired girl's in the hospittle an' the hired roan's sick of a fever. Outside o' that everything's all right. Hopin' this finds you the same, I am, Yotirs internally, AMOS H. AMESBY. Fath. Campaign for City , -Beautiful at Grand Island Successful Grand Island, Neb., Sept. 11. (Special). The committee from the Woman's club, selected by the Chamber of Commerce as judges in the summer campaign for a city beautiful, this week made their deci sions and awarded $50 in prizes. Three classes were included in the contest, best lawn, best flower gar den and best vegetable garden. Dr. E. E. Famsworth won the first prize for the general appear ance of his lawn as to flowers and shrubbery, and Mrs. Charles Was mer won the second prize. Mrs. O. B. Olson won the first prize for the best lawn; S. E. Camp bell second, and Mrs. Cowell, jani tress of a ward school, third. Lucile Kelly won the first prize for the best vegetable garden main tained under school work. The in dividual garden first prize was won by W. r. Krause and S. E. Sinke was second. Chamber of Commerce officials were astounded at the report made of the number of vegetables raised by the first prize winner.' On a single city lot 74 varieties of vege tables were harvested. The list in cluded four kinds of beans, four of beets, three of peas, three of lettuce, tw of egg plant, two of leek, six of tomatoes, two of cauliflower, two of celery, four of carrots, 11 of onions, two of turnips, five of cab bage, five of radishes, two of cucum bers, seven of berries, and one each of parsnips, dasheen, dill, spinach, brussel sprouts, parsley, sweet corn, pop corn,,, rhubarb and mamitjoth Kussian sunnower. State Agents Busy on Pure Food Violations Grand Islaifl, Neb., Sept. 11. (Special Telegram.) On complaint of state agentsT T, A. Gottredge, manager of tha Fairmont Creamery, pleaded guilty to the charge that a test of ice cream made by that com pany showed a deficient amount of butter fat. The; creamery alleges that a rise of the fat in thje contain er must have left a portion deficient and that it was this portion that came under observation. A representative of the American Eottling Works pleaded guilty to the charge of using saccharine in the manufacture of strawberry pop. This is attributed by the company to a technical defect. A charge of selling ice cream con taining less than 14 per cent butter fat, against Roney & Kauffman, confectioners, was continued, i At the trial, the defendants alleged they purchased their cream with the un derstanding that it met the test. Charges against the Harding Ice Cream company of Omaha, Cairo plant, for having other than standard iweight tests and under reading cream tests, were continued. Increase Bank Capital. Washington. Sept. 11. (Special Telegram.) The comptroller of the currency has approved the increase of the capital of the First National bank of Bancroft, Neb., from $30,000 to ?50,000. , Apeal Filed by Street Car Men on Wage Hearing Exception Taken to State Rail way Commission Ruling That Strikes by Men Are Unlawful. Lincoln, Sept. 11. (Special.) Omaha street car men have filed an appeal in the state supreme court from the decision of the state rail way commission refusing to order an increase of wages above the "Scale of 53 to 57 cents en hour, now being paid by the Omaha & Council Bluffs street railway company. The principal feature of the order to which the men object is that hold ing strikes unlawful as affecting pub lic utility service. 1 tis probable that lite American Federation of Labor will aid in the effort to have this ruling knocked out. The railway commission, in the car men's complaint, denied the rail way employes an increase of 13 cents an hour which they claimed was necessary to meet the increas ing costs of necessities of life. In the appeal, the carmen take ex ception to the comparison made by the commission as between wages paid the railway employes and those of unskilled labor in Omaha. OXFORDS With Military Heels For Fall The newest thing Ladies' Black and Tan Oxfords for Fall. These most unuul values in Fall footwear for womeni-fea turing the newest toe and heel, and colera, very durable