Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1922)
r T 1 THE TEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. APRIL 4. 1022. 1 TheiOmawaBee JIOIiXLSG-EVtNING-SUXDAY. f HI ICR rl-'aUatllNQ COMPAQ If ftnutoN . irwaa, riua MKMBBR or THE AUOCIATIO fHUS vu PM a Mu M Ba I . M ' u tf aai.iu w Ika Mt (- wl-w til IM wtl lm Mt'aM fik t maiHmi f TW taiM tam N( f lk al Ciw lua ik rui4 UMU a imUi 4n The Ml firUii l Tk Omki In r J-ekreary, 1923 Daily Am 7130(l Sunday Average ..78325 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY . aatWKR. Garl M'lr ILMlft S. ROOD, CirtUt Muur r I ml 4 suttee) ! lait 14 4f ( Mutt, IIU (SmI) W. K. QUIVCr, NUff Puklto arc itxtPHONU Pni liurt Kutuat. fr k .. , ltrtaiil r !'rui Wanted. Kef Allaaue Nfht (H f.r It r. M.t rdilorlal J 000 Heparin.!. ATtanif 111 r ItU. orricu trlaia Offl' Hta an fufm Cm. Bluff It Ikoll lit. South M 4t I. !ll St. Htm York : fifth A. Wi.almtoa tilt 0. St. ChtMfo ! Bldf. rrlf. frint 4J "u Ft. Hwr At llie Genoa Conference. 'Hie request of Lloyd George for a vote of toniidcuct in the government' program for the irnoa conference amounts (imply to liking the JIoue of Common j to decide bectween the ( rentier and the opposition. It it icarccly prob- hle tint the agenda for the assembly could be changed at this time, and it is even lej likely that Great Britain would withdraw now. A'iiith and hit associate! have raised the point as to revision of the treaties that followed the war. This is not included in the agenda retting on the resolution adopted at Cannes, when the conference was agreed to in January. Nor. as Lloyd George reminded his hearers, does the Treaty of Versailles, of Sevres, or any of the others, have to do with the question of repara tions. Keparation is necessary, for there is some thing to repair, and this came before the treaties. In the resolution adopted at Cannes, inserted for the especial guidance of Germany and Rus sia, is this paragraph: (5) This feeling of security can not be re-established unless nations or their governments desiring to obtain foreign credits freely engage: (a) . To recognize all public debts and obliga tions which have been contracted, or will be , contracted or guaranteed by states, municipali ties, or other public organizations, and to recognize also obligation to restore, or, in case of default, to indemnify all foreign interests for lost, or damage which has been caused by the confiscation or sequestration of property; (b) to establish legal and juristic punishment and insure the impartial execution of all com mercial or other contracts. Germany and Russia accept these conditions, y implication, at least, for they are sending dele gations to Genoa. The Russians, headed by Geort Chitcherin, are now in Berlin, consulting with the Germans as to what course they will follow at Genoa. The party is to be exclusively an European affair, to deal with problems that af fect Europe directly and the rest of the world ;ndirecrly. England must have part in the p Vee Jtintr: The revision of the treaties is not rritaj, while the matter of reparations is, because 'the Utter include responsibility for public debts incurred prior to and during the war. Repudia tion of these is dpenly advocated, and it is to meet that sentiment that France has made the paragraph quoted a condition precedent, to which England has given support and other nations assent. - ' , ' : ' ferhaps revision of the treaties may follow, bur.for the moment it is imperative that some thing definite be done to so stabilize conditions that the world may be relieved from the menace of bankrupt Europe. This will be achieved when the. nations face facts, agree as to what is neces sary, and then set about to put their agreements ' into effect. - Famine's Deadful Toll. The report from Odessa, telling of the burial bf victims of hunger and disease, gives a faint notion of. what has been going on in Russia for many months. Words can give no adequate no tion of the horrors that have afflicted what is one of the, most fertile regions of all the woc"d, all because of man's incapability. An experiment