Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 27, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    NIB NEK: OMAHA. HUUAV. JANUAKV 57. l'iii.
The Omaha Bee
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Tke clrealatiaa f Tfce Oatabe Bee
SUNDAY, JAN. 22, 1922
7W.IC1
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
tUrwrK. (. I Mauser
ELMLH a. RuuU. Cittuuii. Meeer
sara ana u.nria4 aw fat a saa lha I4isj aUy sf
-canary, is...
3sl WH.QUIVCV, Notary PuUta
DEC TtXCPHONES
Private Branca Ftrhsiis. Aid for h ,
rttMmnl fir l'rwft Manrl. rr Atlantic
Kirt fall A"r II l, M i t4inl 1000
'aeerlaianl. AT Ism 10 I di IM.
OFFICES
Main Oiriffr-Hih and Femsm
t o. Bluff U Stall at. Soma bMa 4; 0. JHh St
N.w Yerk-JM ifik A v..
ukiailoo llll 0 1. klrant Wrl.lay BIJ.
ran, rranoa ; jtua 6U Itonore
The lice's Platform '
1. Naw Unioa riten(er Station.
2. Continued Improvamant of tK No
braaka Highway, including the pave
ment with Brick Surface of Main
laoroughfarci leading into Omaha.
3. A abort, low-rate Waterway from the
Cora Bait to tbo Atlantic Ocean.
4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
Our Foreign Relations. .
For many jears a dicu.ion lias been going
on concerning the absolute lack of anything
rcjcmbling a foreign or external policy on part
of the United State. With the announcement
of the so-called Monroe Doctrine, and the open-
door policy for China, our government has at no
other point assumed a definite or enduring posi
tion. Subject at all times to the mutation of
politics, the shift of control from one party to
another, carrying with it responsibility for deal
ings with other nations, our relations with the
world have been marked by an absence of con.
iiiiumg purpose, it not wnn actual levity, in a
large degree this is because Americans are tradi
tionally inclined to attend to their own business,
and to allow others to do the same. Not being
prone to meddle, we have not felt the need of
any such traditional policy as has been developed
by great European powers.
The Constitution of the United States clothes
the president with power to negotiate treaties,
but requires that these be ratified by the senate
before becoming effective. The purpose of this
is very clear. It serves to prevent the president
.from committing the nation to engagements with
other nations of a nature that will not be ap
proved by the senate, acting as a co-ordinate
branch of the government. If the rule had been
otherwise, then Mr. Wilson would have been
successful in committing the United States to
the Treaty of Versailles. His failure in this re
gard is ascrihable Solely to the check placed by
the constitution -on executive action. However,
this is not sufficient warrant- for the assumption
now gaining currency, that the senate has super
visory control over all foreign relations. v
It is now alleged that a breach is growing
up between President Harding and a group of
senators,' headed by Brandigee of Connecticut,
the latter holding that all communications
destined for foreign powers must be submitted
to and receive approval of the senate before
being sent to the government addressed Such
an innovation is not only a stretch of congres
sional authority beyond the reasonable limit set
by the constitution, but would possibly have the
effect of ending all communication between our
government and those of other nations. The
senate has no authority in itself to carry on such
correspondence, and it has no power to dictate
to the president what nature or form his corre
spondence shall .take.
In the controversy with President Wilson,
the senate was on safe ground; in the threatened
break with President Harding the opposition is
assuming a dangerous position, and one frpm
which it will be easily dislodged. It is only just
to credit Secretary Hughes with being in some
degree familiar with the fundamental law of the
land, and able to hold his own with the best
lawyers of the senate. Moreover, he has the
courage to change if he finds himself in the
wrong.
elected. o office. They remain In erlke. for
two four years and when they retire they
havt jq.t begun to hart n inkling of munici.
pal affairs, When Ihey return to private M
inotner group ol amateur take thnr itlacrs.
Ktry thinking man knows that Trot. Fas
Hit .poke the truth. The difficulty It to achiev
S practical joining of two essential objects of
roveritment responn to the popular will and
ctirient management. A despot may give tl
latter, but lack the former; town meeting is
ideal in achieving response to public with but
functions without efficiency. The struggle Is to
gam a sufficiency of both.
Some day the answer will be found In the
election of men to legislate, to express the pub
lie's desire as to what governmental policy should
be, and in the appointment of executives to carry
out broad policies with busmeis-like efficiency.
That is what the city managership will do.
Power and the Ship Canal.
