t IThe Omaha Bee I DAILY ( M ORN'I NG) EVEN I N G SUNDAY i V FOUNDED BY KDWARD ROSEWATTR VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR "i,THB BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPHIETOR $4' MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ' Th Aivriiud Tnu. nr wniea tb m u a nwmw. -llrimtfvUr entitled u the um for puMlratloa of kit nm oipalfi ieredlud to II or not otbarwlM errdntd wi thu paper, end also " U local am published herein. AU rtfsu of publication of our ii metal dispatches are also teserred. BEE TELEPHONES i . - AAA if PriM Brwxsb Kichinj. Art for ta I Xrlf I IIIHI t Department or Pmrtlrulw rerwn Wanted. ; For Night or Sunday Service Calli ? Editorial Dot'erunent Trier 1000U ClrcaLtloa Dmrtmni ...... Trier 10081.. ft VlAdnrUain: Department Tyler 100SL. i OFFICES OF THE BEE Tlome Offloe. Be BuHdlru. 17U and Farm ft a U Worth '" lp,r J tkoMO lilt Military An. Hmit till ' j Council Bluffs 1 s',,,t s- ' Walnut if Out-of-Town OffkMt ;S Kr Tort City H Fifth Am. I Wuhinftoo 'f Chloto Sotmnr Bids- I Lincoln WIS Lesrenmrth 1.118 N BtraM 810 North 40th mil O Street 1330 H Street JUNE CIRCULATION! 1 Daily 64,611 Sunday 61,672 I Aterat oln-tilitinn for trio month subscribed ul mm to 07 9 B. R. Hasan. Circulation Manager. f Subscriber Uavlnf the city should hava tha Be mailed t to than. Addraaa chanted aa often aa requested. a . . You should know that Omaha is one of the leading medi cal' educational centers of the country, with two great schools, 17 hospitals and 284 doctors. In Omaha the job is still chasing the man. Boston, where Liberty bloomed, the home of anarchy! What a spectacle. When the treaty is disposed of, what will the democrats do for an "alibi?" A city forester is recommended for Omaha, but the pay roll looks big enough as it is. The public is in a fair way to be informed as to the glories and demerits of the League of Nations. A free hclinic" for drug addicts may take some of the pressure off the detention home. It might be worth trying. i 1 hi u H I I Attorney General Palmer says the profiteers will get theiri hereafter. They are getting ours now, and that is what hurts. Reforms that result from coercion are not reforms but makeshifts, just as bargains made under duress are not bargains. Mrs. Wilson continues to be the drawing card of the president's troupe, a fact that might suggest several sorts of comment. Now it comes out that Egypt had more than i million men engaged in the war, a slight con tribution from the oldest of nations. That policeman who shot up his own home must have thought himself the "morals" squad conducting a "visit and search" party. The president asks, "Why this debate in great crisis?" Maybe because everybody is not willing to follow wherever ha leads. 3 s - H Tag day for the Visiting Nurse brought in a little more than $13,000, but these good women are not superstitious as to numbers. Senator Shields declined to sign the minor ity report on the treaty, another good demo cratic vote lost for the "swallow-it-whole" group. ; Cardinal Mercier was disappointed to find that a New York sky-scraper was not a cathe dral. It is in fact a temple, but dedicated to Mercury or Mammon. Food sent from America is reported to be rotting on docks in English ports, because no means were provided to take care of it. Looks as if somebody had blundered. An Italian photographer had the unique ex perience of falling into Vesuvius and being hauled out again. Those fellows will do al most anything to get a picture. ! i Rain 'could not keep the boys from fighting back in the '60s, and did not keep them from marching in 1919. The Grand Army faced the hail of bullets too many times to be frightened by a storm of water. Cotton growers are about to form an as sociation to buy up the surplus crop and hold it till they can get the price they want. But this will not attract much attention at the head quarters of the Department of Justice. The preacher who wants communion wine with "authority" has put a tough question up to the governor. Regardless of the law's per mission, it is no longer easy to secure the supply. But, so long as it is merely symbolic in its uses, the ungodly may be pardoned for inquiring why the symbolism may not be ex tended just a little farther and the partaker of communion be enabled to imagine that grape juice has a "kick." Invest in a College Present indications are that the enrollment in colleges and universities this fall will be larger than ever before. At the same time the cost of higher education has increased in proportion to everything else. As institutions of learning are not corpora tions organized for