Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 26, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE IU.K. OMAHA. THURSDAY. JANUAIU LC.
The Omaha Bee
1UILV ( KM X ; ti ) -E VEXING SUNO A Y
1H. 6tK I'lbUMilKii COMPANY
MMiiN B. nt)Ik.t, Pubti.ber
B, Hfttttt.ll, i..nri Vlnr
MtMBEK UP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
lot A-i.trd fnw. kk'h THa Hrt la smbar. to
Slw.,,.1, nlt!li4 tt tlMt liw f.f Iviltu.ll.m rf alt M 4.al. b
ifMiixl lu il or .,t iirMul in (kit Kir. ai,4 !
iM .I 4 luf.ll 411 rijbi f f.,iUcll4l at
atrial Hui- iau rfe4.
Tti Omaha lire i wMt,vr ef Oa Att'tll llama af Cu
Ulm. Ik iwuiil amfcuMi m ihluUiiu suiMa.
The circulation of The Omaha Baa
SUNDAY, JAN. 22, 1922
70,101
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
B PBFWr.R, C.n.t.l Man.f.r
CLMCR S, ROOD, Circulation Mafr
twora u and subscribed baler ma Ihl 24lbj gay of
Jaauary, 1022.
(S..I) W.H.QUIVEY, Noury rukll
BEE TILFPH0NE3
Pril ill I r r L . W a n l.L thm
iiaparlmrnt or I'trami Wanlt. l or AT (antic
N'tht 111. Aft-r 10 r. M.t Kdltnrial 1Q00
lrrrtma. ATlauli 10:1 oi 101 i.
orncES
Mala Office I7fh and Famam
Co. Bluff U Bfolt St. Houlh Sid 4936 S. S4tb St
New York 2S fifth A.
Waihiniton 1311 0 SU C'hlcairo lil Wrlflay Bids.
J'arla, Franca 420 Rue St.. Honor
The Ike's Platform
1. New Union Passenger Station.
2. Continued improvement of tha Ne
braska Highways, including tha pave
ment with a Brick Surfaca of Main
Thoroughfarea leading into Omaha,
3. A ah ore, low-rate Waterway from tha
Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean.
4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
Are We Governed Too Much?
A great hullabaloo is heard about the regula
tions and restrictions laid on the people of Ne
braska, and the hardship and expense entailed
by the law-cnfoscing machinery. Let us look
into the matter.
In the good old days it was not an uncom
mon thing to run across a bushel measure that
held only a little over three pecks. Many a
"pound" package was disposed of the contents
of which weighed only thirteen ounces. Tint
measures were found that held but three gills,
and gallons were correspondingly short. Coun
ter scales had nice packages of lead foil under
the pan, and all sorts of subterfuges were worked,
in this fashion. Spices were found to consist
largely of adulterants, such as ground cocoanut
shells masquerading as pepper, and even so
common and cheap an article of food as table
salt was vitiated by a cheaper substance. Sugar
contained starch and terra alba, and so it went
through all the list. -
- Farmers were victimized by sharpers who un
loaded diseased animals on them, or through
fraudulent claims of high breeding. Nebraska
was a dumping ground for all sorts of inferior or
deleterious stuff, and the people suffered and
rebelled. Housewives clamored for protection
against unscrupulous and dishonest dealers,
farmers rose up against the frauds practiced on
them, and rules and regulations were made to
control the dealings between mart and man, the
law compelling honesty as far as possible. Un
fortunately, no law is self-enforcing. Nebraskans,
deliberately voted in favor of prohibition, and
then as deliberately set about to nullify the law
they had created. Boards and inspectors are not
only necessary, but are kept constantly em-v
ployed in trying to protect the people.
If it is desirable to go back to the dear old
times, when every form of cheating was prac
ticed and the swindlers prospered, all that is
needed is the enactment of an omnibus measure
to repeal all tho laws that arc designed to pro
tect the public against fraud, malpractice and
deceit, and restore the harsh rule of "caveat
emptor" let the buyer .beware. Short of that,
there must be machinery to enforce the law. If
we are governed too much, it is our own fault.
Politics in the Farm Conference.