The financial operation of the KebraLa
Power company, disclosed to the city commis
nioii whenever a rate question has been before
it for the last decade, lias been a monotonous
story of continual investment, not by thousands
but by hundreds of thousands of dollars, in order
to meet the tremendous development In the use
of electric power. New engines have been
bought, new boilers installed, new dynamos con
nected, yet with each extension the demand has
kept apaie and generally moved ahead.
In many respects this development, repeated
in every city and town of the nation, is the in
dustrial marvel of the age. Ainslie A. Gray told
the Klectrie club of Chicago this week that, of
the 2I,0i)0.000 homes in the United States, 14,-
000,000 are near electric power and 8,000,000 are
wired for electricity. Despite the industrial de
pression of 1921, he said, the electrical power
companies generally showed an Increased rev
enue due to the enormous growth of residential
lighting. The report of the super-power com
mission of the federal government declares that
a virtual power famine will exist in the Atlantic
seaboard states by 1930, unless vast new gener
ating capacity is developed. The industrial ef
ficiency of the decades to come, it declared, de
pend on sufficient and cheap electric power.
That is why Newt England is turning to favor
the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence waterway, be
cause it promises development of over 1,500,000
horsepower of hydro-electricity. That is why
there is such intense interest in the Muscle
Shoals development, which offers 100,000-horsc-
powcr for nitrate production and 500,000-horsc-power
for general industrial use. Electricity is
the bread of industry.
Politics Running to Seed.
Politics is the science of government, and to
Americans is vitally important, because it means
the government under which we live. Every
citizen should be concerned in politics at all
times, and take a lively interest in what is going
on. Yet there is such a thing as carrying the
game to extremes, and certain elements of the
population are running wild over the rules right
now. As simple a matter as a conference to
discuss the farm situation is turned to advantage
by the chief spouter for the farm bureau organ
ization, who announces that he wilt call the real
conference to order today. This is all right; it
is within his prerogative, and none will seek to
deter him. The public, however, will wonder
who constituted Mr. Ben Marsh and his sup
porters to be monitors and spokesmen for the
entire agricultural industry of the Unfted1 States'.
A special session of the legislature was called
in Nebraska, for the specific purpose of revising
downward the appropriations made last year.
Instead of taking hold of this business, the Nory
Partisan league element in the legislature, which
achieved election by masquerading as repub
licans, immediately set about to make medicine.
"Alfalfa John" Franklin turns in a demand for
a probe of the highway construction, and this
proves to be a curtain raiser for his campaign as
a candidate for congress. This ambition on his
part is wholly commendable, but why does, he
not run as a Non-Partisan leaguer, he being
openly and avowedly a member of that group,
and withdraw from the republican party, which
he so vehemently opposes?. .- ' ,
Real progressives, seeking desirable or needed
improvement in the conduct of government, de
serve and receive approbation, but the pseudo
progressives, who really deserve the classification
of radicals, are just now making a jest of popular
government in. America. ' S ;.
Getting Onto Practical Ground. -
The farmers" conference at Washington is
expected to give its approval to two great en
terprises that directly affect the industry. ' One
is the operation of the Muscle Shoals plant, to
produce fertilizer that will be of benefit to the
farmers of the south. The other is the building
of the great lakes-to-oceap waterway via the St.
Lawrence river, from which the farmers of the
middle west will derive a direct benefit in the
form of reduced transportation charges. Other
matters of more or less speculative importance
are being considered, some of which may ..not
be answered for a long time to come, but here
are two projects that may be taken up and made
immediately effective. Whether the Muscle
Shoals plant is leased to Henry Ford, or to some
other operator, or whether it is managed by the
government, it has reached a point in its devel
opment where it would be almost criminal fo
abandon it. . The fields of the south need the
fertilizer it will produce, and consequently it
will serve a most useful peace purpose. As to
the great St. Lawrence canal, it has been fairly
well "sold' on its merits to the farmers of the
country, and generally to the region that will be
served by it. Opposition comes from sea ports
that will lose something of their control, and not
from any other source. Endorsement in the
name of the agricultural industry of the nation
will carry much weight with congress, and doubt
less aid in securing the legislation needed to put
over these enterprises.
Pleasures of Retrospection.
Thousands of people, reading President Har
ding's delightfully naive and homely story of
how he once rode 200 miles, bought a dinner and
saw a "show" alt for $7 will be led to recall
how they did something equally enjoyable and
for a similarly small outlay, in "the' good old
days." They are apt to sigh regretfully at the
thought that "the good old days" are gone for
ever. , .
