TMnnnv ft MiT A TOT A UNDAY AMUSEMENTS , EDITORIAL . ; VOL. L NO. 22. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, ; NOVEMBER 14, 1920. 1 D TEN CENTS v y : H?EA SPORT ENDED 1S A PROSPEROUS BUSlNE'crS ONCE BUT THE SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST" WAS A FATAL SlOW TO IT . A lot of things that passed for 100 per cent perfection back in those uncouth days before woman suffrage and the 18th amendment -couldn't nose under the wire nowadays in a speed clash with crippled snails. The period from 1900 to 1920 can't be measured merely as a 20 year lapse. - Omaha "sKcok a leg" during that span with enough vigor and jvim to keep time with the break neck rythm of the latest jazz ' melody. The "new stuff of one '12-month became "out of bounds" in the next and in the third year v-as regarded as "eccentric A fashionable feminine "get up that in 1917 could shock the na- tives down around Sixteenth and Farnam into stares and startled , comments of "some chicken" and such would receive today what is -.own in technical parlance as the equine ha ha. A shining new auto that was its owner's pet and pride and his neighbors' envy back in 1900 today could win without a struggle the hand-embroidered last year's birds nest. Don't See.'Em Anymore. Speaking of horselaughs,, they, too, are fast slipping into the limbo of what was and is not There are few horses left to laugh and most of 'cm seen on Omaha , streets now appear too burdened v.ith years to do more than cackle. ( It wasn't so many years back that Omaha's downtown district, was cluttered with scattered hitch ing racks and livery stables for ac commodation of its native and vis iting horses. In those days it was hardly pos sible for a horse to cast a shoe without being in neighing distance of a blacksmith shop. Now the poor beast has to sneak up alleys , and back streets in order to find footwear. t' The smithy of other days is rap idly becoming as extinct in Omaha sas the spreading chestnut tree un der which Mr. Longfellow stood him once upon a time. The poem isn't quite definite on the subject, but it seems the chestnut leaves - formed a foliage roof for the ' "smithy's forge, indicating they had their housing problem even in Longfellow's time. The blacksmiths of later years , ' bare been more prosperous. At BY THE STREET CLEANING DEPARTMENT least they were able to provide roofs over their heads.But they're disappearing as fait as the much mentioned snowballs under ex treme heat. No More Blacksmiths. Recently they held( a convention over in Iowa and discovered there aren't any blacksmith apprentices any more, demonstrating the opin ion of youth is that the business is slumping into the innocuous desue tude of a "back number." finus the horseshoeing trade, the smithy is metamorphosing into a machine shop and the old-time blacksmith' is becoming a mechanic. But the horse had his day. It was a gay life while it lasted. All dolled up in shining, silver mounted harness, he used to ap pear on Omaha streets drawing,the highly-polished . equipages which in those uncivilized days were con sidered "very much so." Usually on tffhse occasions he appeared "en team," sometimes "en YOU CANT EVEN TRUST CROOK. By Ed Streetef.' Dear Sun: v The town: is all upset over the robbery of Squire Freeman's house. Ira sending you a cuttrn from the Weakly Trumpet givin an account of the affair. They left out two colyums of ' personals to' print it which was half a colyum more than they ever gave the war. That shows how worked op they are. The whole thing come about Milford with Mrs. Freeman an Pooch Frisbee's wife to take in he annual meet of the W. C T. U. The night they left I aked the Squire an Pooch over fer a friendly game of cards. Long about one o'clock the Squire says he had a suspishun where there was a num ber of 275 plus what ought to be seized in the name of the law if anybody had the gumshun to go an seize em. Bein ahead I offered to go. So Squire discribes the place which warent no more than his own ice box. I got an old gunny sack from the seller an started fer his house. The Squire had forgot to give me his door key but instead of goflr back fer it I let myself through one of 4he front windows an turned on the light. After I got through bein blinded I seen a fellow standin across the room pointin a gosh darn pistel right at me. "Look here," say I, not stoppin to find out who he was. "Aint jwu got no more sense than to pomt those things. That's the way the accidents happen." " Well, sir, he looked at me a minit, then, he lowered the contrapshun an started laughin. it tandem." Perched on a' seat jv off the end of his tail (the horse' i was a uniformed, top-hatted driv who "guided the conveyance aboi for the benefit of the topmost oi ( the elite. The 'turnout" some times was further augmented by an t atiffnct and imnrpQQiv uniformed I o v --1 - footman in rear. Somewhat later there came the more middle class surrey and the j, racy rubber-tired, wire-wheeled buggy. The carriage and surreys ' now and then were proudly em- . blazoned, with the family coat of ; arms, either inherited or "adopted." And the Girls Watched. The buggies, though, were the snappy, "chummy roadsters" of the highways. They came in as sorted colors, with more or less fancy upholstering and a choice of wooden orwire wheels. Those were the days when vil- t lage correspondents sent in to county seat newspapers items like these: Letters Prom. Home-Made- Father "If that don't beat all," says he. "I thought you was, the old moss back what-ewned this place. ' Now aint that luck that we should go an pick out the same place on the same inght Blowedif it aint dis couragin," he says. "Thats what comes of havin no sistim in this business." He had a bag over his shoulder just like me. He set it on the dinia room table. 