Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 05, 1920, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 5. 1920.
Supreme Court
Judges Call on
The President
Fall Terra of High Tribunal
Convenes With Many Inv
portant Cases Scheduled
On Docket.
Washington. Oct. 4. For the first
time since 1918 Fresidcnt Wrrson re
ceived today the justices of the
United States supreme court, who
called to pay their respects. The
court convened at noon, after its
summer recess, and immediately ad
jotirned until tomorrow so the jn s
tices might visit the White House
The annual visit to the president
wss omitted last year because of Mr.
Wilsons illness.
Docket is Crowded.
Resides half a dozen anti-trust
suits, matters pending included
turther attacks on the prohibition
amendment, suits to test the consti
t.itionality of the anti-profiteering
section of the food control act and
of the federal farm loan act, appeals
in the Newberry election case and
many others.
With federal suffrage amendment
ratified and proclaimed since the
court adjoined earlv in the summer.
court officials expect what cases de-
srgnfd to test the constitutionality
of that amendment also will reach
t'-ie court during the p-esent session.
The first case to be argued at
this term will be government ap
peals in the dissolution suit against
the Lehigh Valley Kailroad com
pruy, part of the alleged anthra
cite coal trust. This case is set for
tomorrow. By agreement of
counsel argument of the other five
rnti-trust suits will be postponed
temporarily. These suits are those
against the Eastman Kodak com
pany, the Associated Bill Posters
and Distributors of the United
States and Canada; American Can
companjv "Southern Facafic com
pany and the Keystone Watch Case
Company,
Dry Act Up Again.
The prohibition amendment will
reach the court again through peti
tions asking for re-consideration of
the decision of last June sustaining
the amendment and portions of the
enforcement act, rendered in ap
peals to Chtistian Fiegenspan,
brewer of Newark, N. J., and
deorge (.. Dempsey, a Boston
liquor wholesaler. A decision on
these petitions is expected within a
few weeks. A number of othtr
cases involving interpretations of
the enforcement act still are pend
ing and further decisions amplify
ing the court's original opinion arc
looked for at this term.
Other cases of consequence be
fore the court are those involving
the constitutionality of provisions in
the 1919 war revenue act levying an
excise tax on profits derived front
child labor; the boundary dispute
between Oklahoma and Texas and
the case of the United States Ma
rtiincry company which comes up
irom proceedings originally insti
tuted by the government in St.
Louis tinder the Clayton act.
Merchant Shot In Finger
By "Unloaded" Revolver
Morris Marcus, a clothing mer
chant at 1123 Douglas street, was
shot in the index finger yester
day, while examining a revolver
which William Jones, Thirteenth
and Grace streets, was seeking to
sell to him. Marcus did not know
that the gun was loaded.
Jones was arrested on charges of
vagrancy and is being held for in
vestigation. Commerce High to Give
Class Play Dec. 6 and 7
In celebration of the Pilgrim ter
centenary, the graduating class of
Commerce High school, has select
ed "A Rose of Plymouth Town" for
the class play, which will be given
December 6 and 7 in the Central
High school auditorium under di
rection of Mary Irene Wallace.
Man Who Escaped From
Federal Agents In Pen
Raymond Palceos, Mexican, who
escaped Clifford Harrow of the im
migration service near Hamburg, la.,
a month ago, while Harrow was
taking him to St. Louis for deporta
tion is confined in the Anamosa, la.,
penitentiary for grand larceny, it
v:as learned yesterday.
In Divorce Court.
nivnrc Decrees.
Benjamin S. McCormtck from Ituth E
McOormkk, cruelty.
Divorce Petition.
Koicer P. Morrl aitalnut Minnie Morr's.
cruelty; Jtm'i Rlcketts against Zelilu
Hicketts, cruelty.
I'M THE GUY
I'M THE GUY who lavishes big
tips on waiters and hat boy and be
grudges his wife a few cents for
candy.