profit, they cannot set their prices to keep pace with their costs. They must either attempt to perform a larger service with .inferior equipment and fewer teachers or appeal to the public for the funds necessary to main tain their standards and morale. To all who are college graduates this crit ical situation in higher education should come home with special force. Every man or woman who has spent four years at a college or univer sity owes his or her alma mater a continuing debt not a debt of gratitude alone, but a debt that it is possible in many cases to discharge in more practical ways. For the service which the college renders its students it pays several times over the sum which they pay in tuition fees. It is, therefore, no more than a simple recognition of justice that the beneficiaries of higher education make return to the institution which has done so much for them. A man makes no better investment than the amount that he puts into his education. In a larger sense he can make no better investmeent for his family, his country and the welfare and stability of society in general than to contribute what he can to the growth and material , re sources of our colleges and universities. Mil waukee Journal. REPORT OF THE MINORITY. The report of the minority of the senate's foreign relations committee on the peace treaty with its covenant for a League of Nations is commended to the attention of the readers as a splendid example of unwarranted assumption and insincere assertion. On what grounds can the minority justify its statement that "delay on the treaty has been caused by the majority of a committee known to be out of harmony with a majority of the senate and the majority of the people?" Care ful canvass amongst the senators has disclosed the fact that far mom than a majority of them are opposed to the ratification of the treaty without amendment or reservation. In no way is it possible to determine exactly the state of the public mind, but such attempts as have been made indicate a sentiment against the treaty as it stands such as would disprove the minor ity's unsupported claim. So the report proceeds through its length, making one after another statements of fact not yet established, conclusions based on be lief rather than on information, and generaliza tions where particularization has been looked for. Dealing with the textual amendments, the chief of which concern Shantung and the par ity of voting power between the United States and the British empire, the minority says: "We see no reason to discuss their character at length. In our opinion they have no merit." With similar cavalier lightness and grace the proposed reservations are dismissed: "They are the work of senators organized for the pur pose of destroying the league and if possible defeating this treaty." Why should the minority deal so frivolously with so serious a matter, unless it relies on its powers of cajolery to induce senators to accept its views who might be impervious to its ar guments. Or does it hope only to catch and hold the mind of those who have so often been deluded by specious pleadings of the democratic leaders who habitually "keep the word of prom ise to the ear and break it to the hope?" When the Police Force Strikes. Boston's predicament is occasion for thoughtful consideration. Questions involved in a strike of policemen are not lightly to be answered. The greatest of them, that of fidel ity to a trust, carries its own reply. When a man dons the uniform of a soldier or a police man, he vountarily assumes an obligation that is not to be laid aside at his whim. He is bound morally as well as legally to devote him self to the protection of life and property of his fellow citizens, to uphold the law and to see that good order is maintained. It is quite likely that the policemen in Bos ton were not paid as well as they should be; very few are, but they have taken a sadly mis taken way of setting about to secure justice for themselves. When the presence of the law as represented by the police is withdrawn, the elements of disorder assert themselves. It was so in London and Liverpool when the police there went on strike, and it is so in Boston, and will be anywhere else under similar condi tions. If a policeman were to abandon his post, and a crime occurred, he would be punished in some fashion; if he were to retire, knowing that a gang of thieves would immediately loot (the property he was guarding, he would be deemed unfaithful. In what degree is he re lieved from this if he acts in concert with his fellows, and all abandon their duty at the same time? . What may come out of the strike will be an