Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 27, 1919, Page 6, Image 6

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THE BEE: OMAHA, FKlDAY, JUNE 27, 1919.
1
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BY EDWAED ROSZWATEB
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tli, Associated Press of which Th Km ! a number, la ss
ehislrelr aUllwt to the use for pubilrstlon of oil news dispatches
endued lo U or Dot otherwise credited la this paper, and alao the
local news publiihad bantu. AJI rlthta of publication of our apo
dal dltpatcboa ave alio rctaned.
BEE TELEPHONES i
Private Branch Kichania. Art for tho Tvla. 1 (ff
Department or Particular Tenoa Wanted, 1 JrlCr i VVfV
For Night or Sunday Service Call:
frfltortal Departiuwit ..... Tyler I0OOL.
Circulation Utpartmant ..... Trior 1008L.
sdttrtietns Department ..... Trior 100&L.
V OFFICES OF THE BEE:
Home Office. Boo Bulldlnf. Nth and Farnam.
nrancn unices:
Ames 4110 North 24 Park
Bensua 61U Mlllurr Are. South Bide
rouncil Bluffi 14 fi. Main Vlntnn
Lake Kit North 24th Walnut
Out-of-Town Officesi
New Tort Cltr 580 Fifth Are. ' Washlntton
Chlcaiio Seeser Bid-. I Lincoln
2613 Loaren worth.
3318 N Street.
2467 South 16th
am North 40th.
1311 O Street.
1330 H Street.
APRIL CIRCULATION
Daily 65, 830 Sunday 63,444
aubscrlbed and iwora to by
Arerao circulation f..r tho month
X. K. Raiau, CliruLiiiDu Manner.
Subscribers leaving the city should have Tha Bee mailed
to them. Address changed as often aa requested.
Kelly remains unfinished business.
Whitewash seldom sticks and frequent re
newal becomes annoying.
One little thunder shower can make quite a
difference, if it comes at the right time.
The Omaha base ball team would do better
if it were to spread out its runs over more
games.
Kansas is on guard against the I. W. W.
Other food producing states may well emulate
this vigilance.
If . Herr Hohenzollern is shocked to think the
Germans should "surrender," but why did he
;? ' abdicate and run away?
Herr Hindenburg now talks about going
down with an "honorable fall." What does he
call what happened to him?
With the crown prince wandering around
loose, the plot ought to get as thick as the
average German politician's head.
Lincoln voters apparently care as little as
those of Omaha when it comes to the matter of
issuing bonds for public improvements.
Wrightsville, Ga., wherever that is, will be a
popular place if the liberty accorded the ladies
in choice of bathing suits is appreciated.
Mayor Smith's antipathy for the red flag is
quite generally shared by the labor unions, and
he ought not to make the mistake of confusing
the two.
t
i
t
1
Still the question is unanswered as to why
the War department wants to sell 30,000,000
pounds of bacon to the packers instead of to
the public.
King Constantine, out of a job and broke,
finds himself just about where a plain citizen
would be in ljke circumstances. , And there is
hut" little 'doing in his line right now.
More than a thousand pounds of . food for
each person in the country is now held in stor
age in the United States. This may account
for the steadily mounting cost of living.
Secretary Baker's purchases of enormous
tracts of land in Georgia and other southern
states since the war ended is now under fire.
It may yet be shown that he knoSvs where (he
votes come from.
"Resolutions do not hurt me," says the
mayor, and he might have added that they get
little or no attention from him, unless they
are of the sort that approve- some one or an
other of his shifting views.
3
"For the last time I raise in free Germany
a protest against this treaty of violence and de
struction," said Premier Bauer in the Weimar
assembly, and the voices that applauded him
were the same that shouted "Hochl" when the
news came from Liege, Louvain and the
Lusitania.
Fire chiefs in convention at Kansas City
formally approve the two-platoon organization
of fire departments, as improving morale, in
creasing efficiency, and generally advancing the
service. This conclusion is based on the ex
perience of 180 cities, -among which Omaha is
one of the earliest to adopt the plan.
