Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 11, 1919, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHX. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1919.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSSWATER
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
TH BIB PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIBTOB
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED FRE5S
TIM iwruM Preae. of whlrh Tht Bee te a member. ! as-
etinlrali aotitlea toe use for pomicauoo of all aewe oimitaii
mdltad la It or aM otliarwiae credited ta thle per. eaa: else
All rifllV, ut pwiinww vi vw
Iho local iwm pnbllihM hartin.
spatial tfinwMbM ere aiao
BEE TELEPHONES t
rlare Branen Bielunje. Ai for the Tv1fr 1000
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For Nifht or Sunday Service Call:
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OFFICES OF THE BEE:
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JTJUE CIRCULATION :
Daily 64,611 Sunday 61,762
Arerajie circulation for u month subscribed ana errors to or
X. B. Rasan. Clrculatla ilinijer.
,1
i
Subscriber leavtof tha city ahould hava Tha Boa mailed
ta them. Addraaa chanted aa often aa requested.
You should know that
Omaha has one of the finest free
dentist clinics in connection with
the city schools.
The $14-hog is coming back from the war.
St. l.ouis draws an 8-cent car fare.
Going up!
Austria has signed up, but settling up is
yet to come.
The Visiting Nurses are always welcome
to a tag day in Omaha.
Marshal Foch should be induced to come J-
and taste Omaha's hospitality also.
"Rejection 'or ratification" is winning votes
for rejection. The president should modify his
slogan. ,
Sugar is coming, but the canning season is
waning, and the housewife is correspondingly
depressed.
' Another dollar off on hogs, but bacon sticks
at the high notch. There should be better team
work here.
Veterans of four wars were in the Grand
Army parade at Columbus, and still we are a
peaceful nation.
' Whoever told the "morals" squad it can in
vade private homes without warrants ought to
look up the law.
Warren Pershing says Europe is all right,
but he wants to get back to that dear old Lin
coln. "Attaboy 1"
An extension of the "muriy" ice service is
promised for next summer. This ought to be
placed where all can benefit through it.
Reeckless driving is entirely too prevalent
on Omaha's streets. A remedy for this con
edition should be discovered somewhere.
J.'The senate committee on foreign relations
has notified the world of its views on the
treaty. Now, let us see what the body will do.
Speaking about sergeants and heroes, how
many of you recollect Corporal Whatshisname,
who told the captain that the Maine had been
blown up?
' Whenever a congressman is willing to go
along and assent to whatever the White House
suggests, he is a patriot; if he does not, he is
a partisan.
One consolation yet remains to the follow
ers of Omaha's base ball team. It can't lose
many more games this season, and it posi
tively can not go any lower in the standing
table.
i General Wood disagrees with Secretary
Baker on the point of the size of the standing
army, saying there is no justification for an
organization 500,000 strong. The public will
very likely agree with the general.
On one point the president is entirely cor
rect There are too many hyphens left in this
country. What is wanted is a pure and un
mixed Americanism, without taint of other
allegiance. Until this can be had, our work is
at home, rather than abroad. This, however,
may be "provincial," but it was insularity and
a thousand years of hammering that welded the
contents of England's melting pot into an
homogeneous whole.
Giving and Keeping Pledges
'Abhorrent as this conclusion is to those
. who would not make a promise without full
intention of keeping it, it has the merit of
frankness. Neither Mr. Wilson nor anybody
else can tell what the congress in session in
. 1925 or 1930, or in any other year in the future,
will do, and no treaty, even though it be ne
gotiated by a precedent-smashing president
acting as his own plenipotentiary, can over-ride
the constitution of the United States. Yet the
acquiescence of Mr. Wilson's supporters in this
pledge and their simultaneous declaration that
it needn't be kept is no more than a typical
example of the curious doctrine of the viola
bility of pledges of which Mr. Wilson has just
given the counry so conspicuous an example.
We, refer, of course, to President Wilson's
pledge to the senate on July 9 to put at its
iisoosal or at the disposal of the committee on
foreign relations all the information he had
concerning the proposed treaty of peace with
; Germany, and his subsequent refusal to fulfill
that pledge. We have no means- of knowing
whether Mr. Wilson's determination not to ful
fill the pledge of July 9 was formed before it
was uttered or was formed subsequent to its
utterance; the conspicuous and important fact
is that, when he was called on for the informa-
tion he of his own free will and on his own
' initiative had promised the senate he refused to
comply wih its terms.
