Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 20, 1921, Page 12, Image 12

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    1?
THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1921.
11 A
w
E'PY.-T I ME. TALES
THE TALE OF
BOBBY 1
BOBOLINK
BY ARTHUa 3G0TT BAILEY
jr ...
Mr, M
tnirer of
he liked
rcma'nrd
us mus
CHAPTER V.
An Invitation.
cadowlark was a great ad-
Bobby Bobolink. Much as
to ing himself, he oflen
silent when Bobby's joy-
ic tinkiea over me grass-
5
'I'm afraid it will be difficult," he
said
tops in Farmer Green's meadow. And
as Mr. Meadowlark as listening to
on of Bobby's best songs one day
fin idea popped suddenly into his
head.. He liked this notion so well
that ' ll, flew straight across the
meadow to a thicket on the edge of
the- woods. And there in the under
growth he found Buddy Brown
Thrasher, who was exactly the per
son he was looking for.
''I've come to tell you about an
idea of mine. Mr. Meadowlark an
nounced. "It's about Bobby Bobo
link. You know he has come back
to spend the sununcr here in Fleas-
ant Valley. It seems to me he's in
better voicr than ever. And now
that he is quite grown up you know
he has a -wife--it seems to me that
we couldn't do better than invite him
to join the Pleasant Valtey Singing
society."
Mr. Meadowlark had explained all
this in a most eager manner. And
he couldn't help being a bit disap
pointed over the way Buddy Brown
Thrasher received it, He did not
seem at all excited. To tell the
truth, he was? a suspicious chap. He
never fell in quickly -with a new
plan, no matter what it might be.
And more than once he had made
matters somewhat difficult for the
Pleasant Valley Singing society. He
was hard to please. Being a very
brilliant singer himself, he -was never
v,hat you might call keen to take a
new member.
When Mr. Meadowlark had told
him about his idea Buddy Brown
Thrasher gave a sharp -whistle,
"Wheeu!" That was the only re
mark he made.
; "What's the matter?" Mr. Mead
owlark inquired. "Don't you like
iny scheme?"
"Oh! It's worth looking into, no
doubt," Buddy told him. "But I
can't say offhand whether it's a good
one or not. . . . Of course
Bobby. Bobolink -would have to pass
the test before we take him into
the singing society."
"If that's all that's troubling you,
cheer up!" Mr. Meadowlark cr;ed.
'For Bobby Bobolink can pass the
singing test as easily as flying."
"I hope so," Buddy Brown
Thrasher retorted. "I promise you
that I'll be present when Bobby
sings before the society. And if his
singing isn't what it ought to be.
you can depend on mc to know it."
Well, Mr. Meadowlark couldn't
object to that. So he told Buddy
Brown Thrasher that his promise
was fair enough. And then Mr.
Meadowlark hurried away to call on
other members of the Pleasant Val
ley Singing society and tell them
about his plan.
After he had seen and talked with
everyone, Mr. Meadowlark took it
upon himself to. go back to the
meadow, where he found Bobby
Bobolink still singing merrily. And
for once Mr. Meadowlark couldn't
wait for him to finish. For there
was no knowing when Bobby would
stop.
"You're invited," said Mr. Mead-
owlark, "to sing before the Pleasant
Valley Singing society. And if yon '
can pass the test you'll become a ;
member."
Bobby Bobolink was somewhat i
doubtful as he listened to Mr. Mead- j
Owlark's speech. j
"I'm afraid it will be difficult," he
said. '
"Oh. no!" Mr. Meadowlark as
sured him. "You can pass the test
easily enough."
. But Bobby Bobolink told him that
that wasn't what he meant.
. "I'm afraid," he explained,1 "my
wife may not-consent 1"
-r Copyright Grosset Dunlsp.
Dr Louglmdge Dead ' !
Dr. W. K. "Loughridge, 48, died at
1 2 yesterday afternoon at his home,
W17 California street. He came to
Nebraska from Pennsylvania in 1880.
and has practiced medicine here since
1913. He was a prominent Mason.
Surviving him are his wife, his moth
errand his brother, James. Funeral
arrangements have not been made.
o
The American
Legion
Presents
MARY JORDAN
World Famous
CONTRALTO
Brandeis Theater
May 24. Tickets at box
office Prices 50c to $2.00
- CONCERT
Firat Central
Congregational Church
36th and Haracy
Friday, May 20th, 1921
8:15 P. M.
