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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1924)
The Omaha Bee] M O R N I N G—E V E N 1 N G—S U N P A Y THE BEE PUBLISHING CO.. Publisher N. B. UPDIKE, President BALLARD DUNN. J0YM: Editor in Chief. Bunnecx Manayer. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Aiteeiated Prexx. of which The Bee j'S "*5btu is esetsstvsir entitled to Mix use for publication of aU news alcpatehes credited to it or not otherwise credited in tilt© mmt, ®nd tlio th© local nawa published < hwrtu AU rtffct© of republican©® of our special dispatches ar© ‘^VTJSfts Be. is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the recoyniied authority on audits, and The Omaha Bee's circulation is reyularly audited by their oraanisatione. __ Entered as aecond-claes matter May 28. 1M8, at Omaha postoffice under act Of March 1, is<». BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for ]antic 1000 th© Department or Person Wanted. 1 OFFICES . SEjSSESSS,.,af g~3£BiSifc AUaMa—Atlanta Truxt lift \^_-----* WHAT IS MR. JOHNSON’S PROGRAM? Hiram Johnson’s second visit to Omaha in quest of Nebraska’s support to his presidential aspirations finds him still pursuing the president with criticisms. Nothing Mr. Coolidge has done or is doing has the approval of the senator from California. This is unfortunate, of course. Yet, as a republican, Mr. Johnson might devote some of his time to telling what he expects to do when he becomes president. We know what he will not do. He will not as sent to the entry of the United States as an active participant in the affairs of the world. Not only is he against the League of Nations, but he is also op posed to-the World court. Advice, he says, is the only thing he would give to Europe. Now, nobody knows better than Hiram Johnson the futility of giving advice only. He hss been peddling advice throughout the length and breadth of the land for the lest 12 years, and the inclination of the people to follow his leadership never seemed less than at thia time. * m • At least he has been consistent in his opposition to the League of Nations. On that he stands im movable. If we go back to 1912, when he was sec ond on the Roosevelt ticket, we find a platform of prinicples to most if not all of which he undoubtedly gives support today. The great cry that year was for “social justice.” In a slightly modified way the same cry ia heard today. Yet it would be interest ing to have some one tell us in what way social jus tice is to be secured. Woodrow Wilson promised to lead us on to the glittering heights, and Hiram John idii was opposed to him. Warren G. Harding en tered the president’s office with high resolve to direct the nation back to normal, and Hiram Johnson op posed *»»« Calvin Coolidge took up the burden laid down by his dead chieftain, courageously seeking to carry on, and Hiram Johnson is opposed to him. A candidate who is alwsys opposed to whatever is being attempted should, if he is well balanced, have a definite constructive program to substitute for the one he would defeat. That is the weak point in the Johnson armor. At a time when the presi dent is confronted by serious and perplexing prob lems of domestic policy, such as relief for the farm situation, a remedy for the railroad muddle, reduc tion of taxation, development of inland water ways, and a number of other items of immense concern as affecting the future welfare of the country, the sen ator from California is complaining that Mr. Cool idge “complacently associates” with men of big busi ne's. * * * How would it help the nation if the president were to close his door to every man who is con nected in any way with “big business,” and reso lutely refuse to deal with them in any matter? Big business has long been a favorite target in this land, »nd yet what is so described is but a natural result of the progress the world has made. Not in the United States alone, but all over the world, business has grown in importance as well as in size. Huge sums of capital are absolutely needed to carry on the affairs of the world in an efficient and orderly way. Many sound reasoners think the United States already has gone too far in the direction of putting restraints on the development of business institu tions. A dread of monopoly, carefully fostered by some who hope to gain personal advantage ^through the fear they create, has been persistently propa gated. Out of it has come an anomalous situation. The farmer, who is excluded from the operations of the anti-trust laws, so far as his marketing oper ations are concerned, sorters the most from lack of organization. Giant industries, at whom the restric tions and penalties of the Sherman law and the Clayton law were leveled, are thriving. The farmer, however, can not be built up by pulling the others down. Nor will it relieve the distress to set about on a campaign of general price scaling. The trouble is deeper, and requires a more careful treatment than is involved in either of these processes, which .are suggested as easy if not effective cures. We concede to Senator Johnson his unquestioned