With so conspicuous an idealistic exem
plar of the quality of concrete promises to
guide them it is not surprising that Mr. Wil
son's supporters should regard entrance into a
solemn engagement with no purpose of fulfill
ing its terms as a light and happy expedient
But that is not the notion the American peo
ple have of such a transaction, and in treating
the covenant of the league of nations the Ameri
can people and not Mr. Wilson's band of inter
nationalists are going to prevail. New York
Sun, . .
PAN-AMERICANISM.
In Omaha and elsewhere along his route the
president has alluded to the springing up of a
"pernicious pan-Americanism," suggesting that
it is as abhorrent as pan-Germanism. This, of
course, is a corrollary of his charge of "provin
cialism" against those statesmen who do not
agree with him. It deserves brief examination.
Pan-Germanism as we understand it is bet
ter expressed in the slogan, "Deutschland ueber
Alles." If it means anything pan-Germanism
means German domination of the world, not
merely a coalition of Teutonic races, but the
subjugation of all other nations under the sin
ister rule of the superman.
Pan-Americanism on the contrary has been
fostered by the United States for many years as
a desirable and salutary program. As far back
as President Benjamin Harrison's time, a Pan
American congress assembled in the United
States. Since then sessions have been held at
different American capitals, and a great head
quarters organization is maintained in Wash
ington. This movement' is fostered not to
give one or another of the members any ad
vantage over the others, but to conserve and
forward mutual interests through intelligent co
operative effort It finds its inspiration in the
Monroe doctrine, which recognizes the common
life and interests of all the American republics.
Until the present time it has not been con
sidered "sinister" or "pernicious" in any of its
aspects, unless by those European governments
whose commerce and political aims are ad
versely affected by a common understanding
between American governments.
Such pan-Americanism is not a menace to
peace of the world, the president to the con
trary notwithstanding. It is to preserve the
basic condition of this co-operation that the
senate insists on a specific recognition of the
Monroe doctrine, should it be threatened by
the League of Nations. A settled and accepted
policy of so many years is not to be lightly
abandoned for any vague and uncertain ex
periment. '
A Warning to British Labor
Ratification or Rejection.
If Mr. Wilson's recent remarks about rati
fication or rejection- of the treaty are to be ac
cepted literally, the real issue in the case ii
practically joined. The senate committee on
foreign relations has reported out the treaty
with forty-five amendments and four reserva
tions. Some, if not all, of these are likely to
be assented to by the senate. The question
then comes, Will the president accept the ver
dict and ratify the senate's work?
At the White House conference the presi
dent was discreetly noncommittal as to whether
he would ratify an amended treaty. On his
present tour he has frankly demanded ratifica
tion or rejection. His course on this point has
had the effect of bringing out against him cer
tain senators who had not accepted the ex
treme possibility of rejection. These for the
most part cling to the belief that moderate
reservations and reasonable amendments are
not insuperable objections to the success of the
treaty. Taking the president at his word,
though, they will prefer rejection to the
acceptance of terms that are incompatible with
the welfare and best interests of the land.
Reservations reported to the senate have al
ready been discussed, as have the issues con
tained in the Shantung amendment and that
looking to establishment 6f a voting parity be
tween the United States and the British em
pire. These are not captiously conceived. They
involve questions of principle of deep concern
to the whole country, and as they are adjusted
will affect the future of the United States.
A question of judgment has arisen between
the president, whose vision is international and
embraces the world, and the senate, whose
outlook rests on a foreground of American in
terests, the care for home institutions, and the
preservation of our liberties first. A choice be
tween the two must be made.
John Mitchell, Labor Leader.
