4 THE OMAHA m;K: MUM'AY. OUIUHm. 4o, The Morning Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY KELSON . IfUJkfc, Jblar. It. VktWt.lt, O.I. Miii. MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PBE9I Tm final I'm af t.ut TM ta I auaair, la aMtMlt awliM n iu Itf iMtukn ul 4,Muim .ra,u ia M. ar IW4 atArrwlM mflta I Ifa lif , (mI Io IM PJ ! .I,MM4 tama, All KJU( " WHMMIUM af uW d- J, la WKlri. BEE TELEPHONE Prtfat Braioh Earhan. A.k fir lb llrparlnant it Uatla a rma Wau. tot N hl (till Alter It P. M.l 4luwi4 l.nm.nt. AX Unix 1021 ar Itlt. 1WH or r icei Mai OffiM 7th ami fanum Ca. IMh ....u Bu St. Da. r)il. N. W. Cor. iilk tn4 M N York-SIK fill Atisui Warila 4il rHar UI4. Cblraga 72 tUfff Bid. ran, rranra t: ua , Honor lii rpon to the cry of diatmi and will not fail lh needy thia time, i'rrhapi wo were not ready to fly to arm, when Vcnizelos appealed to our kov crnment to v Thrace; our auilon were there, however, ready to mIvk the remnant of the Creek population in Smyrna and carry it in aafety to Mity lf ne. Our galea are cloied to the millioni who seek to abandon hornet in what would be a par'adiae on earth, were it not for the people who live there, to come to America. But our hrt are open, and our purae and wo will feed them, clothe them, and try to help them get a nww atart on the way to happinexi. America doea not expect to heal at once racial rancor that haa outlived empire for ten thousand yean; but America will not lee the victimi of that rancor atarva or freeze. ' -NEWBERRYISM- IN NEBRASKA, Reader of The Omaha Be are flooding- thia file with copiei of pamphlet and circular! lent to them by Senator Hitchcock, There la on on deflation, on on hii friendship for the farmer, one promlalinir that ha will try to aatiafy the people of th utate and anklng the recipient to tell the women of hie family about it, on asking- tha name of republican who might be Induced to split their ticket, on printed in Cer man calculated to convince an important tection of an editorial diatorting the facta concerning do- them, and doubtlea there will be aeveral more, All thia coata money that ia, with the exception of an editorial diatorting the facta concerning do flation that haa been printed at government expenae and sent out under a congrcMional poatal frank. The people pay for thia one, but the remuimlcr of Hitch, cock's propaganda ia privately printed and mailed under a 2-cent atamp. Thcra has been much deierved criticiim of (h tactics hy which Newberry of Michigan won hie senatorial election. Public sentiment in Nebraitka Is united in it disapproval of the ue of inordinate auras of money in election content". Hitchcock, In his newfipaper, and In his speeches, has denounced "Ncwberryirm." K. B. Howell, the republican can didal fpr aenator, early in the campuign declared that if he had been in the senate at the time of the Newberry trial ha would have voted to unncat him, A woman speaker for the democrats has lately de clared that "Newbcrryium" is tha outstanding na tional iisue. Ba that as it may, If Hitchcock continues to pour out his slunh fund at the preent rate, he will approach dangcrounly the rcccord of hi colleague from Michigan, and Ncbraaka will have a Newberry case of its own, "The greater part of the Newberry expense was for postage and stationery," Cliff Frank of May wood, Neb., writes to The Omaha Bee. "It was a ' crime for Senator Newberry to do what Senator Hitchcock is doing." Mr. Frank has been bombarded with democratic eampafgn literature, but ona who lives outside of Omaha can not begin to comprehend the amount of money that is being spent for things other than cir- culars and pamphlets In behalf of a third term for Hitchcock. Here l Omaha n expense is being spared to attract votes to the ')mocratic candidate. If ono has not registered and it is thought that one will vota for Hitchcock, a taxicab la sent to