Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 04, 1920, Page 16, Image 16

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    THKBEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 1920.
THE GUMPS-
THE GUMPS ! ! ! !
Drawn for The Bee by Sidney Smith.
DR. LEE W. EDWARDS
Chiropractor v
OPEN EVENINGS '
. 306 So. 24th Street
Corner Farnara
can mt)
N
OT every trick of magic re
quires years and years of
practice.
Here is a puz zliiiR trick with
which you can mystify the fam
ily after dinucr this evening.
Ohtain three strips of paper,
( U snow rms ou machine: kow.i 1 I hust hiychep 71 ' N )
BOX UVTE MAKfi HE JUMP -- . VVHOAU . V Up. r, J I
AV Y$ GOO OS WD)MVnM- HAVE UCK I ncur.! ' - J-
HAKES Yhe 0U Buoo 60 AST-. Y NNAMITEH THVS 'oXx - 7 "7lf , it. . ''
-
9
The
Greatest
Vote
Ever Cast in
Omaha
Was For
pi
I L
each five or !ix feet long and an
inch or an inch and lone-half
'wide. Strips made, of pieces of
newspaper pasted together will
do very nicely.
Paste, one strip, end to end,
making a loop or band as shown
in Figure 1. Of the second
strip, make a similar hand, hut
before pasting, turn one of the
cuds over giving a half twist
to the strip. This loop I is shown
in Figure 2. The third strip is
prepared in the same way, ex
cept that before pasting, you
must turn one -of the ends all of
the way around as in Figure 3.
This is the part you must keep
secret -the fact tnat there is half
a tvist in the second lortp and a
whole twist in the third. -
Cut .the Jtrst band in two, fol
lowing the dotted line shown in
the, illustration. You Vvill, of
course, get two hands, each half
awide as the original. Do the
same with' tne second and in
stead' of two bands you will
have one, twice as long as the-
' "original and half as fi lc.
So far, if is a pretty good trick.
To cap the tiirhax, cut "the. third
'' band. You will get two bands,
looped together.
(Copyright, 191, Thompson Feaiura
Service.)
Parents Problems
Barents' Problems.
At what age ' should children be
allowed to play cards?
'Each family must decide this mat
ter for itself. Bilt surely, there an
plenty of good gimes for children,
without cards!
The consumption of 1,358,000,000
pounds of coffee , in the United
States in the year endifig June 30
established a new record.
ADVEK7iyK.Mr.NT
r..
"They WORK
while you sleep"
Do you feel "bilious, constipated,
headachv. uuset. full of cold? Take
one or two Cascarets tonight for
your liver and howrls. - VVake up
with head clear, stomach right,
breath sweet and 'feeling tine. No
griping, no inconvenience. Chil
'dren love Cascarets, too. 10, 25, 50
cents. v
AttVERTISEMKVr
Mentho Laxene
Cold, Cough anil Catarrh Medi
cinefor Young and Old. 4,000
Barrel Were Used Last Year!
Why? Because It's the Best
and Cheapest. First Dose Re-
V" licTes. ''.
You buy Jt of any wpll stacked druggist
la 3 4 ox. bottles and tulrc In ten-drop
GOSeF, Or IKUti iiiia ii. mm niiu,i:
BUKar syrup, made by- dissolving of a
iiound of granulated sugar In a httlf-nlnt
of boiling water. ' It Ih bo easy to make
a, whole pint of cold a.nd cough syrup that
tens of thousands of mothers make It
every year for thsir loved ones.
All agree that this home-mad cough
syrup Is free from harmful drugx, and that
only a few doaes are required for each
rase, so that a pint may last a family
throughout ths winter season.
. For -colds, catarrh, cough, sore throat,
hoarseness, . and bronchitis, there Is noth
ing superior for prompt, lasting relief.
. guaranteed by The Blackburn Products
Co., Dayton, Ohio to please or money back.
ADVKRTISKMENT
Says Pile Remedy Worth
$100.00 a Box
"rkave had hehing piles ever since my
earnest recunrcuuu. m pa om
V. - . Ff .-.H 4.m H I Ir I k.M Sv4H
manH remedies and doctors, but no cure.
Abound eeks ago I saw your ad for Pet
ersosa Ointment. The first application
stopped all itching, and in three days all
soreness. I have only used one box and
rnsider I am cured. You have my grate
ful, heartfelt thanks, and may everyone
that has this trouble see this and give
your ointment, that is worth a hundred
dollars or more a box, a triar. Sincerely
yours, A. Newth, Columbus, Ohio."
Peterson's Ointment for piles, Ecxema
and old sores Is only 60 cents a large box
at all druggists. Mail orders filled by Pet.
erson Ointment Co.. Inc., Buffalo, N. Y.