Public Health Bureau
If the members of the American Medical
association will but get together and agree on
a uniform policy with regard to the pressing
need of a federal department of health, there
is little doubt that congress will come to their
relief and establish such a department.
It is not only the experience of the country
with the influenza and infantile paralysis epi
demics that brings home to every layman as
well as professional men the need of absolute
co-ordination and standardization of public
medicine and of all preventive and quarantine
methods that must be set up from time to time,
but the experience of the medical profession in
the war hat confirmed everything that civil, life
has revealed as to the gross stupidity that has
for years prevented a federal department of
health from being set up.
At the same time, this situation cannot be
blamed wholly on the ignorance of the laity in
congress, since, as all medical men know, the
failure to secure a federal department of health
has been due in part to what is known as "med
ical politics." But surely when, as Dr. Charles
H. Mayo pointed out to the convention in At
lantic City in advocating that a department of
health be established, with a member of the
cabinet, it is a fact that as many as 18 bureaus
and departments at Washington take a hand
in some phase of the public health problem, it
is time that the profession got together and
acted as a unit in demanding that an end be
put to this fatuous procedure.
As it is, congress had better be memorialized
to establish such a department, in connection
with the request that it appropriate $1,500,000,
for an investigation of influenza. For, under
existing conditions, to ask large sums with
jnt securing absolute co-ordination in their ex
penditure for experimentation looking to the
.improvement of the public health is not the
a-jsest procedure. Everything that has hap
pened within the last two years cries out for a
properly centralized federal department of
health, and the public, as well as the medical
men, should insist that, this very necessary de-
fartment be established at once. Philadelphia
.edger.
DRAFT CONVENTION DELEGATES.
It is time for the people of Omaha and
Douglas county to wake up to the importance
of the coming constitutional convention for
which delegates will have to be filed next month.
Under the apportionment we will send
twelve from Douglas county and these twelve
ought to be the most representative men in the
community. If they are to be chosen under the
nonpartisan plan as provided for, they must be
of both political parties and regardless of their
party affiliation they should be men of standing
and men who stand for something men whom
we want to send rather than mere self-seekers
who want to go.
The kind of men we ought to have represent
ing this county containing the great metropolis
of the state with its varied and important inter
ests, are just those who will not push them
selves forward as candidates, but must be made
to go as a matter of public duty.
Not by way of excluding anyone or institut
ing invidious comparisons, we ought in our
judgment to have lawyers like Norris Brown,
John L. Kennedy, John J. Sullivan, Howard H.
Baldrige, George W. Magney, Benjamin S.
Baker; business men like Robert Cowell,
Thomas C. Byrne, C. M. Wilhelm, John W.
Gamble, John W. Towl; some one for the live
stock interests like James G. Martin or Gene
Melady; ex-soldiers back from overseas duty
like Capt. Allan Tukey, Capt. C. F. McLaugh
lin, or doctors like Major Stokes and Major
Henry; some one from outside the city like J.
C. Robinson, of Waterloo; some of our natural
ized citizens like Harry Wolf or Vaclav Buresh,
and possibly a preacher like Rev. Titus Lowe,
Dr. E. H. Jenks or Dr. Frank Smith. Of course
there should be one or more delegates repre
senting the wage working classes, men who are
identified with the labor movement, who have
the confidence of the conservative, sober-minded
laboring man.
These suggestions are not intended to com
mit The Bee or any one else to these particular
men, but to direct attention to the character of
the men who should be summoned to help draft
our new constitution. The Bee would like to
have its readers propose other names for con
sideration, for in this way only will we be able
finally to secure a really representtive delega
tion which is so greatly to be desired.
. j What Ails Omaha?
Fewer than one in seven of the voters of
Omaha took the trouble to express their ap
proval or dissent to a $3,000,000 road bond issue.
The city commissioners by a vote of 5 to 2
condoned, and whitewashed detectives accused
of the most outrageous conduct ever charged
against public officials in this community.
The representatives of a certain phase of
public activity, when asked why they did, not
abandon an obsolete and misleading practice,
answered that, although The Bee had shown
them the blunder, they thought they would go
on as they were doing.
