Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 19, 1920, FINANCIAL, Image 62

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    "St '
e
8 F
THE- OMAHA SlunDAY BLci: brTiiil 1U20.
.1
i
1
V 1.
REAL ESTAE IMPROVED
North.
A FINE HOME
Oil of the well-built houses with llv
ln room, dining- room, library with
fireplace, (ood-iiied kitchen, four sleep
ing rooms and bath un Becond floor,
front and back stairway, (rood basement
with larg furnace, combination hot air
and hot water heat, large porch
screened In, lot (4x124, with good ga.--
ffeg very convenient to car; amnR
food homes at 1621 Lothrop street. Can
ha seen any time by calling next door
east. Will be vacated September 21.
W.H.GATES,
T Omaha Nat. Bank Bid. P. 1194.
Bungalow
A J-motn oak finished bungalow, con
slut if living room, lanre dining
room, two nlr bedrooms and bath and
nicely arranged kitchen. Full floored
attic and cmnted hawment Garage
and drive. Houie just painted and In
sVery gvod shape. Large south front
lot on paved street with paving paid.
Owner la moving: to Iowa and is desirous
of disposing of this property. Prire
M.o. Call Colfax 40 for further de-
tatla.
NORRIS & NORRIS,
1501 Podge St. Thone Douglas 4370.
FINE DOUBLE
HOUSE
Six room on one utttn, five oi othT;
- earh apartment is ail modern, with fur
. rinmt heat and hardwood finish ilown-
ntftlrs; traaKc; good location north,
pawed street, handy for tar; $.2r0,
$3,780 rash, balance $.(! per month;
Jive In one, nnd rent, other for 1)50; or
- hera is .lust the property 'for two Aiph
rent Tictitm a a pt-rmanen homp.' or
- an a mn k.rhift. Address Box A-33,
Omaha Bee. '
Investment
An 18-room double hoiWe, nieely n
, cated in Kountze place, neur Florence
' boulevard for sale. Consists of 5 rooms
and bath on first floor of ench apart
irmnt niyl 4 rooms on second. Tenants
furnish, heat. T-arwe south front lot,
, paved street with, paving paid. Ppraon
buyfng ran live in one apartment and
make others pay for thin property. Carl
Colfax 4i0 for further details
NORRIS & NORRIS, ,
ISO 8 T)od gS t . F h one Dougla 3 4270.
Field Club Bungalow
Five-room bungalow, living room with
built-in bookcanca. dining room with
window seat, two good bedrooms with
crota ventilation, kiuhen and bath: full
cement banement. gas ht-ater. floor drain,
coal" bin and fruit room ; 0resPd briek
foundation : single garage; this hftme
lin errellent condition in every par
ticular and certainly a pick-up at 16.000,
12,500 cah. balance monthly.
Alfred Thomas, ,
RKALTOR.
04 First
National Bank
Beautiful Brick Home
First floor has large living room with
fireplace, dining room with buffet, sun
room and kitchen, oak floors and finish.
Second floor has two dandy bedrooms
and bath, oak floors and finish.
Fnll remented basement with laundry
room. Lot 50XT50; on car line; now va
cR(t and ready to move Into. 4731
s North 40th St. For price and terms
call.
. Payne & Carnaby Co.,
.: RKALTOR SERVICE,
1 Omaha Nat. Bank Bldg. Doug. 101(1.
8-R. MODERN HOUSE
FOR $5,000
" Having living room with fireplace,
dining room and den finished In oak.
. four sneplng rooms and bath on second
j floor, t water Jieat, corner lot, 60x100;
near umana university
W. H. GATES, ,
847 Omaha National Bank Bldg.
Ponglas 1294, Realtor. Wabster 2888.
, OWNVOURllOME
Dandy S-room bungalow ' all on one
floor; large attic, oak finish Interior,
nicely1 arranged, newly decorated, built
in bookcase and cupboard.' full sice press
brick' basement; located 2716 Ames Ave.
Price, 17,250; terms to good party, Soutb,
front, paved street. ' " w ,
G. G. CARLBERG,i?
flit Brandels Theater Bldg.
4307 Ohio St
Mv-room home, oak floors and fin
Ish on first floor, oak floors on second
) floor; full cemented basement. 'furnace
heat; fruit trees and grape vines; only
J5.500.
Payne & Carnaby Co.,
i REALTOR SERWCE.
61y Omaha Nat. Bank Bldg. Doug. 1018.
3905 North 18th St.
T-room house, large room across en
tlra front. First floor oak finish, nicely
docorated. 4 bedrooms, hard pine fin
ish. Fine large basement and laundry.
Lot 10x138. Fine shade trees. For pricw
and terms call Doug. 5013.
Amerfcan Security Co.,
18th and Dodge Streets.
t ACRES, 3330 MrKtnley St.. good modern
ahouae, 14 acre In cherries. acre In
raspberries; barn with room for 4 horsea
or cows and garage. 2 tons of hay,
chlckenhouse, .1 acres alfalfa, beautiful
Vlew Call Col fax 311.
MILLER PARK BUNOALOW.
B-room. neatly arranged, oak floors
and Woodwork, built-in features, laundry
" conveniences, large basement. Col. 2621.
SEVEN rooms, strictly modern, full lot.
near car and schools. $'"..500: terms. Al
fred Thomas, 604 First National Bank
A FEW home and lots for sale In Park
wood addition: a safe place for-Inveat-ment.
Norrls A Nqrrls Douglas 4270.
filNNE LUSA homes and lots' offer the
best opportunity to Invest your money
Phone Tyler 1.
FIVE-ROOM''' modern, garage, two lots;
smalt cottage as paat payment. Col.
. 4t82. ' I
FOR SALE Strictly modern S-room cot
tage. 14.000, terms. Phon owner 2 to
" 4 p. m. Sunday, Walnut 1330.
