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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1920)
if THE OMAHA StTND AY BEfE: OCTOBER 17, 1920. ( fluffs Bureau Omaha Bee "15 Scott St. Girl Bride and Tramp Husband Held by Police Former Soldier and. Young - Wife Arrested In Bluffs On Vagrancy Charges May Be Released. Wallace J. Copeland, former sol dfer, and Jasqueliue, his pretty 18-year-old girl-bride, arc held at Coun cil Bluffs police headquarters on va grancy charges. Mrs. Copeland was wearing a uniform of her husband's when they were arrested by Tatrol man Earl Allen near Seventh street and First avenue yesterday. v Copeland told police that he met his bride in Cheyenne, VVyo. He was 'bumming" at the time, he said, with a pal named Albert Hill, who was arrested with them yesterday. Jacqueline's mother and father were divorced and. the mother had married again. Thcgirl did not like her stepfather and willingly agreed , to marry Copeeland and tramp across country to " Chicago with hiTri. He bought her a ticket and sent her to Greeley, Colo., then "rode the rods" with his pal to the tame town, where he and Jacqueline were married. -Alleged Gangster Held Under Bonds of $1,000 WilRanf Holmes, alias "Baldy" Holmes, alleged member 'of a gang of autpmobile and merchandise thieves, was arraigned 'in Council Bluffs police court yesterday upon charges of receiving and aiding to conceal stolen property, lie was bound over to the grand jury under bonds of $1,000 by Judge Frank Ca pell after a preliminary hearing. Will Explain Election To Republican Women A meeting of republican women will be held Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 a( 2226 West Broadway. The purpose of the meeting will be to ex plain the election ballot. County .,' Attorney C. E. Swanson will do the explaining. Many republican wom en are taking an active interest in the November election. Bee want ads are best business tetters. Minor Mention avis, Drugrs. ' fclRlity Acres at $100 Per Acre! (lorrectly fitted glasses Leffrt.. M. J. WILLIS. CHIROPRACTOR. A. B. Cv Super Electric Washers. Daiion Elec. Co. Efn B. King, funeral directors, 335 West Broadway. Phone 146. EIPISON MAZDA LAMPS. Bradley Elecjtrlo Co.. 831 W. Broadway. rjtorrhea Treatment D. H. A. Woodbury, dentist. 307 vVinkham bk. We duplicate any lem In ur own factory. Terry .Optical Co.. 408-410 Broadway Adv. s wiodrlng & Jackson. Mortuary. Broaflway and 4th St Phone 339. LEWIS CUTLER, FUNERAL DI- RECTOR, TEL 97. AUTO AMBU LANCE! 423 WILLOW AVE. Appetizing luncheonettes, dainty sandwkvies and. hot drinks. We can please Mou. After the movie drop Into Clark's Drug Store. The nath to your economical Player piano purchase leads directly to the A.i Hospe company store, 4U W. Broadway, Council Bluffs; la? You g4t th lowest prices, .the lowest tel-ms, and the best guar antee on f your Player Piano, when you purchase at A. Hospe Co., 407 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa. It is seldom you will find in a city of 200,000t people a store that car ries such & complete, stock of pianos", player pianos and Victrolas as the A. Hospe ICompany, 407 W. Broad way, Council Bluffs, Iowa. ,' GIRLS WANTED: Can glv ern ployment at good wages o girls for wratDing and packing candy. Stick Candy wrappers especially wanted. John G. 'Woodward s co . -"ine Candy Men' Council Bluffs. Ia. Do you fcnow that you can buy Holton orj Conn Saxophones, the world's finest -instruments, as well as Cornets, Violins, Banjos, 'Guitars, Ukuleles, Music Bags and all othei small band instruments at A. Hospe Co., .Council. Bluffs, Iowa, 4,07 W. Broadway. This eighty-acre .ract Is worth the money. It is located 12 miles from Council Bluffs and about one and one-half miles from Fulsom. Forty acres is in corn, about 15 in alfalfa and about three acres in orchard, the balance in pasture land. Im provements are fair. If you are looking for a good buy, let us show you this eighty-acre tract. J. V. CROWE COMPANY,- Realtors. : Phone 3580. Rm. 200 Shtigart Bldg., opposite Grand Hotel, Coun