HIE PEK: OMAHA. Fill DAY. MAY . Mi The Dancing Master By RUBY AYRI1 tCaatrtfki. IIJU TKr ii nothing heroic about Roy, ton. fcnt in fcluabeth'i tftt. perhaps renunciation other love, btit a woman ideals " all. art by htr n requirement rather than ty any standard of 11 fiction, an4 was with Elm lth. ... ... ha ot4 htm; he wanted him. n. nohody cU in the world' cou4 ever take hit place. ho o'y delicti aiiccen I pta.e Mm. ad by the irony f( (ate it because of 1.mi that ilie had (ailrd, ' " A a yet h only vaguely realired what it meant, and that now he wa emirtly dependent upon harmer lor her future; lor te moment she was a prey to her wn desperate unhap. pine! and Ivl)ing, . , j Then Mm. Senenu arrived, and mikcrable scenes of rage and vitupera tioo began all over attain; when Farmer tried 10 interfere and tei the tide of her volubility, madam rounded on hhn, ihc Mid that he was greatly to blame for Elisabeth' ignommoua failure; she raved up and down the room, runniiiir Her finger through her cropped hair frantically. "You spoil her: you are a fool, a great big tool alio r she screamed at him. "Will hc try? Will he ork when she know a you are there wait ing for her to juu drop into the arm you hold out- She fail, and it do not matter. She do not care. ou take her; hut for me. what U there for me? I have a failure, what would you? My good name it is gone; it is down in the dust. No more I am famous; no more they come to me; I have to leave London. I am ashamed. The duchesi she never ask me to her house again. Oh, I could kill myself!" , . . ; "You're talking rubbish," Farmer aaid curtly. "YouTre not ruined. Any one could see that it was pure nerv rutnesa on Elizabeth's tIrt She started well enough, and she will try again aoinc other time, and all that tve prophesied for her will come true. She is not well; I have seen i a change in her for weeks past. We ought not to haveubjected her to the strain tonight." . He stood heside Elizabeth, lit, arm on her chair, his eyes defiant. Madame snapped her fingers im pudently in his face. "You are rich. For you it is. nossmg, nossingl she declared. "You lose money; you have more, but I have none. I de pend on what I can get as from you; hut not again will I take her. and she looked at Elizabeth with savage eyes. 'iNot again I take a .iccond risk; not all the money in London will buy the work of Vic torinc Sencstia a second time. She bent closer to Elizabeth. "You go; ou leave my house," she said. Farmer stiffled an oath; his face was purpre, with rage. "You're mad; you re out of your mind he said hoarsely. "How ' dare you speak to her like this?' Hasn't she gone through enough? And now vou threaten to turn her out of the house. You will do nothing of the sort vou hear.' Elizabeth will stay until I take her away as my wife." Madame shrugged her shoulders. lie walked over to i table, found a cigaret and Jit it with shaking fingers. After a few' puffs she was quieter. She wiped her hot face. , ; "So,, that hV it." she said. "Very well, now we know. She stay here till you marry, her,' but you marry her quick and take her away. I have no roOrii in my house for a lit tle fool who get frightened because there are a crowd and many eyes." . "She will' stay here till I can mar ry her," Farmer said obstinately, "and you may rest assured that it w ill be as quickly as possible." f He kne,w Mine. Senestis well; knew that in her oresent mood she held all his money at nothing; her pride was damaged: she (considered that her- prestige had irrevocably suffered, arid that was a thing she could not forgive. Elizabeth listened' apatheically; Farmer's words conveyed very little to her: she only realized that he was kind, and that in him she seemed to have a friend. When presently he told her it was time she wemMo bed ; and that be. would settle with Mme. f. Senestis and come : again in the morning, she obeyed without ques , tion. ..' v.!