I give the waiters big tips to get
their good will and insure good
service whenever I eat in the restau
rant. I don't have to throw money
away on a wife to get good service
at home. It's her job to see that
I get it.
And, besides, I'm in public when
I tip the waiters, and people are
watching me and I wouldn't want
them to think I was a piker.
I wouldn't get any credit for any
small change I slipped my wife.
She's the only one who'd know it
and her opinion don't count.
I'd hate to have strangers form a
poor opinion of me. I like to make
a good impression on them. I may
never see them again but I'll have
the satisfaction of showing them
I'm a good sport.
Copyright, lt:0, Thompson Feature Service
Parents Problems
Should a girl in high school, who
wishes to study shorthand and type
writing, simply because other girls
she knows are going to study them,
do this?
There is no reason why this girl
should not be permitted to take this
course, even though her reason be
simply that the other girls are going
to do it Shorthand and typewrit
ing art very valMbte thing to
THE GUMPS
W1.V.L THAT'S V MIGHTY W4Y AMf THAT ACHOSY TOUCHED ON AYRONOMT VVWEH VOVJ STOP " V j "
I IMYERE.VC1N6 fcOOK Vt SHOWS A WE EARTH COMWtED WITH THE w0lHy SPEC WUH-A A NOW PLAYING I I
rv,T? ww AQovrr w are from H A5TSEoTK5vri"' .t '
) ABOUT SPACE AMt Tvn AND I OVR S AFTER ALL ANWt YA4AT ARfcWV? VXJNWEfeSfc CAN'T HELP WANDER THftDU&fl I lifts. 1
iJ ""JP"" llxj VIGILANTES
' ,KTL ! naiiLKifTCCft
SLEEPY-TIME TALES
3PHE
The New Hat.
II.
One day Faddy Muskrat came
home looking quite distressed. His
wife noticed that he seemed to be
in trouble.
"What has happened, my dear?"
she asked him. "You are looking
very sad. And you've lost vour
hat. I hope you haven't been in a
fight." she said, as she peered at
Paddy anxiously.
Nor said Paddy. Iheres been
no fight. As I was swimming near
the mill-dam my hat came off and
the water swept it right over the
dam and down the stream."
"There!" Mrs. Paddy cried. "I
knew that would happen! That's
the fourth hat you've lest this sum
mer. You remember I wanted to
sew an elastic band on your hat, to
snap under your chin."
None of my friends keep their
hats on in that way," said Pady
Muskrat. "But I shall have to do
"This hat makes my ears bok
too big." he objected.
something I can't keep losing hats
like this I'm going over to buy a
new hat of Jimmy Rabbit and I'll
ask him what I'd better do."
"Jimmy Rabbit!" Mrs. Pady ex
claimed. "I didn't know he was a
hatter."
"Mr. Crow tells me he has jusl
opened a fine hat store. He has all
ihe latest styles of hats so Mr.
Crow says."
"Do go over there at once, then!"
Mrs Paddy urged her husband. "I
hope you'll find a becoming hat,"
she said. "A hat with a pink rib
bon on it would look well on you.
I'm sorry I'm so busy, for I'd like
to go and help you choose one."
But Paddy Muskrat was not
sorry. He shuddered at the mere
idea of wearing a hat with a pink
ribbon.
HOLDING A
Adele Garrison's
Revelations
The Thing Mother Graham
Shrewdly Guessed.
One thing I saw clearly when I
had finished decipherinsr Lillian's
code message. 1 knew tlfat I must
within a few hours meet Rita Brown
and bring her vanquished to Leila
to undo the mischief she had
wrought.
My mother-in-law must be taken
into my confidence, at least in part,
or I never cou'd get away. Of
course, I could not repeat to her
the confidences Leila had hysteri
cf.lly poured out to me, but I
thought I could manage to satisfy
her curiosity enough to enlist the
co-operation she always gives when
she has a sense of being "on the
inside." '
I found her in the kitchet),
flushed and perspiring, superintend
ing Mandy, who was as leisurely re
clining in a hammock with the
latest novel. I did not wqnder at
Mrs. Luken's willingness to lend
the dusky handmaiden I guessed
that the chatelaine of the big house
only kept a maid because of the
frequent attacks of giddiness to
which she was subject. I also sur
mised that when she felt especially
vell, as she evidently did just now,
she was glad, indeed, to dispense
with Mandy's dilatory ways.
