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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1922)
12 B THE PUE: OMAHA. tSl'NDAY, MAY 7, 1922. The Omaha Bee MOKMNQ EVENING SUNDAY lllft ten rt)lUHINO COMP1KT Ummm tt. DtttWEI, HlMfW MtMtKft Of THE AUOCMTW fMM I Tie Faae, ef MM TTet la li Sit, ) as. f awufcat w Ue ass ear mwmm as sll m. nw k H at ! mm wUuM S i i U ! t.tl 1x4 sM ewe I nt Tt hwm a mmtm af m As liwi s Oaa Ll u U Maal4 SSUMUS aa eilvelsDae eHe. e4 Ik tM IK..1 M HTU.lt aa fcf laaW Sanalialls. Tk Ml cirUUa of Tm Osaak Bm for April, 1132 Daily Average 72,390 Sunday Average ..'.79,595 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY I a. BBtWU. Oeaerel MaMfW CLMUI it. ROOD. CtrmWUaa Meaaia Sera to e aakecriko kelete ese tkie 41 4er (4 ) May, itia. (Seel) W. H. OUIVEY. Netary KK TCUTH0NC5 i Pmsle Branch :hnf. Ask for Ik . Itopertmttil er "ru Wsale4. fee Kiikl Call After I T. M.I KdltwWI. J li.tisi-ljiitm, AflanUe ItM er !. ATla.tl 1000 ; orricu Main Offlre I7lb ana Kirntm Co. Bluffs It boti u ttoutk SIM 411 8. tit St J--' N YorkIM fifth Ae I Washing! Hi I & M. thia IIS gitier BMb l'rte. r ranee 41 Hue St. Honor ; The Vision of the Prairies. '. In the day i of the great uuuin scarcely a croi road but was destined as the seat of a V metropolis. Ideals change, and while small com t: munitict may still hold to the desire for progrei, ' iUc.tr notion of what constitutes this is changing. V Oboe industrial development, with the soot of . the mills, the clang of the street cars, the e.t- tremes of wealth and poverty, tenements, sky- icrapers, gay night life, a larger jail and more policemen, lacks charm for the well-rounded Kc braska community. 1 nts impression is ncigrncncu uy siuuy oi me ', Menu Messenger, which characterizes itself as I ""a progressive newspaper devoted to the de '); vcloping ot Custer county and the upbuilding of Merna." More than half the first page of a re 'cent issue was taken up with two special articles on the topie, "A bigger and better Merna." There is no cause to differentiate between the two articles, oiie by a member of each sex. Both emphasize the desire for better schools, particu- j larjy a high school. Bcautifkation of the school grounds, planting of trees and flowers, and the addition of a public park are given prominent nuention.. The central thought ot both is for a commodious community building to provide wholesome entertainment for youth and age alike. The auditorium Avould be fitted for motion pic teres, and for plays, most of them to be given by home talent. Concerts, lectures and even religious services would be held there. In the basement would be a rest room and space for village board meetings. , A good hotel for the comfort of guests, a belter telephone system and an addition to the local flour mill are the only commercial projects that receive more than passing mention. "Ain't lliere snniA nlare tlial rnnlft h nut infn r - shape so that the men of the town might have a matched game of ball two or three evenings each week, after supper?" one of the writers winds up. He speaks also for a community chorus, the, band, and a swimming pool, and he suggests that shrubs and vines be placed to cover bare spots, especially in the case of the railway station. t it . i e j-ci g an try 10 wont in narmony, emorce me taw and be god citizens," this .booster urges. Communal life would tose most of its draw- l . e . t ' ! .1. . . . t oacKS u sucn a simple vision as mis were 10 uo materialized. The main need is for the in habitants to unite in yanting such things at taining them is the easiest part. tba atw wofM U iautricably involved ia the agricultural industry. From tba plain i of Cia4a to tba pampas i the distant south the Uurt art much the same, although there ia no concerted movement toward their general solution. "DadY and Nature! Simple Rule. In tha current Century aa ably written anU dt by a lf-cofiied "dadaiit" defends "dad as a protest against canons in art, whether of painting, sculpture, music, poetry or prose. The dadafst abhors formalism, bectuse that is a recognition of something that is rued. Dad has no Intention to destroy art, or to obliterate man's appreciation of the beautiful; it merely seeks to enforce a change in standards. Pursu ing this