The Morning Bee morning—e ve nI ng—sunday the BEE PUBLISHING CO., Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press, of which The Bee Is e member, ]■ exclusively entitled to the use fov rcpuhlicettou of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local newe publiehed herein. All rights of repubUcatlons of our special dispatches are also rcaetred. BEE TELEPHONES Privet* Branch Exchange. Ask for the Department AT lantin or Person Wanted. For Night Calla After 10 P. M.: ,Ano Editorial Department. AT iantie 1021 or 1042. ,uuu OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam Co. Bluffs - - - 16 Scott St. So. Side. N. W. Cor. 24th and N New York—286 Fifth Avenue Washington - 422 Star Bldg. Chicago - - 1720 Stcger Bldg. FARMING MUST PAY. With high freight rates, high interest, high i taxes and high labor costs, the American farmer is at a disadvantage the moment he tries to compete j with the peons of Argentina, the ryots of India or the mujiks of Russia. Those do the farmer a dis service who hold out to him the illusion of profit able competition in the world market. Exports of American farm products are heavier now than be fore the war, yet this has not increased the price received by the producers. Senator Capper, who represents the agricul tural state of Kansas, declares that America can not raise a huge surplus of wheat in competition with cheap foreign labor and get fair prices for it. He says the acreage must be reduced. Every other line of production has adjusted its production ‘to the probable jlrofitable demand, but agriculture has been taught to believe that large yields are equiva lent to prosperity. The error has arisen from the belief that the gross selling value of farm products represents new wealth. As a matter of truth the only new wealth that comes out of the fields is the difference between what it costs to raise the prod ucts and what they sell for. * * * “Present indications,” says Wallace’s Farmer, “are that unprofitable hog prices will continue throughout the greater part of 1924.” That pre diction is based on the opinion that more pork is being produced than there is a profitable demand for. Senator Capper estimates that wheat is selling about 60 cents a bushel below the cost of produc tion. If actually there is an overproduction, no hastily devised system of co-operative marketing, intermediate credit or warehousing can give the farmer relief. He can only obtain a fair price by adjusting his production to the estimated demand. The problem, then, is not one of raising the largest possible crop, but raising an adequate crop at the least possible expense. • * • The mortgage indebtedness of the American farmers is approximately $7,000,000,000. The float ing debt and bank loans of farmers are estimated by the Department of Commerce at $3,500,000,000. The total exceeds the amount owed to the United State# by the governments of Europe. If France, Italy and the rest of the foreign nations feel that they are in pretty deep, what shall be said of the farmer! * * • Nevertheless there is hope. The American farmer is indomitable. He has never been a peasant, nor is he willing to be reduced in the social scale by lack of reward for his services. He is , >ing to find a way to make agriculture pay. The foreign market is never going to provide that opportunity. Those branches of agriculture are best off today that pro duce for the home market. In the course of time, with the increase in city population, it will be all the farmers can do to feed America. But before that condition arrives something must be done. The plain fact seems to be that the action is up to the farmer, but he may be assured that he has the sup port of all lines of business. It could not be other ! wise, for the prosperity of America depends on the welfare of the basic industry of agriculture. LIMITS OF MENTAL GROWTH. To each nature awards different gifts. It is for U3 to discover and develop them. Special abilities and disabilities must be taken into larger account in the process of education. It is futile to attempt to cast all minds in the same mold. “Every human being born into the world has the potentiality to develop to a certain degree and no farther,” says Dr. H. H. Goddard, an authority E on child nature. He is referring mainly to mental ability. It is rather a new view that beyond a cer Itain limit it is useless to attempt to impart knowledge to some individuals. Americans have always liked to helieve that, given the opportunity, every man could ■ become as expert as any other. This we know is not true in the mechanical trades; many men have abso lutely no engineering or mathematical ability. Artists are, as a rule, notoriously poor business men, and lew business men shine at writing poems or painting pictures. Furthermore, it is doubtful if any system of teaching could impart these traits. Millions of dollars are wasted every year in giving music lessons to children who have no sense of harmony. If what Dr. Goddard maintains is true, there are many young people who attend college who gain nothing