While Governor Parker of Louisiana is prais
ing President Harding and Secretary Wallace
for abstaining from politics in selecting dele
gales to the farm conference now in progress
at Washington, Delegate Wannamaker of South
Carolina is doing his utmost to give the gather
ing a partisan bias. This astute and perspicacious
individual, who hails from a section of. the coun
try where politics as such do not exist, sees in
the conference a clever - scheme for breaking
down the influence of the farm bloc in congress.
His disclosure is timely, and now that he has
warned not only his co"delegates and the mem
bers of congress concerned, but the country
and world as welt, we may expect to see the
nefarious machinations of Warren G. Harding
brought to naught. It is pitiful, though, to see
men, picked as representative of their communi
ties and as having at heart the true intertst of
the entire country, commit themselves to such
pettiness. The connection between , the farm
bloc and the farmer conference is ' too far
fetched. Nothing the president has said or done;
either when a senator or since he has been presi
dent, warrants ascribing to him any ulterior mo
tive in his effort to restore prosperity to the
farm. He is as patriotic and devoted to the
country he serves as anyone else in the country,
and he knows that no class can permanently
' prosper at the expense of another. It is share
and share alike, and when depression hits the
farmer, it hits everybody. However, it is not
unsafe to assume that Mr. Wannamaker is a
democrat, and as such tinctured with that pe
culiar quality that leads to suspicion of anything
a republican president may or may not do.
. Make the Streets Safe.
"I propose to make the streets of Omaha safe
for 'women," said a judge of the district court,
sentencing a culprit to prison. The prisoner had
been found guilty of beating a woman on the
streets, and the judge gave him sixty days to
think it over, the last five on bread and water.
Such administration of justice may build up in
the minds of degenerates a wholesome dread of
getting caught, and so be efficacious in establish
ing safety on the streets tor women. But the
streets should be as secure for men, and a little
more of the same sort of treatment may have
the effect of removing some of the danger that
now exists. The menace of the footpad, the
robber who does not hesitate to shoot or club
his victim, is recognized, and is too common a
part of pur city life these days, Omaha is not
peculiar in this regard, for every city in tht land
tuffcr from tht epidemic cl crime of violence
g-tiittt penon and property, Whatever ths
cauie, the remedy liei in item and unrelenting
punishment of the offender! when thry are ap.
prehended. The police art not powerleia, nor
inefficient, lut they are not encouraged when
they tee tht fruits of their diligence dittipated by
mistaken leniency, Mercy ihould tver season
justice, but the true precept tetehri to be Juit
before being generom.
When Power Ptiiei.
The esteemed Boston Transcript, and the
equally revered New York Times, were deeply
pained when the senate passed the bill amending
the Federal Reserve act. Each of these great
newspapers is pained to note the monster of sec
tionalism and class government, rearing id hor
rid head, once more rampant in America. The
Transcript particularly notes that, according to
the vote, New England and New York are cut
from the rest of the country and are become
"outsiders."
All this because an imposing majority of the
senators of the United States voted that it would
not be improper lor the president to appoint
"dirt" farmer to the board, and prepared the way
for such appointment by adding one more to
the number compossjg the board. The Tran
script is comforted by the thought that such
farmer may be as conservative as any banker on
the board, but is apprehensive because of the
class or sectional control implied by the action.
What really ails both the editors referred to
is that the great empire on this side of the
Alleghanies has attained mature stature and is
able to do something for itself besides pay tribute
to industrial New England and New York. So
long as the handle of the spoon was controlled
around Boston, while folks out west took any
medicine it might contain, the situation was all
right from New England' point of view. But
the scene has changed, power has passed over the
range, and instead of resting along the coast line
from. Bangor to Sandy Hook, it is now fairly
well settled' over the Mississippi valley.
This power will not be used to the detriment
of any section of .the country, but if there is
any advantage in possessing it, the middle west
proposes to share in that advantage. This is
both a producing and a consuming region; we
sell to New England, and we buy from them,
and we expect to deal with them as equals, citi
zens of one country, and not as poor relations
or inhabitants of another quarter of the earth.
And, as The Bee already has stated, there is no
good' reason why the finances of the country
should be the exclusive care of the bankers.
What Really Ails India.
Lord Northcliffe has touched exactly on the
cause of the unrest in India. Laying aside as
negligible the so-called Hindu aspirations for
self-determination, he moves at once to the Mo
hammedan element. This he finds to be for the
first time in history allied with the Hindu,
and for the reason that it is opposed to Chris
tian presence in Asia Minor. Back of it all lies a
movement that has for its purpose the restora
tion of the Turk in control of all he forfeited
during the war.
