Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 14, 1920, SPORTS AND AUTO, Image 30

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: NOVEMBER 14, 1920.
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City-County Block
Urged by Official
As Economy Plan
New Building on Courthouse
i Site With .Storerooms on
First Floor Would He
, ducq Expenses.
Frank Dewey, county tfrrk,' who
rrtvned recently from isliingtofl,
D. C, brought with him several
classy ideas for the use of the coun
ty of Douglas and city of Omaha.
One of these is the immediate
erection of a "twin" building to the
present court house. The building
would occupy the Karnam street side
of the court house square.
My idea is to erect thus building
for, a city hall," said Mr. Dewey.
"Mr. Howell is asking two floors in
the present city hall for the use of
Iiis water and gas enterprises.
"It is impossible to, give him that
much space in the old building and
still leave enough room lor other
city offices. I They arc talking about
-expending thousands of dollars to
revise the building so' as to provide
room for these offices.' And Com
missioner Zimman is trying to palm
off his old Harney street fire station
for a water and gas office.
"We ought to take the bull by the
' horns right away and build for the
' future. These makeshifts will not
be a good investment. '
"Now suppose the city and per
haps the county together erect this
twin building on the court house
square. That will provide'plenty of
room for. years to come. The pres
ent city hall building and site can
be ,solu for enough to pay probably
ha4f the cost of erecting the new
building."
Plans Rent System.
Another city improvement advo
cate with original ideas has suggest-
C(t that the new building be erected
with Store rooms on the ground
floor.
"These Jtould be rented out to
stores," he -V'd. "The rental space
on the ground floor is so high that it
ought not to be wasted in county
or- city offices which are just as well
situated on upper floors.'- I believe
the ground floor of such a building,
Jt hvided into stores, would have a
rental value of $100,000 a year, which
would be more than enough to pay
the interest oh the cost of the build
. ing." v ' "
The other big idea which Mr.
Dewey 'brought home from the east
is a solution of the market house
problem.
i - would raise the floor of the City
Auditorium so that it would be at
the level of the lower part of the
present balcony. Or, in other words,
I would build a new floor at that
level.
Would Provide Market Place.
"This would not decrease the seat
ing space of the Auditorium materi
ally, as it would cut out only that
iart of the available space which is
it present under the balcony, a part
that never is filled with chairs, any
way. .
"Then I would use the main floor.
of the present Auditorium for the
city market house I would divide
it into squares and stalls and would
rent these out to people at fixed ren
tals. "They do that in the cityt)f Wash
ington "and. the city makes a good
thing out of it, and the people have
a wonderful market Tioiisc, where
they can buy all kinds of eatables
at moderate prices."
Swelled Heads in London;
;. " Says Science to Blame
London, Nov. 13. That Londoners
' heads' are getting wider and bigger
than ever hitherto known is the as
sertion of Prof. Parsons, lecturer
to the British association, at Cardiff.
Inquiries among hatters and
phrenologists about London prove
this to be true.
, Cuthbertsons, the well-known hat
ters, said that up to a few years
ago it was very rarely that they had
to supply a hat over 6XA or 6-, but
now it is nothing unusual to have to
have a special hat made for cus
tomers at sizes over 7yi.
Mrs. Stacpool P'Dell, London's
foremost phrenologist, said:
"Men are beginning to think more
than formerly; science is, making
wonderful progress, and men are
having to think and observe more
than they used to.
"If you develop your muscles they
will get larger; if you begin to think
more your brain gets larger, and the
skull must give way to the brain,
therefore increasing the size of the
head." ,
North Dakota Is Setting
High Record In Baby Crop
Devil's Lake, N. D., Nov. 13. Ba
bies will be a big cropin North
Dakota this year. A bumper, yield
of future citizens already has been
harvested. The Grim Reaper, on the
other hand, has gathered only a few
meagre sheaves in odd fence corners.
J The quarterly report of the State
Board of Health shows 1,022 births
in the state, against only 295 deaths
in June; 1.238 births, against 366
deaths in May, and 962 births against
476 deaths in April.
