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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1923)
The Morning Bee _MORNING—EVENING—SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY NELSON B UPDIKE. Publi.h.r. B BKEWEK. G«». Man MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tbs Associated Press, of wbl'b Tbs bee is s member, is ezclastrelf entitled to tbs use for rerubl test too of all news dispatchee credited to It er not oUienrtae credited to this paper, and also tbs local news published bereta. All rijbts of repablicatloos of tar special dispatches are alen referred. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for the Department XT lantic or Person Wanted. For Night Calls After 10 P. M.s innri Editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or 1042. 1WUV OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam Co. Bluffs - - - - 15 Scott St. So. Side. N W. Cor. 24th and N New York—286 Fifth Avenue Washington - - 422 Star Bldg. Chicago - - - 1720 Stegcr Bldg. Paris, France—420 Rue St. Honor* HOPE FOR THE FUTURE. Civilizations before this have flowered and gone to seed. Doubtless the Egyptians, the Greeks and the P.omans in their heyday of power and culture never dreamed of oblivion. Scarcely more does the modern world consider the possibility of stagnation and decay. From the standpoint of a philosopher and a stu dent of human affairs Henry Adams discussed this contingency and concluded that it was almost in evitable. There were few in his day ready to admit that mankind might go backward instead of for ward, and his theory of degradation found few listeners. Circumstances now have altered somewhat. The world war led some to feel or think that civilization was tottering on the brink. There are more who predict that another such conflict will send the world back to the dark ages. The greatly aug mented powers of destruction which have not been accompanied by any increase in the moral restraint i which should control their use has caused thought ful persons much misgiving. Cities may be wrecked, populations poisoned with gas and all progress stopped by the distortion of science that now repre sents war. Worse than the material wreckage is the brutalizing efTect of such thoughts and deeds on human nature. Measured in years, civilization even though dated back to the close of the stone age, is only a thin veneer of time. Mankind was millions of years in savagery and has had only a few centuries of any sort of culture. The thought that civilization is only in its infancy, that the possibility of forward progress is still practically unlimited if the mind and will of man will follow opportunity should stimulate rather than discourage. Dr. Thomas S. B. Baker, acting president of Carnegie Institute of Technology, notes signs of a trend toward despondency which characterizes a people whose culture is failing. While from a scientific standpoint he refuses to give any assur ance that progress is inevitable, saying that' such a fatalistic belief would itself be destructive of all effort, he bespeaks a greater confidence in the fu ture. This is to be what the race makes it. “The energy of the race can only be conserved through new ideas, new discoveries, and the ap plication of these discoveries,” he asserts. Man kind will degenerate unless there is a continuous flow of new ideas, is his thesis. There is m> stand ing still; one must go forward or back. And yet it is necessary to remark that progress does not de pend entirely on new ideas or scientific discoveries. There are old truths that must be held fast, th_>ro is a need for strengthened moral fiber and a spirit ual enrichment without which progress is a futile hope and degradation threatens. WHAT WILL THEY DO WITH IT ? From an eastern paper we cut the following item: "Washington, Dec. 22.—The resolution of Sena tor Fernald. republican, Maine, creating a congres sional commission to consider establishment of an art and industry educational ’temple' In this city to cost $30,000,000 was adopted today by the senate and sent to the house. "The only expense to the government would bo donation of a site. Senator Fernald said, adding that a number of multi-millionaires proposed to erect the finest and most elaborate building ever constructed.” The information is interesting so far as it goes, but it does not go far enough. How will the cause of art and education in this or any other country be served by the erection of a “temple” that will cost $30,000,000 and be the “finest ever built?” Human pride and arrogance has been manifested in many ways, such as the Pyramids in Egypt, or the great temples in Java, but how has the human race been benefited by any of these attempts? The great pyramids in Egypt stand today much as they did thousands of years ago, and men still puzzle their minds as to why these great piles of granite were heaped up. Whether as temples, as mausoleums, or mere monuments, their purpose is a mystery. Yet they are quite as useful in their way as a $30,000,000 "temple” in Washington will be. If the multimillionaires concerned are serious in their desire to aid the cause of art and