It is ever a trait of human nature to remember
the happy times and forget the sorrows as the
years pass by; It is one of the traits which makes
life worth living. But, to make sure that we see
life as it really is today, it is well to give these
happy memories their true setting. Let us look
back at "the good old days." Twenty-five or
thirty years ago the world was "going to' the
dogs" at an even faster rate than now, if one were
to listen, only to the backward looking pessimists
and pay no heed, to those courageous souls to
whom adversity is merely a goad to ambition,
disappointment only a spur to new effort. In
those days, too, men sighed for "the good old
days" and so it has always been.
President Harding told his story with a touch
of humor which indicated clearly that he gave it
true perspective. He recognizes full well that
the new day has its own pleasures and rewards,
which more than balance its disadvantages. Let
us who read it be sure to give it that same
philosophic setting.
Referendum on Alcohol
Results it Summed Up Fiom
Answers by tha Physicians.
(Front tht Journal of tht Amsricsn Medical
Auociauon.) ,
In bearing before congrett, In the dituion
of regulations iourd by the Internal Kf venue de
partment, in fact, in pranirally every diuui-'S)
ot prohibition, contradictory statements h
been nude as to the views of phyit un on the
value of alcoholic beverages therapeutic
ageuts, Several scientific organitationt have
adopted resolution on the subject. Ha far a we
know, however, no attempt lias heretofore been
made to atcertaui, in a direct way, the opinion
oi any considerable riiiinber of i hvicians.
Moreover, the medical atocution hat been
subjected to ridicule and criiicitm on account of
the actions of a small number of its members
who are abusing their privileges and who have
assumed a position in the public eye not rrrdita
ble to the profetiion at a whole. It therefore
seemed worth while to obtain the views of a large
number of physicians regarding tha effect on
medical practice of the present regulation; to
discover whether or not conditions might be im
proved, and if so, how.
In order to secure the views of a representa
tive portion ot tne medical provision a que,
tionnaire was sent to more than one-third 5.'.-
'XX) of the physicians of the United Ststet. Of
these, 4J.WHJ were selected by arbitrarily taking
every other name on the nuilinir lift of the
Journal, In towns in which there was only one
physician, the questionnaire was sent to that phy
sician. In addition, the questionnaire was tent
to 10.000 physicians who were neither members
of the organization nor subscribers to the
Journal. These names were selected in a similar
manner, but from the medical directory.
1 he excellent response, reaching 5H ner cent
of replies and representing 21. S per cent of the
physicians of the country, a percentage of return
seldom attained by the questionnaire method, hat
been gratifying as an indication ol the interest
taken by our profession in this attempt to secure
an adequate expression of its views.
At might have been expected, the Journal
has been accused by many of preparing these
questions wholly in the interest of prohibition,
and an equal number have asserted just as em
phatically that the questions were intended as
the opening wedge for breaking down prohibition.
Some have taken exception to the word
necessary," claiming that no drugs are abso
lutely necessary, and that "desirable" or "ad
visable" would have been a better word for the
purpose. This point was given careful consid
eration in formulating the question. Moreover.
the word "necessary" is used in the national
prohibition act itself (Section 7, TitlcII)
How to Keep Well
, PH.W.A V AM
Quetttaae a i f Si f aeaa.
im m4 imi ! n.i..
n i.4 la f. tiae ..,!. f
tka p.a, mM fca mmn4 .riitHy
ukjMl la rf . liaMiaiM, okme a
enwe4, 444 eai-e la a.
aUa.4. t, fctaae ill -l aufce
4uMi a aaa.rifce lar MiMmI
aiaaaMa. Aeaiaae liaa j ta at
Ike .a.
lnt. 19; t. r Vr. W.A, E.eei
NEWS ABOUT THE LIVER.
Tha cheii.l-'ala wtilili the tirer
niakr or Itctpa 14 luaka n,f which
ara e,teorteil tircily into the tlw4
aiream am ft far mora imiuirtam-a
ID health than thnaa wtij.'h are
Itiruwn ctT under the name ( bile.
of ilieao nun i inuro Important
than Ufrt,
Thie kunstam-a la tha one great
wnate prnUiK't whii h rnnlaine tiliro-
gen, Wltt-tiiurr albumin nurna u In
ilia bdy the prod ml C tha rombu
tlim i urea.
I'rr la found .y tha liver. Ah
tin lUe tHir kid.
t'iiialia. Jan. ?.--T the Kdit.ir
.- m. i !( Aiir iwriiig ina tar
illumine- i,ua January ;j, is:;,
in me j u if ,u.i tM,r
mniea i.. ii, eijrl t,f ina dtpariiiieiit
etr aalpaiwraun a life.