As my mother-in-law met my
eyes I quickly veiled them to hide
:he smile I couldn't repress at the
unequal contest she was staging
She who had cantinually grumbled
at agile, industrious Katie, was now
having her first experience with the
indolent, absolutely unimpression
able servant which Mandy typified.
The old sayings, "pouring water on
a duck's back," and, "punching a
feather bed," were exemplified in
Mandy. Always smiling, always un
ruffled, neither reproof nor praise
had any effect in changing the even
tenor of her inherent laziness.
A Confast to Katie.
"May I speak to you a moment,
mother?" I asked.
A look of actual relief Hasn't)
.fr'AQSK his, caujtCTaoce. I fiuuwd
-
TATk . OP
ARTHURaSCOTT BAILEY
: UMr
"I'll see what Jimmy Rabbit has,"
he promised. And then he started
for the hat store.
It was just as Mr. Crow had
said. Jimmy Rabbit had a fine
aray of hats. And though he had
hats with ribbons of many different
colors, to Paddy Muskrat's great
relief he hadn't a single one with a
pink ribbon on it.
Paddy tried on a hat that took
his fancy.
"Have you a looking-glass?" he
asked Jimmy Rabbit.
"Certainly!" Jimmy replied, "That
pool over there in the brook is the
best mirror you ever saw."
So Paddy went and looked into
the pool.
"This hat makes my ears look too
big." he objected.
"Big ears are quite the fashion
this season," Jimmy Rabbit told
him. "As you see, I'm wearing
mine quite large. The trouble with
this hat is that it makes your ears
look not too big, but too little. The
way to make your ears look as big
as possible is to wear the smallest
hat you can keep on your head.
Here " he said "is one that will just
suit you." And he clapped upon
Paddy Muskrat's head a little, flat
straw hat with a narrow brim. "Now
go and look at yourself in my mir
row!" Jimmy urged. "You'll like
this one, I know.
Once more Paddy looked into the
deep pool. At first he thought the
hat looked very queer. But ihe
longer he gazed at his reflection the
better he liked it.
"There's just one thing about this
hat that I don't care for," he, told
Jimmy Rabbit. "It has a green
ribbon; and I want a red one."
Jimmy Rabbit promptly found a
hat exactly like the one on Paddy's
head except that its ribbon was
!.
"Now ," Jimmy said "now
you ought to feel pretty happy. For
you won't see a stvlisher hat any
where in Pleasant Valley."
But Paddy Muskrat didn't seem
happy at all.
"I forgot one thing," he remarked.
"I don't see how I c;m keep this
hat on my head when Im in the
water. It's so small it will be sure
o fall off. I don't believe I'd bet
ter take it, after all."
For a few moments Jimmy Rab
bit looked disappointed. And then
said:
Let me think! Give me six sec
onds in which to think and I'll tell
you of some way to ix the hat so
it won't trouble you."
Paddy Muskrat agreed to that.
And he sat down, with the hat on
his head, and waited.
(Copyright, flrnsset A Dunlap.)
HUSBAND
New Phase of
of a Wife
that she who for years, in that
now ages-remote period "before the
world war," had been the chatelaine
of her son-in-'aw's establishment,
applying almost military discipline
to the maids had received her first
ieal defeat in managing a servant.
Even Katie, who used to flame into
wrath against her, had given her
enthusiastic obedience and co-operation
in housewifely tasks. Indeed, I
think Katie's ;mpressionable spirit
held Mother Graham's unmistakable
housewifely prowess in something
like reverence.
"I'll .be with you right away," she
replied. "Now.'Mandy, see that you
heat those plates before putting the
hot chops on them."
