Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1919)
THIS Bfctf:'. OMAHA, VvEDiit.SDAY, bahiaMBtl 3-1, 1919. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSE WATER VICTOR RQSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TIM aumcialed I'm, of walca TIM Bee M a number. It el elntinlf emnld lo tts un foe publication of all newt dlipetchei credited It or not otaerwtM credited tain paper, end alio (1m Ivul news published iieretn. Ail rlcoi of publication of out Denial dikpatcbea are alio inrnii " BEE TELEPHONES! Prtrate Brencb Exiar,ie. A is for th Tvler 1000 Department or Particular rernon Wanted. For Night or Sunday Service Call: Editorial Department ..... Tyler WOOL angulation Department ...... Tyler WW Advertising Department . - - - Trier IQOeL. ' OFFICES OF THE BEE Horn Office. Bee Building. Via and Fareato. Branca Offlrn: . . . A, met 4110 North !4tb I Park Zt15 Learenwortk llftieun 6111 Mllluij aa South Bid 3318 N Street Council Bluffa IS Scott St. I Ws'mit gltt North 4l)t uut-oi-iown unices: nil o street 1330 H Street JUNE CIRCULATIONS Daily 64,611 Sunday 61,672 Aeertie circulation for the noota (ubucrlbed and rom to bt E. H. Rucan. circulation Manafer. Subscriber leaving the city ahould have the Be mailed to them. Addresa changed often as requested. New Yort Ctl !S Fifth Ara I Wahinoo . Cnlcaiu Seeser Bid. I Lincoln You should know that Omaha has nolums or tenement district, no lowlands, no narrow streets, and is a city of comfortable homes. They're off at the carnival. '. Mayor Hoan of Milwaukee rings true to his socialistic extraction. Chief Eberstein is learning more about the law every day. The steel strike is almost as noisy as a steel mill, but not nearly so useful. The street railway situation is making a strong argument for home rule for Omaha. England has a profiteer law that is said to be bringing down cost of living. America needs one. Again the guilt for starting the war is fast ened on Austria, but where does this leave the ex-kaiser? It is up to the unparalleled leader of the administration forces in the senate to count "noses again. ' Seventy-eight colors are promised for the new spring styles. And the rainbow only shows seven! Nebraska has had its first frost of the fall now, and everything else is in readiness for In dian summer. Bond issues are coming from the city hall almost as fast as they did from the belligerents during the war. If all the "thou shah nots" were eliminated from the tables of the law, we would have lots of liberty, just like Russia. Attorney General Palmer pleads for a truce between capital and labor, but does not tell -how to. bring it about. A little give and take might help. Complaints about service on the street rail way will be referred to the city attorney, as the commissioners are too busy framing up bond issues to be bothered. Japan will not undertake to "predict events" which may follow on negotiations soon to be opened between Tokyo and Peking. In May, .191,5, no such difficulty was experienced. A brewer's chemist testifies that if the "2.75" stuff is exposed to the sun it will develop a "kick" equal to T. N. T. Watch for bottles all irf a row where the light will strike them. An enormous increase in the amount of but ter, eggs and poultry held in storage indicates that we will not starve next winter if we can only get hold' of money enough to tempt the .speculators to let go. . "Jimmy" Cosgrove staged quite a party for -his farewell appearance, which is likely to be "much delayed in consequence. Such playful 'young persons as he seems to be add much to the joy of urban existence, yet at times they are apt to overdo it Senor Francisco Villa pays his high respects to "muy estimo amigo" Venustiano Carranza, and will he please get off the earth? And just to think, if it had not been for that same Car ranza and hi high standing at Washington, this pestiferous Villa would long ago have been put in a place where he could trouble nobody. The army store does not propose to be bothered with competitors, and therefore has shut off the postoffice and the city from selling the surplus stock. It may take some time for the people to fully appreciate just how this . service has been bungled,' but when it finally is cleared up, it will be found that no part of the war operations has been more jumbled. Wages and Efficiency Some Boston authority, eminent no doubt but lost to memory at the moment, issued a statement which, dealing with labor production, took the ground that efficiency, after all, was the only accurate measure and wages were neg ligible. If wages, for example, increased 30 per . cent and efficiency increased 50 per cent, the situation was vastly improved. This is axio matic, of course. Then the authority went on to assert, rather than to prove, that labor