Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 26, 1921, Page 7, Image 7
TIIK BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 2G. 1921. ''if- Noted Cancer ecialis't to ncaklin Omaha Sp iJevclopmcnls in Effecting Cure of Disease to Be Dis cussed at Public Meeting During Clinical Congress. One public meeting which will br lcld during the Clinical CoiiRress of American Surgeons of the Nebras ka section will take place Thursday night, March 3, at the City auditor ium. Dr. Francis Carter Wood, noted cancer specialist, will lecture. Dr. Wood is head of the Crocker Institute of New York, an institu tion eqdowed l'y a rich westerner for the express purpose of investf .li.itiiitf and conducting work regard in " cancers. Methods ' discovered toward ef fecting a cure-through years of re-M-arch; the treatment of cancer with radjutn. and many' other phases will be described by Dr. Wood. Should Attend Meeting. Dr. D. T, (Juigley, Omaha spe cialist said yesterday; "Every man and woman in Oma ha should attend this public tnect inv; and hear Dr. Wood. He will tell them things they qught to know about this menace to the lives of men and women. r "More thu; lOfl.000 persons,- men and women, die each caf from can cer. . ' , "Of these, 80,000 (hi? because they have not had the proper medical advice and because they have neg lected themselves through ignorance. Displays Radium at Club. " The remaining 2(1,1)00 die because their trouble is seated in an internal organ and difficult to treat until too late." ' t the Mwanis club luncheon yes terday noon Dr. D. T. Quigley dis playe'd $9,000 worth of radium two tubes containing two wee specks of the precious metal about the size of a pen point. Then he related the history of the discovery of the radium and for what it is now used, t,.- ; lie told how it i? applied to cure cancer, and gave an interesting dis ' cussioii of cancerous disease; London Mad Over "Omaha Waltz' Dreamy, "Peppy," Soothing, Jazzy Melody, Which Captured "Nanny" of EnglisH Metropolis, Played for First Time at Kiwanis Club Here. Photos of Pair . Here Identified By Canadian y S:iir Baa-aa-by! London's mad waltz mad. And the great British metropolis is wild over, the "Omaha Waltz." Ever hear it?- No?" Well it's dreamy it's peppy it's soothing it's jzzy! . And it wa lIayed in . Omaha the city for which it's named for the first time yesterday at the meet ing of thc Kiwa.iis club in the Rome hotel. ' ' , In every niuie hall, daitcc hall, theater, jazz palace in London, the Pmaha waltz . resigns supreme jut now. ;, . . So contend.-? Dr. N. C. Mercer of Omaha and London who wrote a It'itr about the music to David Cole of the David Cole Creamery com pany. .,;'. The Omaha valtz was written by Horatio Nicholls. s ' - Who he is, no one in Omaha, is dead sure. , While in London last summed as u delegate to the international con vention the Chatn'bcr of Com merce, Cole met Joseph, Baldrige, Dr. W, O. Bridges and Dr. Mercer. When Dr. Mercer came to Omaha last fall, he attended a luncheon of the Kiwanis club as the gU;t of Owner t( Cole and was especially impressed g Compton a So whejt he ran across the Oma ha ftaltjz taking London by storm, he jazzed, oft a letter to his friend Cole and, enclosed a copy of the music. w On he cover if shown a dazzling woman, classically draped, with her arms outstretched cntreatitigly, be seechingly. She is standing on the top of a high -hill, and ai her feet flows th majestic river purported to be Luii ; don's idea of the. "Big Muddy." I Woman Is Draped in Gray. j The figure of -the woman is in gra.v. winie tin:-, background is in blue to represent a clear and beatiti tul moonlight night, with the heav ens dotted by stars and planets. Along the river bank at her feet pre trees, many trees, but England lias auother queer i'dca there, for most, of Jhe trees arc evergreens and firs o'f Jhit kind that grow on the mountains, '-,. But tilt "picture is 'attractive ami the song is even -nSore" so; it is, grip ping, thrilling and dreamy. The Kiwanis orchestra played it this noon at the meeting, and the crowded dining hall was filled with the chords as they 'swung into' the "peppy" strains and back into the dream' waltA Wireless Reports on . Weather Conditions Big Help to Farmers Wife Doesn't Favor Cave Man Tactics Men Charged With Tl?ci t Of Tobacco Bound Over