Show THE OGDEN SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 7 1928 MUFFS ARE IN STYLE A GAIN INDIANS ARE ALLEXGITED Osage Accuses Friend of Taking $1200 Gem ' Wealthy By NEA Scrricc Kan-ARKANSAS CITY The noble red man has taken a leaf from the book of the palefaces and has gone Into society The women of the Osage tribe —richest organization of people on the faco of the globe— do not wear the colored blankets of tradition nor intone ancient tales of Groat Chief Thfy wear clothes that their paleface sisters misht envy and they play bridge and get into gos-- Bollod-on-both-eid- STANDARD-EXAMINE- es sipy rows CIUMIVATj Now the whole Osage country Is excited by criminal charges against the pretty Mrs Freddie Wheeler white wife of the rich Morris "Wheeler Indian rancher The chief complaining witness Mrs Edna Plomond-ois an Indian woman of charges striking beauty Last July Mrs Plomondon and two other Osage women — Mrs T K O'Connor and Mrsl Edna Watts — went for a drive On their way homo a masked bandit stopped the car The chief article of value that was taken was a $lgOQ diamond ring belonging to Mm Plomondon r uoxn fm:e uxder later Mrs Plomon- A few days er Johnnie Willlamsi with beini? and charged Mrs the bandit Wheeler with staginsriit The two are now freeunder bond of $1600 apiece awaiting a' hearing? next month Williams says he has 12 witnesses to an 'alibi Mrs Wheeler tearfully protestsr "I am not guilty iThere is not a witness who believes so in her heart A fair trial will prove my innocence' Meanwhile the whole Osago country is excited don charged Mrs Wheeler's broth- AIR SERVICE LINKS EMPIRE — (AP) Bert Hinkler the aviator Captain who flew from Englanjd to India in seven days in a Moth airplane has accepted an executive post in the 2Jealand-Ta- s new Australia-Nemania air serviceThe company back bf the line is imancea at sizsuooo chines will carry 15 passengers or the equivalent weight! in air mail freight They will have British engines and crews Most of the capilalj is furnished by English' Australian and New Zealand investors Some help has been given by the Gerjman Dornier company SYDNEY-Australi- w - T--t T WOMEN ARE TOO BUSY FOR TEA GERMANS KISS fflflMFM'S IIAUn J IIVIIIUI1 - rLach LoTJWlements Une Costume K R l: W 1EI111L? Everybody Shakes Hands With Everybody At All Times By LOUIS P LOCnXETt (Associatetl rress Staff Writer) HAMBURG — (AP) — Formality is a characteristic of German life to which the stranger living 13 within its borders can accustom himself only with difficulty Take the endless ceremony of handshaking and handkissing for instance It is by no means sufficient to shake hands once on en1 tering and leaving a friend's house f f After the meal everybody' ehakes hands with everybody else or in case of a married woman the the 4 J ' f ' man touches his lips to her hand i! 'is Then as one is ready to leave a series of handshakes ensues in the living room beginning with the hostess and host If there are : k i many guests with all of whom the departing stranger shakes hands next he feels that the first adieu V6 f with the host and hostess may have 1 7 crj worn off by this time Accordingly ' If he shakes hands with them once v" more to TIIIBD HANDSHAKE Often the hosts go out into the reception hall with their guests it This means that a third handshake is indulged in before departure And should the visitor chance to l! leave the apartment building with other guests he will solemnly shake hands with them anew before the house door When members of an executive 4 board or of a conference convene the session will not open until 11everybody has shaken hands with i everybody else When there is a series of daily sessions the handshake exchanged when first the members met will not be considered to hold through P3 but new at each are handshakes exchanged A beige wool crepe walking dress is completed by a band of fur buttoned to the decollete and a rather session intricate muff fashioned of beaver and the wool crepe of the frock (left)j (Rigth) One of Patou's sue The handshake is always accomcessful "muff ensembles" made of dark green'veUet and fox fur The blousj Is light green panied by a bow varying in angle t to be1 worn There are also as many different according to the amdunt of respect which they By JEAN PATOIT one bows They are jinj ffact an indiietisable ways of carrying the muff as there due the person to whom For NEA Service Another frill thrown in with' handor tne element dress pi nsempie h PARIS — This is the second with which ihey" are shqwh and are of draping a wrap around the shaking hand kissing and howing I have could not ter collection in Worn on either arm it is the clicking of heels on the part iossibly be wqrn with figure on the shown street dresses and ensem- any other dness condo' not does jnot convey the slightest sense of theofmen ancltocourtesying women bles completed by a muff Consid- stitute a trimmingThey older young part in themselves Titles further make for formality ered as a rather obsolete accessory but to with either collar and cuffs of utility but rather that of an ad which: today The title in Germany is infinitely its return came verv much as a sur- or a neckpiece and so fgllow the ditional trimming t is quit4 probimportant than the first prise to women line of the modehj happens- to be about its only fraison more name People don't care whether able that they would never have general d etre MODEIIX MllFFS DIFFER a man having the ubiquitos name accepted its reinstatement in their differs from Schmidt in Hans or Fritz Schmidt wardrobes had it been presented itsThe modern inmuff that 'it 111 comprototype — they want to know is he Ilerr A SHEEP IN ON E in its old form which as everyone fabric posed in part of the Direktor Schmidt or is he merely was always in the