from contact with higher education, and who would be more usefully employed in other ways. It may also be true that there are some children In high school who would be better fitted for life if put to some work for which they have an aptitude. It is not out of perversity or wilful inattention that some children fail in their studies, but simply because their brain pan is not shaped in that direction. And yet it is beyond tho powers of any scientist or educator to select tho ones who are best fitted for thinking. The opportunity must be open to all who wish to take it. People are not to he sorted out, indexed and card catalogued as to their particular role in life by any so-called scientific test. The most that can he done is to provide suitable channels f through which each child may muke his way accord * jng to his taste and ability. There is a dignity and worth in every soul that is not dependent upon the amount of hook learning that is stored up in the mind. It will be right nice of them if they will only get the prize fights all settled in time to let the American people have the line fall days and nights to attend to sopie simple matters like the railroad problem, the world court and a few other things. What piques an outsider's interest is to know how they distinguish fake from genuine buying i orders on Wall street. Mussolini is showing the boys what a real dicta tor looks like. He has just put a muzzle on the Italian newspapers. Argentine also produce* pugilists as well as ©thcr things to compete for Yankee custom. FRANCE ON THE RHINE. Development of science and industry have made the Ruhr region the richest prize in Europe. It could not be otherwise than a temptation to the French statesmen to seize and keep control of this region. Even during the darkest days of the world war French imperialists preached the gospel of annexa tion. The Rhineland has for centuries been the French desire for safety and for conquest. Mark Sullivan may point out that Poincare and Baldwin are' suffering from nervous strain and ascribe General Degoutte’s occupation policy to his lack of fresh air and exercise, together with illness in his family, but he would admit that there Rre deeper forces at work than these in the European situation. Many times since the 13th century one flag has been pulled down and another hoisted along the Rhine. It may even be true that the people them selves do not take the matter of nationality so ser iously as do Americans, but certainly they have no cause to revere the French. Back in the 17th century, during the wars of Louis XIV, the southern German provinces known as the Palatinate were dev astated by the French after they found out they could not hold them. Lord Macauley, in his “History of England,” gives the picture: “Duras received orders to turn one of the fairest regions of Europe into a wilderness. Fifteen years had elapsed since Turenne had ravaged part of that fine country. But the ravages committed by Turenne, though they have left a deep stain on his glory, were mere sport in comparison with the horrors of this second devastation. The French commander an nounced to near half a million of human beings that he granted them three days of grace, and that, with in that time, they must shift for themselves. Soon the roads and fields, which then lay deep in snow, were blackened by innumerable multitudes of men, women and children flying from their homes. Many died of cold and hunger; but enough survived to fill the streets of all the cities of Europe with lean and squalid beggars, whq had once been thriving farmers and shopkeepers. Meanwhile the work of destruc tion began. The flames went up from every market place, every hamlet, every parish church, every country seat, within the devoted provinces. The fields where the corn had been sown were plowed up. The orchards were hewn down. No promise of a harvest was left on the fertile plains near what had once been Frankenthal. Not a vine, not an al mond tree, was lo be seen on the slope of the sunny hills round what had ones been Heidelberg. No re spect was shown to palaces, to temples, to monas teries, to infirmaries, to beautiful works of art. to monuments of the Illustrious dead. The far-famed castle of the Elector Palatine was turned into a heap of ruins. The adjoining hospital was sacked. The provisions, the medicines, the pallets on which the sick lay were destroyed. The very stones of which Mannheim had been built were flung Into the Rhine.” Another armed march into Germany has come now. Doubtless the attitude of the French has been influenced by Bismarck’s unjust annexation of Alsace i and Lorraine, but this alternation of revenge must stop some day. Just as France’s lost provinces guaranteed a new war, bo would the theft of other territory from Germany sow seeds of further con flict. In the interest of justice, of peace and of humanity, of this generation and of those to come, it is to be hoped that French statesmanship will revise its historic policy on the Rhine. YES. WE HAVE NO GOLDFISH. Divorcement has been practiced