Many Mure uuru, ,e 4t tear
f hate read eni.tra wriliru ,y ,r,
one l many .f wlumi I f.r ara
prejudiced t who aiirnipt to .,4t
anii riiiu uie ariartitunt aioro aan
Mie ana aieairn, lit iari-lly
Frr iiiamice ilia empire u held
mi in riuimia una irniii.ni and
oci""'i an airug.Mii, iitii,i
lid Miaulent pora.ui.
fr ni'-r than ti yrara ! have
p"n connriir.,1 tait t nmt in lha
retail hti.inmi, a)uu.. ,f h
ear wnti una firm in Omaha, e'or
evei4l vvera I wotked aa aaieaman
In blankeia and ilmut-.iiia. traieria
and liiiena, 1 have waited Upon Una
if thuuunds f Omaha men and
unit, . i my nieM-iu ttntk 1
eema In nmun wilh hmli tha Mir
r. AO" i ..... . . -
nrbed lilt lha blood. 11 ta earried to ' T. i " I f
all .ari of lha Imdy, and, tlnatly, " wslna-that iu..r than fuur-nfiha
r' hea tha ktdne, " lr rt of lha riix i.urieuua
... . .,i.. .(..... ... .u- remarka .r lmit lie acin.n
tire In lha Mood Which rettiee ,. ' !'! and lid the ii.
them and purity aa a result f Una ,-., .....
..,, iiir-.i."iiaujv are
made tt lha aal.nn-iiiiln limea with.
out number. Many limea mervhan
diaa a retiirnej fur credit r refunl
whan the ruMomer ahoiild t Jinan.
ny annitiiiva to rven k for un l
Inwam-a and when their dettian.la
ara nut ot m-i-erdcd to thr-r la
ailtiuijiilloti the varioua aulieittiicea
which, grouped together, make up
tha urine ara abairaned from tha
blood and thrown into tha unnlfer
oua tubulin.
I rest make tit nnr than one-
half tha total soluls of tha urine.
, . . , , .. .........
I m-rw in eiijr int..,, w iiu n i . . - -
i ...... .... . . MiHiiiiii. iwa eirriiiir rue ii.in ,a
ariane uei auae n liver naa innrnii- , . .. . . 1 '
. -irniiiHiian pi ina nrm aii lis
employee.
Thrr never wa a hleeee li i.i
ir"i man turn (llhpluyni at tnie
down on lis Job T mnkinir urea, or
If there t any medicine by taking
which the liver la tnado to make
more idea, I never henrd of It.
lilyroKen la another ff lha impor-
taut cheiiili'Hla with whn h tha liver
litia to do. Thia atibetani-o la clowly
Kin in euar ani eiercii. I , ' - - -
In fact, it la a morniro form nt V'" " rr ngn
rm In which It la readily ' "'" l"-"ni-r. j onirvo ina
. ur...,. , c viiener wronz man
nam.
Ijrnt week T viewed tan rem ma
of merehandiae from cuaiompra to
tlma over th deak of department
inanagi-ra ami general ali'anieii of
It laraa eaatem r-onrern. Thla tin
wn in mo lortn r a placard read
augar a form
atored away In the liver eetla
equipped with handlea br which tt
ran ha expeditiously picked up and
carted away for any use found necea-sary.
And thera aro Important tiaea ror
giyrogen. it la the great source or
nrai ana riieruy. th.i If .11.1 ..... n. VZ
Cornea a coij day, the liver snoveis i,.7r Vur 1 . r J ' . . " V"'
more glycoiten Into tha fire. r,'" i"Z,:irl' "."T
Cornea a need for great volume or ":. 1 " ' " y:'"
work, rrcat apeed or supreme exer-
cma of cur Omaha department
aiorea. One waa a itreaa altered to
ineaaure, returned not becnuao It
waa pot a good value, no complaint
tlon for a short time, more glycogen
Is uaed to niiTt the demand.
If fiuittna; emuth's the coal Pile at
the furnBco guto the liver the conl
iln) la drawn on xor glycogen
1 enough to keep thing going.
I Tlu-n there ta tha function of the
week returned aa not wnnted be,
eauso another woman In th aame
town hud a similar model.