Here are three instances symptomatic of the
situation. Civic indifference, lethargy of the
public conscience, whatever term may be ap
plied to it, apparently controls. Only the people
themselves are to blame.
It is no pleasure to expose wrong-doing or
to criticize public servants, nor is it of great
avail, when warning and admonition alike en
counter only inattention. Blowing bubbles
and chasing rainbows will not better the local
situation. If Omaha Is td- improve and go
ahead as it ought, a more lively concern in
public affairs than is now manifest must be
awakened.
Getting Back on the Job.
The decision of the Central Labor union not
to call a general walkout in Omaha was well
taken. Loud talk and vehement assertions on
either side will not help in adjusting any of the
difference's between workers and employers.
These only can be settled in conference wh,ere
calm counsel prevails and wisdom directs the
outcome. In the present strike, limited as it
was, fair employers were made to suffer be
cause some were deemed unfair. The injustice
of this does not require argument. A general
tie-up would have increased this imposition and
would have punished the fair employers more
than it would have affected those who decline
to deal with the unions. It is encouraging to
note that the leaders of labor in Omaha are at
last cognizant of this fact. Reasonably satis
factory conditions of labor seldom if ever flow
from violence. Settlements that come through
direct bargaining are the only basis for the co
operation that must be had if industry is to
thrive. The sooner the union men who have
been out on sympathy strike get back to work
for the employers who are willing to treat them
fairly, and by their faithful attention to business
show the sincerity of their purpose, the easier it
will be to make a bargain for the others.
Work of the War Labor Board.
The War Labor board is winding up busi
ness, preparatory to its dissolution. No agency
of the government performed a more needed
work in a more efficient way than this. Called
into existence as an emergency organization, it
was charged with the delicate and perplexing
task of stabilizing as far as possible industrial
conditions. This required that complex nego
tiations be carried on, searching, though hasty,
inquiries be made, and a full and sympathetic
as well as patriotic understanding of the difficult
problems be reached, in order that adjustments
might be made and the wheels kept turning at
high speed while the war was on. Its activity
gave vitality to the practice of settling labor
disputes by conciliation or arbitration, fixed the
principle of collective bargaining, and brought
relations between the employers and employed
to a better standing than ever prevailed. That
the board did not finally solve all the difficulties
in the way of industrial peace is not its fault.
Here and there a group on one side or the other
declined to accept the ruling made, and under
took to enforce its own views, but in the main
labor and capital found room to stand on the
ground prepared by the War Labor board. Its
existence has been fully justified by the results
it obtained.
It is Dr. Pershing now, by virtue of Oxford
university's having made him doctor of civil
law. He earned this degree by services in
France, but his bachelor degree in law he won
by hard study at the University of Nebraska,
and that is the one that counts.
If the torrid weather could only be induced
to operate on a six-day schedule, then the
mayor's plan to do away with Sunday delivery
of ice would be perfectly feasible. .
When New York Takes a Bath
From the New York Post.
There were enough baths to go around Sat
urday, for a wonder. Saturday was the hottest
day this summer each Saturday always is, you
know. The Pate.llo baby in Jones Street almost
didn't get any, through the conductor on the
trains falling foul of the salt bath that Patsy
Patello was bringing home to her from Coney
in a milk bottle. For a few minutes it was quite
a question as to whom was going to get the bath
and where. Patsy won out, however, and was
able to deliver the bath to the baby in person
on the fire escape later in the evening.
Yes, baths were certainly in order and in
evidence. The town was determined on baths.
They pushed and shoved and used fists and
had words and about ten thousand went through
the municipal bathhouses at Coney Island,
which is a verysmall proportion compared with
those who were of a size that could conveniently
make shift behind mother's umbrella.
And the trails to all the beach resorts were
clogged with the various forms of that mysteri
ous bundle known to contain the bathihg suit,
but still mysterious by reason of its powers of
compression and the diversity of its manifesta
tions. Sometimes it is a knitting bag, sometimes
a corset box, often merely a fat shopping bag,
just once it was a lawyer's brief case. Some
men think they can conceal it in a collar box;
and how.it swells and forces it uncouth identity
on the pretty girl sitting next on the trip home.
