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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1922)
t 0 A THE SUNDAY BEE: u.iiHA. JULY 16. li. The Sunday Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY thk r;i P'.BLISHINO company KBUOH I. .iWtK Paklitkw. MEWtR. . stanatar, MEMBER or THK ASSOCIATED PPtSJ fW lmii Pn af Tfc Saa la t pankar. la awlaalHlr sauna u w w amanaauaa w ii mditm u u aa fej saarlaa araalu la ki aaw, aa laa IM al aukuaa4 art. u now m nnxi'iuo ar iw asanai ihvm ih Maana. Nat rlrtulatla ( Tkt Omsk Dm. Jim, 12 J .Daily 71,731 Sunday. .. .77,034 B. PUKWIR, bdllll MBMfaf ; ELMER S. gOOU, ClrculatiM Majaaaar Iowa to tutxriM fcaUr in this Sta, ear ! July. IU. tSaal) W. H. QUIVEY, NUr PukIM , TIM Audi Haa li i sank af tkt twill llaraa af flm'illtl IM (iwniiina MikatiK a aiiraiaum asoji. aa Tkt Imi aircsiauia) it mi but a4iiaa Mttr cttasiiaua. BEE TELEPHONES ,PHU lrsk Eirhsnta. Aik fr the Daprlmnt TIii. or PmB Wta. for Nifkt Calls Afi.r 10 P. Mi t J??"" Eaitorwl DtftartatBt, AT It n lit 1021 or 104, 1000 OFFICES Main Offlr ITih tad Ftnika ;C. Btufft .... It geott St. Bout 8ld - Hit 8. tllb Bt . Nw Vors 2i Fifik ArDut VYiaklnitoa . . 421 Bur Hllf. Chiftfo . . Mi $tft Bldf. I Pant. Frtnct 420 But 81. Honor J PRIMARIES AND THE PEOPLE. This is not to discuss the academic question of the primary method of Delecting candidates. That ". question hag been paued upon by the people them l selves, and any changes made in the method will be adopted by them. Whatever may or may not be said concerning the direct nomination, the outstanding ; fact is that if anywhere people are to be trusted to J choose for themselves in such matters, that place is J Nebraska. J Outsiders, viewing the political history of the t state for the last thirty-odd years, might conclude that the popular will in Nebraska is unstable. Such t a conclusion would rest solely on the fluctuations of political fortune as indicated: by the party label, and would consequently be wrong. While the state has swung from one party to another, and the vote has varied in numbers,, the issues usually. are decided ac- cording to the popular idea of what is right or what holds the greatest promise for the welfare of the ; state. This does not bespeak fickleness on part of the J voter, but rather a willingness to try new methods of government, to experiment in applied politics, 4 finding out what is best and clinging to that. As an j illustration, the main points of the populist platform j of 1890 later were made into law by the republicans, and these laws still are effective. So, too, some laws enacted by democratic legislatures remain on the statute books, tried in the courts and found good. Here is found the essence of true progressjvism. A J change of administration does not mean that every- thing done by its predecessor is to be smashed. Perhaps in no other-state does the "stay-at-home" vote exert more of influence on the election outcome J than ire Nebraska. Few who are not thoroughly J familiar with the habits of thought of Nebraska's people can appreciate this fact. An intelligent elec J torate is not easily or deeply affected by surface is J sues, and normally Nebraskans do not readily respond J to appeals that have back of them no support in fundamentals., For the matter of that, the people 3 of the state are fundamentally conservative. Stabil ity of government' to 'them hi more than the su- premacy' of a particular party, or of a group within i a party. ' Thus, Nebraska has escaped the condition of being either a pocket borough or a "dependable" state. ; Voters discriminate between men as well as between J issues, and the officers selected by the people, through J the process of the primary and the general election, bear the respect and confidence of a majority, and this is the best defense that can be made for the lystem. i HORSE NOT AN EXTINCT ANIMAL. One whose opinion rested on observation of 1 Omaha streets might be excused for thinking the horse all but extinct. He' has been all but totally J banished from city traffic by the auto. But the sec ; retary of the American Horse association comes from Chicago to tell us that the noble animal still is active J in man's service. Speaking to the veterinarians, he J said that back of all the great output of food from 'the farms stands the horse; he furnishes the motive power, plows the fields, helps to harvest the crops, ' hauls them to market, and takes his food from the surface of the ground and not from an oil well. This ; is very true, generally speaking, but the assessor's J reports in Nebraska show that the number of horses J used has been steadily dwindling for more than ten years. Much, perhaps the major portion, of farm work is done by horse power, but