Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 03, 1921, Page 14, Image 14

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    '5 r
THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY. JUNE S, 1921.
ssr
LXtX tiPY.-TIME TALI?
S
THE TALE' OF
BOBBYj
BOBOLIMKd
BT Ain HIIkJcQm BAILEY
ITHE. GUMPS
',. , , CHAPTER. XVII.
-t' ! Turning th Tables.
Mr. Fiog hd given Bobby Bobo
link a .great surprise. He had said
that Bobby was wearing bis clothes
upside down.
.. .'After 'making .that unpleasant re
mark. Mr, Frog burst into a gale of
laughter. And it was seme time be
fore he could say anything norr.
While he- held his sides and
faughed, Bobby Bobolink tried to
look at hit own reflection in a pool
of water. But so far as he could
ite there was nofhing unusual about
his suit. ': He was puzzled; but. there
was no ' use asking Mr. Frog any
question! just then. Bobby knew
that he -would have to wait until the
silly tailors fit . of laughing, had
eassed.
" At last Mr. , Frosr grew calmer,
He drew forth a big handkerchief
from his sleeve and wiped his eyes
i "You're certainly the funniest
light I've ever seen!" he exclaimed
i :'! ' wish you'd explain about my
suit being upside down, Bobby sai'l
"Tyt worn it this way for almost
two months.-, And only yesterday
my wife fold me there was nothing
wrong with it.
' 'Ah!" Mr. Frog cried. "She
doesn't know . about the styles. 1
she did, she'd know what was the
matter. . Your' waistcoat is black
and you 'wear bright colors on you:
back. Anybody that follows the
fashions as I do could tell you rhe
ANDY'S LITTLE NAMESAKE
Drawn for The Bee by Sidney Smith.
- Copyright. 1921, by Chicago Tribune Co.)
I jr , Jva 11 iwnirv- a Ttunr uxi.c - I r NUI wt WrW rutrTT ' J COME. HP RE. AnDt : IStrX
( WpiW-rmiAlN Lie HE So BAD A H JXttf0 0V V 1 3tHAVEVoUR.SEl.F- aj
j n0l. '-TVttt's '('. 4 ' NlGHT WYWvA THE SUM U a??L. aVwiau V J
1 VAN6A0O VNCLCBIM WT J KITS" "WW AAE oy HERS" Y UtffcS' VXARUW AT NIQHT' - . -T
Wow It nra l&ftotf turn to
VmI Vuneomlbrtable;
yellow and;, white ought to .be on
your - waistcoat. That's one of the
rules: .Coat dark, waistcoat bright
and; gayi Look at mel" . And Mr.
Frog drew himself up proudly and
leaned against, a stump, with. his feet
' crossed, exactly as if he was having
his picture taken..
Bobby Bobolink looked, at him.
And til once ht fctirst 6ttt lauh
ing. : - .-,!-,.,
; Now it ;wa " Mr. Frog's turn- to
' feel uncomfortable.
"What's the matter?" . he asked.
''Isn't my tie straight?"
"Oh, I dare say your tie's cor
rect;" Bobby Bobolink told him.
"But there's something queer about
you." j Maybe it's because your f?et
are so bigty. And he laughed harder
than ever;, for, Mr. Frog certainly
ldoked funny:
i Now, Mr, Frog's, feet were a great
trial to him. ; He had always want
ed small ones. But somehow he had
never been able to change them. .
"They, aren't really as big as they
look," he remarked, gazing down at
his feet k4 mournfully. . "You see;
trousers ire being worn very tight
ths summer. . And that always
makes the feet seem bigger. . , ,
Mv ieet can't look peculiar.",
"Then,", said Bobby Bobolink, "it
must be something else that amuses
"me. It must .be your mouth!"
"My mouthJ' Mr. Frog repeated,
as hi jaw dropped. "What's the
'matter with that?"
"ItVs big!" Bobby cried.
Tl-'Kow, Mr; Frog had always bee t
terribly Sfnsitlte ibout the' size of
fc mouth. :.v.-J.'.. ' t..-,: .