- 7 - . She went up to her room and tried to unfasten her frock, but its , fastenings were obscure,' and she .felt too tired to trouble. She was still wearing-, it, sitting on the. side of the bed, .her eyes fixed on the floor, when, an hour later, Mme. Senestis came into the room. Madame looked a trifle ashamed, and her voice was kinder when she -spoke to Elizabeth. Neil Farmer had presented her with a' handsome check for the loss she' chose to con- sidershe had suffered that night, iind she was beginning to realize that, after all, it, would be foolish to - quarrel with him; he was an influ ential as well as a rich man. ; "Yon .' stay here," 1 she began abruptly, "yon go to" bed and sleep - like a good girl. We are friends . . r.gain--hey?". t ...... " . Elizabeth raised her eyes, hut made no answer, and madame went 5 on: "You are fortunate. Mr. Farmer, he love you very much, he make yotf his wife, he marry you " ctuick," she laughed nastily, "You marry him to pay all tUe many debt you owe him." ' ., - A painful color crept into Eliza beth's pale face. !;::'. ' "The debt I owe him," she echoed j almost stupidly ; then v with a rush she remembered the money she had beifrowed from him for Enid San- ger. and afterwards for Royston, and that those two checks were (mite apart from all he had paid for 1 lier training and for her very exist ; ence since she came to madame. She felt as if a mocking yoicewas singing gleefully in her ears: . "And now you can never pay him hack! Now you can never pay him tacW'"" 1 " ' ' " (CUam ta Tk Be Tararrw.) "Hog Thief Parolca . Osl:osh. Neb,, May 18. (Special) r-Miner a married man living in t'r.i -jxtreme eastern part of "e o"ntjv-wM convicted of hog ' te'uz In Judge Ho'wTt'i. court.' On arc unfit of h family, the mart was Radiophone to Be Boon to Commerce Farmer,' Ranrhrr and Mer rbanti Will Bf Ailel in ( " Buiinra by Wirel. Fach day finds new uiei for radio, Ihe mall town merchant, the farmer and rancher can learn the market am of his crop or rattle. He eam what is being shippH and how much he should at cure for the product of his labors. It is an old story now of how ships air guided in iornu. huw almoM immediate recu it at hand, of per sons being doitored I.util) milts away, of silling in your own home and hearing famous arti-t, speaker! and the n?wt of the world. Radio it de ititied to play a hig and important part in the lives of the nations, to bind us more cloely together, A radio expert predict that another decade will ice the fol lowinga frw of the thingt that may happen. In practically every home, whether it he a home on the prairie, the small town or the cave-dweller or the huge apartment houtel of the biff cities, there wiji be a raaio.re ceivlng set. simple and. practical, where all the news and event of the world will he daily spread before us. , Commercial Use. ' For invalids those confined lo their hornet, it w ill come as a blesed boon. To them will come the news. music, lectures, sermons on Sundays to pass the weary hours. To the merchant wil! come daily reports of all the activities prices and movements of goods in which he deals. The, doctor will prescribe in many cases by wireless and thus y M. ? the .Wording to Informal n teemed M. H. Murjihy, geutral. manager Omaha plant ol Ui'Uiiy k Co, range cnmlitions in. me cattle districts of the Auih't are good in spots. The information to, ered i conditions in Tea, parts of Arizona and New Mcm.sj mid si yo the eltert that liiere.jias neen an ahundanee 01 r.vil ill inr cuumry ri of the I'tco river in Ttsa where the grass is ii ritrrllriit condition. Smie parts of Tew and aluiot a!! of New Mexico are very dry and in great need of moUture and moM of the cattle on tlue ranges will he moved to pastures in the north, the SPARKS Tu'rnlv.fnnr veart affn u'linn Mm. Bert Pinkerton, 3019 Praf street, de KvrrrA Hectamatorv adorers at her graduation from high school, she predicted that the day would cer tainly come vhen "we shall have un- Arr nur rontrnl ihr lliafftlrtif