Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 06, 1921, Page 14, Image 14

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. JANUARY 6. 1921
14
THE GUMPS-
Drawn for The Bee by Sidney Smith.
CopvrisM, Jfl"0. Chicago Viiliui e C.vun
cicty will help. If there are charit
able organizations in the place, an
acquaintance with their work will
also help.
An artificial fly for fishermen in
vented by a Missouriati has detacha
ble wings to enable its' color to be
changed.
class WILL TELL
Parents Problems
I0HCUE I
STMmN6 OFF IN
SHAPE- JDVT
PHOMED TUAT vu
CAR WM ARRV.t
FROtA AUSTRALIA.
AND HE VWfc
"StNWNG VY OUT-
tu,vy He has
A?RAGP TOR A
smc dinner
AMP XlCKCTS RR
TfC GSANP OPERA.
How can boys and girls of high
school age be led to help in charit
able work, especially in that made
necessary by the war?
Mem bership in t lie Red Cros s so-
NEIGHBOR
IK THE
&LOOC
HAC A FLASH
MIN ACTfcP
BUT ANDY
CeASBEpTHE
VJHDIE SHOW
SHAKING
FOOTMAN
AJ4 HAN&IMQ
Hi A.
PHOTOPLAYS.
riiOTori.AYS.
K . :
Seuen Daus, Startina Sunday, Jan. 9th
AT THE
lis rj i -ocT""!r ll l
A.H.Blank lif
S:
THE OJfcTAlN Sot
UP OH TrtE
FRST ACT OF
THETALEOF
PETER
mm
BTARIHUK oCOTT oAlLtl
Passing the Mat.
After giving all they happened to
c!iave in their pocketbooks, Mr. Rab
bit and Mr. Woodchuck began to
' pass their hats to take up the collec
tion for the poor boy that Fet?r
Mink had been telling them about.
And all the people who had come
to hear Peter's lecture began to dig
.down info their pockets.
"Thrt's right !" Teter cried. "Give
,'Wh'Sre are you going V Mr.
Babbit asked him.
i
- what you can! Of course, I di't
. expect the poor people to give as
- much as the rich."
iThat made everybody decide that
he would give all he had with him.
" and nuny people wished they had
: brought more. Besides, no one
wanted to be thought , stingy, like
Uncle Jerry Chuck, who had hurried
away as soon as he suspected that
there was going to be a collection.
When Mr. Rabbit and llr. YVond-
chuck had passed their hats to every
person present, their hats were filled
. to the brim. And they marched
proudly up to the stump where Feter
Mink still stood.
Fetcr jumped down to the ground.
'.'Keep your seats, everybody!" he
v called. '!The next thing to be done
i7- to count this money. And I vi!l
do that myself." So" Peter picked'
up the two hats and started away.
"Where are you going?"' Mr. Rab
bit asked him.
"Just a little way into the woods,"
taid retcr. Its so noisy here, wit If
a!l this talking, that I might make
"We'll go with you and help you,"
Mr. Rabbit told hhn. "
"Oh, you don't need to do that,"
iaid Peter Mink.
"One of those hats is mine," he
; remarked. "And wherever it goes,
T em tftn " Ani-1 In. KprkrnfH
Mr. Woodchuck to follow.
Well, Peter Mjnk didn't like that
. very well. You "see, he had planned
to go into the woods aione with the
money. And nobody likes to have
his plans upset. But all three went
into a thicket of elderberry bushes
and counted the money.
"I thought there was more,"
, Peter said. "Maybe we dropped
some of the money. You and Mr.
Woodchuck had better go back and
see if you can find any," he told Mr.
- Uabbil.
But Mr. Rabbit said that they
could just as well all go back to
Rether and search along the ground
as they went
"All right!" said Peter' Mink.
"We'll leave these hatfuls right here
for a while."
But Mr. Rabbit said he didn't
; think that would be a .safe thing to
da So he picked up one hatful,
and toid Mr. Woodchuck to carry
the other.
eter Mink didn't like that at all.
Uat there was nothing he cou'd say.
j So. they all went back together to
Jieople were still waiting. And they
found no more money, cither.
Mr. Rabbit jumped up on the
stump where Peter had stood and
. talked.