Sherman McConncll Drug Co. will supoly
yo"
More Truth
By JAMES J.
SCIENTIFIC FARMING
No more the fafmer has to rise
Before the break of day
To plow and sow and rake and mow
'And till the waving hay.
The plow is rusting in the bam;
He's left the harrow flat j
" All toil he's sprned, for he has learned
A trick worth two of that. :
For in the autumn of the year,
When motor parties fare.
In' winding trains along the lanes
To get the country air,
The farmer sets beside the road
A bountiful supply
Of produce which the idle rich
Immediately buy. . .
They throng about the rustic shelves
.... He strings along the way; , .
They grab whate'er is vended there,
And gracious how they pay! , V
And when the village savings bank
Is groaning with his wealth,
When flies the snows, the farmer goes
To Europe for his health. ,
And how, you ask, can this be done
When" in the gentle spring
The farmer and his hired hand
Do not a single thing? . .,, . f.
The answer is an easyone. . , ii
And so we jot -it "down", ..'
The truck supply the suckers buy
Is all sent out from town.
gRTfTBRot r"VA:a y. .
UNHAPPILY, THEY CAN'T
If rats chewed holes through glass bottles a way to get ride of 'em
would soon be discovered. ' -
, . ALL WINTER TO DO IT IN -
The White Sox will be the better for a little laundering.
AND NO GUARANTEE CtJMES WITH 'EM
The new dollar bills look as good as the old ones used to, but you
never get as much mileage out of 'em.
(Copyright. 1920, By The Bell Syndicate, Inc.)
Dog Hill Paragrafs
By George Bingham
The storekeeper at Bounding Bil
lows, who wants to keep his women
customers, finds he is bound to re
duce the price rn dress -goods, even
if he has to cut a. few in;Iies off of
his yard stick. ,
- Poke Eazley was forced to r.o, t
bounding' Billows' yesterdav Svitft
his wife on a perilous shopping ex-
AOVKRTISK.MKNT
MOTHER!
"California Syrup of Figs"
Child's Best Laxative
Accept "California" Syrup ofc Figs
only look for the name California
on the package, then you are sure
your child is having the best and
most harmless physic for the little
stomach, liver and bowels. Chil
dren love its fruity taste. Full di
rections on each bottle. You must
say "California."
Than Poetry
MONTAGUE
pedition. He would havejrot lost
after he arrived there but the town
wasn't big enough. '
Miss. Peachie Sims savs Ellick
Helwanger has got to do a lot o
fettling down oefore the girls will
think, about. msrrying him, as he is
still ,so unsettled in his wavs he1
hasn't even decided yet on where to
part his hair. . -
WHY?
Do We Have Surnames?
In early times the names given
by parents to their children were
usually descriptive of some pe
culiarity already existing or which
it was hoped might become char
acteristic. The names of the Jew?,'
Greeks and Romans 'were almost
invariably of this nature. Thus!
Eve means life-giving; Jacob sig-,
nifics a supplanter: David is, "well-'
beloved," while Lazarus means
one destitute of help. In the
Greek, Alexander is a helper;
Hector, a defender; and Charity1
signifies love or beauty. In Latin, i
Augustus meant grand or vener-
able; Clement, mild-tempered, and'
Felix, happy. . .
So also ' it)'- English names,
whether of! Celtic, Anglo-Saxon,
Danish ..or Norman origin. Cad-I
wallader. for example, means val
iant; Griffith, good faith; Llewel
lyp, lipn-jike;. Alfred is "all
teace;." Bernard, bear's heart;
Edward," happy-keeper; Gilbert,
bright, and Richard, powerful.
These names were all of a per
sonal nature, 'having nothing in
common with thejiames of others.
In this respect they corresponded
to the English Christian or
"Chritianed" , names of modern,
times, and to the forename o
other countries. As population
increased, however, it was found
that something more was required"
to .distinguish between two or
more persons who were named
alike, and the practice of giving
a supplementary nani! or adding
something to jjhe proper nanie
came into vogue. These additions
were called "super" or "sur
names." -
At first, - however, these sur
names were "not handed down
from a father to son, but were
changeable at the will of the own
er. Nor was a man confined to
the -use of one surname. In the
"Domesday Book.jT for , instance,
there is the case (f the Earl of
Clare, who- had five surnames in
addition to., his title, and ' Lord
Coke stated: it is requisite that
special heed be taken of the name
of fjaptism; for a man cannot
have two baptismal names, though
he may have divers surnames."
(Copyright. U:. By the Wheeler
f Syndicate, Inc.)
S.L E'E P Y r T I M.E T Al E S
chapter
a 1 1 -1 : j
There was great rejoicing m the lit
tle village in the pond when Brownie
Beaver returned ith the g-.d news
that there would be no more hunting
and fishing. And when old Gran
daddy Beaver said that everybody
ought to take a holiday to celebrate
the occasion, all the villagers said- it
was a fine idea.