forces of the earth for commercial use." Last Tuesday night. Mrs. Tinker ton saw her prediction materialized uhin hrr inn. Tollll 19. listened in with his tadio set on The Bee Gool Will program that was broadcast from the Brandeis theater. lninttrrrU of, ' . radio amateurs in Omaha who listened in on The Bee Good Will program at the Brandeis theater last Tuesday night, additional reports from Ji A. Diahota of Howell's, Neb., Ivan Smith of Harlan. la., and Cecil 1. McAfee of Anita. Ia.. showed that U rnnnrl n hmaHraKt rlfaflv. reach many patients where today he reaches one. The stockbroker will be in con ian anH r1n touch with his clients and they1 with the latest movement in the stock market. Nations win talk with each other daily and hourly and much misunderstanding and trouble cleared away by close con tact; ambassadors will either disap pear or become as gilded mersen- Armies will be guided in the field, aeroplanes will act. guided by radio. Navies of the world will be guided A,rrrA nrrhans without man power, by its wonderful power. So after an, n iooss as muui, radio has come to stay and promises to be a big 1art of our daily life. QUESTIONS Southwest Mav Ship to Omaha Condition! SpotlfJ hi Suilf rrn Cattle Country, Hp jort to Packer 'jhow. iiiivfieiit f m herds hating ! 4dv tartd. In the ial two rs JViin; cost pa-ker hat bought lurse number of fU foe '! whit-It has eued shortage ol ) curling and wo-yrl't rattle. In the diktnct arouud Amarillo, Te ratlr large hf honness U bring developed, the Cudahy rosn. ( .n meiating a buying renter there which ships aleut IS carload oi hog. wk to Pacific eoat point. It i predicted tht Omahi market will draw mote business out of the touthwot country this aeatoti than heretofore as stockmen ol Tena. Aruona and New Mexico have found they hae been selling, cattle to trad en that have been shipped to Oma ha at profit. Wonirn Atltnittf 1 to Baptist Committee. JacVsonvillr, Kla-, May IS. (By A.i I',) Women were admitted to membership on the executive rom mittee and the various boards of the fouthcru DaptiH convention here today. ' 1 , G. F. A., Deniaon, Ia. " Will a four-wlra atrial SO fjjt Ion; be good at a alnsl ' l0j;,L S) Can I tune to W'AAW with thl aerial? (S) If I attach a varlacc-upler antf two varlometera the loading coll of my eryatal aet will I be able to tune 'a O) No.' (2) Tou" o not tune with the aerial to receive WAAW: it It all in your tuning coil. . The coll that you have le a tuning coll, not a loading coll. (3) The introduction of two. varlometera and a varlocupler into thla circuit will mane your aet abaolutely ueeleas. It cant be done. , ; . ", D. S. C, Missouri VMley, la." q Please tell me who and where 2AZR l,j . , .......... A 2 ASTR la an amateur etatlon, belong ing to C. C. Pyne, In the navy ard at Brooklyn. " , ., -. - Followinsr are the call letters of additional licensed broadcasting sta tions: rll T.Apntlon. KJS. I,o Angeles Bible Institute of Los Angele. . t't KtB. Fasadena, Cal. J. J. Dunn uo. KLP. Loe Altos. Cal. Colin B. Konneay - company.-. - . . , - , KM. Oakland, Cal. Warner Bros. - KOA. Denver. Colo. T. M. C. A, KOG. I.os Angeles AVestern Radio Klec- trie company. . r -. Other stations will be listed in the radio" columns of The Bee tomorrow. Read through, mg. ; The Bee all the way You will find h interest- ADTKBTI8KMt.NT. Cfcy Are Scsa Uessa Popular happy, beloved and successiul, while others drag out -a negative existence, of no use to themselves or anyone else? Except in a few , cases the answer is to be found in a state of freedom from the troubles known as "female." ' The well Woman radiates cheerfulness and serenity, while the ailing-one repels because of her lack of these qualities. It is not neces sary, "however, to harbor aches and pains, and the "blues" that make one a detriment to society. ; The use of Lydia'E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has brought relief to such women, and given them a new lease