,T. B. ROBISON. real estate and Invest
ment. 442 Bee Bldg. Douelas 8097.
HKNSON ft MEYERS CO.. 424 Om. Na VI
t-ROOM. modern bungalow.' Col. 3683.
South.
BE A HOME OWNER
Just completed 3056 South 32d St., B
rooms with sleeping rooms on second
floor, oak finish on first floor, nicely
decorated, convenient?? arranged, built
in buffet, bookcase and cupboard,, stuc
co exterior, paved street, home owning
community; priced right; terms to good
p"c? g. carlberg, .
' 312 Brandels Theater Bldg.
: (PUBLIC AUCTION
i ' Sis-room house at 2419 So. 24th St.,
. will be told at public auction at the east
front door of the court house, Wednes
. day. Sept. J2. at 10 a. in.
FRED B. CH ERNISS, R KFER EE.
IMMEDIATK possession; 824 S. Sth St.;
8-room tnodern stucco bungali
alow: J2
cash, bal. mo. Creigh, 608 Bce.v Dg. 200,
$500 C.A3H, partly modern house.
Benja-
mm f ranKenperg.yuoug. izz.
7-RCOM, modern house, make offer,
9. 25th St. South 3600.
4423
Miscellaneous.
: ;: , $600 CASH
".'5-room cottage at 2010 Dorcas
St. In exxellcnt shape. Large
"lot and barn. Shade trees, fruit
. ' trees, well and cistern. A bargain
at $2,700. .
- A. P.TUKEY & S0.N,
620 First Xat'l Bk. Bldg. Doug. 502
.'Sunday call Mr. Peterson,
Douglas 4450.
yJ 1. $400;
T- : . "Cash, Payment
W , Buy)a six-room cottage close In,
modern except heat; price 83,250. Call
Doug. , (013.
i American Security Co.,
llth and Dodge St.
SAVE TOUR MONEY.
' X have a dandy lot near the -Country
lub and In line of development. I can
sell for 110 down and 83 per week. Call
Us. laead. Doug. 7412. Monday,
REAL ESTATE IMPROVED.
Miscellaneous.
FOR SALE ThreV fancy Boston terrier
puppies; two males and a female; these
puppies are well up In the Squoutum,
Ringmaster and Toss stock; no better
Bostons anywhere; price, 140, 60 and
J75. Midwest Kennels. C. W. -Bisland.
proprietor.
Dl'PI.KX preiwd brick flat near 3(Uh and
Farnam; eluht r. each, side; oak finish;
snap, $12.5011. terms. D. 1734 days.
! DTD l?T?rW P, Pfl sells renti
: JJilViYXJ i IA. JJ.. and lnsu's
real estate. 250 Bca Bldg.. Douglas 633.
COMMERCIAL GUIDE.
Attorneys.
FISHER, h., 1418 First Nat. Bank Bldg.
I . IS M. Attorney and counsellor at law.
Packers.
CUDAHV PACKINO CO.
South 2340. South Omaha.
Doctors.
CAMPBELL, DR. S. M.. Physician snl
Suryrion. 1804 Farnam St. Douglas 1220.
Banks.
AMKUICAX STATE BANK. 18th and Far
nam. Head Block. Phone Tyler 80.
Mirrors and Resilvering.
OM AH MltiROK AND ART GLASS CO,
Pouglns 6525. 1814 Cuming St.
Patent Attorneys.
PATENTS procured, boueht and sold. In
tern't Patent Co.. EDS Brandelg. D. 661.
let Machines.
BAKER ICE MACHINE CO.
l!Mh and Nicholas. J. L. Baker.
Pres.
Automobiles.
M'OAFFREY MOTOR CO.. 10th and How
ard. Doug. 2500. Ford cars and re
pairs. Authorized agents for Ford cars.
Tank Manufacturers.
NFBRASKA & IOWA STEEL TANK CO..
1S01 Willis Ave. Webster 278.
Auto Repairs.
AMERICAN MACHINE WORKS. 110 S.
11th St. DouKlas 4881. Patents de
vloped. Models, tools and dies made.
Baggage and Transfer.
OMAHA TRANSFER COMPANY
"THE ONLY WAT."
Telephone Doug. 505. 14th and Jackson.
Dry Goods.
BYRNE & HAMMER DRY GOODS CO..
th and Howard Sts. Douglas 208.
Cloak", suits, ladies' and men's furnlsh
Inirs, art goods, millinery and draperies;
all kinds of fancy and staple Dry Goods.
Boiler Manufacturers.
DkAKK. WILLIAMS MOUNT CO.,
2.1d
and Hickory. P. 104S. Mfrs. of boilers,
tnnks, smokestacks, oxy-acetylene fld,
Butter (Wholesale).
ALFALFA BUTTER CO.. 120-24 N. 11th
St. Doug. ,'.903. W. W. Richardson. Pres.
Cement Products.
OMAHA CONCRETE STONE COMPANY.
28th Ave. and Sahler St. Colfax 888.
Cash Registers.
MORRIL CASH A.MDv CREDIT REGIS
TER CO., 218-211 City Nat'l Bank
Bldg. Doug. 4403. E. W. Hart, Pres.
Electrolysis.
SUPERFLUOUS hair removed oy electric
ity, needle work guaranteed. Miss Allen
der, 40S Barker Blk.
Engineers, Consulting & Supervising
ANDERSON & BENNETT. 424 Bee Bldg..
Douglas 1430. Heating, ventilating and
power plants. Engineers and draftsmen.
Foundries (Iron and Brass.)
PAXTON-MITCHEL CO.. 2614 Martha at
Harney 1661. Machine, gray lt.a. bhasa.
bronze and aluminum castings.''
OLSEN ft SCHINGER, 1401 Jackson. D.
7491. Brass, bronze and aluminum cast
Ings. .
Paints, Oils and Glass.