among all races in every clime and country and all ages of human history. Many interesting volumes have been writ ten around the institution of marriage, and not all the varying theories of sociologists are entirely to man's credit with respect to his motives for the sanctity of the vow. Singular customs are recorded, from the simple expedient of merely kicking an of fending wife out of doors to the elaborate pro cedure of the modern courts. In some societies it is considered good form to require the discarded or deposed wife to wait as servant on the new. This gives the husband a dis tinct advantage. He may continue to have the a new feature into American divorce. She must have carefully conned history and romance as well pleasure of the cookery and other attentions he has become accustomed to, and at the same time'enjoy the society of a bride whose charms still attract. It remained for Marjorie Rambeau to introduce to get on track of a novel symbol, but she struck one finally. She simply passed a bowl of goldfish across the table to her husband, and he accepted it as a sign that all was over between them. Marriage ties that git so lightly may as well be dissolved by a bowl of goldfish as by the most pa tently corrosive of acids. Yet we doubt not that Marjorie will bp required to go through certain for malities in court before she is permitted to set up another fish bowl ns a “Mizpah” with another hus band. Nor is the great institution of marriage menaced In any substantial sense because some people are so foolish. Incense will still ascend from millions of altars on which loving hearts have laid their hopes, and little hits of humanity will gurgle and coo at parents proud and happy because their lives have truly merged into one, nnd goldfish bowls will be tolerated only as swimming pools for silly fish. Well, suppose Grant Shumway did use the state's time and the state’s stationery, and the state’s stamps to invite Brother Charley to attend a party in honor of Brother Bill—could he have made better use of the time, the stationery and the stamp? Twenty-one T. W. W. agitators at Los Angeles prefer state's prison to renunciation of their views. Thus does the list of martyrs grow. Dope mixers down at Lincoln nre fixing some fine tickets for next year, but the voters may yet decide the nominations. Homespun Verse —By Omaha's Own Poet— Robert Worthington Davie PIPE DREAMS. Each evening when the stars are out 1 light my pipe and dream, 1 hear the hoot owls weirdly shout, I we those stars agleam. From my rotreal I gaze afar Amid the putts of smoke— 1 view the things that sacred are, 1 see the eltn and oak: tVilhin the gloaming straight they aland Against s quiet sky Their boughs l each out to shake your hand If you are passing by. I hesr the whippoorwill's clear call From my secluded dell, And 1 am happy with It all— More so than I can tell. I hear the coyote crying out Koine where along the way — I shudder at his gruesome shout. But still my heart la gay. 1 puff my pipe and deeply gas* Into the apace of night. And dream of tha exquisite daye Long lost In rapid flight. “The People's Voice" Editorial! from reader* of Tda Morning Baa. Reader! of The Morning Boa ara Invltad to uaa thl! column frail* for axpraaaloo on matter! of publlo latercit. Supports Idea of Poets’ Club. Hastings, Neb.—To the Editor of The'Omaha Bee: The suggestion The Omaha Bee has made and is widely discussing of founding a poets’ club or writers’ guild for Nebraska or the mlddlewest seems a good and potent one. Why not? Nebraska has much to be proud of and could start with colors flying. That phrase, "The Great Plains Guild of Writers and Authors,” sounds like a march to vic tory. In literature Nebraska is bear ing good fruitage. With her writers —seekers after soul’s growth—banded together it might prove a ribbon of light radiating in all directions. Hiving with and for a great thought, a great purpose, one grows toward it. This spirit, working in fellowship, might and ought to find new growth, new strength and beauty in that fel lowship, when it has no fetterings, hut only the helping reach outward and upward; and sometimes co-opera tion proves an efficient energizer. Our great Nebraska is in Itself s rich, a fertile field for the poet or the novelist. We ony need to think and dream over it for a while and we find it is all there. Though I have con fined myself mostly to the universal, yet I see the great field near at hand and have been Impelled, sometimes thrilingly impelled, toward writing an epic drawn from this rich source alone; only interfering conditions have prevented; hut it rings Its music in me o'er and o'er; it rises on the mind's horizon like a mirage of the beautiful calling for its realization In expression. It may he a wrong to one's self and one s state by not responding to the call. May The Omaha Bee-s wise suggestion become an accomplished fact and that banner of fellowship he waved over our great calling west. They have these poets’ cluns and writers’ leagues elsewhere; why shoudn’t Nebraska he alive and active