on life. oarQled hi Sheriff ADTKBTMniXICr. FOR ITCHING TORTURE Use Antiseptic Liquid Zemo Ther ia one remedy that seldom falls to stop itching; torture and re lieve skin Irritation, and that make the akin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with zemo. which generally overcomes skin diseases. Eczema, Itch, Pimples, Rashes. Blackheads m most cases give- way to Zeme. Frequently, minor blemishes . disappear over night Itching usually stops In stantly. ' Zemo Is a safe, antiseptic liquid, clean, easy to use and de pendable. It costs only 35c: an extra large bottle. SI. 00. It fa posi- Tba flavor' grett try it and see! ; No fancy wrapper just good gun ADAMS 7" Chewing Gum r- i Aaaorieaa Chide Co. . . .I--... . Sport Oxfords and Flapper , . Pumps ' Styles that fit in' charmingly wifti preparations for summer. piack and White Sport Canvas Oxfords. Patent Trimmed with -Neolirt Soles and Strap Effects. Also a new 'line in Black and White One-Strap Oxfords, Pat ent Trimmed with Rubber Heels. , ' Priced $5.95 to $7.45 SHOE MARKET OMAHA'S POPULAR PRICED SHOE STORE 320 South 16th St. . ' Fraternal Aid Teams to Drill A (ORipetliis drill tn4 initiation eontrst svill be he4 in ht Swedish iit4iiofium rest Tuesday at 2, f the Fraternal Aid union. Crack drill le tins (mnj Grand U"d !-' fahl rentpetf ior button a4 .iher Whhi tuj Mh) the Hanner Mondsniin Ms oi Oiuh- 1 lie cup i fHfa by iBf ciiiveri of the oic'r. lb teairi Hill be eaertuid at noon luncheon and at 'clock dinner on tM day at Hl l-oal. The dmnrr will ht Mtewed ly dancing an4 euteftainmeiit at the SJwU authiorauui. 1 ht oiTice ei W. J. JlemlieM, dutritt mmafer. ,srvUifd of Strillog Tfim i7 On.aha hiiiMing and l-oan a. . v . ntSneciaU tuiiu NilJnig. . he e4 as ChVe-ih, ,eb. May K-Mw wrttmt ilac 4 rrt room for ihel Pert Dunran, oung rancher, vi.itat duimi tht day. living JO Bill nmth ol hei. ai r-,;-, Ift.rnh V. t-iti.tifv. aiunt divi.ion UeMed on eharae (it ielinf team I manager, is in charge of la arrange, ol horses irm a neighbor. H f i mmt released on l.'.OO.bond to appar at Ihu ai It the lu.t competiiU mflimmary neawg itnii ihji ihe (oriftv lu ha id lor ludae Gutitaer May JI. ihe aJi'i"! eiiM r. it is 4id. IfMt as committed uo ar ao Psssa at -M . kaaaaaaaaaaaaa "aaaa.aaSS . ' BLACK TREAD TOR WithNewFeatw&e (earancMileiatfe end id Security " . Insist on Ajax from your Dealer Supreme m- AJAX RUBBER COMPANY, Inc. 1932 Farnan Street, Omaha, 3e. - , tiveij- aate for ttmitr, ssnsitivt skins, j Is Bond's Best Salesman Once,, a man compares Bond's clothes with any ordinary retail' ers' clothes which sell for at least $10 more than Bonds-that man then and Ahere becomes a Bond Booster for life! It never fails, simply $e- cause Bond's Clothes are N the "last. word? in style, tailoring, and economy. See Bond's Windows Featured at Bonds It ..... ' . ,WV . ir1 The greatest showing of 2-pants Jl . suits in the city. All the wanted I V fabrics and the newest styles for men and young men. . 1 'A good coal and vest de- - serves two pair of pants . J Jhe extra pair costs you ;' I y L ' " ' only fiV6 dollars. I C Regarding Bond's Extremely Low Price From ; Our Own Factories Direct toYou . - remember this! We could not sell Bond's .Quality Clothes at Bonds price if we didn't watch our selling expense very closely.- ' ' ' We deal direct from factory to you, through our own outlet stores, eliminating the usual middleman and his profit. It brings Bond's Clothes to you' at just about wholesale. Alterations Free it PtevYork . Cleveland Detroit - Alrron Toledo '- i Pittsburgh Youngslown ,f : 111'. ,. . ' . . lit ! , - I ' aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ammtm mm ISaaaB aaBaaaBal asWaW aSaaHalafafJaaai . HaHaM SaMHaMal taHHaaW " " ' I fSSSSH HOT SSaaaaHBW i 1 ' - . S " 1 1 SSJaaaMaMHBSSSSaliaiaiaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa-aaaaai i - . . v . . Omaha Cincinnati Kansas City t. Louis Columbus Lorain .Louisville ) ) 9 ii 3 A