,j."I'H teH'you something about my
mottt.bAvntvl'' " )"Onc, it ;J..was
stnalfer '.thai 'VoursAvBut I've smiled
.so much-;, it . has ' stretched ' ap'bit,
though "I' hoped nobody hid noticed
that." -v- V ..v
-"S'Well," Bobby Bobolink told . him.
-I'm' better off than you are,' Mr.
Frog. For I expect to have a new
suit thi?fall. But how are you go
ing to c.hng your mouth or your
feet, either?" , : : ;-.. ,
- That was a ; question ''that Mr.
tiog couldn't answer. He made no
.attempt , to reply, but plunged into
the water and swam away. ;
"And 'he never again laughed at
. anybody's, clothes all that summer.
J " (eapyrithf Oot k Dunlap.) '
More Truth Than Poetry
By JAMES J. MONTAGUE
AS
Dog Hill Paragrafs
By .George Bingham
A QUESTION MK. EDISON OMITTED
There still is a little in cellars,
But people with stocks of their own
Don't keep open houses for parties of souse
It's awful how stingy they've grown.
Now and then, to be sure, you're invited '
To sit round imbibing till dawn
In the shack of a friend, but that's soon going to end
. And what'H you do when it's gone. '
The bootleggers still have-a little,
Though most is a mighty bad sort,
But it's pretty dear fun when the price of a bun
Comes to thirty-five dollars a quart. . . . .
And now the policemen are busy.-
Why. bootlegging's risky a bit.
For some day they will raid all the birds in the trade, . '
And what'H you do when they quit? . . .;. '
Of course it easy to make it, ' . . . .?! . . . . ;.
Providing you've got a good still, . - . .. . "
But the stuff's awful strong, and folks find right along-
That that kind of liquor can kill. ' .
And now they are hunting through houses ,
For amateur boilers of brew.
The business will bust and the still go to rust ;
And what'H you do when they're through? ...
Your doctor can write a prescription
For two or three pints every year, .
But you've got to be sick or he'll cut you off quick -
And life will be dismal and drear.
In fact it is just about over, ' - !
The start of the finish j's on,
When they've cleaned the supply, then the place will be dry, .
And what'H you do when it's gone? -, .
Cricket Hicks, realizing that there
is nearly always somebody on every
program who does . not show up,
which makes them more conspicu
ous than if they were present, de
cided not to go to the entertain
ment the otlvr nijrht after it had
i been announced that he was to make
a talk.' .
,
' Frisby Hancock got wound up on i
: a long conversation at the postomce
INI
i -ihMJ , V-mi I 'Ji
1 S4LFu ? IJ y
the belief in the evil eye is prevat
lent, says those " possessed of it are
believed to be unaware of their bale
ful gift as a rule. Plutarch, writing in
the first century, says that relatives
and fathers sometimes cast-a spell
on their own children without know
ing it. '
In fact this appears to be the opin
ion of all the old writers on the evil
eye. And. starting out upon a jour
ney, or any sort of an expedition,
has always been looked upon as a
time when the evil eye was particu
larly liable to get .'in its malevolent
work. Also there is no knowing
ow far the influence of the evil
eye will carry. .Mcoto Valletta ot
Common Sense
down everybody except him had
quietly eased put and gone home.
Washington Hocks says to live
clean a person must use plenty of
prudence and soap.
Copyright. 1981, Georr Matthew Actam.
Naples, a firm believer in the evil
I eye, offered, in 1787, a reward of 10
I scudi for a satisfactory answer to
I this question and 12 others con
cerning the Jettatue, as the Italians
call it. So you will see that you can't
be too careful. If, perchance, you
have the evil eye let your friend get
away from its influence before he is
fairly got out on his journey don t
I follow him up with your glance. As
! to the superstition of the-evil eye
in general it has a whole, literature
of its own ancient . and . modern, j
The most complete modern treatise j
is tnat ot luwortny.