theme, it outrages every understandable form of expression; painting become a grotesque merger of meiningtess splotches of color; drsw: ing. the crude efforts of the unskilled, expressed in lines that Ignort perspective and curve alike; poetry is the ululation of the inarticulate savage, a succession of vowel and consonant sounds, without meaning in print, but perhaps carrying a message when spoken or chanted with proper background, and so on. What dads overlooks, and the fact confounds its pretension to be in accurate interpreter of nature, is that nature's way is orderly and fixed. Man's first notion of symmetry was gained from observation of nature, and no advance he has made in art transcends that of outdoors. Canon here is absolute and eternal. Tree trunk or grass stem, the shape Is round, and for the reason that such form is best adapted to protect the growing plant under all exigencies. The. frost crystal or the snowflake show wonderful geometric designs, invariably in right lines, and for an equally good reason. Trees are known by leaf or fruit, birds by songs, flowers by per fume and color, and so they have been for count less ages. Characteristic signs exhibited in ani mals and plants are universal and so nearly un varying that they may be regarded as fixed and determined. They are the Creator's unchanging ! niarlc- Xo inspired colorist ever painted such pic tures as may be seen in the Nebraska skies at sunrise or sunset; nature's prodigality in color is exhibited everywhere, and in appropriate har monies, but never with the crude and ludicrous effect of a dada painting, and so the inquirer may go on, through the list, always verifying the line from Tennyson, who wrote of Nature's way: "So careful of th type he seems, ao careless of the single life." Dada will be accepted as a protest against all forms of expression, even dada.. But even the most devoted of anarchists comes eventually to a place where he must acknowledge law, and so, when the weary who seek surcease in dada finally turn from its emptiness to something else, they will fine real art ready "To hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to nature." Destruction of Forest Trees Tlsottg ntletAfiesa or Carelessivm That Com Lift and Beauty of Growth. "On These Two I Commandments." . Then one of them, which was a lawyer, " asked him a question, tempting him and say ing: "Master, which is the great commandment ' in the law?" Jesus said unto him: "Thou ' shalt love the Lord thy God with all fhy heart, ' . and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two command i' ments hang all the law and the prophets." Matt xxii, 35-40. ' v' Here is the simple, ; straightforward way, plain stated. It contains no by-paths, no com plexities, nothing to bother either the wisest or the simplest minds. When men are distressed to , reconcile creeds, to establish harmony between Genesis and geology, still uncertain as to the exact interpretation of "bapto," and resolutely alined on one or the other side ' of "et cum filioque," the, 'answer of Jesus ' to the lawyer shines a clear guide to human conduct. " Man is curious, prone to investigate, to rebel .gainst established order, to disregard , rules, and, true to his nature of contradictions, is amenable to discipline, to orderly movement, and regulated conduct If in no other way lie presented those characteristics that support the thought of his dual nature, this is sufficient The struggle between the two forces is incessant,, and the end is determined as the individual succeeds, either in establishing a just equilibrium between the two, or permits one or the other to dominate, ' and so become1 one-sided. On these two laws should and must depend the moral progress of man. And, as material progress in the long run is proportionate to the mamI . all n( man's frrnwth 'tinwarft nancta An them. Their meaning is clear, their application is easy, their effect is absolute. Debate or dis pute will not alter them, but the one who gives them full expression in life will find beauty in . living, and the consolation that a clear conscience and aa unquestioning faith give to the believer as the hour comes to walk with AzracL Life-Saving That Counts. The man whorisks his life to save another, threatened by death in