right to differ from the president on all matters. His patriotism and devotion to the institutions of our common country* is none the less sincere because he declines to follow Mr. Coolidgc, or, indeed, the lead ership of anyone. Were he so constrained, he would not now be a candidate for president. Seeking the highest office in the land, he is but exhibiting an American’s high ambition to serve the public. Along with this ambition should go a full and definite pro gram of purpose and plans, to be carried out as far as possible. Outside of keeping the United 'States from becoming entangled In world affairs, whst else is it Mr. Johnson proposes to do when he is elected president? ONE SHAH LESS IN PERSIA. The shah of Persia is the latest monarch to go into the discard. His loyal and loving subjects gave him the gate with about as little compunction ns ever was exhibited toward a vanishing luminary. He is a lucky king, however, to be living in this enlightened age. Once in th« variegated history of his interest ing country he would not have been simply pushed off the throne. Persians used to have a practice of disposing of rulers who had outlived their welcome after a fashion that left no doubt as to the intent of those who were directing the proceeding. As the mikado said, referring to attempts on the life of the heir apparent, “it was something lingering, with boiling oil in it.” What a consolation it should be to the shah to realiie that he was dismissed, just as if he had been the cook or the chauffeur. • What the effect will be on international affairs is to be develop'd by time. Prrria has been of im portance for some years, because of tJjc desirability of certain oil fields and other natur^ advantages. Russia took considerable interest in the shah’s gov ernment prior to the war. Germany’s drive to the "east also considered the kingdom. Berlin to Bagdad was something more than an idle dream, and may yet be fealized, though not under the auspices of imperial Germany. Following the war England got very busy in Persia, with loans and other methods of fastening the country closer to the other Mesopotamian groups that were being developed. This scheme fell through, because of oppositionist home, and the outcome of the undertaking that had for its end the subdivision of the Ottoman empire. Oil fields still exist, agricultural and other re sources have not been effectively exploited, and the prospect for a greater market for the manufactures of western nations is as alluring now as it has been these many years. Swiftly moving shifts in the gov ernments in the Near East do not lead to a solution of either the political or economic problems of the people, but these will some day be settled. In the meantime, shahs will come and go, as rulers have in that region for more than 125 centuries. HIGHWAYS AND THEIR USERS. A factor in connection with the good roads ques tion which comes up for consideration from time to time is what charge shall be levied on the users of the road for defraying the cost of construction and maintenance. This highly important, and gener ally neglected, phase of the whole question must soon come forward for full discussion and settle ment. On it, in Nebraska particularly, depends much of the future for good roads. Atitomobile clubs and association s are keenly awake to the need of better and uniform regulations for the use of the roads. It is one of the perplexi ties of users of the highways who go from state to state that the rules are not always the same. A federal code, simplified and resting on experience is needed for the common safety of all drivers. When this is out of the way, and traffic is proceed ing under rules that are the same from coast to coast, then an even greater problem will be up. A typical case may be cited. Between St. Louis and Terre Haute a large trucking traffic has been established. A few miles only at either end of the route are outside of Illinois. The rest of the road is paid for by citizens of Illinois, who get no benefit whatever from the fees paid by the truck owners in Missouri or Indiana. What will be done to adjust such a case as this? An Omaha man has a plan which deserves ex amination. He would put a meter on all cars, and let the owner pay proportionately as he uses the highway. Details, maybe, for carrying out this plan are not so simple as the idea itself, but it could be worked out. Loads may be figured, also, so that those who use the road most will not do so at the expense of those who use it least. These questions should be studied, so that when the time comes action will rest on intelligent under standing of what is involved and what is sought as a remedy. As each state is developing its own high way system, so each will probably work out its own scheme for controlling the highways. Ultimately all must be harmonized into one general system. The automobile and truck are figuring more and more in interstate business and must be dealt with accordingly. “OUT OF DEATH COMES LIFE.” “Oh, Wind, if Winter come*, can Spring be far behind?" Not now. dear heart, for winter has gone, and just around the