A mighty man has fallen in the ranks of or
ganized labor, and a worthy and patriotic citi
zen has finished his work. John Mitchell is
dead. Only those who have been closely as
sociated with the industrial and sociological
movements, which run parallel, for the last
fifteen years, understand or appreciate the great
influence, the sterling qualities and loveable
characteristics of this man. v
Son of a soldier who fought in the union
army, he was an intense American; the child
of penury, he tasted all the bitterness of pov
erty, his father having died and left a widow
with small children to provide for by her own
efforts. The darkness of the coal mine sur
rounded his boyhood years, but his mind
broadened and he came to manhood with vision
strong and clear. In 1902 he came into na
tional prominence as head of the United "Mine
Workers of America during the great anthracite
coal miners' strike. It was then his remarkable
ability and capacity for leadership was proved.
He was also found to be incorruptible, a fact
admitted by' foe as well as asserted by friend.
In the more or less celebrated "contempt
case," set in motion by Judge Wright of the
District of Columbia, Mitchell came in for gen
eral publicity along with Gompers and Morri
son. His public career was then well launched,
and as a member of the National Civic Federa
tion, a chairman of one of its departments, and
as commissioner or chairman of many of New
York's state social activities, he has been a
busy man for the last ten years. How much
of good he accomplished none can tell, but
those who came into contact know how com
pletely he was devoted to high ideals. "Johnna-da-Mitch"
will be sorely missed and sincerely
mourned by those who knew him well.
From the New York Times,
More than fifty years ago Frederick Harri
son, a firm and wise friend of fade unions, was
. a v-i T J ft. '
a member ot tne Koyai . i raaes union commiS'
sion. He has seen them grow and expand un
til they have not only obtained for themselves
advantages then undreamed ot, out, uncier sei
fish and radical leadership, they have become
in some respects a. parasite upon and a danger
to the British community. At 88 this old and
steady friend of the just demands of labor, this
clear, impartial thinker in so many neias, cam
UDon the labor leaders to make iheir "fellow
workers understand how close to ruin and
starvation our people stand." Trade unionism,
which for two generations, intelligently con
ducted, won incalculable advantages for itself
and the whole British people, is now threat
ened with a revolution in its own ranks. It
infested with the exotic madness for sovietism
revolution, anarchism. Unless its leaders can
make the hotheads obey, unless its members
can be united in a policy of common sense, it
"is lost, and in the breakdown of it ruin and
starvation await millions of our people) at
home." ,
Great Britain has a debt of $40,000,000,000,
It is getting deeper into debt every day. It
is importing annually $4,000,000,000 more than
it exports; and for most of its imports it is
paying merely paper promises. "The wages
paid enormously exceed the real value of the
work done. Bread, coal, houses, sea and land
transport are all subsidized, as very soon meat
and milk will be subsidized. That is, the pro
ducers of these are getting far more than the
goods are worth.
Great Britain has been paying millions to
keep the price of bread fixed. It is paying mil
lions for higher wages. It is giving doles to
the employed and doles to the unemployed,
many of whom prefer not to work. When the
price of coal was raised six shillings a ton, Mr.
Smillie, head of the Federation of Miners, de
nounced the decision of the cabinet as "an elec
tion dodge." As a matter of fact, it brought
vividly and clearly before the British public
exactly what the policy means of granting sub
sidies derived from taxation of the public to
satisfy the insatiable demands of the trade
unions. Obviously, subsidies must stop some
time. There will be no money left from whioh
they can be borrowed
When the British consumer saw that he had
to pay a bigger price for coal in order that the
miners might get threefold wages, while their
output was steadily diminishing, the fatal re
sults of trade unionism unlimited were im
pressed upon the taxpayers. Mr. Harrison
seeks to impress them upon the trade unions.
He tells them that a large portion of the wages
paid to workmen is simply a gift. They are
paid more than their work is worth out of the
taxes of their tellow-citizens. Labor keeps
getting gifts of money "which its labor does
not earn; it is sucking down the savings of
thrift and piling up debts to lie heavy on our
children." This cannot last long. If much of
the wages of 10,000,000 or 15,0W,000 men or
women is to be paid by the taxpayers, "this
monstrous form of charity will soon end."
There will be no fund left for the gift to come
from. "Great Britain," Mr. Harrison says, "is
paying its workmen and workwomen " a bonus
of $1,000,000,000 more than they really earn."
Besides, the transaction is really one of "paper
credit." If the practice is continued, the state
will be bankrupt, the workmen will starve.