Roy Slack, Fred Pledge, Tom Mur phy and Carl Rose, arrested recent ly, charged with breaking and enter irg and stealing cigars and cigarets, were held to the district court when arraigned in nolicc court yesterday morning. Their bonds have been fixed at $1,000. Leo Lou, restaurant proprietor, 613 North . Twentieth street, and Rosario Caniglio, 1525 South Seventh street, also were hound over, charged with receiving stolen property. No less than a quarter of a million women in this country are operating their own automobiles. Weather repprts by wireless are i proving highly helpful to ' ranchers i in the far west and inland villages, according to letters received daily ' that her l.v l V Rniiine l.i.-il mrlmrnln. ! JalllCS F gist- "Out here where we have had no means of getting daily weather re ports, your messages areconjing in fine," writes Frank Fcrrec, rancher at Lew-anna, Neb., an inland village 200 miles northwest -of Omaha. , "The government did a. mighty fine thing when it started wireless re ports of weather," the letter contin ues. "Ranchers in this part of the country are installing wireless sets. Reports of coming storms and bliz zards will save farmers' thousands of dollars." ; The air mail service co-operates with the local weather bureau in transmitting daily forecasts of the weather. . O. D. Mitchell, wireless operator p.t the Omaha station, sends out the messages every morning. , Superintendent to Speak Pawnee City, Neb., Feb. -25. (Special.) Dr. A. O. Hinsou. dis trict superintendent of the Methodist church, will address the local Ep worth league here Sunday. CaVe man tactics won't go will; modern, intelligent girls. This was proven yesterday in District Judge A. C. Wakcley's court when tM?tln Anderson, teacher in South High school, testified hi a suit for divorce handsome,' blond husbmd. tried them on her. She alleged he had dragged her aaound their apartment by her hair She admitted to having uittcn him in "self-defense." Anderson is employed, by the Great -Western Insurance company. After marriage his wife ' continued teaching while Anderson was study ing at Crcighton. Later' he left school and ' neighbors V say NJrs. Anderson sometimes geew impatient at her husband's lack of education. Move Under Way to Put Dr. Gilford in Council The 'Committee of 5,000 will ma1,t, an effort to induce Dr. Harold Gif ford to file as a candidate for city commissioner. . The matterwvas discussed yester day at a meeting of the executive committee of this organization. A general 'meeting will be held next Tliursdav night when - candi date will be discussed ?nd probably a ticket will be promulgated. nd Pearson Two Men Wanted on Bogus f Check Charge. 1. Sair, K.-tlavuti. Sask., Canada, owner of one of the largest distil leries in Canada, identified pictures of Wiley Compton and Alex Pear son in the rogue's gallery at cen tral police station yesterday morning. The pair were arrested Thursday night as two of the 10 men wanted by Canadian officials on charges of passing bogus checks for $60,000 and tic theft of $2,000 worth of whfsky. Sair identified 10 other pictures in 'he gallery as men wanted in Cana da. Among them was that of jimmy Cosgrove, now in the low a peuitcn tiarv at Anamosa. la. detective sergeant representing .mad-tan government was with air. I lie detective reiuscu to give his name. "1 tell reporters nothing," Large. ,DUlillerv?t!f 11d; ?.? VH-,"f!luut,j"I;t! boys." t ' According to local detectives, the , whole case involving Tom Kelly,! . Hart Williams and . others will be i I cleared up in 24 hours. ( The bogus checks, it was reported esterday,' were not forged but were j cashier's checks on several of the many ilelunct banks or .ortn Dako ta. , These checks were distributed to the Omaha" rum runners by a man w ho represented himself to be a cash it r of a North Dakota bank. The banker, according to reports, was acknow ledged to be the head of the ring of runners operating in the great north middle-west section oi the L'nited Stales." He sold jhfse. cashier checks. to the rum runners at TO cents on the dol lar, and it the runners tc short on cash to,-uay for -u sufficient amount of the- checks, lie-w ould accommo date them by taking a portion of their contraband i(iior- in part p.i uient. . ' f It is said Canadian officers hope to identify him .through the arrest of Tom Kelly, for whom the officials are now looking. Omaha Divor Licensed to Wed Iionuhl . Pain son and Mrs. Khic Mailtos Ohtaiu Mar riage Papers at Kansas City. w as iii l)iorce Court. llvnrc IVtltlono. Kill.