No one need bother again this summer about
getting the right trains for the beach. Just fol
low the bags.
In town the line formed early for tub baths
at the public bath houses,' which were worked
to capacity. Up to noon they poured in by the
family, and great was the noise and splash in
those neighborhoods. Children, an average of
four to a mother, disappeared, without the usual
protest, into the cubicles, while mothers and at
tendants enjoyed all the results of a Turkish
bath. After noon the grownups had things to
themselves, and at 11 o'clock Saturday night one
attendant, mopping up the floor for the hun
dredth time, declared it to have been the most
useful day of her life.
But those are all the more or less conven
tional baths. Ladies of a Victorian delicacy,
finding themselves off the beaten track, must
have thought they were being punished for this
indiscretion ty a Kiplingesque "sending," this
time of small, naked boys. Every East Side
street, from Brooklyn Bridge up, emptied a t.-rt
of its population into the river, while policemen,
headachy from counting and recounting each
group, and weighed down by responsibilities and
clothes, whistled vainly from the bank.
In the park lakes there were nooks that only
half concealed the almost nude bathers and the
policemen that slept peacefully while they
waited for someone to drown himself. At the
little "Round Pond," where model little girls
and boys sail model little boats, one bold, bad,
red headed adventurer was seen up to the neck
among the goldfish, while a group of more
conservative sympathizers took care of his
clothes and watched for the cop.
The street sprinklers helped some, too, but
the real treat of the day was when the white
wings" came along, about 10 at night and turned
on the water plugs, whether to clean the streets
and cool them or to do the same for the left
over bathless ones is immaterial, for both prof
ited. East Side and West Side were, in the main,
ready and dressed for it. By that time most of
the babies were in something resembling the
scorned one-piece bathing suit and, uncensored,
they raced to the corners where the older chil
dren were already casting off anything that mat
tered in the way of shirts and conventions.
Those who were in bed fose and went, some "as
is, others showing a fine regard for the proprie
ties in mother's old sweater or an old coat of
father's.
Shades of those deep, cool swimming holes
that must be a necessity of the small boy's na
ture, for where they do not exist he invents
them.
People You Ask About
Information About Folks in
the Public Eye Will Be Given
in This Column in Answer
to Readers' Questions. Your
Name Will Not Be Printed.
Let The Bee Tell You.
Council Bluffs: It Is reported
that the prince of Wales may visit
here In August.
Joining Hands
Some day the hatred and bitterness of this
war will have 1 passed away and humanity will
be reconciled. How soon that day will come is
a matter on which there are different opinions;
Grand Admiral von Tirpitz and Enver Pasha,
with a vision of the gallows blocking off the
future, would like to see it dawn tomorrow;
the mothers of Belgian children, the fathers of
deported French girls, the surviving Armenians,
may feel that this would be somewhat prema
ture. A group of French writers, the best
known of whom is the variously eminent Bar
busse, think that the time is already at hand;
they have issued an appeal to intellectuals of all
lands to "scorn hatred of all kinds and join
hands for the task of tomorrow."
For some unexplained reason no German re
sponse has yet been made public; but intellectu
als of Austria hastened to clasp the outstretched
hand, and another answer has now come from a
group of American authors describing them
selves as
We, your brothers in the dear home land
of Emerson, Whitman, Lincoln; lovers of
our country, taught by our country the love
of mankind, ourselves feeling the blood of
all the races of your ancient Europe in our
veins.
These lyrical ladies and gentlemen tell "the
intellectual fighters of Paris and Vienna" that
"we in America have heard and understand;"
that "for all nations there can be but one hu
manity, one in its piteous sins, one in its true
worth and works."
Among the lovers of the dear home land of
Emerson, Whitman and Lincoln who have
signed this fraternal greeting are Dr. Edmund
von Mach, Dr. William Bayard Hale, Professor
Thomas C. HalU Frederick Franklin Schrader,
Frank Harris, and Padraic Colum. Along with
these representatives of intellectual entities, run
ning all the way from the Irish Republic to the
Fort Oglethorpe internment camp, there are
a dozen or so authentic Americans. One may
wonder how the signatures of some of them,
who knew what tae war was about not more
than a year ago, have been obtained to this
remarkable document; conceivably they didn't
know what other names would appear beside
theirs when the appeal for the forgiveness of
the criminal before he has begun to serve his
sentence was issued to the public. New York
Times.