calamity or accident, gets lecognition and applause. Who acclaims the man of science, whose research when applied is the means of saving not one but many lives? Dr. Victor H. Vaughn, chief of the medical section of the national research council and dean of the medical school of the University of Michigan, says 700,000 lives have been saved within the last thirty years by campaigns against disease. These figures are probably well within the truth. The doctor was speaking to the delegates to the Na tional Tuberculosis association, whose work has cut down the death rate from that single disease almost to an extent equal to the life-saving total mentioned. Gorgas and his aides all but wiped out yellow fever, headway has been made against malaria, pellagra and the hookworm are getting heavy blows from science, cancer is slowly yield ing some of its terror, the tsetse fly is being challenged in its conquest of huge areas of the earth's surface, and its victory, begun probably in paleozoic days, may end in utter defeat be cause man is after' it with the weapons of microscope and test tube. This is the form of life-saving that counts. Science has not, con quered all disease, but no longer stands baffled in presence of any. The discoveries of Jenner, Pasteur, Metchnikoff and Virchow are supple mented and applied by devoted hunters whose quest for the germ and its antidote never flags. Preventable disease is being routed, and it may come yet that we will return to the condition that prevailed before the advent of ''Dr. Horn book," when "men died from loss of btood or lack of breath." At any rate, the pathway of life is made a lot easier to travel because medical men are courageous, active, and inspired. Throughout the New World. v The situation confronting the nations of Europe differs widely from " that in the United States. From this the conclusion is apt to be drawn that conditions here are peculiar when as a matter of fact they are general throughout "the American continent. Down in Argentina the 'Agricultural-Live Stock congress has advanced suggestions for meeting the economic crisis which sound re markably familiar. Lower interest rates, better farm credit, cheaper freight rates, development . of foreign markets for agricultural produce, de velopment of dairying, increased national con sumption of milk and meat, stabilization of wool, prices to save the sheep industry, and regulation of marketing these are measures suggested in South America to relieve conditions. This is evidene enough that the problem of Heroism's Verge on Folly. , The death of a young man and his wife in Lincoln, both of whom were earning their way through college, is a tragedy of sacrifice. The two kept cows and sold milk; the wife taught at odd times and the husband worked for the street railway company while carrying on his studies. One week after the burial of his wife the man died. With his passing who shall say what dreams were blotted out . Others on the cam pus knew nothing of their aims and ambitions and few of their hard circumstances. ' . - Had life held out and success been won, still this pair of ambitious students might some day have looked back and questioned whether the struggle-had been worth while. The problem of life can be viewed from many angles, and from each the solution appears different. Each suc cessful man and woman chooses some obstacle to be,, overcome. Doubtless the part bf wisdom is to select something that can be surmounted, but still many whom the world lists as heroes have been those who strove beyond their strength. The March income of the Class 1 railroads shows that the operating income increased 5.8 per cent over that of a year ago, while their operating expenses declined 8.9 per cent. How ever one is disposed toward the railroads, it must be admitted that their profits indicate increased general prosperity. - " "It is possible to turn gray hair back to its original color by natural exercise and without dyes," a lecturer asserts. Who does not feel curious to know just how to exercise the hair? If Senator Caraway keeps on digging into newspaper files he may come across something somebody said about Woodrow Wilson a few months ago. The McCormick family's harvester is no doubt L under way, but whether it is