advance in the methods of organizing, train ing and controlling police. Men will be given more detailed instruction as to their duties, moral as well as legal, made to understand clearer the relations between the law and the citizen, and so developed as to more nearly measure up to the requirements of the ideal policeman. In the meantime, the public will also do well to realize that it is asking for a high grade of service, and should be willing to properly recompense those it employs. Why Food Prices Decline. The power of the consumer over the cost of living is being felt. In the hysterical proceed ings that marked the earlier consideration of the problem this factor was not given due weight, but its steady and certain . application is now having effect. We are told that the sharp decline in live hog values, accompanied by similar slump in other provision and grain prices is due to the fact that consumptive de mand has lessened. In plain words, the people quit eating the high priced grub and turned to something cheaper. "European demand" that was relied on to bolster up prices on this side has evaporated, and between the two the price boosters have been caught Retailers have not as yet felt the impulse, but very soon must real ize, as have the packers and wholesalers, that the control of the consumer over the market is absolute. And just as soon as Mr. Ultimate Consumer gets so he understands how to apply this control, the greater part of the cost of living will have been put on a basis where it will be a'djustable to conditions. The buyer is responsible in the main for undue prices, and when he avoids extravagance and resists ex tortion, the seller will come hunting for him, with inducements to purchase rather than re frain for economy's sake. The League and the Army. "It will save the world from wars and prepa rations for wars. It will reduce armies and navies and taxes," reports the democratic minority on the League of Nations covenant. Admitting that this is true, what is behind the request of the secretary ofSvar, asking that we set up a standing army of 500,000 men, the greatest ever proposed for the , United States. Only recently the secretary of the navy re ceded from a plan he had submitted that con templated expending immediately one and one half billions of dollars in constructing a navy that should be "second to none in the world." He merely asks that we proceed on a naval pro gram involving the addition of half a dozen more of the biggest fighting machines ever floated, and the accompanying minor vessels. Do these coadjutors of the president lack faith in the plan that is to bring universal peace and all its attendant benefits? Their apparent skepticism is disconcerting, to say the least. "The law presumes a man to be innocent until he is proven guilty," says the superintend ent of police, defending two of his men who are held for trial on a charge of manslaughter. But the "morals" squad has reversed this rule, and holds a man guilty until he is proven innocent, and then generally declines to accept the verdict. The Public From the Philadelphia Ledger. The public is really not such a bad fellow after all. He is accused of all manner of unim aginable or at any rate unforgivable crimes. He is a dread, devouring monster, who prompt ly does for all fair youth and innocence that comes to a great city. He starves the aspirant poets and novelists. He grips the hearts of painters with despair at his cold neglect. He sends musicians to the almshouse. He bruises delicate flowers of fancy to the oavement and robs the nest of the twittering fledglings that might one day be singing and upsoaring to delight. He is, in one aspect, a leering, ugly, brutal and brutalizing creature destitute of fine in stinct and high rapture of tremulous, sensitive intuition of keen discernment of nice and fastidious perception. You would not ask him to your house, for he would track in mud and wipe his feet (if he wiped them at all) on your most delicate belongings. He would let fly an uncouth jest about that which you held sacred. He would be unsparing and unseemly and irreverent. You could not speak or under stand his language and you would not care to do so. But look again and think again. Behold and see if there is not some virtue in this hideous apparition. Wash his face and find what is be hind the grime his hard labor may have put there. See if there are not beautiful dreams in his eyes that your passing glance considered wild and terrible. Be patient and listen and out of the heart you did not think he had per haps there comes some confession that stirs you like music. Bestow at least the