Resting the agitation on the necessity of
Mussulman controt of the three holy cities,
Mecca, Medina and Bagdad, the clever politicians
of the caliphate at once extend that to inchide
the revival of the broken down Turkish empire,
with political as well as religious domination
over Palestine, Syria, ; Smyrna and Armenia.
Agitators who are going about in America, mak
ing a great effort to enlist casual sympathy- for
the Indian uprising are at great pains to conceal
the ulterior motive that is underneath the effort.
Restore the Turk to the position, he held prior
to 1914, and we will quickly see the dissolution
of the partnership he now holds with the Hindu.'
Remove British influence from India, and we
will soon note the disappearance of all. Chris
tianity has been able to do in that land for the
amelioration- of the condition under which the
masses live.
To revive the control of the Turk in Asia'
Minor, and to again give over the millions of
India to the mercies of native rulers and priests
may seem attractive to the unthinking, who
translate self-determination into terms that are
intolerable to advancing civilization, but such a
step will certainly add to the confusion in which
the world welters.
Pope's Simple Life.
Details of the daily life of Pope Benedict
XV, published after his death, add his name to
that long list of successful men who have
achieved great things while pursuing a personal
regime best described by a single word sim
plicity. The daily routine of Pope Benedict was
almost rigorous in its simplicity. His diet was
light, his recreation was confined mostly to walks
in the gardens of the Vatican, his relaxations
were conversations with his fellow clergy and
certain laymen, and with it all he had the
strength for a vast amount of work.
, It is a story grown almost common because
of its frequent reiteration in the review of the
lives of notable men. Men great in scholarship,
in industry and even in politics have found suc
cess not by spectacular means for the most part
and certainly not by excesses of pleasure. A sim
ple life has been the solid foundation for steady
achievement.
The World-Herald has made a remarkable
discovery. Governor McKelvie does not plan to
save money he is only going to refrain from
spending more than is needed for an economical
administration of state affairs.
Florida and Georgia kukluckers continue to
.uphold the traditions of white supremacy by
mobbing negroes who engage in anything but
menial labor. Such is civilization's influence 1
That young Massachusetts socialist who could
resist a . million dollars showed himself to be
human by falling for a vamp.
Legislators may approach the task they are
called to in a spirit of levity, but the people are
looking for relief.
Telling the farmers they are in a hole is no
service. What they want' to know is how to
get out.
Old King Ak-Sar-Ben is after recruits again,
and is not having a bit of trouble finding them.
Looks like Governor McKelvie also had some
blocs to deal with.
Columbus is where the Albert law came from.
The Husking Bee
IiV Your Day
Start ItWithaLauah
1 1 INK O TIN,
When it's 90 in the stud
Almost any car that's nude
Will pop aiy at once, so I am told;
But when it' down to aero
TKft lifa'a alft etiita A rheerat
When you try 10 sum luiie when it'i cold.
Now I own rutty Ford.
And I thank the blessed Lord
That there' only eight more payments till
she" mine:
She hi' on all her four.
Em up hill and bgt (or more,
When the temperature is up near JW.
Oh, it' purr, purr, purr,
With the engine turning over with whir,
When the day it sd and hot,
Then the starts off He shot,
And she sings along quite smartly, think you,
sir.
I drove to work one day.
In the street I let her lay,
It was cold as Billy II, and that' i fact.
I didn't think she'd freeie,
But the doggone chilly breeze '
Mutt have blown tome twenty Icebergs up
her back.
T uAr ill ? jtstu-n
a n vi v v s i t wwvft
Then I climbed out on the ground.
An4 1 anun fcer till ah tiearlv foil snarl!
Then I cursed her and I flayed her,
And the living boob that made her.
Still i couiun i get uie Diasiea iniug to start
It was crank, crank, crank.
With the icicles a-freezing on her tank,
And if Gunga Din of old
Can start her when she's cold
He' a better man than I am with the crank.
J. M. O'Neil.
PHILOSOPHY.
An ounce of buttle beats a pound of with,
a
When a motorist gets hit by a freight train
he realizes how it feelt to be a pedestrian and
get struck by an automobile.