reaping trouble or happiness seems to be a tossup. If human nature is really growing better, shouldn't there be fewer- laws instead of more? One day during the ek The Pee published a pifinre of hu the Lark of a tree li been marred by the rrtiug f initials on it. It brought 14 tit editors attention by a tMiu who is intense y iHirrestrd in tree culture, aud who esoressfd the pain it gives her in note a fine tree so scarred. Of roui.e, those who cut the btrb da so uh no thought ot injuring the tree, bul the harm i dour, ntseriheless, and is quite a hurtful as if it were uuenlwually e CVinpnsnrq, During the week a letter was received from the forester tu charge ol the work in thisretion, Mr. X S. Peck, whose hcadtjuaxlers is at Lit a. ver, ii asks that certain matter be brought to the attention of the school children of the state, urging that they be taught tome of the simple truth about our vanishing forests. He writes: "I s very la4 to c the piitute of iIhi plaining and nursery operation on the Nebraska National Forest in the rotogravure sertiuit of The tire on April 23. I have been informed that a number of good articles on the planting on the Nebraska (orr.t. as well a on tree planting in general, have appeared in your paper recently; also that the Nebraska Slate Forestry associa tion, under your leadership, it urging that school children be tarntht some of the simple truths about tree planting and about our vanishing for ests, i desire to congratulate you on the good work The Bee is doing along this line and of what you are accomplishing personally through the 'te attoriaiion, "The importance of teaching children about caring for tree was illustrated by an incident reported by Forest Examiner Johnson of thit office, who ws at the North Platte (Neb.) ex periment station on Arbor day. A high wind and dust storm prevailed all day, but despite this a Sunday school teacher and her flock had come to the station ground for a picnic A large number of trees have been planted at the station by the stale university in co-operation with the United Stales forest service. Among these trees were a considerable number of ever greens planted on an exposed ridge, where condi tions for tree growth are not very favorable, but those which have survived are beginning to change the appearance of the landscape. "The children found these trees and each proceeded to cut off or pull out a tree, with the idea of taking them home and planting. Eighteen trees from one to four feet in height were thus destroyed, for of course the children did not pro tect the roots and the trees dried out In a few minutes. Neither the children nor their teacher had been taught the lesson of respecting private property, and although their intentions were good their Arbor day efforts were misdirected and eighteen trees were destroyed instead of being planted. These points were explained to the children so that they would understand that it was wrong to take other people's trees, that the roots of a tree are as delicate as a baby and that' in a region like western Nebraska where there are so few trees there is no particular gain in pulling them up front one place and moving to another. Trees should be secured from nurseries and planted. "Superintendent Snyder of the experiment station plans to take up this matter with the superintendent of schools at North Platte and request that a little time be devoted to nature study and tree planting in 'the public schools He also expects to make a window exhibit ol the trees in one of the stores w ith an appropriate poster, so that possibly the incident may result in some good after all. "I have described this incident at length as it occurred to me that the State Forestry asso- ciation might be able to make some use of it for educational purposes." It is well to remember that "any fool may write a poem, but only God can make a tree." How to Keep Well Br Oft. W. A IV AM Qwasissaa (auaraiaf kyftaaa. aaailalia aa4 Ua to i, tas imui at 1 a im as Iimuiim, ka turn ft M t M ! aa asska a tsar avaattiaw tor Makaaa laiutt SB swt a I M SSaaj. I a1 nam, auttasilssa in I, saklsal aaanasaa) aasatoaa M aiU.4 Dr. Cern(ti tltt CENTER SHOTS. It la kisiilfkant that In all that lit uf j wumeaj tvtn as tha wltea uf laaiah Uk, ta waa abla to