this has been sup ; plemented or entirely replaced by the self-propelled vehicle or the power plant contained in a tractor or a gas engine. The horse will be in service for years j to come, if not forever, but his field of usefulness is j steadily being restricted by the machine. The farmer has records of performance to guide him, and is not inclined to allow either sentiment or curiosity to J sway his judgment when he comes to making up his mind which source of power it is more profitable to ' employ. DIRT IN A CITY'S AIR. One of the long recognized and easily understood ; facts connected with city life is that the air is con ; taminated to a greater or less extent by the activi- ties of the community. Fuel burned for power or do J mestic purposes, street traffic and other sources con- tribute to the mass of matter that is suspended and transported by the air currents. What becomes of j this almost any city dweller can testify. London is j just now bidding for the distinction of being the J dirtiest city. There a series of tests is being carried on, with the discovery that an average for forty- aeven tons of dirt a month are distributed over the citizens of the British metropolis, due to the polution of the air, ...Twenty-seven and one-half tons of this dirt is soluble, and tons of it insoluble, consisting of tar, carbon, grit and like materials. These figures I afford a reason for the prosperity of laundries in London, and the mad desire of the population to get ' down to the seashore frequently. Many industries in large cities, and not a few public buildings, hotels and department stores wash the air sent through their ventilating pipes, and if the London record can be even approximated by many, the practice of wash- ing the air to be breathed is a good one. J FOES OF HOSPITALITY. Hospitality, one thinks, was more prevalent in simpler days. It is to be suspected that the women's magazines with their folderol about the proper way $ to entertain have set up a false standard that makes t a guest a burden rather than a pleasare. How often j is aa Invitation to dinner or a night's lodging with- held because everything is not just so. Too many chances for sociability and enjoyment sup lost through the restraint imposed by fashion. The're are very few persons who would not be content to take pot-luck in order to be in the midst of friends, j .The tM going ways of the average American family i-Bf ; ".- ' " "'- jwhm an ettr;tK,n that can not be provided by stiff conventionality. It is uhtn the ordinary course of life is reversed that lutpUality becomes onerous. Then the guest is as ill at eae aa the host and one might as well be in a hotel for all the enjoyment or human com. panionkhip to be found. The s nobbiah desire to appear different from what one really is comes constantly in conflict with human happiness. Unless the atmosphere of a home is de graded or depraved, a continuance of natural routine and a holding to its simple ways is the truest wel come to a guest. SERMONS. NOT CHURCH, BY RADIO. An Illinois minister views with equanimity the broadcasting of sermons, holding to the proposition that such service will never supersede the church' In the opinion of Rev. George Craig Stewart of Evans ton, the sermon by wireless lacks the essential ele ment that vitalizes the sermon from the pulpit, and that is the congregation in body as well as in spirit. He says: Mn after all ara giegurlua. They Ilka to "llalen In" on a roneert. but after all thy k to to to concerts, too, and do their bent alrla. They enjoy a ood political speech by wlreleaa, but the political convention ltwlf ah. "that's the berries!" And an men will always so to church becauaa rellRlnn la a aoclul experience, a hocIh! act, demanding the exerclae, not alone of the ear but of the eye aa well, and Indeed of all five aensea. Man does not relish being alone altogether, and at times the most selfish and self-centered of the race will seek for company. Particularly Is this true when it comes to worship of God. The devout may go into the closet and shut the door, and pray in humbleness of spirit and secrecy, and be the better for so doing; but, when he comes to raise his Ebenezer, he likes to do it in company with others of similar mind and bent on a similar end. He finds this at church, and the sympathy that moves him U lift his voice in congregational singing, hymning his praise to God because he is not alone. A sermon by radio may interest, may challenge thought, but it will never inspire action, because it does not have the support of the warm and vibrant presence that animates the congregation when the pastor has aroused the souls of those who listen. Nor can the pastor put into his broadcaster any of the personal enthusiasm he