The coal export has been failing. The Brit
ish foreign investments have been transferred
to save exchanges. High wages, the high price
of coal and raw materials make the price of
British manufacture so high that foreigners will
not purchase. Great Britain has got to buy
its food abroad or starve. What is it going
to buy it with, provided it has ships enough to
bring it? And now ships cost so much that
they can't be built. The miners have given a
dangerous and are seeking to give a fatal blow
to the cardinal British industry on which all
others depend. Competitor nations are driving
Great Britain out of its foreign markets, even
out of its home markets. "We cannot go on
working "five days for six hours if foreigners
"work six days for eight hours."
It is a dark and a true picture by the hand
of a friend who has no motive except the good
of the trade unions and his country. Unless
British trade unions are blind to facts, to their
own interest as well as the general interest,
they will go no further on the road to ruin.
Some Unusual Arithmetic
Before Christmas days arrive the people of
the United States will receive in interest on
liberty bonds $458,000,000. They bought the
bonds in a spirit of patriotism and now find
it an investment, as well as a debt which they
must eventually discharge. No usurer receives
the interest or had any part in fixing it. Our
own citizens own the bonds, and now, with an
agreeable feeling, cut the coupons. Many citi
zens bought bonds "until it hurt," often making
sacrifices and exercising unwonted economy.
But fcow well it pays! If those who receive
interest in the months remaining of this year
so elect they will be paid in war savings stamps
instead of cash, an operation by which they ob
tain compound interest. Now here is a pleas
ing and interesting problem tn mathematics.
The debtors are also creditors. The debts are
also investments. Much of the money saved
would not have been saved but for the admir
able responses to the liberty bond calls. In
Healimr with this oroblem. what is the com-
r
a!
Demand
Surplus
Neve So Great;
Never So Short.
San Francisco. Cal., Sept. 6. To
the Editor of The Bee: There never
was a time in the history of the
world when merchandise was so
short or the demand so great, or
when the balance of trade was so
enormously in favor of the United
States. It would be surprising if,
following- the greatest war In his
tory, some things were not out of
tune, but there is nothing that can
not be remedied or that will not be
remedied. Of course, the calamity
howlers, professional pessimists, the
I. W. W.'s, anarchists, and bolshe
vik!, are trying to create a tempest
in a teapot and make mountains out
of a mole hill.
Naturally, there has to be a re
adjustment and it will be made,
Some people may get hurt:, but the
united states as a whole has gone
ahead and will go ahead. If the
United State authorities want to in
quire into things, let them do it
from the standpoint of economics
ratner than political expediency.
The world will gradually get back
to a point where it will begin to
think straight once more. There
are many years of prosperity for
us if we don't go to extremes.
However, the political agitator can
do a vast amount of harm if taken
too seriously.
We want constructive suggestion
from the federal trade commission
rather than destructive criticism.
We want an appeal to reason
rather than to the sensational scandal-monger.
Back of all the fluff in
this country there Is considerable
common sense, whicfl usually comes
to the surface when the necessity
arises and I have no fear of the
future and the present is taking
care of itself.
J. K. ARMSBY,
President California P a p. k i n c-
Corp., San Francisco, Cal.
j(t&e qJos' Com&r
DREAMLAND
ADVENTURE
By DADDY.
DAILY DOT PUZZLE
"THE PRINCE OF DOLLARS.1
(Tho Princo of Pollers seeks hla lost
mermaid and Peggy, Billy and Judgn Owl
go with him. Thoy follow a voice singing
tho mermaid's song, and find it la that of
a bird who has heard the mermaltl alnglng
In a building to which the bird guides
them.)
Jerry Asks for Borah.
Omaha. SeDt. 8. Tn th UMitru.
of The Bee: There are two sides
to every question. Prcsidpnt Wil
son's interpretation of the league of
nations, to the contrarv notwith
standing. I believe every sane
thinking citizen should aturlv nil trm
questions that confront the nation
and not to allow themselves to be
camouflaged by any of these skill
fully woven phrases, no matter whn
utters them.
Senator William a nnnh t
Idaho, whose patriotism cannot be
questioned, besides being- one of the
brainiest men in the United States
senate, will be at the Auditorium
next Friday evening at 8 p. m. to
give a different translation of this
proposed league of nation t m
submitting these few remarks for
tne aenoeratlon of the. natrintin
wise men and women in nil ora
tions of life In Omaha and else
where, hoping that they will lend
ine aiirnuv or their flpA!nM .i
Senator Borah's meeting.
