THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1922. w a a r f . m a wt 1 1 r 1 HtUMAnA && DAILY (MOR.'lNG)EVENING-SUNDAY THR SEI PURUSHMO COM F ANT NELSON UPDUB. raalteaaa B. SREWKR. Gaaaral X MUUU Of THE ASSOCIATED rutl Tse twuu4 PM a wal TMlmit MM, fe a laaMelf aeUUad UM M m eawMMMMa at ell aawa Wl t M alaarwiaa araSMai aue urn, ead alee Ma taeel Mm eaHieaed aareea. All HejkM at lniMnilH t aa aBBalal of Sm. J ftaaaa Bee a Waaler af (M aaS T1i tlmUtloa ml Tae OmU Bm SUNDAY, JAN. 1, 1922 74,310 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY .MWCR. Oeaaral Mwht KLMK S. ROOD, Ombltaa Mw la sad aaSiaHaaa baleta M Ok M r ,1 Jaw aery, I fit. (Seal) W. H. QUtVIY. Notary FaltUs ATlaatie 1000 iu Tcuraortu Private Branca Eiekaaaa. Aaa far taa Department ar Ferea Waate4. Far Nlghl Call AfUr IS P. M.I BdHaHal Department, AT bat's IM ar IMI. OPFICU NilB Of flea lTtfc end Famam Co. Slutti-U aooit St. Souta Bias OSS 8. S4tb St. New fork 1 Fhta Ara, tTaaalngten llll 0 Bt, Chleaga 111 WrlgWa Bldf. Paris, fraaea 42S Boa St. Hoaora 7A Bee's Platform 1. Naw Unioa Passoager Stetloa. 2. Coatiavsej improwemeat of tha r'j. ' braika Highways, iacluolng tbo pave maal with Brick Surfaca of Mala Thoroughfares loading ialo Omaha. 3. A abort, low-rata Waterway front tba Cora Ball to tho Atlantic Ocaaa. 4. Homo Rulo Charter for Oraaha, with City Managar form of Cotaramoat. The Battle of 1922. A the new year brings the promise of greater trength to the cause of peace and concord be tween the nations, so far as phyjical warfare is concerned, so also it brings the certainty of an intensification of the ' economic strife that lias grown to be so bitter within the last generation. Whatever it is, something is wrong, and until the cause is found and removed, the struggle will go on, gathering in force and increasing in its virulence until the world will be prepared for another debacle such as that through which we passed between 1914 and 1922. No accumulation of good intentions, no repe tition of platitudes, or reiteration of formulas will avert this. Only the exercise of good sense, the recognition of certain fundamental principles, moral as well as economic, will avert the disaster. And this recognition is lacking at the moment. Leaders of thought among the nations are not seriously at work, striving to secure a settle ment, but art feverishly endeavoring to gain an advantage. That competition can not avail to restore the world. The French demand for great er naval and military strength, the Japanese ma neuvers to secure a stronger hold on the Asiatic mainland, Germany's apparent determination to engulf all Europe under a smothering blanket of irredeemable fiat money, all are signs pointing to the 'same end. Of all the nations, the United States alone is able to stand out from the prevailing madness. Such nations of Europe as are solvent are men aced by the bankruptcy of those that are not Our government can and will redeem all its promises. The Hughes program was laid down in good faith, 'and such of its provisions as finally are agreed to will be observed in letter and in spirit by the United States. Not only in this but in other .ways are we striving o help. A bridge of boats is forming to carry to starving Russia 20, 000,000 bushels of grain, only a small portion of our surplus food stuffs, yet enough to feed hun gry women and children, to aid the soviet gov ernment to renew in some measure at least its attempt to correct its mistakes and get the coun try on a working basis once more. Trade op portunities are . presented to all the European peoples, but only on . sound conditions, and in other ways we are useful' The battle of 1922 will be fought in the coun cils of nations, and only as they are willing to mitigate their claims, discount their aspirations and postpone their ambitions, will they make progress towards recovery and draw away from the disaster that now looms so big because of the program they have adopted. Disappointing to Democrats. The move made by Governor McKelvie in calling an extra session of the legislature has apparently Irritated the Nebraska democrats beyond endurance. Only on this ground can we account for the steady fire of adverse criticism that is being aimed at the plan from the opposi tion. Having preceded the call for the legisla ture by announcing that he is not seeking any office, particularly not that of United States sen ator, the governor disarmed any allegation that he is trying to make political capital out of an effort to relieve a distressing condition. Ne braska's citizens, who are mainly fanners, find themselves