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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1925)
The Omaha Bei MORNIN G—E V E N I N G—S U N D AY THE BEE PUBLISHING CO.. Publisher N. B. UPDIKE. President ■ALLARD DUNN JO\ M HACKLER. Editor m thief Bm i«ii Ms safer “ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tbe Associated Press, of which The Bee is a member Is exclusively entitled to ths use for republics!ion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this piper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republicetion of our special dispatches sre also reserted. Tht Omaha Bee Is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the recognised authority on circulation audits, and The Omaha Bees circulation is regularly audited by their organisations. Entered as aeeond-elass matter May 28, 1908. at Omaha postoffiee, under act of March 8, 1879. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for i m i 1 AAA the Department or Person Wanted. * 1 I»ntlC l UUU OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam Chicago—Stegcr Bldg. Boston—Globe Bldg. Los Angeles—Fred T-». Hall, San Fernando Bldg. San Francisco—Fred L. Hall, Sharon Bldg. New York City—270 Fadison Avenue Seattle—A. L. Nietx, 514 Leary Bldg. mail subscrTmON rates" DAILY AND SUNDAY 1 year 18.09. • months $3.00. 8 months $1.78, 1 month 75c DAILY ONLY 1 year $4.60, 6 months $2.78, 3 months $1.80, 1 month 75c SUNDAY ONLY 1 ysar $8 09. 8 months $1.76, 8 months $1.00, 1 months 50c In the Fourth Postal Zone or 800 to 60ft miles from Omaha, The Daily end Sunday Bee is $3.50 for 6 months. $6 a year. The Daily Only Hue is $3 for 6 months, $5.50 for one year. Subscriptions outside the Fourth postal zone, or 600 miles from Omaha: Daily and Sunday, $1.00 per month; daily only, 75c per month; Sunday only 60c per mc/nh. CITY SUBSCRIPTION RATES Morning and Sunday .1 month 65c, 1 week 20c Evening and Sunday ..I month 65c, 1 week 15c Sunday only .1 month 20c, 1 week 6c -J Omaha-IDhere the IDestis at its Best NO FORESTS IN FIFTEEN YEARS. Secretary McNary of Oregon, chairman of the annate irrigation and reclamation committee, an nounces an interesting program. He proposes to unite all reclamation undertakings into one com prehensive group, to he administered by the federal government. In specifying generally the scope of his program, he includes the removal of stumps from cut-over forest lands. This warrants the assump tion that the senator aims at the extension of the food-crop area of the country. If Senator McNary will give his plan a little fur ther consideration he may discover reasons for modi fying it in some particulars. As one of the authors of the C'lark-McNary act, he is familiar with the sit uation as regards the woodlands of the country. Needs for conservation of our forests are known to him. He has assisted most effectively in making provision for the care of all standing timber. The next big job to be accomplished is to provide for the replanting of trees on areas that have been de nuded, to the end that the future generations of Americans will have timber for their uses. For many years our use of forests has far outrun the supply. In round numbers, the annual consumption of forest timbers in the United States has been 25, 000,000,000 cubic feet, while the annual growth amounts to but 6,000,000,000 cubic feet. In January of this year it was estimated that at the present late of consumption, the available timber supply of continental United States will be exhausted in fif teen years. This means calamity. At present the area available for food crop? is ample: Much of the trouble of agriculture has re sulted from an unwlaldly .overproduction. In Ne braska at least one'-'haTf oFthe~arable land, capable cf producing bountiful yields of grains and other foods, will be idle this season- Little likelihood of famine for lack of food is present. Immediate dan ger of exhaustion of the timber supply is with us. This fact has been presented many times to the pub lic, to congress, to state legislatures, and very little action has been taken to rectify the situation. We suggest that Senator McNary might improve his program by taking up the work of restoring tree growth on the cut-over lands, rather than to under take to make farms of them. The United States is more in need of serviceable woodlots than of more corn