in the interests of this greatest line of endeavor for human progress? CAROHYN RENFREW. Hostile to McAdoo. Omaha—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: When the boy orator of Russia, Mr. Kerensky, was selling hia speeches, he attracted tha attention of Mr. Wilson, who exclaimed: "The new Russia will make us a good part ner.” Just then Mr. Kerensky's New York ambassador called on the crown prince, who was secretary of the treasury. At the concuston of the chat Mr. McAdon, guardian of the public money, held Mr. Kerensky's ambassador’s I. O. U. for $187,000,000 of the people's money. Will the suck ers now exclaim: "The crown prince would make us a good president.” Tha crown prince doesn't like isola tion; there are good reasons why OBSERVER. What the World Needs. Omaha—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Not many days ago I heard a group of Christian people tliacus w hat was wrong with the world. They ills cussed for some time. They concluded that the world needed Christianity. The world Is In u meet. Most people admit it. The particular group In question were sure of It What Is the matter? Who should bear ths hlarne? Our rulers in shop and state? We who submit are to blame. Not a government, not a so cial system, notan industrial regime, could last twenty-four hours In the face of united, widespread opposition. All rule Is by open or tacit consent of those subject to It. The ruling classes are virtually our agents. They have failed, but we do not protest effec tively; therefore we have failed. What Is the matter? We have failed, but why? If the reason Is lack of1 religion, what would happen If religion were present? Simply believe in God and hope for the best? But most of us do that now In a leisurely sort of way. ?dost people mean well, but that is not enough. They do as well ns they know, but their knowledge is so sadly limited. Few can explain even tha first principles of government. The average person lives and dies without thinking that he lives under an In dustrial system. It is easy to persuade many that "ths dictatorship of the proletariat," for example Is a new disease or a brand of dynamite. "Knowledge is power.” nnd the lack of It Is weakness and hopelessness and a crazv old world. Few of ua ever will know much, per haps. but fewer still need to lie stupid, given half way normal conditions Read. Think independently. Take nothing for granted. Know something of history and economics, labor and society. Read your Bibles with open eyes, paying particular attention lo Isaiah. the Psalms and the Fermon on the Mount. Don't atop even a‘ the risk of being called a radical, for the greatest In history have borne the huted brand. Even the Nazerene! 1 firmly believe that a general movement In this direction would bring about stuiiendous and beneficial changes. Just how they would affect the i hureh I do not know, hut surely religion would !>e purified and strengthened, and I do know that they would not lead lo a single human aoul being rejected from the arms of ever lasting love and Infinite Intelligence. EDMUND R. BRUMBAUGH. Trifling With Speeders. Omaha-—To the Editor of The Omaha Ree: Omaha has had it* full share of atitomohlles. Many citizens have ad or*. Every month there I* a toll of human live* and maimed men. women and children, caused by speeder* In automobile. Many citizens have ad vnnoed the Idea that drastic steps should ha taken In curbing these speeders nnd make life safer on the streets of Omaha. But In spite of *11 this, wo have the *|K*etaol* of a voting girl speeding recklessly 41 miles an hour down On^ha'S streets Sh.- lib mil, deftSd Daily Prayer Nay, 1n all thaaa thing# wa nr# more than ronquarora through Him that In vail! on K«r I am p*raua<1#«l, that q#lth©f <1 ruth. nor Ilf#, nor ang#l«. nor prln< ipal iti##. n<»r pow#rg. nor thing# pr#aant, no thing# to corn#. B«»r hMght nor il^pth B«r any oth«T <-r#atura •hall t»* aht# to aap nr#t# ua from tha lov# of Ood wh!' h t# in I'hrlat Jr#u# our Lord Homan# » I. ttt Almighty God. our Heavenly Father, In Whom wo live and move and hnv« our being, wo i©nd©r Tim© our hum hi© pmIm*h for Thy preservation of ua from iho boginning of our liv©* to this day; for Thy many met ©ion wo Mean and magnify Thy glortmia name. Anti alnm it i* of Thy mercy. o grnrlntin Kalb©!