embarrassed on account of low prices. Taxes are delinquent, and oppressive under the circumstances. Governor McKelvie has under taken to find a way to ' relieve this situation to some extent. To carry out his plan he must have the assistance of the legislature, for certain laws will have to be repealed, and perhaps some others passed. Because he has done this, every democratic popgun in the state is blazing away at him. It would have been fa better to let bad go to worse, in order that next fall the unterrified spellbinders might shout their denunciations of republican incompetency. Whether the governor anticipated this or not the effect of his action is to rob the calamity shouters of one of their big gest sources of inspiration.. The republicans are trying to do something to help the state, and the democrats are "not pleased; that is all the politics in the incident. Extending the Police Service. As might have been expected, The Bee pro posal that the efficiency of the service performed by the Omaha police be extended by adding to 'the force sufficient men to permit the proper patroling of residence districts is getting general support. The necessity for this increase is ad mitted, and public opinion in connection there with is being well exhibited to the commis sioner. The main question is from whence to take the needed funds. A general cut in esti mates will have to be made, but that is a matter f course, for, conforming to long-established tradition, preliminary estimates always allow for liberal shrinkage. In this case a net reduction will have to bt figured out ia some, is order that the police force may be eupplisd with the needed moocy. Property owners will be content if iu some other department! economies tr practiced, that the safety of the city's homes be made the more secure by the habitual presence of pollce mta la sections where today they art unseen. Privacy in Funeral Services. One of man's commonest traits Is to make a public spectacle of his mourning when called upon to sustain the death of a relative or friend. Whether sincere or not, he displays emblems of sorrow, assumes distinctive badges of grief, and otherwise advertises to the world that he is or was interested la the departed, and keenly feels the loss. When one who has been prominent in affairs, whether of community or nation, goes to his long home, as in the days of Ecclesiasticus, "the mourners go about the streets.' Accustomed to the ostentation that follows the body of a prominent cltixen to the tomb, the public is naturally astonished at the rigid privacy that marked the funeral of Boies Penrose. He was a big figure in the popular eye, a character of national importance, had done great public service, had many friends and possibly some enemies. That he should be burled under the re ported conditions is in no sense a reflection on hit memory or on the taste and judgment of his relatives. It Is entirely within the bounds of reason and decency that the public be excluded from the sanctity of private grief. However, Senator Penrose did not belong ex clusively to his family, for the people of Penn sylvania had some claim on him, having honored him with their trust and commission on many occasions; the people of the United States also had an interest in him, and it would not have been a violation of the family's rights if some recognition had been made of the greater obliga tion, and the public have been afforded an op portunity to- testify iu sense of loss as it .had been permitted to certify its appreciation of serv ice while Boies Penrose lived. Yet the dead statesman will rest as serenely and be remembered as long as if the nation had marched behind the hearse in mourning cortege, but to the record of his public achievements will be appended the curious account of how he was laid away with such secrecy as will cause won der for a time. Where Children Grow Best. Other things than corn grow tall in Iowa. Children there exceed the average" height for those of the same age in the country as a whole by one-fifth of an inch, an investigation by the children's bureau has shown. New York City children are half an inch below the average stature, while in California children averaged two-fifths of an 'inch above normal. The ex planation is offered that the presence in New York of a large percentage of short races, such as the Italian and Jewish, is responsible for its standing, but the middle west, which considers itself ably represented by Iowa, still will feel that there is more opportunity to bring up strong, healthy children here than in the crowded metropolis. It is