Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1922)
I.1" Till r.KK: OMAHA. FRIDAY. MAKCJ1 3. 1022. I I The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNIN'O-IIVEN'INC-SUNDAY THE PIC PUBUSUtNO COMPANY hEUO.N B t'PPIKE. Publl.b.r B, bRtWUt. Cn.ul Mmanf MEMBER OP 1 HE ASSOCIATED PBtSS lapfiiwl fm, ttl Xa tut M t-. M tlumii aiai m w (or iuii.ua f a mo innai M4!U4 II U tl M WkMVIM tnsl'1.4 la l el. H u ik k.l w iwM.etM imk. U rt4i l vwumu at pm .tantl lH4uKi j im iMrn4 TIM Owth. H l a m)Mf at Ik. ietit Rurw. at On' tatiau, u ruiit4 uib 'iit m (imil.ii') auana. Th net circulation of The Omaha B.a for February, 1922 Daily Average . . . 1 .HNi Sunday Average ... 78.325 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY rVHRtwrit. Ciaiwral Ma.f.r I'LMLR 3. FOOD, Clrculaimt Mfi.r Swera Is and aub.crlb.4 briar in ihi 2nd dty ml M.ne, lU. $.. W. II. QUIVEY. Notary Publl BtC TELEPHONES Pflat Br.nrh Fichange. Ak fur lha tWparlRi.nl or 1'cr.on W.nL-H. if Night Calla Af'sr 1 P. M l F,ltnnl D.ptrtm.nt, AT liulio 10'JI nr IOC. OFFICES M.ln Offn-e 17lh anil r'arnam Co. Bluff. 1& Scott (it. South "Id 4a 8. tit Bt N.w York ! Fifth Ava. Ya.hiogton-. 1311 (i (it. Chleago 111 Wrlt BW. Pari., Kranr 420 Rua Bt. Honor ATIanti 1000 The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Paaaenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highway., including the pave ment with a Brick Surface) of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha. 3. A abort, low-rat Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Horn Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government, ' Tragedy of Transportation. Most vitally important of all tiic points brought out in the debate before the Kims fnd Harbors congress on the lakes-to-ocean canal projict is that made by Governor Allen, and which hp denominates "the tragedy of trans portation." lie recited the established facts of production in the great food producing region to be served, ami emphasized the .stupendously important price-controlling factor of distance from market. Only eleven states of t he union eNport food, that is, have a surplus after feeding their own population. Of these the Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska form a compact group, from whose fields and pastures go forth each year three to four billions of dollars worth of food to the world. This is met by the initial handicap to the growers of being produced and marketed on the longest rail-radius in the world. The Nebraska farmer must ship by rail, 1,500 miles to the At lantic or Pacific, and 1,000 miles to the Gulf, to reach tidewater, and sell in competition with 'Argentine farmers, who ship less than 300 miles. A stronger argument for the proposed water way can not be framed. Hydro-electric power nd similar advantages are aside from the main purpose of the proposed ship canal. Its principal business will be to haul from ports as far inland as Diilutli, Milwaukee and Chicago the exportable goods of the most pro lific agricultural region in the world, and its principal service will be to bring the fields of Nebraska 1,000 miles nearer the seaboard.. When this is accomplished, the rail haul, with its corre sponding high rates, will be shortened, and a greater percentage of the selling price on the world market will go to the man who raises the grain or fattens the meat animal. Distance from market is the controlling factor of farm price, and the waterway will lessen the distance to mar ket, just as the good road is doing, by making the market easier to reach. Porto Rico and Uncle Sam. The demand of the Porto Rican commissioner that Governor E. Mont Rcily be investigated may have the effect of determining the status of the island, and also serve to quiet some of Uncle Sam's unruly nephews in that part of the world. The commissioner, as one ground for his com plaint, sets up that Governor Reily referred to the "flag" of Porto Rico as "a dirty rag." This is hardly possible, for Mr. Rcily is an American citizen, loyal to his government, and the flag of Porto Rico is the Stars and Stripes, a fact that some of the islanders seem to have forgotten. When Spain surrendered the island to the United States, the flag was raised as a symbol of pos session, and it has not and probably never will be lowered in token of abandonment. Lately a group of island politicians has set up claims of independence, and pretends to have adopted a flag. These gentlemen are jn