that was entered upon with high hopes by its. promoters, has proved disastrous. Its end was foreseen, but wilfully wrongheaded leaders per sisted to the ruin of their country and its people. .' Marxism never had a fairer test, certainly never can hope for a broader field on which to experimentnor could it more completely reach its logical destination. " Chaosj political and eco nomic:, has overwhelmed Russia, definitely prov ing that' the theories of government on which Ltnine and Trotzky proceeded are inherently wrong. One of their complaints against the "so-called rule of capitalism was the toll taken by war; Russia's losses in the great war were heavy, a great proportion of them Inexcusable, but the millions who died in battle are insignificant com pared to the millions who" have starved and are starving to death; the other millions who have succumbed to preventable disease, and the un counted victims of mob wrath and authoritative brutality, all sacrificed to a hideous doctrine that asks for support because it promises human .brotherhood. - No greater travesty could be imagined than the pretense at happiness set up under' com munism in Russia, Odessa's record is but an ex ample of the fate that has engulfed Russia. Its suffering people will win back in time to order and comfort, but the record of 1921 must remain forever, one of the blackest spots in all human ity's long record. Change Route, Not Charter. Saturday's informal conference between north side residents and city commissioners forecasts an understanding, it is to be hoped, whereby the Sherman avenue street railway line can be shifted from Seventeenth street to Sherman avenue, north cf Cuming street, without in any way im pairing the franchise rights of either the city or the street railway company, t Th company disclaims any desire to trap the city into an unintentional forfeiture of rights it may hold in .the forthcoming dispute over the length of the franchise. The city's corporation counsel has advised that tacit permission for the laying of tracks on Sherman avenue will not work any such forfeiture, under recent federal supreme, court decisions, In this he is in accord Ml lh roa tka by the cowjuny. With that is a nailing aiungfiRent !iouM tf po.titi!, Tht (hsuge In tlil toutt khould be made, fur ih benefit el both feminity and city, without in uy way changing ht fruiliie sU'ui qua, Meat for the World'i Tablei. On h people are more or lr. familiar itf the fn (hit (hi i grri ni-t poking tenter; ihst from Xrbroka'i field, aud pasture tome ii any thousands of cattle, twine ml sheep, l pats through the bbtoiis mid be tunmted into wholesome, dainty food. The chop, the urA, the rot, the siew, s! the mulnuriou dulin that are toed on meat have their origin here. Yet few people realize wlut a niagnitaeut induttry meat packing iat come to be that i, magnificent In in proportions, for it 1 essentially unlovely in its vinMe apect. The Department of Agriculture reports total claiib'htering under federal inspection in the Toiled States for the month of S69.I5J cattle. calve, 775,841 klieep and J.479.9U7 swine. Omaha's share of thii was 54,78 cattle. J.R.'S talvri. 114.:.!') sheep and ISJ.ftOI si.ie. 1 or the eight months ending with February the slaughtering was: Cattle, 5,18119: calves, 2J77,:J4; sheep, fl.40l.K97; swine, i5,.w.7V4. lliee impressive figures a I ford some idea of the magnitude of the meat in duMry. Forty million head of meat animals means quite a flock, herd or drove, as they may be clas.ified under our peculiar language. That the source is not being exhausted may be sensed from the fact that for the week ending March 17, last, "feeders" were sent from the principal markets as follows: Cattle, 53.OJ; hogs. 14,376; sheep, 15,807. Feeders in Iowa and Nebraska, took the greater number of cattle, I4.4J8 going to Iowa and 11,497 to Nebraska feed lots. If the world goes hungry, it will not be for want of at tcniion from the men who provide its ftrh meats You Can't Scare 'Em. A Columbia professor of optometry, who i supposed to know something about the eye and its uses, warns women that