The other return waa two riarlv
dnswe, light airy fabrics, delicte
eoiora. evriuialto hIvIoh. both udIo
date models; mm In the flint case no
particular complaint except they
And no physician shall prescribe llvP , protei-ting tho body agalnBt 5L!. "u1 nt one ot ,he ',artr 4r
i. . . i" t i a . ........ I nftfl nlAII U'nplt Slftrl trtaa V at f Lr aa rw
linuor untcss after careful shysical examination
of the person for whose use such prescription
is sought, br if such examination is found im
practicable, then upon the best information ob
tainable, he in good faith believes that the use
of such liquor as a medicine by such person is
necessary and will afford relief to him for some
known ailment.
The word "advisable or "desirable would
have been as much too mild as "necessary" is,
perhaps, too strong; "necessary" does not mean
indispensable, and it was properly regarded by
practically all who answered the questionnaire.
The criticism has been made that the question
as to whether whisky is a necessary therapeutic
eent is a scientific one and can not be decided
bv resolutions or bv votes. This is true: and the
referendum was to secure the opinions of phy
sicians on the subject, not to decide a scientific
question. It is granted that the physiologic ef
fects of alcohol are matters which may be de
termined in the laboratory; but therapeutics is
the application 'ni such findings to the treatment
of disease as determined by the opinions of phy
sicians for the opinions necessarily are based
on experience and observation may dc nc
termined, as has been done, bf the questionnaire.
City Manager the Solution.
Slowly perhaps but certainly, public- opinion
is turning to a realization that city government
is a question of business management and that
it is not being operated today with any approach
to the efficiency that a business concern must be
run, if it lives. Prof. C M. Fassett of the Uni
versity of Kansas told the Nebraska League of
Municipalities in Omaha: -City
officials are all amateurs when they are
New York is returning to "opera" hats for
evening wear, but out this way the good old-
fashioned "slouch" will retain its hold on popular
fancy.
New York builders are proposing to erect
dwellings without profit, but the world is waiting
to be shown.
Omission of a road building probe will not
stop talk about it during the coming campaign.
One thing that is fairly well demonstrated is
that talk will not save the world. -'
Gus Hyers has friends in the legislature, if
nowhere else. . . '
Watch Ralston start a building boom.
AoDroximately one-third bf those replying
commented on the general prohibition situation,
on the restrictions and regulations, or on some
allied topics. The, more interesting of these com
ments have been published in connection with
reports on the individual states. Many of the
views, brought out in the comments are of value
to those who are interested in the subject from
the sociological or from any other point of view.
For instance: Since national prohibition went
into effect, judging by these comments there has
apparently been a reaction against prohibition in
many states in which prohibition by state law
had become accepted and effective. This is es
pecially noticeable in the comments from Colo
rado, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota,
and even from Maine. From the com
ments, one must conie to the conclusion that
ome-made, illegally distilled or chemically com
pounded liquors so-called "moonshine" are
being extensively used in states in which this was
not the case three or four years ago. VV hat has
produced this apparent change?
I he questionnaire has brought out dehnitcly
the fact that the present regulations governing
the medicinal use of alcoholic beverages are not
satisfactory in fact, many physicians declared
them "intolerable." Many who were convinced
that these drugs were not necessary therapeutic-:
lly were emphatic in stating that other phy
sicians who believed them necessary were en-
tied to have their views respected, and were
warranted in efforts to have the drugs made
available without incurring the odium attaching
under the present regulations.
Evidently most physicians are satisfied with
the control of narcotics as regulated under the
Harrison narcotic law, and many expressed a
desire that the control of alcoholic liquors follow
such lines. A decidedly large number of phy
sicians suggest that the government take over the
whisky, including its storage and sale, and sup
ply it in sealed packages say of 8, 16 and o2
ounces for medicinal use only, and at a fixed
price, under regulations similar to those of the
Harrison narcotic law, thus making available to
physicians a drug of dependable quality.
had been worn and the marka of
peraplnitton very visible under the
Wera these two runtomera
I am not saviner how the
department atore aettled these two
runes, as tt was up to me to niako
adJiiKtment.
At one time when I waa aclltnir
draperies I waa reported to the head
of tha house as impertinent because
I refused to show every curtain in
tha atock for tha customer to try
and pick ono out to match noma she
Ah' To lie Yomur Always; "011 Bt "onie wnrcn were purenneen
I tnr ' . (. r. Vn t , , fa Till. o aw T hn,l
M. M. J. writes: "I have swollen
joints in hree of my ".vT.tt? and get ono of her curtains for
fr!J,t.8.tLlT:i,"t .""o80,";.1 m3 "mPle, Was I Impertinent and
"'V'". 7 I.I w " ' ii i wan the customer risht?
tonsiia ana ire n .r oi. ..B..v. . M m1!1 gong. whether
nnvo laucn iiicuitinr. ...ii. n ..i. ,.,,i.i .
h.ln Mu .Inrlfil- ilnpH not Kpfin ' . no, " ' . .
i.ci. ...... gtra lent salarv. la comnuted from a
had it three months,
what to do for this.
poison absorbed In the intestines.