Copyright,' 10J1, by Th McClure Newi- j
paper synmcaie.
Business Failures in U. S.
In May Fall 7 Per Cent
New York, June 2. The tide of
business failures continues to recede
slowly, according to reports received
by Bradstreet's for the month of
May. These showed 1,338 failures
for the month, a decrease of 7.4 per
cent from the April aggregate and
the smallest' monthly total recorded
since November, 1920.
By J. J. MUNDY.
. The Young Folks. .
When parents have daughters o!'l
enough to entertain young persons
of the same age they must expect
to do so and plan accordingly.
A girl cannot expect to enjoy the
hospitality of other homes when her
own home is closed to outsiders.
It costs something, it is . true, to
help the young folks with' their
parties and other social function,
but parents should expect to assume
the responsibilities for the social h
pleasures of children.
Usually when the young men be
gin to call on the . girls there are
additions and rcdecorations asked for
in the home' furnishings, and unless
the parents are well enough to do to
keep theNhome modernized, this must
be expected and planned lor ahead.
Of course it is difficult sometimes
for parents to sec the shabbiness ot
certain articles which association
hold dear.
But the younger- generation can
hardly look from the same point oi
view, so do not expect it.
If you are fortunate enough to
possess some really old and valuable
articles, teach the children to value
them for. what they are -worth in
preference to tawdry stuff; but fix
up for-the. youngsters, . they like it,
and you were young once yourself.
Copyright, 1321. Intornattonnl - Feature
Service, Inc.
. .PHOTOPLAYS.
PlIOTOri.AYfl.
THE DAY OF MIRACLES.
One begins to believe that peace is really coming. when i one con
siders the quiescence of Pancho. Villa and Jawn McGraw. ' ? , V
NO APPRECIABLE DROP. ; I ,7 " '
Prices may not be af the peak, but they arc still a long way from
th valley.- ..,:" .'' ' - - "'. t" '. ':: N"
Copyright, 19 Jl. Bell Syndicate. Inc. '
Romance in Origin
Of Superstitions
Watching Friends Out of Sight
A great many people believe, or
half believe, that to watch a friend
out of sight when he departs on a
journey brings him bad luck. This
is rrtprrlv a nha"; nf thi imreti-irin
. y, ..........
oi me evu eye a precautionary
measure. For you may have the evil
eye and not be aware of it, and so
cast a malign spell upon your friend
without wishing to.
Dumas, writing of Naples, vhere
WHY
Jewel, Flower. Color
Symbols for Today
By MILDRED MARSHALL.
"-By the ancients, today's talisman
ie gem is called the love stone. It
r- the little-known lodestone, which
. has the. power to' draw its wearer
. everything that is desired, friends,
"admiration and wealth, according to
- Lucian. Its fascination was said by
' him to be like that of a beautiful
woman who could draw friends as
a magnet draws steel. Nowadays, it
is regarded as a talisman which
bring happiness and love.
, ' Another uusual gem, the serpen
tine, : is the natal stone for today.
Worn most frequently, it is little
.known here.. It should never be cut
or polished, or it will lose its mystic-qualities,
and no longer act as
k protection against misfortune and
accident. ;
Today's tolor is green, which is
said to protect its wearer at this time
against disappointment. It is also
; said . to make . more fascinating a
woman who -wears it
. - The ftetal symbol for today is the
i hlr.symbolic of sweetness and gay-
ety." - . .
CpyrlthC 1M1. Tholer. Syndicate, Ine.)
! v i Parents' Problems
- What can be done.to help a boy of
n me, quick to take offence when
none ijr'fBtended? '
- This Dby should be reminded that
n is ver seldom that any person is
intentionally offensive. His common
sense should be appealed to; he will
learn quickly that other persons are
like himself intending usually no
Are "Scotch Tweeds" So Called?
Those' familiar, even in a general
way, with the geography of Scotland,
would, naturally reply to this ques
tion, ''Tweeds take their name from
the River Tweed, of course" prob
ably because of the fact that this
kind of cloth was first made along
the banks of this river. But" the
obvious reply is, in this case, er
roneous. Scotch tweeds owe their
name to a slip of the pen, and not
to any reference to the river..