if they smoke they do so at the risk of injuring their faculty of sight He says the delicately adjusted organism of woman will not sustain the effect of so powerful narcotic as tobacco. Undoubtedly he means well, and it is only fair to him to admit that he sincerely believes what he says. When lie leaves his class room, however, and goes out into New York, he will find women smoking, just the same Some of these, maybe, have little use for their eyes, having seen everything, but the majority are of the class who are willing to take a chance. It is this unfortunate propensity of the human intellect that has perpetuated a number of things that are not good for the tace. Blessings have come because of it, too; for it was the first man to eat an oyster that introduced that succulent bit of food to his fellows; somebody had to be the first to eat a potato, and somebody preceded all others in smoking tobacco. Doctors have made something of a war on oysters, have recom mended that potatoes be indulged in sparingly, and otherwise have sought to limit the use of one or another articles or substances, customs and manners, and a perverse world goes blindly forward, doing things it ought not to do and having undone the things it ought to do. . If man were susceptible of being frightened into good behavior, his regeneration would have been com plete long ago. A Children's Theater A Actors Rather Than Audit net May the Youngster! Get ti e Mtsute. Life of a "Hunted Beast." "Wandering like a hunted beast over the face of the earth" is the fate which Dr. Max Cohen, "master anarchist," sought to avoid by giving himself up and winning a parole by public re nunciation of his anarchistic beliefs.' That has been his experience, he declared, and he is tired of it. He wants a chance to go home, to his wife and children in Brooklyn, there to live in peace and quiet. Dr. Cohen may realize by now that the fate which society prescribed for him because of his attacks upon its organization is the very fate which would fall to everyone if he had had his way in substituting anarchy for government. Anarchy is not socialism. Anarchy- is no gov ernment at all. If we lived in a state of anarchy there would be no restraint whatever upon human passions.. If one man coveted another's wife, his goods, his money, there would be no obstacle to prevent his seizure of them save the brute strength or the ingenuity of the possessor. Every man's daily life would be that of a "hunted beast.'.' . . ' v Government may be good or it may be poor, but the argument for no government at all is folly. Every time a democrat is removed from office nd a republican installed, it becomes a "return to the vicious spoils system." Have we so soon forgotten when Mr. Bryan was looking for "places for deserving democrats?" (From the Nt w York Times.) Il urging children'! theater Mr. K. H. Sdlhrrn tut Uttered I thought that has long brrn dear la nuny hopeful bearuome of which ri"rirucf hi nude l hopeful. Ytr tn the inot attractive plans have Ueii urged noon no. nHe ptruiu real pU, drn tu ile by an art lnirti and "re mliicd" in allurintf color by an attune jfuM, i litre was never a gvrr mid lot mm or a more iaxinatiiiff staitr. l over an utrcn fiojil were bright wnli lum (or candy, toy and juvenile frock., lut hard brut tuuld iHi.iWy Hunk ol lailuir.' Cut wlitn vie rsneri iitrnt ha been tikd-. ii wa on the roui ui the my lliraifr in which Mr. Stthrrn is now play H'K. and under the nio.t fator-Me auiire th result ha always been, as the French so tenderly pui it, a ueve with no tomorrow. It U a cuikju phenomenon, the child. Lveu more ieciie!y tiun the modern woman, it in ii in! it it not what it rem . the wttrh: but only a human heme, tauclit oil if. tiurd will level in a fairy pUv. K4u wnh vtiildi drror ami bubble with miautiic lov. Hut tome tlung in the proud spirit denies it. A children i theater I as impo.vihle a the other project dea to tho dreamer, a theater manaeed by women fnr women. Neither parent nor teacher favor evening entertainment away from home except in the iMirt and crowded nolid-tv. Nor are mati