cil Bluffs. , At Council Bluff 8 Theaters STRAND The Theater Comfortable" Today to Tuesday. Viola Dana in the screen ve'sion of F. Scott KiUgwald's Saturday Evening Post story. "'Head and Shoulders:" "The Chorus Gist's Romance;" Booth Ttrkington's Special Comedy, "Edirar Camps Out." Pathe's Late News. $30,000 Pipe Organ. Coming: Starts Wednesday J. ' Pwlcer Read. Tr?s super-production, "Love Madness." ' MAJESTIC Today, to Wednesday. Double attraction: "The Revenue of Tarian," adapted from the famous story by Edgar Rice Burroughs, and Vyvyan and Kastner, character and harmony singing. .The Gums: "Oh, Min'. Andy's Wash Day." , LIBERTY i Today and Monday. Hnbart Bos worth ;n "Hia Own Law." a thrilling heart dofcma. and Joe Mar tin, the monkey comedian, in a riot of laughter, "The Proftbition Monkey." Topics of the Day, , f. . ROPER. Sunday to Wednesday. Tom Mi in "The Untamed." "Mutt nd Jeff," a good comedy. Fox News. N.M.SIZER Painting and Paporhanging -'' Phono Red 1666 100 So. 224 St, Council Bluffs. Ia. Telephone 43 Mother Stunned By Tragic Death . Of Young Bride Funeral of Hunting Victim Will fee Held Monday From Home of Mother In Bluffs. Mrs. Pearl Hensley, 15 09 West Broadway, Council Bluffs, was prostrated - yesterday over the death of per daughter, Mrs. Margaret Stilen, 22, a bride of eight months, who was acci dentally shot to Mrs. Stilen. ,deattn .W lier husband (. on a minting trip south of the city Friday afternoon. Funeral services for Mrs. Stilen will be held at 2:30 Monday after noon from the home of the mother, Burial . will be in Walnut Hill ceme tery. No inauest was held. Mrs. Stilen was Miss Margaret Hensley before her mar.iage. Jan uary 26, 1920. She is survived by her husband, automobile mechanic and former member of the Bluffs po lice department; her mother, Mrs. Pearl Hensley: two brothers. John Hensley, at home, and Mark Hens ley, with the Yankee Robinson cir cus, and three sisters. Lottie Hens ley, at home; Mrs. Mary tJeiger of Hecla, is. 1)., and Mrs. Jessie Walker of Route No. , Council Bluffs., Prominent Bluffs Woman Dies In Omaha Hospital Mrs. Sara C. Moore, 41, wife of E. L. Moore, 313 Lincoln avenue, died Friday at St. Catherine's hos pital in Omaha following an illness of six years from heart trouble. She was a prominent member of the First Congregational church of this city and had resided in the Bluffs for IS years. New Garbage Ordinance Is Proposed by Ringer The city council received an ordinance' yesterday, which revises some of the features of the exist ing gaibage hauling regulations. The measure was offered by Police Commissioner Renger. It proposes to require that all garbage haulers shall have permits and that they shall be subject to regulations. The ordi nance, if passed, wo:ild allow restaurant and hotel managemerts to sell their garbage to any hauler who holds a city permit. Thi pur pose to the ordinance is to enable the city to control all garbage haul ers. It will not affect the general contract now in force between the city and Henry Pollack, y New York Woman Indicted On Charge of Willful Murder New York. Oct. 16. Ida Werner. 42, was indicted by the "Campbell county grand jury on three counts charging her with wilful murder. The indictment Was the result of in vestigation of the deaths of Stanley Williams, 4 months; Carl Williams, 2 years, and Shirley Williams, 4 years. The Werner woman is the aunt of the children. A chemist's analysis showed traces of pioson in the children's stomachs. . : Ladders can be prevented from slipping with a new stay to be ad justably fastened to their lower rungs and terminate in a spike or Miction cup. ADVERTISEMENT REAL HAIR GROWER FOUND AT LAST New Drug- Borandine Cause Big- Stir Among Hair Specialists. $1,000 REvVARD IF WE FAIL ON OUR GUARANTEE. Those who have become prematurely gray or who are troubled with scalp or hair diseases, such as falling hair, dan druff, baldness, itching scalp, etc., know full well the humiliation that they cause. There is no need, however, of such con ditions. These troubles csn be quickly overcome