"The question is." he said, "who
i is goinp to take charge of all this
." money?"
. "I am!" said Peter Mink.
But Mr. Rabbit said "he didn't
think that would be safe.
"You have no home, you know,"
' he told Peter. "And you can't very
well' carry the money about with
'you. I must have my hat back; and
no doubt Mr. Woodchuck will want
his. too."
Mr. Woodchuck nodded his head.
He certainly did want his hat. It
was the best one he had.
- "I would suggest" said Mr. Rab
bit then "I would suggest that I
take one hatful home with me, and
that Mr. Woodchuck take the other
to his house. Then we'll each have
. our hats; and the money will be per
fectly safe."
"That's a pood idea!" Peter Mink
said. "The only trouble with it is
that it won't do at all. For you
and Mr. Woodchuck don't know the
poor boy. So how could you ever
give him the money?"
Everybody said that was so.
rThis. Peter Mjnk is. certainly a
More Truth
By JAMES J.
CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
Of course we don't exadtly. know
Who dug the tulips up;
If Ave had never found the hoe
We might suspect the pup.
We were not there when it was done,
No witnesses were nigh;
The neighbor's naughty little son
Has proved an alibi. '
But in our eager quest for clues
We've gained a little light,
For Tommy cleaned and shined his shoes
When he came in tonight.
, We don't know where the jelly went
That Mother made today,
Or where the jam is that she meant
To cool and stqre away.
Although we do not trust the cat
As much as we could wish,
We know that she would not do that
For jam is not her dish.
But in developing our case,
As great detectives do,
. We find that Polly washed her face
When no one' told her to. '
We have not yet run down the thief
Who took a whole mince pie,
But it is our profound belief
That he is still hard by.
We haven't tracked him to his lair,
Or tried to trace the route
He followed, when with stealthy care
, He bore away his loot.
But we are sure that he'll be found
Together with his spoil,
For little Dick is hunting 'round
To find the castor oil!
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH
If we were President de Valera we'd be perfectly satisfied with one
term
IN FACT, THEY'RE SLOWING DOWN
i The higher rates that the railroads intend to install are not ligher
rates of speed. !
STULTIFYING HIMSELF
Mr. Bryan insists on a single standard of morals, yet he spent the
best years ef his life arguing for a double standard 6f money.
(Copyright, 1921, By the Bell Syndicate, Itjc.)
bright young fellow," people told
one another.
Mr. Rabbit looked puzzled.
"What do you suggest, then?" he
asked Peter.
Peter Mink smiled. He seemed
pleased, for one reason or another.
"This stump," he said, "is hollow.
As you can all see, there's a small
hole in it. We can put the money
in there and nobody can get it out.
It will be the same as in a bank.
"I know I can't get through thai
hole," he said. "But what about
you, young fellow?" he asked Peter.
"Oh, I can't squeeze through such
a small hole as this," said Peter.
"See!" He pushed his nose part
way through the hole. And there
his head seemed to stick. He could
"nave squirmed through if he h:ul
really tried. But nobody else
seemed to know it.
"But how is the poor boy ever go
ing to get his money?" Mr. Rab
bit inquired.
"Oh, he's very slim," Peter Mink
said. "He can get inside the
stump. Don't you worry about
him!"
Everybody seemed satisfied. So
they dropped the money through
the hole.
And then Mr. Rabbit said:
"When are you going to bring the
poor boy to get the money?"
"Tomorrow night would be a
good time," Peter Mink said. "Would
you all like to come here tomorrov
right at this same hour?"
And everybody said, "Yes!"
(Copyright, Growet 4 Dunlap.)
Where It Started
HOCKEY. !
Field hockey is an ancient game, i
played by primitive peoples. The 1
earliest record of the jjame is en an i
altar-pot in the Copenhagen National
museum, dated 1300 A. J)., showing;
men playing with curved stick and i
Bowen's Lower Price
FURNITURE SALE
now effective in every
department of this store.
Costs and profits are not
thought of in the new
price markings for this
sale, giving you bargain
opportunities such as
very seldom present
themselves.
Advertisement
Than Poetry
MONTAGUE '
a ball. Ice hockey did not gain in
popularity till later. It is a develop
ment of the boys' game of "shinny."