tier more favored, except on Friday and Stur days. More than that, the period of childhood is umaringiy brief, v that a theater would be for ever loing it clientele and thus be forever under the painful iirceuy of creating a new one. l he story is told by tlir fate of children' iuagaiiie. Where are the Golden Days that once delighted the youth of Hie laud with serial of adventure by Frank R. Stockton? Harper's Young 1'eoplc changed it name in deference to tin very prejudice of children against being treated a children, yet Harpers Round fable is no more. A far more hopeful approach i through the theater mat appeal to the child imt as an audience but a actor the theater of the drama tic club. In early life the histrionic imagination i wondrrluliy strong, l-.ilucator have seen great poibilitic in this sort of children's play, The voice is cultivated, and pure Enslish speech, The imagination is lifted upon words and deeds of beauty to a comprehension of honor and loy ally, heroism and sacrifice. In our public schools Die acting ol plays is the most potent of all pos sihle agents in Americanization. Before the war there wa an Educational Dramatic league privately financed and managed, which supplied local dramatic clubs with acting text, proles sioual stage managers and producers. Sanguine spirits even dreamed of a permanently endowed theater in which the actors would be children The more wisely skeptical knew that in such a theater the audience would be largely limited to rtval artists and their even more Jealous Barents, The war put an end to the Educational Dramatic league; but the idea it stood for is reat and ive on. The deeper need is for a theater in which the whole human race is young. That is no dream of Ponce dc Leon, but a near possibility. There arc not only Olympian bards, but dramatists also. who always tind us young and always keep us so. Air. bothcrn says of the J.000 poor children wno laiciy saw ii is "iianiict mat they sat en thralled in the spell of "a play rated as obscure by many who call themselves grown up" many, that is. who read the play without seeing it. In the same theater a few years ago Shakespeare s Tem pest" had 35 performances, being witnessed with delight by over 45,000 people, most of them children who paid the then "moving picture prices" of from 10 cents to half a dollar. Neither Urownmgr with his "Caliban Unon Sctcbos" nor Renan with his philosophical drama of Caliban end Ariel came half as near as these children to the true heart of Shakespeare or, for that mat ter, half as hear as the grown-ups who renewed their youth. ' The Ruined Ocean The senate is now held down to the prosaic- business of discussing tariff under a rule that re quires speeches to be germane to the subject. Talk about hard luck! Governor Len Small demands that women be permitted on the jury by which he is to be tried. This raises a question is to what he considers his peers. ' Sounds like old times to hear paving material men disputing as" to which will get the job. Maybe the public will get some concessions yet. Fancy the chagrin of those enterprising New Yorkers, who held up" a train and found it ldadci! with sugar instead of silk! Why should a girl in high school need to paint her lips? If she is normal, nature will make them red enough.- Jury bribing is not a lost art, by any means, but some modern .work appears to be coarse. April showers are not very enthusiastic as yet, but the month is still young. - The Irish stew is boiling over. Time was when the tired business man wel comed an ocean voyage as a rest It was, in a sense, a holiday, far from all possible interrup tion by partners or associates, and free from the iansliner calls of the telephone and the constant demands of a thousand visitors. Released from the tyrant Time, he could breakfast or lunch at will, without ever looking at his watch except to set it each noon as the ship s chronometer was changed. He left, sometimes reluctantly it is true, tne renorts of the market behind him, and until the noveltv betran to oall on the third or fourth day out he welcomed the new freedom with an. in ward thankfulness for the peace and quiet that it brought. Then came the Marconi system. , Although undeniably useful, it' was an inroad upon the ship's isolation. It made it possible to keep m touch with the omcc, ana even Drougni inc news- nanrrs tn miaocean. . ne sense 01 miuuicic peace was disturbed, but fortunately the original inhibition against the true possibilities of the wireless made the traveler use it only in' emer- Bendee. 