"The doddering old fool with the
glass and scythe will have to get a
whetstone and show more pep if he
wants to stay in business in North
- Dakota," said the secretary of the
board. "The climate conduces to
longevity. Life and health are in the
prairie air. OrrTy 73 persons died of
tuberculosis throughout the state jn
the three months covered by the re
port. Whereas there an area of
similar extent on the American con-
" tinent that can beat that record?"
. )
Woman Voter Keeps Vow
of 20 Years, Smokes Cigar
Lewiston. Me., Nov. 13. This is a
suffrage story.
- A woman, aged about 75, walked
into a local drug stare. She said to
the clerk: ' '
"Give me a good cigar.
' Next she asked for a light.
' To a query from the amazed drug
clerk, the woman said:
"Twenty years ago I vowed that
if I had the chance to vote I would
smdke a cigar. Now I am going to
do it if it kills me."
She walked out of the store puff
ing the cigar.
Wife's Love for Husband
Won't Influence Her Vote
Suffragette Leaders Brand as' Piffle the Idea That
Ball6t Is Now Barometer of Wifely Affec-tion-They
Will Use Their
Own' Minds.
Written for tha InternaMniiat Newt
Service
By MARGERY REX.
JfeW York, Nov. 13. According to
Dr. Edward tram Reede of Wash
ington, the ballot is the barometer
f wifely affection, and the woman
who loves her husband as every
flood wife should, will vote as her
bpouse does. '
In the course of his remarks Dr.
Reede, v. ho is a well known neurolo
gist, says of the modern wife:
"If she folds political views con-
I trary to liiPshe consciously or sub-
consciously feel.- antagonism toward
nun. .
"The woman who loves her hus
band romantically has an 'denttiica
tion of interests with his. She is one
with him in everything she is a
.1 i 1 . ! . 1 . - . A
utiiiucpu uecause nc is .1 utmuirai.
one may credit: d iny.il uiuuuu mi
reasons for being a democrat, but
subconsciously she could be nothing'
else. To her this man she loves is a
fountain of wisdom and she concedes
the superiority of his judgment in
politics as in everything else.
This, of course, leads to the an
cient and honorable question, 'What
is love? which is even harder to de
cide than why are some candidates.
Dr. Brill's Opinion.
Dr. A. A. Brill, eminent psycho
analyst, on being consulted by the
writer, in search of truth and opm
ions, partially agreed with the neu
rologist of the capital, yet modified
his assent to some degree.
"Of course, from the few .things
the doctor says I cannot fully judge
what he means," said Dr. Brill re
cently. "It depends largely on what
we mean when we speak of a, 'wo
man who loves her husband.'
"If he refers to the Romeo-Juliet
type of intense, excessive, mad love,
then he is right. That sort of love
causes two hearts to 'beat as one'
?.nd each agrees completely with the
other. Each personally envelops the
other.
"But it seems that the matter of
voting today would be more or less
extraneous. There are mary women
in this city, active politically, who
love their husbands or tiiink they
love their husbands, perhaps, and
really do insofar as we know. They
vote differently, though. 1 hei love
is not that type of the very young
and ardent lovers, who belong com
pletely to each other.
"Therefore the doctor's idea would
not apply here. But in all things we
find exceptions.
Dr. Reede, I understand, says that
if a girl has an ideal love for her
father, that is. regards him as her
ideal of masculine perfect:on, or, on
the other hand, has a secret antag
onism for him, either quanty is trans
ferred at her marriage to her hus
band, who thereafter is either the
object of her admiration or antip
athy, just as her father was. In that
he is right.
"I do not believe, though, that the
matter cf a wife casting her lot with
a party opposed by her husband
would mean that such a state of an
tagonism existed or had bren passed
on from her father to her husband."
Women Make Denial.
Indignant declaration? from prom
inet women voters haveyless scien
tific value than Dr. Brill's state
ments, but come so to speak, "from
the heart out."
"For 18 years," says Mrs. Rose
Bres, lawyer and suffragist, "I have
lived with my husband, a democrat,
while I have been a strong adherent
ADVERTISEMENT
"They WORK
while you sleep'9
Do you feel bilious, constipated,
head achy, upset, full of cold? Take
one or two Cascarets tonight for
your liver and bowels. Wake up
with head clear, stomach right,
breath sweet and feeling fine. No
grioing, no inconvenience. Children
love Cascarets too. 10, 25, 50 cnts.