bring that man or woman to the county court house. Seven i Special telephones have been installed in the lav r )hly supplied general headquarters, so that all may . call and receive instantaneous service fnm the motor corps which does nothing else bul convey voters to their place of registration. This deluxe method of campaigning costs money. The federal government was called on for its bit. the printing and mailing of thousands of copies of an editorial boosting Hitchcock, but some other , intercuts must be footing the rest of the bills. Who and what are they? Tha votera of Nebraska are becoming resentful of this extravagant bid for their votes. They may well believe thnt a cause evoking such extraordinary expenditures to bolster it up is indeed in desperate plight , i Nebraska wants no Newberryism. Its free born citizens, whatever their nativity, are seeking no special favors on clans, creed or racial lines. They are able to consider the contest between Howell and Hitchcock fairly, and without being snowed under in a drift of propaganda. All are familiar with the record of Howell, and with the wavering career of Hitchcock. All the money spent by the Newlyrry outfit could not cover up the rec ord. And the more money those interested in a third term for Hitchcock spend, the worse for his cause. ( REMORSE ALWAYS TOO LATE. A San Francisco man hss offered to give his own child to the forrowing mother of the one he killed when driving his automobile while intoxicated. Such an act of contrition denotes the poignancy of re morse Mt by the guilty man. It is not the first time, and pro.-ul.ty will not ba the last, when the though: IfKtims, the carelessness of a moment has brought conhe.iuences that have embittered life for th Innocent. An offer of reparation such as is made here de notes a generous, impulsive nature, a willingness to shsre the sorrow he canned, hut it could not he com pensation. Remorsa should have com before, not Bftar, tha deed. If people would only think ahead and not behind In surh affairs, fewer of them would occur Yet there i comfort In th thought that a culprit can fl th pang that lead him to regret hi dl His csi i not beyond hop, for, while h can not undo lh vd h has tud, h can and probably will b wr crful m the future, and by watching his our. bring a l ttl aunnhln into th world whra k ' mu,h " U ,h wrong Wr who do at .'. Jtn' action to Hi foneir., and rr', n of lfWhn, h is th rl mni. and th ) , pd to be arwuwd. WHERE MaiiONlARIt HUNGRY. Ta ar, a lav H l a"' arain, but fi"" t ' ,m 0' MdUon stilt urig in An Minor. I It it up t u to ft J tkasa, WHAT NEBRASKA FARMERS READ. A bulletin, No. 180, from the Agricultural Ex periment Station of the University of Nebraska, con tains som interesting conclusions aa to reading mat ter In Nebraska farm homes. Studies have been carried on in different parts of th state, but over areas that afford typical condition. In comparing town and country, th bulletin editor says: "Nebranka furniia srem to realUn tha viilu of th printed puga. uml to lis pretty well uiilli with fiirm and news cmllng mailer. Kvary four wvrka I he uvithko vlllag horn received (tally, weekly and monthly periodical lo tha tola I number of 4.16 u', as citinixired with ii per open country home about one dully, 2.8 weekly and thn monthly perlodicil pir town home, and on dully. Hire weekly and three monthly pi-rloil. cats prr country home, J,'nrh month the vIIIiik dwell received only 34 tr.ida or profcMonul Jour iihIs, whh h are In some wuy t ho town equivalent nt the fiirin nwapuper, and tha farm maxozlne. Th farm maa-iulii mid farm m wapaper went Into even tha town homes n twli: u great numliem as did thin trade and profcralonal Journals." However, the town home receives a greater di versity in quality of its periodical reading mutter, and in this the bulleting editor finds reason for the request of th farm