worth noting, however, that the proportion of children whose parents were born in the United States is 82.2 per cent in Iowa, 62.4 per cent in California and only 22.? per cent in New York City. The average boy in the United States, 71 months old, is found to be 43.87 inches talf and to weigh 41.60 pounds. , The boys are a little taller and heavier than girls of the same age, these averaging 43.52 inches and 40.56 pounds. The examination of these groups in three separate parts of the United States, while it shows the advantages to be with the west, still, has not shown any difference great enough to. be disquieting. There is movement back and forth throughout America, a thorough mixing, and instead of anticipating increased differences between the residents of one end of the country and another, a gradual coming together may be expected. Iowa probably will continue to pro duce huskier children than the crowded cities of the east, but many of them, as many of those from California and all the rest of the west, wih later go east, there to mix their sturdy qualities in the general average, ' - Will H. Hays and the Movies. The Bee wants to go on record to the effect that if the moving picture magnates have - suc ceeded ia getting Postmaster General Hays to take the position of executive head of that indus try, they have picked a mighty good man. Mr. Hays has made a record that is not likely to be surpassed very soon. He took over the affairs of the republican party in Indiana when the or ganization was pretty well shot to pieces, and put them in such fine working order that a great victory was gained. Then he did a similar job for the republican party on a national scale. Hav ing thus proved his capacity, he was given the task of rebuilding the service of the Postoffice department, which Albert Sidney Burleson had completely demoralized and- almost totally wrecked. Nine months of his presence there shows results in a restored morale, and extended service and renewed confidence in the depart ment by public and employes alike. If Will H. Hays can do this, he surely is the man to get the movie business straightened out. Some comment might be indulged, though, on a state of affairs that win permit a group of business men to out bid the government for the services of a man of his capacity. However, there is no likelihood of the public ever paying a postmaster general $150,000 a year, even if the business under his management does amount to half a billion dollars, and comes more closely home to the people who pay for it than any of the other departments of the federal government They will pay it, how ever, if the movies get him. A member of the city zoning commission in Baltimore suggests that the municipality buy tracts of land and develop home sites, collecting any increase in value of the land for the general good and the public treasury. This may be logi cal, but it is at least somewhat in advance of the times. Returns are still coming in from the yuletide gayety, but the death roll up to date resembles that of the old-fashioned Fourth of July. A crusade for a safe and sane Christmas is next in order." ' The fanner has no reason to complain of lack of advice or sympathy, if he can use either. "Pill boxes" for the police will be all right if they live up to the name. Uncle Sam seems determined to make some promoters come through. . East Omaha remains ia Iowa, aU right Challenge to France Submarine Incident Direct Invitation for Declaration, (From the New York Times.) Lord Lee's suggestion that the French gov ernment disavow and repudiate Captain Caitex's commendation and sdvocaoy of the German method of using submarines to sink merchant men, by instructing the French delegation at the conference to vote for Mr, Root's second resolu tion, was a challenge that can not be evaded by asserting that the French government accepts no responsibility for Captain Castex's article in the Revue Maritime. When It was published he was chief of a naval staff bureau, and at the present time he is chief of staff to the admiral of the Second division iu the Mediterraneau. More over, Captain Castex has just been appointed principal lecturer to the senior officers' courses tor 1922. The French government, as Admiral De Bon says, can point to a statement on the title page of the Revue Maritime that the ad miralty and general staff disclaim responsibility for the views of contributors, but the Revue Mari time is a naval general staff publication: also, it may be assumed that Captain Castex will feel himself at liberty to inculcate his theories of sub marine warfare when