ADVERTISEMENT
Says, "Have Taken Mentho
Laxene, and Found It
Just as You Said
Only Better"
Home-Made and Pure
MOTHERS! Give Pure Medicine to your
sick child. Make it at home with con
centrated Mentho-Laxeno and simple
sugar syrup. Directions with each bot
tle. So many cough mrtlcines contain
narcotics. not enough, perhaps to poison.
but enough to deaden the nerves which
cause coughing.
Mentho-I.axene contains no narcotics
It Is all purity, with Wild Cherry, Toiu,
Menthol, Cascara. Grindelia, Ammonian
-niorme, a. nigniy concentrated,
compound.
pure
Give children and aged folks this pleas,
ant home-mado mixture, and see how
the very fin-t dose does a world of irood.
for severe cough, tight cold, bronchitis
hoarseness, whooping cough. throat
tickle, etc. It is antiseptic; it Ionian
the tightest cough, and sleep, restful aleeo
ct mes. '
Mrs. M. I.. Martin. 953 Prospect Av.,
Buffalo N. T.. writes: "I have tnken
your Mentho-La.xene for a short time
and found it to be just as you said
or.ly better, for I hud a ve'v bntl r'.M
and K made me well in four days." Quick
results, quick relief gotten cheaply too
as any one saves two or three dollars
by making Mentho-Laxen cough syrup
at home. Tour druggist baa it. ou
should bav Jt too,
V
of republican policies. We have
never had a hard word about poli
tics. Our life has been characterized
by the greatest congeniality. Dr.
Reede is wrong. 1 am sure."
From Mrs. Olive Stott Gabriel,
law partner of Mrs. Bres and re
publican leader, comes further, refu
tation of Dr. Recde's theories.
"What's the matter with that
man?" questioned Mrs. Gabriel. "Mr.
Gabriel has always been a demo
crat and I have been on the other
nde. Now my husband on account
of the absolute inefficiency of his
partv, will change to the republican
platform, he says.
"At any rate we get on wonder
sixATcSHsf5ND Union Outfitting Co. X,V:.?h Union Outfitting Co. 'fST
'
Your Lower Prices
1'si.LMtw vu& m'j? cp ro
raj f i gl f
And We Will Deliver Your Pathe Phonograph on Christmas Eve
Every, year there is always a shortage , of Pathc Phonographs at
Christmas and in order to save scores of our customers disappointment
this year. we are forming a Pathe Christmas, Club in which members will
pay at the rate of a DOLLAR a week up to the time of delivery on
Christmas.
What more appropriate Christmas gift for wife or mother ihan a Pathe Phonograph
one that they could get real (enjoyment from after a hard day of housework. How
the entire family would enjoy hearing ALL that is best in the world of music sitting
around the tree on Christmas Eve.
A straight-out, clean-cut offer. A wonderful Demonstration Sale by the makers to carry
Pathe Phonographs and Pathe Records fato' 1,000 additional Omaha homes.
Select your Pathe Phonograph now and wc will deliver $25.00 worth of Pathc Ttecords
with it absolutely free. Records of your own t-hoice, including all the new song liits, latest
dance numbers, standard ballads, operatic pieces and band and orchestra selections.
Home of Home Outfits
You may select your furniture from any part
of our mammoth stock and pay for it on con
venient credit terms arranged to suit your
own needs. Come in and talk over your plans
with us Let us help YOU as wre have so many
happy couples in the past.
y ROOM
Outfits
$199.50, $275.00, $344.50
fully together. We disagree in many
things, but I think the woman who
votes always just as her husband
does is a voting nonenity.
"Anv woman who is at all inter-
I ested in civic affairs is able to think
out how to vote."
"We women have traveled alone
up the steep hill to get our vote."
interposed Mrs. Bres, "and I guess
we can make our stand without
man's support, now that we are on
the smooth plain of victory.
"I don't agree with Dr. Reede at
all. Love for country has nothing to
do with love for husband. It is as
different as the love of a mother for
a child, compared with that of a
woman for a man.
j Must Follow Convictions.