1'Well," says he, thoughtful like, "the owner of this place is out shoot in penny ante with some other old ikin eaters. I don't spese he'll be back til he's morgaged the old farm. So now your here I guess we might's well act social an split things up." "I'm .a bit of a socialist," says he. like we was havin a chat in some body's office. "I believe in dividin things un fair like." Fity-fifty. So saying, he began making two piles out of the Squires hest eatin utinsils. I seen how the wind blowed an figgered I'd be dots a big ger favor fer the Squire by savin half his stuff an a whole skin than by r jir-in a fuss an losin both So we split everythin there was worth tak in which didn't mount up to a stag gerin load tween you an me. The young fcllow insisted on my gettin rry share of everything. "I aint'never cheated nobody yet an I aint goin to begin now," says he, breakin an old fork of theoquires in two. ' Havin finishea the down stairs he sjiys he always has a bit of vittels about this tiirc an hopes I'll join him. We found the beer an some cold meat. m He was an ambishus cuss. Claimed the troubel with the world- was-that people didn't care what kind of a job 'Vorld Do Move'Thei Say and These Last Fev Yea rs Have Beeri-feord Breakers. Stile$ in Everi lh1ndChan.de asRcipidliA as wbmetfs Uats . J- (TV TWS WAS QUITE THE 'THING A ' FEW SHORT YEARS AGO Wt HE TINKER! lurm AnrartOPTrVGk nun wnuviNuiw AND MAGNETOS NOW "Ed .Perkins has become the proud owner of a new red box bug gy. v Look out, girls 1" "Wallie Wimpler was seen sport ing his new rubber-tired road out fit in the Lewis Creek neighbor hood fast Sunday eve.! Don't be surprised at news of an engage ment from this neck of the woods they iturned out. His idear was al- ways to do the best he could an not to shy at hard work. "Theres lots of first class crooks," NAn locked him Ft r V4 ill soon. I There were those, it is true, who touted the superiority of the-phae-ton, declaiming it as nore com fortable and dignified." When they began o talk like that, though, the wise ones figured the courtship had progressed a long way. It was undisputed that the he says, "that gets lazy after they've made a little money. I aint got no use fer a fellow, though, that lies in bed after midnight. in' quick a icaL" 1 kf'Vil lA'rtiWnr TUE TIlRtUER, OF BOYHOOD DAYS 16 JUST PART OF THE SCRAP HEAP NOW saw TTCAME AND TWA5 SEEN. AND IT CONQUERED BUTJT HAS. A tt -CYLINDER. BROTHER NOW - bu&gy Jhad "the class." But it couldn't compete as an aid to romance with the more" ef fete and "up-to-snuff" motor caf, not even with those one-lung and two-lung, curred-dash affairs which appeared first as the par excellence and top-notch t perfec tion of the auto builder. "The Thirst for Speed." The owners of those pioneer autos ' had their troubles, to be sure, but the chug-chug cars cap- tured road honors from the h-and-b with hardly a struggle! They de veloped sneezes, coughs and inter nal complaints unknown to the modern jnotor, but they bowled along with bursts of speed that were joyously exhilarating to a horse-and-buggy populace. Run ning out of gasoline along a coun- - try road in those days meant "hooking" a ride back to town but minor discomforts were for gotten in what some people de cried as the "thirst for speed at IS miles an hour. So, he who would a-wooing go fa the face of competition that was eeu began to think in terms of cylinders instead of pedigrees and to " His Sdn After we got through eatin he sug gested we take a look upstairs. He opened the Squire's desk with a Lunch of keys an told me to go through that while he leoked over .the old fool's clithes. When we'd got through, all we could find worth takin was a few old suits of clothes, some brick-a-brack, an old clock that wouldn't run, and a $1.90. We flipped up to see who'd take the money and who'd take the rest of the stuff. I won the money, thereby savin the squire a good bit - The less we found the madder the young fellow got He says it was just like Ihese rich folks to take an advantage of a poor man. Then he allows we'd rua the rest of the house quick an call it a night an the squire could blow an bust fore he'd come her(e again. .' JOutside the squire's bedroom was along hall with two doors in the middle, one on each fide. Right there ah 'idear began churnin round in mv mind. "You go in there." says I, "an 111 go in here. An we'll take a sportin chance on which draw the best." That seemed to please