So they stopped working, for once,
and began to plan the celebration.
They thought that there ought to
Me Crow looked around
be swimming races and tree-felling
contests. And Brownie Beaver said
that after the holiday was over he
would suggest that someone be
chosen to go down and thank Farmer
Green for putting the notice on the
tree.
The whole village agreed to
Brownie's proposal and they voted
to see who should be sent. Brownie
Beaver himself passed his hat around
to take up the votes. And it was
quickly found that every vote was
for Brownie Beaver. He had even
voted for 'himself. But no one seemed
to care about that.
Then the swimming races began.
There was a race under water, a race
with heads out of water and an
other in which each person who took
part had to stay beneath the surface
as long as he could.
That last race caused some trouble.
A young scamp called Slippery Sam
won it. And many people thought
that he had swum up inside- his
house, where he could get air,, with
out being seen. But no one' could
prove it; so he won the race, just
the same. ,
Next came the tree-felling cotesL
There were six, including Brcjvnie
Beaver, that took part in it. Gran
daddy Beaver picked out six trees, of
exactly the same size. Each person
in the contest had to try to bring
his tree to the ground first. And
that caused some trouble, too, be
cause some claimed that their trees
wtere of harder wood than others
and more difficult to gnaw while
others complained that the bark of
their trees tasted very vitter, and tf
course that made their task unpleas
ant. Those six trees, falling one after
another, made such a racket that
old Mr. Crow heard the noise miles
away and flew over to see what was
happening. .
After, everybody crept out of his
hiding-place,, some time afterward
(everyone had to hide for a while,
you know), there was Mr. Crow sit
ting upon one of the fallen trees.
"What's going on?" he inquired.
"You'ra not going to cut down the
whole forest, I hope."
Then they told him about the ce
bration. And Mr. Crow began To
laugh.
VWhat are you going to do next?"
he asked.
" "We're a-going to send Brownie
Beaver over to Pleasant Valley to
thank Farmer Green for his kind
ness in putting an end to hunting and
fishing," said jld Grandaddy Beaver.
AnVERTISKMKNT
STOP CATARRH! OPEN
NOSTRILS AND HEAD
Says Cream Applied In Nostrils j
Relieves liead-Loias at unce. j
If. your nostrils, are clogged and
your head is stuffed and you can't
breathe freely because of a cold or
catarrh, just got a small botlle of
Ely's Cream Balm at any drug store.
Apply a little of this fragrant, anti
septic cream into your nostrils and
let it penetrate tnrough every air
passage of your head, soothing and
healing the inflamed! swollen mu
cous membrane and you get instant
relief.
Ah! how good it feels. Yo'.ir nos
trils are open, your head is clear, no
more hawking, snuffling, blowing;
no more headache, dryness or -struggling
for breath. - Ely's Cream Balm
is just what sufferers trom head
colds and catarrh need. It's a delight
ROW N I E,
BY ARTHUK-SCOTT BAILEYJ
"And he's a-going to ' start right
away."
, Mr. Crow looked around. And
there was Brownie Beaver, with a
lunch-basket in his hand, all ready to
begin his long journey.
"Say good-bye to him then," said
Mr. Crow, "for you'll never see him
again."
"What do you mean?" Grandaddy
Beaveft. asked. And as for Brownie
he was so frightened that he
dropped his basket right in ;the
water.
"I mean " said Mr. Crow "I
mean that it's a very dangerous er
rand. You don't seem to have un
derstood that sign. In the first
lace, it was not Farmer Green, but
is son Johnnie, who nailed it to the
tree."
"Ah!" Brownie Beaver cried.
"That is why one of the words was
misspelled!"
"No doubt!" Mr. Crow remarked.
As a matter of fact, not being able;
to read he hadn't known about thoi
AMl'SKMEXTS. ,
EMPRESS
NEW
SHOW "TODAY
KALALUHIS HAWAIIANS; GfLROY,
DOLAN A CORRIEL; SANTRY &
NORTON ; FISK & FALLON, Fhoto-
play Attraction, "The Man Who
Had Everything," featuring Jack Pick-i
lord. Sunshine Comedy. Fox News.
"OMAHA'S FUN CENTER"
v Js gf r uauy mat., ioc ro.ioc
liSfsr Nites, 25c to $1.25
Aaausl Engagement of the
MAIDS CF AMERICA
Intlre New Production In Every
Oot.ll With the Big- RQBBY BARRY
gelt tittle Comedian. BUBBI OMBAil I
Hslf Portion SUe Full Meaiure In Fun
Beauty Chorus ol American Malde
LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS
Sat. Mat. & Wk.: Incomparable Mollis Wllllami
In Peraon.