danger of running afoul of a government that is usually patient and inclined to leniency with offenders, but which can deal sternly when occasion demands. Porto Ricans have self-government to the extent al loted any state or territory, and that ought to satisfy them. If they want any information as to the chances of secession, they might look up the record of the Confederate States of America. A Correction. A misstatement was made in The Bee with reference to school taxes, due to the use of the wrong figures. The tax for 1917 was $1,220, 608.70; for 1921, $2,62S,132.63, an increase of more than 100 per cent, instead of 63 per cent as stated in The Bee. The other figures in the editorial are correct. Police Situation a Warning. . Much concern is manifested generally over the reduction of police department personnel at the very time when the list of unsolved crimes in Omaha runs larger than for many years. City officials lament the necessity and citizens whose lives and property need protection are aghast. There is reason for concern. Omaha needs more and better police protection rather than less. The shame is that the outcry comes in March when it should come in January, It was in January that the city commission apportioned funds to the various departments. It was then that newspapers and civic organizations sup ported Police Superintendent Dunn in his re quest for adequate sustenance for his department. That was the time for action. But the city com mission did not respond; the public opinion which could have forced response was not aroused. Now the lawyers say that funds can not be transferred, that there is nothing to do but to worry along as best may be, while individual fcitiztnj dig Into their pockets for special pro tection. Il may tt t 4 UH M I'medy h. .iitMtiuii, Lul it i nt too lat? ! I'-V al.raJ to future r-iebtrntt. The police ittiuiioit j warn. ii'.g. Omaha n"d i bak ehraJ, not merely la bring; about lh reduction of (, hi. li U upper, nio.t now in hf riuLlii? ruind, but to nuke wt that pionry i pf nt properly and adequately fr riling a vthifh mut It maintained. Next yrr, for iti.urue, pun I.ioii thuuM b pu le f r an adequate police motorcycle patrol, .WiNon, Glm and Excess Profits, 1 hi? irpubliiau iidmiuUtration repealed the rif prohti 14 and purely fr f4rliau pur. po.ri the drmocratic minority Intra no oppor tunny to ilutKe thti ttm is pn-f v( undue fiie nil.liip on the part of tiic republican with the lare tm.inr.t iuterrt. What U carefully withdrawn from public ight ire the word of President Wilnon' mr.tagc to longtf., JVcem. ber 2, 'H when lie recommended not only con nidcration of the rrpral e.f ihr profit U Ijw, but a reduction in the income ta on Ur&e fortunes. Thrc are hi word: The conureM might well coiuidrr whether the hiKhrr rate of income and pri'tit t4r . can in pe4e time be eifeetivrly productive of revenue, and whether they may iim, on the contrary, be dettrurlive of huinr activity and productive of waste and ini il'icirney. 'I lirte is a point at which in peace time high rates of income and profit, taxes diciirage energy, remove the incentive to new enterprise, en courage extravagant evprn'lii"'' and pro duce industrial M.unation with consequent unemployment and attrtidant evils. In bis annual report, d4td November 20, l')9, Carter GI.iss, thru secretary of the treas ury, now a democratic etitor from Virginia, goes President Wilson one briter by s.ijing that the excess profits taxes were no gool even as a war expedient. We shall quote from liis report: The treasury's objections to the rxcess profits tax even as a war expedient (in contra distinction to a war prolits tax) have been re peatedly voiced before the commttees in cnu gress. Still more objectionable is the opera tion of the excess protits tax in peace time. It encourages wasteful expenditures, puts a premium on overcapitalization and a penalty on brains, energy and enterprise, discourages new ventures, and confirms old ventures in their monopolies. In many instances it acts as a consumption tax, is added to the cost of production upon which profits are figured in determining prices, and has been, and will be, so long as it is maintained upon the statute books, a material factor in the increased cost of living. The record of the past rises up to mock the hollow pretenses of the democratic politicians. They are dealing today in half truths and de pending on illusion for their effects. President Wilson and