The first ice hockey clubs were the
McGill university and Victoria clubs
These played at Montreal, Can., in
1881.
Copyright. 1921 by H'hwler Syndicate, Inc.
Colombia is looked upon by
prominent geologists as a promising
field for the exploitation of petrol
eum resources.
AMISKMK.NTS.
Tonight
All
Week
Mats. Wed & Sat.
The World's Most Famous Production,
CHU CHIN CHOW
14 Big Scenes 300 People
Curtain Evenings, 8:00; Mats., 2 p. m.
Evenings, $1 to $3.50; Mat., $1 to $3
WEEK COM. NEXT MONDAY
Mats. Wed. and Sat.
The Bohemians, Inc., Announce
A Revtisical Comedy of New York's
Latin Quartier
ORIGINAL GREENWICH VILLAGE
THEATER CO.
James Watts, Ted Lewis. "Jazz King;"
AI Herman, Sylvia Jason, Verna Gor
don, Hickey Bros., and the
20 FAMOUS ARTISTS' MODELS
Nights, $1.00 to $3.00; Wed. Mat., SOc
to $2.00; Sat. Mat., $1 to $2.50
Matinee Daily, 2:15. Every Night, 8:15
"VARIETIES OF 1920," with Richman
and Waldron 4 Co.; GLENN & JEN
KINS; Nate Leipzig; Alfred Latell; Sab
bott 4 Brooks; Weadick -4 LaDue;
Willie Hale 4 Bros.; Topics of the Day,
Kinograms.
Mais., 15c to 50; Some 75c and $1.00;
Sat. and Sunday Nights, 15c to $1.25.
EMPRESS
NEW
SHOW
TODAY
ELLIS NOWLIN TROUPE, "Merry
Monarch! of the Sawdust Arena."
THREE CHUMS in "A Few Moments
at the Club." CHARLES KENNA, "The
Street Baker." MARCO 4 CO., "Come
dy Magician.
Photoplay Attraction.
"HER UNWILLING HUSBAND,"
Featuring Blanche Sweet.
Fatty Arbuckle Comedy. Fox News.
"OMAHA'S FUN CENTER"
Daily Mat., 15c to 7Bc
INites, 25c to $1.25
ir.V.4FlflSHLlGKTS Or 122C K
with -shorty" McAllister 4 harry
"RIB" SHANNON. A Fast-Moving Whirl
wind of Joy and Happiness. Brand New
All the Way. Unusual Cast and Dancy,
Prancy Beauty Chorus.
LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS
Bit, Hal. 4 YVk.; Ltn Hoill and Uls Dim Boon.
1
I--. r ,.
.1
Romance in Origin
Of Superstitions
By H. IRVING KING.
Spilling the Salt.
The superstition that it is bad
luck to upset the salt at table is
sometimes said to have originated
from Leornado da Vinci's picture
of the Last Supper, in which Judas
Iscariot is represented as overset
ting the salt-cellar. But the super
stition is much older than that.
In ancient times salt was a com
paratively scarce commodity; fre
quently it was placed on the table
in one dish for all hands and just
as a dinner guest of today would
feel that he was "playing in hard
luck" if he accidentally broke a
Sevres plate, so would one of the
ancients feel about accidentally over
turning the salt-cellar. Besides, as
the ancients regarded salt ad an em
blem of redemptive power, it was
not unnatural that they should have
looked upon the spilling of it as an
evil omen.
The custom of throwing a pinch
of the spilled salt over the left
shoulder three times to break the
"hoodoo" is clearly a pagan survival
of the times when salt was one of
the propitiatory Offerings made to
the infernal gods who sent bad luck.
Da Vinci undoubtedly had m mind
the ancient superstition regarding
spilled salt when he introduced the
overturned salt-cellar into his great
picture.
Copyright, 1920, hy MrClure Nowspapsr
i Syndicate.
PHOTOPLAYS.
Now Playing
LYTELL
IN
Alio
The Serious Funmaker,
BUSTER
KEATON
In Hit Latcit
"The Scarecrow"
A drama of wives who never know,
husbands who never tell, and women
who never forget. Based on Sir Arthur
Wing Pinero's story, "The Profligate."