It was about a century ago that !
there sprang up in London the first j
widespread demand for - Scottish I
"twill," the colloquial name "at that
time for diagonal-weave goods, and
pronounced, with the typical Scotch j
accent 'twecl. In making out an
invoice, .the Scottish bookkeeper of
a firm which specialized in this type
of cloth a man who was probably.
much better weaver than a pen
manchanced to write ''tweeds" in
stead of "tweels." and the London ;
house to which the order , was con-
signed, thinkiiC; the change was in
tentional and the new ' name auite i
appropriate, used it in placing their j
next order and also in referring to
the material to their customers. As I
the cloth attracted widespread attcn- j
iion ana caught the favor of, the
public at that time, the, name has
been preserved ever since.
Copyright, 1JJ1, "Wheeler Syndicate Inc.
Do Yon Keov tlii Bible?
(Cover tip the inswen. read the aue
tione end e it you can answer them.
Then look at the answers tn if va
ar right.)-. . : . . ,
Follow These Questions and Ans
wers As Arranged by-' v
v J. WILLSON ROY.; ;
1. " Where does Paul acknowledge
the hospitality of the Thessalonians?
2. Where does Luke express his
opinion of the Athenians?;
3. Where did Paul preach to the
Athenians? - .
4. What was Mars Hill? ' .
5. Of what did Paul accuse the
Athenians?1
6. Why did he make this accusa
tion? . , -';' .
Answers. '
1. See ;Philippians iv. 16.
2. Acts Jtvii. 21.
3. Mars Hill.
4. The Ju'ghest court in Athens.
- 5. Superstition,
6. Because they had erected an
altar with a peculiar inscription. ,
Copyright, l:i, 'Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.
You always have
a right to expect
. Style, Quality and
' Service, but this
V ;. Season you have
a right to expect increased power for your
dollar as well.
"Ready" clothes are moderately priced.
Young Men and Men's Clothing Specialists
1809 Farnam
D. E. Cable
' Louis F. Schonlau
C. G. Kaetaner
These Summer
. Days
When food lofee its flavor
and appetite its edge, the
delicious salads, vegeta
bles, fruits and ices at
your selection in the
Indian Lunch Room will
restore your enioyment at
eatin?.
Very moderately
l pr'ted.
' ; Today Tomorrow
TOM
MIX
in
"A Ridin' Romeo"
SUNDAY
ZAfJE GREY'S
Story
"The an of
the Forest"
When a Zane Grey story is
made into a photoplay, pa
trons may be assured of
seeing ' a production that
will please.
zsrmt
" . U
PHOTOPLAYS.
TO NITE!!!
metes
Today Tomorrow
DOUGLAS
MacLEAN
me
RoOki&S
Tomorrow -
BOYS GIRLS
attend
1 O'CLOCK SHOW
and . then march to th Moon
Theater to see :
TOM MIX
- , Both Shows for
15 Cents
hi
it famous bou
WESLEY
(FRECKLES)
BARRV
i
SUNDAY
"Dunty Pulls
the Strings"
Also
McDouglas' Scottish
Singers and Dancers
Today and All Week
at 11-1-3-5-7 and 9
Conway Tearle, Anna Q
Nilsson, Miriam Cooper
SILVERMAN'S
ORCHESTRA
Path
News
Chruly
Comedr
SUNDAY
And AH Week
One of the most popular
books and just as Ralph
Connor wrote it.
tJH&fc QJrra present!
( (POL?
from the Navel by Mph Connor
3. kinovTdor)
CATWAtnoi
FIRST NATIONAL
Q00 the most thrillinj; cattle
'''' stampede erer filmed.
Vivid picture . of life in the
Canadian Rockies, and the love
story of a mountain girl, a sky
pilot and a hard-fighting cowboy.