The Day We Celebrate.
Frank Dewey, county clerk, born in Cedar
Rapids, la., 1862.
Daniel T. Quigley, physician, born 1876.
Miss Helen A. Keller, the celebrated deaf and
blind scholar, born at Tuscumbia, Ala., 39 years
ago.
Heber D. Curtis, astronomer of Lick Observa
tory, born at Muskegon, Mich., 47 years ago.
Sir Herbert Ames, chairman of the Canadian
National War Savings committee, born in Mon
treal, 56 years ago.
Viscount Inajiro Tajiri, a Yale graduate who
is now mayor of the city of Tokyo, born at
Kyoto, Japan, 69 years ago.
May Irwin, for many years a leading come
dienne of the American stage, born at Whitby,
Ont., 57 years ago.
Thirty Years Ago in Omaha.
Omaha now occupies first place in the West
ern Base Ball association.
Plymouth club of Plymouth Congregational
church, assisted by Mrs. F. W. Hills, A. E.
Mercer, Frank Brown, Herbert Rogers and
John Brown, gave a concert.
W. A. Paxton and wife have gone south.
Appraisers for the new government building,
appointed by Judge Dundy, are: P. W. Birk
hauser, Richard S. Berlin, William F. Bechel,
Andrew Rosewater, Robert C. Jorden and Henry
D. Estabrook.
I would like to know where
Caruso can be heard next winter, if
it Is possible to tell me? M. O.
Caruso has been .re-engaged with
the Metropolitan Opera company.
New York, for a four-year period.
Miss Farrar has accepted a three
years' extension of contract. Mr.
Amato, completely restored to health,
will resume his place with the com
pany. So if you are fortunate
enough to hear Caruso next season,
you will have opportunity to enjoy
other famed artists.
I read with interest the recent
reference in "People You Ask
About'" column to the engagement
of Princess Mary. Can you tell me
more about the "man in the case?"
G. D.
We made it clear, did we not, that
there has been denial of the en
gagement of Princess Mary, only
daughter of England's king and
queen, to the earl of Dalkeith, in
spite of which rumor persists. The
earl is a lieutenant in the Grenadier
Guards, the Prince of Wales' regi
ment. Serving on the personal staff
of the sovereign as he did, he came
in close touch with the royal circle.
He is a scion of one of the oldest
and most famous of noble Scotch
families. The family! mot is "Amo"
"I love." Twenty-five years old,
tall, clean-shaven and good looking,
he is the eldest of three brothers.
He is of the house of the "bold
Buccleuchs." The first head of the
family was Sir Walter Scott (not the
novelist). The Scotts fought with
the Douglases against the king of
Scotland, and in the process founded
the vast estate, which today
amounts to some 460,000 acres.
Many are the honors and high the
titles which will descend up on the
earl of Dalkeith.
How did Booth Tarkington reach
his present success as a writer?
L. H. M.
By ability and hard work the
route over which success of almost
any kind comes. It is said of Tar
kington that he worked for eight
years writing almost incessantly and
acquiring as varied an assortment of
rejection Blips as was ever accumu
lated by a struggling author, until
S. S. McClure finally accepted "Mon
sieur Beaucaire," and then "The
Gentleman from Indiana." In "Pen-
rod" and "Seventeen" he has equaled
if not excelled Mark Twain in de
lineation of the psychology of boy
hood and youth.
Newton Booth Tarkington was
born in Indianapolis, Ind.. on .Tr'"
29, 1869. His family was one of
means. He attended t'uruue u....t.
sity at Lafayette, Ind., where Mc
Cutcheon and George Ade had pre
ceded him, and later graduated from
Princeton. He was married to Lau
rel Louisa Fletcher In 1902, by whom
he had one daughter, and in 1912
to Susannah Robinson.