BARKER BROS. PAINT CO. Douglas
4750. 1609 'i Fanrara St.
Live Stock Commission.
JQSENSTOCK
Bldg.. Omaha.
specialty.
BROS.,' 126 Exchange
StocKers and feeders our
, Hardware,
PETERSON t MICHELSON HARDWARI?
I MI(
-18 S.
CO., 4916-18 n. Z4tn Bt.t soum Blue.
Phone South 171.
FfRD TRANSFER CO., 817 Douglas St
Tyler 3. "Always at your service."
Printers' Supplies.
BARNIIART BROS. & SPINDLER, 1114
Howard St. Douglas 1076. Printers
supplies.
OMAHA PRINTING CO.. 13th and Far
nam. Douglas 346. Printing, stationery
and office furniture.
DOUGLAS PRINTING CO., 109-11 N. 18th.
Douglas 644. Fine commerc ial printing.
EDDY PRINTING CO.. 21- South 13th.
Douglas 8647. Fine commercial printing.
Electrical Goods.
LE BRON ELECTRICAL WORKS.
318 S. 12th. Donglaa 2176. Largest eleo
trlcal repair works and contracting com
pany In the middle west. .
Undertakers.
HULSE & RIEPKN. 701" S. 10th. D. 1220.
Undertakers and embalmers. Personal
attention given to all calls and funerals.
rTRTAlTK'V A VI I.' A WV 9S1 1 Farnam. Bar.
ney Z(i.ri. UnuertfiKers and emnaimera.
CROSBY. Willis C.
Webster 47.
2018 Wirt. .Phone
Stationery and Supplies.
OMAHA STATIONERY CO., THE. 307-
309 S. Seventeenth. Douglas 805. urnce.
typewriter, architects' and engineers'
supplies. Loose-leaf devices.
Council Bluffs Directory.
Coal and Ice.
Phone 28il0. Citerers to heat and cold.
Real Estate Transfers
Charles B. Tlarman and wife to
Margaret M:illison. Fowler ave.,
172 feet e. ,it 24th st. n. s., 60x
132 8 4,750
Miiry Kozina and husband to Anna
Vojtech, 21st st.. 260 feet s. S
st. w. s.. 50x130
James T. Lcarv and wife to Morris
Wlntrub and wife, 19th St.. 215
feet s. of ClarkrNt. w. s., 40x140.
Omaha Loan BMg. Assn. to Jake
Mandelson, Willis ave., 148 feet
w. of 20th st. n. s 48x122
John B. Kelly to Most Rev. J. J.
Harty. bishop, Center st., 90 feet
e. of 51st St. s. s., 45x100
Fred W. Clements et al to Loella
Clements et al. V St., 132 fee;
w. of 29th st. s. s., 40x130 I
George C. Flack to Goldle A. Nei-
4,400
4,050
2,100
1,000
lan, 47th ave., 245 feet n. of Ma
ple st. e. s... 40x125 7,500
Edna B. Johnson and husband to
Charles T. Hansen, n. w. cor.
51st and Capitol ave.. 100x135, exchange
Harry B. Oleason. et al, to Harold j
A. Eaton, s. e. cor. 45th and
Grand ave., 11914x128 . 3,500
Ben Lustgarten and wife to Andrew
Christiansen, et al, 17th "st., 200
feet s. of I st. e. s., 60x130 ... 2.000
United Real Estate & Trust Co.,
et al, to Josephine Seroy, Spaul-
ding at.. 120 feet e. of 36th st.
n. s., 60x128 270
Isadora Goldstein and wife to Meyer
Grossman, et al, a. w. cor. 16th
and California. 66x99 18,500
Joseph H. Dcsterhouse and wife to
John B. Mears'and wife, 9th St.,
44 feet n. of Spring st w. s.,
39x140 2,200
John B. Mears and wife to Edna
G. Walworth. 9th st. 464 feet n.
of Spring st. w. s., 39x140 1,000
Jeanette Beckmann, et al, to Harry
A. Tukev, Farnam st., 66 feet e.
of lltb St. s. s 22x132 12,500
William C. Norria to Mary F. ,
Gwynne Vaughan, 24th st, 2S0
feet s. of Ida st. e. s.. 40x125 ...
Ernest E. ("rare to Florence I.
Crane, 41st at. 80 feet n. of Pratt
st. w. s.. 40x134 ,
4,160
200
William Negethon and ' wife to
Grant Mcllnay, et al. Camden
ave., 158 feet w. of 24th st. s. s.,
45x136 6,000
Rose Dunn to Agnes Murphy, L St.,
66 feet w. of 39th st. s. s.. 66x132 700
Charles H. Moulthrop to Herman
O. Wulff. 60th ave.. 200 feet s.
of Lake st. w. s.. 50x120 4.000
John Happe to William M. Temple,
n. w. cor. 35thl ave. and Wool
worth ave., 53.4x75 8,000
Edith R. Barber and husband to
Isaac Warshawsky, Seward St.,
142 feet e. of 24th st. a. s., 62x
130 2,300
Anna C. Gunther and husband to
Joe Waken, Wirt st, 250 feet
w. of 65th st n. a., 100x128 700
Mary Welsh to Michael G. Mallon.
et al, Binney at., 250 ft . of
65th at, s. a., 60x128. 1,700
Frederick H. Davis and wife to
George P. Stebbins, n. e. cor. .
John A. Crelghton blvd. and llan
derson. 45x128 680
Elizabeth Rlvard Dufrcne, Hill and
ROYAL PRINCESS
SECRETLY WED TP
HER CHAUFFEUR
Elopement of Former Royal
Princess With Her Chauf
feur Causes Tremendous
Sensation In Berlin.
Zurich, Switzerland, Sept. 18.