Tickets $1.00
More Truth Than Poetry
-By JAMES J. MONTAGUE
Jewel, Flower, Color
Symbols for Today
VAMPING OF ANNABEL LEE.
(At To mitht hue wrltun It. If ba'd Bid ths morns In mind.)
It was many and many a year ago,
In a kingdom by the sea,
That a lady lived -whom you may know
By the name of Annabel Lee.
And that lady lived Vith no other thought
Than to vamp and be vamped by me.
I had a wife and a couple of kids,
And a husband, of course, had she;
But what were these trifling marital tics , ,
To tne or to Annabel Lee?
'The neighbors talked, and her husband raged,
But nothing at all cared we.
And this was the reason, that long ago,
In that kingdom by the sea,
I wasn't permitted to run away
With the beautiful Annabel Lee;
Because her furious husband came
And bore her away from me
And locked her up in her kitchenette ,
While he sought a divorce decree.
Now the loveliest lamps of the soulfulest vamps
Full often are.cast on me, ' ,
But never (as yet) have they made me forget
The beautiful Annabel Lee.
My pulse is a-throb as I sit here and sob.
But her hard-fisted husband is still on the job
In her kitchenette there by the sea t '
In her jail by the sounding sea!
By MILDRED MARSHALL,
THe diamond, the symbol of be
trothal, is today's talismanic stone.
The Greeks held ft sacred to Venus,
the goddess of .love, and believed that
when it was bestowed upon a loved
nrif ir was cnrfl tr hrinc haonincss
j and prosperity. According to Mar-
godus, it is a cure tor inanuy, dui
in modern' times this statement is
no) credited.
The natal stone of those born on
an anniversary of this date is the
turquoise. The ancients believed that
those who wore it were sure to have
many love affairs and to attract
scores of friends to themselves.
Today's color is siler blue, which,
when worn by a woman, is believed
to enhance her beauty.
The gardenia, symbolic" of youth
and beauty, is today's flower.
(Copyright, Wheeler SynrtloU, Inc.)
AMUSEMENfs.
KB
TODAY AND
TOMORROW
Matin Saturday
PRINCESS PLAYERS
in "Polly With a Past"
Exoallently Stagtd and Acted
Start, mat: Parlor, Bedroom
Mat. Me. an W?. ,nA Rath
HUM .".
Eva. 80c. 750. $1
Alt Next Wtek
Seatt New
TIMES CHANGE. .
When the Germans made the French dig in, they little thought that
the French would soon be making them dig up!
ASK AN EASY ONE.
The police commissioner of New York wants to know what to do with
two million dollars' worth of hootch he hai confiscated. We don t be
lieve he'll have to offer any prices in order to get an answer.
REASON FOR HOSTILITIES. ,
Maybe the Greeks havebeen buying rugs of some of those Turks.
(Copyright. 1911. by Ths Bell Syndicate. Ino.) :
Mat. Dally, 2:18: Every Night, 8ilS
WILL M CRESSY and BLANCHE
DAYNE: SHEILA TERRY; BERT
A BETTY WHEELER; MARION
WEEKS BARRON; Grace Doro;
Aah Hyama; Paul Nolan A Co.;
Manf A Snyder Topics ot the Day;
Pathe News. Matineea, 15c to 50c;
some 75c and 1.00; Sat. and Sun.
Nights, 18c to $1.25.
TWO
SHOWS
IN ONE
EMPRESS
THE VOLUNTEERS, a Muaical Novelty;
CHAS. LLOYD A CO., in "The Speed
ster;" JOHNSON A PARSONS, Present
ing "Jarx That' Jaw;" BELLE A BEN
SON, Song a and Artistic Dances. Photo
play Attraction "THE DAUGHTER
PAYS," Featuring Elaine Hammeratsin.
rnoTortAYS.
PHOTOPLAYS.