his secretary of the treasury united in urging upon congress what has been done now under President Harding. If there is any comfort for opponents of the present national administration in this, they are welcome. Banks and Blue Sky. Nebraskans who were inveigled into the reckless purchase of blue sky stocks sometimes accuse leading citizens 'of their communities of having aided bogus investment salesmen. In stances are occasional in which country bankers are blamed for not using the information ob tainable through financial channels to block the defrauding of their neighbors. There are spots in Nebraska where scarcely a cent was fleeced from investors. Wherever this condition is found, most of the credit be longs to the local bankers, who used publicity to warn the people against the promoters who drove up to the farm gates in their big cars. One of these districts which kept their sanity in the1 mad days of speculation was around Geneva. Another was at Stuart, in the hay belt. The Citizens' bank of Stuart used full-page ad vertisements in the local papers to denounce the blue sky mania and to warn the public. This idea of righting illegitimate business with printers' ink was pushed by John M. Flannigan, then president of the Nebraska State Bankers' association. Many a man now owes his sav ings to the fact that the Flannigan bank at Stuart punctured the stock bubbles. From this experience Mr. Flannigan, now executive secretary of the War Finance corpor ation for Nebraska, has sent out letters to the country bankers urging them to advertise in their local newspapers. He sees the stabilizing value of the banker putting himself before the public as a reliable business adviser, offering broader service than the mere routine transactions. No one can afford to look the other way while his neighbor is being plundered for fake stocks. His loss is the community's; and if he is unable to pay his local debts, that may pre vent his creditors from meeeting their obliga tions to the one who looked on in scorn at the start. More advertising by the country banks will give a great opportunity and a sure method of heading off blue sky promotion before it starts again. Ship Subsidy Plans What Ntbra.U Editor Say tl President Harding' Propo4l Our Navy at Rest. If the secretary of navy is correct in his statements,' and the house committee on ap propriations, continues to hold its grip on the purse string the world will be edified by a mo tionless navy from now until the end of June. As the country is at peace with all the world, perhaps the condition of the naval coal bunkers and fuel oil tanks is not an unmixed calamity. Four months of a respite should not be the cause of serious deterioration in the discipline of our sea dogs; in fact, the time might be to great profit employed in teaching them shore routine as well as ship drill. Greater than this, it will accustom the American people to the thought of being without a navy; not completely, of course, for the ships are there, ready for emergency, but quietly swinging at moorings, and so exem plifying a world without cause for battle at sea. Six million dollars will buy considerable fuel, for it will provide $1,500,000 a month from now until the end of the fiscal year, and may admit of all the running around that the exigencies of the service will call for. The Bee is not in favor of scrapping the navy, but we can not escape the thought that six million dollars saved on the coal pile is of just as much worth to the cause of economy as a similar sum saved any where else. It is 400 miles to the irrigated country of western Nebraska, but for all that, Omaha's busi ness will be benefited by the bill postponing payment of water charges that has been pushed through the house by Representative Kinkaid. These irrigation rates have been a heavy burden on the farmers, and this temporary relicfywhich will enable them to get on their feet again ought not to be held up in the senate. A Boston doctor says the Irish fight because of buttermilk, What about potheen? Scoti.blufT N. tieorge Crime.lt j iirj ir 'ie n,i..!9 wrl l.i undiri,iii,f wliv h hipping imbMry .h..ul. ie !ie recipinn , ,fU f hoi, rmi 1I14 g.nrri'iurnt. 't lie reej the (.inner appears iime muI iind tie., rung; of greater attention iiom toiiijre. au the pn,idnir Beatrice Exprroi, llaik I'eikin. Supplemented ,v M,t (u.i.. protutue lanti, pre.id-iit IlardmuV pint lor encouraging tie iiiihIum marine ; romphiii tn ruup.'