benefit of the doubt where you mistrusted. Bring out the best instead of the worst of this strange entity, the public, and see if, after all, there are not admirable traits that you had slighted or ignored. The public cannot be all bad for you and I have seen him in action when he was strange ly noble and true to the supreme qualities of human nature the qualities that teach us lm mortality and point us to the stars. We have seen the public manifesting a subljme heroism on the field of battle, and in the walks and the works of peace revealing an endurance and a fidelity not less touching and inspiring. We have seen the public self-denying and frugal, showing tenderness to the weak and the un fortunate, affectionately faithful in every family relation, supporting just causes with outpoured earnings, patriotic and honestly religious and insistent on decency and order. We have seen the public doing the work of the world and carrying a burden uncomplainingly. No we cannot believe that the public is so bad. Saving the Dance The dancing masters of the United States have been saying some things of pith and worth during the convention of the National Association of Masters of Dancing held at New York. It has long seemed to many know ing somewhat of dancing, its social and aes thetic values, as well as its pleasures, that if those recognized as preceptors and exemplars would raise their voices and set their taces against the progressive degradation of dancing in this country, progressive degradations would cease, and the dance could be restored to its old estate. This is not saying, of course, that there would not remain places where grace is sacrificed to lewdness in the dance. Such places always have and always will be found. But in late years these have been the places out of which have come dances easily to be learned, without skill or grace, and serving only the lewd purpose of their originators In the low places of their origin. The dancing masters must be charged with a large degree of the responsibility for the con ditions which they now deplore. They have yielded overmuch to the importunities of young people unwilling to take even the small pains of acquiring those graceful steps and motions which are a part of every dance worthy of the name, and wanting to plunge into dancing orgies in which all pretense of grace as well as propriety is abandoned, and in which the awk ward can get by with as much of distinction as the most graceful dancers. The president of the Dancing Masters, Na tional association says that "the old waltz is coming back. There will be no new dances; only a few modifications." In truth, it is not easy to imagine how new dances could be made without including many of the motions to be seen in the manifold waltz movements of a somewhat earlier day. A few even of these waltz forms lent themselves too much to sue- gestiveness, and, like all such dances, they were the easiest to be learned. Ihe professors may meet with opposition in the effort to teach the lesson that grace and beauty in the dance, like all other good things, cannot be had without work, but if they persist they can hardly fail to win. Should they fail, dancing masters will ere long find their occupation gone in a gen eration which will not think beauty and grace to be indispensable requisites to dancing. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Carter Glass' Patched "Pants" The Virginia senate since Patrick Henry's time has heard a good deal of patriotic ora tory, but nothing, we may suppose, more elo quent than Secretary Glass' appeal for the wearing of old clothes to beat the profiteer. Commending the suggestion of his predecessor, W. G. McAdqo, who declared that "we should use every effort to win the war, even though we wore patched trousers," Mr. Glass said: "Mine are not patched, but they are old enough to be. I expect to wear this suit five years longer if it will stand it." If this is not a patriotic example, what is? A suit of American clothes that will last five years after reaching the patching state is per haps a better suit than most people wear. But the precedent is the important thing. When a man who superintends the spending of billions of dollars stands ready to wear old clothes, the rest of the public ought to be willing to make the attempt. Most people, indeed, who tried the experiment as a war conservation measure were surprised to find how presentable a dis carded suit could be. If we are to combat profiteering "we must acquire the habit of strict economy and sav ing," says Mr. Glass. Certainly there need be no false pride about wearing of clothes after the gloss is off. A