3 J: But now the last signs oi ireeoom arc aisap- m . 1. T - 1 pearing. ine ocean, as ivtr, hskcl says, ruined. The t-eviatnan win nave a wircicss icic phone in every state room, and those who cross the ocean may Keep in constant unicn wuuurcu husiness associates. There will be lio more peace for the weary traveler. His office Will tell callers to try "Leviathan 9535," and he will have to spend a greater portion of the time hanging over the receiver when he is not hanging over the rail. . ' It is not inconceivable that sea sickness may become a blessing in disguise. New York Tribune. How to Keep Well PR. W. A. IVANS Qim.Iim (. ta( riM. Malt. iw m4 . ml all, biii.4 t 0r. t.M fc ihSiii t 1 a, lU t ! pCMMlly ui v r"w Iwhiim, a 4'M4 ! u . . Pr. t-M ill t auk ' nfc r iM-itietMl ; A kitw fa , ,t Ik 0M. CmH r LONG LIFE A L FRESCO. 'Home years ao." write c. W. It , "ou guv ..i,ia advice about hep. tng well i ihia a.on. I have found it o urful il.at am ..ins to Hk uu lo rWNt ii fop the ,rn.ni or ha many oihrr itii wtin nm meniorivr 'tun down at Oil nine tr in yar. -ion aHWI m( a had now neen ,r ira inuiMtra ror rottr inmilti M...I it.... ... ...... ... ...-i , ..,.,,-r in ( inncii up ... nmirg mi n mm IA iimsn, YlM ininirnnr, out f umira oi1. tui, fwina an rtdir)y permm ami nm irr-na. invke wt out or Hut uu I lot! fur lite. "lint I have found Unit wiilMmr very rMhi aport if on will make ll mi. I ukually walk Iwitti a cUv. I'M men II ami J. prrf.-rnhly " '"'il aun u linn, ami I I.,. mh all hurry ami worry from my ni anil try to (ho thliu of InUuc.t Uiat tan I found, if two look fur innii. aimoi enywhem ant n doora, wiiru mn trcra infa nava arc vry nrauiiful. nml ilin kv i.. noiiKii, aa ioiiii onn aaya, many pronto only look at tiio latter to wa wnat i ne wrallirr Ii King lo lir! ".Naturally, an odlrrl In wnlkinr rhakra it nmre lirm-ni-ial. atnl that la ray lo nml In errand or ralla. Ko many or mv I'oiitrmnorarira tot ilirniHrlvrs bu almnat iuniif lely nnuHPa niinnir t in winter anil rarlv uprlnc that I'm ijoinsr to hk you lo say lo them. Don't for your advice a winriy lean. "tilit a ta not airreaaarily In vbII.IIbtii. lint It Ik almnat rrrlitlnlv no ir one alvea tip witkliiK. I eiinnot niyarlf walk far or faat. iiwlne to a work Heart, but I ran kern In f.,l.-!v cniiirorlnhln liralih by celtinK out every day in almnat all weatluis." HE PLY. I hope three will lm tnanv who win follow your exnmplr. ebrr, who wrote an excellent book on altHliiinr lonir lifr. was nn able rxpnnrnt and example of th benefit of dally walks. He thotmht every person should walk flvo mllra a Hay and on one. day a week should aura a ions; walk. At 93 yeHra of aee h was Raid to be still walkimr five nillra a dny. He argued that. rIiic-o incut of the weight of the body waa due to tniimie. health of muscle was all Important. Hnd health without work was unthinkable. That part of your policy relating to interest In things as you walk along la also advisable. It was nn integral part of the long educational walks of pupils with tho master so popular in Germany, Austria, Swit zerland, and the Scandinavian countries. Walks In the soring are interesting nd informing as well as healthful. Th beginnings of life in the animal and vegetable world til interesting stories to the interested. What Becomes of Buttons? America has not been able, perhaps, to clothe the destitute of the whole civilized world but it is doing a very large part in keeping such garments as they have on the people. Our but: ton manufacturing business has grown to im mense proportions since the outbreak of the war in Europe. Before that, according to the Trade Record of the National