comer is joyous spring. What though the days be dreary, the skies leaden and over cast when they are not dripping, the great transition is at hand. Nature is coming to life once more. A bit of green already tinges the lawn, the certain presage of what is going on. Cold winds sweep the skies, and a rawness in the air makes close wraps comfortable, yet a suspicious softness is noticed on bark and branch of tree and shrub. Down, underneath the soggy surface of the earth, where yet frost holds sway, the miracle is being wrought. Despite the cold, life is stirring in the germs, and only a touch of Nature’s wand is waited for them to burgeon into loveliness of bloom. All the long cold winter they have slumbered in the frozen ground, but returning warmth will be the magic to bring them back life and beauty. It is the old and ever new wonder. Over the earth soon will spread that marvelous mantle only Nature can weave, and all the tender presence of grass and buds will prepare the stage for summer’s magiyficent opulence. Gentle rains or gushing torrents, sunshine that daily will become more ardent, these are Nature's lure for the things that grow from the ground. The old dame knows secrets man has never fathomed, and presently she will clothe all outdoors with a radiant beauty whose charm never fails. It is spring, when all animate things feel again the im pulse of vigor and growth, and the renewal of life that has been dormant. Old as creation, yet new as each recurrent dawn, the process goes on as it has from the beginning and will till the end. “Some call it evolution, And others call it God.” The supreme court says it can not take Governor Bryan’s name off the progressive ticket. The voters can settle the whole controversy by taking his name off all tickets next November. Perhaps you have noticed that nine tenths of the testimony brought out by those investigating com mittees would not be admissible in the court of a justice of the peace. The Nebraska republican convention will be held at Lincoln on May 1. It should be a real republican convention. CURRENT OPINION. When a poor men goes a straying For wrongdoing he needs ps.v; Tharp's no opulence to hide him. And there Is no open way To evade the eye of Juattce. There's no "comeback” In his game,— If he sin* he has to suffer, Lose respect and bear the shame. In thle age ag In all others Wealth has fostered lewdaome lust. And has shielded highbrow fellows Who commercialise their trust. Need we wonder why the honcat Lore their faith?--and need ua ask Why tlie* poor man s constant tolling Often proves a futile task? We have boats of good among ns, We have faith tn fiod and man.— But we ask an equal sentence For the lowly caravan To the "hushere" and “four-flushere We tn unison exclaim; '*Vmi are breeding more than malice I Vou are leaving mors than shams' Letters From Our Readers All letters mu* fee eleaed. hot nm will he withheld open leanest « »"* mnnleatinn* of !w words *od lees will he (true prefer rare. .. ' ■ y Advantages of Partisanship. Oxford, Neb.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: If any one has doubts that our primary law is a humbug, let him scan well the ballots, that Bill be made up from the political filings. Wo-find men filed for the legislature under the bantjer of a party they had recently denounced as an organization of crooks. AA's find men trying to ride two political parties Into congress. AVe find a man filed for governor as a progressive and we find this selfsame man filed as a democrat. Now the progressive plat form hobby Is that both old parties are corrupt beyond redemption hence the need of a new party, while the democrats point with pride to their age, tracing to Jefferson, ss a reason why voters can trust their party to administer the government. How is this hifurieated candidate going to faithfully tell the progressive voters that he loves and supports their organization and then make the demo crats believe their party is a top notcher, 16 to 1? AVe were told the primary was to be the death knell to political chicanery, hypocrlcy and deception. It was to give better public servants drafted from the people by the people. Has it done it? • On the republican ballot we find a candidate for United States senator who recently arose in the senate turned his eyes gallery-ward, pulled out the tremolo stop ami exclaimed, "I have no party to eulogize. I have no party to condemn." This man who had divorced himself from party pro ceeded to out do Heflin and Ills cohorts in their dirty slimy insinuations against the administration and even the sleeping Harding. He can not eulogize the party of IJncoln whose history is written in ths grand achievements of our country since that party's birth: he is ashamed to defend the party that lifted him from an obscure country lawyer to the United States senate, yet h# files on the primary ballot, not as an inde pendent which he claims to be, not as a progressive the party he extols, not as a democrat the party with which he votes but lie has the gall to file as a republican, the party which he has traduced and with whose administra tions