A ... u n Aula afiniA nverrlnA meat.
The putrefaction product It contains r"'"-,
are mado harmless by tha liver. li5J.,'..
Tho Indiana and tho Airlcan
nogroea cat putrid meats and thrive
-on them. You and I would be Kiuea
by them.
The answer: They have llvera spe
cially trained for the purpose.
Buzzard, lion, dogs go them one
better still.
An American Romance
Once upon a time there was a poor boy who
became a lawyer and a politician in a small
town in a middle west state.- As a result he
became connected with the business end of na
tional politics, an assiduous and an able servant
of a great political party.
In the course of events the little lawyer phy
sically, of course from the little town became
postmaster general. For a while he contrived to
live upon his cabinet salary in Washington.
Soon came certain business men with a gunny
sack of gold and with a proposition to pay the
cabinet officer a whacking salary. The publicity
agents said to the public $150,000. At any rate
it was more than the pay of several cabinet of
ficers, or maybe the pay of the whole cabinet.
The little lawyer from the little town put his
hand into the gunny sack of gold and felt it. It
was real gold. He pinched himself. He said to
the business men, after due consideration: My
country majr need me. My country I May she
be always right, but right or wrong, my coun
tryl Nevertheless you get me.
In this true story we have an American ro
mance quite as wonderful as a story from the
"Arabian Nights' Entertainment." It is a
story which will be told again from time to time,
and truly. Yet there are grumblers who say that
a young- man has no chance in America nowa
days. Louisville Courier-Journal.
.uy uuciur uuen iwi nr, -,,
to Know -wnai. l-liures mm. " n.iv.n9 .l.nn,lnl r,A
Tl nau All in I - - n " " w...
i. i. ..ri,..inhoso who make pood stay long in
" " """" line work. This belne tho cane, does
RGrLTi it stand to reason that when a sales
A great many women beyond RO, pernon's salary comes from eales
and some men of past middle life, they will deliberately snub or in-
have this kind of joint enlargement, suit a prospective customer?
principally of the finder joints. It The salespeople aro not in the de
in not serious except that it is a re- partment store from choice. Most
minder of the running of tha sand. of them, aa well as we department
Not much can be dona about it. It managers, are there becausa "we
I a. mild Inflammation ot the bone need the money." and the only way
and joint, due to a very mild, long we can get the money is by doing
continued bacterial absorption, and our work right.
may result from an old pelvic trouble The management of all depart-
or condition ot bowels, gall bladder, ment stores wish to llnow of any
appendix, nose, teeth or tonsils one discourtesy on incivility on the part
that was never considered worth of their employes yet they also wish
While.
Tablespoon Is One-half Ounce.
N. S. J. writes: "1. What does a
physician mean when he says, 'Take
a tablesiioonful of medicine?' That
Is, how large is a tablespoon, tho
correct size?
"2. How many teaspoons equal tho
right size tablespoon?"
REPLY.
1. A tablespoonful is one-half an
ounce.
2. Four.
Change Your Habits.
K. H. M. writes: "I live on top of
a high hill and walk up and down you Ehe doesn't caro for underwear,
the public to exercise at least a rca
sonable amount of tolerance on rush
days and special sales. Salesper
sons are human and as a rule, I be
lieve, they develop a greater control
of their temper and keep their
heads better than almost any other
class of workers, but take it. from
me when you have worked hard all
day, doing your best to sell goods,
been sweet and pleasant all the time
and nt half past five someone steps
up to your counter and lias you
show all the underwear your have
in stock and finally when the bell
rings and your goods are all torn
up and spread over your display
space tne customer caimiy iniornis
two or three times a day. I have
high blood pressure.
"Would I have less trouble from
this complaint if I lived on the level
ground and stopped climbing the
hill, or does hill climbing make no
difference?"
REPLY.
What we speak of as high blood
is due to stiffness of the
blood vessels plus force of the heart
beat.
she will come back tomorrow after
wall paper, you sure feel like sayinu
something.
DEPARTMENT MANAGER.
Liberty Clark Warns Vs.
Osceola Neb., Jan. 25. To tine
Editor of Tho Bee: In issue of a
week past, I noticed a, rhort article
written by some one from this vicin
ity wherein Liberty Clark had cas
ually remarked that the reason of
I should say that when you get to the great losses sustained by people
of ail classes Dy investing in siocks
of Omaha institutions was the lack
Work Shirta Come; Silk Shirts Go.