ef- ."ficiency had enormously increased since the be ginning of the war and there was nothing but optimism; to be spread out for our delectation. Unfortunately the facts are not all in cor roboration of the efficiency assertion. In the steel industry, commonly said to be the barom eter of all industry, the reverse has been as serted Reports by the several steel concerns. "unverified as far as we are concerned, show that since the beginning of the war steel wages have advanced an average of 170 per cent and at the same time efficiency - has decreased an average of 20 per cent. If this is true, the labor cost of the average ton of steel produced has . increased approximately 225 per cent. -'' - The books of the steel corporation show ' that in 1902 it paid an average wage of $717 per man. or $14.70 per ton of steel produced; while in 1918 this average wage had increased to $1,685 and to $32.68 per ton of steel. The figures indicate a distinct lessening of labor ef ficiency at a time when increased production is acknowledged to be the world's greatest neces- ilj. St. Taul Pioneer-Press. , WHY AND WHERE HE FAILED. The president is greeted on his homeward way by a telegram from Senator Ashurst, who names seven other democrats in addition to himself, who are ready to vote for the Johnson amendment to the treaty. He also has the news that Senator Thomas is opposed to the treaty in its entirety, and that Senator Hoke Smith is seeking to compose the Lodge and the McCumber reservations, that ie may present an acceptable compromise. This is the fruit of the tour on which it was sought to overawe the senate by taking the treaty to the people. The president of the United States will always be heard when he goes abroad to address the masses. He is always assured of a respectful audience, and of great popular acclaim. He makes a serious mistake, though, if he ascribes the applause to the acceptance of his views. In regard to the treaty and its covenant for a League of Na tions, the longer it is considered, the less likely it is to be adopted. The reason for this is not far to seek. Sen ator Hiram Johnson fairly epitomized the president's record when he said at Minneapolis: Wilson, for three years before we got into the war, was unable to tell for what the na tions of the earth were fighting and told us ' each side was battling for the same hidden causes. For two years and a half he neither saw nor understood the underlying forces in civilization's titanic struggle. Unmoved and untouched, he witnessed the crime against Belgium and the assault upon humanity. He now speaks learnedly of the initial phases of the conflict, the actuating reasons, the roots of the cataclysm. Until the beginning of 1917 he told a different tale and spoke another story. It is only now, when the exigencies of his league demand another presentation, with a wholly different back ground, that he reverses his utterances from 1914 to 1917 and assumes now to tell us the causes of the war, the underlying forces of the ruthless militarism which pounced upon an unsuspecting world, and paints a picture utterly the reverse of that which he painted to the American people for nearly three years. And during all this time Roosevelt clearly saw, and he sounded his trumpet call to the American people of preparation for the in evitable, while Mr. Wilson, in utter indiffer ence or with unseeing eyes, again and again publicly stated that both sides were fighting for the same unknown reasons and that jus tice substantially res.ted with neither. Examination of his messages and addresses shows tha( the president has changed his mind or reversed himself thirty-one times between 1914 and 1919 in regard to the war and its causes, its purpose and its settlement. He must not be surprised if people decline to try to follow him through all the mazes into which his own uncertainty or instability of mind have led him. Seth Bullock, Pioneer. Seth Bullock is dead. The announcement will not cause much of a ripple on the surface of a world turbulent because of tremendous things that agitate it, but it will bring a mes sage of sbrrow to those who are familiar with the real west. The first sheriff of Silver Bow county, Montana; the first sheriff of Lawrence county, Dakota; captain of a company of rough riders in the war against Spain, a fearless man, a staunch friend, he was peculiarly a represen tative of law and order. No man in himself represented the majesty of the law in more dignity than did Seth Bullock, when he served the processes of the court ill the lawless regions around Butte and Deadwood in their formative days. His six-foot-three was all man, and no one who ever looked into his eye saw there anything but the clear light that shone from a fearless soul. No more gentle or modest man. did deeds whose