education, they might establish with the fund such scholarships as it will provide, and through that method give op portunity to many young men and women to get in formation that will be of real service, and which never can be obtained by gazing at the wonders of the most expensive building ever erected by man. ANOTHER EXPERIMENT IN BUSINESS. Because he believes that his employes have a right in the business they helped to build up, Henry 1 A. Dix, a New York clothing maker, has gone about j to give practical expression to his ideas. He has i virtually turned over the assets of a million-dollar J concern to his employes, and has also loaned them ; $25,000 for working capital. Each employe who has completed three years’ ) employment with the concern gets an allotment of stock, which is to be paid for from earnings. In this way no element of charity is involved in the transaction. No interest is charged on deferred pay ments. so that all will have an equal chance to ac quire the ultimate ownership of the business. Mr. Dix and his son for the present remain with the company, in advisory capacities, having given up tbeir $60.0^0 salaries ns part of the deal. It is not altogether a novel occurrence, for Omaha had a somewhat similar affair last summer, when the late L. G. Doup willed his half million-dol lar concern to his employes, proportioning the amount of stock bequeathed to each according to length of service and position with the concern. So far as is known the new company is carrying on with all the prospects of success. So it will probably turn out in the New York venture. Whether this is to be the basis of the ultimate solution for the labor and capital relations, or4 merely another experiment in applied communism, the experiment will be wot h watching. Reformers who have devoted much in liry to the subject of dis persion of huge estates v il find in it some points of interest. As a sign of t' _• times it is worthy of espe cial note. WATER, CROPS AND POWER. If the influence of Omaha counts for anything, the project for supplemental water on the farms of Adams, Kearney and Phelps counties will be carried on to completion. Those business men who came here from Holdrege, Hastings and Minden found a quick response when they appeared before the agri cultural committee of the Omaha Chamber of Com merce. This plan to utilize Platte river water that is now going to waste is not to die for lack of sup port, moral or financial. The soil of those three counties is rich, but the rainfall is not to be depended upon. What more logical, then, to take some of the water that fltfws by in the Platte and store it in the subsoil, where the roots may tap it at their need? There are many other spots on the great plains where this same plan would be profitable. In many respects such a method differs from or I dinary reclamation work. These lauds are already I settled. Farmers have established themselves there, ! with good homes and big barns. Some years, when moisture is plentiful, they have enjoyed profitable harvests, but in dry years they have suffered. To stabilize their production at a volume about three times its present average would be a wonderfu’ thing for them and for their neighbors; One of the causes of depression has been the low buying powei of the farmers. If in this district their output of grain can be increased, as is promised, from thf present figure of $85,000,000 to $241,000,000, ther< is an immense advantage in putting the water on thi land. The waterpower that would be produced over the 100-foot-high dam is too big an item to be called e : by-product. Nature has placed this and many othei resources at the disposal of Nebraska, and it is wel that the people should begin to plan to utilize them A NEW DAIRY QUEEN. A *new queen has been crowned in the dairy world. May Walker Ollie, Homestead 300043, a cow of the Holstein-Friesian breed, now has the honor of standing first in butterfat production among all cows. Her record for 365 days, during which twenty different supervisors were employed in conducting the test, was 31,610.6 pounds of milk containing 1,218.59 pounds of butterfat, equivalent to 1,523.23 pounds of butter. During the past decade, record after record hat been broken in the dairy world. In winning the new honors, May Walker Ollie Homestead displacet Duchess Skylark Ormsby, whose record for 365 dayt' was 1,205.09 pounds of butterfat. We are told that this was the 59th cow credited with a produc tion exceeding 1,000 pounds of butterfat in 365 days. One might well ponder over the question of when records in milk and butterfat production will cease to be broken, and at just what period we may ex pect to see the world's final supercow. The pro duction of this Holstein-Friesian milk machine may be better realized when we consider that it represents an average of 4.17 pounds of butter for every day in the year. When we contrast this record with the record of the average cow in the United States, six tenths of a pound of butter per day, we can see clearly why she is a very remarkable cow. If there was any question of the fact that science was playing a very striking part in