feels when he looks into the faces of his hearers and feels their sympathetic sup port for his thoughts. "Where two or three are gathered together in My name, I will be in the midst of them and bless them." This was not promised for the wireless, but for the congregation. OP I N 10 N- What Editors Elsewhere Are Saying Deboshed Young Folks THINK OF THESE THINGS. A lot of people are strutting around today, tell ing themselves and a wondering world what they pro pose to do. Some are asserting that until "justice is established." whatever that may mean, that they will not be found doing the things they are better qualified to do, and others are as earnest in asseverating that until their own will is acknowl edged by everybody else, the world must stand. A very confusion of Babel has arisen among men, and, even as on the plain of Shinar, work is standing still because "they may not understand one another's speech." If these self-important ones only could understand: Astronomers have laid their measuring lines across space, and now tell us that the galactic uni verse is 300,000 light years in length, 42,000 light years in breadth nd 30,000 light years in thickness. And a light year is the distance light will travel in a year moving at the uniform rate of 186,000 miles per second. Sirius, whose heliacal rising is almost due, is the nearest of the fixed stars of the earth, and yet the red rays that reach the earth from him on the occasion of his ascendancy have been thirty-five years on the way. An astronomer on Sirius, equipped with instru ments no stronger or more powerful than our best, could not find the earth in space, it is so insignificant a speck in comparison with the universe. When you get to thinking that the earth is about to put the universe out of existence, or that some one man or group of men is going to regulate every thing for everybody, recall some of the simpler truths and be comforted. LEARNING HOW TO RECREATE. Every country has its loafers. It has also a greater proportion of people who take life much too seriously. Keen business men and hard workers, they do not know how to play. The idlers lounging in the shade represent one extreme, and between them and the workaday population there has been no golden mean. Now, however, the recreation habit is spreading to the interior. It is not possible for families to spend the. week end at the seashore or in the mountains; nevertheless opportunities for enjoyment and relaxa tion are enlarging. Weekly band concerts are a fea ture in Randolph and Superior, to name only two out of many. Swimming pools and parks are more numerous, and community halls and libraries are es tablishing themselves. Out in western Nebraska men are pursuing golf balls through the sage brush to the great benefit of health and the tempering of disposition. Country clubs and golf courses have been laid out in, a sur prising number of places. Franklin has its links, and so have Sidney, North Platte, Ogallala, Alliance, Su perior, York, Aurora and David City. Such signs as these assure the widening of life in the plains country. There is something more than work, and more than loafing, too, in the middle west ern towns. " These communities are of a size that might be found ideal for the purpose of a better civ ilization. In their close relationship with the open country and their possibilities of neighborly co-operation are latent forces that could establish a splendid culture. To learn to enjoy life and to drop routine for mental and physical relaxation is a far step. Call for potato pickers at Gibbon reminds us that Nebraska spuds are fighting their way to recognition in the world market. I is encouraging to think there, axe in prison some, criminals who can not move the parole board to grant their freedom. Senator Norris at least carried his committee on the Muscle Shoals proposition. The big verdict still is to come. Money is accepting a reduction in wages and glad to get employment at that. If everything that is scheduled comes to pass, the Monday front page should be interesting. 