.o, ib vel.ip ,mn icii hiul iiidii.tnr and re.t.ire Anuriiau flipping lo po.itiott &i uorld leader.liip. With completion cl the St. f-aunwe waterw.iv project, the ngri cultural iitiddh; ft will lure directly in the benefit i iiicli a program, Kearney Hub. M, A, itnmii American luvc been t:te ort eurinie of an Ainriicin merchant marine. Prci dent llaidiiig n.e the pre.nt danger and of. ler, a bau for salvation of our mean shipping. The i.iue is not sertional, but national, and is neither poh'tiol nor partisan, Harding' plan I adaptable. Grand Inland Independent. A, I. Hue. hler I'roiu the ieiint i.f m tional eionoiuin, Prccideut Harding' idan pro vide for one of our gre.ite.t nerds. I rom the viewpoint of polemic, it is somewhat delayed, but if promptly executed by his nartv in con. gre.s it will mt-.t completely and liappilv fulfill party promises. Once operative, il will r.0011 af ford an outstanding example of constructive st.nem.inj.litp. Nebraska City Press. , il. Sweet lanner of the middle west should rcalie by this time that opposition to a merchant marine is bound to react against their hot interest. The agricultural bloc should lend its support to President Harding' proposal to revive America's merchant mat inc. Broken Bow Chieftain. I '. K. Pun ell President Harding's plan for encouraging America's merchant marine is a feasible one to devolop and expand Amirica's commerce. America hadly needs a transoceanic ranging system of its own and should utilize ships built during the war. With proper safe guards the president's plan could be made a wonderful stimulus to American shipping and would have direct bearing on the marketing of our surplus products. How to Keep Well Br pa. w, a, f vans Qu.tiwa. (H.rMi klM, Iimi a4 p'via l gi..a., u. M!t4 1 Hi. tt.a. br r-ar. at lb Dm, nil b ..4 m.bIIv ublatl proper Iiwiuimii, t.i a nwraii lae' a.bpe la aw. Im4. pr. t . will t mak Uiaai a aiM.rib. far larfituluat a 1 . A44i(i. 1.111 in tar lb Dm. Cirr:(hl; t.3 'Futile to Try Ag'alT Zf&t Am' Columbus Telegram. Fgar Howard President Harding's t'pon congress for a ship subsidy is an attempt to tax the American people benefit of the shipping trust. A ship will mean prosperity for the shipping the expense of the masses and without turn. The ship subsidy is a British mental game, and that game should played by the American government.,' demand unhappy for the su! dy triis. at any re-govern-not be Osceola Democrat. E. A. Walrath Nearly unanimous opposition her to ship subsidy. Nebraska congressmen and senators in past have been compelled ultimately to oppose, willingly or unwillingly, all form of government subsidies. Bonus for the soldiers should precede subsidy. Conference Critics Confounded The Washington conference has achieved in this direction results which have electrified the world and given new heart to those who hon estly hope for peace. It has disappointed the jingoes and those who have insisted that no hope for international amity exists outside the Wil son League of Nations and who have been con sequently ready to belittle and decry every action of the Washington conference. A great deal of this criticism may be ex pected as the results of the conference are summed up. The great American public will not be impressed by them, but will prefer to form its judgments on the clear fads of reduced naval armament, agreements for peace instead of armed alliances, elimination of causes of friction in the Pacific and the Orient; definite and practical steps toward the restoration of China, and the outlawing of poison gas and submarine com merce destroyers. These are the results which stand out and no amount of criticism regarding such details as the scrapping of one warship in stead of another will weigh very heavily against them. Milwaukee Sentinel. McAdoo's Record The efforts of William Gibbs McAdoo to whitewash the government administration of the railroads during the war period were interesting but unconvincing, interesting because they were so contrary to what every one unprejudiced realized as to results, and unconvincing because facts are stubborn things. The proof of the pud ding is in the eating: the public and the railroad companies ate and it didn't taste good. Of course no one who does any thinking or who has any knowledge of the facts accepts Mc Adoo's statements as being anything more than a very transparent coat of whitewash for the government's mishandling of the transportation system of