people clad in patched "pants" worn for a principle might even claim an added self-respect and look upon the patch as a decoration. New York World. The Day We Celebrate. Rt. Hon. H. H. Asquith, former British prime minister, born in Yorkshire, 67 years ago. Sir George Parley, Canadian high commis sioner in London, born at Lebanon, N. H., 62 years ago. Dr. Francis E. Clark, founder and head of the United Society of Christian Endeavor, born at Aylmer, Quebec, 68 years ago. Henry J. Allen, the present governor of Kan sas, born in Warren county, Pa., 51 years ago. Milton H. Smith, president of the Louisville & Nashville railroad, born in Chautauqua coun ty, N. Y., 83 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. G. W. Lininger has received a spinet from southern Italy. This is the instrument from which the present day piano was envolved. An Andrew Delsarte painted in the early fifteenth century was also received. Today's victory by the Omaha base ball team gives Omaha the pennant in the Western asso ciation this year. Hoyt's "A Brass Monkey" was seen at Boyd's opera house, and Prof. Herman, the great pres tidigitateur, gave an excellent program at the Grand opera house. J. Wallace Broatch and Randall Brown have gone east to resume their studies at Yale. Following the President. York, Neb.. Sept 10. To the Edi tor of The Bee: Now tell your read ers to go away hack and sit down and keep quiet, since we have re ceived our new orders to "put up or shut up." And seeing we are not to have any chance to put up. It remains for ue to shut up or else run our own thinker and acter, so far as our own affairs are concerned. But so far as his rights, that are his by virtue of his office, the president should be respected, and I am not In sympathy with any one or any measure that had any other object in view. But Mr. Wilson takes him self a little bit too seriously when he goes so far as to dictate how or for whom we shall vote or whether we can express our own opinion on things just as dear to us as his Ideas are to him. And just as liable to be correct, if we are to take his own record as to what to expect from him and that is an uncertain quantity either in steadfast thinking or acting. For it is a commonly known fact that he has not stood still long enough on scarcely any position he has taken for the country to get his views until he changes front, and then he is the same sure-right boy as in his previous stands. Not wish ing to make any statement to In jure any one, I will Just cite a few cases in point: First, his one-term promise; his toll plank promise; his refusal to commit himself in the suffrage question until it looked as though all the suffrage states were going for Mr. Hughes, then he says "me, too." Then he said we could not have peace with victory, but must have a ' negotiated peace, then we were to have one by victory only; then by withdrawing from foreign soil: then unconditional surrender on 14 conditions; then refused to comply with them. Now he has his league pact to cure the rest of our ills and wants us to believe it will work. Then when certain danger signsNare pointed out, he says that is not binding, as each nation can do as it pleases in those things. Yet If we fall to take it whole we will break the heart of the world. In conclusion, I make this statement: No one should be taken for more than they have made good on. Now, where will he be to morrow? None can tell. H. F. POPE. Points Not Explained. Omaha, Sept. 10. To the Editor of The Bee: President Wilson on his recent visit in Omaha did not make clear why England should have six votes In the League of Nations while the United States shotild have only one. Neither did he pvnlnin Rnticfof.frtn'lv TtrYv v United States senate should not have a right to reserve for the congress to decide about partaking in a war when the League of Nations, which otherwise has a right to call mem bers to arms. Is composed of so many members of nations which have made a business to engage in warfare. The expansion policy fol lowed at the peace conference and the desire to strengthen the navy of one particular member is no In dication that a change of heart has taken place, but that the ambition is greater than ever. Let us give credit to the majority of the senate for clear heads and a sincere desire to protect the lnteresfs of our na tion. O. R. JOHNSON. FROM HERE AND THERE. A first class modern locomotive contains over 7,000 parts. Every time the carp breathes it moves 4,368 bones and muscles. The average depth of the Atlantic is estimated at about 16,000 feet. There are tribes in India that s ear by the head of a tiger, while