him right well. He says it was a pleasure to work with a fellow that was a gen tleman an not Alw ays tryin to grab everything he could lay his hands on. Telephone No Use. "I felt kinda cheap when he talked 'like that. I opened my door an he opened hisen. An as he started to go in I gave him a push an locked him in quick as scat. ' I didn't stop to use the telephone. Sarah Marcy is night operator now an they say she sleeps so loud she can't hear the bell ring. I tkun out T V 1 1 1KB i XV' V ye 4 "hands high." The .horse became passe, outre andya "dead one" in romance. In the wake tt horseless court ship there followed a lot of other horseless things, until now Omaha and Douglas county have, almost horseless streets and roads. That situation has brought its "prob lems," too. I , The sons of he citizens whose slogan was "more hitching racks" in the old days, plead indignantly for morCparkini; space on down town streets. The crowded livery stables of a few "years back have been supplanted "by the overflow ing garages of 1920, the filling station has -taken the place ofthe old watering trough, and the tire shop is as. humming with industry as the old-time blacksmith's forge. Take Place of Sleigha. These are by means all of the changes wrought in Omaha by the 20 years' fugit of tempus. F'rinstance, the automobile seems to have obliterated not only the phaeton, buggy, surrey and carriage, but also the sleighs that used to jangle so blithely o'er the wintry snow. Maybe it doesn't the parlor window an started home. Then thought, "There may be a window in that room," thinks I. An back I went to look, but there w asn't one nowheres near it. After that I raced home like all the devils in Paducah Center was ridin on my heels. When the boys found I wasn't jokin they all come arunnin. Pooch stoppin at his house fer his shot gun. When we got to the Squire's house everything was as quiet as a room where they're readin a will. I led em upstairs n pointed to the door where I had the fellow locked up. The Squire looked at me like I'd gone crazy. "What in the name of this, that an tother," says he, "did you lock him in there for." "HushUp," says I, "Do you want a bullet through you?," .Then the Squire unlocks the door as bold as all outdoors. An while we was duckin he walked right through it an down the back stairs. I'll stop here to explain that the fellow had escaped by walkin down the back stairs an but the kitchen window. An I'll add that on the way out he had the nerve' to stop an get my share of the Squire's val uabels what I'd left in the front hall. s Which goes to show that there aint no tellin what these fellows will be up to. Your mother was very interested till she got wonderin what I was do in in the Squire's house. There aint been no dealin with her since. But it's astonishin how smart these fellows is. You can't trust nobody, yours cinkaly Amos H. Amesby Fath. (Copyrlwht, me, by th Bll BradlcaU. InaJ FINESBE?ilR "in snow as much as ft used to. Mayo the white stuff doesn't stick at long to asphalt and brick as frozen dirt roads. Anyhow, sleighs seera to haT "gone out" When a man men tions a "sleigh ride" nowadays they usually put him down for a cocaine "dope." Children of the next generation probably will think a slefgh bell was a signal for killing, or something of that sort f Those same children won't haye the faintest idea,' either, what a horse-drawn steam fire engine looks like, unless they happen to dig up photographs out of the past or visit a museum to gaze upon that once common appa-ratus- Many Are the Causes. No horse-drawn fire apparatus has appeareij on Omaha i streets for mere than two years. Motor ' trucks have come and he old time fire( horses are no more. Steam fire engines disappeared at the Tame time. They're' using gasoline motors now, instead. A "combination of causes," gar the oldtimers, is to blame for the , changed appearance- of Omaha streets. The eighteenth amendment is one of them. It drove from the highways and byways the once familiar brewery wagon, which made its regular and frequent journeys to saloon portals and through the alleys of residence districts. Don't see 'em any more. The bootleggers are com pelled by certain exigencies to use more discretion. Not Here Anymore. And what of the changes the shifting edicts of style have wrought? Where are the tight trousers of yesteryear, donned with eclat and worn in trepidation and fear? And where the big sleeves and the long skirts in which Omaha femininity once dis ported? 'Passe, gone, "dead stuff." Probably there are a lot of other skeletons that might-be dug tip. There's a certain mystery about bleached bones that "doesn't cling to flesh-covered ones. Who, for instance, ever saw his own bleached bones? A 4,000-year-old Eg'pitian mummy 'that never sneaked onto page one of a hieroglyphic can arouse both in terest and envy among a hard working assemblage of archaeol ogists. Can't Look Back. ( But ghouling has its limits. A post-mortem never won a jack-oot and looking back has its disadvantages as a habit "Eyes rear" are too apt to put their owner in a class with last jeaxa calendar,