DREAMLAND
ADVENTURE
By DADDY.
"CINDERELLA'S BALL."
(Peggy and Billy go to Cinderella's ball,
which la broken up when Rod Beard ap
pears among the dancers disguised aa an
elephant. Billy saves Peggy from the
Turk, but is himself placed in danger.)
Ostrich Loses His Head.
RED BEARD'S dancing apparent
ly hadn't; made him tired,
while Billy was out of breath from
blowing the magic whistle. So the
Turk would have captured Billy in
a minute if the latter hadn't made
quick use of his wits. Billy pre
tended to flee, but when Red Beard
came at him with outstretched arms
he suddenly turned and made a foot
ball tackle, grabbing the Turk by
the legs.
Wham! Red Beard hit the floor
so hard that the palace shook. Billy
staggered to his feet and dashed for
the door.
"Climb on my back," whistled Op
timistic Ostrich, meeting him half
way. In another instant Billy wa3
beside Peggy and the ostrich was
skidding across the slippery waxea
floor. Red Bear lurched to his feet
and foaaowed. Peggy saw to her
alarm that the tumble had split the
eiepnant skin ana the Turk was
drawing his gleaming scimitar. Red
Beard in his rage forgot the slip
Can you tell me the name of the
Iowa girl with the best school record
for attendance? Omaha School Girl.
Miss Alyce R. Miller, daughter of
Calvin J. Miller, a druggist of Wa
terloo, who has not been absent from
school or tardy in 13 years. She thus
excels the record of Miss Eva Peters
of Renwick, who has a similar rec
ord for 12 years.
J. H. If you are interested in the
new Pacific fleet of the United States
navy you may be glad to know that
Admiral Hugh Rodman has been as
signed to its command. He is a
brilliant and versatile officer, and one
who has seen more sea duty than
any other man on the active list,
He is a native of Kentucky and was
appointed to the naval academy
from that state. When he left An
napolis in 1879 he was assigned to
the Yantic and went to sea. Later
he devoted many years to coast sur
vey work. It was his good fortune
to be with Admiral Dewey in the
Philippines and to be the agent
through whom Spain surrendered its
forts on Corregidor island. In the
latter part of 1917 he was appointed
to duty with the British grand fleet,
and when the United States entered
the war in the following April he
was given command of the United
States battleships operating in the
war zone. Last September Admiral
Rodman was knighted by King
George with the Order of the Bath
"MISS LIBERTY."
There's a Rlrl that I will look for
When I sail into home port,
And I know that she'll be waiting there
for me;
She was the last one I did view
When I sailed the ocean blue.
That good old girl they call "Miss Lib
erty." Her welcome will be bright
Just as soon as she can sight,
And a gleam she'll send far out Into the
bay.
There'll be almost mutiny.
So glad I'll be to see
"Miss Liberty," the girl of U. S. A.
How I long ofttime to see her
With her flaming torch held high
For freedom she proclaims triumphantly.
She's a girl that is true blue
And will never prove untrue,
And firm she stands for truth and liberty.
To receive all she Is waiting
And help in- celebrating
A victory by men of tho TJ. S. A.
And she'll be always ready.
Her hand is firm and steady.
For Miss Liberty will never be passee.
Omaha. BELLVIEW.
DAILY CARTOONETTE
tf0HN-Y0U0UfHT TO SHOW
YOUR PATRIOTISM, BY
MaRCHmijmTHfiRfiflT
VICTORY PARflTiF I
rV
ANDHEJIID- "
Wham! Red Beard Hit at Floor so
Hard that the Palace Shook.
periness of the floor and all of a
sudden both feet went out from un
der him and down he sat with a
walloping bump.
That gave Optimistic Ostrich time
to get out of the dor before Red
Beard came In pursuit.
Now there came a terrific race
across the plain toward the distant
river. Optimistic Ostrich, loaded as
he was, stepped out faster than the
fastest race horse, but Red Beard,
in spite of being handicapped by
the cumbersome elephant hide, cov
ered the ground with astonishing
speed.