I have no desire to counsel with
the "Omadhauns" because there is
no use in trvins- to rpnenn wtft
mac Class. JEKRY HOWATm
Just Poppycock.
A lot Of poppycock cornea nver tho
cuues. J.ne otner day there was an
nouncement from Berlin that k nnn
000 Germans had filed applications
vpiiiiissicn 10 leave rnermintrir
and the majority of them proposed
lu seme in soutn America. Imme
aiateiy mere was discussion of the
new uerman menace.
rho absurdity of a German Invn,
sion of such proportions may be ap
preciated wnen it is said that the to
tai immigration into the United
t-tates trom (Germany in the last 100
years amounts only to 5,494,487, and
those 100 years include three periods
that after the revolution of 1848,
that after our civil war and that
from 1S80 to 1892. inclusive when
there was emigration from Germany
limited in volume only to the ca
pacity of vessels to carry the people.
In the present condition of world
shipping it would take Germany
more than 10 years to transport
3,uou,uiH of her people to the
nited States and, as for getting:
them to Soiith America, it would
take 15.
There is not likely to be any large
emigration from Germany. The
government will not permit it. Those
who emigrate escape taxation and
their share of the war debt, shifting
that much more on those who re
main. That sort of thing will not be
ermilted. Richard Spillane . in
'hidadelphia Ledger.
plete answer
? The complexity of it is evident,
but all is commendable.
More remains to be said. The money was
spent in an unavoidable war. We won the war.
The country was called upon to prove the in
flexible courage of its manhood and woman
hood. The result was in keeping with the
best traditions of the greatest republic. Mili
tarism went down. Frightfulness was indomi
ably faced and smashed. A terrible world men
ace was ended. On the whole, future peace
among the nations will be strengthened. The
United States is o longer unprepared for com
ing emergencies, whatever they may be.
How stands the balance sheet, the showing
of profit and loss? It is a wise scholar who can
do the sum. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Cardinal Mercier's Mission.
Cardinal Mercier says he has come to thank
Americans for their help and loving sympathy
extended to Belgium while the war was on,
He need give himself no concern on that-point;
a special visit was not called for. Americans
have had their reward in the knowledge that
they were able to feed and clothe the needy
of his land and to relieve as far as possible the
distress wrought upon it by a merciless foe.
We are interested in the cardinal himself,
though. The primate of a great church who
had the courage to defy the men of. violence, J
who lifted his voice not as a cardinal but as a
citizen of an unjustly invaded and cruelly rav
aged country, rousing the fire of patriotic
devotion, urging his people to resist the
wrong even to death, is welcome amongst us
because of his courage, his sincerity and his un
selfishness. Among all the figures of the war
none stands in better light than Cardinal Mer
cier, and he may be assured of a warm wel
come in America.
The Day We Celebrate.
Arthur Metz, born 1869.
C. J. Ernst, assistant treasurer Burlington
railrnarl Knrn 1864
Gen. Sir Julian Byng, who commanded the
Canadian overseas forces in the early period of
the war, born 57 years ago.
Lord Inchcape, president of the British Im
perial Association of Commerce, born in Scot
land, 67 years ago.
Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Shahan, rector of the
Catholic university of America, born at Man
chester, N. H 62 years ago.
Benton McMillan, former governor of Ten
nessee, now United Staes minister to Guate
mala, born in Monroe county, Kentucky, 74
years ago.
Thirty Years Ago in Omaha.
Douglas county has "done herself proud in
the exhibit at the state fair, which is in charge
of Elijah Allen, Allen Root and C. S. Avery
Brownell Hall reopens with about 100 stu
dents. A new studio has been added to the
hall during vacation. Miss ,M. A. Young of
England has been engaged as instructress in
art.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hamilton gave a
tea at Hamilton Place in honor of Mr. and
Mrs. John Hughes, who are visiting Mrs. S. S.
Caldwell.
The Omaha musical, literary and social club
gave a concert and supper at Washington hall
for the benefit of Zion Baptist church on
Grant street near Twenty-second.