fields. A statesman sufficiently far-sighted to serve his country in this regard will do more good to the people here and to come in the future by * moving to restore trees. The Chinification of the United States along the lines of forest destruction has gone a long way. Time now to check the progress and retrace some of the steps. Reclamation is a good thing, and we have always warmly advocated it a« a federal policy. Forestation is more vitally im portant just now, and should be given the attention it ^eeds. ___ UP TO THE MOTORISTS NOW. Inspector Pzanowski, acting as chief of police, has laid down an ultimatum to motorists on the parking issue. From the standpoint of the police, the warfare is to be relentless. Any motor illegally parked, that is, contrary to traffic rules, will he tagged. Any motoriit who finds a tag on his car must appear as per indicated instructions at the po lice station. One who does not will be subject to a call from the patrol wagon. This seems like drastic action. It has been brought on by the conduct of a comparatively few drivers, who place themselves above all rules or reg ulations. Who lightly disregard all warnings. One who is suing to test the towing-in plan admit* that he parked where he knew parking was forbidden. Probably he did this with deliberate intent to get into court so that he might test the law. Others, however, have violated the rules with no thought other than their own convenience. These are the ones who make trouble for everybody else. It is a good thing for everybody that the over whelming number of motorists are careful, regard ing the safety and comfort of others as well as their own. If this were not true, Omaha’s streets would long ago have been rendered impassable. Enough of the careless or indifferent drivers remain to se riously complicate the situation. The police are after these, and in time will overhaul them. When traffic rules are observed by all drivers, the problem will have been solved. •EE WHAT VIERECK BROUGHT IN. W» thought all that sort of flummery and flap doodle had passed. Evidently it has not. George Sylvester Viereck, than whom there is no other so close, addresses the Hohenzollern fugitive, now clois tered at Doom, in terms that were familiar up to the 9th of November, 1918. “His Majesty, the Em peror and King,” is the salutation of Viereck to the exile. And in return the answer comes through the “Acting Chief of the Household, hy His Imperial Majesty's Orders.” Many people have been eonsoling themselves with the thought that this form of address is as dead as the dodo. Imperial majesties and their attributes ware believed to have vanished when the last gun flashed and the amok# eloud rolled away from t.ha battle front. Germany and Its people have gona through a mighty travail sin<-« that day. Not yet j have they come up from the valley in which their soul* have been tried to the utmost. We feel very certain, though, that the little crowd of American junkers, of whom George Sylvester Yiereck is the head and front, will learn that Germans who have tasted liberty, bought at such a price, are not going to voluntarily relinquish the. boon. Germany is sorely beset at this moment. A great pilitical campaign is on. Fierce partisan strife di vides the people, along lines that run from the wild est of bolshevik radicalism to the other extreme of absolute militaristic imperialism. Between these limits is the mass of the population, now being tested. The world soon will have their answer. Are they confident in their own power and capacity to govern themselves? Or are they ready to return to the domination of selfish men, who seek only per sonal aggrandizement, at the expense of a populace who will exchange liherty for the privilege of a di rected existence? Yiereck correctly foreshadows the issue. It is the rule of the people, or the rule of the kaiser. Hindenbprg is the shadow of a com ing event. Will the German voters avert its ar rival? EXPRESSION OR SUPPRESSION? Should accounts of crimes, in all permissible de tails. be given full publicity? Or should news papers suppress as far as possible the facts, and minimize what is printed? An English critic, re viewing the general situation, refers to what he calls “trial hy newspaper," as prevailing in the United States. He had in mind the Leopold-Loeb irial, and sought to support the conclusion