There i a bill in the senate to fix the price
of wheat. While congress it about it, they might
carry this a little further and guarantee s price
on golf balls. They say the high cost is entail
ing a positive hardship on the leisure classes. ,
a a
, TODAY'S IDLE THOUGHT.
No matter how mean a woman treats her
husband while he is alive, ahe always plant on
giving him a SWELL FUNERAL!
H. H.-REMEDIES.
Dear Philo: I have found your articles so
helpful and your philosophy so sound that I am
coming to you for help in my trouble. We have
an alarm clock with a sleep meter attachment
which snores at night. How can I remedy this?
I will be up early looking tor your answer.
Yours, ' Nell.
Dear Nell: Always glad to assist. We admit
our philosophy is mostly SOUND.
In regard to your alarm clock, it it ts in the
habit of sleeping on its back try turning it over.
If this doesn't help, insert a bale of hay between
the ticks. This ;will tend to deaden the noise.
Don t cet ud too early or you may be looking
for it before we get it ready.
'
A WISH.
A girl won't ting the old. old stuff,
The gay tongs nor the blue ones,
And we wish she'd be kind enough
To lay off of the new onet.
,''.
"Actions speak louder than words."
"They have to, to make 'emselves heard."
Tim savs: Diplomacy is the art of telling a
lie in such a way that you like to think the other
fellow believes it, although you know he doesn't-
..
PREFERRED THE CASH.
The knot was tied, the pair was wed, ,
And then the smiling bridegroom said
Unto the preacher, "Shall I pay
To you the usual fee today,
Or would you- have me wait a year.
And give you then a hundred clear,
If I should find the married state
As happy as I estimate?"
The preacher lost no time in thought,
To his reply no study, brought,
There were no wrinkles on his brow;
Said he, "I'll take $3 now."
; Anonymous.
Professional ball players are getting to cost
so much that the clubs have to buy 'em on the-
installment, plan. ,
As the time draws near when teams will nit
for the southern training tables, anxious club
managers are scanning the -want ads for' such
notices as this:
For Sale High grade shortstop, m first class
condition. Used only four seasons. Small eater.
Terms. ' -
News item says a woman who slept 88 days
was awakened by a phonograph.
Eighty-eight days is some nap. we admit, but
being awakened by a phonograph is nothing new.
How to Keep Well
Br DR, W. A. EVANS
Quaatwaa taatwaia l, aaaitalM) a4 aatM l 4imm, ifeaiill4
a lf . r ! of Ik tta, put ha aa4 arally, avkiM.1 la
raM iMiiaiiaa, ke a laaiia) aM'.wl aakalua I atltw4. lYt,
,e ! a 4ixhi ar eatiib w laaivulual e.
A Mia ta al Ike Boa.
(."hi. t:u i'' w. a. tu.
A BOUQUET.
(From one of the thousand bricks.)
Oh, merry huta ' of the Husking Bee,
Yours is the tune that pleases me
Wisdom wise, with a laugh thrown in,
That's the .stuff that is sure to win.
When we have finished the daily news,
Of dozens stung or killed by blues,
Like a wiper our glasses you clear,
Changing our vision from things so drear.
A "BEE" that's busy, swarming with joy,
Whose sting is never allowed to annoy,
Long may you buzz within our hive
For happy are 'we when you arrive.
J. C. B., Gothenburg, Neb.'
There, P. R. B., is one from your old home
town, sent in direct response to your invitation.
Thanx, J. C. B. That's "saying it with flowers."
AFTER-THOUGHT: When you say it with
a smile you say a mouthful. PHILO.
Creating Wealth by Spending.
After the civil war this country entered upon
a period of tremendous expansion of railroads
and industries, and in doing this increased its
wealth so rapidly as to be able to pay off its
debt far in advance of what would have been
possible under any niggardly system of with
holding money from wise expenditures of that
kind. We can today better afford to create
wealth by large construction undertakings than
we can afford to skin down to the narrow
est possible point in order to save. There is
a withholding that leads to poverty: there is a
wise expenditure that leads to prosperity. The
building of the Nicaraguan canal, the develop
ment of Muscle Shoals, making the Tennessee
river available for transportation, the improve
ment of the St. Lawrence as proposed, giving the
west a direct water route to the ocean would
all, we believe, come tinder the head of wise ex
penditures, viewed from every possible angle.