President Mike Lee of the city council, es
corted a number of councilmen and city offi
cials on a trip to the state fair at Lincoln.
Apparently He Does.
Does the president think he can
make his arguments appear less
thin by spreading them all over
the country? Boston Transcript.
PEACE.
her
The wan. exhausted world lifta up
neaa
From brooding on her dead,
To catrh tho message clamoring down the
aky
That heralds what la flnlahed at Ver
sailles. Into her (;ided eyes creeps heaven now;
Forgotten Joy grows fair upon her brow;
Her hands, unclenched, fall open and out
reach To touch that future aha so yearns to
teach
The errors of the past tha woe, the
wrong.
That comes from being strong
If justice and if love are laid aside.
Peace! The awaited word rings wide,
Fraught with the beauty of the summer's
day
That broke from storm to greet It, as a
play
Breaks on a darkened house In sudden
light
When the first curtain's rising gives to
sight.
Some scene where wa, expectant, lean to
see
A dream take flower or fail us utterly,
eiu wans tne universe before this Word
lhat sounds upon her heart! Have we
men heard
As surely as an actor hears his oue?
Or shall wo fall In things that we must do
.1.0 mane tne aream coma true?
Edna Mead In New Tork Times.
DAILY CARTOONETTE.
CHAPTER V.
ThrouKh the River.
PEGGY and Billy were filled with
wonder when they looked
across the river to the great build
ing where the charming mermaid
was toiling. How had she come to
be shut up there she who had
seemed so free as she sang on the
rocky isle and raced along the
beach.
"Teacher! Teacher!! Teacher!!!
Teacher!!!!" sang Ovenbird War
bler Nightingale, but the charming
mermaid sang no answering song
out into the night. She waved her
hand sadly and turned her back to
where hundreds of other girls were
busily working.
"Why, do you suppose, she is in
prison?" whispered Peggy to the
Prince of Dollars.
"Prison!" he exclaimed, making
a queer sound in his throat. "If
that is a prison, then I am her Iail
er." Peggy and Billy looked at him
in surprise. "xnat is one or my
mills," he went on. "It Is grinding
out dollars for me. But no more
shall it grind at night with young
gins reeding toe machinery. And
no more shall it grind as a orison.
but as a pleasant, happy working
piace ior contented, cheerful work
ers. uome, we win give them a
holiday to celebrate the better days
to come."
The Prince of Dollars steered the
auto toward a bridge which led
across the river to the mill. But
when they reached the siver they
round mat me storm had turned
the stream into a rasing torrent and
water was sweeping over the floor
of the bridge. They could not pass.
Lightning was still flashing and
the thunder rolled and banged. It
was the wildest night Peggy and
Billy had ever seen, and the raging
river before them made it seem all
the wilder.
As they looked in dismay at the
angry waters there came a particu
larly angry flash of lightning, fol
lowed sharply by a terrific crash of
thunder. The Jar shook the auto.
"That struck near here!" shouted
Billy.
"The mill! See, it struck the
mill!" screamed Peggy, pointing to
wnere a tiny Durst or name waa
leaping up from the roof.
"Those girls! My mermaid love!
They must be saved!" shouted the
prince. "Get out, Peggy and Billy!
I'm going to cross that bridge."
"And we're going with you. Go!
Go!" screamed Peggy.
Not waiting a second the Prince
of Dollars sent his auto leaping for
ward. Straight at the bridge it went
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Sa
SI9
45 4fc
Noodle says, "Just trace with me,
Till you come to fifty-three."
Draw from one to two and so on to the
end.
drove through a river; you must
fight fire, too!" screamed Judge Owl,
as the Prince of Dollars stopped the
automobile and dnshed Into tha
-w. Ill
VH. .. .......
(Tomorrow will be told how tha Print a
ot Dollars finds tha mermaid In grave
danger.)
and right into the angry waters
which swept the roadway.
Swish! Swish! Swish! The current
roared against the wheels and
smashed at the fenders, but the car
went on, on, driven by its powerful
engine. Again and again the rush
ing stream threatened to sweep the
auto away, but each time ffe Prince
of Dollars held the swaying car to
Its course. Once or twice the en
gine gave a splutter and seemed
about to stop, only to pick up again
at full strength. So swish, swash,
swish, they plunged ttn-ough the
river and up on the bank beyond.