by Borandine, the new drug re cently discovered at the Scientific Ret sesrch Laboratories at Scranton, Pa. Since its discovery a little over a year ago, Borandine has been found to contain mar velous properties for producing a new growth of hair. In subjecting it to vari ous tests in the worst cases of baldness, dandruff, itching scalp, etc., the results obtained by the experimenting chemists were considered almost miraculous. In everycase it was found that where there were any hair roots left it would produce a new and luxuriant growth of hair in from four to six weeks' time. Gray or faded hair was often restored to its natural color in from 10 to 14 days' time. In minor cases of scalp and hair diseases, such as dandruff, falling hair, itching scalp, etc., it was found that these un natural conditions were corrected and often completely cured by two or three applications. The discovery of Borandine will without doubt put an end to the troublesome scalp and hair diseases that are becoming too common- with the Amer ican people. Anyone who suffers from scalp or hair troubles should write the Scientific Research Laboratories, Dept. 74, Scranton, Pa., at once, and full particulars of this new discovery will be sent you in a sealed envelope, free of charge. Prices eat ! niialf u an indue nook to ran to try DiM.Wt know the . excellent srvt JJMr'll iff will make jot oca of ttw the. Guaranteed 6000 Miles spmMhie Ttrm mrm fcb. Umjtmt 'udvil la nnMbvfl Or, w. build nu doafci ind tirM on mw uhkI.i. whta.iT to fir nm aiilMf with pracd- murnoQwvoacs. titfnqMiitysl thM pric is ariirfity Me ewto-fcw to tow "MBWjrs mpd. Bra Til Sill J - 5.80 30x3V 6.SO S'Jxl 7.00 six s.oo 32x4 H.4S ii.eo 1.75 3.00 S.15 . 3.30 S.SO S.ftO 3.85 3.00 3.15 3.S5 3.75 33x4 4 S.5 34x4 . 8.75 10.00 XO.BO 11.00 11 60 12.75 r oj may dadtwt 6-) vpacial caat nt. Y a' ;atfln atnbi.-4 Aa tm aat. b eTacT 4r ordi aial mil a. 8sa"Tv$S afaia. ei jmht ar aat 1 1 IsliasrFraa with Ivory Thro Maamai Ml hMHim I with vntmr dtfaew Wife In Lawsuit ' To Get Baby From Grandparents Mrs. Ravmond Peterson Asks Court for Clnld Held by Dead HusbandY. Parents. In the neat little cottage at 1502 Madison street Mrs. Raymond Pe terson, with a heart full of anxiety, has been waiting for a week for the coAity judge of Nemaha county, at Auburn, Neb., to render the "judg ment of Solomon" and restore to her arms her '20-months-old child, now in the possession of the maternal grandparents. ' ' Ihe story of the mother is an un usual one. She was married to Earl Cotton in Nemaha county and two months before the birth of the child in controversy the father died during the influenza epidemic. The widow went to the home of her parents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Cotton, farmers, to live while, she awaited the visit of the stork. Shortly after the birth of the babe the mother became a victim of in fluenza and left tier in such a condi tion that she could not nurse the in fant. ' "Mrs. Cotton, grandmother of the infant, took possession of the child and nursed it. The mother complains that all the time she was never per mitted to have the child to fondle, nor was she allowed to have the pleasure of sleeping with her. f Works in Omaha. When the mother was restored to health she found Jierself in strait ened circumstances and shet came to Omaha, where she entered one of the factories of the M. E. Smith company and worked at a small weekly wage, out of which she saved sufficient to make periodical visits to the home of her parents-in-law to see the child. She alleged in the trial now in progress in the Nemeha county pro bate court that the grandmother of the babe coddled the Jittle one to the extent that she had no oppor tunity to establish herself in the infant's affections as mother. She met Raymond Peterson, a Mammoth Stock f Pianos, Players and Phonographs ATTUVTIfiW! e kfttl expected to be in our new home Oct 1st, All JuPI 1 lUIll but the inability of the contractor to secure ma r terial has delayed us. t In the meantime the iminense stock of instruments