the country, a mishandling brought about not only by lack of familiarity with the subject, but because of the impossibility of get ting through with the job without playing politics along the lines of the Adamson act, which was the beginning of the great troubles of the rail roads in the last several years. The public learned to its sorrow that Mr McAdoo's promises in regard to railroad man agement sadly failed, and as the Manufacturers Record said when he resigned he got out just in time to unload' upon others a broken down rail road system for the whole country. Manufac turers Record. A Real Achievment The great accomplishment of the arms con ference is the agreement of the five sea powers upon the limitation of naval strength. This is something definite and certain, a recognition of the interests of the common people, a brake upon mad armament competition, a step toward the goal of world peace still shining in the far dis tance. Voluntarily to destroy even a few battle ships, voluntarily to agree to build no more even for a short time it is a great triumph for com mon sense and high ideals and may well lead to greater things. It may be said in a broad way that little has been accomplished toward the per manent settlement of the far east questions. And so the cynics say that the conference has accomplished nothing of real importance, Japan being the potential Prussia of the future. But, despite the cynics, the pledge to destroy engines of war and not to build more for a stated time is in itself a great achievement, an accomplish ment to hearten the taxpayers of all lands and give hope to those who or whose children must bear the cruel brunt of war if war comes again. Ohio State Journal. Great National Evils. It is a tossup whether the country has more to dread from congressional extravagance or the average congressman's weird and fantastic no tions of economy. Chicago News. Evolution of Phraseology. The nations are making sure progress. What used to be called rattling the saber is now called a gesture of protest, Boston Herald. NOW THE TKOUBLK BEGINS. The inollvi ti.lUI ,1uh tutu ,,f inutile tMMiin Mar. tl I an l May lav, 'liiere will uliml.y iav in Min n lii frt will Maud In im lting aimw Ulitll iliry urv ' ol'l lllt'l l el, Thrr will ia rainy il.it Willi tli aaniri end OulU iwiml 11m . wild (Hi meaniin:l. Thero will ba hot ie,room niivI wniied tirttwren evurmon mio aero 011 1 of lor. Tln-re Hill be lint tlaya with lot of went und mi l ihii with loin of mom. Ite.h. in fuM, 3n lulioiits tuny hi liliiii ie 'lirit:l lielU'iH'il guoNn fli i.ii und twenty ri'liumioii. And all the wlill lieliind ewry lnii.ll, lurk the f rum of eurxn, rom moii coiiirJ, iiiilio iiuM, liroiu liitin, piKMtmoniH mid iiuiriy. Thn follow V1I10 Iiiih riluruteil lik viiNHMiotur iipp.uliiH lay wli.'it la known u Ihe llHI'iti'lttlltf proiei-d an oiitd"if unlvrraity, a ilosre from which la worth liuvliig will .iis ttllotlk'll these l-xpirlenren without rlls.-iuiifoi t and with imt Iim,- ma- Ul'it. Mut the poor mollyi-uihlle In worxo off than mi lllltciutn man at 11 Hn luut tlcbate on llmiiir'i. "iiiljanev." Kor live year or mora lil'iuoiory worker havn lu-en provnur Hint w lii-ii ynu ( hill tin; skin you dull the liiK'tmil orusiiH an well. Mui'lxiPil und Taylor apply boat of degrees above, blooil li.-n t to lli skill ( the Ililiih. ami. almost nt nnro. thn t'uiiperalur" of the iuiih-eli-a matby Jump up. They i.ika off tho heat unl apply an 1 luiir and rtiiwii, nwnv below nortiiiil, kocm tho tiinperfilure. They claim tli.it liiuit or cold, lo ciilly applied, nfferla. tho tf lllpi'luture of I Insula aonir ilistHiii'O awuy. And now they carry tho dmon striiiou h stf'p further. liy upplyim; hoi or cold .. rally, tlo-y run rulsso or lower the tunpT atura of the kidney. Th effert nin h application hax on thn ti'mper.ituro of th liver I pull more evident. And, tlniilly, tins bruin Ix more af frctod than Is either of tho other omans. No fallow Is so thlrk sloilled but. that his, brain tan be heated or chilled. A St. IoiiIh croup of ardent tain proved that chilling tins surface low ered tho temperatnro of thn inside of thn nose und throat and upper bronchial tubes. )t course, with diathermy the wholo body, na well an a local nra, can bo treated Internally but some body says "that's different." Maybe it la. but every few years somebody discover Hint something Rets through the skin which a few years before was thought to stop at the