4J Uncle Sam ought to make a pretty good coal digger. On Second Thought By H. M. STAN 81 FEB. Controversy never haa contributed anything to Christian experience, . - An EtUan llane)." From Iht Botion Trtntcriti A papyrus discovered by learned piofetitor of t)i I'nlvaraliy of CM caeo seeina at first lo prove quit cniit'luaively that the ancient Ey tlnna, betldea belna able l recog n Ua a number of disease which ara supposed to have been discovered quit, recently, understood In Its gmeral lerma the princlpla of lha circulation of lha blond. Thua tuns, In a treatise by a physician, found In the cuff I ii of it medical mummy of 3, (no years ago, this pHssase: "There la hi It (the he.irM i canil lending to every member of the body. Concerning these. If the physlclitn place the finger on the back of th liend. on the hand on th pulse, on tha legs, he discover Ihe heart, for the heart lead to every mem ber and It beat (literally 'apeak') In the canal of every member." In observing thl connection be. tneen the heart-bent that Is. lha pulse and th heart, tha Egyptian phyilclan of three and a naif tnll lentil ago waa making no more tlini a very ordinary observation. All that I stated In the abov words wan known to th Chinese, who llmse their whole system of d4itgnosla on th pulse, long before tha Kgyp tlan physician' papyrus wa tucked ay In hla coffin. It waa certainly Known though of course this rain afterward to Aristotle, who plainly taught that the blood was sent from the heart through the body, though he thought It went through the vein. The broad fact wa apparent not only to physician but to any per son, no matter how simple, who had killed a chicken by cuttlnr off Its head and had ohserved that th regular spurting forth of Ihe blood sank low and ceased with th beat ing of the chicken's heart. All. In deed, who ever took the pains to place a hand over th human heart and at the same time noted th beating of the pulse In th wrlt or the neck, must have known that there were "canals" from the heart to the members. Hippocrates, wrltlnar 400 venr t. tore cnrist, speak or the "circula tion", of th blood. Galen. In the second century after Christ, knew the function of the arteries, but not that of the veins. We ascribe great sagacity and knowledge to Shapea peare for writing "dear as the ruddy drops that visit my sad heart" before Harvey, but If the ruddy drops came from the heart, aa had been taught from . antiquity. It must have been apparent to all that they returned thither. The extraordinary merit of wn. nam arvey lay In discovering: and proving not merely that the heart sent the blood to all parts of the body, but that It sent th hlnn the lungs for a particular mimnm and then dispatched it through the arteries, to be returned by the veins when its function is performed. Thus Harvey did truly discover the 'circulation" in Its true process and function. All previous ohservnra were making merely blundering at tempts to account for the process, and their knowledge of the anatomy of the heart and the circulatory sys tem was so far inferior to Harvey's that they could only be considered as guessers in comparison with him. The discovery of the Egyptian papy rus will not deprive him of a single leaf of his laurels. The world will continue to write "discovers e ., circulation of the blood" after bi name. Sea-CarrvInQ nAnniMmAM. , . g .ui.viucuw, Prom fhs Washington Star. u. US not decelve ourselves about this sea-carryinsr business,, tt a serious business and Is MniiMj business principles. Those now en gaged in it understand it. Thev r veterans, and are firmly and profit- auiy estuDiisnea. They are not to be exnnotprt in welcome a competitor with ooen arms. Especially a competitor with such resources as we possess. Rather are they to be expected to tighten their hold on affairs and give us a run for our money. It Is a matter of common sense and necessity, therefore, that In en tering the field we do so with fulf appreciation of the requirements. To succeed we shall need all the re sources we possess. We must recog nize and employ the proved and ac cepted rules of the game. There is no short cut to success. We must take the route and go the pace pre scribed, and exhibit staying power of the first quality. Our competitors did not achieve their success in a day. Why, if we obey these rules, should we not succeed? We have past suc cesses to our credit We were once formidable and prosperous sea- carrier. We dropped out on the lure to develop ourselves on land., We have done that, and now the sea calls again. There is no mistaking what the wild waves are saying the wnoie day long; and we should re spond with pleasure and alacrity. t'rant ih N Vr TimM On the wl! t'f the palace of runs! are pictured Ih golden M.ell i the established agent, hand- ,rl of. Minn clvllisa Ion. riding d loW1, from mother to daughter '""' 'h"1 fhum which di. for generation i necewiiy foritreed our onwrv.tlv equestrian .offra making I. a established a.!", ''" ?' Iuhi not iliijl tha iieerty of iOffee itself for '' Mer. ggd their breakfast, staffs and beard and lamented th Koe th mr'-a ,l-.l.r. ,., ji.. : degeneracy or H l. According credit on eggshell would a well .