already purchased for, our new store are arriving daily, and we are so crowded in our temporary quarters, we have no room to place them. Rather ihan pay excess storage charges we will give the people of Omaha and vicinity the benefit of the biggest savings on pianos and players ever known in the . country. The management says unload, and Price Is of Secondary Consideration '"ls sV, FREE Bench, Scarf and $10 worth of music To Be Had in Burl Walnut-San Domingo Mahogany or Oak. We have no room for. them, so to move them quickly we have priced them way below their worth. Read the names ofv the instruments and their prices. These are but sampl the many used pianos in this sale. Royal Schuman Schubert Weaver Fisher Marshall Mahosanjr Walnut 88-Nots Oak Fumed Oak A Wendell A very Worth much Player Almost Just like Good practice fine buy mora Mahogany new new piano Only Only Only Only Only Only $265 $195 $450 $278 $325 $138 I 1 : 1 i COME EARLY-COME PREPARED TO DO BUSINESS. BRING WHAT YOU CAN SPARE FOR FIRST PAYMENT, WE WILL ARRANGE VERY EASY TERMS FOR THE BALANCE. Home of the Steinway, Hardman-E menon, Steger-Lindeman and Schmoller & Mueller Pianos and Players. SCHMOLLER & MUELLER 114-116-118 So. 15th St THE LEADING Bootlegger Nearly Misses Pie iin.i i ii Curious Crowd In Small Minnesota Town Congre gates to Inspect .Car With Big Load of Cana dian Club But They Didn't Know It.- Speaking of guilty consciences! One of the w. k. Omaha bootleg gers (name suppressed for obvious reasons) recently toured to Canada and toured back again with his au tomobile springs sinking under a his car in front of the window and heavy load of the celebrated Canad ian Club. He reached a small town In Min nesota about noon and decided to pause long enough for a lunch. He wheeled around the town square five times before he found a suitable beanery, one where he could park keep a watchful eye upon it during the meal. He hadn't reached the pie course when, he noticed a crowd of citizens gradually accumulating In front of the machine. All seemed interested Alarm Expressed by Farmers Unwarranted, Reserve Board Says Chteafo Tribune-Omaha. Bee Leased Wire. .Washington, Oct. 16. The alarm expressed by agricultural producers thrifty young mechanic here, and they were married in Omaha De cember 31, 1919. He at once took her to the home he had prepared for her. How that she is able to take care of her babe she wants it in her home. The Cottons, who are aged folk, have become so enamored of their grandchild that they say separation from it will break the heart. They air W Mr Peterson had oracti- cally surrendered the babe to them and that they have. . letters to' this effect, which she wrote while living in Omaha. The mother admits that she wrote to the Cottons that they could have nnccpccinn nf the child until she was able to care for it, but that she had repeatedly refused to sign papers oi adoption. y The case has been under the ad visement of the court for the last week and as yet no judgment has been rendered. fill I - MiTTTr 3 . Out-of -Town Customers Use This Coupon. No matter where you live. We ship anywhere to approved credit. Writ today. Mark with (X) Piano interested in. Nam .... Address ,v PIANO CO. MUSIC HOUSE OF THE WEST. in the Nebraska automobile and they conversed with each other in a sus picious manner an they gave it the O. O. The Omaha man didn't wait for the pie. He wiped his mouth with a napkin and a shaking hand, then walked boldlytout to the car and pushed Into the flock of interested citizens. "Something peculiar about my ma chine?" he asked. "What's the little blue tag on your radiator?' said one of the interested citizens, in response. The owner of the car sighed with relief. "That's just my wheel tax license," he answered. Then he went back into the cafe and ate two pieces of pie. over credit conditions is unwarrant ed, is the burden of a formal state ment issued by the federal reserve board. The statement is the reply of the board to appeals of delega tions of producers for preferential rediscount rates and more