leather, at $8.45 and up. This large assortment is composed of smart street, college and sport styles. , , . Our upstairs location, with extremely low rent and overhead expense, enables us to save the pur chaser from $1.00 to $3.00 on every pair of shoes. MODERN " SHOE CO. SECOND FLOOR PAXTON BLOCK 217 South 16th 16th and Famam PIANO BUYERS, ATTENTION One of the biggest Piano Sales ever held in Omaha is now going on at the warerooms of SCEMOLLER & MUELLER Piano Co. We Are Forced to Vacate , and our prices and terms will STARTLE you. CALL AT ONCE if you want to obtain the bargain of a lifetime. AK-SAR-BEN VISITORS, ATTENTION! Take advantage of our Big Removal Sale, and save from $100 to $300 on the pur chase of a Piano, Player orThonograph. 5450 Kimball Beautifully Figured San Domingo ' Mahogany, only $287 $875 a Steck f Grand f Big J fJ Bargain . Only iTlfv?! $550 Jij I MVHMiMMMWMMmaMHMMHMMMMMMBHMWMMMMSHWWaaMMMHHMSMNSMSaMMBSaBBMMBaSa .BELOW IS A PARTIAL LIST OF WONDEBFUL BARGAINS IN SLIGHTLY USED HIGH GRADE PIANOS WE , HAVE MANY OTHERS $500 Gramef, Oak case, fine tone and action, Only $248 125 ' Prescott, Famed Oak, cent be told from new, Only $275 $450 Irion, Walnut, used a little, - Only $278 A beautiful $850 Hardman Piano, mahogany case, just like new. This will go quick. Only jg475 SOHMOLLER & MUELLER PLAYER PIANO VALUES ARE THE GREATEST IN OMAHA The great fundamental principle of modern business is td buy in .such large quantities in order to reduce cost. This is why the House of Schmoller & Mueller undersells all competitors. - OUR GUARANTEE IS THE STRONGEST WRITTEN SAVE SI 00 TO $200 DO IT THIS WEEK Terms as Low as $6 1 Per Month 0CT-0F.T0W CUSTOMERS USE THIS COUPON No matter nhere yon live, we ship anywhere. Mark with (X) Piano interested in and we will glie yon complete Information. Name ( ., Address Orf MM (fill I II s 1 11 11 11 as 1 t UVUUlVDlCBB' All IV PIANO CO. PHONE v DOUGLAS 1623 . r 114-116-118 Soutlr 15th Street PHONE DOUGLAS 1623 I- about the HOSE you select. Saying that you paid too much for them that the quality is poor, and that they will.not wear. Don't iuss up "Friend Wife" knows more about hosiery, in a minute, than you'll ever know. She wears PHOENIX HOSE she won't wear any other kind. Experience has taught her thf . folly of buying other makes. We are PHOENIX headquarters. We carry everything in hosiery that PHOENIX makes PHOENIX HOSE is a specialty here. It doesn't matter what your size may be, or the pattern or shade that you like best PHOENIX makes it, and we have it. Come in and see. Two Stores 1908 Farnam St. and 508-10 South 16th St. IT For Men The Home of PHOENIX HOSE for M. sad Wcmsa. The Rogers One-Pipe Furnace , Does Heat Your Whole House Through , One Register Do away with your "old" stoves. The modern method of heating today is the pipeless furnace with its one register heating the whole house. The Rogers One-Pipe Furnace is easily and quickly, installed in old hbuses. It burns any fuel hard or soft coal, or wood. It fills the whole house with a welcome warmth that is uniform in temperature, yet constantly changing and purifying itself. Built For Long Service and Constant Saving Furnaces' differ as much as people, and we welcome a comparison of the Roger with other pipeless furnaces. The "insides" of a furnace are what count, and that is where the Roger excels. The castings are un usually heavy and unusually well fitted. The inner casings around the firepot are unusually durable, a double lining of galvanized, iron, inter lined with asbestos. Thjs all means that heat is retained longer, that radi ation of heat is greater. It means less fuel, less attention and more com fort. . ' , Let Our Service Department Help You We will gladly aid you with advice, absolutely without obligation, if you will consult our service department or send sketch of your build ing with the number and size of rooms. Wbol.,.1. and Rotail - Fiiraae Department, 1405 Haraay. One of Our Men Will Be Glad to Call Tyler 414. eltokTDoqers .& SONS CO. JIM. 1515 HARNEY -Hardware arid Kitchenware WhoU.aU and Ratal! FwrftM Depart saaat, 140S Ham.r, r '4 r 1 1 J. ".V jWtfatawwwrw'iMS r