he lectures before his class of senior officers. In the remarks which Lord Lee made to the conference on Friday last he showed by extracts from Captain Castex's article that this French staff officer affirmed that the Germans were "ab solutely justified" in resorting to the "new form of warfare." There could be no doubt of what he meant, for he quoted with approval a descrip tion by the late Admiral Aube of the tactics that would be employed by the torpedoboat, which an tedated the submarine, in sinking a liner: "In the dead of night quickly, silently, it will send to the abyss the liner, cargo, passengers and crew." Captain Castex saw in the submarine a more ef fective machine for stealthily sinking enemy craft of all kinds than the torpedo boat, and his article ended with this paragraph of exultation: Thanks to the submarine, after many cen turies of effort, thanks to the jngenuity of man, the instrument, the system," the martin gale is at hand which will overthrow for good and all the naval power of the British empire. Admiral von Tirpitz or General Bernhardt never wrote anything more hostile to Great Britain, or more vicious. Nevertheless, Captain Castex has been selected by an admiralty that must be familiar with his theories of naval war fare to teach French officers the use of an arm which the government wants to well supplied with for "defense." It is not surprising that Great Britain, after losinsr millions of merchant marine tonnage and 20,000 sailors in the Ger man U-boat campaign, should be suspicious and alarmed when France, which enjoyed the protec tion of the invincible British navy during the war, demands of the conference a submarine flotilla d'soroportionate to her capital ship quota and 330.000 tons of auxiliary ships in addition. Mr. Root's second proposal would forbid and outlaw submarine operations against merchant men. Submarines could still be used to attack men-of-war from the ambush of the deep. Great Britain would abolish submersible vessels alto gether, but other nations represented at the con ference want them retained. "One must not de duce from abuses by Germany," said M. Sar raut for the French delegation the other day, "the idea that inevitably others would commit the abuses." Lord Lee proved that .the "abuses by Germany" had the approval of a French naval staff officer who was a professor of tactics. The disclosure put the French government on the defensive. How could it reconcile its pro fessions of humanity in warfare at sea-with oppo sition to the Root proposal to make an end of submarine operations against merchant ships? How to Keep Welt 9t OBU W. A. IVANS. Queetiaaa Mam a lag ayjlaaa. ' saaJe tlaa aaa anvaaltaa al dieeeee. eua aeitted a Or Evaaa ay reeSirs al TV Baa. will bo aaewered aaraaaaUy avkjael la Ueaitaliea. aaart r etaataed, aoaaaaaao aavahaa la aa alaeai. Dr. Evaaa l aal aaaas dlafaaeia ar oewaartaa laf ladlvkaWJ ieeaaea. a Satin letters hi aaro ol The Baa, Copyright, ISIt, by Dr. W. A. Braao ' "J Go On Forever Every now and then, by a dead lift effort, re fomers do get something reformed. Then they fall intp each other's arms and sing "Laus Deo, it is done," and forget all about it. The gang ster and the profiteer continue business at the old stand, and some years later the public finds J that the, thing basn t been reformed at all. Lease less vigilance is the price of reform. The re former works after business hoursa few weeks in the year. The gangster and the profiteer work 365 days in the year, and 366 days in leap year. , ' 1 If there was one thing which had been be lieved to be satisfactorily reformed, it was the tenement house evil in New York. From the time when Dickefis described the Five Points to the days when Henry George and Dr. McGlynn used the tenement as the spearhead of all their lunges at poverty, and to the time when Trinity church served as the text for the excuse for columns on columns of revelations, it was the city's dirtiest shame, the one unansweable slur. Then it was taken in hand in earnest, and so thoroughly cleaned and washed and fumigated that New York was everywhere spoken of as having taken the lead in giving the poor a decent place to live. The problem has been solved, in the minds of al most all who thought about it, solved for years. But the other day the New York World con tained an interview with Dr. Annis S. Daniel, chairman of the tenement house committee for the Church Association for the improvement of labor and attending physician for the tenement house department of the New York Infirmary for women and children, who, is about to make a report on