"Hoo! Hoo! I told you true. You
'The Mill! See. It Struck
Mill!" Screamed Peggy
the
The Higher the Lower.
For some weeks past the New
York Sun has been freely and gay-
ly attributing all or most of the
present high costs of foodstuffs to
the government's policy of fixing
the price of wheat. But during
this time attacks have been made
on the government's policy by peo
ple interested in establishing a
higher price for wheat. Just how
the cost of living would be reduced
If wheat should jump to $3.50 a
bushel may be left to the Sun's
eoonomists to figure out. Spring
field Republican.
Keeping Down the Price.
The two Paris bellboys who stole
a $1,000 necklace from a Red Cross
worker and traded it to an ice
cream vender for ice cream cones
should be severely punished for
their crime. The price of ice cream
cones must be kept somewhere be
low that figure. Kansas City
Times.
To Those Who
Would Be
Physically Fit:
To those who realize the
tremendous importance of
keeping themselves physi
cally in the best of condi
tion, and to those who
already are ill, THE
SOLAR SANITARIUM
offers a service unex
celled. All baths and electrical
equipment useful in the
treatment of the tick.
The Solar Sanitarium
Masonic Temple, 19th and
Douglas.
Phone Tyler 920.
ii
1
is piano or that mav
win admiration for
excellence in some one-1
or another of the?
features that distin
guish fine piano making
But tne matchless
excels in all. In every
register its tone is n '
incomparaHy leautital,
it resonance superb,
and soul-stirring.
And its transcendent
musical qualities will
outlive those of any
other piano in the world
-witnout exception,.
Isle trs ? shorn yot' vtryf
A Fine Line of Real
PIANOS
Kranlch a Bach, Voaa 4 Sons,
Sohmsr, Brambach, Kimball, Bush
Lane, Cable-Nelson, Hinsa and Hospe.
Player Pianos
Apollo Reproducing, Gulbranaen and
Hoape.
Our Caah Prices Are Our Time Prices.
1513 Douglas St.
Chicago Grand Opera Seat Sale Here
Mail Orders Filled NOW.
"Business Is Cood.Thank You"
-WHY-
sjsjHSBS'SSaaandnBjBB
LV. Nicholas Oil Company
lj:IMIIIIIIIIIIi;llllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIII!llllllllllllllllllll!lllilllllll!lllllllll!lMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII!lllllllllllllllnNIIII
Have You $500?
It will buy five of our shares. If you have not this
amount, start with less, and systematically save with us
until you reach your goal. No better time and no better
place. Dividends compounded semi-annually.
The Conservative Savings & Loan Ass'n
1614 Harney St.
Resources, $15,500,000. Reserve, $525,000.
i l"i!:'iiiii'i'iiiii'ii.i'ii:iiiiiiiii,:ii'iiirtiiliiiiiiil 'I, ii!i:!iliiiiiM!i:iiiliiii!iiiiiiiniiiii!iiiinii:i,!,i
NOUJ.HAROLU. YOU'VE SfllHYOU
UJI5HEB YOU HR1 50ME PlE
LIKE YOUR MOTHER USEE TO
MAKE-501'UE MflBE YOU ONE
AND I HOPE YOU'LL EflT IT
ANH STOPTrUKlNffj
,0
2P
W HE DID- W
KNOCKS AT THE
DOOR BUT ONCE
An opportunity like this has never before presented
itself. It is an opportunity to share in the profits derived
from the operation of a moving; picture theater, as well as
the rental received from apartments and storerooms.
Conservative estimates show this stock will pay at least
20 per cent. Heretofore these enormous profits have been
taken by a few individuals. It's worth your while to investi
gate. Fill out the below coupon and mail it today.
Ames Realty Corporation
ERIC J. HALLGREN, President.
W. B. BURKETT, Vice President.
RALPH F. CLARY, Sec'y-Treas.
2404-6 AMES AVENUE.
PHONE COLFAX 175.
OMAHA, NEB.
Ames Realty Corporation,
2404-6 Ames Avenue, Omaha,
Nebraska.
Without any obligation on my
part, I would like to have you ,
send me further information on
your company.
Name .
"B" Address