'The woman who loves her coun
try will vote according to her best
convictions. A husband is a dif
ferent matter.
"The women that never have a
thought that isn't put into their
heads by some men are the kind that
fill ojir divorce courts."
However, Dr. Rcede's hypothesis
makes great arguments for the hus
band who wants to bend his wife's
will to support what he believes to
r
Cotton
1
x80 in. size, in
brown, tan or white,
with contrasting
borders ; spe
$3.15
Woolnap"- Blankets,
extra heavy, large,
warm blankets that
will give long serv
ice, in ton Qf
this sale, 4)UsfcJ
I ROOM A C ROOM
r Outfits O Outfits O
End Tables
End Tables An artis
tic model In highly pol
ished Mahogany that
will be useful In many
ways, an excellent
value
at ...
$9.75
be the best political party. ' "You
don't love rue or you would vote the
way 1 say.'- the would-be masterful
male can assert, but it remains to
be seen what results his argument
will bring.
German Burglar Caehes
Loot in His Stomach
Berlin, Nov. 13. Arrested . here,
Willi Tansin, a but gear, who former
ly drove the Berlin police chiefs
motor car. was found to have
swallowed the proceeds of his latest
robbery.
It was noticed after his arrest
that he walked with difficulty and
that his stomach appeared abnor
mally large.
The prison doctor advised him to
undergo an operatiou, but Pansin
refused, saying that he' would rather
be operated on at his own expense.
Next day he was found in his cell
with a deep knife wound in his srde.
An X-ray examination, says the
Berlin l'ost, revealed "a mountain
of foreign bodies" in Pansin's
stomach, including silver spoons,
small forks, a number of screws,
and a silver nail file.
Worth of
Pathe
Records
Bedding Reduced
Blankets, 66 , Plaid Blankets
in
pretty blue, pink,
tan or gray effects;
unusual nr
values, atP.t O
Warm Comforters of
good heavy weight
with a serviceable
well sewed cover
ing
$3.85
special,
Large Size Comforters, at $6.45
3.E. COR. 16th
Chinese Conduct
Strict Boycott
On All Jap Goods
.
Newspapers of Shanghai and
Canton Will Not Carry Ad
vertisements for Japan
ese Firms.
By DAVID N. PARRY.
Int-rrnstloral hs Ncrrir Maff
CwMpondent.
Tokio, Jipan, Nov. U. "Don't
meddle with the family quarrels of
your neighbor," is the advice of Mr.
Kumataro Honda, former minister
from Japan to Switzerland, to his
own country after a visit to China.
Mr. Honda was one of the members
of the Japanese peace mission to
Paris, and is rememhred there as
on Furniture Are
You'll Save Many Dollars on Furniture for
in Your Home
WE 'EE lending our influence toward a general and permanent reduc
tion on Furniture prices. These reductions are of a most substan
tial nature, too, in some cases they are surprisingly low.. We hope we can
maintain these lowered prices for the future, and yet it will be wisdom
n your part to buy NOW while you're sure of thern. Easy Terms
dge the Value-Giving of
1 the Union by These
Everyday
Offers j
Hood Carpet Sweeper. .$1.29
Large Chopping BOwls at 59J
High Grade Brooms for..3l
Simplex glass Egg Beater 14
Aluminum Tea Kettle.. $2.09
Acme Ice Cream Freezers 65ft
Casseroles with frame.. $2.19
Good Electric Irons at.. $3.95
Sturdy Kiddy Kars for.. $1.98 '
Big Scooter Kars only.. $1.59
Steel Frying Pans are 296
Well Made Whisk Brooms 17
Aluminum Rice Boilers $1.12
Dust Pans with handle, at 256
Glass Berry Bowls 29t
Splint Clothes ' Hampers $1.79
Adjustable Stair Gates.. $1.49
Self Wringing Mops are... 89
.arge Baby Plates for,. . . .396
Children's Play Sets.. J... 986
Large Baby 'Walkers.. ..$2.45
rinnH Tnllirtp. Pinn nf 07 k
"Easy to Pay "Terms
Wool Fiber Rugs in a num
ber of pretty designs that .
will wear: the 9x12 sizes
go
at ...