renders for an abundance of fiction in the traveling libraries, 1 Tenant farmers read almost as extensively as do the owner or part owners of lands, the percentage of each taking newspapers regularly is above 00, Hired men In a large sense depend on tha employer for their reading mutter. An argument is mado for the extension of library work among the form districts of Nebraska, present arrangements being inadequate. The greut fact established is that our people are readers, and that most of their effort along this line is directed to the acquisition of useful knowledge dealing with the business in which they are engaged. THE SHAVING CREAM THAT LOOKS LIKE TOOTH PASTE YA K A y X II - J I 1111111111' r23SlN . "The People's Voice EaiOrul lrai nmdf al Tha Maraht Uaa. PaaSara al Tba Manila H ara kiiia ta itae kta aaluaia IrMla lar aaaaaaia aa aiattars al stWll lalaraal. Hitchcock's Two Opinions of Bryan The Spirit of the Plains Nebraska Civilization Viewed as That Hoped for by Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln. EXUBERANT YOUTH AT PLAY. A score of university students were hurt, some of them dangerously, as a result of a "pajamcrino" party at the southern brunch of the University of California. A group of young men were celebrating their manly vigor and virility by parading in paja mas, when an equally virile and vigorous party from a rival university appeared to give approba tion to the proceedings. The visitors enlivened the occasion by showering the paraders with "gasoline bombs," blazing oil-soaked rags, brickbats and simi lar favors. One hospital was comfortably filled as the outcome, and some of the paraders may die. Thus it has always been with the pursuit of higher education. In medieval times "town and gown ' meetings brought broken heads if nothing more. Paris, Oxford, and other university centers suffered from the exuberance of the youth who as sembled there in search of knowledge, but whose soaring spirits found outlet in disorder. At Annap olis, just now, a naval court-martial is endeavoring to fix responsibility for certain injuries, including broken bones, sustained by a student who is said to have been roughly treated by some of the upper class men, djexpite the strict rules against hazing and the severe penalties for violating them. "Doys will be boy," and youth takes little ac count of the probable results of a mad prank. In groups, such as that which sought to break up the pajamarino" parade, they are wholly irresponsi ble, without malice or viciousness, but bent on de struction merely as a sort of accompaniment, or ef fect, of excess animal spirits. Faculties will rule against such proceedings, and sober fathers and mothers will deplore the fact, but it is not easy to restrain the young men of the tribe, be it ever so civilized. WORD ABOUT FEDERAL .TAXES. Senator Arthur Capper, who lives just across the way in Kansas, puts a decided damper on the statement of W. J. Bryan, who came all the way from his Florida home lo tell Ncbraskans that con gress had "lifted (450,000,000 in taxes from the profiteers, and placed it on the backs of their vic tims." Mr. Bryan, as he frequently docs, was in dulging in a flight of fancy; Senator Capper, who helped to make the law, was sticking to the facts. The Capper statement that congress reduced the burden of taxation by moro than a billion dol lars from the point where the democrats had fixed it allows for the $160,000,000 Mr. Brynn talks about, and leaves $650,000,000 to he shared by tho people. This i one phase of tho tax question the democrat do not talk much about. Another fact driven homo by Senator Capper that public expenditures have been reduced by moro than three billions sine Mr. Harding went Into office. Spending Icps money, the republicans are required to raise less, and so could easily re- uc the tax burden. Uut th combination was worked out