rm4 only on wUluw. InUiMiiapulw Hr. "Inforntalutn ia VniJ ly llixtv sr." mm a lirailllna. Another Ulu aiun ahttllared. Wa funilly imaflnrd Hist lr. Ilouvar knw evervihlnir bunt vrthine C'harlt C, New and Courier. A eorraaimnd-nt ask whether It to ris-M to Tha man "' or "The mn wan hmet. in modern rrio la Tha Jury ere4." Akron lO.i Jieaaun-Jour rat CARROT COMPLEXIONS. flltrtftatiiita beina; hai. the first thing wa know thrr will ba aon rresli yoUHaT rrula on Ih labia. I'rfsonils- wnit a beautiful ano natu rally Mie4 rl will lake ti that parrots day by day. on tha theory that ealing carrot will "do I he com- illation luud " And that it will. provMH khaaata lniy of them -that ia. If wa ara allowed la supplement ao that the aMtenieni wriu r1 "do tha com pinion od and fallow." Whan ilia dial contains an abund an. a uf rarrota aome of tha golden fallow pigment of the carrot oaas through tha inieaiinnl wall, acta Into tha blood ktraam, ia earrlod to the akin, and la thera laid down aa tha same beautiful sallow whtrh makes the vge-ul.la ao attractive, but the human aa unattractive. It la u-h a. yellow yellow that even tha Japanese have noticed It. In that country In the aprlne the people drink Urea rj'isntltlea of milk and a aperies of yellow oranae. In the autumn they eat large quantities nf a, yellow o.uah. whtrh la about the anme aa our atiuaah. And after they have eaten enough of It they color tin. The color differ from that of Jaundle In aeveral ways. It doe not yellow tha eye aa dnea Jaundice. It stnlna th akin around Ih mouth, -heeka and templea, the palma of tha hand and axil of the feet, and the lining of tha hack part of the mouth and tha soft palate. A food that can yellow th afcln enough to make th discoloration show on a Jap produce complexion color acheme that Ih glrla ar not looklnc for. A Japnneae authority, lleahlmoto, write of hla very extensive ohaerva lion on yetlnwlnrr of th complexion due to ratine; yellow vegetahlea and friilla. and he quote a Inna Hat of Jupaneae eclentlM who have written on the anme aubject. In thla country lies warned u about the unit dlacoloratlon du to eating carrot. Report to th Mm effect have com from many part of th world. There la sums proof that yellow corn carrle more of the growth vita min than floe th white. There I aome renann for thinking1 that rich, yellow milk and cream. and yellow June butter, contain mora antlacorbutlc vltanilnea than the paler fluids and the annato col ored solid. Rating good green vecetablea add coloring- matter to th blood. I expect It I true that fending red pepper pod to a canary for some time and In quantity will color hla plumage. Much can be ald a to the advan tage of eating certain pigmented loon a. All In all. carrot, squash and pumpkins are good food and should b eaten. But eat them for other reaaona than Improving tho com pletion, aud when, having eaten them to sour fill for week, you begin to lake en a rich, Oriental hue, witcn to other food or do It first, Hint to Hoitacwtve. U C. writ: "Mom week ago aom on wn.ie you asking for a remedy for cracked flnaer enda. hav th aama trouble every winter Jual aa aoon aa I begin taking car of three aort coal atovea. l think it la caused by duat from coal ashea. also esiHieur to cold, I waa away two week and my hand healed, but cracked again when I resumed rare of th fire. "I find It helo to dip th finger tnda In warm ml (aalad and cooking oil I ue, rubbing It Into th skin of th hand and wrapping tha cracked ringer end In rlotha wet with the warm- oil at night. I wear glove now when Inking car of the ftra" Koau Tluit la Venerable, If. A. .. M. wrliea: "tn to day' nnnVr. under 'Housewife' la- ease." (. II. wlshra a remedy (or painful crack a about her finger. 'The raaea, almoet without ex ecution, aro caused by using new aoap or oap that haa not aged. Thl snap contain an excea or alkali, whli'h Irritate the akin and drle It. 'The beat remedy I have ever ued I absurdly almple: filycerln, 1 part; cider vinegar. 