Showing "High and Dry" Comedy
RIALTO SYMPHONY PLAYERS
Offering the overture. ."Mile Modiste"
HARRY BRAER, Conductor
J. K. JOHNSON, Organist
LAST TIMES TODAY
LON CHANEY
in the picture that created such
a big sensation in Omaha.
THE PENALTY"
Muse Comedy
"HE LAUGHS. LAST"
ERT
$?PRICE
00M
I'HOTOI'LATS.
J
I Now Playing
7)he Moiiej
MONEY
Bought Her Gown
and Diamonds.
MONEY
Bought Her Soul.
"Where a drug on the market is
a turned into gold,
IT 11CI V .11 D U ..... .1 taac tffrJ
turn flesh into mould."
And what she cot, was but a mite,
for what she gave.
Then came the awakeninjr. She
found the gold that lured her to , be
but tinsel, and the man "like all men."
Her. dreams were broken hubbies. Do
men who cTiange the souls of weak
men and women into money, pay the
price like their victims?
See this powerful play minclinK pathos
and climax with laughter and action.
A drama that will wring the heart of
every woman and jarr the mind of every
man. 1
Special Prologue
"THE DANCE
OF BUDDHA"
Enid Bennett
in
"SILK
HOSIERY"
and
HAROLD LLOYD
In His Latest and Best Comedy
"Number Please?
CAFE
JVleals Served atAll Hours
Dinner and Supper
Luncheonettes Daily
Biggest and Best Spring
Dance Floor in the City
SLATER'S SOUTHERN
JAZZ BAND
Jack Connors, Mgr.
BEATTY'S
Co-Operative
Cafeterias
Pay Dividends to Those Who
Do the Work
PHOTOPLAYS.
OheGftPliotopla)
'MADAME
Will be shown at the
Sun Theatre
-AT-
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES.
$25.00 FREE!1
to ids man, woman, or child id Omabt
who tvndfi in the flrt correct answer tit'
the puule t!mv. What do the Initiate'
below stand for?
R. N. W. IYI. P.
rfnilP1 (l,al rour answer oni.l Satur-J-'v-'1'
day. January 8th. Address
Mm to Moon Thester The J-S will ha
awarded from the stage of the Mooa. The
famena production. "OCT OF' TUB
SNOWS," Kill lie nhown for a week mart
in Sunday, January Ola. and H will r
eal the correct answer to the ouwle.
After ypu ha?e een the picture too will
know ponitltclj t nether or not yoa matlfd
the correct answer The name of the win
ner will he announced at every show dur
n he week
Onward Omala
The Treat of the Season
BIG CHARITY BALL
For the Benefit of
Father Flanagan's
BOYS' HOME
numciPAL
AUDITORIUM
Arranged by the good Fathers and Mothers of Omaha, in
recognition of Omaha's most constructive work of clothing and
educating the poor little waifs of every creed, color and nationality
Minstrel Show
by--
Father Flanagan's Boys
Something That You
SHOULD NOT MISS
Fun for AllOld and Young
MINSTREL SHOW
AT 8:00 P. tt.
The Sensation ot New lork and Chicago
Basil King's
Tremendously Powerful Drama of the Unseen World
EartKbouTid
PRODUCED BY GOLDWYN PICTURES CORPORATION
"
It Crosses the Borderline Into
the Unknown
"Earthbound" is a vivid do
mestic drama of love and
marriage, sin and passion,
ideals and frailties, weak
ness and forgiveness.
"No Qod-No Sin
1 "No, Future Life
was the creed that bound
four lives together and tore
them apart between the
fires of loyalty and passion.
WHAT WAS THE AN
SWER FROM THE
OTHER SIDE OF THE
VEIL?
'EARTHBOUND
Will Hold You
SPELLBOUND
Tickets $1.00
Six w eeks in Chicago at
the Playhouse, all seats
i
at $1.00 and absolute l
capacity. iU
Three weeks in New ft
York at the AstorThea-
ter with admission
prices up to $2.00. jf
i
73,125 admissions first
week at the Capitol
Theater, New York a
world' record.
Dan Desdunes
and His Famous
Jazz Band
Will Provide the Music
DANCING STARTS
AT 8:45 P. M.
!
i