-is ill Hast roil. He erica la h fillll "lO'ieril inrnries. rvrrynun i ' KPiiinu npiivr. (iruiriK iu m " mh, The Conspiracy of Dress. From the New York Globa. Women's clothing is of far more significance to the wearer's health than It is to the esthetic taste of the beholder. Note so long ago it was too terrible for description, with its grotesque sleeves, its skirts trailing in the mud, its multiplication of pet ticoats, its tight laced corsets, its dangerous and debilitating heels. The escape from these monstrosities was not so much a change in style as an emancipation. It meant, not merely that woman's dress was to be as sensible as man's, but that it was to be more sensible. At a stroke it became healthful as well as beauti ful. The change accompanied a wide excursion into fields of sport and professional life heretofore al most forbidden to women. It remains to be seen whether women will resist style changes which will inevitably infringe upon their present physical freedom. There Is a good chance that they will. Hampering clothes stand for hampering traditions. It is impos sible to believe that women who have known freedom from either who have become, for the first time in history, real human beings in stead of a mere embodiment of sex will ever willingly go back to their old chains or skirts or laces. No Flouting of Eggshells. FroTO the Kanaas City Star. , "The use of the eggshell In set tling coffee is satisfactory; no ob jection can be made to it; but the use of the white or the yellow of the egg is not required." Thus speaks the latest word from the laboratory over the latest in vention of science the result of the experiments of the coffee dealers sent out by radio from the Star. But it speaks with a certain guarded wisdom, that is too often lacking in the brash laboratory worker of to day. There may be doubt among the crucibles of the experiment station as to the efficacy of eggshells in settling coffee. But the coffee deal ers know better than to let the doubt flare out The chemists ven ture ,to suggest that the white or yolk of the egg "is not required." They dare not openly flout the use of eggshells. The white of egg no doubt has a degree of prestige as a coffee settler. But it la a bit ultra, a sort of frill on the making of coffee. The egg- mighty. Hut there ar Hums beyond which It cannot go. HugluV riinll. iujo to lUluoMor. Freni th w Vera Kvanlnf I'mi, if all th pronouncement upon education with which th air ha re cently been filled, t It moat llnlabl l th one mud bv a man who I not a member of th teaching pro. fession. In th detail upon which h touched, a wll as In hla gnral contention, what Kecretary Hughe said In th paper red at Host on before Ih National Kducatlnnal aa social Inn I worthy of the moat rl iiiis attention. Kvery on agree that tlie American Ideal In education, a In other matter, I equality of op portunity, but Mr. Hughe waa con. eerned lo know what this Inspiring phrnsa meant. lately It has been employed as If It meant chiefly op portunity for vocational training, Such opportunity, said Mr. Hughes, la Included In It scope, but Its full meaning I nothing les than that "of giving play to tatnnt and aspira tion, and to th development of mental and spiritual power." In other words, he recalled educators from exceaslv emphasi upon on part of their task to a vlw of the entire Job. If education ned any thing more than another Just now It Is a sense of proportion. Mr. Hugh' address should do much to give It a keen realisation of thl need. Another timely word dropped by Mr. Hughes wa "discipline." Here again, without naming the quality, he pleaded for a ense of proportion, arguing that, while It i Important to mnke study Interesting nnd to recognize individual gifts, "the prl innry lesson for the citizen of de mocracy Is self-control." In stress ing thl point h struck out an epi gram that statesmen no less than educators would do well to remem ber. "The sentimentalists," he ob served, '.'are Just aa dangerous as the materlullst.' Mr. Hughes own course In office gives him the right to make this declaration, a declara tion that comes at a moment when some educators of high standing are In danger of forgetting that there is no substitute for fundamentals. In tentionally or unintentionally, these men and women are responsible for the Impression that after all there Is a royal road to learning. Mr. Hughes administers a corrective to this superficial doctrine that It is to be hoped will reach into every corner of our educational world. Dutch Courage In New Bottles. From the Vancouver -Sun. World-wide attention Is centered on the discovery by scientists of the strange and powerful drug used for years by South American tribes to give invincible courage to their warriors. The new drug, "caapl" or "aya wasco," is said to inspire super human bravery in the user. Nothing dau'nts him. It is a veritable draught of mellowed Dutch courage in non-refillable bottles. middle age. pralMT of past time, even milling the paleolithic