he is ever at war. If such candidates ran by political trickery force themselves upon the party in opposition to two-thirds of its members, where is "the peoples rule” of the primary? The law stages another farce requiring party con ventions after candidates are nomin ated. County conventions that used to pack the courthouses have dwindled to a farce and state conventions are not repreaenatlve of the party mem bership's wishes. Primary promoters told us it would be a great blessing to farmers. It was to give him more political power, wipe out all the trusts, give him school privileges equal with the city, make him pros perous and create a back to the farm movement. Our prosperity and our schools are languishing. Are the trusts all dead? Where could one find a more vicious un American trust than the schoolmas ters' trust? Has any one been seen going back to the farm? The pri mary builders told us no candidate could get by the "people rule" primary but pure minded, honest faraeeing statesman and they svould reform state and nation. 1'seless offices would be cut out, salaries clipped, taxes reduced, we were to have fewer laws end better enforcement and lobbyists to be executed, were a few of the reforms slated. What has happened? The primary ha* put the greatest flock of demogo gues Into congree* ever assembled under one roof. Pureness of mind and honesty could not abide with those who are Importing a bunch of crook* and scandel monger* to testify of their evil Imaginations. Where are the far seeing statesman and leaders? Use less offices ars being created by the thousand and salary boosting Is a daily pastime. Our state and county officers have become an organised gang of lobbylete for more pay, more clerks, more equipment, less work end shorter hours, while Idiotic laws a plenty are dumped on ths people and enforcement la a joke. The primary law certainly needs amending for It is destroying true repreaenative government. Political parties are necessary that responsibility of administration may lie mslntalned and our danger Ilea In destroying those parties through the primary and substituting irrespon sible blocs and class groups. Men of character and honest statesmanship f-> Abe Martin V ■ -. j__ w _■ W# kin recall when woman'* hair wua Her glory, but t’day it'a th’ only thing that bother* her. Ever’ buddy like* a good loser—till he loses ever'thing. (Copyright. 1121 > NET AVERAGE PAID CIRCULATION for February, 1924, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily .75,135 Sunday .80,282 I Dm* K*t Include return*, left •ttrt, eamples *r papers epoiled tn | printing end include* an special aalaa ar free circulation of any kind, j V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mgr. Subscribed and swatn to helot* me this 4lh day of March. 1M4 ! W. H. QUIVKY. (Seal) Notary Public I By EDWIN G. PINKHAM. The Only Material of Which a Nation Ever Can Be Made / would invoke those who fill the seats of justice, and all who minister at its altar, that they execute the wholesome and necessary severity of the law.—Daniel Webster. XLvr. 1IE outstanding fact in the J history of the evolution of our government is that its own necessities and those of the American people have tenaeci steadily to make us a nation. Nationality, through whatever and stresses, and whether we liked it or not, has been the Inevitable goal toward which government and people have moved. , The "league of firm friendship or the confederation gave way under those necessities to the "compact as many believed it to be—of the con stitution. The compact theory, after long test, was found to be a defective one. Under it the union was a house divided against Itself. After 72 years of compromises it broke down, and a terrible civil war settled It for all time that the constitution was not a compact but 1 he supreme national law of an indestructible union of inde structible states. This nationality is the heritage which these present generations have received from those, who, through those long years of compromise, mis understanding and final conflict, fought the battles of nationality and triumphed over provincialism and dis union. A\+ now are a nation, terri torially, politically and even physical ly, for we have seen that the con tinent is now held together by those bonds of communication tnat arc stronger to bind than distance is to separate. But nationality is not a thing, wholly territorial, political or physical In itn nature. Nationality la a mental and spiritual condition as well. Nationality cannot exist where the people, even though living to gether under the same political sys tem, are not one people in thought and aspiration. We have Been the at tempt in Europe, in recent years, to make nations simply by drawing boundary lines around aggregations of Inhabitants. Tlfose attempts have not been successful, because, no mat ter what treaties may say, nations are made out of only one material, and that is human beings united in mind, with common interests, com mon history, a uniform political training and with a spiritual bond stronger than that of the strongest legal sanction. The