tenement conditions to the associa tion. She has held these offices for seventeen years, and she declares that in all those years she has "never seen the tenements so crowded, so much in want of repair or so dirty." She gives horrifying specifications. Almost one seems to be hearing a speech by Henry George or Dr. McGlynn in 1887. The model, law-ruled tene ments have fallen into the hands of the land lords, and the landlords, once co-operative with reformers, seek only the dollar at the expense of human life. She goes into details about the ef fect on morality which sound like the report of some educational authority in Petrograd. Life, health, chastity, even that small degree of com fort that can be called tolerability all these have fallen victims to a system that was supposed to have given its last gasp seventeen years ago. Yesterday, today and forever. The reformer works like Billy Sunday, that is, sometimes; but the gangster and the profiteer work like the devil, that is, every day in the, year. Philadelphia Ledger, Ot the People; for the People. President Harding has one qualification for his high office which appeals particularly to his fellow countrymen and the existence of which they could not have suspected from his earlier career. He is fundamentally a good man; and by good we mean something more than merely well intentioned. He is good in a sense that ex Presidents Roosevelt and Wilson, in spite of their superiority to him in moral energy and in tellectual ability, were not so good. He is not an egotist. He is kind, patient, fair-minded, con siderate and apparently disinterested. He pos sesses not only a keen but an humble sense of personal obligation to all his fellow citizens. He wishes them to be happy. He hopes to make them happy by faithfully considering their prob lems, by listening to their proposals and griev ances, by composing, if possible, their differences and by leading them soothingly along the middle of the road to some accessible and eligible goal. Finally, while he is not yet an enlightened man, he is by way of being flexible and open-minded. He has learned much since the assumption of his grave responsibility opened his eyes and aroused his conscience. New Republic. Not Always a "Bargain." . i "It comes high but we must have it" seems peculiarly applicable to the feeling of the Chinese toward western civilization. But they must wonder, sometimes, whether it is worth the prices Portland Oregonian. A SUPERMAN'S GLAND. Napoleon Bonaparte was I feet S Inches In height He was short and pudgy, with oddly small, plump hands, and hla hair was long, straight and black, and his com plexion was dark, but In spite of that hla skin was thin, soft and unusually smooth. In his youth he was determined, relentless, eold, calculating, re morseless, courageous. His judg ment was almost superhuman, his Imagination wae vivid, but It was always well under control. He was eapablo of prolonged, wearing effort, aeomed to require comparatively little slaep. If ho had emotions ho never permitted hlmsalf to Indulge In them. Legand said he had a multitude of Uvea, but all were on a physical basis, and no pamlon of other aort touched him. Even at mat age ne was given to such violent headaches and brain etorms that many thought him an epileptle. The only other physical ailment of the period was bladder trouble, a complaint that annoyed him greatly all his life, the basis for which no physician was able to And. This Napoleon reached his hey day about the time of the battles of Austerllti and Jena. A different Napoleon was In evi dence at Moscow, and thereafter the change was proaresslve until death closed the scene at St. Helena. Hla Judgment, towards the lust, was poor. His character of mind under went a remarkable change. He ceased to manifest any sexual tendencies. He died of cancer of the stomach The autopsy showed a lot of fat in the abdominal wall and around the hips. He was stodgy and bellied. His skin was fine and soft And this is how Dr. Louis Ber man interprets Napoleon from the standpoint of bis ductless glands. AU his life he was under the Influence of a nland the pituitary. When this gland ia driving things the brain develops too much or too little. The skeleton is too large or too small; there is liable to be too much fat around the abdomen and the legs; the sex glands are apt to ne improperly stimulated and there Is "'oneness to manner trouble. Napoleon's overdeveloped pltui tary was responsible for his small alse, his large head, prominent fore head and firm under law. He had headaches because his large, hard working pituitary