"Yas'm, I'll remember," Mandy
drawled, and my mother-in-law
waited only till she had closed the
doors behind her before bursting
forth into indignant expostulation.
"I never have seen anybody in my
life to equal that that gorilla," she
sputtered.
I quickly repressed another smile
at Mother Graham's tendency to at
tach cognomens of the monkey fam
ily to people with whom she is dis
pleased. For years Katie has been
"that ape" whenever my mother-in-law
has been annoyed at her, a con
dition , of affairs which seemed to
me sometimes a perpetual state. The
poor woman's mind just now was an
open book to me. She had een
about to attach the name "ape" to
Mandy. With the thought of the
word has come a vision of Katie's
neat kitchen and unbounded energy,
and she had substituted another and
more opprobrious word for Mandy.
I suspected that she was suffering
actual homesickness for Katie,
though no doubt when we went back
home she would nag the girl as much
as ever.
"I'm just as sure as I'm standing
here that she'll bring those plates in
stone cold, with the fat of the lamb
chops congealed all over .hem," she
said, her face expressing such lively
horror that I giggled involuntarily.
EXPERIENCE VS. BOOK KNOWLEDGE
gized, as her face darkened. "I j
couldn't help it. Mandv is so ab- i
..i.. .t.. :ui .i . .t...
auiuiciv iiijpussiiuc nidi Mica iwui-
rrous. You can't tell her anything
five minutes beforehand or more
than one thing at a time, and that
in words of one syllable. She's like
a kindergarten child."
,aw that my apology had appeased
her. "Why, Richard Second has far
more mentality than that girl will
have in her whole lifetime!"
But she soon forgot Mandy in
listening to the account I gave her
of Leila's unhappiness and her pres
ence in Mrs. Lukens's guest room.
I told her as little as I possibly
could, but her curiosity was appeas
ed, and her interest wildly excited by
the sketchy outline I gave her.
"Of course, spend all the time with
her you want!" she promptly ac
quiesced, when I had prepared the
way for my absence from the cot
tage. "And you must take her over
some luncheon. There's nothing for
you to do here, and I won't count
on you being here at all this afttr
noon. But, you mark my word, if
vou'll ferret out the real trouble
you'll find that the colored gentle
man in the woodpile ?s that Rita
Brown!"
"I've no doubt you're right," I
said, trying to make my voice indif
ferently casual, and paying a mental
tribute to her shrewdness as I hur
ried away.
(Continued tomorrow.)
WHY
Do We Hear Sounds in Sea
Shells?
(Copyright, 1920. h y the Wheeler
Syndicate, Inc.) 1
The belief that, by holding a;
conch or other large shell to the
ear, we can hear the sound of j
the waves beating upon the shore
is hardly in accordance with the,
facts in the case, but, because it
appears to be the simplest ex-j
planation of the phenomenon, it
has come to be generally ac
cepted as the truth.
The sounds which emanate
from the shell even in what ap-
pears to be a "dead quiet," are
real ly caused by the magnifica
tion of the air waves striking'
upon the sounding box of the.
shell itself. The conch shell and;
others of its class are natural ex
amples of the principle apparent'
in the construction of a violin, aj
guitar or a phonograph. All of
these instruments have the facul-i
ty of pick'ng up sounds and mag-'
nifying them. The sound waves;
bounce off or arc reflected evem
stronger than they originally
were. The instruments havei
what are called "resinators,"
because they make sounds re
sound. The seri shells in which this
principle is most apparent not
only magnify the sounds which
we can hear with our unaided
ears, but also those which are
not sufficiently loud to make any
impression upon our ear drums.
They pick up the sound waves
and throw them back, multiplied,
many times in strength. Inas
much as sound is present every
where except in a scientifically
constructed sound-proof room
and even there the beating of
one's heart and the noise of one's
breathing would make a certain
amount of noise we appear to
hear sounds which come from the
shell itself but which are, iti
reality, only the magnified sounds
around us.
13 Eggs A Day From
17 Young Pullets
Mrs. Mies Starts 6-month Old
Pullet Laying. Tells How.