One of the healthy signs of the times is the
report from manufacturers that there is an in
creasing demand for work shirts. This is sig
nificant in view of the rage for expensive silk
shirts which swept over the country during the
war years. Shoe and Leather Reporter,
the ton of that hill your heart is
beating strong, and your blood pres
sure is at the maximum.
People who live on mountains are
especially liable to die from apo
plexy. I take it this means that the
ordinary pressure, plus a hard, heart
pumping spell, breaks a blood ves
sel. Whether you should live on top
of a hill or not depends upon how
high your pressure is, and how brit
tle your arteries are.
If you have your home up there,
why not change your habits rather
than change your home?
Albumin In Urine.
Mrs. O. O. writes: "Where albu
min is found in the urine is it pos
sible to cure?, The specimen it a
man 36."
REPLY. '
Albumin in the urine is present
in several conditions. Some are very
serious. Some moo.erai.eiy so, auu
some are of little consequence.
Tho Worst Sufferer.
"Dld.vou hear about the awful
trouble that has berailen jurs. lam'
alot?"
"Don't tell me she lias lost ner
vntiw"
"No. her husband has lost nis
hearingi" Boston Transcript.
And No Kiirine.
To a mere motorist Henry Ford's
sreat financial idea looks like a
plan to eauio dollars with demount
able rims. New York Heraia.
IF I HAD MONEY.
'
If I had money.
Not a salary's mm.
Say a quarter of a million
I could llva on my income;
I could loll and laugh and linger,
Read and ramble and relax.
And for exercles could flsure
Out my Income tax.
If 1 had money ' ' . .
Not the dollars that J earn
In my pedagogic hsrnesa
Helpln' little chaps tn learn:
But a great big h.slthy Income
yielding tax to I'ncln Sam,
I could travel, travel, travel.
From this cold spot where I am.
If I had money
I could buy soma old estate.
With' a homey houre upon it
And a. girden wKh a gate:
There with aunshtne saturated,
Steeped In comfort to the core
I might realize tho blessings
That wera mine when I res poor.
BAIOLL, NE TRELB.
ADVERTISEMENT'
Kiddies9 Colds Can
Be Eased Quickly
Dr. King's New Disco very will do
that very thing, easily and quickly.
Uon t say, roor little kiddie, 1 wish
I knew what to do for you!" Khta
the cough first comes, give a little Dr.
King's New Disco-very as directed, and
it will soon e eased.
It's a good family cough and cold
remedy, too. Loosens up the phlegm,
clears up the cough, relieves the con
gestion . No hat mf ul drugs. For fifty
years a standard remedy for colds,
coughs, grippe. At your druggists,
60c. a bottle.
Dr. King's
New Discover
Constipated? Here'sRclief IClcanse
the system, with. Dr. King's Pills,
They prompt free bile flow, stir up
the lazy liver and get at the root of the
trouble. All druggists, 25c.
DPROaAPTJ WON'T GRTPE
r.ffs Pills
or
We Do Repalrin
and Altering
aa well aa cleaning and dyeing.
The Pantorium
Big Chocolate
Coated Doughnut
and a bottla of Ala
mito Milk, one week
only, all for.
S-V'i All
Restaurants
of a", ilny tf aij maipulaur to
lie ilii. i heir Ituamea. Tiia feci la.
I dn I l hvt that lha ina part
of Ihrni aver had any fcuainraa Inter
ma only aa ririHd on paper.
Th fa-l remains that hy Juggled
nillliona ft ri.illaia out of the bard
of an, g i laaai-a and all, or nearly all.
fliuttt-d ia innali. a Una thing for
ir boakted iala Chy (a rfl t tr.
The iyra and lha reuna got a
g.MMlly hare) tf lha loot and aoma
fine i run urea ihat will ever remain
aa a eb-ome addition to your great
city; bur it has hied lha royniry
unmarrifully. and lha Investors gel
ling no liuert-n and In rnoat ca
losing . it a not matter lo ha
mada a Joke uf, aa I not us th
Omaha faopla ara Inclined lo view
lha ttiailvr. No ma i tar how lightly
lhy view Ilia matter, thera ta one
Hung certain, Ihat If lha mlnlnna ft
lha law fall to do th'ir duly In bring
ing Iheea man lo a tealiialluii of
their rraponailiilliy ihat U will fn-
g-nder a 'rating mat win not t
wiped out In lha next 39 years, and
will aureiy act th tHmrah tn any
worthy project In lha future. Juat
word about lha sllcg-totiiuan etocK
vinilnr: tha anrtenia had nothing on
llieni In thvlr raids for awag, only
unlike lha brlgnnd of Old they did
not steal cur wnmn.