would till up with blood and thus be pinched by the bony cavity in which it lay. His judgment was 'fine and free from the harmful Influence of emo tions because it was the front of the pituitary which was well developed, He had firmly ' developed adrenal glands. . After Austerlits his pituitary be gan to play out By the time of his death it was worn out. In consequence hie judgment bn cams poor, his mind changed char n.tfr, he became fat around the ab domen and legs and he lost his sex uality. That he held up as well a he did was because nis adrenals and hla thyriod did not play out as com pletely as did hla pituitary. Operation for Cross Eyes. R. M. writes: "la an operation the only way of curing cross eyes? My eyes have been crossed eirtfce birth and I have worn glasses for nine years. My eyea are better, but not cured. Po you really think glasses can cure cross eyes 7 ' "I am told that if I continue wear Ing glasses until I am ,19 or 20, that when I stop growing my eyes will be cured, it isn't mucn or an opera tion to have the eyes straightened, is it? Am I7H yrs old." RBPL.Y. ' Some cases are cured by wearing glasses.. The chance of cure, without opera tion, when treatment-has been post poned so long, is not good. Most of the cases cured by glasses are s years old or under. Don't If You Are Fat E. S. M. writes: "Just before go ing to bed I feel hungry, so I eat a light lunch. Is this harmful? Is it fattening?" REPLY. This habit will help those dis posed to insomnia and those who are underweight It wiU harm the diabetics and the obese. Perforation of Intestines. Mrs. G.-W. R. writes: "Will you please tell me what are some of the causes of a perforation or tne in testines 7 "Will chronio constipation bring it on? My son Just underwent an operation for this trouble. Ha had been troubled with constipation for some time." REPLY. Among the cause a are typhoid ul cer, tubercular ulcer, other ulcer, appendicitis, inflammation of a diverticulum, adhesions and tumors. Mongol Type Children. Mrs. B. J. writes: "In your article today, 'Unusual Child Types,' you describe the Mongol type. Would you please write more on this par ticular type? I am very much in terested." REPLY. This is a type of child with a low grade mentality and witn the uni neaa ava. The cause of the condition is not known. It has been noticed that most of the babies of this type are born to mothers near the end of tee child bearing period, or to mothers who are constantly fatigued or who have had severe illnesses. - Such children do not grow up hjr mally. In fact, they rarely live be yond babyhood. THE SPICE OF LIFE. Count! I'm sorry I couldn't So mora for yoa." - , CanTtctcd Cllant Don't nwntlon it. guvnor. Ain't tiva yaara enous&T" The Bollock Way, Th Cuitomtr I can't find my wlfo anywhar. What shall I dot Tba Shopwalktr Juat aurt talking to oar prttty anlitant ortr thr. London Opinion. Tba tho dralar waa hiring a dark. "Svppon." h( aaid. "a lady ciutomr war to nmark wblla yoa wr trying to fit ber, 'Don't yen tninb on of my foot la blrsar tbaa tba otitrJ' wbat won 14 yoa any? "I iboold say. "On tba contrary, tntdaan. na la amallar tbaa tba othtr.' " "Tba Job la yoara." Boatoa Traaaertpt. It waa tba custom of tha eongrteattea to rapeat tho Twanty-tblrd Fialm 'a roncart, and Mrs. Arraatrong'i baMt waa to bMp about a doaaa word ahead all tha way through. A atrangor ni taking oaa day about Mra. Armstrong. "Who," ha lnqalrad, "waa tba lady who waa alraady by tht (till watara whllo tha rt of no wtr lying dowa la grew paataraa r Metropolitan. Vaaagar (ta applicant for office boy Tcejscy I "Artn't yoa tba boy who ap plied for thle poalttoa a faraalBt foI" Boy lea. aUa," C. of C. Has Plans for Co-Ordinating Citizenship Work Committee With Represent tives From All Patriotio Bodies May Recruit From Suggestion. Plans (or the organization of a city citizenship committee, were made at the Chamber of commerce yesterday noon when representatives of the Chamber of Commerce and patriotic and welfare organizations con Orred. Till the present time, citizenship work has been earned on by the various bodies individually, and their efforts have overlapped, and some phases of the work nave been neglected because of a lack of co ordination. The present plan, suggested by Dr, E. C Hcnrv. chairman of the citi zenship committee of the Chamber of Commerce, calls for a representative from every club and organization iu Omaha. , The main work of the organization wil' be the proper instruction in the history of the United States, lives of patriots, the proper observance of patriotic holidays and work among new