sheer courage justifies their remembrance, or had less to say about them after it was over. Nor did a more courtly or polished gentleman ever greet a friend or wel come a guest. His years were such as gave him chance to see the wild region into which he rode as a young man brought to the state of peace and quiet usefulness. A leader among the pioneers, friend and companion of Roose velt, known from coast to coast, Seth Bullock enjoyed the deep regard of all who knew him well because he was a man. , Applause from the Senate Gallery. Decorum that has marked the existence of the United States senate from its commence ment has vanished under the rising wave of popular control. No longer does hoi polloi, sans culotte or proletarian approach with bated breath the sacrosanct presence of the greatest deliberative body in the world. Shattered is the sublimated dignity that hedged the "rev erend, grave and potent seignors," gone is the reverence once theirs, vanished the gravity, and only some vestige of former potency remains. Where once the welfare and the future of the nation, tremendous problems of state and in ternational relations were discussed with pon derous and learned phrase, where oratory flowed in language lofty and limpid, and rapiers of reason flashed and rang, while spectators and junior senators sat in awe and spoke in whis pers before the giants of intellect and ex perience, the people now gather, and regardless of traditipns or rules, express approval or dis approval of what is being said. Whether this be a triumph for democracy or a loosening of bonds, it is proof of the passing of the old forms and the coming of a new day. The gap between the people and the senate has been bridged. "Compromise" on Fiume. It now appears that the adjustment of the Fiume incident . rests in President Wilson's hands once more. England and France have agreed, so it is reported from Paris, to permit the occupancy of the city by Italy, with the in ternationalization of the harbor and the rail roads , leading to the interior.! This appears to be an easy way out of the tangle. The af fair would be of no especial moment, were it not for the importance it draws from the peace conference itself. When the adjustment of the Aedriatic was before the "big five," our presi dent felt that Jugoslavia ought to have the "window" it sought, and so decided to turn the city in dispute over to the new state. A gov ernment was overturned in Italy because of this, and now revolt among the soldiers is com pelling a revision of the president's inept diplomacy. That great moment in Woodrow Wilson's life, when he was the whole thing at Paris, is imitated if not equalled by the specta cle of Poet d'Annunzio at Fiume. Atmosphere of strikes and disturbances of many kinds is turning a- handsome penny for the anti-riot insurance companies. A better form of insurance might be to insist on each property-owner carrying his own risk, and thus enlisting his influence against disordei The I. W. W. Cases In Kansas From the Kansas City Times. The trial of the members of the I. W. W arrested in Kansas during the war on the charge of conspiracy against the government, will be called for trial in the United States district court at Wichita next week. The case has attained nation-wide discussion and is of peculiar interest. To begin with, the men were arrested two years ago in the oil fields of the state on the suspicion that they were gathering there for the purpose of destroying oil properties and hindering the government in its war with Ger many. The government's case against the men will be that the I. W. W. sought by the use of the strike and by sabotage to completely tie up the lumber, copper and oil industries in order to cripple the government in war. They succeded in their efforts to greatly hinder the timber and copper industries. Then they moved upon the oil fields. Notwithstanding the fact that the men were arrested two years ago, they have not yet had a trial. The majority of them have been kept in the jails of Kansas, which fact has brought down upon the heads of the government offi cials, and especially upon the head of Fred Robertson, United States district attorney, the condemnation of the uplifters throughout the country who count it as a fundamental princi ple of the great reform to sympathize with all revolutionists against law and order. They have written volumes in the publications of the "reds" and in the soulful magazines about Mr. Robertson's "vindictiveness" in keeping the I. W. W.'s in jail so long a time wihout a trial. But, as a matter of fact, Mr. Robertson and the government officials in charge of the case have made every effort to bring the men to trial at every term of court since their arrest. The crime of conspiracy is a rare one in ciminal court