'MARY
PiCKFORD
in her latest production ,-
Through the
back door:
will radiate dladness in
others' hearts -DrinJin forth
tears to vafer the crop of
smiles and keep those self
same smiles blooming -an
attraction of unusual strerfh
full of happiness and good cheet
pofhefic apfieal sunshine and eta
Alia a Beautiful Scenic,
"IN DUTCH" .
Rlalto Symphony Players
Harry Brsder, Director
"It Happened in Norland"
Julius K. Johnson , "
' Premier Organist ' '
Playing "Make Believe"
A. ,
Paramount
Picture
THE real ro
mance of.
Anne Boleyn, the
eirl who traded
love for a throne.
. All in a poignant human
story, set in scenes that in
splendor and magnifi
cence have never been
approached. t "
Whole cities, cathedrals,
palaces, abbeys built for
its production ; 7,000 in
the cast, headedby Eu
rope's greatest emotional
actress. i
The great, awe-inspiring
work of Europe's great
est director.
mioii
All This Week at 11. 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9
Two Days More
MARY WILES
-nnp
mJUIiv
"The Little Clown"
Also Showing
FATTY ARBUCKLE
Tomorrow Matinee
PINK LEMOHADE
For the
"KIDDIES"
STARTS SUNDAY
BERT LYTEL
and-i
BUSTER
K EATON
TWO
DAYS
MORE
TODAY
and
Tomorrow
"The Hiss of Scandal"
STARTS SUNDAY
AND HER $100,000 DANCING LEGS
IN PERSON
III C0I1 JUIICTI0I1 WITH HER photoplay
(Passion Fruit
99
KRUG PARK
The Home of Refined Amusements and Picnics.
. ; . -xxxxxxxxxxxx
Dancing Every Evening and Sunday Afternoon
xxxxxxxxxxxx
Select Your Date for Outing and Picnics
Phone Walnut 5S80
Romance in Origin
Of Superstitions
By H. IRVING KINCj.
Company on Monday.
If ynu have company on Monday
you will have company every day
during the - .week. As perhaps you
know, for this superstition is gener
al throughout the L'nitcd "States. It
arises from that impulse in man, as
old as the race itself, to "seek for a
sign at the beginning: of any new
enterprise or the beginning of a new
epoch or specified division of time, of
"pierce the veil through which we
may not see." The savage seeks for
a sign from his medicine man be
fore setting out on the warpath, and
for this, when the Grecian licet lay
becalmed at Aulis ready to sail for
the plains of Troy, did Iphigenia see
around her the "stern black-beard:d
I'HOTOri.AY9.
s
Today and
Tomorrow
V
kings, waiting to see her die." And
tke Roman augurs sought not only
for a sign "when the eagles marched
to Rimini." but at stated intervals
forecast the welfare of the Roman
people.
A new enterprise, a new week,
nuist have a sign at its commence
ment. Though Sunday is really the
first day of the week in practice
we' regard Monday as the week's
beginning and something innate ia
ns makes us regard a happening at
the beginning of anything as prog
nostic. If you have company on
Monday it is "a sign' that you will
have company every day of th?
week.
In some sections of the'eountry
people say that if you have com
pany on Sunday not Monday you
will have, company the rest of the
week. These people might be called
the "strict constructionists."
(Copyright, 39:i. bv The McClura Xews
paprr Syndicate. )
Use Bee Want Ads for Result.
Do You Know the Bible?
The
First
Lesson !
What is woman's chief
aim in life? To charm
men !
In reply to loud hisses
we hasten to say this '
is only the creed of
a daring male, who
found a girls' school on
his hands and tried to
put it on its feet.
By teaching charm! To
fifty charmers! 'Nuff
sed! Come!
Jesse LLasky Presents
WMMl
OSEOE)
9he .
Charm School
CCQammowxlQkkrt
Saturday Matinee
Money
Grab-Bags
To All Children
All for 15c
LAKE VIEW PARK
Opens Tomorrow Night
DANCING
ENTIRE EVENING 30c
SUNDAY MATINEES 20c
Leonard Jacobs and His
Melody Men
And Other Attraction's
Take Sherman Ave. Cars,
Change at Locust Street
WITH P
WESLEWreckles" DAT3V
Empress Rustic Garden
MOTION PICTURE
MEN'S DANCE '
TONIGHT
Also Usual Public Dancing
Time Record Meeting
' Saturday Morning,
May .21st, at
10:30 A. M.