agricultural ad vancement, it would be answered by a recital of the achievements of such dairy cows. Breeding and feeding arc the two big factors which have been responsible. Each of these factors involves myriads of problems not yet all solved, but in proc ess of solution. Over at Beltsville, Md., Prof. R. U. Graves of the Department of Agriculturo is spending his entire time in the investigation of problems of inheritance in dairy cows and other breeding problems. Feeding problems are being studied at pructically every state experiment station. While we are proud and justly so of our dairy queens, yet our possibilities along dairy lines as a nation are great when we consider that the United States is low in the average production per cow. The latest figures on milk production show that the average milk production per cow in the United States is 3,627 pounds. In Denmark the average production is 5,666 pounds, in Switzerland 6,950 pounds, and in Holland the average milk production per cow reaches 7,585 pounds, or more than double the record in the United States. Of course it will be argued that Holland is a relatively small country and that very intensive farming methods are prac ticed. Nevertheless it is very evident that there is plenty of room for improvement. The dairy cow as an asset on the farms of the United States is being realized more and more. There is plenty of reason to suppose that besides de veloping dairy champions, we can in time raise the production of the average cow. THE BUSINESS GIRL. The capable young business woman can not be accused of selfishness even though she spends her few short hours of leisure for her own pleasure. All the recreation she can take is necessary that she may efficiently fill her niche in the business world. She should, therefore, receive special commendation when she sacrifices these golden hours which mean so much to youth, in serving and giving pleasure to others. The Business Girls’ league of Albion, Neb., under the leadership of Miss Bertha Watson, newly elected county treasurer, employed its evenings for over a week in packing 46 boxes with gifts to be sent to the different towns of the county. These gifts, which represent other sacrifices, were furnished by the league, assisted by high school girls, and were distributed among 200 children who would have had a cheerless Christmas had it not been for the tireless efforts of these unselfish young women. It is this same thoughtfulness for the welfare of others that makes the business girl useful to her employer. Forgetfulness of self shortens the work ing day and lightens the task, for she is not work ing for recompense but for the more worthy purpose of being useful to others. Her greatest reward is in the realisation of making herself necessary to the accomplishment of another’s high purpose. There is not enough appreciation of the part played in the world by the girls who work. “Never take the horseshoe from the door,’’ was a good old song, but between automobiles and the pitching rinks, it is hard to find one to nail up nowa days. Maybe it would be a real step toward effective prohibition if bootleggers were barred from the capi tol restaurants. The increase reported in exports and imports suggests that Europe has found a way to pay up and buy back. More police protection is needed, but not at the cost of less fire protection. All set at Lincoln? Let’s go. “From, State and Nation” ' —Editorials from Other Newspapers— Froposed State Economies i From th« Ttkamsh H'rsld. Tax reduction will he the promi I nent issue before the next legislature. We mentioned last week the extrava I gance of the state maintaining four separate normal schools, one at I 1‘eru. one at Kearney, one at Wayne and the fourth at t'hadron. Each has expensive buildings, heating, electric and water plants. Each has a superintendent and a corp of in structors to be maintained at the ex pense of the taxpayers. Mow arc wo going to reduce taxes if the expense of maintaining the public institutions in the state are to Increase each year. The state normal board has Just filed a request with the governor asking the next legislature to appropriate $2,250,387, which Is an increase of $960,673. or 73 per cent, over the ap proprlation made for the same insli tutions by the last legislature. The normal board is wild in its demands at this time when retrenchment should be the watchword. Another leech on the state treas ury is the railway commission. It is asking the next legislature to appro priate $152,000 for Its maintenance This is the same as it had the previ ous legislature. Wo will defy anyoivt to show where the average taxpayei received any benefit from that depart ment in the last two years. Their principal occupation waa increasing phone rates in rural localities, in compliance with the requests of one of the largest corporated trust con corns operating in Nebraska. The state cannot nfford to pay $150,000 to maintain a railway commission; bet ter abolish the department if the ex pense cannot he reduced one-lialf by discharging a corps of experts who are as useless to the welfare of the state ns a fifth wheel to a