Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1922)
THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. JUNE 1. 1022. Judge Lectures Parents of Girls Accusing Youth Tho Young CUU Tfll of Thrilling Auto Ride Ending ia Alleged Attat-k. 1'arrnu who went to Central jx ft e court Wednetday l bear two girls, one 14. the other 15, tell their iory ct thrilling motor ear ride ending in alleged aniU. rrc tliemeke lectured by Judge W. F. Wappuh. "The teiiiiioriy doet not imprest inr,M he said. he fised the bond ol Joe Leonardo, 22, I0J9 South Ten-ty-teeond street, one of the young men arruted, at $500. "If more teat were fhel at home and more spank ing ere administered hy parent (ewer tear would be shed in court. Girl Falnte. Kvelyn Garner. IS. 531 SoutM 1 wentv-fifth avenue, one ot tne vie lima of the alleged attack, fainted and was carried from the court room. Lucille Prilton. 14. 521 Sou'h Twenty-fifth avenue, the other girl victim, accused Leonardo. While they were on their way to church lat Vedneday night, the girt testified, they met Leonardo and one of hi friend in a motor car and. being coaxed, entered. A wild ride to Ak-Sar-Ren field fol lowed, the young men holding the girl in the car and gagging their screams with their hands when nu merous other motorics were pac ing, the girls said. Companion Sought. The girls returned home at 10 and Lucille Britton told an older sitter. Tarents learned the news. Leary L. Oherlin, a private detective, was hired, ond Leonardo was arrested the next day. His companion is sought. A. V. Nelson, booze squad detec tive, testified he had warned the girls away from soft drink parlors as late as midnight. Seized Property Is Returned to German Heinrick Sinjen is $100,000 richer today than he wan yesterday. A de cision of Federal Judge Woodrongh yesterday restored to him property seized by the alien property custo dian during the war. Sinjen is a former Franklin coun ty citizen of German extraction. He returned to Germany for a visit 14 years ago and didn't come back be fore the war. Then he conldn't. That he never relinquished his American citizenship was the de fense of his attorney, Arthur Mul len. D. H. Stanley, special assistant from the attorney general's office in JVashington,. represented Uncle Sam's interests. TL. " . ; t I ; 11 I inc propeny involved inciuaea rich farm land, cash, notes and real estate. The case was the first suit of its kind on record in federal court here. Mothers Give Tea in Honor of Retiring School Principal Miss Mary A. Reid, retiring prin ;! f i7..nt,i: ...:ti k. w. guest of honor at a tea given by the mothers of the children at the school tomorrow afternoon at 2. A lunch eon is to be given , in her honor at the Happy Hollow club Saturday afternoon by the teachers of Frank lin school. My Marriage Problems Adelt GarrUeol New rtwM ( "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE" iCerrmfct HSI! What Madge Find the Must Di. s cover In Allen Drakt'a Eye. At my request that she bring me some flower. Marion ditJ toward me to give me an ettatic l.ttlc hug. then Hopped short ilh thoughtful nen far beyond Iter jeart. 1 iIiiiom rruihed your d'CM." she cried remortefuHy, "but, oh, Auntie Madge, you're jut like picture in that gown. And thoe scarlet and orange natturtiuins, they're exactly the colors to et you off. Yon do think of the nice! thing. I'll hurry like everything and get them. One of each from Grandpa Scncer'i room, you said." Mie danced off, repeating my 11 injunction, and I turned to my mir ror again with eager questioning. Was it true what the child had said, or was the compliment simply the tribute of her childiih imagine tion? I remembered that Dicky had said laughingly when he had de signed the gown for me that it brought out the "red hair" of me. referring to the auburn tint which my hair holds in some lights. Out Dicky had expressed no unusual ad miration when I first had donned the dress for hi inspection. Indeed, I had felt with a trifle of pique that he was more concerned with the success of his own handiwork than with my appearance in the gown. I scanned myself relentlessly in the mirror for the little lines which should tell me that my vouth was flitting away from me. But excite ment had given me the fillip I need ed, and with a little gratified thrill I acknowledged not the truth of Ma rion's words I wasn't so vain at that but the undeniable fact that I never had looked better than I did in this gown. Madge Is Triumphant I possess very few jewels, all of them presents from Dicky and my father, and I opened my case with a distinct idea of the thing which I should select. My father had once given me a necklace of quaintly carved Oriental beads in odd shapes, strung irregularly upon a slender sil ver chain. This I fastened around my neck, and when Marion, breath less and triumphant, relumed with the flowers. I fastened them in my corsage. Then I bent to kiss the child, whose eyes, wide and lustrous, remained fastened on me in the en thusiastic admiration which only childhood can give