citizens. The American Legion has taken the lead in nationalization work so far. There is now in preparation i series of articles dealing with radi cal governments, radical movements and their leaders. These articles are to be released from time to time throua-hout the citv. A meeting for final discussion of organization plans has been called by Dr. Henry to convene in iU days. Will Advertise City in Adjacent States Omaha's commercial and civic ac tivities are to be advertised in 47 papers and journals . of adjacent states, considered Omaha trade ter ritory. The bureau of publicity of the Chamber of Commerce voted yesterday to keep a continuous stream of advertising In these papers the coming year. In addition to the advertisments in the papers, there' is to be sent Value-Giving Store Vacuum Cleaners . Lighten housework and do the work better than broom, dust- -er and dust pan. Picking ip all the dirt and lint from rugs and carpets without scatter ing dust, they are endorsed by all users. - m Easy to Operate Easy to Own 3975 Vacuum Demonstrators, slightly uaad , . . . $1 DOWN $1 PER WEEK Be as willing to help mother as she is to help you, so left one of her gifts be a Vacuum Cleaner. ' Eldredge Two-Spool SEWING MACHINE Saves Dressmaking Bill and at the same time permits you to have more clothes for much less money. Own a ma chine and keep the profits at home. As usual you are privileged to make your own terms. Select your Sewing Machine now, having it to use while paying for it. Eight handsome models from which to choose; priced from $72.00 to $98.00 Ask for demonstration, and remember It pays to read'jJow en's small ads. We offer several good val . ues in Machines that have been used for demonstrating purposes, as well as a number that have been used for short periods in homes. $21, $32, $35, $39, $45 It pare to road Bowan'a aasaD ada Howard Su, Bat. 15th aaai 16th Vwwwwwwwwwwwwww broadciet over the territory, pam phlets giving detailed information. Omaha has been advertised in many national msgaiinei and daily and weekly papers in tne past, out the pftn of advertising adopted for this year is much more extensive. Thousands of Inquiries regarding Omaha's activities are received an nually by the Chamber of Commerce. Plan Reception for Zionist Delegation rlv in Omaha next Wednesday IS causing no little interest in local Jewih circles. The psrty includes Nahum Soko- Iaiv tBlin fioriir Ih wnrlH yinn- ism; Col. James H. Patterson. D. S. v., ot Boar war and c-auipoii iame anil an aiitknritu An ennditinna ill Pittin, flan Vlartimir Tahfttin. sky, the '"Jewish Garibaldi," organ izer ot the jewisn legion in tne late was4 and Prof. Otto Warburg, noted scientist. They will speak at the Brandcls "business is good THANK YOlf LYNichoiw oil Company theater Wednesday evening at 1:15, on the condition of the Jews in the near eat and Palestine. William Holzmsri Is the chslrmtn of committee of local Jewish men and women who have planned a re ception to be held immediately fol lowing the lecture. The party will remain in Omaha uold Thursday. Man affairs have been planned tn their honor. aaawapaajMaja, CHOCOLATES INNER- CIRCLE CANDIES House- Cleini? Sip in fullxing ;.V Pa V" $8S.eo Phonographs es low as i $25.00 Proportionate cuts in small musical instru ments, art goods, sheet music, player rolls. Sale Closes Jan. 10 The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Straws When in Omaha Hotel Henshaw Nickels and Dimes built one of New York's most wonderful buildings the Woolworth the highest in the world. Not many of us . Want to Build Skyscrapers But .we want a home, we want a Savings Account, we want a fund for old age, we want money to educate the children, to give them a chance. Shares in The Conservative are absolutely safe, backed by FIRST MORT GAGES dividends are paid twice each year January and July. Start a Savings Account and let it grow add dollars and dimes as often as you can. Sueh an account brings sat isfaction. . Have you tried it? . . " Conservative Savings & loan association s cT y d r n o y PAUL W. KUHNS. Pree. E. A. BAIRO. Vica Praa. OFFICERS: J. A. LYONS, See. J. H. McMILUN, Trass. BARTON MILLARD says: frills "Save and jjour 'Savings rvorj vHh you Spend and you work alone" Can You Save $571.99? Are You As Good As the Average? Statistics . show that there are over 11,000, 000 Savings Accounts in the United States. The average value of each account is $571.99. A pretty high mark, isn't it? Open a Savings Ac count with us today and try it You can if you will. The OMAHA NATIONAL BANK Farnam at 17th Street Capital and Surplus ... $2flO0fi0Q