The amaz;ng royal romance in
volved in the marriage of Princess
Alexandra Victoria, daughter of
Prince Frederick, duke of Schles-wig-Holstcin,
who yns recently di
vorced by Prince August William of
Hohenzollern, fourth son of the
former kaiser, to her chauffeur, has
created a tremendous sensation
Berlin..
The former royal princess has
eloped with Fritz Meyer, whose only
linic with royalty was a limousine
speaking tube. Frau Meyer, ' the
princess that was is now on her
honeymoon, and happy.
s Prefers Husband to Prince.
' I'd ratLe'r he the lover wife of a
-hauffeur than the unloved wife of a
royal prin.re," she tells her friends.
Her royal ex-husband's comment
was the bland announcement that
royalty is well rid of his quondam
spouse. But the people of Berlin are
stii! gasping from the shock of the
affair.
Fritz Meyer, before the war, was
a smart figur;- in the ex-kaiser's
livery. Later he became a lieutenant
in the German officers' reserve corps.
out it is understood that the romance
,,.;!. r;n. T7...:. i i ;
in. i IUUC33 riLiund urtu na in
ception while he was still the pilot
of the royfil motor cars.
When Prince August William
brorght his stir for divorce from the
charming, beautiful and reputedly
extravagant princess, he alleged that
she had. fallen in love with an offi
cer "of common tastes and demo
cratic name." Berlin wondered at
the time, but since the recent elope
ment the bewilderment has turned
to social shock. Friends of the
princess are said to have commented
on her frequen" appearance with the
officer who drove her motor. The
statement is made that at one time
the chauffeur was caught kissing the
fair hand of his queenly mistress.
Prince August William is at pres
ent emploved .is a bank clerk in
Berlin. He has figured liitle in th
puMic eye sinre the war, although at
the time when Germany was at the
height of its power, overrunning
France and invadinsr Russia, the
kaiser planned to make his fourth
son regent of Lourtland.
Incompatibility was the reason
publicly given for his divorce from
Princess Victoria
Anger Aroused.
But how can a chauffeur support
a wife who' "hot only possesses roya
blood but royal tastes? She was
taken to task several times by the
former kaiser for her extravagance.
The ex-emperor imprisoned her for
two weeks in the round tower of
Castle Babelsberg as punishment for
a frivolous whim.
His anger was aroused because
one night at the theater Princess
Victoria summoned to the royal box,
alter the performance, ban Petras,
the star of the play. It seems that
the actress was wearing a huge
cartwheel hat, which Mad so struck
the fancy of the princess thafshe
wanted to inspect it at closeS-atige
She not only took the name and ad
dress of the milliner, but asked and
obtained permission-to "try on" the
bat. This upset the emperor, and
for "conduct unbecoming a royal
princess" Victoria was "imprisoned"
with only two maids to attend her.
The princess is 1 a statuesque
blonde, la'-ge of figurer-with reddish
hair, and a complexion which radi
ates vigor, health and activity. She
is a personification of the national
German heroine, "Germania." Cen
tra! News.
Sham Battle Planned for
American Legion Convention
Cleveland, Sept. 18. Three thou
sand regulars" of the United States
army rwill come to Cleveland to join
1,000 veterans of the famous Thirty
seventh, or "Buckeye," division in
refighting the battle of the Argonne
as a , spectacular feature in comieci
tion with the national convention of
the American Legion here Septem
ber 27, 28 and 29.
VThis stunt, (w ith "zero hours," bar
rage regulation and the same pre
cision of maneuvers wfu'ch made the
American, expeditionary forces the
admiration of the world's military
critics during the great war will be
staged on the two days preceding
th,e convention's opening, according
to L. S. Conelly, colonel of the' new
One Hundred and Forty-fjfth- regi
ment, national guard, formerly of,
the Cleveland Grays and a major in
the war. " '
The "regulars" will be members of
the First division, who went through
the battles in France from the start
of America's participation to the
"cease firing" of the armistice.
Experiments are being tried in a
German porcelain factory with a
view to making fractional currency
of some noiynetallic, washable ma
terial. husband to Arthur Theodore,
Parker St., 60 ft. e. of 2th at.,
a. s. 60x127.6 2,500
Minnie Clark to" May Theodore. 36th .
St., 87 ft. n. of Franklin st, w.
. 43x91.6; s. e. cor. John A.
Crelghton blvd. and Seward, 80x130 2,950
Peter E. Nelson and wife to John
41. Anderson, n. w. cor. 38th and
Charles, 60x130 S.2J0
Carl A. Llnd to Henry L. Olmstead
and wife, Ohio st, 3 1-8 ft w.
of 22d St.. a. a. 33 l-3x7 2,758
Julia B. Kelllne, gdn to James W.
Coyle, Charles at, 120 ft e. of
27th st., n. s. 60x127.5 und. H STS
Ross Rlegel and wife to Charles W.
Martin, Ida at, 295.5 ft. w. of
' 28th ave., n. a. 42x120 1
Ross Riegel and wife to Charles W.
Martin. Whltmore ave., 43.6 ft.
w. of 28th ave., s. a. 42x120 1
Ross Rlegel and wife to Charles W.
Martin, Vane St., 211.5 ft e. of
30th at, s. s. 42x120 t 1
Prudential Sav. & Loan Asa'n to -
Elmo Stevens, Ohio St., 360 ft. w.
of 34th ave.. s. a. 60x120 661
Thomas E. Mahoney and wife to
Alfred J. Lynn, V St. H ft a.
of 33d st, n. w. 26x53... 2,000
Th Recollection of Quality Remains
Long After th Price Is Forgotten."
GOODYEAR and CORNHUSKER
AUTO TIRES and TUBES
Bicycle, Repairs, Accaasarica, Supplies,
Gunsmith. Laclumitlk Phonograph
Repairing, Cutlery, Tools, Raaora,
, Vacuum Cleaners.
NOVELTY REPAIR- CO,
Rescoa Rawley, Pray.'