wagon. All the Information needed can be ob tained from the corporations over whom they have jurisdiction. Happy Hay. | From the Beatrice Express. | Some day a pond farmer’s wife Is I going to invite us out for breakfast and if wo can manage to get up be j fore milking time, we are going to I accept. Then gathered with that i hearty, happy farjner family, we're 1 going to show ’em all what a real ! hungry farm boy who has wandered away a little can go to good farm sausage. And we serve notice right now on that anonymous farmer's wife that she’ll have to spend all her time In the kitchen, she and the hired girl both, cooking sausage, and more sausage, and a flapjack now and then and drawing oft some more milk from ! the stone crock in the summer | kitchen. She’ll rue the day she in I vlted lis. I But her troubles won’t be ended j then. After breakfast, we are got nr | to make a determined effort to arisr 1 from the table, maple syrup mayls still reminiscently hovering around i our lips, and we're going to force that farmer woman to tell ns what i' ! is that goes into country sausage that isn't put into the citv kind. We have interviewed many of .tlios< j in the business, but haven't got an* j satisfaction. There's a tang, a flair j or any other hifalutin’ word you car 1 think of, about country sausage, that rests not in any other condiment known to man. We are going to pray with the country sister, and plead and , hep, and before we leave we’re going ! to have the secret. Then we're going to get rich making city Sausages into country sausages for the benefit of all the starved and repining simple tons who were foolish enough to leave the farm and sausage in their youth The argument will be long, hut that doesn’t matter. If we protract it enough maybe the farmer's wife will ask us to stay to dinner. And for dinner, well we know It. the piece de resistance, as we say in town, is going to he backbones. Sausage and back bones! The mind cannot conjure a day better spent. Peaceful Texts. Frnrn the Wi'-hlta Enarle. In Japan the sixth-grade histories and readers used In the puhlic schools have just been rewritten and thor oughly revised. In keeping with the new spirit which prevails in Japan, the text books have been demilltar ized and demobilized. The reader Is a collection of short stories of great men. Of the 400 sto ries contained in the reader, only a very few formerly were of foreigners Nearly all the sketches were of Jan anese military heroes. who were praised for wading through blood to success. In the new reader more than 50 of the characters described are non Japanese. Among them are Washing ton, TJncoln, Edison, Watt, Marconi and Florence Nightingale. Many non military great persons are included nqd the military heroes who remain are praised for the peaceful qualities rather than for their ability to kill or a large scale. Japanese educational, authorities, i who are decidedly antimilitaristic, be lieve that these changes will tend t« i foster a spirit of international go»d Daily Prayer Ilia love is perfected In us.—John 4:1S. Heavenly Father, write Thy new, best name of Love upon our heart* this morning. Help us to remember Jesus Christ. During the busy hour* bring Him often to our thought. When the mind is free from some set task may it revert to Him, as the needle turns to the pole. Keep us from wounding Him in thought or word. Make our communion with Him sweet. Give us His strength, of His wis dom. of His winsomeness. Forgive the professions which have been but empty words. Forgive the sins which have brought a reproach upon Thy church. Forgive us if we have made it difficult to distinguish between tbe church and the world. Save us from the sin of despair. Light the lamp of hope in every heart. Fill us with the spirit of expectancy. Teach us that ruined lives may be rebuilt, and tHht in Christ is suf ficiency for all our needs. We are thankful that Christ is the way to our Father’s house, that there is forgiveness for all, the bread of life for all, and a welcome. Cleanse us from the defilement of the way: blot out the memories of righteousness, and give us the Joy of knowing that Thou dost own us as Thy sons and daughters.s-Amen. FREDERICK T. KEENEY. D D , Syracuse. N. Y. i NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION for NOVEMBER, 1922, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily.73,84? Sunday .78,105 B. BREWER. Gen. Mgr. ELMER S. ROOD, Cir. Mg. Sworn to and aubscribed before me thia 5th day of December. 1922 W. H. QUIVEY, (Seal) Notary Public will and a desire for International peace among the children who will be the statesmen of. tomorrow. In the history the Washington dl» armament conference is described at length, and the several nations are praised for tlielr apparent willingness to co-operate in a primary move to ward reduction of armaments. Certainly there is an active and quite successful antimilitary ^urlt In Japan, and It Is a fae'or in affairs which Is not to be overlooked in cou tddering future development of that country. A Modern Hip Van Winkle. Fruiu the Keek} Mountain Nrtv». A prisoner released last we* k from a Pennsylvania penitentiary after lta> been confine*! for 16 years, had his first automobile ride when he was taken by some friendly person to Ills Maryland home In a high-powered machine. Tho man had Seen automo biles before he was shut away from the world, hut they were not in com irton use. Me was overcome and made 111 not only by the excitement of the ride, hut hy the number of motor cars he saw on the way. To those of us who have not been shut away the advent of automobiles, of airplanes, of mechanical music, of wireless telephony and other recent Inventions has taken place gradual!