moral lata, everything and vrybody ar getting worse. Thl wa a favoilt form of Honian humbug; and It I alunvs Willi u. The Iniquities of contemporary American youth make cnuntls thousand niourn, Ar they so bad a they are pulpted? one almost ha lo belieie so when so clear-headed an observer and a thinker as Charlotte I'erkin fill man enumerate th fitult of our tender Juvenl: Whiit doe glaringly distinguish . thl period, among those who con sider themselves most "advanced" and superciliously condemn the nineteenth century. Is an un checked Indulgence In appetlt and Impulse; n coarsenes and looseness In speech, dress, man ner and habit of life: and. a wholesome resistance to any re straint mor worthy of a fractious voung mul than a reasonable be ing. If even thl were accom panied with om strong effort to ward social Improvement, It might be nvrlookd. . Youth might argu that to be voung is In Itself sufficient aoclal service. Hut whv bother about th most "advancd?" They are never very numerous, and about them, a about th les advanced young people, ther I a considerable area of essentially harmless affectation. If their mnnnera are nan. eo those of a good many others. "In checked indulgence In appetite and tmntilse" cant long remain chocked; and why should we worry much about a loud little mi nority? "Our modern youth hear the call of the "llf" force' and fly to obey Has not the "learned rreun told us that It i unhealthy not to n .ht w wish? ... It I not ..nnrsMArf desire' but indulged de sire that write the foulest cipter In human history. Those puritani cal forefathers and foremothers or our were aturdy and efficient under considerable difficulties, w.ii Viair-haked Freudism popular with some of our half-baked ......v. h hv strut and vaunt; i'r. a inrff-A extent, outside of nnvols their bad behavior Is mere pose and imitation. As for our puritanical ancestors, the loosest ol their descenoants may o bmo:" point out that at least the gracious nM rntr.m of "bundling" doesn t ..i.i amnnq. h modern son and daughters of Belial. How much of transitory fashion there Is in the shuddered-at sins of the younger generation appears even in Mrs. Oilman's article. She speak of the pfnm of our children for 'the Vic torian age and their love of free verse. But tne pnncox prmut m enntpmnt of the Victorians is al ready dvlng out. So is tree verse. And these familiar strictures on our young baggages already seem an tliue: . . ... ....... What we ao see is v "eDU" tante slouch," whitewashed noses and painted lips, plucked eye brows obscured by hats worn like the caricature of an old-clothes man, .unl lens whims scjnly shelter la a skill having almost th frankness of th ballet with out It freedom of motion. t That "slouch" departed at least two ye.ir at". Tint prnnly shelter la down to the ankle Krn "flap per" style are f.dlme , White washed nose and painted Up w ought lo be slil to endure. Thl exterior fashion ha no moral con notation. "What hope I there fur th world," ask Mr. Oilman, "If oUth ltelf become corrupt, turns traitor to It duty of leadership and sinks to a level of behavior resem bling senile decay?" Ierus som of our youth abuse their greater freedom and knowledge, why should bother shout the corruption of th world, who corruption has kept th satirist and moralist busy lmmmorllly? Thirty or fony year hence som of iIips youths, now regarded a children of the pit, will be shaking accusing tlngets at th youth of that day and wonder Ing what hope there I for Ihe world, IMwrnrrrd. Elsl had been reprimanded many lime by her mother for eagernes to appetian her appetlt and begin her dinner before grace had been said. But , It came a a shock to all present when Jimmy, her brother, who had to ask grace, took upon himself to administer a gentle re proof. "For what w ar about to re ceive," he said gravely, "and for what Elsie ha already eaten, make us truly thankful." Los Angele Time. rouTicAi. Anvr.RTifcr.Mr.vr ITCH PIMPLES IY ALL OVERFACE Hard, Large and Festered. ' Cuticura Healed. " My trouble started with a break ing out of ugly, red pimples on my face. They were hard, large and festered, and scaled over. The pim ples itched and burned, and were in blotches all over my face, causing me to be very much disfigured. " I tried many remedies but none seemed to help me. I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and they afforded relief. I continued using them and was completely healed in three weeks." (Signed) Miss Nellie Gardner, R. F. D.3, Iantha, Mo., Jan. 18, 1922. Make Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum your every-day toilet prepa rations and watch your skin improve. Staph lie. Fn. IT stall. Addrws: "Oattnra Lab raurlM.It.B,tfallMl,lIau." Soldanrr wtrn. Soap 26e. Ointment X and We. Talcum See. aWCuticura Soap sbat without mac. Baby Grands of QUALITY Osborn $425 Milton $635 Haynes $650 Kurtzmann $875 Cable ...