MAIL ORDERS.
4809 S. 24TH ST. TEL. S. 1404.
Woman as Good as Her Nose
Says Prof.' Who Studies 'Em
of Tx!vee.
5S".fnrvoM
Written for International News Service.
By MARGERY REX. .
New York, Aug. 21. Josephine,
of France, early married Vicomte
Beauharnais. After his execution
she was induced to wed Napoleon
Bonaparte. Because this childless
marriage displeased France she con
sented to divorce so that the em
peror might marry Archduchess
Marie Louise.
Lucretia Borgia, Who was the sis
ter of Caesar Borgia, is famous for
her many wanton crimes and vices,
being chiefly known for her deeds
of poisoning. She was married three
times. In later years writers
cleared her of many charges.
Maddened by the beauty of Hele;i
Troy, Paris, son of Priam, stole
Helen from her husband, Memelaus,
who gathere'd together a number of
Greek princes to avenge the wrong.
This brought on the Trojan war.
When Paris was killed Helen was
married to his brother and later be
trayed him, after Troy fell, in order
to win back her first husband.
All of them had straight noses.
Nose Tells It. ,
Familiar to scientists is the fact,
that a chain is only as strong as its
weakened link.
From a phrenologist and psychol
ogiet. Prof. E. V. Howe, now con
ducting a thorough investigation of
humanity by means of a walking
tour to "See America," comes an
other useful if a more disturbing-
hint. j
Prof. Howe stopped off in his
travels long enough to say in effect:
A woman is only as good as her
nose! .
"I've seen them all. I have been
to all the foreign places India.
Austria, Fort Lee, Africa, Soviet
Russia and the Scandavian peninsu
la and I tell you a woman with a
straight nose will never forsake you.
They love but once and are very
constant.
"Women with straight noses
make the best wives. Whenever I
want to judge anybody I look at his
nose.
Sign of Intelligence.
Prof. Howe also said people with
large noses should be proud rather
than ashamed; that a sizable nose
was a sign of intelligence and self
control; that straight noses mean
reliability," while thin-nosed people
are narrow-minded.
He also, brings the news that
though a blonde may be , livelier
company than a brunette, she is
more apt to forsake you for another.
This last, the professor says, he pos
itively knows and is prepared to
prove. In classic times beauties had
golden hair and straight noses.
Foremost among the straight
nosed women of history were the
celebrated Greeks. Yet Helen of
Troy was able to stir up quite a
little excitement in spite of her clean
cut profile, i And there was Madame
Ulysses, who stayed at home and
wove mats and did other reconstruc
tive work, while her wandering hus
band went ' sailing around looking
for trouble and a short-nosed
woman.
Dead Calm.
Ulysses struck a dead calm whijf
he was out cruising for the Graeco
Roman cup, or vase, and decided to
take instead the cup that the siren,
Circe, offered.
Caesar's wife was so impeccable
that to mention her is to name a
synonym for virtue. It is quite safe
to assume that the famous general's
wife had a nose of the Roman vari
ety, large, if not altogether straight.
Montaigne, in an essay on beauty,
praised large noses as indicative of
strength of character. Napoleon
chose marshals, governors and other
leaders for the size of their noses.
Josephine had a long, straight nose,
and proved her worth by her selt
sacrifice. But, while some scientists claim
such noses are signs of character,
others say character itself chances
and molds the features and expres
sion. In youth a nose is more or
less indefinite. Decisiveness comes
with age.
Outzon Borglum, the famous
sculptor, says:
Creates Countenance.
"Man is tjie creator of his own
countenance, just as I am the crea
tor of heads in marble. Just as I
fashion features in clay, so a man,
by his thought process Dlavinsr uoon
-his facial muscles, assumes a coun
tenance fitting the nature of hft
soul.
"The contour of the face itself
means little. I have known sons of
great men, men whose faces were
replicas of the countenances of their
respective fathers. Yet almost al
ways with certain phenomenal ex
ceptions these faces were vacant
masks; they meant nothing. The
son with the father's distinguished
fe J
K2W
e Trovr
face had none of the qualities which
should have gone with that face and
which, according to accepted theories
of physiognomy, the face should
have carried with it.
"An aquiline nose indicates noth
ing; a big nose indicates nothing; a
thin nose nothing; but the way the
nose is used indicates- much. The
small muscles on either side of the
nose in the tiny lobes move as one
breathes they move, too. as one
thinks.
Indicates' Character.
"A straight nose, with a bridge
which comes horizontally from the
face, indicates straigTitness from the
uprightness of character.
"But a nose with a bridge which
tilts upward indicates a sneering,
supercilious nature a nature lack
ing in human forbearance, generosity
and kindliness."
On the desirability of straight
noses at least the sculptor Borglum
agrees with Professor Howe, who
fights shy of the pug-nosed or re
trousse lady, and who will recom
mend only those maidens whose pro
files show a nose as straight as an
arrow.
Yet why is it that men do marry
women with short, humpy and tilted
noses? And why do cartoonists,
famous for their keen observation of
human nature, depicts the shrew, the
disagreeable spinster, and the nag
ging wife with long, straight noses?
Why is the straight-nosed woman
more loyal in love? Is it because
she receives less opportunity to be
fickle than her pert-nosed sister?
But it is true that one can never
tell about a woman. I used to have
confidence in those straight noses
on our small silver coins, but now
I never know what they will get me
Neiv 'Sherlock Holmes' Turns
Trick On Men Robbing Store
Paris, Sept. 18. A new "Sherlock
Holmes" has sprung up in Paris in
the person of Marcel Pantin, a Paris
detective.
Robberies being reported by a
store in the Rue Daunon. Pantin
concealed himself on the premises
in a trunk. After waiting for sev
eral hours he heard the burglars ar
rive, and proceeded to gather in
their loot.