Nearer and nearer drew Red
Beard until Peggy and Billy could
see his piggy eyes squinting through
the slits in the elephant skin. And
looking ahead they saw that the
river at the point for which Op
timistic Ostrich was heading was
swift and turbulent.
Inch by inch Red Beard gained
until, with the river five yards away,
he was only a pard behind. He was
sure to grab them as they plunged
'nto- the water.
' But Optimistic Ostrich also had a
trick play. At the very bank of
the stream he dodged aside, and as
Red Beard tried to stop, Optimistic
"JfieB
west
wo
Constitutional Convention.
Omaha, June 20. To the Editor
of the The Bee: When will the pro
posed constitutional convention sit?
How many delegates elected in en
tire state? How many nominated
and elected in Douglas" county?
When will the primary and election
be held? AN INQUIRY.
Answer The constitutional con
vention is called to assemble
on Wednesday, December 10. It will
consist of 100 delegates, chosen in
the same manner and from the same
districts as the house of representa
tives in the legislature. Doug
las qpunty is entitled to 12 members.
The primary for nominations will be
held on September 9, and the elec
tion on November 3.
Limited Suffrage for Women.
Omaha, June 24. To the Editor
of The Bee: Would you kindly in
form me, through your question and
answer column, on what offices wo
men may now vote in the state of
Nebraska, and on what offices they
may not vote? A. R. D.
Answer Uner the limited suf
frage statute of Nebraska women
can vote for all but constitutional
offices and on all but constitutional
questions.
IN THE BEST OF HUMOR.
Bella Aren't you worried because you
don't know where your husband goes,
when he is out late at night?
Donna Not nearly so much as I would
be if I knew. Cartoons Magazine.
"A thoroughbred gentleman puts on hla
clothes and then forgets them."
"That's what I tried to do, but my
tailor won't let me." Boston Jranscrlpt,
"It's nice to be connected with a fine
family, isn't it?"
"All depends. Not when the butler tells
you to ring off." Loulsvills Courier-Journal.
Hazel Was papa very angry when you
asked him for me, George, dear?
Lieutenant Not at all; he asked me If
I couldn't bring around a couple of more
officers so that he could marry off your
two sisters. Ontario Post.
"BAYER CROSS" ON
GENUINE ASPIRIN
govern
"tiavrar Tahlots nf .Asnirin" to be
genuine must be marked with the
nfpfv "Raver Cross.". Alwavs buy
an unbroken Bayer package which
contains proper directions to saieiy
relieve Headache, Toothache, Ear
ache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost
but a few cents at drug stores
lavrvA nalrnfl0s nlftn. Asnirin ift the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture
of Monoaceticacidester of Salicyl
icacid. Adv.
Ostrich kicked out with one of his
powerful lega and sent the fat Turk
plunging over the bank into the
swirling water. x
Red Beard rose to the surface, his
elephant skin all wet, bedraggled
and shrinking. He was madder than
a wet hen when he waded out of
the river and started again after
Optimistic Ostrich.
At first Optimistic Ostrich ran
along the bank looking for a shal
low crossing place, but he, could find
none, and Red Beard was drawing
so close that he plunged Into the
raging torrent and started to wade
across.
The wate.- was deep and the cur
rent was swift Soon Optimistic Os
trich was struggling for his life. By
gigantic struggling he succeeded In
gaining a large rock near the center
of the stream, but the river ahead
looked so danerous that he hesitated
before going farther.
"I'll get you yet," yelled Red
Beard. With that he flung his scimi
tar straight at him. Peggy and Bil
ly dodged, ' but Optimistio Ostrich
couldn't get his long neck out of the
way. Whish! The scimitar struck
it, going through it like a knife
through soft butter. To Peggy's hor
ror Optimistic Ostrich's head
dropped into the water and was,
swept -vay.
But, surprising to say, Optimistic'
Ostrich didn't fall down dead.
"Ho, ho, came a Jolly voice from
inside his body. "I've lost my
head, but I'll still get the better of
Red Beard. He isn't the only one j
who can wear a disguise.