-! l.dis a .uuis l.t-l". Mlnuio fhaiimai) Hulu-it A1h dim n. tioti support. I l.orelta Tlnil;l'i:on nutt!!il Thompson, cruplt.,. olive c'ox HffH't.. t John rruWty. Mii-Ih Jens?u :isnlli!t' Ncl '.luriHHi. i-rueliy. Art-lnp Soronson ntfuiuM Kuilipritie Soiens!!. i-ruplty. Uivur. 1 .Uplift C I' lit' 1 1 V . iiulty Mallory. fi- m Hurry Mallory, ikhi-pinnnrl. I la rmw from Jlrr i'Imi Kubftrt - llnriiuM-, Ronald M. Pateisoii and Mri M. Haines of Omaha were li i y.i ii i.i i i jt in I. nil .. v 1 1 ji.m i iihj , it was learned here through reports. -they are well known socially m Omaha and both were principals in sensational divorce cases in district court several months ago. I'atcrson was divorced in November, ll)l(. an it Mrs. Haines was divorced in Ji-.ne, 1920. I'atcrson 's proprietor of the Haines drug stores in the I'avton ho tel and at Fifteenth and Douglas streets. When sued for divorce. Haines iiiaigeti witu extreme cruelty. ; first wife was Itlmvhe. WteNi : n an. vi ho. when the decree I was' 4 .iwai de?lf, was allowed, SlO.OOOj ah- i imiy in imnithly paynieuts ofrl25. J Mrs. Haines was ioriucrly iif.twict' to tieoige Turner Haiuev .' ! Ili-Y Cluh Organixfd in i Randolph High Seliool ! Randolph. Nib., Feb. 2S-Spc- ; ii.il.) A lli-Y club was orgnwized the Randolph High school by ,- ensedjo K. Diehl. state w.ork seciVtury, ! who gave a short talk in explanation . of the ili-V cJub oiganuattoii- Twenty-eight boys have loincd. j i. A. A. C. P. to Meet ' J. K, Lynch of Lincoln, Ed. 1, Moriarty anil lsabbi Frederick, Cohn I will address a meeting of thj-:-Na- ' tional Association for the AdtJliee- ment of the Colored People M. the : Pilgrim ll.iptist church, Tmity- i liftb and ll.miillon streets, SlV)-y; afternoon at .V ' '" ,' . X. iMiOomeBThin'JsInNebrJsk $forttk(iving and a practical tribute to the dead i HE '.'Bipgest Thine" in Nebraska is the soldier bov the. one? who. ha offered his life upon the altar of his ..country. 'Make no , mistake about that! ? 1 . 1 .. f The soldiers will parade ill Omaha-Saturday. They are aslving the ' I'ebrasla legislature to give them a bonus:!' AVe are for it. AVc shall stajid ) hlong tlie side lines Saturday aird cheer the soldiers. Then -we shall boost;' for that form of bonus which shall in a practical way demonstrate the grati tude of Nebraska people. The boys are entitled to it and Nebraska should take front rank among the states that recognize their duty to their soldiers. "Tlierfc is nothing too good for the man who bares his breast to the foe. We ere ready to bear our share of the tax increase in order that Nebraska may do its duty toward its soldier boys." - " In war Nebraska has been famous for doing its part. In the Civil War, Nebraska then a territory gave to the Union a larger number of soldiers in proportion to population than any other state or territory. The First Nebraska was one of the best among the fighting regi- f '. ments. In General Grant's "Memoirs" you will read, the statement of. that line old warrior, to the -effect that at Donelson Thayer's Brigade o which the First Nebraska was an important part saved the day for the Union by charging at the right moment and, in the right way. . in the Spanish-American war Nebraska gave three regiments. All of them made good records. .' The i; "First Nebraska" the only one to reach foreign shores provided the lighting leaders in the Plulippines. Regi mental colors were torn into shreds as they floated above the dearNcbraska boys who fell eyery one of them with his face to the foe, ' ' . ' ' In the 'World War Nebraska1 gave three regiments and was prepared to give a fourth. Every, Nebraska regiment made a fine record. In addition Nebraska gave thousands of other soldiers. Many of these boys are buried io, foreign soil. They died as Nebraska soldier boys have' always died with face to the foe; and their souls go marching on in the memory, of the peo- , pie of Nebraska who 'build' the homes and pay the taxes. Nebraska is a richer state than many people know. The great .state s of Massachusetts owes Nebraska an even one million dollars borrowed money. ' Nebraska can afford