VAAJtAMA. " '
Matinee Uauy 2:15. Every Evening 8:15
Eddie Vogt Co. in "THE LOVE
SHOP" CAHILL & ROMINE; SID
NEY PHILLIPS; "Follow On;" Jackie
& Billy; Harvard, Holt & Kendrick;.
Lucy Cillett; Topics oi the Day; Kino-!
grams. ,
Matlneee ISc, 25c and 90c; Few 75c and $1.
Sat. and Sun. Nights lie, 25c, 90c, 79c $1.00
and SI. 25.
A TONIGHT &D
J SAT. MATINEE
Sol Dicksteln's
YIDDISH PLAYERS
IN
., . . -
Tickets 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $1.53
Five Days Sttu-ting Sat. Eve., Nov. 6th
GERALDINE
FARRAR.
' IN
"THE RIDDLE WOMAN"
A De Luxe Photoplay of Distinction.
Atteraoons, 25c; Evenings, 35c
EMPRESS
RUSTIC GARDEN
, JACK CONNORS Mgr.
DANCING AND REFRESH-
MENTS.
CABARET ATTRACTIONS.
Thane Tyler 664 5 for. Table
Reservations.
Nobn-day Luncheonette,
Suprer.
Open every day, 11:80 to 1 A. M.
Admission Matinee, Free.
Night, 55c. .
,.ht.,,- MjfflH
RobtZ-aSr CmadameJ
"The Restless Sex" s SjCOQCB
Marion Davies and Alf-Star Cast .
I EDITH ROBERTS I XFQCr
in "The ADORABLE SAVAGE" j
. . ' : . . 1 - ' t
word that was spelled wrong, i "In
the second place," he continued, "the
sign doesn't 'mean that hunting and
fishing are to be stopped. It means
that no one but Johnnie Green is
going to hunt and fish in this neigh
borhood. lTe wants all the hunting
and fishing for himself. That's why
he put up that sign. And instead of
hunting and fishing being stopoed, I
should say that they were going to
begin to be more dangerous than
ever. . . . They tell me," he added,
"that Johnnie Green had a new gun
on his birthday."
I'HOTOI'I.AYS.
NOW UNTIL
SATURDAY
NIGHT
BIG
Sometimes big happiness comes by living
in big places among big people. Some
times it comes in the face of death, but
there is Eig Happiness for All, if you only
know where to look.
'
This is Dustin Farnum's Greatest Screen
Triumph a drama of marvels.
aft
32
Brownie Beaver said at once that
he was not going on the errands of
thanks.
' "I resign," he said, "and anyone
that wants to go in my place is wel
come to do so."
But nobody cared -o go. And the
whole village seamed greatly dis
amointed, until Grandaddy Braver
made a short speech.
"We've all had a good holiday,
anyhow," he said. "And I should
that was something tj be thank
fof." (Copyright, Grosspt & Dunlap.) , .
PHOTOrLAVS.
"DUTIN FAQNUM
HAPPIN6AT
'SKSggS
few
Now Playing
WILLIAM
FARNUM
In His Big New
Production
"Drag
Harlan"
Official Moving Pictures of the
New President on the Screen
Today.
BEATTY'S
Co-Operative ,
Cafeterias
Pay Dividends to Those Who
Do the Work
Eowens
Specials
Again this week this Big;
Live, Progressive and
Growing Store is offering
every inducement to the
housewife to buy and save.
Read over this list and note
the saving to be made if
you shop at Bowen's.
Hi -lb. can Bed Label Karo
Syrup (crystal white) i , OP
2 cans '. . sfcOC
Aunt Jemima's Pancake
29c
Flour, 2 pkgs
'i-lb. can Hershey'n Breakfast
Cocoa, per ,v - Q
can J C
E. Z Shoar Polish, assirt- OP
ed colors,' 3 bottles. , ...s5DC
2-in-l Tan Shoe Polish, OP.
3 for .ADC
Quaker Oats,
2 pkg3.
25c
Stoves
at a Discount of
from20to50
so buy now at Bowen's Low
Ebb Prices and" Save.
Elite Economy Heater
With circulating hot blast sir
tube around fire bowl exactly
as illustrated.
14-in. 4ze fire bowl $19.00
16-in. size fire bowl.. . .$24.50
18-in. .size fire bowl $35.00
Cascade Economy Steel Range
This range is heavily asbestos
lined, with full 18-inch cooking
oven, and is full nickel trimmed.
The construction is of rustproof
steel and is a guaranteed baker,
priced at.. .$62.50
You can always buy at Bowen's
to advantage and at a saving.
, . - s
Otaahas vuut tivmt JTOM
mwut n stratum s
' . ) : .
1
1
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