and remembers As fur are muffs LONDON'— A 'golfer at More Herr Friseurgehilfe — conjbined meaning barshape of a more or less large bol- relatively a new departure the canie killed a sheep when ber's attendant — Schmidt Gerrecently ster roll Thus were all modern editions so far have been his drive hit the animal on the mans usually sign their letters not muffs fiftfeen years1 ago made up solely of such furs as temple On completing the round with their Christian names besides The muffs you will see in my may be termed "fluffy" like foxes he found the hangikig from the family name but with the present collection axe direct com- - or flat pelts jlike broadtal caracul a raifter in thesheep clubhous bitasrged: title Jacob Schmidt plements of the ensemble with or beaveri f'A sheep in one by Mr 11 Lund" ology at the Universityteaching of Berlin J' 'J - l 1 1 'S3 - msssssmwi!mMSisssa afe-mean- win-whic- ! : drs self-respecti- ! ng 1 t (Ph rs tip-stai- ion $110000 A CARPET LONDON — The "oniperoi's " winch is said to have been a car-pot- present from Peter tin- - Great to Leopold I of Austria about 169 8 was recently Vol 1 at Chrteuo's for 2000 guineas or about 1 10000 It is a Persian carpet an wai made probably in the tim of Shah Tahmash w 153 ' ! - L :' Yr - ' fc f I ' II IDemand —— — -- ' ' iil ' IT V i k 1 ::':: r r 4vyte'M: M M v-- i signs his name as Professor Drt Schmidt TITLES FSED Men meeting daily and engaged in the same task will nevertheless address each other by title It ts almost unthinkable for instance that members of the German reichstag sitting side by side year after year should address each other familiarly as "Bill" or "ChaM ley" or "Jim" They will continues to address each other as "Hern Kollege" This "Herr Kollege" habit offers the one escape from the embarrassn ment of not knowing the exact title or name of someone engaged hi the same class of work An: American correspondent or "Herr Re- dakteur" as he is called may have forgotten whether the representa-- t tive of the "Tagablatt" has the rank Of editor-in-chifeature editor or departmental chief And he may have forgotten whether his name is Meuller or Schulz He need not feel embarrassed If he simply calls him" Herr Kollege" all further questions are obviated BAFFLES STRANGEB One curious formality which often baffles the stranger is that of wishing 'Mahlzeit" literallv "mealtime" It is an abbreviation for a German saying "Gesegnete Mahlzeit" or "may you enjoy a blessied meal" and was originally usedj as a polite expression after grace had been said at table Now however" the mall carrier coming into an office will shout "Mahlzeit" the janitor's wife a? the business man hurries to his office win accost him with "Mahlzeit" even though he has breakfasted and several hours just will intervene before he takes fiis next meal 7' Cm A 'k--i- I mv r ' ' - lMVt ef If i jr A rv fo)o) n iv The (whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for pain But it'r just ps important to know that there is only one The name Bayer is on every tablet and ggnuity 'Bayer-Aspir- in on the box If it says Bayer it's genuine and if it doesn't it is not!: Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin So are colds and the pain that goes with them even neuralgia neuritis and rheumatism promptly relieved Get Bayer — at any drugstore — with proven directions v ! i Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin it does NOT aftect the heart Asplria U V9 Pi Buyer MaaufACtux (TSdt VM M R IK V! v- H UOQMCcUcscldtwter of 3allcjrUeacl4 NOW PLAYING j ol A Superb Masterpiece— A Picture of Charm—Vibrant Action —Pathos— Humor— Tears— Happiness Don Alvarado with Gene Hersholt Phyllis Haver Belle Bennett Sally O'Neil Ik ' livesH around the Democratic headquarters ' They're all for business The men are regular old gossips compared with the women down on the seventh floor i IT3P TO) J - t or their social 1 -- V By LOREXA A HICKOK NEW YORK --MAP) — They used to serve tea in the "women's section of Democratic national But they don't any headquarters more It was not very - elaborate tea If they call it "high tea" In England this was certainly "low tea" And it was"" by no means a daily occurence' Usually It was sent up from the drugstore in the lobby of the building where the "lady Democrats" occupy the seventh floor Sometimes when thre were! visitors — for instance the days when John J Raskob the national! chairman came down from thei floor above and had his picture taken drinking tea with former Governor Nellie Tayloe Ross off Wyoming first vice chairman of the national committee and Mrs Franklin D Roosevelt chairman Of the national women's advisory committee — it came over fromf a "hotel in tall glasses and ac-companied by little sandwiches and cookies But that was all back Jn the! summer The only food that comes into the women's section these days is Mrs Roosevelt's from the lunch — pandwiches drugstore Women at Democratic national headquarters don't have time to bother with afternoon tea any more They dont even think the chat about tea Somehow ter that goes with tea drinking would sound out of place in Mrs Roosevelt's office these busy October days The eltmlbatlon of the personal element — that is one of the most cstriking changes that has come about in the development of suffragists into politicians Women leaders seldom nre heard talking about their children their husbands their home problems '' "ft H Master Showman of the World k ' Si it Presents Urn - "I' "i§- A Drama of Life as Only! t3ie Incomparable Griffith Could Portray it :i s s v tY v " '' ' ALSO G V TAlPHONE ACTS 4 1 Solomon First el Children Talking Comedy 3 2 Sweeties Syncopating Hot Stuff A ovietone Talking News 5 V: H Price s Matinee 30c Nite 40 ChUdren 10c 4 r 1 1 Coming Nexti Sunday MGING 'FOOL — |