that trial by jury was made impossible in that case hy reason of the exploitation the crime secured through the press of the United States, especially that of Chi cago. A ready retort to this is that in England crime is given quite as much publicity as in the United States. Perhaps not in the same form, for news paper methods differ in degree, but in effect it is the samp. The main question is whether publica tion deters or encourages crime. It is fairly well established that the present generation is looking for sensation. It w-ants a “kick" or a “thrill,” wherever it turns, and it may be reasonable to ac count for some percentage of crime on this basis. Certainly for some form of the publicity given to crime. But the morbid curiosity of the public is not a new thing. Crime is the unusual, and people are interested in crime for that reason. When a crime has features that attract the attention of the ablest of men, that set in motion discussion among the most learned, it is clearly the duty of the newspaper to give all this information to its readers. Moreover, the obliga tion extends even to the minor crimes, because they have a value in determination of civilization’s ad vance. Proof has never been given that publicity has increased crime. Suppression of news of this sort would easily lull the public into a false sense of security, and smooth the way for the powers that prey. “Trial by newspaper” doe* not interfere with the course of justice, for the law has had its way In all cases, notable or insignificant, and rarely if ever the event has been affected by any publication. The advocates of suppression have not yet proved their point. LINCOLN WARNS OMAHA. Taking note of the impending clash between the school authorities and the high achool "frata’’ of Omaha, the Nebraska State Journal gives us thia friendly warning: “The anti fraternity law It Is true, has nowhere enforced Itself. The experience of the Lincoln schools showed long ago, however, that It can he enforced. A Lincoln achool board of adequate In testinal atamlna, aided by school officials with the courage of their conviction against the fraterlty nuisance, has made the law effective In the Lincoln High achool. “We advise the Omaha school board not to pro ceed with plans to enforce the law, however, unless it feels itself fit for a bloody fight. The high school snob squads, as Lincoln's experience discovered, have a terrific determination to live. The Lincoln school authorities had'not only the fraternity mem bers to deal with, but also in many eases their par ents. These latter In many Instances were people of power In the community and did not easily ac cept defeat. "Before it waa done, the achool board had to fight Its way In the courts. The Issue got Into echool election politics. Had there been the slightest weaken ing anywhere in the line the battle would have been lost. It will be lost In Omaha urles* the Omaha school board and school officials are prepared to use the spanking board with relentless hand regard less of who Is blistered thereby.” We have no doubt but Omaha will repeat the ex perience of Lincoln. Illegal fraternities ere as firmly entrenched in the high schools here as they were at the capital. Powerful influences from outside the schools will support equally powerful combinations msidr. The policy of extermination will no doubt cut some figure in the school board elections. Whether Omaha will win as complete a victory as did Lincoln in its struggle to enforce the law, remains to he seen. But the attempt should he made. It is time to learn who runs the schools of the city. John Oliver, prime minister of British Columbia, says Americans and Canadians are in more danger from self-indulgence and avoidance of hard work than they are from any form of foreign invasion. That may he one reason why so many people are talking loudly about the Hangers of foreign invasion —it distracts attention from their self-indulgences. “This new freedom” has hern thoroughly tested by Governor Donahy's son, who finds himself under restraint until he reaches the age of responsible manhood. By that time he may know enough to appreciated what he has forfeited. f---' Homespun Verse By Omaha's Own Post— Rol>rrt Worthington Davie. - - --———-' TIIK JOYFt I. DAYS OF APR1MJ UAVB COMF. The Joyful days of spring have conte, the children lump ‘ and play; Around the house they run and shout until the close of day. And even I feel young sgiiln although my hall Is gray. The balmy air and mellow sun hold more than words express: It Is, mathlnks and I have thought -subconscious hap pluses—— ‘Tie Intuition and the soul Inseparable. 