} ami wo take the changed conditions calmly and ask with more or less In difference, yet with expectation. “What shall wo have next?” But it Is not surprising that a man should be overwhelmed by a sudden Introduc tion to a changed world. For It is tar from being the world with which wo W'ere familiar 20 years ago. * Many elements have entered into the cliang eil conditions, hut the most conspicu ous one. after all, Is the motor car Imagine for a moment the return of a friend of 20 years ago after a Htp Van Winkle retirement. The street spectacle would bewilder him Accustomed in past days to cross from one side of a thoroughfare at his leisure, only looking out fur Jog ging horses and sure that drivers of the horses would look out for him he would not be able to estimate bis danger from even slow-moving cars as slow, say, as 25 miles an hour! an*l would probably be run down on his first unguided trip across a thoi onerhfare. And he would gaze and gaze and hardly believe his eyes a* tlie sight of tlie never-ending proces sion of horseless carriages. For a ve hide with no visible motive power, in escaping steam or smoke to suggest the railroad locomotive, would seetr to him to move by magic. For that matter, jne who has seer ♦ he now ever-present car for years but lias an ineradicable eonvietion formed In childhood that a iarriag' should have horses attached, mat sometimes looking at the swiftly pass ing parade have a sudden sense of the uncanny even today. People wh" are soft-hearted have a sympathetl* thought for their fellow beings wh* are shut away from the world for anv cause whatever, but thev think of tin inexperience chiefly as a deprivation of liberty, of freedom to come mid «*> They do not reflect that a new work is being made in tho interval and that When freedom does come the forme* shutins will have a new alphabet o' living to learn. Only tho blue sky will bo quite the same to them. Common Sense An Ideal Husband and Father. "For many years I carried my busi ness troubles home with me. 1 was short and irritable and domineering In my home. A member of my family became ill. Death was expected. X thought of the many times I had been cross and ugly toward this beloved one. I prayed for her recovery and promised Clod if He would spure her I would bring a reform into my home life. She recovered and T am a chang ed man, and never have I experi enced the happiness and the content ment such as I now enjoy since I mnde that promise." This is the statement of a man whose cheerful happiness is often a cause of remark among those who know him well. His wife and children smile, nnd laugh and loko with him. He is al luded to as an ideal husband and father. Ills wife praises him; his children say ho is the best daddy in the world. ! Fathers, what do your wives and ' children think about you? Do you so conduct yourselves in your homes that your entrance into it brings joy to the children and a welcome smile from the wife—the kind that a happy wife gives the hus band who is kind and thoughtful to ward her? Ask yourself this question. You know the answer. (Copyright, 1*2J.) “center shots. We'd much rather be right than president of Poland.—Wheeling Reg ister. Some citizens kick everywhere ex cept at the ballot box.—Greenville Piedmont. What's making John Bull angry Philadelphia North American. Mr. De Valera was not caught at church last Sunday. The same might be said of many others.—New York Post. * Manchuria wants America's worn out street cars. Sorry, Manchuria but we are using them.—Muskegon Chronicle. advertisement. THE DANGER OF PNEUMONIf How You Can Avoid It When you have a cold and neglect it you are in great danger of pneumonia: The pure food ele ments in Father John’s 1 Medicine | build en e r gy to resist cold and grip germs. The gentle laxative effect of Father John’s Medicine helps to drive out impurities. Father John's Medicine soothes and heals the lining of the breathing passages. You are safe when you take Father John’s Medicine because it is guaranteed j free from alcohol or dangerous drugs in any form. Sixty-seven yeai s in use. “The People’s Voice” Editorial! from readers of Tho Mornlnf Boo fUaderi of Tbo Mornlap Boo art Invitod to um thl! oolumn freely for expreseton on matters of public latereat. The New Year and the Farmer. .. Kansas City, Mo.