under republican administration, and against the solid opposition of the "agint" party, niad up of democrats in congrea. Hired help to the fsrmer is provided through th farm loan arrangements, deUed by the repub lican administration, and Senator Capper thu government is now loaning at lh rat of $1,000,. (n0 a day to the farmers. It la a record of progro the Kanaaa aenator rad to his Nebraska iieis-hbor, contraxted a.ainst Ihe calamity tun and dolrful foieraMs tf b Hrn Pros. A Hitrhtock (III) outflt. Th ihal.'tnfc-a of n upatal democratic ranJi I f-r th t-!ilaiur has bcn acrpied ky lb luMl.'n candidate, hn bappesi ta fe a woman. There's rt drmiwiat h wuh fc Sa l Vrpt tlill Autumn's gtHt will alt't many t lh kit'h and lh p!tur f H nU will l in !! ly tak ng it rit), Yuti wilt mi if t d sl l mtit ft. f.M.diM .11 thai mar ! " t;,.,,, mm . wi! , tt !a i lae ait I th !!..; g ' 4 '"' j tmnt tWti, U it I .p.wd Ivt f rU. fjlll ffMlhf, t W.Fy 4rft j fc w ill at rt, ' w ",' a14 , ft f ' or Ik cMMaf U kf k i wii. H will tty I ,m thaea lr ) f k ' '' ri a krrr, f,t ni .ls.er.fa, gnat, f " :'"J V ka.ai.f.l tr-i. 4 af. Ileal rice K press. John t. Keurncs: The question hn b n UHkeil: "lit there u Ncbiankii aplrlt, did'erent from that of the eaat'" LlKCldedly there Is. At tho eat there are traditional booIokIc nnd social condltloim which uhtuln for provln ciullxm. The eaat la wedded to pre cedent established by the centuries of fttl':inm. It bus sparse soil and h-reat water power, the water power hud to be developed and labor exploit ed bi.-cauae agriculture was n alow and unprofitable occupation. Today tho population Is denoe, with large colonlts of the foreign clan In her industrial cltlea llvlnir under tene ment and social condlllona thnt per mit and encoiiniK racial prejudice, and tradition that exlaled on their native aoll. In Nebraska nuturo ba created ft oll that W4 the acme of fructlvlty. When civilization and the nation wo vlrllu and youthful this wonderful land lay like plastic clay to bo worked by the adventurous spirits who hud been dlschurged from the armies of our civil war and tho cream of tho adventurous emigrants from Europe. Thor were no mine or forests, only the beat land that (!od had created. There were no Hampering tradition only a pure democracy of opportun ity and environment no place for tho perpetuation of ago old antipathies and insularlam; thero wus a verdant soil for tho cultivation, of purery American ideal In the center of the continent, therefore, Nebraska exem- plllle in her spirit puro democracy, pure Americanism, a spirit of Ivr own, national hi scope and universal In expression. We are tillers or trie ami, tnererore a peculiar poople, Intensely American for we are the product of what wash inKton, Jefferson and . Lincoln, with prophetic vision, bped for. Kearney Hub. M. A. Brown: There is undoubtedly a Nebraska spun that is widely dif ferent from that of the east. It is in part the surviving spirit of Ossawa tomie thnt barred negro slavery from Kansas and Nebraska. It Is in still larger part an embodiment of the sol dier homesteaders who later populated the two utatcs. It is the spirit do- cendlne from free men who had fought for freedom for all men. H I a spirit unsrmcKJed and urmrr.nn: it I n spirit that knows no political masters; It I tho deathless spirit en shrined In the Nebraska motto, Equality Before the Law." Seward Wade. Mrs. E. E. Hetner: Visit the eastern state with the cold aloofness you meet, and then come to sunny Ne braska and mark the kindly spirit of a people lull of hope and enthusiasm for the future. You are bound to feel this, the true Nebraska spirit It I contagious, and you are imbued with it nnd nr ready to drive down stakes and ko to work with a people o con fident1, courflKeous and friendly. Sroltsbluff Nes. George Grimes: The spirit of opti mism, ( rnerary. of determination and of