1 guess. When winter fades and flowers grow and roblna hllthelv sing, And sweetened breezes everywhere are gently murmur Ing— I feel the unseen hand of Zest before me heekonlng And with the children, flowers, winds and robins I'm possessed By that emphatic Joy with which the lnvley spring Is blest, And out of doors 1 Journey on my gay and endless quest. r *■ —- n Letters From Our Readers All latlert mutt b* tignrd. but will h« withheld upon request. Com Bumicationi of 200 word* und let* %»ill be given preference. V_S (io<l. Nature ami Man. Omaha.— To the Editor of The Omaha l-tee It is surprising how some people wTll break Into print with half-baked Ideas and affirm them ns gospel. George R. Child in his lei ter, "Personal or Nature God." affirms that "Infidelity has never given the world anything, morally or economic-] ally. It has never given anything for (he faith and hope it destroys. Douht less it has kept a vast majority out of tlie churches and has given them imihing for the happiness that re ligtnu affords, the solace it gives." It is easily possible to believe that tlie George R. Childs of the world would handle Thomas Paine s ' Age of Reason" with a pair of tongs. It is dear that Voltaire and Ingersoll would profane the air these mortals inhale. God declares nothing except through His works. It need no long faced, pious human animal to tell the "infidels" that. "Nature is God." That evolution is merely a term to desig nate the workings of God. That the rocks are as much alive as the trees, and the trees as much so as the ani mals, and in more respects more alive than the human animals who deny Nature. Everything is God, or the es sence of God. Any time a person quits the church it is because he is not satisfied with the sort of spiritual medicine he is getting. If lie awakes to the truth and wants to know more; finds out he cannot get it in church, is an infidel because he seeks knowledge? Should he he contented to swallow the stuff given him and he content? Infidels (?) have written some of the. moat classic literature in existence. If the "Age of Reason" has made many per sons think for themselves Instead of leaving it to the paid servants of the church to do it for them, then it has performed a colossal benefit God or devil, we make them for our selves, Devil and God are equally Nature and therefore evolution. We have will to do, to decide which to do or not to do. To do wrong Is the devil, to do right, is God. What more does anyone want? What more can he have? The universe Is vibration and therefore alive. Everything is life and force and God Is everything. Inseparable and everlasting. Why try the futile impossibility of separating God from Nature or other matter? The idea of a God watching over this little speck of earth like a father over his family is so childish as to he in dicative of senility, and yet that Is exactly what the "personal God fans" are trying to conjure up. The real God of this earth is love and the brotherhood of man. SA?*"EL WALKER. •John Johnson's Opinion. Omaha—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Since Al rite last fall In papers to Dimoerats and Follett voters In dis contrv to talk and vote a good deal for Cal and Dawes Al have not said much In papers, hut hv Jlminy Al got roused In my temper good English, Al got mad when Al good English, Al got made when Al reads In de papers som little polirlka] feller day call McKelvie kritlcislng my good old friend Senator Norris—he sure knows bedder (At mean de Sena tor) what common folks need, dan som happen to he akcldent governors try ing to get der names In papers just to dumbltnd de peopel to make dem tlnk dav know a hole lot bedder how Norris ought to vote on oonflrmaslnns. Now Cal bane biggest and smartest man In dis TT. P. cause no many mil lion folks, both men and ladles, said dat way In last lection. Der a no kvestion Cal waa rite to put opp dat feller Warren for General Barrister for TT. P. as Cal was so sure he bane all rite—T mean Warren—cause Cal never put opp Warren for yob less he tho't that Warren were familiar with all tings