4 parte. "Mix. ahaka and apply each time after using soap. I always adviao my patient to ue old soap." A I -a KlU'licncr. Mr. A. T. W. w rite: "What 1 a method for teaching a S-year-old calmness in th face of dlsaater? "Th child in fiueetlon ha a calm. well polMed character, but I. hla- mother, am aholutely frantlo In dungrr, and tho child will have to hav more training If h l not to ba Influenced bv my ahuky self -com rot. "Incidentally. I find training him hetpa me (I grew up with no train ing, and am (till beiiting myself against a atone wall). I read dosena of hooka on child training and am training my hoy (I haven't over trained him)." RKPLT. Can you get hold of on of Clark' book on character training for chil dren? Th fimt edition ha been ex hausted, but perhaps your book eller could pick up one for you. T undri-atand a larger hook la being written and will appear aome time aa a necond edition. A Bad but Very Common Habit. Tumulty' trouble lan't alone that he talk too much, hut that he folk too much that Ixn t so. I'hlla- delphla Inquirer. "Wine. Wine. Wlnc!" Welt, friends, cheer up! Tha dandelion season is very near at hand. Cincinnati Enquirer. Mr. Gompers' Warning Mr. Gompers does not need to put on colored spectacles on Mayday morning in order to see red when he looks in the direction of Russia. Nor anyone else. Lcnine, Trotzky, Tchitcherin, Krassin and the rest have not changed either their ideas or their practices because they have gone to Genoa or because Lenine, to get a hold upon pounds sterling and American dollars, has winked with one eye and confessed the failure of communism. ' Mr. Gompers is quite right in assuming that the worst sufferer from sovietism, the world over, is the workingman, for without industry there can be no "workingmen," and it has now been abundantly proved that Marxism is the wreck of industry. ' " ' , Mr. Gompers pledges his word for the knowl edge that the Russian soviet organization is spending millions to corrupt the American work ingman to his own ruin, and that its present con cern is to get more millions to continue this work. To that end to get hold of more mil lions Lenine makes a pretense of trading his so called principles for a working arrangement which will bring money to his coffers. It may be that some of our moneyed men have an idea that they can undermine the labor movement in this country by assisting in the propagation of bolshevism, on the ground that there is no danger that the American democracy, will ever approve bolshevism, and that by its means, meanwhile, organized labor can be weak ened. If any are proceeding on this theory, it may be as well to warn them that they may be playing very dangerously with fire.. In connec tion with such a possible idea, Mr. 'Gompers' words may well be placed on recor-d; If it were possible to despair or the sound democratic faith of the American people, the situation today in relation to bolshevism would be most discouraging. I do not despair, hut never since the assumption of power by the faithless, ruthless, adroit and conscienceless Lenine conspiracy has the situation in America been so filled with peril. "t ' The recognition of soviet Russia by the United States has been withheld for good and sufficient reasons. Boston Transcript. ' 7 v Negroes Atone for Negro Crime. In the great "city of color" which constitutes the Jieart of the Harlem section of New York City, a colored youth killed two white policemen in cold blood. The colored people of the com munity organized a benefit entertainment for the relief of the widows of the policemen and car . i,.m (nn.rniic cum f( minnev as a token of sympathy for them and of abhorrence for their black neighbor's frightful act. Adding their reparation to the fact that negroes revealed the criminal's hiding place, a coiorea munsicr im ported it to the police and a colored magistrate . n'ct- fTrtrr1 hie arrest, the can- A L glial irtiovun. . . did white man must acknowledge that the negro race is redeeming itsett irom tne accussauou m it shields its criminals from justice and puts race feeling ahead of citizen duty. The negro people are not by nature lawless, and are highly un likely to hide criminals where the lynch horror does not hang over them. The Continent. Baseball Mourners' Bench, While Babe Ruth sits idly by and eats out his heart with vain regrets, a young upstart out in St Louis is going wild batting out home runs and grabbing the Bambino's limelight. The way of the transgressor is hard when it means an un cushioned seat in the grandstand watching the