youth, valuing a man for what he doe ahovA sll else, and ttrasurins; tho tradition of tho West because, of the hardihood that It pioneers ex perienced, Is the Nebraska spirit. There l none belter, because It en able N'ehrarkans to rise above adver sity and keeps them youthful In their outlook rn Plena County Call. C. II. Hiande; As near as I ran f1e lira It out. there is a dtstlnct Nihraska spirit. Tha kind that I risht tip and rominir The eist I livinir on Its pint reputation and is not nllv In tha future, As sn example it lh Irun Western spirit we hnvu only to refer In the Iowa Vain f,Hilball inio of two weeks at') when liosa wun by a score r to o Falls ( It) Journal. Aaron avdiiir Xehrask.t spir.t la usually rtenipllfied In In ! p.-ndeht thinking I Vfiv ter In Ihi at.ite I a lH.lt,, .i rntliv iit.-. ft l.isns a I'xil of a iniK bin. Ii., .m i t tlu examples. Instead of following a beaten path, Ni bra ska luwmaknr make the pattern for other to fol low, Nebraska spirit I on of pride. Nearly every red blooded young man In the Mate is imbued with it. That Is why Nebraska, athlete slay at homn and vie with each other to help maintain the athletic uprmacy of thu state university. And that I why Nebraska university i so emi nent In tho athletic realm. It 1 th Nebraska spirit. Oakland Independent. C. (. C'urleton: Nebraska, being; younger than the east, I less bound hy tradition, and therefore less timid about venturing away from old moor ings, particularly political and socio logical. For sentimental reasons wa rhapsodize about "out where the handclasp's a little truer," hut man kind 1 pretty much the same th world over. What Really Happened. North I'latle, Neb. To th Kdltor of Tha Omaha Kro: In th World Herald on Monday, October II, liter la sn Horn beginning on pna l an ending on page , telling how th renubllrana flocked to tha twnuu and speech of Henutor Hitchcock her Tuesday. Thar I quit a jok about this Roma of tha leading democrat wen to th republican and gnv them two ticket apiece, saying. Her ar eoupl of ticket for lh Hitchcock banost, b sure to com and bring your wife." Tha ticket were marked 'complimentary.' Th republican thought that tbl meant complt mentary to themselves, During Hi fw hour prior to lh banquet theae am good democrat went around and asked for th sum of II for th two ticket and then explained that tt wua complimentary to thu senator and not to the republican, J got my Information on thi point from Guy L. Hwope, who I one of th leading republican here, and ay that thi I the manner In which they obtained the presence of himself and wif and a number of other repub llrans. WILUAM IS. HIIUMAN. Newberry and llllrhrwk. Maywood, Neb. -To the Kdltor of The Omaha Ilee: Ilepubilran paper should keep hot fin Henutor Hitch cork deflation trail. Not long ago th postonice lier waa flooded with an extract from the Congressional Kecord containing an editorial from th World Herald charging th repub Ilea n party with the rrlin of 1020. That, of course, went to every post ofllce In the state, fre of postage, Yesterday we all received a personal letter and pamphlet from th senator, Ihesa letters have t-cent postage stamp on them. The greater part of the jNewtierry expense was postage and stationery. It wn a crlmo for Senator Newberry to do what Benator Hitchcock I doing. No ona find fault with Kenator Hitchcock for try Ing to reach th voter. They do ob, Ject when he roost Newberry and men does like Newherrv did Dut (iiize at this last quarter-dash for tho Judge's stand, Hero 1 tho head of it: WHV PKONI'KKITV I.KFT NKHKA.HKA IHy Senator Hitchcock. After mixing thing around In the hat, thu enator pull out this white raiihit: "Thi fall In price was chiefly caused by a violent and rapid con traction of currency and bank cred it demanded by republican na tional convention ot Chicago in June, 1920, when Harding was nomi nated. That platform denounced the expansion of currency and credit under th democratic admin istration and pledged the republican party to make: " 'A courageous and Intelligent deflation of our over-expanded credit ond currency.' " HI movement are too swift for the mtked eye. Whllo you sit watch- Norfolk Press. Mario Weekes: Ts there a real Ne- braska spirit different from that of the east? Indeed yes. Just ss differ ent is the rear Nebraska spirit from ioai oi mo east as t our own hea th- m. h, ,,.rfm. ......... '"f T"0 ' the'l?. of the! KraThrve tooVd. 