Just before he was ready to spring
out and denounce them, however,
the detective sneezed and the rob
bers at once sprung on him and, bc
lievinc him to be another thief,
called the police and said they had
discovered Pantin in the act of rob
bing the store.
Shmvinc his genius as a true
book-detective at this moment Pan-
tin, instead of protesting, allowed
tiimsplf to he. taken to the nearest
police station, knowing that the real
robbers would nave 10 go mere aisu
is Accusers
When the party reached the sta
tion the detective revealed his true
identity and the discomfited bur
glars were arrested.
Sheriff Looking for Still
Finds Hidden Ireasure jar
Ga.. Sent. 18. Digging
into the ground on the Miller plan
tation near Preston, in search of an
illicit still, Sheriff C. M. Christian, of
Webster county, recently unearthed
a scaled glass fruit fruit jar contain
ing silver dollars, halves, quarters,
dimes and nickels totaling $284.25.
Nearby the sheriff found a stilling
outfit, including a copper worm. -
negro living in a house on the plan
tation, where a smau quantity u
Honor was found, was arrested and
taken to Preston, but as yet no one 1
has claimed tne jar containing uw
buried money.
Whisky Used to Bathe Pet
Birds, Man Jells Officer
Detroit. Sect. 18. Despite pro
tests of Patrick Foiey that he was
cimnlv cnnrlnrtino- a canarv ranch,
federal officers searched the grounds
nf V,; rnnntrv home, one mile nortn
of Wayne, recently and say they dis
covered two whisky suus ana
quantity of corn and rye aistuiaie.
l?nW and his nartner. Bernard
Rafferty, asserted that the alcohol
was ascd tor- giving ineir ..iuwcb
dailyBaths. Nevertheless, they were
arrested on charges of violating the
prohibition law.
Woman . Goes ClamHunting
And Finds Pearl Worth $1,000
Aurora. III.. Sept. 18. Mrs. Led
3rown of St: Charles put on a pair
of rubber .boots and announced to
friends that she was going on a hunt
for hidden treasures. They laughed
at her. She spent the entire day
picking up clams. Toward evening
she opeed a shell and picked our a
perfect pearl. Shts.jvas offered $1,000
for the nearl. She had plenty of com
pany when she resumed Jher treas
ure hunt
I
EUROPEAN TOWNS
CRY FOR MORE
PEACE MEETINGS
French and Swiss Towns
Eager to Be Chosen as
Meeting Places of
Diplomats.
1
Pans. Sept. 18. There will be at
least 10 more conferences before
peace is finally restored to Europe.
The 10, however, are needed not to
regulate the' dispute between the al
lies and Germany or Russia, but the
little war between French re-snrts
I which are clamoring for recognition
J by the conferees.
1 So far conferences have been held
at Paris, London, San Remo. Bou
logne, Hythe, Brussels and Spa. The
1 .. . . 1 , 1 1 r f 1 -
next is scueuuiea ior ueneva, Swit
zerland, but there will probably be
a series of pourparlers at Boulogne
and Hythe and elsewhere first. Mr.
Lloyd George has already traveled
more than 4,000 miles at the expense
of British taxpayers in journeying to
pleasant resorts to discuss peace and
more time has been taken up in trav
eling, by several days, than has been
absorbed in 'talking over the peace
itself.
Clamor for Meetings.
Now -other resorts are clamoring
for conferences. Among them are
Cannes, Aix-les-Bains, Vichy, Monte
Carlo, Nice, Mentone, Biarritz, Vit
tel, Paris-Plage, Trouville and Din-
ard. Deauville is trying to shoo the
conference away, because hotel room
has already been booked up until the
end of the season there.
But the majority of other resorts
are having poor seasons. A confer
ence or two, they say, would put
them on their feet.
Profiteers Reap Harvest.
The conferences so far held have
proved, splendid opportunities for the
profiteers. Hotels at Spa doubled
their rates, and the taxis trebled
theirs. ' Geneva is already preparing
for the windfall. Air companies are
charging ministers, secretaries and
newspaper correspondents as much
as J?2.50 per mile and getting it
sometimes.
It is estimated that the confer
ence brought 27 ministers, 693 sec
retaries. 1.824 stenographers, 266
newspaper correspondents and about
200 others to Spa. If each one spent
a dailv miniitum of $30 and the fig
ure was nearer $100 in most cases
the tidy little sum the shop and hotel
keepers, not to speak of the taxi
drivers, gathered in per diem was
$90,000, which at current exchange,
is about 1,000,000 Belgian trancs.
Big Powder Companies
In Fight Over tor inula
Washington, Del., Sept. 18. A suit
based on alleged infringement of
patents has been instituted against
the Hercules Powder company in
the fedral district court at Tren
ton. N. J., by the E. I. duPont de
Nemours and company of this city.
The patents upon which the action
was : brought, it is claimed by the
duPont company, protect the use
of a mixture of ethyl acetate and
benzol, with or without the addi
tion of ethyl acetate as a solvent
for nitro cotton. As pyroxylin so
lutions or dopes used in the manu
facture of split and artificial leath
ers lacquers, cements, celluloid ar
ticles and hundreds of other com
modities are frequently made by
dissolving nitro cotton in these sol
vents, and the two companies are
among the leading competitors in
the business, tjhis will assume a high
proportion of interest to many con
cerns throughout the country.
Cure for Toothache Found,
, But It Hard On the Eyes
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 10. A new
wav to eet rid of toothache has been
discovered by Mrs. Heresa Kweder,
50 years old, of Mount Winans,
who made the contribution to the
science of dentistry without ever
having taken a course at a dental
college.
Mrs. Kweder had an aching tooth.
She couldn't sleep, and all the home
remedies she knew afforded no re
lief. Finally, she told her husband
if the tooth didn't stop aching she
''would shoot it out." It didn't stop,
whereupon Mrs. Kweder lost pa
tience and made good her threat.