Manufacturers Record.-
SMOKING CAR GOSSIP.
Hr ta aoine a.tvl.-a is Arum
mera, Tn ret tf III WufM may
oiarviam ll ir mry in.
I am iiiiiuUi4 i wrde it !
rtuae of S Irixer from a rtir.l
drummer, h ttuit nU.itt 19 yent
agit bacauoa lia il'Vrlii''l illlrl..
Mints diatM(iD inut ttauli lna
bill of faro very iU'm-Iv, ati.t time
a drummer inuat eat what lis ran
tel. ebvioualy (ratellHg U no Wurk
lor a llafll
m roci la not Hip only r tr
In a traveling- man's lif. which la
on ratch-aa-catrh't'en lM.
There's tiuta an4 li-ila, not to
mention s few oiltcra, un h
smallpox sn4 milk.
Hut this etury la about wtr.
l'ld sny liruinmT's I'rolmitvo
eoclailon or sny whutraatrtV awto
elation or sny large whulraula r.ni
rem ever conenW tha silviiMbiliiy
of setting out s ilruiunirra' lianil
book, or arrlra of rcKiunal drum
mers' lianilbooka? If aiu li u bunk
la now put out or sny tina rnnteni
plates putting one out. I want to
aussKt that It rontulu a fow iiic-a
entitled, "How to lie a I.ho Itrimi-
mer": or in !. "How to AvuiJ
Uoing Home In the HnKKase Car."
On on ri4 of t htit tiok thero
mUlit be . statement aa to the
aafety of the water umiII lit the
different towns arranii'1 by tho
tale. Hurh m Hat Would be enay to
sat by writing- the mate healiti department-.
ror Inatunre. In Auiiuxf. 1921. tlio
Illinois department puhllhhed s
etatement ss to the public Hitpiillca
In that alate.
This aiatement toll us that of
4l municipal water mii'plloH 77. &
per cent were Rood, 14.6 it rent
were doubtful, and 7.9 per tent bud.
The It intiti t-ial tics s llns
their people bud wnter were Avon,
Kulton county; t'Hrllele, Clinton
county; L'arnl, Whlto rounty;
Charleaton, Coles rounty; Cheater,
Randolph county; Christopher,'
Franklin county: Coroden, Shelby
county; vallaa City, Hancock roun
ty; Fairfield. Wayne county; Free
burg-, ft. Clair rounty; lirayvlllo.
Edward county: Greenup, Cumber
land county; J tillaboro, Motitproin-
ery county: Johnxon Cliy, William
eon county: Klnkald. x Christ lun
county; Litchfield. MnntKomery
rounty; London MlllH, Fulton coun
ty; Iouliivtllo, Clay county; Mattoon
Municipal nupply, Coles county;
Mount Sterling, Brown county;
New Athena, Bt. Clair county: New
ton, Jaeper county; North ChlruRO.
Lake county; Olney, Kk-hlund coun
ty; Pari. Edgar county: Mount
Olive, Macoupin county; I'inckney
vllle, Terry county; St. Elmo, Fay
ette county: Toledo, Cumberland
county: Vandalla, Vayette rounty;
Waterloo, Monroe rounty; Stanton,
Macoupin county; Went Frankfort.
Franklin county; Whitehall, Greene
county, and Zltgler, In Frankfurt.
Published reports, such an the one
quoted, are seldom up to the min
ute, at least, nt tho time they corne
td be used. Therefore, it la wise in
writing- to a atato health depart
ment for such a report to ask thorn
to note any changes in tho rlmrac
ter of the water supplifs made sub
eequent to the dato of the iuspre
tions on which the report is butted.
It might also be well to nslt both
the state and the United States pub
lic health service for a report on
the typhoid ratea of the various
places.
If a drummer must stop at some
hotels where there is a private wa
ter supply, he will lessen tho hazard
if he will drink no water except
that which has been heated. The
statements of proprietors as to the
iiujluy t)f tit water from wtll mi
tli mhuim la notoriously undo.
lrlliHIlt,
The water upilia on trains and
uo.it m iW quite kill.