0 ne el '?' iTT " "'"P i They were, nt the time deflation Was "f the east. In Nebraska the sun- proposed: Chairman Carter Glass f 1 IU cltlrveXef i?: ,h?Tlt,",,',y VM- -retaryVf th.' treasury of lis cltUcnry, where tho latchntrlng Governor W. V. G. Harding of Ala- . u.way. oui una me spirit of wei- bama: John Pkelton Williams ,,t vie. vlnfa; controller of currency; A. C. Miller, California, and C, 8. Hamlin, Massachusetts The only republican on the board wa Vice Governor Al bert Ktruus of New York. Shortly after deflation was threat ened, Htrauss rcalgned and a demo crat, H. A. Moehlcnpnh, succeeded him. The board then became solidly democratic. Vet, while you look at the members of the deflation board nnd at President Wilson, under whose direction the one billion and -en hundred mil lions were wiped out, while you look without batting nn eye, the JugRler pulls out and holds before you this squawking duck: "Harding, when he made his speech of acceptance, repeated this pledge. He has kept It to the limit. "He hag squeezed ono thousand mil lion dollars out of Federal Reserve bank currency that was In circulation among the people. "He ha reduced the loan or bank credit which the Federal Reserve come greets tho wayfarer when he stops t tha house by the side of the roud. In Nebraska you are not asked what Is your ancestry, but what con you do. It is taken for granted that you are a worthwhile citizen and you keep that estimate a long a you merit It, In Nebraska th dollar mark 1 not the biggest thing In the world. It is worth only in the com fort nnd good It may buy. In Nebras ka the spirit Is broad as her fields, generous as tho fertility of her soil, rich as the fruitage of a state that does more than Its share toward feed ing the world. Illoomington Kcho. P, M. Crane: Nebraska Is as far from the Idols of the east as day and night. The cast has always been helped by congress whllo tho west, with a spirit of eticktoitlveness, has prospered by leaps and bounds, until the eyes of the nation are taking cognizance of the worth of Nebraska. We are bound to com Into our own. (.LOBE SIGHTS, From tha Atrhlson Cllobe. A secret always gets plenty of free advertising. Begging is Just ss when culled soliciting. disagreeable When two girls go to a show to gether they buy sent in the balcony. The man who can make a welcomn address In a new way 1 what the world needs. A bushel of corn and a packnge of etgnrct nro about the same price In Kansas these days. An Atchison man belong to so many lodges he has never become acquainted with his wife. There is st least on reason why women are not happy; women are not not in-red i,y iir insurance ugyit. In building house now people don't provide as many spare bedroums. Tho modern bungalow Is a hint to kin. THEN. On April 13. 