Ak-Sar-Ben Field
EEATTYS'
Co-Operative
Cafeterias
Ws Appreciate Your
' Patronas.
Hamilton
FIREPROOF
Famam at 24th (Business Center)
Per Day, $1.50 Up
Per Week, $10.50 Up
Newly Furnished ' and
Equipped
A Satisfactory Place to Live
(Cover up the answers, rrsil the ques
tions and Ms If jou esn answer them.
Then look t the answers to see If jou
era right.)
Follow These Questions and Ans
wers As Arranged by
J. WILLSON ROY.
1. What was the cause of the disci
ples' failure?
2. What relationship existed be
tween Annas and Caiaphas?
3. What counsel had Caiaphas
given to the Jews?
4. Who were N'adab and Abihu?
5. What was the manner of their
deaths?
6. Which one of Joshua's followers
was stoned to death for theft?
, Answers.
' 1. See Mark ix: 28-29.
2. Annas was the father-in-law of
Caiaphas. See John xviii :13.
3. That it was expedient that one
i man should die for the people. John
f xviii:14.
4. The sons of Aaron.
5. They were consumed bv fire by
the Lord for disobedience. Leviticus
x: 1-2.
6. Achan. See Joshua ii:19-26.
(Copyright, 1)1, lly The Wheeler Syndicate,
Where It Started
The Buggy.
The name huggy. applied to a
small vehicle without a top, drawn
hv one horse, is of Hindu origin.
The Hindu name for such a carriage
(usuallv drawn by an ox in that
country), is "baRhi;" shortly after
the British occupation of India, the
officers adopted the name, altered
in pronunciation to "buggy," to their
light traps. From here -the name
spread to the continent and to
America.
fopyrlsht, is:t. -Wheeler Syndicate, Tne.
SILK DRESSES for This
Reorganization Sale
on the
Dollar
To be placed on sale at the same proportionate saving . in price to our customers.
Sale starts promptly at 9 o'clock in the Annex Friday morning. See the Sixteenth
Street Windows.
fLJTfc
TRY-
Another Noteworthy Annex Event That Will Make Selling History for Friday
350 Silk Dresses--A Remarkable Purchase From
a Maker Hard Pressed for Cash
Our buyers "on the spot" in New York Obtained the entire lot
at less than the cost of materials
Our customers will reap the benefit of this dressmaker's losses
they will all be sold in one group at an astounding low price.
Your
Choice
O
Worth
to $30
:
Hardly
Any
Two
Styles
Exactly
Alike
Every
Size
Silk Dress
Materials
Beautiful, rich, lustrous all-silk Messa
lines, fine quality Crepe de Chines, high
grade Taffeta Silks in colors and combi
nations of colors; hew and very attractive.
Silk Dress
, Styles
Elaborately trimmed in silk braids, rich
embroidered effects, .the plainer, more
conservative models and many with em
broidered ruffles; suitable for afternopn
and sport wear and semi-dress occasions.
Trunks, Bags and Suit Cases A Mighty Purchase at a 50 Price Saving
. Genuine
Leather Bags
$12.50 Values,
. This Sala
$4.95
About 200 Baga in
this lot; every one
perfect with rein
forced stitching and
strongly built.
Choice at one price.
Surplus Stocks of a
Well-Known Make
F.vicrlisri TTanr?.
Sewed Bags
$32.50 Values,
$14.95
About 50 Bags in
this lot, all high
grade English hand
sewed, frame leath
er lined, heavy hand
YinarAeA ntfirV all '
J in one lot.
Three Great Lots of Trunks A Maker's Surplus Stock Selling at Close-
Out Prices
Trunks at
$10.00
Worth regularly up to $20.00
and $22.50.
Trunks at
$12.00
Trunks at
$15.00
Worth regularly $25.00 and up ! Worth regularly $30.00 and up
to $30.00. i to $35.00.
Every Size trunk in the lot. Three-ply veneer, covered with hand vulcanized fiber, bras trimmed
balance clamps; built to withstand the hardest kind of usage.
t Pays TRY HAYDEN'S FIRST It Pays I