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: For the past two years we have been telling the farmer and stockman to take off his hat to the milk cow. the hog and the chicken instead of taking his hat off to the hanker. Tho hogs, cows and chickens have been a true friend and debt payer for the pnst two years. Now we say, Mr. Banker, take your hat off to the farmer and the stock raiser—they are the men that had pluck enough to stay with Ihe milk cow. hogs and chickens, late and early, regardless of time, without a union or a guarantee of 6 per cent on their capital. It is true that the milk rows, the hogs and the chickens saved many a hank door from being closed and bundles of dead notes came to life and were paid in the past two years. Farmers, be careful of blue-sky agents, smart promoters and organ izers. The country has gone organi zation mad. YVo have too many util ity hoards and bureaus of Investiga tion. The fanner must conservo his resources. Money may not always be as easy as now, so the man who stays dose to shore with money on deposit instead of paying interest will he the boss instead of a servant. The farmer is not Asking for more credit of the federal government, hut relief from the burden of high taxes: the common people do not want the federal gov ernment to have a finger in every thing and a strong hand in nothing. N. B. Z. Reed an Impossible Candidate. Omaha—To the Editor of The Oma ha Bee: Jerry Howard has announced that the Bryan club will soon start a movement among tho democrats of Nebraska to favor the nomination of Senator Reed of Missouri by the dew oratio party for president of tho Unit cd States. Mr. Howard is supposed to ho well informed on public matters particularly on the political situation He should know that Reed's nomina tion by the democratic party is abso lutely out of the question. He should know that hundreds of thousands of democrats who believe In the leader ship of ex-President Wilson would not support Reed even if he were nom inated. He should know that hundreds of thousands of “dry” democrats under the leadership of W. J. Bryan and Governor Bryan would consider it a colossal mistake to put the enforce ment of the eighteenth amendment in the power of such a liquor advocate as Reed. Political parties sometimes agree to favor undesirable candidates on account of race, color or creed, on the theory of expediency to win success. But. ye gods! What a descent it would he down from President Wil son and President Harding to such a marplot and selfish politician ns Jim Reed. He was one of the wilful 12 who were a thorn in the side of President Wilson during the world war. He succeeded during the last election In retaining his seat in the senate only by n narrow margin. His election was due to the support of liquor republicans In St. Uouis and Kansas City. If the decision had been left to democrats only, he would be numbered among the “lame ducks” in his own state. DEMOCRAT. THE BEGGAR. My Httte girl’s a beggar—she is begging all the white To climb upon my back and take ft ride; ^he to tidies round behind me and tells me with a smile, Her tiny hands stretched up on either aide. know her heart-felt longing and I can not fail her call. I kneel beside a chair while she her arms entwine ’ round mo. and we gallop, or we canter down the hall Much to the satisfaction of that little girl of mine. We circle row'd the table, I play a broncho s ,-art, And Peem to be as blissful as is she. And there is a dizzy feeling In the region of my heart That brings a pleasant memory back to me. My little girl's a beggar, but I was a begger, too. In the days for which I often times repine, And I’m glad to be a father agreeable and true. And grant the ardent wishes of that little girl of mine. —Robert Worthington Davis. Annual Invoice and Report - oAJkr*. W»IXIA>A£ - A Book oj Today "When Kansas Was Young.” a col lection of true stories of interesting times on tho border, written as only ' Tom McNetil can Write, have just ; been published in book form by Mac millan. Some of the chapter headings give an idea of the book. Here are a few: “The Largest Indian Council,” "A Frontier Court," "When Slaves Were Hunt* 1 in Kansas,” "A Frontier Foot Rate." ' Recollection of n Fron tier Hhtrili." "The Hast Indian Raid,” "Windy Smith and Tiger Juelt," ' Da^ Men. Real and Imitation." "Drawl Poker on the Harder." "The Gambler Who Tempted Fate," "The Hast Raid of the Daltons,” etc. In the hook Car rie Nation and other striking person alities of Medicine Hodge are made to live again. Pjp-jp;; jiet Contents ISTluirt Tlrachm |. Forlnfant^and^hildren^ ||| jtesi5|g33|| Mothers Know That P|| [PASlPnlA Genuine Castoria j] AVeiletnblcPrcparttioftfonvi i ||| li t t| Cheerfulness and Restt^6 WM-‘ R neither Opiam.Morphvnen !«& | >lineraLNoTNAHC0Ti KlPf ^ouocsmaurm |pS(i .. H J>wnp*M \ Bt Sir j Uli BBSs ? 1 ■i s MS 1 Ahcllrfultten*^** K~c' S Constipation and DUrrhoe m L^sSs&H md ,1 ra^^iicSidna^l04 J ■ ,£===§■ j Thirty Years lg§^ CASTORIA SxACt Copy of Wrapper, tm* «*•▼•«* eowweiir. niwtom city. Join Our 1923 Army of New Year Get-Ahead Savers Nineteen Twenty-three stretches before you— twelve months of Opportunity. Convert Opportunity into Accomplishment by starting your Get-Ahead account Today. There Is a Club to Fit Every Purse and for Every Member of the Family The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Capital and Surplus - - $2,000J)0t>