liheralitv on the part of the banks in the finan-' c:ng of farm products. As was ex pected, the board refused to make any change in rediscount rates. It is declared by the board that recent price fluctuations in markets tor agricultural products are inevi table and unavoidable consequences of the economic derangements occa sioned by the world war." Receiver Is Asked for Co-operative Association Milwaukee, Oct. 16. Application for the appointment of a receiver for the American Co-operative asso ciation, whose headquarters-are in Milwaukee, was made by the Jungfi Shoe company, a creditor. It is claimed the association's liabilities are $400,000. The assets are said to be between $800,000 and $900,000-. The association has .78 branches, including about 45 in Wisconsin, the remainder being located in Ken tucky, Wyoming, Nebraska and South Dakota. Bee want ads are best business getters. ' Reducing A CHANCE FOR YOU PIANO BUY ERS TO SAVE BIG MUJNJlii:. Think of your opportunity High grade dependable PLAYER PIANO ONLY $550 Such an instrument at such a remarkably low price should induce every man who wants a player to be at this store early tomorrow morning. It will pay you to lay-off from work a half day to get one of these bar gains. Phone Douglas 1623 Prices May Go Higher, Avers Louis C. Nash Manager of Burgess-Nash Store Says Closing of fac tories May Cause Shortage and Boost In Prices. ' Uncertainty of merchandise con ditions is emphasized by Louis C. Nash, of the - Burgess-Nash store, who just returned from a meeting of the National Retail association in New York. "In many qtses merchandise is now being sold at prices below the cost of production," said Mr, Nash. "This may result in the closing down of mills and factories and the consequent shortage and price ad vance of materials. "There has not been the decline in prices which the public has been led to believe. There has been a de cline, however, and the big reduction sale of the Burgess-Nash store last spring cleaned . the shelves to an extent which has enabled 'the store One hears a great deal about Miller Tires nowadays about remarkable mileage and ' unique uniformity. Do you realize that ten years have been, I spent in perfecting this tire? And that $1,000 a day is spent just to guard against defects? Every tire signed Cords and fabrics are all tested in the most exacting ways. Not a tread is made until a sample of the stock is vulcanized and tested in -the laboratory. Fifty experts inspect the finished tire. Each must sign every tire' he passes, and the man who makes it signs it. If a tire comes back, both these men are penalized. Over 1,000 tires a year are worn out at- the factory in watching Miller mileage. Eight geared-up machines each run two tires 650 miles per day. Heavy cars, under-tired, are run night and day on the road. Scores of taxis and jitneys are employed in these ceaseless tests. Five rival makes are constantly compared with Millers. Day after day the Miller makers prove that their tires excel. They know the mileage they are giving, they know that they are uniform. Million-mile tests Many large users are comparing Millers in million-mile tests, and over. Ofttn a score of makes are run against the Miller. On stage lines, taxis and trucks Millers mhcc, uiAia a..u i-uuu x...t.0 winning enormous contracts out-serving every rivaL i - Now Cords or Fabric WHOLESALE ONLV 2220 Farnam, Omaha. OMAHA DOWNTOWN I COMBEIiTION TIRE MFO. CO, ISM . cass Btreeu Teiepyue iwufiM (. CCMTNO TTJIB REFATH. CO., Cuming Straai. xaiepnone uvufimm Stti. IATTA TIR COMTAKT. Ill Bo. Mtk etreet. Teiepnoo uougias aj. B. WHCTXEV, V. S. Vulcanising O., lis so. lito Bveeu xeiepuon. Douglas 1(01, to take advantage of this decline and to buy large quantities of mer chandise at prevailing prices". Yeggs Got Only Small Loot From Coal Office Yeggmen last night broke into the offices of the Resnick Coal com pany, 2306 Cuming street, and car ried a 400-pound safe into the back yard where they chiseled open the bottom. They obtained only' k few dollars, leaving several thousand