other fellow perform. Philadelphia Inquirer. Whatever 1$ the Matter? Henry Ford's railroad reports a deficit in operating expenses in December. The wizard must have mislaid his financial wand. Boston Transcript v Mark 'Em Up. German marks might take on more value if the government would print a few entertaining or instructive sentences on each edition. Wash ington Star. Broadcasting Congress From th Kltchhurff Sentinel. Representative) Brennan. Detroit has aimless wireless ideas. Wants to set breach-loadlng radio broad caster In house and senate so any body with tuning; fork can horn Into nation-Ravine; conversation. A if the unemployment situation wasn't bad enough a H Is. ii. k. n p. -r (1284 Meters) Sunrise, a. m. Brennan' scheme eliminates electric chair and hang ing. . Condemned ret national cap ital punishment by being chained to v ashineton wireless receiver and talked to death. J. A. X. Z. (B Flat) High noon. Congressmen chant Honolulu legislation to ukulele ac companiment Harmless wireless quarter bleats of four power treaty. Senators use the squeal In pork by interpolating senseless saxophone solos in rivers and har bors appropriation. Good tenors run fop office on phonographic record. Irving Berlin becomes national dic tator through ability to write ; legis lation to fox trot time. i R V. N. K. V '' - (14 karat) ' Lunch time. Wrong voting con gressmen lope home to mend the wireless fence. Claim radio crossed them with Bryan running for office In Florida. Squawk alibis that they had astatic asthma "and couldn't vote In the right key. Twitter that flock of birds Jammed home con sumption waves. Deny report that traitor hung wireless ' dictograph under back stairway, where left handed bribe were strung up on amplifiers. v.-- D: I. N. -(104 deg. Fahr.) 2 to 4 p. m. Ether waves ricochet off Washington monument and knock four bricks Into Gulf of Mex ico. Starting whistles in Seattle fac tories draw no action, as sturdy workers have their heads strapped into debate over interest due from Austrian flour 'debt New York votes to seceda from the ' union, unanimously deciding that Dr. John Roach Straton ha a better act. Farmer near Kalamazoo writes his congressman that neighbor's tame crow persists in breaking in on the line. Anti-suffragists organize to as sert that women congressmen Jam the radio vibrations. Society dame in Pittsburgh .runs on a platform of having all wireless waves marcelled by presidential proclamation. Go-to-church-by-wlreless campaign ut terly ruined as radio listeners de mand one day's rest In seven. . i:. a. t. (3.75 per cent) Supper time. Corner grocer In stalls magnavox and says It draws more useless wireless trade than old-time free cracker barrel. Beer and light wine advocates draft edu cational bill to establish poor men's clubs equipped with amplifier horns and blggest-in-city schooners. Anti Saloon league favors amplifiers, but against schooners. - Congressmen talk so much about it that Cincin nati, St. liouis and Milwaukee aerial proprietors start back-to-Munich movement. " r. t. jj. m. (. reels) Midnight. " Hollywood flicker film flapper sending Marconi kiss to kind old mother in Philadelphia gets grounds for breach of promise suit when misguided ether waves intro duce her to bewhiskered congress man from Blaaville. She says kisa was longest on record, 3,000 miles. He says a kiss on the ear Isn't worth much. F. t. TV. I. S. (10 seconds) Adjournment. Radio vibrations leap off capitol dome like prickly heat, crash into league of nations, duck Into wrong wave length, and knock Kansas cyclone into an Eski mo display of aurora borealis. Wire less amateurs start agitation to make nation safe for crystal de tector sets. Elect new congress on three-meter wave plank. Then float plank to three-mile limit and sink it without a trace. Wa Clean. Reblock and Hairier. Fait and Panaaia Hats DRESHER BROS. Dysrs, Cleaners, Hatters, Furriere and Tailera 2217 Faraam Street AT Untie 0345 II AUVEBTIHEMENT. Regain the Vital Force of Youth A Simple Horn Treatment, Mora Available Tbaa Gland Treatment or Bark and Animal Extract. Nature s areatest sift to mankind ia Kara Compound, for th rejuvenation of flamrng vital fore. If you aspire to re stored vital nervoua enercr. to the clori- oua vigor of the days of