LlhKKTV CUAUK.
Sox l' Parents' Problems
Haiv ran a fliilil tha Ik i t. i.
muih ghoul money and what if J)
buy bt tiugM 0 undrtaund, lu,jt,
th tiett riches do not ronut c, ,Uhll
a--' .1 ..... A
I
n .if,
terial poemin? i
ina lids or (in una imc
khould b dealt with bv
j. : j. .1...... ' n .
inv orir o uu inina. ..a if
plot, a r 1 of tools, some d . .
n and crafts anyihmg o Jt'Ioaluit
lure will help. When the ch . -tSpe.
lo have rrcources in nmne
think lot of money.
td Mr.
lirlhiii
re when
warm up
1 he nil
hen Mrs,
tlic d'or.
Prospcrd (or Srttlfin
of Miantung Hoy
Washington, Jan, 26 (I
P.) Projects of sen
the Shantung controversy
Lrigiiirr today rrsuu
(mention ol rrcsidrnt II
In both Jai'atieie inC
quarters were reflected a
cenre that the preside 'To years it
would rctuii 111 in agrren
most troiinirsome 01
quentioni, clearing the w
termination of ill the rc
sues under diocuMion her
ad.
I. Willi ha
luiot lier-j
led by the
Douglas County Auto
5,000 NAMES NOW READY
Official list of the motor vehicle licensei taken out
Douglaa County, 1922.
Full year'i service Include!
- AAA - JR P
over 4,wv names lor jrij
Owncr'i name, address, ttyle and year model 0
t Special lisU t reduced pricei. J j V
TEEHalTOS ADVERTLSOiC CCHMT
OMAHA
r-i '
I.i :
- 1 1 :
i ' i ii. .
Some One Saved the
Money You Borrow
Why Not Save Your Money for
Someone Else to Borrow?
THE CONSERVATIVE SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION is conducted for
the purpose of helping some to lave and
others to acquire homes.
Behind the confidence of the people is
the assured safety which come3 in the
careful management of the Association
by its officers and directors the strong
reserve that has been accumulated and
the protection afforded in its high-class
first mortgages the best possible
security.
Help build a bigger, better Omaha invest your
savings in your own home institution. Keep
your money at work in your own home city.
Participate in our semi-annual dividends by
opening a savings account with us.
9rfe Conservative
Savings & loan association
y eT
PAUL W. KUHNS, Pres.
. A. BAIRD, Vica Pres.
OFFICERS:
J. A. LYONS. Sec.
J H. MeMILLAN, Trtaa.
You Demanded It
Lots of people have been in the market for a piano
for months, but hesitated to buy on account of prices.
To meet the demand for lower piano prices, we have
lumped all manufacturers' discounts and in some
cases have even curtailed our own profit, giving you
the benefit in the form of a permanent reduction in
Guaranteed Piano Prices
Make Peak Price Today's Price
Meson & Hamlin ?1,800.00 Jl.725.00
Kranich & Bach. .. 860.00 ; 675.00
Sohmer & Co...... .... 675.00 SUO.OO
Vose & Sons ....... 650.00 800.00
Bush & LGne.'. ....... . 650.00 465.00
Cable-Nelson 465.00 , 338.00
Kimball 450.00 315.00
Hinze.... 365.00 295.00
Gulbransen 595.00 495.00
Dunbar ...... 265.00
We also have a number of Used Piano on which we
- are willing to take a substantial reduction
to facilitate their moving.
JKliBpe do
The Art and Music Store
1513-15 Douglas Street
T
Omaha-Chicago Limited
Chicago
Lv. Omaha 6:05 p. m. Ar, Chicago StOS a. m.
On this and ail trains of the "t. Paul" road there is a
characteristic "St Paul" atmosphere intangible, but
none the less real, and by everyone appreciated. It is the
atmosphere of cheerful service of interested personal
attention made possible by the fact that the 'St, Paul"
road owns and operates all the equipment of all its trains
and that the attendants are "St Paul" employes -direcdy
responsible to' the railway company.
Chicago
Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway
Rsnrvatianai fares, and full iaonnatiea at
407 South Piteen th St., Phone Douglass 4411
or Union Station
W. B. Bock. General Ateat Pianmir Depajlwat
Omasa
54D-13619
1