to take the leadership in giving'' a practical bonus to ' her soldiers. , . It will be a good investment for Nebraska. It .will be a fitting recog-. nition for the soldiers. It will show that those who .represent Nebraska on, the plains of peace are just as brave- and big and noble as those who have . represented Nebraska en the battlefields of America and in' the blood-soaked trenches of the world. V , ; That's why we are heart and soul with the soldier boys. That's why v we lik the slogan, "Cheer the soldiers and boost the bonus." ; ' !: ICM Massive Brass y A Great - vou uvf" lill ' Iipi 111 f v .imlil" W1P- I- m-f. .. Till " . for J"u'..l'.9.incii. - ir- . mi"" - Hvt- wlnm Buffo '"? in i "2W fitii"':. -.1-ia'. 175 i'lrtint?r ,,.at the " 'tupltra.Vi C9nn" Jtnn L ".V'd. R 75 .AW- Cut in Hall for Tomorrow hoiiM-t imiiattnn la"''" ,T. specially priced Crib 'IlKl, vxio . . . ,J'o "'Hi. top 75 Sec TWsBargam The j on 7. VitkM,,... " ti, Hie h'. r!"'"itUrr iha" "ve aie advising you most emph.t.c.lly to ic de to come to Hartman s tomorrow. he article shown in this advertisement I e posU.ve roof of the fact that our pr.c have "etched bcdvoc!;. .And a you marvel, at the lowness of these 'prices Just remem ber that you can- ri. aif.n.. tilrn... ""'6 to,. 'ei(,l 785 Buy AH You Need on Easy Credit You Can't Beat this Bar gam . The Mi9 a,rtH r,ic of of uas.h insures imme A Year ,n ,0Ur-onS of the un n,f "a ,. - here V ,l iowll nere- t. tomorrow foi . Use Your Credit Kin in her thtvt "A Yejr nml a Halt to Jiy 19 th Hrttm a n Vnv." T vour credit and huy Una cabinet, nifl 11 amount of our purchase. and a Half to Fay is the Havtman W . ?t is the sensible, dignified' vay tc i M fumiture: Our. is a. convenient credit i stem Planned toid our cu-tomer. .n beautifying . their homes-H. i at our command without red tape or. '' ,iff nuestions. Asls -about , our plan to morrow when you come to investigate the wonderful bargain UseYour! CREDIT ...V Tear tJL linn ... -. To Nte tliis liming room , vour lioilif. U l W of soliil nr,K- --nia i r"'-lornert- iilonp pimi'le, Uisni'eJ lint-- rtnva" your freely at mm' . , 1U Use i edit llart- 1 TO: id! 01 Seven Piece Solid Oak Suite on Sab Saturday want to take aavaimib" - - tust as saou rinn't make a morrow if you j..noil nriee. The suite is finished in funded oak color. and is Special for Saturday Only liromonw mornins: nt 9 o'clock -wo iioicn rocKera on sale at . ,.onsl"era'tv, lower than former .in cosi or manufacfurlnir 11, ,. ' are In perfeet condition and becaune Ta"'i,yuiS ,imitcd ' p only ""li oers. , ono sent C. O. No nhono I. t,0ns ne ed"c- this yo. oak. .cjs "ition up. e" to f --"-e0. 75 Great Bargains . At ..the , Mid-Wiotcr CUarancn Sale at Hai t niaa's yon will finrl rug bargains bj-- the score' tf you want lo savp. money, don't fail to attrnrl this great sale. Here arc two of the bargains. 9x12 Royal Wilton Rugs UfiQ75. Thesa rugs are 'woven fioin Siado of materials Wiat insure Ion ear. anu satisfactory servn.-e. The ruga are r hown in new and in teresting patterns and are SKAM- l.tss Maple Rocker $75.: This tioilr roi.-ker is for eervica limit o wail-' s'Hnd the rigors of the wenthor. Seat . and ' bapfe are s.- made 'of i . w o ve ri rinh. .". Kranre is., built "Vf senutrin , ;,oiailo.,,r' Your vreait. Ti-eely.; JiitUUftl mum fitiaiL, t,. ' to 9x12 Wool Brussels Rugs Don t fail to Investigate this bni pain assortment, -of SKAM1.KSS rugs. If saving innney is an object to ypit. you are ceitainly given -a wonderful Opportunity toinonow at Hartmans IS Price Big Coiich Bargain itvut Suite LJJJ -lJ-i'vouro'.ltioUlns for sensatlo.ini bar-tilto..--ou will Do aura of i mUlng them man's. The Mid --Winter C Itira n v. Sale brings reductions of 20 to CO Ci on alt dread ers. The one Bliown Is a belily Buy It For m lias lrt mr.ed mirror and three ex t r a 1 1 7 nl drawer?. T!e member jo'l can buy It an credit. Tut a couch in vour home and evvy member of the familv will derive houis of cpnifort from yom thouBlitful purchase. The couch shown' U a beauty and at the sale mice It surely is a sensational bai- Rain. i- raine is nuiu oi buuu golden oak. Upholstered over oil tempered springs-with imitation Mack leather. Buy It on Easy Credit for' . ... in -"'. n ticr,- pile" so .,i in -";.n , see See Sunday Papers Columbia Records Sixteenth Between Harhey and Howard