"Early In November, I bought a
package of Don Sunn and started fir
ing it to 17 May pullrts. Ia tba first
30 daTi they laid 138 lovely eggs. All
through December I got Jl to 18 eggs
a aay. - -irs.
Ntles, It. V. V. 2, Lu
cerne, 1ml.
Mrs. Nile found now
to start young pullets
laying and seep inrm
laying Bll winter, ion
same method helps hens
through the moult, and starts them lay
ing, Yon can test this at our risk.
Gfva your hena Don Rung and watcli
results lor one month. If you don't find
that It pay for Itself and pays you a
good profit besides, slmplr'tell ns and
your money will bo cheerfully refunded.
Don Rung (Chlnosa for gg-laying) Is
scientific tonic and conditioner. It Is
easily given In tho feed, Improves the
hen'a health and makes her stronger d
more active. It tones up the egg-laying
organs, and gets the ggs, no matter
how cold or net the weather.
You can obtain Don Sung from your
druggist or poultry remedy cealer, or
send $1.04 (Inoludes war tax) for
package by mall. Bnrrell-Duggcr Co.,
214 Colombia Bldg.. Indianapolis, Ind.
SonSubk
Chinese for Egg-Laying
AMUSEMENT.
"OMAHA'S FUN CENTER"
lSe to 7Sc
25c to $1.25
JOE HURTIG'S FAMOUS
BOWERY BURLESKERS
With the Tho Are of Ijuirhter. IIII.LV
l'OSTER nnd FRANK IIA Ht'Ol'KT, Hop
pliur Oft In the Aviation Absurdity, "(iolng
l'p and Comtwr Down." Wondorfnl last
and Hlfth Flytnf Beauty Chora.
I.A1HFW TIMK MATINKK WKKK PAY
as. Mat. at Hk.t m Harlla's "Xsw Social
More Truth
By JAMES J.
THEN AND NOW
When Cheops ruled with iron hand
Disease was rife and plagues were plenty,
And doctors in as much demand
As they are now in 1920.
Tlx people were benighted still;
They had not yet devised papyrus,
And when a patient ran a bill
For calomel or vaccine virus,
The doctor figured up the cost
Of bromides, sedatives and tonics,
And these he carefully embossed
Upon a chunky block of onyx.
If patients paid, they got the bills
Receipted with an iron hammer.
But if they still complained of ills
Or put up any undue clamor,
.Complaining that they'd never seen
Such thieving charges for specifics,
The doctor crowned them on the bean
With seven-pound hieroglyphics.
But few disputed with the Doc,
However costly his prescriptions,
For such was the effect of shock
Upon the early day Egyptians.
Today a doctor does not need
So rudely to impress a person
That if his bill they do not heed
They presently will
They drop a missive in the mail.
Next day the postman brings it to you,
You read it, turn a trifle pale,
And thrills of horror hurry through you
For if you're not o'erstocked with pelf
You need no rock your soul to harry,
For you will find the bill itself
Is all the shock that's necessary.
GONE FOREVER
The eighteenth amendment drove the Dago Red out of America and
the collapse of the Bolshevik movement has done the same thing for
Italy.
GAS IS STILL GOING UP
Since that last reduction in flivvers we can't help wishing that Henry
Ford was running the Standard Oil company.
.-- ' ' TO LEARN
All the practice he's iu.u .,, iignung doesn't seem to do John Mc
Graw any good at all.
( Copyright. 1920. By The BeUJSyndieateJne)
AMFSEMENT.
J ..Baa- A - J
Oliver Morosco Presents,
Prior to New York Opening,
MAUDE FULTON
In Her Brand New Surprise Play,
"The
Humming Bird"
Eve'ngt: 50c to $2; Mat., 50c to $130
Oct. 9 and 10. Neil O'Brien Minstrels
Three Days. Starting Monday, Oct. 11,
The Supreme Musical Event of the Year,
"Apple Blossoms"
Seats Selling Evenings, $1.00 to $3.00
Cee want ads are best business
getters
ilililililllOilllilliilillCillillllliliHilil
GRAIN--
WE solicit your consignments
of all kinds of grain to the
Omaha, Chicago, Milwaukee and
Sioux City markets.