COLORADO Laadins popular - vrlead
SPRINGS' ALTA tourist hostalrr offering
VISTA HOTEL ratas now from II. SO up.
. Fina Cafeteria. FREE
ana , .
ova men xratni. neaa-
Paak mctien" 5rric.
r fffm 4
gig In
D AT T
KuBeToWn
WArE YoUR GiNpHamS
: - . AnD OVeR ALls . : - :
Big PriSe for Best laDie DanCer
Carl Ump's Villij Orkistra
Goth! Come out and see the fun!
CA?r?W.AV gROg. frees. I Mutiiiiiiij
FUN
FUN
FUN
For Every Boy and Girl in Omaha
EVERYBODY WELCOME
First Anniversary Party of THE MUSE Boys and Girls Will be Given To
morrow (Saturday) Between 1 and 5 p. m. ... .
CANDY LEIVIONADE
BIG PRIZES
EXTRA! EXTRA!! Two Shows for One Admission
Every boy and girl who attends the 1 o'clock show at the Muse will march in a body
to the Moon Theater to see Tom Mix free. The admission to the Muse 1 o'clock
show is only 15c. which will include the free show at the Moon.
Where It Started
'Bliwards."
This term for an exceptionally vio
lent snowstorm, is of obscure origin;
it has been attributed to the French:
"Blesser," to wound.- but this is only
conjectural. The first use of the
word appears in the Ethervillc (Illi
nois) Northern Vindicator, between
tRArt anrl-1ft7fl: ili Milwaukee Re
publican, in its issue of March 4,
1881, refers to the articles in which
the word first appeared.
(Copyrts-ht. l:t. Wheeler "Syndlcat. Inf.)
AM18EMESXS.
"39EAST";'
Today and
'omorrow
Mat. Saturday
Last Season's Bi Broadway Success
FIRST TIME IN OMAHA
Comedy, Romanes Tears and Laughter
Featuring
tha
PRINCESS PLAYERS
Starting Sun. Mat. Musical Comedy
"YOU'RE IN LOVE"
Mat. 25c, 50c Eve. 50c. TSc, $1.00
TWO .
SHOWS
IN ONE
EMPRESS
FICKLE FROLICS, A Musical Fantasy;
WILD 4 S ED ALIA, Snappy Songs and
Sayings; HILL A CREST, Presenting,
"Naturalisation;" WILL A GLADYS
AHEARN, "A Spinning . Romanes.
Photoplay Attraction, "THE CHICKEN
IN THE CASE," leaturing Owen Moor.
THOTOPI.ATS.
( WANDA
1 HAWLEY
I "THE HOUSE THAT
j JAZZ BUILT"
I , Rialto Orchestra
a Julius K. Johnson
9 at the Organ .
H Our Third Anniversary J
j BABY CONTEST
WANTED
100 BOYS
Who Can Play Horns and Drums.
Call Douglas 7870,
Ask for Mr. Protter.
American Legion
Carnival
16th and Jones St.
Friday
Ex-Service men's night
Free Concert, American
Legion Band
Saturday Afternoon
Children's Day -
Saturday, June 4.
Last Night
NO GATE CHARGE
Ak-Sar-Ben
Running Races:
OMAHA
2 to 10
Six Races Each Day
Rain or Shin '
300 HORSES
HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE
Auto Races June 11
General Admission, $1.65; Child
ren (under 12) 75c; Automobiles
(Parking) 50c, War Tax In.
eluded; Grand Stand Free.
General Admission, Children's and Au
tomobile Tickets on Sala at Beaton
Drug Co., Unitt-Docekal Drug Co.,
Paxton Hotel. Box Seat Ticketa on Sals
at Baaton Drug Co.
BASE BALL TODAY!
' June I 2, 3 (
Games Called 3:30 P. M. '
Omaha vs. Sioux City
Box Seats at Barkalow Bros.
EEATTY'S
Co-Operative
Cafeterias
We Appreciate Your
Patroaege.
The Bee vant ads are bu sines
(Ji&ojtCLS, ,