the most genu ine feeling in the world. "Run and tell mother I'm ready, sweetheart," I said, and when the child had departed obediently, I turned to my mirror again with a most unholy little feeling of triumph. "I'm old enough to know better, am I ?" I mocked alottd. "Well, per haps I am, but I'm still young enough not to sit down tamely in a drab dress and knit by the fireplace while my husband disports himself at a luxurious Adirondack camp." Not nutil then had I realized fully how deep my mother-in-law's strict ures had cut. She had taken the po sition that I was past the age for youthful gowns, that I had no busi ness making myself attractive. In deed, so caustic had been her words that I had wondered if I were not losing my youth, and the first fresh ness of what Dicky in his atrocious slang called "the map and mop" which first attracted him. A Sure Teat Dicky's flitting to the city, his ref erence to Edith Fairfax, this trip to the Adirondacks all had intensified my fear that I was losing my lure (or my husband. The particular little devil which always comes to me when 1 am troubled whupered in my ear: "Why don't you tbid out I "Find out what J I answered, startled Into speaking aloud. "You know. The answer came al most at distinctly at jf it were a spoken one, and startled, shaken, I knew that I did recognize the mean ing of the questiou. If I were really losing my youth and attractiveness, I knew with certainly which told me' how surely 1 had read the man, 1 would read it in Alan Drake's eye. Fastidious to a fault, selfish and spoiled, hi re gard for any woman, 1 knew would be but admiration, which would auto matically cease when her attractions letteued in any degree. For monment, my conscience lifted Its head and tried to apeak to me, but another glance at Dicky's telegram made me ruthless. And as the ring announced Allen Drake's ar rival sounded through the house, I sent another satisfied little glance in to the mirror and went down stairs to meet him. I Dog Hill Paragrafs I R Gram R!nKam Somebody in the neighborhood of Thunderation the other day tet the dogs on the Depity Constable. This is the tightest race he has had since he ran for re-election the last time. . Sap Spradlen has been needing a hair cut all this week, hut has decid ed to wait until Saturday afternoon, as that is what nearly everybody else does. The Tin Peddler, wjio has been in our midst for several days selling jewelry, is preparing to leave town, while the- jewelry is still holding its color. Wife Refuses to Lash Mate, So He Must .Serve Jail Term "I'd rather take the 30 lashes than Ktav in tail 30 rlavs." said William Baker, 2880 Binney street, in Central police court yesterday, wnen Drougnt before Judge Wappich on the charge of wife beating. But Mrs. Baker, who had pleaded with the court to keep him in jail as long as possible, refused to manipulate the lash. Bak er was taken back to jail. 1 The Bee leads all the other papers in sport news. Read The Bee first ILCCPY-TIMC TALK I THE TALE OF SNOWBALL LAMB ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY chapter xvfi, A .Terrible Mix-up. There was a terrible niixup, Some sheep were trying to cross the stone wall in one direction. Some were trying to cross it in the other. And in t!-e wtidt of the fleecy Unfile, IT "If I haJii't made yuu Aunt I VaHiw iiifrriitkteit And turiiinff IA her companion she cried: "Did you j ever near anyming usi iivii in an your ouysf And everybody said. "Nor And then somebody asked, "Where the bcur Hut nobody could anwer that Question. Thcoiily one that could lute an swered it wa Culfy Wear himself And he v. is way up under the moun trf'it and still running, There wan't a sheep In ftock that had been more frightened than he. ifriihl. 1131 Aj for the bear, h didn't lag a single- word. Snowball struggled in vain. lie found himself face to face with aunt Nancy I'we, who was so huge that he couldn't budge her. He pushed and shoved until she cried out: "Where are your manners, young man?" "I I don't know," Snowball stam mered. "Maybe I left them in the terry bushes, with the bear." Well, the moment she heard the word bear Aunt Nancy blatted at the top of her lungs. With a mighty heave she turned about on the ton of the wall, sweeping Snowball off it as if he were nothing but a fly. He fell backwards among the rasp berry bushes, fully expecting to be eaten by the bear. He shut his eyes and held his breath and lay with his feet in the air, waiting for the bear to seize him. "Oh, dear!" he groaned. "I won dcr if he'll begin with my head or my tail!" Just then he felt a terrible nip at the end of his tail. "He's begun I The bear has begun to eat me I" Snowball thought. As for the bear, he didn't say a single word. And that seemed odd Somehow Snowball didn't quite like it because the bear didn't exclaim how nice and tender he was. His tail was still held fast. And that was as much as Snowball knew. At last he slowly opened his eyes. To his astonishment he saw no bear. In fact he saw nobody at all. For the last of Farmer