dollars in checks in the i.ife. . The robbers almost completely wrecked the interior of the office, ransacking it in search of money. The robbery was discovered" on arrival of employes this morning. ' Poles Smash Reds Warsaw, Oct. 16. (By The Asso ciated Press.) The smashing of the Sixth bolshevik' division by the Poles in a resumption of fighting on the Russo-Polish line fs reported in last night's war office statement. The Toles are extending their 'lines to ward the boundary set by the arm istice, which is shortly to become ef fective, and have reached the town of Krzywicze (probably Krzyvche), southeast of Lemberg. $1,000 a. Day To prevent defective tires Mr. J. E. Brown of the Brown, Magrtey A Lynch Commission Com. sany of South Omaha, ran two !5x4i Fabric Tires twenty-one thousand miles on an Apperson :ar. They are still in service. Tread Patented are .t CWtrMdetfc with... by for fir- m wt ., 1 Miller supply charge. Everywhere Discussed . Gett.th.rirmA THE MILLER RUBBER COMPANY ROBT. MILLER SERVICE DEALERS WEST SIDE. CENTER STREET OARAGE, M4t Center Street. Telephone Walnut 7T. DUNDEE OARAGB, Kit Dodge Street. Telephone Walnut 114. LEAVENWORTH HEIGHTS GARAGE, i 4312 Leavenworth Street. Telephone Walnut 474J. NORTH SIDE. HESTER S LOWE, Butck Serrire Sta tion, 1911 Sherman Ave, Webster St. STHOLLMAW BUOrt. HARDWARE CO, 4114 No. 14th Street. Telephone ; Coltax 41, Driver, -Whose Car,.. I Killed Man, Freed j Carl Adams, Driving Slowly, i r!jv e.- ri wr-i V He Tells Jury. Carl Adams, driver for the Omaha Taxicab company, who Friday morning ran down and killed John Tierney, street car company track tender, at Park avenue and Leaven worth streets, was exonerated by a county corner's jury at the Crosby undcrtking parlors yesterday morn ing. Adams was ordered released from jail, where he was held in de fault of $5,000 bonds. Adams testified that the accident occurred at 4:30 a. m. and that, in the darkness, he failed to see Tier- v ney, who was bent over greasing the tiacks with his back toward the car, until too late. He said that he was making 20 mile an hour when he struck Tierney. He did not know that it was a man he wf.s runping . down until heN had struck him, he testified. Sixty-nine per cent of the w-rld' ' I yield of copper is produce-L in Amer ica. Thousands of asers are fhaHng iothpar? sons. They put another tire on the opposite wheel and watch the mileage. And all this talk about Miller Tires comes through those comparjsons. - . . It is this uniformity this constant su premacythat has placed Miller Tires where they are." They don't come back A defective Miller Th is a rarity. There are nu merous large cities from which not a single Miller Tire came back last year. In Akron where Mil lers are made the Miller Tire outsells at retail all other makes combined. On a retail bdsiness of $500,009 yearly, only 15 tires cama back last year. Over 99 Miller Tires in 100 ex ceed the expectations. Think what that means to yoa The records , which Miller Tires make are dependable. What they, do for you once they will do for, you constantly. In a lifetime's user the probability is you would nevetl . get a faulty tire. Watch your mileage Don't take other men's fiforet sj , mileage.. Conditions differ. Learn what. Miller gives von on your car. Compart! a Miller with the tire yoo now aae Irft the records show which is besar Such a test will probably be a ravens tion to yon. Perhaps you do not kmo the service tires should give today. Don't guess on tires. The Miller ftN tory is spending fortunes to win eortr mileage for yoo. Find ont what it ia. Tires. Twenty ear makers now them and there is no extra , - I V. & MaatfQsM C. BURLAN, Mgr. Phone Douglas 892. soma stdh RELIABLE TUB A REPAIR OOu 47l8o.- J4U Street. Telephone SoutA COCNCTX M.ITVS LAND a M'KINLBY, IT Bout Man) Street. Telephone Tft, LAINSOK ROBERTS COMTAXTs St Fourth Street. Telephone tut. ROT WILSON OARAGE, lit aadj Broadway. V I ft. 4, Si 1 ' ' 1 I 1 ' ! i i i f .V r.m Ai r j i 1 htm mm mil r r 1 ii ai s,oyi t m m. m, a,e. m m .m - , r f - i- a, aa, I