City bank, Germany and Austria had a goodly share of the business. In -the year before the war we, turned out Only $20,000,000 -worth of buttons, but in 1919 our product of practically 10,000,000,000 buttons was valued at $100,000,000 when it reached the consumer. We supply buttons to over eighty countries and colonics. Thirty millions is in vested in the industry, the employes in which receive $10,000,000 a year in wages. Though we have 557 button factories, the Japanese sold to us 5,000,000 gross of pearl buttons last year, they having gone heayily into the industry which the IcKinley tariff was o largely in strumental in developing for us. What becomes of all the buttons? Save the i datively small proportion which are cloth covered, buttons'1 do not wear out. But they are not indestructible, as every patron of a laundry knows. Billions are carefully hoarded in mother's familiar button box, but this does not account for the immense number manufac tured. When you think about it, what becomes of the buttons? is a question to put beside what becomes of the pins? It is unanswerable. Pittsburgh Gazette Times.- "Back Home." Men well qualified from experience in politics and from travel through the country to speak, advise against trips home by senators and repre sentatives for the purpose of sounding sentiment ,1113 lime AUUUi fJiiaaiitK iuisuv. usua. A T U 17 A C According to these men. there is no sentiment I 'A J00 or Anv Mn. worth while to sound. Only village wiseacres i One of these years, a session of the legisla and professional agitators perennially uninformed" ture'ought to be devoted to the repeal of useless, ere vocal. The people of weight are, as a rule, ineffective, superfluous and obsolete laws, and to silent and thoughtful in the presence of condi- J simplification of those that ought to remain. tions so unusual. Washington Star, .Albany Journal. Fifteen Minutes! Hnrdly. J. D. T. writes: "!.- What should e the weight of a woman 15 years old, of medium build, who measures feet 34 inches tall? "2. Would 15 minutes' exercise every day reduce one? 3. AVould doing without any sup per help any when you eat other meals as you always have T 4. wnat are the dangers or tak ing thyroid unprescribed? Does it affect heart? ' REPLY. 1. 126 pounds. 2. Xot so you would notice it. S. Yes, provided you ate sparingly enough at breakfast and dinner otherwise, no. 4. It is not logical to Induce hyperthyroidism in order to reduce, Excess of thyroid in the blood causps excess of tissue and food to be burned. A person with such thyroid excess will want to eat enough food to fill all demands. Therefore, whether you take thyroid or not, you must restrain your desire to eat. Hyperthyroidism Is a disease, and it may be a dangerous one. Toe Dancing Beneficial. L. L. R. writes: "I am a boy 1 years of age and have a natural, un developed ability or talent for toe dancing. My mother tells me that if I keep on toe dancing, after many years I will become a cripple, as am too heavy, although I can stand on my toes as lonsr as I like without hurting my toes or feet. My weight la 130 pounds, am 5 feet 8 inches in height." REPLY. I know of no basis lor your mother's opinion. Toe dancing strengthens the muscles of the legs and feet and is of service in curiqfr weak feet, painful feet, 'and broken arches. Probably- about the best treatment for "slewfooted," weak foot, fallen arches is toe dancing, Ravages of Smallpox. L. C. K. writes: "In a letter re ceived from a friend in Kansas she tells of an awful disease in Kansa's City and other towns. . ; It is called black smallpox, and is almost sure death when a Derson takes it. ''She says 'their feet burst, their eves burst out. ears drop off and such as that, and really their flesh Just drops off and the only way. they can biirv them is to wrap them In the aheet they lie on when they die. Manv are dving of .it.' "1. Can you tell use of anything to prevent this disease? - "2. Do you know a cure for it? ' "J. Do you think it is rightly named?" REPLY. 