In lat^, but Norris had honrd dat Warren had read law To gedder with deni sugar trust feller' and Cal had no chance to post Norris about Warren being all rile cause Ca! and Norris don't talk much to each j odder, so Norris )<ene a. good feller to his konsohtenoe and votes de wav he! tloks rite. Now dat little ex governor feller rites In papers asking Norris to wtth raw from Senate and Publican party so people can focue on him to take j Norris vote some dav. hut wha' Is de use to rite more, It bane so ridieulos; so any body can laugh .and dis krltl-; slsing dis big man Norris by dis little | feller Is Just like a little rat tarrlerj barking at Barnum's Jumbo to ekare him. Nebraska, got J good men In Sen ate IT. S. who you can be sure vote what they tlnk rlt# and best for de peopel. and dem 2 bane In dere for mAny years more which ban* a good ting for de common peopel, so dey can make both Publican nnd Dimo erats behave demsolfa end you all should tank de good I,ord dat bo helped de peopel to put dem 2 der* In de 1T. B. Penate. Dla Is not saying nothin gainst Cel. hut Sometimes dem fellers who Talk j so slick lo him try to fool him. but vou bet dav alnt so able to fool Cal so many limes JOHN JOHNSON. Girls, Yesterday and Today. A clergyman recently remarked "1 would rather see a girl on the hue’ of a motor- vole, dangerous though It may he, than see her fainting on an antimacassar In tha drawing room So would I. But.the man drlytng the motorbike doe" not regard the girl on the carrier as a tvomanlv proposition 3he la companionable luggage T\ here as tVy* major, who, as the girl on the antimacassar knew null* well, was peeping a' her from behind the plush curtain, was enrhanted by this dis play of feminine weakness, nn<1 pro - ceeded to applv restoratives—Arthur Ponsonhy In Empire Iteview. f Abe Martin N*.__- , _ Th' only darently rlroaarri «»mrn w» hava loft ara t'.akimoa. WHrn it coma* t* « rar nr a homa, ut pity *h' home. (Copyright, 1911.) Me and Mine I • \a/a5 Com*iMti\ worth , AWgMUS AMD I \ Hf AR M MORiR I CVCL6 COMikiCi \ AiOwfc of Anj t> Jiy BKHiUS f Howi=5t Frank i yUASiu t \ Go ISJCj iA bit twenty-j BUT He ,SAY£>- 'H/H&RE- £ YA I Thi\/x Y'APF Pull up To Thc I Cops" anj i aat s 'all - *. • <. j p{S6HT (.AATA.v'A^ATj Tma / Trouble figr p 'Sows rt-t/v& yJ V WPOVCm r" t JAVA- AivjQ- y <jO-3H ' WMAT a Ho hS cam MAX’S 7i-\E IDM6SST YaHmI OOP OP noThiwG * 111 II—... . y SUNNY SIDEUP lake Comfort.nor forget. 1 hat Sunrise nev'er failed u.s uev Ctlca ‘Jh.a.fteir ___J r---—~n If all the printing consumed in Omaha was the product of Omaha printing houses, not less than half a million dollars would be added to the city's annual payrolls. If all the cigars bought In ttmaha were manufactured in Omaha, another half a million would be added. If all the candy anti all the flour consumed In Omaha were manufactured in Omaha, more than half a million dollars would he added. And that's that. We would have you know that President Ooolldge had noth ing on u* In the matter of Easter parade expense We wore an old suit fresh from the cleaners, a hat purchased several months ago, shoes that have been half soled, a bargain counter shirt and a wash tie that has been washed numerour times It Is more than probable that there were about six or eight million other men In the same rlass. If all the people who attended church on Easter Sundae were to attend church every Sunday—well, the chances are that the problem of law enforcement would he less difficult of solution. - Ordinarily we Just plug along at our dailv task, seeking no particular credit. But this is the season of the year when we Point With Pride to one evidence of self-restraint. Right now It Is the custom of city folk to spend most of their time advis ing farm folk how to carry on. Pridefully do we call attention to the fact that we are one of the frightfully small minority. We have no advice to offer the farmer. What we know about farming Is a minus quantity. Our farming experience has been limited to eating the spring chickens kindly provided by farm wives when we go visiting. All we know about a hora» is tha it Is an animal with four legs, one on each corner Most of our experience with cows ha« been limited to cans of tpe cows con densed product. Our advice to the farmer wouldn't be worth a whoop, and we opine that we cun best serve him by'lettinc him alone to work