'I'M'Hlft' I'laraar,"
H n. rit: "I Imvn had ria kd
lunula fur vr two ruouitia. au Ii
!'- I, . mf u I crack In my flttsrs
eif, i.illy, I lavs tried riinrnt
kind f ereama fur I), but tmve
found m relief, o nm cumins to
.ii fur help. My ftnsers l.e.otn
n if iii tiiui and it hurls to bend
litem."
ItKI'LV.
To keep the kkn of your liaiula
well creuard will lirlp mntlderably.
It dor not mutter s whole lot what
SrrttMt SOU UM,
If you ran da r. keep your hsnda
warm Slid dry. The prlm-innl cauie
of your iroublH some fen lure of
tM upatluii. For 'iiipa. umnIiImk
uimu-a, arrutiMiia. elo. if you mum
put jour hsnda In w.tter, could ou
wear rubber glove?
I'lllTO I'mirtt IMt LtMin!
M. J. t'. write: "Do you con
sider cold shower baths healthful?
"Am 4'J year a and 2 month old.
and for th tiaat fix yeura have
taken a dully rold ahoHer (In the
winter In on itnheatf-d bathroom).
'.foro that juat took dally cold
r-ponui-H.
"The ratine of my so cltlnif your
lieiietlriul nilvli-o Is an argument
brousiit forth the other day that,
whllo cold showers at no time are
really InviRorntlmr and rather tax-
Ins one's vitality, they sre surely
detrimental to s mnn of tny ss.
"I will not deny that while in
former years I took to them like a
lurk, It now takes a a. rt of an ef
fort nt tlmea, nt leant. In oppear-
a tiro I miii never taken for more
than 3D, which fact 1 have always
sitciibed to the rold water baths."
ItEPLY.
If you ran fool people 11 yesrs
worth I think you had better kecD
.tin-m tip.
I know people who would try to
Rwlm arroNH tho Atlantic in January
ir they thought doing no would make
them look 11 yours younger.
Cold ahowers are very invigorat
ing, health-producing-, and cold pre
venting, provided one gets a good
glow after hln ahower.
If the shower leaves one cold,
bluo, and shivery, it does harm.
ardUd at s critl.-al moment, whll
I tha firs depsriment ! on s run la
nia uhi.h never kliould hsv
sn urrrd. Firamen rosy be Injured
snd equipment tUnid on sucn i
run. lira dt-uartiiieiit are not main
tallied in urolevt a man from th
result of hi pegllime. and alien
ha rail uixin tha city In any such
rae, Ii should be mads to JHiy for
Ilia wrv..-e.
" I'llder A parson I liability kUtut
this ran be brought about, fcu'-h i
statute aould a upon Individ
uala, llrms or corporations the coat
of rxtlnf uUliln or attempting to
extinguish all nres oecurrlng on the
premier of surh partlea, whenever
aucn nre sre in ruu or failure
In comply with any law, ordinance
lawful regulation or requirement f
sny state or municipal authority
enacted or tiuda fur the prevention
Of flrn. It would alo hold such
partlea liable for any damage In per
son or property reauiiing in cun
Buiahlng or attfinpllng to extinguish
sum nre. t it lea could adopt orill
nance slong tha line of the statute,
Holh an amended fre marshal set
and a ueranual liability statute con
rern you very much, and 1 want your
wholehearted support In working for
their pnsitage, i know you muat
feel eperially strong for a personal
llatniily law, because it la you who
Personal Liability
for Fire
AIlVKRTMrWFAT
Head Stuffed By
Catarrh or Cold ? .
Use Healing Cream
If your nostrils are clogged, your
throat distressed, or your head is
stuffed by nasty catarrh or a cold,
apply a little pure, antiseptic, gertn-
destroymir cream into your nostrils,
It penetrates through every air pas
sage, toothing inflamed, swollen
membranes, and you get instant re
lief. How good it feels. Your nostrils
are open. Your head is clear. No
more hawking, snuffling, dryness or
struggling lor breath. Oet a small
bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from
any druggist. Colds and catarrh
yield like magic. Don't stay stuffed
up. Relief is sure.
Hotel Castle
OMAHA
(From Mafrguurcllng America Against
Mre.)
In a number of American cities
there are now ntatutes providing for
personal liability for fire, and the
movement is one that appears to bo
slowly but surely gathering head
way. Mate Fire Marshal John G.