1. Vaccination. ' ' ' " 2. No. Under proper systematic care about two-thircls of the cases get Well. ' ; t ' 3. Yes. The proper name forMt is hemorrhagic smallpox. TI (tea all.t. IL hIwh lrl la M rwulM . 14 eiiriM aa. ambli ."IK.. II rerl lltPl MINI W MMMklf kHW, aa a.w S mmnU. ll ah iMtet Ik.l k Mat ml lb virHw rMMMaf aft IvIlM. Put MMirlll iHtMirallM. kw lll Ik. 4iif aa pb na amiiaa. la I aw mm kim (a nm a. arri4 '" WM n.iai.l tf mm w4rai la ika IXirr tfcM.I M Libra Ihr IUi alriiiniM, ."svii., Mrtitli :. To 1 ho iMlutr i.f Tti lire: I wi.li 1.1 tMr' lo vuil my aiiri Mlloii of Ilia moral 11 ml It-lialuu rlir4iirr 1 ritiiiM-tala. The btiif one Itu milium- roni-rrnina tlm Itibto la tnHu who Ii rvny InirlliL-rnl 11111 pIiuiiM riiiiimrit.l, lived m una ii from l03 , and ird The U durliia that tiinr, I am Impiiy 10 nay 11 la far RiiiH-rior now 10 uiat rra. I am a youne re low nnly in ihr KSd rar of my life and Ihr tutli f nty miumiiy, but I have prMoiii Mi l m tUlly ko wrtiilrpniiie. a In Tlie Itof, a 11 liaa aiiprarril 10 me ine Mi two year, hmii a caper la a nieiKiun in i no nomr. wniin rannot lr raid of all daily paiicm. 1 have nm ivrn ih priviifan of having inrt im, tun frit 1 iiuaiit u rxprena my kincrre appieiiaiioti or your wnra, J. X. I'ALUWKLU Constipation and Sluggish Liver Don't take ehanee. Get CaHae'a L111U Uvar nil tight now. They never fail to make tne liver do Ita duty, relieve const! pa IDon, oaniso dlgeation, drive out bill ouaneaa, stop dlxsioess.. dear the com se us xV ThayXX IITTUE IVEH PIL plexion, put a healthy glow on the cheek and sparkle la the eye. Be sure and get the genuine. SswiD Pffl-SaaB PtSsaia Prfci r 1 When In Omaha STOP WITH US Hotel Conant Hotel Sanford Hotel He nshaw Our reputation of 20 years fair dealing U back of theia hotels. Guests may stop at any one of them with the assurance of receiving how. ast value and courteous treatment. 'onant Hotel Company Victor S. Pcarlman & Company Creator t of cnlm'tve lighting fixtures, wvg furmheJ all the lighting fiitum in i ncn World Theater, Omaha, A'ctrfla. A few retail imtallatiatts: Rialto Theater, Omaha Nebraska Dauglat County Court oui?. Omaha Stiller Theater, Wuhita, Kanun AVivffian Theater, Kamat City, tiisaini Roi'al Theater, Kanuis City, Miuouri Chicago Theater, Chicago, Illinois Tivoli Theater, Chit ago, Illinois Tivoli Theater, Chattanooga, Illinois An invitaion is extended to you to visit our Callcrics and Worl( Shops U'icn in need of untnual lighting effects for Theaters, or any other purpose. Victor S. Pearlman & Company 533-535 South Wabash Avenue Chicago, Illinois BREAK OF MORNING. Sound th invisible trumps. In circuit Th passive erth like seen of dream U net. , , . Th email birds flit and Bin?, their dark hours past. . And their ren ..lojournlnf vlth dew drops wet. With Riant boufhs outspread, the oaks on high Brood on in alumhroui quiet In the air. Sole In remote inane or vacant sky Paling Arcturua sparkles wildly lair. Sound the Invisible trumps. The waters weep. A tealina- wind breathes in the meads, is Ron. Int their earthen burrow the wild things creep; . Cockcrow to thlnnlne cckcrow echoe on Avert thine eyes, sleep-ridden tace! Nr .ran Thea seraph hosts that In divine array Oirrtie the morta l-maked empyrean: Their sovran beauty of this break of day. Theirs 1 the music men rail silence hre: What wonder srief distorts thy burning eyes? Tura ti thy pillow again In love anl fear: Net Ihln t a the Ron Bf Morning rle. W alter & la Mar la April Tale Review. 1 ADYKBTISEMBST. How Fat Actress Was Made Slim Many stage people now depend entirely upon Marmola Prescription Tablets for reducing- and controlling fat. On clever actres tells that eh reduced steadily and easily by using this new form of the famOUS Marmola. PreacrlnHnn. and nnu. by taking Marmola Tablets several times a year, Keeps ner weight Just right. All Boon- aruggiais sell Marmola Prescription inoiet. at one dollar for a esse, or If you preier you can secure them direct from the -Marmola Co., 4612 Woodward Av Detroit, Mich. If you have not tried them do so, They r harmless and affective. . ADVERTISEMENT. Relieves Headache A little Jfusterole, rubbed on fore head and temples, will usually drive away headache. , A clean, white oint ment, made with oil of niustard, Musteroln is a natural remedv with none of the evil after-effects so often caused by "internal medicine." Get Musterole at your drucr store. 