surface. I !ut this is laboratory stuff! i!ivo us something practical! This laboratory stuff is practical. Here's what it means. In the winter-spring season, keep your foot, very dry and warm and avoid being ehiiled if you would escape coryza, bronchitis and pneumonia, unless you are hardened. How to Stop Nosebleed. G. W. J. writes: "I am a man 19 years old and about six feet two inches tall. I have been troubled with nose hemorrhages for quite a while. I have tried several reme dies, but with no advantage. Can you suggest something for me to use to stop it?" KKT'LY. To stop nosebleed compress the nostrils with the thumb and index finger. Bend the bead forward long enouph for the nasal passages to fill with blood and for the blood to clot firmly. If the tendency persists and ap pears dangerous have a physician find and cauterize the- bleeding point. Nose hemorrhages occur with great frequency in young people. Inn Ihe flilUtl'lvhia) I dr. In re. iiifii nni ! no-lit and rUIng wi.imi una tuition 1 w.11. liioar In e. oii nf thm .i!.iiiw i.n. I j iiindteed aeiialolial KloUP of ' ilTeeolti'lUble" ti.iint 1 l,e 1 ..nf.-if in treat ra. Ala we to go ihiiMish lha aania emhit, tiin-, imlv rearrvauon move and loiinier-mote 1H.1t i.,r and exaa. pel itd thia country during Ihe league etruNal'V Are, I'ivuiii lal ininUa and men Willi narrow soul, to 1 lop and w hu ll" und h.ii W away at th treaties j until lin y are tin pmre than it use. tea rnniuMit or what nicy were intended to be and end bv nullify. luir i hem wholly (r in part? The opening move In uih a rumps Inn ban- been in. ol. There ara other lo mine. Mad lliem down with reserva tions', aluk the treaties under a bur den of diiiowalii and iiotuouniiil. no nis. Iti-ilsiniM und evil.ms' That aeoiim to be Hie plan of campaign, Prowl ami ser. It (or anme poaaible nh.i1,' of inclining- that may be tor tured MUd (wisted lnli the filuiv shadow nf a menace! In place of Koiid fulfil MUd lonftdiMiee In the meanliiii of plain words, substitute bad tnlili and suspicion ni' I"1'" foPKeiy! The senate U concerned grenily about Its preroyaiisee and conatltu II01111I tiithi mid privilege. Tin country ts not unconcerned about them, but tl la I'onci'tneil far nmre with writing mid approving the world's own great hnrter ngAlnat wars, The Micna Chart of peace thstf la bound up in the seven treaties that were laid before the HcriiiiA in ett f.iv more tnioortanco 10 those who pay in thn blood and gold' thai Is the price of war than thev are In the rlclda and power of i ll her president or senate. There is too much eizo In thn cos 1110a of the embittered "Irreconcil able." He Is takliiir himself too seriously. The best tliiui; for blm to do Is to listen to the people who n.ade him and are staiidiui: baek of him. wall-bins', resentful and assay ing the stubbornness, pride of opin ion und pure "cusscdness" of the obstruct Ionian. Tho American senate took the treaty of Versailles and the league ci. tenant, pulled them apart, hacked nt them, dismembered them and threw theni away. The next greHt international movement to end war nnd insure peace was the Washing ton conference. The agreements: made there, put tn thn form of treat ies. 11 ro now in the senate, the sus picious, peering, captious senate. While pondering over Just where tin y shall begin ripping and dissect ing" and rejecting, the "Irreconell nbles" will do well to call to mind these words of the president when he submitted the treaties: Your government encouraged and has signed the eompacts which it had much lo do lu fashioning. If to these ad vanced expressions of the eon science of the leading powera. if to these concords t- guard against conflict and lift 1'ie bur dens of armament, if to all these the senate will not advise and consent, then it will bo futile to try again. "it will be futile to try again." So it will. It might have been added that it will be futile to ask other na tions "to try again" with us. Men cannot deal with men who do not know their own minds, who evatle and slln out of solemn contracts. Nations cannot afford to waste time and stultify themselves by dealing with a petulant power that Is at the mercy of its seir-seekers ana inai contents. They do not slgnfy any diseased con dition, as a rule. Do You Walk Straight? E. C. S. writes: "1. Will you kind ly advise me whether eating fruits, dates, tigs and bran biscuits is harmful to one's health if eaten be tween meals? "2. Is there any method of mak ing one grow taller, as I am under sized?" T.El'LY. 1. These are excellent health giving foods. However, it is not a good idea to keep tho stomach work ing all the time. It is contraa-y to the rules of the union. 