$22.50
Tapestry Rugs that are seam
less in 9x12 sizes; a num
ber of rich looking, pat
terns
flt
$38.50
Simmons Bed in the fashion
able sauare tubing with a beau
tiful golden fin
ish, priced
$27.50
& JACKSOH STS.
-iA
the member who one day abruptly
left his post and returned to Japan
because he disagreed with the atti
tude certain of his colleagues were
taking.
"While in Shanghai recently,'' said
Mr. Honda, after returning to Japan,
"I noticed that the anti-Japanese po
litical movements and tlie boycoxfng
of Japanese merchandise was going
on full blast. The newspapers in
Shanghai and Canton have not for
two years carried advertisements of
Japanese goods, despite the fac that
they themselves lost good revenues
by this action. If the Japanese au
thorities continue to sit idly by,
Japan's industry and commerce will
suffer considerably, I am afraid Not
only the authorities but also the peo
ple, should see to it that tiie cause of
the boycott is removed. ,
"What is the cause? It is because
Japan has meddled too nit.ch in the
past internal affairs of China, in the
time of the first, the second and the
third revolutions there. We s'lould
strictly refrain from interfering withj
-u:' j . a ... .1
Miuid a uuiiioui: ;ndirs aim w e
should see that efforts are bent to
ward increasing our trade with that
country, which occupies 40 per centbnsed in Danish initncir.
cf the entire China foreign trade."
Extraordinary Savings
In a Big November
Stove
Sale
"Ideal" Oak Heater, 9 stove
that will hold fire for hours
at a time; has a 17-inch fire
pot and is a most unusual
value at the d q mj
sale price (pltaO
Howard Heater, with the fa
mous "overdraft" construction
that turns Into heat the coal
gasses that usually go up a
flue In smoke, in this sale,
Same
at
only
$29.50
for
Scores of Other Values Too
Howard Pride Range $59.50
Federal Cast Range $39.50
Cast Iron Cook Stove $27.50
At Greatly Reduced Prices
The reductions made for this No
vember sale brings back the glad days
of "old time" low prices. There are
vast assortments to choose from.
Soft Velvet Rugs in 9x12
sizes, closely woven to give
long service, in this Novem
ce, lu luis rvuveiu-
$41 50
ber
Sale ,
service,
at
Axminiter Rugs of verr high
quality In patterns particu
larly suited for living rooms,
2,"" $47.50
Velvet
rugs In
colorings
at
only .
Dining Table A William and
and Mary period in Jacobealn
oaK with 45-inch top and 6-foot
:SnT: $49.50
be proud
Kroehler Bed
You have an extra
bed room at no In
crease In rent, thpn too
you are always read,
for unexpected guests
Styles for Apartments
On Easy to Pay Terms
Peregrine Falcon
Returns to London
J London, Nov. 13. A peregrine
falcon an unusual stght In Lon
don visited the neighborhool of St.
Pauls Cathedral recently and taus
ed one death and universal con
sternation among the pigeons.
About titty of these half-time pig
eons were wheeling around the,
dome when the calcon arrived, closed
its wings, and swooped down at
about 150 miles an hour.
The pigeons dived to cover. A
burst of feathers fluttered and
danced in the air; one pigeon hed
been struck and was beiiirf carried
off.
The peregrine falcon, the roisa"
of the air, is extremely rare. It usu
ally haunts high and desolate c lilt s
on lonely parts of the coast.
A hundred years ago, however, it
used to haunt the region of St.
Pauls.
A great part of the machinery
from abroad.
comes
Here
Every Room
Oak Heater, a wonderful beat
producer; has an 11-lnch fire
pot and is a most
unusual value at. .
$9.75
Oak Heater only with a
13-inch fire pot
$12.95
Numerous to Mention
!iiiiiiB
Combination Range $74.50
Aiminster Rugs that are
seamless in 9x12 room sizes,
that will give years of
$58.50
Rugt, seamless, 9x11
the most beautiful
imaginable,
$62.50
Large Dreiser in a beautiful pol
ished walnut, with extra size
French plate mirror and roomy
top, a dresser to CQ CA
of, at
Davenports
s
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