1920, Hitch cock in his newspaper Bald of Bryan: "Mr. Hryan'a campaign in Nebraska in a campaign of hate find detraction and he wage it with a hammer in one hand and a knife in the other. "Mr. Bryan is campaign ing Nebraska for nobody but himself, lie apeak nothing but faint-hearted and perfunctory pruiso or commendation for anybody mm uc lino ivugiii.. I II for self, or for principles that Hiysn and llitrlicoch are now contending. What, except the hunger for office, could thu bring llina togvlhcrf NOW. Just two months ago Hitchcock thus reversed himKelf in a World-Herald editorial: "All this is a matter of hintory, us Mr. Bryan's en tiro public life is a matter of history. He has done his fighting always out in the open, the same when he seemed to ntanl almost Alone us when he was cheered on by admiring multitudes. And it is for the principles in which he believes, not for individ uals or agninst individ uals except as they stood in the way or his principle" liank lysUm wua then making to th people through their local banks, by on billion seven hundred million dollars." Then the senator grab Into th whiskers and pull out "overtaxation" snakes, "robber tariff" mice and cook a "ship subsidy" omelet III the hut. Th letter and pamphlet bewilder me. What I really en In the moving picture Is a bunch of republicans wishing for deflation and Just be cause they wished for It a democratic president and n democratic federal Jteserv board did the trick. - If Henalor Hitchcock's reasoning Is good a gold the voter should follow that same reasoning on November 7 next. The republican are wishing the de flation on Henutor Hitchcock. Will tha democrat do the deflating? n number that thn republican platform demands n, President Harding re peat the demand. Follow your own reasoning, liilliert M., by voting for It. II. Howell. If you can not do that, run along anil hn k'"'I. quit th white rabbit, duck and whiskers. CUFF Fit A. NIC. H.111 IN JKST. Our f uihtnn?" "W wbuliln't fiiif mlt th MM of rlnthra f Ilk d weir." aimwr"l Mll rynn. ' "tn v jmy I'arta !i(U -tra for taking tha Harna.' Waahlhgtun Manlnf tftar. rar Mra Mrdowa" acroaa (ha hall vac wHifijr f (ha truubla aha bran bav in with hr car, "Hut mvtryUmiy haa (mubla lalaty," aha aM; "ami ll'a nothing In th wurM hut tliriti ualrif thi-aa raw mauriala al tha fartftrtna.'' M!r I-lfa. 1'OLJTU Ah AOVMITIHKMKNT. rOMTIf At Anvr.KTIHKMr..T. SEARS FOR CONGRESS WILLIS G. SEARS Vote for judge, sears FOR CONGRESS. HE HAS SERVED YOU FAITHFULLY AND EF FICIENTLY AS A MEM BER OF THE STATE LEGISLATURE, AS SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESEN TATIVES, AS- A JUDGE OF YOUR DISTRICT COURT. HE WILL'SERVC YOU WITH EQVAL FIDELITY AND EFFICIENCY AS A MEMBER 0FTHE NATIONAL, CONGRESS Money to Loan on Omaha Real Estate Present Interest Rate Charge Is conservative Savings 6 loan association & ? 3 f n o y aaaaeeeaeeaaaaaaeeae4e AT 40, Ii it, n 'l.ienui v urvite hue Nrhrask aiiiril la Tie vols bill 1 en Hill i id I tver a crr.t:e eo i f t'ta r.ii tela ifUn.t (if tttii( nu(-M,ijt 14 Titk Ik , 41 lr vf-l f i '.; f . y aM I f - n 4 ! Wvtlt l'U'. ' Jl- t I i-f l' a a,li,..i j ll r . an I al ..M4.r.i NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION f. Sff TIMBER, ItK, al THE OMAHA PEF. Dily :-;.ot;i SuritUy ?ti..'ui i IIIWIR, C.aa, M. 1 1 MLR . R(H)U, Cir M( tawa aa uA4 H a. al IK'-k... la iWI S.r rH . ,,. . a . s. ., ... ,, ,. h, i n ARE IMPERII FD Fur rvr?tn put oi every live forty, and thoutandi younger, contract Tyvrrhea. IMeevling um ate ligex tignaL llvl it lor the .Ae c( ouru IihiK artvl liriliK. IkmJk )Mt ltk tik fprliaiys FoaniE r.UMs- St iJLm 4 t4 4 tymK s, a-.l . IwiiwiiHiiMMimmmiinMil '- 111 1 I U l 1 11 I 1 I I ft How to Help "Information" to Help You Wt find that nearly half of the numbers asked of information opera ton are correctly listed in the directory. I Wore you call "Information", always make sure that the numtx'r you wish is not in the directory, Thia s ill save time. When it is necessary to call an information qx-rator, please tivc her the complete and definite facts, such ui th correct knelhnitof the name, initial and address. (hy when given complete m.WtiuiUon cm t!ve girl ConuU their record a.nl uUain the rtumtr (or yuy quakly. Ar-d jour thtKi;ht(ul Mtiti.a ti,!0 a laf fnulhn tperatcr i fuidui the numrr will hr to help uu. 9 i! HoitTHWISTtRM BUI .il r m ftm m iiCaZw4.sTXwiaTj TttiPMONC COMPAMf rs " gati4.Ni