2. No. Delicious minty flavor ... full of zestful relish . always fresh and good and tasty. YouVe guessed it already Yucatan! "No fancy wrapper Just good gum ADAM S iMgcISfiSIfll Chewing Gum Americas Chida Co. Ouch 1 In Animal-, and Humana. Omaha, I 'en. T Hn i;jiur nf Tha Ilea; Th J k lamdon club lof Uoatoiil uigea 11 a to wall, tint of llieatei when anun.il uyta cr pi ', tuie of aui h are show 11 on th" m or i iet n, Hu' li a niovement la d.riouiate cruelly to enimnl. lu ha aura, will b-ad In a nobler out. look upon life, i hank- a bnadrr Philosophy I'.i 1 oiiiiii eiibabiriif.i. our cotiaclciiilotiaiiea expand and I1.1t niily doe ui.iai',on ol ci..-.l. caste, 1 olor and m lun !, but we lllsctni p lii( lutlMlllll II II" Wit lib..) show roiialdi-iaiion and mercy iimo all creation, ev.n lu ihe btuus. dn we bm-ne oursehn. ,h,,,ui,, edu cation mean Justice for all' nnd it ought o be a task of mint lit protect Ihe tlwellera nf the field ru fftrcl. sa well as our ibuncsii.' auiinals, To IK cnllpill litis w e have In upinnl lha eont let ion frciiuciitty cm-ouii. tired among sportsmen, int In hii o II011 people interested in tin. 1 attic or fur business, etc, lhal we are JuatlUed when ies-oni; 'pist-' nr catching f ur-beiirer, to employ any nieaiia or Instruminia, boweter bar bnroiiM Isu-li. for example, as tin nnnkiliing steel icai 1, because cer tain cruel trait In the victims of our pursuit warrant our Indicting "pun ishment." All life biln "an adln-iliieiit nf Inlet mil to external con, III Ions," thn blood thirst of carnivoia was prob ably developed when a'-m-clly of food proved disastrous lo all nf their kind but the most elllclent hunt ers, Their ferocity la only ti.ilunil. ' To Ihe killing In-llint In some classi-N of the brute domain we prob nbly owe our very existence, and we do not, for example, condemn the voracity of ceit.iiu iitiltiiitli-nl or Insect-e.iting birds or bais, who re- ipectlvely reduce In number dsir tlve germs nnd Insects, thus noting na balancing forces lu nature. To punish animals for being lacking lu human qualities or moral responsi bility la unrensonnlilo and below man's dignity. II. MF.t.U 3S20 Fnrnaiii. IVoV-Cmitf Store When Moving Time Comes phone for that Metropolitan Van ami toi.it l , 'H e men rmphiyed are experienced, tateful and will move yog ritlit. !' letter '.! far clniipcr 10 bate ti e M. V. & S. I n. finite )i, Howen't Furniture Krpair Department is in cbar-e if ni efficient foreman, mid hut in? geveral eapabl" mecSanns workinp under hi persiipjil guprrvi. lop, will t-'pair your furnl. tun- nnl biake it like new a 'in. Our ihun'e are iiumf 1 . mtr work the best, ami, if you'll phone, ttr mil, pet the piece nnd drliier tlnm to you in tin- b a t possible time, Il pay lo read Rowen' Small AJ Howard St., bet. 15th and 16lb ft- The Soil Doean't Show on Dark Garment. THE PANTORIUM us Mpollo Reproducing PIANO To give local music loers the opportunity of hearing a fair test of the faithful reproducing quali ties of the Apollo we are bringing to Omaha MADAME STURKOW - RYDER Famous Composer-Pianist Madame Sturkow-Ryder will be at the Rialto Theater all next week, during the showing of "Just Around the Corner," giving at each afternoon and evening show a few numbers of her own and then reproducing them on the Apollo. You are urged to hear this splendid artiste. Beethoven's Genius What would the fjti sicid world JJ.e tn koow thar'nVa.tfr'. own i.urpretatioii of h . 8 immortal sonata; Today, the worVa of compoi.r. f welt as the inter- , 'relation of the .-lassies by livinsf masters, are pre served to ponterilr tlirnugh th Apollo Keproducing Pisno. The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Street COUPON FREE Offer Purchase one package of Britt's Powdered Ammonia and receive one Free. Name Address aTKJLaSn IJIII ' - m afl rSi rj 1 ON SALE ONLY AT J. G. McCRORY CO. 5c and 10c Store 214-16 So. 16th St. The Men Behind This Company Have bfoad bu.inei. experience. Have found financial judgment. Have intimate investment knowledge. Are experienced in handling trust eitate.. Will jealously safeguard your interests, when you make this company your executor or trustee. mana I rust Company Omaha national Bank Building MB OMAHA. NEBRASKA 4 A 1 T - WA T