*, (hnl another tiny la added lt» our liven. wo hoi© d^tlirnl# both our aoul* nnd our bodies to Tit* © nnd Thy sorvlr©. Wo would rcm©mb©r before Thy Throne of Grate all than© who ar© n©nr and dear to ua. and nil for whom w© nr© bound to piny. Tl© merciful to nil who ar© In any trouble, and b© araoloualy planned to f«1<© tia and nil thing* belonging to tis«t under Thy Fatherly rara and protec tion thin dny, and forev©rmore. We ask It for Ghrlet’a aak©. Amen BISHOP r/nin.BKnT talbot, South U«thith«m, Ja Thlrty-thrc* years ago Omaha wan diac-uasln* the question of municipal ownership of public utilities, and In July, 1*90. the Omaha Water company was applying for an extension of It■ franchise, which was to expire In l#o?. On July 18 of that year, Mr. Rosewater wrote. "MAKE HASTE SLOWLY.” "The proposition to extend the char ter of the American Water Works company twelve years beyond the limit of its present tenure should be carefully considered and weighed in all its bearings. "Under the present charter the city will have the privilege of purchasing )he entire plant within 13 years, f-'lnce that contract was made the population of the city has increased loO.OOO and Its area has been extended from nine to 25 square miles. The hydrant rental for a city of 35,000 population was reasonable at $84 per year, but the number of hy drants have been Increased from 200 to 1,100 and the water tax has reached dimensions that almost absolutely pre clude the planting of additional hy drants. "The company now proposes to put in 400 additional hydrants at a yearly rental that will not exceed the amount now paid for the 1.100 hydrants, pro viding the city will extend the fran chise 12 years. "This proposition should be con sidered purely from a business stand point. The question is, will 400 addi tional hydrants offset the reduction that we shall Inevitably get, not only for the city but for private consumers, bythe time the present charter ex pires? "This Is a proposition of such grave moment to all classes of our citizens that no hasty action woud be Justi fied. In any event, no ordinance granting such an extension should t>e enacted without submitting the propo sition to the voters of Omaha for ratification." the police who arrested her and be cause or the fact that her sw eet hi art was In town, was granted a 24-hnur reprieve. The sentence given was only two days—two days when there was every chance that she might have crushed out the lives of little children as she dashed madly along. Two days seemed small sentence Indeed for one who openly defied the law and boasted that In California sne used to speed 50 miles an hour. Treating the whole nffair as a joke this young lady, guilty or a crime for which most folks believe there should be drastic punishment, was let off after serving only hair a day. Are Omaha's streets safe’ Hardlv when disregard for speeding laws Is so open and defiant and the penalty so light. Should we trifle with a proposition that Is a menace to human 1 if• II. H R A Call to the Poets. Omaha—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Anent the Poets’ cluh. could you make some announcement of the fact that I am planning a meeting of all Nebraska poets to bo held In the near future at the Chamber of Commerce for the purpose of outlining plans of organization, and would like to have every poet In Omaha attend? I would like to have everybody inter ested write me at the Chamber of Com merce and when I get an Idea as to the number In attendance. I will nr range for the meeting and the date JACK LEE. Historic Spots Neglected. Ogalalla—To the Editor of The Omaha Her Tour editorial. "Drama In the Field*." is very fine and very sug gestlve. We need men and w men who are hlg enough and broad enough to assist In keeping the Ideal* of the past before the ever changing times of today. Personally I am ns much interested in some little article which has been preserved and handed down ns any man living. I never see an old stage roach, but what I ran not help standing before it with a feeling of awe. and you might say reverence, for 1 realize the great part it played in the civilisation, especially in this great big west. T can not help but Wonder of the thrilling tins i tis occupants must have had In the trips, they took across the ever same but still very new frontier Whenever I see the murks of buckshot on its aid' s I can form picture . f the In i. in raids, and the great race for suprem acy in the new countries. Have rve dona anything to preserve theso land marks’’ One may take tha trip to Halt Inuty spots. The bill not only provides for a per mit fee but empowers the department to remove any sign it cares to remove without giving cause. Billboards give all American towns a sameness when viewed from a railroad train, and are unsightly But that will no longer be the rasa In Nebraska, and neither will » b hwsv« def . ,1 by them if the Department of Public Works see* to it that the law is enforced.—Shel ton Clipper. Drop the “I" From ih. I.otilrviil* Courier-Journal Hu the world of letters made up Its mind that the American news paper correspondent's formula. I have this moment come from the Kremlin,'' In rein Unis the assassination of a Russian c*ar. Is the thing? Js It cither essential for substance, nr Im portant for form, that the writer a personality lie Intruded upon the reader, and intruded with an egotism that is distinctly repelling? Hardly a field tn the wide domain of letters nowadays escapes thia nuisance. Ft nka reck with it. Maga ilnes Mare it. Future articles in newspapers parade It. Politicians, artists, critics, engage in it. While Kenatnr Horghum In * Hal! at one street comer is saying ' t tike to think that th> tariff is a Messing to all our people." Representative Bun combe, in a hall across the street, con lldcs to his hearers "I