She got a pistol, placed it to Jier
jaw and pulled the trigger.
The Jooth went out, so did the
bullet, leaving a bad wound under
Mrs. Kweder's eye.- She was takei
to St. Agnes' hospital, where physi
cians are doing everything possible
to save the sight of her eye.
Viscountess Curzon Fails
To Pay $40 Taxicab Tariff
London, Sept. 18. Viscountess
Curzon, the wife of Viscount Cur
zon, the British foreign minister, is
to be examined as to her financial
means because she has tailed to payj
an injunction of $40, obtained against
her for the hire ot an electro motor
bus. The vehicle was hired from the
Hertford Street Motor company in
Tulv. 1919. who obtained the in
junction for that amount due for its
hire against her as a married wo,has ent canning specialists to the
Itle application IO CAdlllluc lltl aa
to her financial means was made be
fore Judge Sir Alfred Tobin, in the
Westminster county court. The
judge granted the application after it
was stated tha't she had paid no part
of the debt. ,
Husband Left 26 Years Ago,
On Business, Not Back Yet
Muskogee, Okl., Sept. 18. Twenty-four
years' ago Alex Bell, then a
young farmer near here, told his
wife he would be away on business
for a few days. He kissed his wife
and three children goodbye and has
never returned.
Now, with all the children mar
ried, Mrs. Bell fears he will never
return, that he hasn't yet completed
his "business." 'v
But if he does he will not find her
at home. She has filed suitf or a
divorce.
With a new Norwegian electrical
process for obtaining salt from sea
water it is estimated that each kilo
watt year of powetlwill produce 10
tons of saltl besides useful condensed
Vbrine,
Man Told Mother He
Was Going to See "Jake"
Kansas City, Mo., Sept 18. "He's
a bad boy, Judge," Mrs. Mary Parke,
a 60-year-old mother told Judge
Towne, in municipal court. "He goes
out with 'Jibe' and comes home in
a terrible condition.
The "bov," Bert Davis. 40 years
old, explained that "Jake" was short
for jamaica ginger. "You must obey
your mother," said the court.
"I'll do what mother says from
now on," he promised. The court
suspended a fine of $100 as a surety
thatert will keep his promise.
GERMAN "STAMP
LAW" MAY MAKE
MARK VALUELESS
Will Mean Loss of Millions by
Foreign Speculators if'
the Law Is
Passed.
By FRANK E. MASON.
Staff Correspondent International News
Son Ice.
Berlin, Sept. 18. German marks
bought up and held by American
speculators may suddenly become so
much worthless paper if a group of
Oerman financiers persuade the
German government to adopt their
proposed "stamp" lawt The stamp
law, successfully carried out in
Czecho-Slovakia, provided a limited
time during which all paper money
had to be presented to the govern
ment tor stamping. Money not in
the country did not receive the
stamp and became worthless for
Czecho-Slovakia.
Herr Erzberger proposed a simi
lar law for Germany. The allies
protested vigorously because it
meant the loss of millions of paper
marks held in their countries by
speculators, so Herr Erzberger
dropped the matter.
Export at Standstill. ,
The German finance ministry es
timated that 20,000,000,000 paper
marks were being held in foreign
countries July 1. Foreign speculators
manipulating their mark holdings
drove the value of the mark so
rapidly to a comparative high point
that it has brought down German
export business to a standstill. For
eign manipulation has resulted in
the German finance ministry becom
ing absolutely helpless in their ef
forts to regulate German exchange
by controlling imports and exports.
When a group of American finan
ciers who had a pool of more than
1.000,000,000 marks threatened to
drive the mark up to 5 cents and
then to dump their holdings and let
the mark crash, a few advisers of the
finance ministry concluded that their
most effective weapon is to invali
date the American holdings by giv
ing 40 to 60 days in which to stamp
German money. It woud be imoos-
sible to return anv laree nrooortion
of the 20,000,000,000 within this time,
and Germany would not only wipe
out the speculators, but would wipe
out with them a large puart of Ger
many's debt expressed in their
wholesale printing of marks.
German Optimists.
The stamp law advocates are pen
erally the optimists who believe Ger
many will come -back financially
ivithout crashing to absolute bank
ruptcy. Another group of financiers
also represented in the finance mm
istry believe that Germany is now
bankrupt and that her only salvation
lies in taking the whole world into
partnership m her indebtedness,
They go on the theory that creditors
mav close out a small rlehtnr thrnii
bankruptcy, but that when a man
I owes too much and his debts are on
a large scale, the "creditors must
finance him and do not dare make
use of the bankruptcy court.
Flour Mill to Be Built
To Handle Alaskan Wheat
Portland, Ore., Sept. 18. A lo
cal milling house has sold a flour
mill to be installed 175 miles south
of the Arctic circle, in Alaska. This
will be the first flour mill to be sent
so far north. The acreage of wheat
in Alaska has been increasing so
steadily and the Department of Ag
riculture has been so successful in
developing a hardy wheat which
matures in 90 days, that the grow
ers, have felt the need of a mill. The
plant, which is a steam operated
mill, will be shipped to Seattle,
thence by steamer to St. Michael,
south of Nome, where it wilLbe car
ried bv boat up the Yukon river, 836
miles to the mouth ' of the Tanana
river, and thence 2S0 miles to Fair
banks. The mill has been purchased
by the Tanana Valley Agricultural
association, and its capacity is 25
barrels a day. '
Women of France Learning
To Can In American Way
Washington, Sept. 18. Thousands
of women and children in France are
learninc to can in the American way
this year. All classes, trom the peas
ant in the cottage, to the lady in
the chateau, are being reached by
the four American tanning special
ists who are giving.the canning dem
onstrations. This is the second year the United
States Department of Agriculture
of teaching the French people the
American art of home canning, and
drying. The same group has been
sent both years.