out his own saltation, .lust as soon ss we succeed in Passing a Few Laws we have In mind, we purpose taking up the task of organising a Society for the Prevention of Loading Down banners With Fseless Advice. If we thought Russia to be a better rnuntrv than our ow n, we'fl hie to Russia If we thought all nur puhlio officials were crooks and thieves, we'd go to South America, where we could revolute at will. If we thought the world is growing worse every day we'd take poison at 1 end it all so far as we are reft, rented. If we thought our young fol s were jaxx.ing their wav to eternal damnation, we wouldn't blame the young folks: we 1 blame the parents. When we are unable to point with pride to the fart that we reside In Omaha we ll move to some city wher we can. T.lfe Is full of compensations. The fart that we live In a third floor apartptent Is amply compensated for by the fact that It estops little Clifford from making sarcastic remarks about tha way weeds are overtaking the garden. A number of gentlemen of our acquaintance hie out to the golf links for exercise after employing a brunette gentle man to manicure the lawn, I seek no deeds of high emprise. No honor* high I wish. I'd like to sit 'neath aunnv skies And fleh, and flsh, and flsh. Tlds Is the season of the year when we yearn In be '.lie proprietor of a welt stocked secondhand store with tier er a customer to bother us. Fashion Not*: Hip pockets ere now hring nutde In 1 i ounce sixes, WILL M MAC PIN f~ -- ~ A j Center Shots By the time we g«*t around to loin f he world court the w orld will be so peaceful that the court won't be need —Waterloo Tribute Wonder how manv vnung brides In this fair land of ours can quote off hand the current price of a barrel of flour.—I >e troit New s. The ITjft summer pltls complete fostume i* to weigh less than two jMomds Make Ijght of that, if you an.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. Our idea of retributive justice would ie the collision of two "hlt'-a nd run 'into drivers -!»es Moines 1 .evening Tribune. Stone walls do not a prison make, nor Iron bars cage, but how the Job In springtime makes the helpless j prisoner rage Louisville Times. Though needles and thread grow on » .N’evv Zealand tree, the ■ i le of bach l*lnr buttons continue* brisk St Paul IMoneei Pi« sh. The tnan making the weather Is in 1 1 ^i excellent refutation of the l>elief lhal practice makes perfect Fort Wayne News Sentinel. Wv laughing at two bandits a plucky Boston girl saved an II,inn PmvtoII. When a revolver tickles vour ribs It s uulte proper to laugh San Antonin Kxpress NET A'ERAGE PAID CIRCULATION For MARCH. 1925. THE OMAHA BEE Daily.76,525 Sunday .78,473 Doas not Includ# returns, left-ovat«, • ampIp» or popoit apoilod in print* inf and includra no ipacial aalca or fret circulation of any kind V A. BRIDGE. Cir. Mfr. Sukiuibrii and aworn to kaforo ma thii 1«t day of April l*aal> Notary Public W H QUIVEV. isr::.rnr :: . '^jcga>, .ttt -^1 A "THE CONSERVATIVE” I The Best Place to Save Your Money |J The Best Place to Borrow Money I The CONSERVATIVE I I 5V;/y Savings & Loan Association L?,V‘ 1 Saving* 1614 HARNEY Ham*. f “From State and Nation’' —Editorials from Other Newspapers— J Sunday Observance, Frnm the Grccnd island Independent: There is a thus far covered hut vet nationwide movement to clamp a lid on the firs* day of the week com monly called Sunday. It has selected the national capital, it is said, as the si one of its first quiet conquest. The donee hill now before congress, wit It its advocates ready to resume activi ties with the next session in Decem ber. would forbid, in the District of Columbia, ell business and entertain ment on Sunday including such re reations as golf. Kvery senator and congressman, it is rejrorted. is being bombarded with ideas to vote for this measure: and tipt similarity of the letters, whether from Maine nr Cali fornia. indicates plainly carefully planned propaganda and a large, quiet organization. The prograjn. a» out lined hy those who have investigated the matter, is to follow up the passage of the Jones bill with a like lay af fecting the army and navy, anti an other applying to our island posses sions. It iy said that the promoters are certain that such action would pave the way to general national Sabliatarian laws, prohibiting recrea tion in general along with the amuse merits