others chop a dog in two as emblem atic of the fate of the perjurer. Whilo the average temperature In western Siberia is extremely low, it is withstood by human beings com paratively easily because of the lack of wind. It Is believed the Nile contains a greater variety of fish than any other river in the world. An expedition sent by the British museum brought back 8,000 specimens. Many great musical composers had exceptionally large appetites. When Handel dined alone at a res taurant ne usually took the precau ton of ordering a meal for three. Haydn, yet more voracious, was known to consume a meal that would have satisfied five ordinary appetites. DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY. "THE PRINCE OP DOLLARS." (The Prince of Dollars, aeeklnc the charming mermaid, finds her In one of hta milla. Lightning seta tha mill afire and the prince, with. Peggy and Hilly, rushes to the reacue of the mermaid and girl -workers.) CHAPTER IV. Into the Hre, T7WRE!" "Fire!" shouted the 1. Prince of Dollars, rushing Into the mill. "Fire! Fire!" cried Peggy and Bil ly, following after him. "Hoo! Hoo! Too! Too!" screeched Judge Owl like a fire whistle. The people in the mill had been startled by the thunderbolt, which had crashed into the building, but they had no idea that the lightning had set the roof ablaze above their heads. So they were much sur prised when the prince and Peggy and Billy rushed in with the alarm. The girls Jumped up from their ma chines and fled to the doors and windows. And the flames were spreading so fast that if the warn ing had been delayed another min ute many ' surely would have been burned to death. The prince showed himself a hero, for he stood right where the danger was greatest and coolly hur ried the crowd to safety. Away up at the other end of the mill Peggy caught a glimpse of the mermaid. She, too, was helping others to es cape. Finally it appeared that every one was out, and the prince and Bil ly dragged Peggy away from the hungry flames that were now dart ing fiercely toward them. "Hurrah! Hurrah for the Prince of Dollars!" shouted the crowd. DAILY DOT PUZZLE He Lowered Her to Outstretched Hawls and Himself Dropped Safely to the Ground. to prosecute the market man at the corner, who, whenever the men higher up raise the price- a cent, immediately tacks 2 cents on the retail price? Boston Transcript SUMMER DRIED WIT. "Do you know Jonea?" "I lent him a tenner thla morning. I should say I know him." "You lent film a tenner? Then I should say you don't know him." Edinburgh Scotsman. "Flgurea won't lie!" declared the statistician. "Maybe you're right," anawared tha mild-mannered cltiaen "And yet, some, how. I can't put Implicit faith In the numbers that go upon a taxlcab regis ter." Washington Star. Waggish Verse. Yonr friend may vow that he's true-blue, And, whpn you need him, fall; But when Towser asserts hla love for you Hla la no Idle tall. Boston Transcript. There Is an elevator bojr In a New York office building who Is among a large num ber of public servants who resent needless questions. One day there entered his car a rather fussy old lady, and garrulous as well. "Don't you ever feci sick going up and down in this elevator all day?'' ahe asked. "Yes. ma'am," said the boy. "Is It the motion going down?" "No, ma'am." "The motion going up?" "No, ma'am." "Is It the stopping that does It?" "No, ma'am." "Then what Is it?" "Answering question, ma'am." Every body's. The Little Profiteers. "The Attorney General to Prose- But who is going PITY THE POOR OFFICER. Has to salute 'em all, private! and all of "em. Has to watch out for tha eonsummata gall of 'em, Has to make sure that they give him the high ball, Has to be good and behave Ilka the best of 'cm, Never can go on a tear Ilk tree rest of 'em,' No raising hell Just to show off the seat of 'em, Has to be martial from toenail to eyeball. No chasing round with a skirt Ilka the bunch of 'em. Wouldn't look right, and they might loao the punch of 'em, Has to remember he sets an example. Has to be dignified, more than the mob tf 'cm. More rules to follow than any low alob of 'em, Just because Ire'a got the most flashy Job of 'em, Haa to dress up like a tallor-mads sample. No cafe partle along with the gang of 'em. Good Lord! Suppose that the bucks got the hang of 'em Make army discipline blow up, ker blooeyl No chance to go and shoot craps with the crowd of 'em. Has to keep moral so all will b proud of 'em, Only associate with tha hlgh-browed of em; Praise be to Pete I ain't even a loole! Tip Bliss In Come-Back. 5 2.3 V 22 26 "3 3o 4 7 Trace the lines and trace them well, And you'll see a . Draw from one