know you agree with me when t say that the tariff Is a national Might," In making a little talk, callow youth opens with ' When I was in London In the fall of lids'' and winds up with something like I shall not soon for get how 1 felt while m Tokto when the orange trees were abloom" Apart from letting their hearer* or Hie reader on to the fact that speaker or author h is been about a hit, this use of the first persona] pro noun is valueless. From It disciplined minds turn to literature that lives, to writers and speakers who were im mersed more In their subjects than In themselves Politicians. In search of a model, are ejoinmended to make friends with Jefferson's first inaugural address and Lincoln's Gettysburg address. Kssav ists may do well to consult Bacon's essays. Writers of history may profit bv Motley, whoso "Dutch Republic" Is rightly said to be as nearly perfect a* industry and genius could make it. In none of these may tha offense now In mind be found. Writers and speakers who have a message are self detached. What they may say or write ts free of egotism. NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION for June. 1923, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily .*. 72.799 Sunday. 77,783 n.*« not Include return*, left over*, unmples or paper* *p**iled In j j j print me amt include* no tpeeial . I ■ala*. B. BREWER. Gen. Mgr. V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mgr. Subscribed and »wnm tn before nit thi* 7th day of Jltlf. Ill) \\ H QUIVF.Y. I Seal) Notary Public. j When m Omaha Stop at Hotel Rome --1—r.ir A Booh 0/ Today "JARVIS'-—By Reginald Kaufman. The Ht. Botoloph Boclety. This book, the first efforts of a use ful mind focussed on sex problems, lias been deemed worthy of reprint by some of the author’s friends. It deals with the tragic-comedy of an American boy who has been brought up alone, an only child, never attending a school, either private or public, nor ha%’lng any of the natural associations of boyhood. Books and adults Immersed in business or so ciety make all his world. Just when he ie ready to enter Harvard he meets In his own social connections a young woman who would in these days he styled a ’’beautiful vamp." This fair Delilah beguilea bis Innocence and he departs for Harvard burdened with anxious thought. The flood of books on etlquet con tinues in sn unmannerly way. A re cent volume is that of Laura Thorn borough, "Etlquet for Everybody.” iRarse A Hopkinat. Less bulky than others, It seeks to cover all phases of the subject and to be "a guide to social usage for old and young.” Joseph F. Fishman served for a pe riod of years as Inspector of prisons for the United Htates government, and he has been an independent prison investigator and consultant for state and municipal governments. In col laboration with Vee Perlman he has written “Crucibles of Crime,” being a strong indictment against jail condi tions as he observed them In many states. The author explains that It Is his purpose to arouse public sen timent. "The opinion has been eg. pressed that once the public became cognisant e>f this barbarous situation, It will demand a swift change,” Mr. Fishman w rites. It is evident that the author was a keen observer while making his rounds in the penal Insti tutions of the country. The book is published hy the Cosmopolis Press. New York City. Abe Martin “Oh, give me another chance, don't be a brute!!!” shrieked Miss Fern Moppe, this mornin’, when 'Squire Marsh Swallow told her she’d have t’ wear cotton hose at th’ reformatory. Lafe Bud washes his Ford ever' mornin’ so he kin identify it right off th' bat. I Copyright. 1t2f.) HAVE The Omaha j Morning Bee or The Evening Bee mailed to you when on your vacation. Phone AT lantic 1000, j Circulation Department. __ - A New Lighting Fixture Transforms an Old Room It’s really surprising! Nothing makes a room look smarter and more up-to date than a new lighting fixture of good design. Try the effect of a handsome urn in verted light in your hallway, or cluster candelabra in the dining room. Replacing lamps (bulbs) will often produce a very surprising effect. Now is a Good Time to Get New Globes at These Attractive Prices 10-25-40-50-Watt Clear Edison OO _ Mazda Lamp .. . . . OfciC 50-Watt White Edison Mazda Pj Lamp...DUC 60-Watt Clear Edison Mazda Q ^ Lamp.D/C 75-Watt Clear Edison Mazda CC Lamp.DDC 75-Watt Bowl Enamel Edison Hf\ Mazda Lamp.OUC 75-Watt White Edison Mazda Lamp.OUC 100-Watt Clear Edison Mazda *7 f\ Lamp.#UC 150-Watt Clear Edison Mazda AA Lamp.DUC Nebrdskd ® Power <5. No Packing No Carrying! Imagine the luxury of having the most im portant vacation article reach your lake or camp without you having any packing or carry ing to bother with. For a full enjoyment of your vacation, The Omaha Bee is indispensable. Telephone or write to The Omaha Bee stating just where you will spend your vacation and the length of time you expect to be away. We will pay all post age costs and you will be charged just the regular delivery rate which you are now pay. ing the carrier. AT WOO AT WOO The Omaha Bee