Green's flock of sheep had vanished. And Snowball noticed, resting on the tip of his tail, a stone. Though he did not know it. the last sheep to leave had kicked it down upon him purely by acci dent. Snowball gave a baa of surprise and relief. With a little effort he managed to'jerk his tail from under the stone. Then he sprang to his feet. And since there was no know ing where the bear was, Snowball made all haste to get on the other side of the stone wall and join the flock of sheep once more. When Aunt Nancy saw him she did not act half as pleased as he had expected, she would. "You got us into a pickle, young man 1" she greeted him. "It seems to me," he replied, "that you are the one that made all the trouble. If you hadn't made me jumpy the wall " I ' liifc' fcillB Si3 llliil 1 Beginning Thursday and continuing until sold, 980 pair of our better grade v ow Shoes Women's JL Formerly Sold from 6.50 to 14.50 This lot comprises 42 distinct styles in the most favored leathers and fabrics. In cluded are white kid, white calf, white linen, patent leathers, stunning two-tone com binations and satins. All are made over the newest lasts with high or junior French or box heels. x . You are practicing economy by purchasing 2 or 3 or more pairs. Morning shop ping advised. First come, first served. Efficient sales force on hand to give you courteous and prompt service. Third Floor East. . - Common Sense Art You a Vain, Playful Animal f Art you Improving your physical well being at the tkpen i our mind and moraNr Art you in for every active sport, but out when it comet tn study? D you not know that the well balanced man or woman, it the tuc cestful one every tunef It it always the phytica'Jy active, who glow with warmth and good spirits, who exert lite greater inrtu. cure unless you bart learned to bal- net yourself. In fact thert art certain Individ' !, very iiivt sort of peoplt they art, too, companion hit, and often hetpfulphyHtly who cany ou ofl your balance brrtu.t they ait to full of tbt aumul ptnt, Pa you want to bt merely a vain, playful little animal? la you preen jour feathert and perk your head daintily because there it to little in it? Instead, cultivate your mental, vour moral and your humorous idt ae fully that you can tee how ridiculou you are to prcpart for a day, gone tomorrow, when there It all eternity. TfezzaruneFloor Paxtorv Block i Announces Its Opening Thursday Morning, June First THE "DRESS SHOPPE" has been created by two Omaha ladies whose experience in Specialty Shops has been wide and varied. It will be the policy of the "Dress Shoppe" to costume each patron with the least expenditure that is consistent with quality and good taste; Starting Thursday we are showing an unusual assortment of dainty summer frocks and sport dresses, including sizes 14 to 46. We extend all a heart) invi tation to attend our opening. -McGuire & McCoy AS WELCOME AS THE FLOWERS IN MAY Good Old-Fashioned Doughnuts and Crullers The Kind you can only get at Home DOUGHNUTS K enp Kingsford'a Corn Starch 1 teaspoon Salt 4 taaapoonfl Bakfng Powder cup Kara cup Milk cup Sugar Flour 2 Eggi 3 tableepoona Mazola . 1 ttetpoon Vinffln Sift dry ingredients. Beat eggs, add Mazola, flavoring and milk. Stir liquids into dry ingredients and add sifted Sour to make soft dough. Roll one-quarter inch thick, cut and fry in deep Mazola. CRULLERS Z cunt Flour leap Sugar cup Ktagafotd'a Corn Starch 3 level MMpoooa Baking Powder . JS teaspoon Sod I teaspoon Salt 2 Eggs H teaspoon Nutmeg or Cinnamon , 1 tablespoona Kara 4 tablaspoone Masola - 1 cup Thick Sour Milk Sift dry ingredients. Beat eggs light. .Add Xaro, Mazola, and sour milk. Stir liquids into dry ingredients and add flour to make a soft dough. Roll one-quarter inch thick, cut and fry in. . hot Mazola. If desired substitute one cup rye flour and add one and a half squares melted chocolate for chocolate crullers. ; sinric"' IT is not necessary to purchase both a bread and pastry flour. By using cup of Kingsford'a Corn Starch to cup of any good flour the percentage of gluten ia decreased and the starch . content increased so that home prepared flour will make a lighter and finer grained cake FREE Ask your grocer or writ Com Products Seleo Co., 8th umI Jecluoo street. Omaha, Neb. lor bean , tiful folder el the sew Kingsford Cor Starch recipe. : . qomcrwdfb Ifmtmiikr fame 11 11 Take a Ride in the New HUDSON t t For Thursday's Selling This White Enamel Kitchen Cab inet, run site, itn eon en porcelain top ' J07JU White Enamel ' Kitchen Table, regulation size, with . QfJ QK porceliron top ........ P ovtl 1 1 Cabinet Gas Rangea with white 'I i -i Aai n oven door .vOUeUV Aluminum Dish Fan - Qtyf Oil Mop and Bottle . J( of Oil DOC 10-quart Galvanized '1 Q Buckets , . XJC Long Straw Enamel 00 Handle Brooms . . .... ..... S7C Large Size 4-passenger Lawn Swings, stand 8 feet 3Q high tpOeOO ' , . ! 1 Small Size Child's nj? PJ.7J Lawn Swing f. "fwo-Passenger Hardwrtod Porch I Swings,, complete with 7-foot chains and .' books ..$3.45 HRB owen .erUUSULH MM ejoas'