33 and 65c, Jars add tubes: hosnital size, $?. BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER The Vital Matter of Support Support is vital to depend ent women and children after their financial pro vider it gone. They do not need property a much aa i n c 0 m e steady and assured. In their own hands or in the bands of an inexperienced executor or trustee the property might be lost, or the principal and income might shrink. The extensive experience of this company in han dling estates assures the safety of principal and income. OmahaTrust CoSS . . Omh NatioMlBuk BuMInf ADVERTISEMENT. FOR SKINTORTURES Zemo, the Clean. Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need DorCt-worry about Eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear healthy skin by using Zemo obtained at ai'ny drug store for Soc, or extra large bottle at $1.00. 'Zemo generally removes PImnles. Blackheads, Blotches, Eczema and Ringworm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating,- antiseptic liquid. It is easily applied and costs, a mere trifle for each application. It is always de pendable. QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That is tho joyful cry of thou sands finco Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physi cian for 17 years and calomel's old time enemy, discovered tha formula for Olive Tablets while treating pa tients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxative. No griping is the "keynote" of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablets. They cause the bowels and liver; to act normally. They never force them to unnatural ction. . ' If you have a "dark brown mouth" bad breath a dull, tired feeling ick headache torpid liver constl- natlon. you'll find ouick, sure and pleasant results from one or two of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take them every night just to keep right Try thent, 15c and Joe PLAN ES& PARTS, Sale of J-l Airplanes, Aviation Engines and Hangars Lot No. 1--30 Standard J-l Airplanes, in cluding gasoline tanks, hand pump and air gauge, but no instruments, accessories, spare parts or tools. Lot No. 2 269 Lawrence A-3, 2-cylinder, opposed, air cooled, 28-H. P. engines. 38 Sturtevant Model 5-A, 8-cylinder "V" type, water cooled, 140-H. P. engines. 83 Thomas Morse Model 8, 8-cylinder "V" tyoe. water cooled, 135-H. P. engines. Lot No. 320 Alban Richards Type "B" portable hangars complete with canvas covering. 40 Alban Richards Type "A" portable hangars, minus can vas covering. ' Lot No. 1 (s located at the Aviation General Supply Depot, Houston, Tex., where it may be inspected upon application. Bids for the lots will be opened at p. m. (Eastern Time) Tuesday, May 2, 1922, at waining-ton, v. v. Lot No. 2 Is also located at the Houston General Supply Depot. It may also be inspected upon ap pication. Bids will be opened at 3 p. m. (Eastern Time) Tuesday, May 9, 1922, at Wathinaton, P. C. Lot No. 3 may be inspected at the Aviation General Supply Depot, Morrison, Va., where it is now lo cated. Bids will be opened at 3 p. m. (Eastern Time) Monday, May 8, 1922, at Washington, D. C. Sealed bids on the several lots should ba sent to th address given below. The Government reserves the right to reject any or all bids. For conditions and terms of sale, together with de tailed information and specifications of the ma terial offered, address; ' MATERIAL DISPOSAL AND SALVAGE SECTION Office of the Chief of Air Service, ' Room 2624 Munitions Building Washington, D. C. AIR CRVICE E NO INtS &(B 0)0 IP fclB 0 00 U USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULTS Hotel Castle OMAHA Cuticura Soap SHAVES Without Mug OWhsira mmm tt faw II tatsaf H"nr . CASaCAOUININE "W C RECKS Mt la M tan ti H I ra OsfcUr nMras HnartK TaV hi tim. MaMai ma wmM mm. I Mr. aan tUtttfrnxm Mf w. a am comtaxt. petto Bee .Want Ads Produce Remit. V II k II J IflM