Peggy and Billy, much astonished,
looked down into the neck to see
the grinning face of the Giant of
tha Wot ds.
"This river is too deep to wade,
and I can't swim with you young
sters on my back, but there's still a
way to get you home."
So saying, the Giant of the
Woods gave Billy a mighty heeave
thatsent him flying across the river
and out of sight. Then he gave Peg
gy a mighty heave. She sailed far
over the water, far over tha woods,
and through a misty white cloud,
and right into her seat at the
movie theater. Her wish gown was
gone, and so was the glass slipper.
She was dressed in her own neat
frock. ,
"My gracious, I wonder if the
Giant got away from Red Beard,"
Peggy wondered. But she didn't
need to worry about that, for the
Giant was a powerful swimmer, and
DAILY DOT PUZZLE
.
23 - t lb
a
M a"
35 J k
11
3fc
19 e
V .
Sit
For what' is Willie hunting? ,
Draw from one to two and so on to th end.
Red Beard didn't like a bath, not
even to capture a foe who had out
witted him.
(In the next story Peggy and Billy hava
an adventure of another sort.)
slvec
Ike' inAisked
musicia.iv
it necessary to
cliscoutvfc rrvtcrY
pia.Tvom.aker s' claims
to superiority.
But ettcr
investiga-tiorv, lye i
realizes tkafc tKe urv
qualified statemervf
tftat tKe
is tke worlds irvestr
piano' tar rtorvg
is susceptible ol
indubitable, incontro
vertible.pKysical yrooP.
?Jc ccs v sAau
Following is a list of pianos which
may be seen on our floors some of
them we have handled for 45 years:
Kranich & Bach, Cable Nelson, Bush t
Lane, Kimball, Brambach, Vose & Sons
and Hospe pianos.
Grands and uprights at prices from
$285 and better.
Cash prices or terms if desired.
1513 Douglas Street
Have
ever experienced the
satisfaction that comes
from having a Savings
Account?
A Savings Account
in the Savings Depart
ment of the First Na
tional pays three per
cent interest.
The location at the
southwest, corner of
Sixteenth and Farnam,
ground floor entrance
is most convenient. '
A Savings Account
may be opened any
banking day with a s
dollar or more. You
want a Savings Ac
count, of course. Why
not open it now?
. ' J1'
First NaflonalJ
lcankdumana
Be Young In Body, Mind and
Looks Despite Your Years
How often you have
wished that you could
indulge in the strenu
ous exercise of out
door sports with the
vigor and enthusiasm
of youth! But the
end of the week finds
you all in you are
tired, listless and lack
the energy to go out for
a vigorous walk or a
round of the links or
any other exercise that re
quires much physical exer
tion. Many a man, even in
his middle forties, 'has a
vague feeling that he is
"getting old" and right
at a time when he should be
at his very best physically.
Andheisgrowingold.not
in the sense that the years
are pressing heavily upon
him-but in the sense that
his vital forces are wasting
away faster than Nature re
places the worn out tissues.
Thousands yes millions of people 'find
themselves in this condition early in life. And
there is no excuse for it You can check that
tendency to grow old. You can carry your
?outh with its joys and enthusiasm into your
O's and 80's. But you must give Nature all the
help yon can. Th beat aaiittanca yon can flnd--Mshn
ance of sound, constructive character ia in the use of
IMCD
4g5
LVKO U sold In arlttna!
asea onl,. like pietur .bore.
Refuse all substitutes.
The Great General Tonic
It enriches the bkxxj-trently stimulates heart, live and
kidneys to normal activity brines back your pap. punch
and mental vigor chases away that tired, worn-out f sta
ins' and replaces It with a spirit of buoyancy
LYKO is a distinctive preparation, scientifically cor
rect in tta combination of medicinal ingredient, and thers'a
nothing more invigorating, more strenartfceniiur or mora ie
boiWing. Specially beneficial for Invalids, convalescenta -and
run-down people of all conditions. Get a bottle f ram
yourdrurilat today-tomorrow yon will feel better for tt, .
Sole I L. M-J:.: "- New Vatk .
atjaw wifWUsM lUasMCIW.Maj,