$940 Steck $950 Conover $995 Weber $1,150 Easy Payments fQAKFOnt MCsic Co. 419 South 16th St., Omaha Your Income Taxes can be substantially re- duced through the opera tion of our Insurance Trust Plan., This plan also protects the estate you create when you take out Life Insurance and by so doing increases its value to your family. Our Trust Officer will gladly talk over this matter with you or we will mail you further information on request. QmahaTrust Company OMfte National Bank BUiUInf POLITICAL ADVEKTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT - A SQUARE DEAL FOR EVERYBODY . Charles A. Randall Republican Candidate for Railway Commissioner Vote for SAM K. GREENLEAF for County Treasurer And Reduce Your Taxes A PRAYER INTK MOVIES. Th fi.w.a tfiaw ii.af, a"4 In Pft,M Mal.hin n4 K' tl'' hi.. ..... ih. I..a a4 ealls In h ua li4 i axafh Hr r.t aa atari rl br airh a Bit Irk fana, I llai la Ilia luukl'i, .lav "tern lha KMO'""thal 0t oill h'sr tot f'n4 a T V!it th ln'rapil Lear. r Te I .an. Ah. Uod t ilira-'lM. smke at Pnaw Mora .ut.ily cru-i tliat la lhraini Ilia Th Horror ef that rii.Hii' Fr touih will r A Ii. In f'tn'e. til Tha Nwr Yrk Tlma. said'toTiTfunny. A d. inr lallv ntarrifil fl'l whnnj h. ),.. iialiriril Into lh wortil : ar a H-. li si li't aif ht. I.enaoi H'lnion. Kfti. ifi.-y la th art ef an!inf nlns trill h i.f i.ui lime inakln out rafsrt thai amnrbmly Hunks ha la oln to raa, tint neve dura Kaiwa Indualrlallat. (iitlirf drab ball and l.a ta sat I.irIis at laaat t P hr through my epan "That B'"raa tiaia l"fk at glaaaa " I rant f hata furfntfan !, put el my nnt. - I.a Journal Ainuaant (I'triat I rtrnv hiinttd nillaa apaadad h ohole rtiatatica-ort all lha ay but ill, In l akul a bit " What ra you rlrlvlns?" ' "A cht " Naahvill Tnnaaaan. In lha ivorrta of HI. Paul. X haa fmigh' ('""I (Kill: h haa k.pl tha faith: In i!na nnt aary In wall doin Hum lie wit iuhllah a book of a.nava. MW pata. will aoiitrnir ilrlura of tha amhor. COrda. now Tlaa voto for your tnia ant faithful aariant ' From s North tiakotl l'amain Publicity Pamphlet. POLITICAL ADVKBTIf KMKNT Candidate for Concrtas Siath District, Nebraska W. E. FLYNN PLATFORM t favor lower frefeht rataa and lower taxes. Am for soldier bonus, payabl In treasury notes, redeemed from aav ing on army reduction. Dirt fanner for Federal Retarve Board. Deflation on farmer and atockman haa been too aavara. Profiteer and grafter should be. proaecuted. I am In favor of th enforcement of our Laws and our Conatitution and respect for oath of office. Am in favor of transmitting tha Repub lic to our children like w got it, only better and mora humane country. Square deal for labor and every one elae. Official are servants, not mas ters, of people. Am opposed to. Cummlns-Eich Railroad Act. Too much commis sion to Banker on U. S. Govern ment loans. Vote for Herman A, Thielke Republican Candidate County Commissioner 4th District A Taxpayer in Douglas County for 36 Years Bee Want Ads Froduce Results. 1874 1513-15 Douglas Street Specialists In Grand Pianos 1922 "A".....-.- Mason A Hamlin Grand, Style Standard Piano ef the World $1,725 THE GRAND IS THE PIANO OF THE FUTURE Only a short time ago comparatively few people aspired to ownership of a Grand Piano. Its price made It prohibitive. Things have changed since then! One far-seeing manufacturer remembered the fate of the once popular square piano; he recognized the unattractiveness and limitations of the upright piano; he appreciated the desire and longing of lovers of music to possess a Grand Piano. He realized that this could only materialize through substantial cost reduction. This pioneer manufacturer was "Brambach" of New York. The Brambach factory discontinued making upright pianos and crystalized Its thought and energy toward producing the flnett small Grand that could be built. It succeeded for today the "Brambach" has an International reputation for excellence In tone, action and durability; It is supreme as a small Grand. WE SHOW THE CHOICEST STOCK OF GRANDS IN OMAHA Brambach Grands 635 Apollo Grands Kimball Grands Vose Grands Kranich & Bach Grands Sohmer Grands Mason & Hamlin Grands 1725 Pianos Player Pianos Victrolas Victor Records Music Musical Instruments POLITICAL ADVF.RTI8KMENT. POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. Former Member Nebraska Legisla ture Two Sessions, 1915 and 1917 Thos. E. Cpnley Attorney-at-Law ; Republican Candidate for State Representative 19th District Being all of the 12th Ward and Knpinrli fl K ' at 9 J sv Primaries July 18. 1922 in the' nth Ward aMaaAaMAAAMaaMaaMaAaMNaaaaaaaaaaaaaAAAaaaaaMMaaMaiM 'iar .i