reason why It ha* heen impo* sible to make nations in Europe by the mean* it* diplomats have em ployed Is because the mixed popula tions of the continent do not furnish these essential elements of national ity. if these processes have failed there they will fail here, America can be a nation only so long as the human material out of which it is made remains one people. Our pres ent danger is that It will not so re msin. Our material necessities have caused us in recent decades to admit into our system vast accretions of hu man material not readily malleable under nationalistic processes. Nor have we done our best to make those processes effective upon them. tVe have allowed alien people* to come stand little chance In the primary with the passion and prejudice appealing orator. Parties are prevented by this law from drafting its best men for standard bearers but haa often to ac cept those whose only qualification is the ofllce itch and the filing fee A. C. RANKIN. Has Older Coin. Deadwood. 8. L>.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Today I cut out a clipping from your paper, in which It stated that one John D. Cain, a collector of coins, carried an Irish Penny minted in 1781. On one side was the head of King George III, and on the other side a harp surmounted by the word ''Hibernia." I wish to state that I have a coin the exact duplicate of Mr. Cain's ex cept the date is 1776. so that I have Mr. Cain beaten by about six years. BANKS STEWART. When in Omaha Hotel Conant Buy Experience Executorship of other men’s affairs is a special ized business. An in dividual rarely has an opportunity to ac quire all the neces sary qualifications for this work. The wide experience of this company in acting as Executor and Trustee has jriven it a particular fitness for this im portant task. Sand for our booklet. "Safeguarding Your Family'a Future." 4 Bankart Reaorae Life Bldg. Douglat a* 19th AT 2945 MEMBER AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION here, to settle in colonies in our cities. I 10 retain their own language, their racial customs and political anlmosi ties and to become. In effect, breeding centers of un-Aineriean doctrines. These people do not know the mean ing of liberty. No people can know it who know only its deliverances and not its obligations. To them liberty is freedom from restraints of law and (he control of social forces that are the basis of civilization itself. It is to these elements In our population that we trace the propagation of doctrines directed openly and boldly to the overthrow and destruction of the American government. The paid agitators and agents of foreign an archy. working upon the inflammable material we have allowed to accumu late in our population, have started the same fires that are now ravaging great areas of Kurope. If America is to escape the fate of Kurope these fires must lie put out. They can be put out only by Americans. It is their house that is threatened, it is their nation, their laws and their dearly bought institutions of free gov ernment that are marked for destruc tion by these enemies of all govern ment. Only the spirit and devotion of those earlier Americans who flew to arms when the village bells of Mid dlesex rang out their midnight warn ing that the British were coming can save America today from the invading forces of these new enemies of free dom. Let us as Americans remember the definition of nationality our history has taught us. A nation is one peo ple. We can he a nation on these terms, and upon no other. Let it lie remembered that they were Ameri cans who differed over the theory of the constitution, and whose differ ences all but cost us our nationality. Americans almost became two pei, pies. If Americans could so nearly become two. how- much greater Is the danger to their nationality when di vision is threatened by great sections of our population who are not Amer [leans? America shelters them, Amer ica gives them its freedom, its op portunities, its prosperity, but n£ man is an American in the true mean ing of nationality, whether native or alien born, whether rich or poor, pow erful or humble, whose mind and heart have not received the baptism of its spirit. No msn is an American who does not obey the laws of his country, who does not faithfully discharge his every obligation of citizenship, who does not hold his representatives in gov ernment strictly to account, who does not jealousy guard his civic rights from those forcv*. whether alien or domestic, that seek to despoil him of them or who by his indifference to or contempt of public affairs when put in the balance against hie own. aban dons his privilege of suffrage to the enemies of his country, its laws and its institutions. (Copyright. Kansaa City Sit) JACK FILES COMPLAINT. Purty tough time* around our house Gotta keep mighty quiet, Tiptoln’ ’round stlller’n a itioun, Hr else somepin’ close nigh it. Measles got kid brother o mine. He gits all th’ good eatin s; I gotta git t’ ol’ school ’fore nine. An' all o' Sunday meetln's. Didn't treat me in thatta way When measles had me goin ; Let me lay ’round all th’ day, An’ all them red spots showin . ’Cause he’s baby I got no show’ 'Hound this house, I'm fellin'— Let Dan have it. doncha know*, T' keep that kid from yellin'. Nobody lovin’ me no more; Gotta play second fiddle. Givin' me double-cross f'r shore, Both ways from th’ middle. Kid brother gittin’ all th’ best'— Wish 'at I could beat it. Gotta dig in th’ garden, I guess. An’ git a worm an' eat it. In some 40 years of wandering hither and yon it has been our privilege to note gome great changes, and most of them for the better. And in no profession has there been a greater change, and for the better, than among traveling salesmen. Time was when they were supposed to be “sports," of the first water—only they seldom took water. They were looked to for a never failing supply of off-color stories, and if they were not rounders they had to appear so to be. Of course they never were as bad as they were painted, but even at that they have improved in morale and morals. Most of them me married men. and arc proud to say so. -m' day lust week we sat in the smoking compartment of a passen ger coach with four traveling men. We talked politics and business conditions for a while, and then, somehow or other, the subject of home and kiddies carne up. Four of the fire traveling men were married, and each one Irad a picture o. his wife and kiddies along, for each of the four were fathers. And the fifth traveling man admitted that he expected to be married in June and, while he didn't show the photo of his fiancee, it was easy to see that tba thought her to be the sweet est girl in the world. Three of the five said they were church members and never failed to attend services at least once every Sunday, and two uf the three show ed small Testaments they carried in their grips. It Is just such little incidents as this that give the lie to the plaints of the pesaimlsts and grouches w ho are forever - whining that the world is growing worse. A\'e have many laws In mind we would pass if permitted so to do. but first we would repeal a few, and about the first on* would be the law. if such there i>», that allows a surcharge on sleeping car tickets. AA1LL M. MAC PIN. \free! Grow Exceptional Flowers Buy Direct from Bert Maye Nursery ’ST. mt Growers’ Prices It ia ioat eaa? ta r*r>w exrep*^ooal flower* M oHiaarj^teift^a wt » Ctfwa ith^t w3b?W?aSx7 ^•verjooSy who «t I from Ear! May Get rare rarietie#. oj onoaoal apaomaax^of J I both Mr flower Mab are pure, of hv* t» rnal.ty aad from earafoiiy prepa<sU4 f atoea. fcey wilJ fir# 70a aoaderfal reaclta. V ■ CWMW Cl—— Vt— Fe™.-ot end ea»te*t frown of ea climber* Heel for porehe* end 1 window*. Very hnrdy Grow* m ion or. »had*. One* plentotwOl prow * bfWJow Too Ole.* fo ' hOiou frepwoco. Throe &C herd/ l-rewiaew. eetr Me* '■ Fenooe Keinbow Mu rare of Gladioli - all the rotor* from da red* to*hade*of white, end eelrety blue-JO healthy, nporowe ouipe puarantoed u> produce flower* for sa«irB5*.0£te 75c ■eat far eatr Direct From Grower to You It b linn nfMt ud cbnpmx tiftttb thine* yoo p at ngtat too* tbo mb ab* imntlM My now ulwtratsd lW-p—o Cat aloe odor* yoo boost uaiMtnmt at aaoda. •hnafco sad trass. Lots at barmias. Isotoaly here tbo ioreost serose* sf Iranian ntdl and aanery stork ia A taarira hot loefl tost to planter* My aaocto b Fob Vatoa aatf Ms* aiaa. I taw* that wfeat I sail a abaa lut*}y A No. I. ^ Got this remorksblt booh Mr UM-Ceteloe a full of practicalIj ec penance I nut to kelp poe rack | _ jBjwaaarUfcee.. use bee Want ads-tHey bring result How a Widow Protected Her Inheritance VT7HEX a well-known busi ** ness man died recently, it was found that his will left everything to his wife. However, her inheritance did not free the widow from an noyance and trouble. In fact it created them. Relatives and friends came forward with numerous invest ment proposals. Various per sonal needs, all requiring the expenditure of money, were pressed upon the widow. The protection of her inherit ance and insurance money now became a serious problem for this woman. She remembered that her husband had lind a personal friend who was an of ficer in a trust company, and she called upon him. He rec ommended that she consult a lawyer regarding the establish ment. of a trust fund for her own benefit. Tliis the widow did and an arrangement was entered into under which a trust company now cares for the fund and pays the income to her in regu lar instalments. She has no fi nancial cares nor responsibili ties. She finds personal inter est in her business problems whenever she needs it. and— what is most important—her in heritance is safeguarded. 'Pile strength, responsibility, and integrity of the trust com pany are her protection. Ask a Trust Company for this Booklet The subject of trust funds, crested either by will or during life, is discussed in Ssfecnsrdlng Tear Faail. Ij's Fatare. Ask s trust company for a copy, and consult its officers as to how it ran serre you or your family under a trust fund. The booklet Is also sent on request to any company below. U. S. Trust Co. First Trust Co. Omaha Trust Co. Peters Trust Co. Members American Bankers Association