to two and so on to the ml. But the prince was looking anx iously about. "Where is my mermaid?" he cried. The crowd looked puzzled. They did not know whom he meant. "The girl with the wonder ful hair! The girl with the beauti ful voice!" explained the prince. "Oh, you mean Anita," cried some of the girls. "She helped us out but we do not know what has be come of her." "Teacher! Teacher!! Teacher!!!" screamed Warbler Ovenbird Night ingale. Looking up to a window on the second floor, the crowd saw two girls. One was the charming mer maid. The other was an uncon scious worker. The mermaid was lowering the other to the ground with a rope made from strips of her own aress. Kager hands stretched up and caught the worker and the crowd shouted to the mermaid to jump. But as the mermaid, chok ing and coughing, tried to climb out of the window, she fell back, over come by the smoke. " ' ' A cry of horror went up from tn crowd. The whole mill was blazing. It seemed certain the brave mer maid would perish. Then came a cry of hope, for the prlnoo climbing a waterspout a nimbly 9M a squirrel climbs a tree. When the prince reached the eo ond floor he swung himself from win dow to window until he ranched that where the mermaid had stood. Into this he bounded, and in a mo ment was out again, holding tha mermaid In his arms. He lowered her to outstretched hands and him self dropped safely to the ground. Now arose shouts of rejoicing. Thanks to the dash through tha river and the quick alarm not a Ufa was lost, and' no one was even se riously injured, for the mermaid quickly recovered from her faint, and smiled up at the prince, who was bending anxiously over her. "Speech! Speech!" cried tha crowd to the prince. Then he told them and he wasn't sorry the old prison-like mill had burned, for ha was going to build a better mill, ona in which it would be a Joy to work. And the crowd yelled In gladness. But, when the prince turned to look -for the mermaid, she waa not there. Down the road was speeding1 an automobile and from it came tha mermaid's song: "Prince of dollars, prince of my heart, Sad is the fate that keeps us apart" "Come back! Come back and wa never more will part," shouted tha prince. But the mermaid didn't come back, and why she didn't will be told in another story next week. Mystery Solved. Another explanation of tha high price of pork Is that skim milk, which used to be fed to tha pigs, is now used for Ice cream. Thla has long been euspected. Provi dence Journal. Rescue Homes and Maternity Hospitals provide competent medical and nursing care at times of confine ment and nurseries for the babies. They also give that sympathetic aid which is so need ed. Results 90 of the girls passing through these homes are restored. It's worth a million times the cost. The Salvation Army Visits All Helps All Gives all. We Need Your Help to Help Sept. 21st to 27th. Siiiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiniiniiiiiiiinittiiiniiiiiiiiiii niiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiinniiwinnimimiiiitiiiiiiiiii iirtniiiiiniiiiiiuiniriidtniitininniinniinui mtiutiHi iirHmTintuiKtimititiiMiiiiitiiii ium S School Trunks Are in Order WE HAVE THEM ou would not, of tf bcty a piano whose tone would gradually deteriorate, even with the test ofcare. Sturdiness shows all over, reinforced on all vital parts. Cretonne lined, two trays- $20.00 and $25.00 FRELING & STEINLE 1803 Farnam Street fiiiiiuiiimiiiiiiii!niiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM inimiiiffliniiimttimmiiiniiiiii, II cute Packers.' DAILY CARTOONETTE. man V's '. E0 YOUR SHOPPING EAR W WaJHEDLD- HO YOUR 5H0PP IKd m - ' I T ITf -t-4 o . fcj careiuily, ana you will find that tfve tft;euiuV2j;miliH alone of aU pianos has a tone and resO' nance which improve with age. wonder it is highest praised as well as niahest oried. u r sJc its o fAoiv you why. A Fine Line of Real PIANOS Kranlch A Bach, Vea A Sons, Sohmer, Brambach, Kimball, Bush Lane, Cable-Nelson, Hlni and Hospe. Player Pianos Apollo Reproducing-, Gulbransen and Hospe. Our Cash Price Are Our Tim Prices. 1513 Douglas St. Chicago Grand Opera Scat Sal rler Mail Orders Filled NOW. Established 1866 V A Real Convenience AJmost daily this bank transacts business with many people who have no bank ing connection whatever. Sometimes this is inconvenient to the individual, neces sitating identification, which is not always easy to obtain at the moment. Would not your interests be bet ter served if you had a Checking Account, Sav- ings Account, or some other tangible connection with us? The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Resources, Over $38,00000