We Offer You the Services
of Our Offices Located at
Omaha, Nebraska
Get in touch with one of these branch
offices, with your next grain shipment.
The Updike Grain Company
"The Reliable Consignment House"
st mills aa,)inl,tt.aiij4jiAiiiulli
Drawn for The
Than Poetry
MONTAGUE
get a worse
AMISEMEXT,
Matinee Dally 2:15 Every Night 8:15.
HENRIETTA Georgia camp bell a
rnnpilin CO., BEVAN A FLINT.
CROSMAN Roy LsPurt. Raymond
Wylle A Co., Major lack Allen. Reddlnftoo A
Grant, "Topic of the Day." Klnooramt.
Matlneee. IS. 25 and 50c: Few 75c sad tl
Sat. and Sun. Night 15c. 25c. 50c. 75c. 51.00
and 51.25.
, CONCERT
Swedish Mission Hospital
Alumnae Association
Under the Direction of Misner
School oi Dramatica
BRANDEIS THEATER
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7
General Admission, $1; Reserved, $1.50
Lincoln, Nebraska
Hastings, Nebraska
Chicago, Illinois
Sioux City, Iowa
Holdrege, Nebraska
Geneva, Nebraska
Des Moines, Iowa
Milwaukee, Wis.
Hamburg, Iowa
Kansas City, Missouri
Bee by Sidney Smith.
, I mMll"! a?9 I
AMI SKMKNTS.
I EMPRESS fzffPMfin
Rubetown Follies, fraturin; "Tho I KT 1fU f 1 V W UTl 111 B
Pumpkin Center Ja Band;" Duke J r.n . ;W V m
Duchess; Davey Jamison: South (Jl j a". M. 'Hit n K JT
Tobin in Sparks of Harmony. Fho- - - yP.
toplay attraction, George Walsh in f . " 4
"From Now On." J Alllta ipfaJSM
r AUDITORIUM IfSJjT? (
Tuesday Evening, Oct. 5th I THE PPER v. (
j The Famous eLiT A JJf 's(V
Pavley-Oukrainsky fF"" w If
Ballet Jfi 5u
Philharmonic' Orchestra ... ,
Prices 2.0O$1.50-$1.00.75c A U2FOluUOyCl
Tickets now on sale at Auditorium. v.'y
Direction Anne C. Browne GET OUT AND
vlj OET UNDER"
rilOTOI'I.AVS. V
Last Times Today
A VIOLA "THE STREET
X DANA CALLED STRAIGHT"
in -
'TheoChoru Girl's BEATTY'S J
Romance r r f II
Co-Operative U
BUSTER Cafeterias I
KEATON py DiVDrtdhaWoTk0,e Wh I
"Two Weeks" I
J 7 APOLLO
A X CHARLES' RAY
X in "Pans Green"
IaBaaBaBBar J News and Comedy
j A REAL SCREEN 1
B TREAT
118 Lionel Barrymore, America's I
premier dramatist star
JO I tt photodrama from Daniel
,;2 P'y based on the mysteri- I V It
S jJUUr '"j out power of strong wills lf f mt If
if v-" JS over weaker ones I
'Pvf The story of how a master .
i J&S? "3 mind uses a beautiful woman
j re'ent'e revenge
J The climax comes in the 9
j 2p9S telepathic clash of the men- I
j'lCjj tal power of love and re- j
! venge. II
Western Union WJJ C:
Reports by Inning IVUI1U UCI lCd
j I'llOTO-M.AYrl. I
ll A FIRST NATIONAL IjT
VATTriACTJ j
SO
'Set Out
ad GertMer
ft
A Comedy Joy Ride
With Lloyd at the
Wheel of a Wild and
Ferocious Ford.