youth, try Korm. tn tne prtvuy of your own bom. Gratify Ing results are known, usually in a few days., ' Korea Compound (in tablet form) la the result of many years of scientific research. It contains no harmful drugs or opiates. It acts naturally to rebuild the vital forces- in man or woman, to revive tha power of youthful vigor and stamina. More widely acclaimed than Gland Treat ment or bark and animal extracts. It has a powerful action In strengthening and renewlnir nerve tissues, and to overcome the handlca of physical weakness, result ing from breaking nature's laws. Korex Is distributed and guaranteed only by the Helton Laboratories. Dept. 141, MsBsaehusette Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. A full treatment of this wonder vitalise asnt prepaid for only 12.00. Or, if more convenient, send no money; pay the postman $2.00 and a few cents post age whan it arrives. The laboratories guarantee to return your money promptly if results are not entirely satisfactory. Cut or tsar out thla ad now, and aead or der today. ADVERTISEMENT Eczema Caused Years . of Intense Agony "I have suffered Intense agony from ecsema on my leg and other parts of my body for years, and received only tempo rary relief from other preparations. It ia only a month since I started to use PETERSON'S OINTMENT, and there ia no sign, of eczema or itching. 'You can refer to me." Geo. Talbot, 27 Fenfield street, Buffalo, N. Y. "I've got a hundred testimonials," says Peterson of. Buffalo,1 "just as sincere end honest as this one. Years ago. when I first started to put out PETERSON'S OINTMENT, I made up my mind to sive a big box for CO cents, and I am still doing it, as every druggist in the country knows. "I guarantee PETERSON'S OINTMENT because I know that its mighty healing power is marvelous. I say to every one who buys a box that it is rigidly guar anteed for ecsema, salt rheum, old sores, Diino, oieeaing and itching piles, ulcers, skin diseases, chafing, burns, scalds and sunburn, and if not satisfactory any drug gist will return your money?' Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., inc., Buf falo. N. Y. For sale by Sherman & Mc Connell Drug Co. raze r You can let any of Jcttcr'a Bcvaragoa at and for yaar without any deleterious result. Jcttcr'a Beveraircs arc Pasteurized ia the bottles by hcatinjr to 150 degrees for over one hour, thus killing any possible bacteria. The water used in Jettcr's Beverages, for Old Ago (Dark) and Export (Light) and for Soda Waters and Ginger Ale, is drawn from our own deep wells, boiled and then filtered twice before being let into the mixing tanks. Jctter's Beverages Are PURE They Are Delicious They Are Made by Experts Pbon your order to JA cksoa 4231 or MArket 0900 for a cat or a brrl. For your health's sake- Driisk Ak for Jetter'a at the Soda Fountains and Soft Drink Stands. A 4 s 4 4 Jetter Beverage Company 35 Year 8 in Omaha 6002-16 South 30th Street. ntiltsjatiaaVtAiat Uiai. tAiisl " an seasnsaasa4TaMe, iiimmrn ir' Baby Grand Mason & Hamlin Grand. . . .... ,,.$1,575 up Kimball Grand . . . . . . . $735 up Apollo Grand. . . , . .... . .'. . $780 up Brambach Baby Grand. ............ $635 Upright Pianos Sohmer, Vote cV Sons, Kranich & Bach, Bush Lane, Cabl ' Nelson Price. 9315, 375,) $500 9550, 9675. A SMALL CASH DOWN PAYMENT. Easy Weekly or Monthly Payments. Player Pianos Player (fully guaranteed) 9359 and up to your dirs. $3.00 PER WEEK PAYS FOR A PLAYER. Used Pianos aa low as $110 WE MOVE PIANOS. RENT THEM, BOX and PACK THEM for SHIPPING. Pianos Tuned and Repaired. 1513 DOUGLAS STREET The Art and Music Store Constructs Big Buildings The foundation of Home Builders' 7 Preferred Shares are Big Business Buildings Erected in the Downtown Districts on order for owners. Home Builders helps to finance these great structures, taking real estate mort gages, upon which shares are issued and offered to investors. 7 Payable Semi-Annually Safe, Sound These shares, now .available by resale, are tax free in Nebraska, and when compared with taxed securities yield better than 8. Semi annual dividends invariably have been paid on these securities for many years. , . An Ideal Investment Ask for free booklet explaining Home Builders Plan. AMERICAN SECURITY COMPANY DJ .t ISA St. B,.k.r. OmSfcW,