which are often over-oomnifr ciall/.ed for that day. I’ndoubtedly Sunday ia misused by some persona and some interests, just as every other good thing in life is now and then misused and desecrated. More over surh misuse is not to be con doned. and can be eliminated by in telligent action Hul it is easv to make the pendulum swing so far to the other extreme, by wav of these many extreme prohibitions, that It will further shackle personal nrivi lege and nationalize or socialize per sona! responsibility >cnl create even more discontent and disrespect of all law and government. A great federal machine for the enforcement of Sun day amuaemeni laws is not an allui ing prospect. And thia must be re membered: If you desire reiigiou- '. erty for yourself, you cannot de" leliglous liberty to vour neighbn = It I* incongruous, inconsistent, tm possible. .Millionaire Bryan. Fr«n ch# St ,,ouj* Po»t-DUi'**ch: William Jennings Bryan is now . millionaire—become such, the new - relates, through investments in Flo. itla real estate The report will as'-. ieh many and shock not a few. t\ experience neither of those reaction-. If Brother Bryan wasn't a i redf lined millionaire the copybook nw\ 1ms are worse than empty twaddle they are sinister deceptions, of a niece with Mother Goose. The m,r has been thrift incarnate He hat never sown so much as one aolltai little wild oat The primrose p*' has never borne the imprint of h'» solid pragmatic solo In keeping wic. he got he has been and is a keeper lasimo. And he has been no slouch as i getter. Acquisitively he has been in his wav. pretty nearly a genius What in clumsier hands was a trade V came in his an art. As a professional mourner for the woes of the eomrm people he has heen a wonder. H° has spilled his tears for the lowly and oppressed all >,vei the ciieuita—"Big «■ time" and “tank towns alike, ard always as so much per spill. go here he is, arrive! at the ph e charted in his stars. The erstwhile Nebraska Nemesis of the rich, a Flm Ida millionaire, eligible to hobnob on the golf course with John T>.. qual: fied to loll cheek by jowl on the gold er, Rands of Palm Beach .with stub lollers as he fancies. Vale. Commoner' Hail. Caesar! Barqain fares I Round Trip From I Omaha I $ 0/250 Denver, Colorado Springs, I Pueblo. \ I I 9 700 Rocky Mountain National j | » — (Estes'! Park. I ^Af2 00 West Yellowstone (Yel j at tmm /ou'ilom National Park). Four I and ore-half days' motor tnp in & the park, with accommodationaat hotels $54 00. at X camps $45.00. Sida tnp Denvar to Rocky Moun I tain National Park. $10-50. I $ AQ10 * Cedar City, Utah tSoatk. X am Utah National Parki'. Four 1 day motor tnp Zion National Park. S Cedar Breaks. Bryce Canyon, including accom ■ modationaal ramps $47.15. Side trip to North I Rim. Grand Canyon at additional coat. 1 $7*200 Portland, Tacoma, Seat m / me ~~ f/e. J00 miles along erenic Colum 1 " hia River. Side rnpa to Zion, r nil Yellowaione and Rocky Mountain National Parks tree HOOKS I at small additional eipenae. I $7000^on Francisco. Los An The** l>nt#n Pxol- ■ g —• gelet. On# war vi® Ofd#n, 5v« t keeks a reborn ■ Lake City — r a to rn ir g through endvsli"VVe?icne* I 1 *nT*r- Sld* U,P* to Zion. Yellowetor a and Rcvkr non intermetian. I Mountain National Parka at amall additional Including m$f« — I #vp#n##. routr# and ■ \*::i I S Of) 00 Circuit Tour or the West. 'he ashinfc. I %/\J Union Pacific to Portlsfid. rail or ■ iteamer to San Francisco. return in* direct through Ogden or via Los Angeles and I ■ ^4l« l-«ka City. Route utay ha is versed Includes I Rtf Ml I kit hats include Cetera da Seringa without etleg charge | ' . ~ 'iW I J. r lets to Pacific Northwest ■ J ■ c I UUkSr ■ Itleaeetemherk' le Vellcstor, • -.e I :.-*ei ten / iqkfj ■ •** •» ether rainte 'une | ts September sc a:. . I ZlAhirk I •'*>e anywhere en route Final return mu Octet I aWo® ■>«. Her srouceew. ./IneneW KvK W..imt eerne. - I WuT < AJOtfti, ■ vS'C* «ee er» narmnee^. V. <k»». .SuAeae I r. rtr n,n A«i. Pa*s r Part- Taloa Lr^ ■ lactd;-Sv.tetn ' irv , Icket OfBce. IsflVarttl'1 7**m ’ h*;’V •’•ck.nn Am A At ie a tie »> . \ 1 * *'• or l nlen Fiat Ion -,«th A Marry Ft. \ , _ „-n UQ\2e / 1 • tut anoae rx.'P#^ \ I 7/l# M / \ / l iro intx-nt <*♦ \ f t\y ir i\ «i-rit mi tT . ■ 1 A \ e#?e**t <• -t?## N>» S NORTHWEST VWf - 1 • Ou ••wftf.##, U4 NATIONAL sA. «#w thcugM#. J ALASKA j, P\RK IT1