Champion Boy Judge of
Canadian Cattle Wins Prize
Regina, Sask., Sept. 18. Edward
Troendel of Windthorst, Sask., 15
years old, is acclaimed as the cham
pion boy judge of live stock in west
ern Canada. He achieved this dis
tinction at the Regina fair, where in
a stock judging contest among boys
he won the grand aggregate prize
with a score of 353 points in a possi
ble 400 ,
HiS competitors were more than
100 boys, whose ages ranged from
11 to 15 years, selected from 600
who have been studying egriculture
this summer in a farm boys' camp
near Regina.
Sell Table Rock Hotel.
Table Rock, Neb., Sept. 18.
(Special. C. A. Scoville and L. R.
Scoville have purchased the Ex
change hotel in Pawnee City from
Mrs. D. L. Greenfield. 1
ABSINTHE BACK
IN PARIS: SOLD
TO AMERICANS
Forbidden -Drink Sold to
Yankee Tourists for
Large Prices In All
Cafes.
- By NEWTON C PARKE.
Paris, Sept. 18. The "Green God
dess" has come back to Paiis. In
any of the big cafes of the boule
vards, as well as m the less elegant
bars of the side streets, the waiters
ill, if you happen to be an Ameri
can and appear to have the price, of
fer you a bottle of absinthe tor 35
or 40 francs. Just now it is the firm
belief of everybody connected with
cafes and bars that every American
in Paris is here for one sole pur
pose to enjoy a drink. Moreover,
barmen and cafe waiters are unani
mous in believing that all these
Americans are absinthe fiends.
As a matter of fact, despite the
law passed before the outbreak of
the war prohibiting the 'nian'ifacture
or sale of the once popular ap
petizer, anybody who cares for it
can obtain all the absinthe he de
sires. Sometimes it is sold as
anisette, which it tesembles n color
and in the change it undergoes when
water is dripped into the glass in
the approved fashion. You can, if
you are known and considered
"safe," even buy a bottle at a drug
store with regular medical indica
tions of the number of spoonfuls
which will cure your thirst In the
old days when the acrid odor of
absinthe floated up and down the
length of the boulevards at the "ap
petizer hour," people having re
lerred to the drink as a "Pernod,"
from the name of the manufacturer.
Nowadays they ask for a "Pernaud,"
which has the same sound, or a
"Pernoz," with the "z" pronounced.
It is all merely camouflaged ab
sinthe. In the police courts there is
scarcely a day without several cases
of "absinthe jags" before the
judges. The signs are unmistak
able. Senator de Lamarzellc author
of the law prohibiting the sale of
absinthe, drew the attention of the
Senate the other day to the re
crudescence of absinthe drinking in
Paris. He said the manufacturers of
the forbidden drink make no secret
of it. The senator even showed a
poster which represents a tall glass
half filled with the "green fairy,"
with the regulation spoon and lump
of sugar on top. This poster is safd
to have been spread broadcist over
France recently. By the side of the
glass is the word "enfin" (at last).
Senator Lamarzelle declared that if
the present law does not confer on
the courts sufficient power to deal
with the absinthe traffic he will sub
mit a new law to the Senate.
New-
Rubbish Court"
Keeps Denver Clean
Denver, Sept. 18. Mandates of
Denver's "rubbish court" must be
obeyed, according to A. E. Medaris,
chief in the municipal inspection de
partment. Medaris appeared in police court
against Charles Kangari, who was
fined for not cleaning certain prem
ises as Ordered by the "rubbish
court." s
The -"rubbish court" was estab
lished in an effort to maintain clean
liness in alleys and around back
doors. Persons guilty of neglect in
this regard are warned upon the
first offense by "officers" of the "rub
bish court" and haled before police
court if neglect continues.
Two Sisters File Petition
For Divorce On Same Day
Columbus, O.. Sept. 18. Double
applications for divorce rarely or- '
igiriate in the same family.
Twins and double marriaires hao-
pe more often.
Applications for divorce wire UpA
here on the same day by sisters, Mrs.
Tarr.zon Libbv Ford and Mrs. Hpr-
trudc L. Brown.
Both ask for restoration to. their
maiden name, Scrimger, and allege
that their husbands deserted thein
and that they had to work for a live
lihood after their wedding day.
Texas Cotton Producers
rian to Keduce Crops
Fort Worth. Tex. Sent ia
Commenting on the call of Hnv.
eriior Hobby for cotton reduction
meetings in Texas for September
20, Secretary Baker of the Texas
Farmers union said that the fi
should refuse to plant any cotton
next year and should so continue
until prices advanced. He said the
refusal of the federal reserve board
to finance the holdine movement
was a body blow to Texas cotton
growers. '
Man Taking Car at 50-Mile
Clip Finishes In Hospital
Manhattan, Kan., Sept. 18. "I iust
wanted to see if the old boat would
make fifty miles an hour," Charles
t-ol? of this city is declared to
have told his rescuerswhen he re
gained consciousness following a
crash between two motor cars near
ere. Foltz, after hitting the two
cars, ran into a culvert. He will re
cover. Kansas Grain Dealer Meets
Brother First Time In Years
Hutchinson, Kan., Sept. 18.
Ralph Russell, a local grain dealer,
met his brother for the first time at
a family reunion at Offerle, Kan.,
when some 10 brothers and sisters
from half a dozen states met at the
old home.
"My oldest brother left home be
fore I was born. 30 years ago," said
Mr. Russell. "He has been living in
Mobile, Ala., and I had never seen
him."
Burglar Attends Church,
After Which He Loots Safe
Newark, N. J., Sept 18. A burg
lar attended services at the Memorial
Baptist church here and later he
riped the safe with a "can opener,"
took out a strong box and found it '
contained only the deed for the
church. He left the deed as well as
his tools.
Eee Want Ads Bring Result
t
1
( I'