Gamber of Illinois voiced an opinion
upon this subject In addressing- a
convention of firemen which is well
worth reprinting:. He said:
"As for a personal liability statute?,
I believe it will bu of more impor
tance in reducing- fires than any
singlo piece of jpglslatlon. It is
tinio wo quit pitying people who
hnve flies because of their own care
Ifssness. The only way to make peo
ple fepl personally responsible as to
flres is to hold them liable by law.
A man who has a preventable firo
robs his neighbors, either through
the medium of insurance, or nn ua
Justlrted use of the publio fire depart
ment wiucn an must support. The
safety of the whole city may be Jeop-
"
Rich in Nourishment
and of Purest Quality
yet the price of this milk is no higher
than other standard brands
BORDEN'S Evaporated Milk is
pure country milk with the
cream left in. Rich and pure as
milk, our most important food,
should be.
Its production is guarded by the
strictest regulations to insure its
purity. Every possible precaution
is observed in handling the milk,
and a special, extra laboratory' test
is made on the finished product
before it is delivered to your grocer.
Yet you buy Borden's at an equal
price with other standard brands.
Even when your grocer pays more
for it he sells it to you at the regu
lar price because he , knows its
purity guarantees satisfaction to
his best trade.
THE BORDEN COMPANY
Borden Building New York
Makers ahe of Borden's Eale Brand Milk,
Borden's Malted Milk and Borden's Confectionery
QQTBBEOaftflifl
fc unsweetened IT
Evaporate" W.
MILK L
1
When In Omaha
STOP WITH US
Hotel Co nant
Hotel Sanford
Hotel Henshaw
Our reputation of 20 years fair
dealing ia back of these hotels.
Guests may atop at any one of them
with the assurance of receiving hon
est value and courteous treatment.
Co'nant Hotel Com pany
risk your Uvea on rn. 1t) ,,.,,
backing. I am going t .., ,u:
Ihl kkauriatiuii liulu.1 lit ,B r",,.
lutlon of this coiivnu.,w h
will kirungly (MduiM, ih i,aIHllat
liability law."
AIM fSTlafCMSAT
SULPHUR CLEARS
A PIMPLY SKIN
Apply huli'liur a TM Wlwn louf
hklit Itrcuks Out.
Any bre.iklug out of tlie skin mi
face. neck, anus or body il over
come qulckeet by applying Mnlho
Kulphur. Tha pnnpla e. in to dry
riKht tin ami so a a ay, uiirr a
noted skin Mi lalist. I
Nothing has even been found In
take the place of sulphur a a pint
tile remover. It la harmh'ksi sud In
expensive, Just ask tny flrutitiol for
a small jar or auntno-BUj'tiur smi
Uaa It like cold errant.
Big Chocolate
Coated Doughnut
1
ThePantorium
A Real Cleaning Plant
IKotel Em
DANCING
' Informal
-Elias and His Orchestra
Thursday and Saturday Nights
- ?. a
ell 'Y
snd a bottle ot Ala. . va J
taito Milk, eaa week S1J I
only, all for jr" I t
iVS&J Restaurants J
i i i i ,
EXCEPTION .(
CHOCOLATE!
INNER-CIRCLE J O
CANDIES y I
WWMWWM'Z?o rvens -- , I
Value-Giving Slore V
g"
if
w
Columbia
RECORDS
Reduced in Price
75c
All 10-inch records,
formerly selling for
95c, now
Columbia Kecords f titnish you
with the latest song hifi the
moat popular dance recorig
and all these popular Columni
Records are to be had at the "
H. R. Bowen Co. Don't be
without them, as Columbia
Records can be played on any
make machine. Come to the
store and hear the late Co
lumbia Record releases.
Our Record Exchange
Department
,We allow 25 cents for old
records (any make) towards
the purchase price of any Rec
ord on our Exchange Table.
It Pays to Read Bowen's
Small Ads.
Howard St. Bet. 15th and 16th.
I III I A good banking relationship K Jj ., a
HI ' multiplies your ability and largely E' Iff V
HI increases your chance of success JJII Ii
HI I because it puts you in touch with Vf 1I jf
j the experience and knowledge of ll
HI relationship with this strong bank j
! . that has for sixty-five years helped . - : ,
I PirstNational I . :
I iBank of Omaha j! I
t
VI
I,
i
V