records. It is well known among lawyers that it is the most difficult crime to prove. In order to convict it is necessary not only to prove the act of the conspiracy, but the time and place of the actual conspiracy to commit the act. In order to draw an indict ment in conspiracy it requires that every hair splitting technicality of law be observed. For in the drawing of such an indictment, always the man charged with the offense is given every benefit of doubt, as he is in the trial of the case. Three times the I. W. W. attorneys have appealed to the technicalities of the law against the indictments, and three times the court the United States court, too, which usually is pic tured as being a holy terror to revolutionists has given the benefit of the doubt to the pris oners and quasbed the indictment. , Now, the failure of -the indictment to com ply with the dotting of every legal "i" and the crossing of every legal "t" of the lettering of the document, has nothing whatever to do with the crime charged against the offender, so far as his guilt or innocence is concerned. The quashing of an indictment because it fails to spell a name correctly, or fixes a date on the 17th of a given month when it should have fixed the date on the 18th of the same month, does not mean that the court has ruled that a crime was no tcommitted by the man whose name was mis-spelled, at some date in the month named. The United States attorney, having in his possession, what he regards as sufficient proof that a grave crime was committed, and believ ing that he has the men under arrest who committed the crime, is left to the choice of turning the men loose, after each indictment is set aside, or drawing a new indictment. The United States attorney believes, of course, that his indictments are legal in every way. He does, not agree with the views of the court as to the weakness of the indictment. But the court is the law in such cases, and the district attorney must submit to the ruling. He must either let his prisoners go free, or, he must hold them upon a new indictment. Mr. Robert son simply decided to hold the men. He has attempted each time to cover up the technical provisions of the law. He has had his wit nesses present at each term of court. He has been ready for trial on every date set aside for tne neanng. tie has not asked for a con tinuance. There has been nothing vindictive in his conduct toward the prisoners. The uplifters whose sympathy for the revo lutionists prompts them to set Mr. Robertson apart as a "demon," would, of course, have turned the prisoners loose. Even more, they would not have arrested them in tthe first place for such a trifling matter as a charge of con spiracy against the government. The uplifters of this school regard conspiracy against the government as an essential plant in the plat form of the brotherhood of man. But Mr. Robertson is of the old-fashioned sort who be lieves that the punishment of conspiracy against tthe government is the best way to promote the brotherhood of man. Profiteering in France Profiteers are having troubles of their own in France and vice versa. A governmental de cree shows that what is true of human nature on one side of the Atlantic has little falsity on the other. It finds: That dealers have been "carried away" in their efforts to obtain "excessive profits." That under all sorts of "cover" the middle man has followed suit, and That the consumer, being unfamiliar with the exact elements of the situation, finds him self disarmed. Hence an effort to devise immediate pallia tives. But a distinction with a difference calls for comment. The decree issued has only for its aim the exercise of a "moral restraint." The difference is significant. It is eluci dated or emphasized or both by the explana tion on the part of the government that it does not mean to interfere with freedom of trade. This freedom is referred to as being dictated by the constituent assembly and as being or dained by the fundamental law of the land. It is "sacred." Further, the government is convinced moral restraint will really palliate and that it will suffice until the return of the play of normal economic forces. The confidence of the French government in moral restraint badly needs vindication. Moral restraint has never operated here to curb profiteering. Brooklyn Eagle. 7 The Day We Celebrate. Charles Leslie, district judge, born 1867. ' Edgar M. Morsman, jr., attorney-at-law, born 1873. ; Dr. James M. Patton, oculist and aurist, born 1876. CharlesPiez, who served as director general of the Emergency Fleet corporation, born in Germany, (of American parentage), 53 years ago. , . .- Maj. Gen. William M. Wright. TJ. S. A., who commanded the 35th division in France, born in New Jersey 56 years ago. Maj. Gen. Clarence P. Townsley, U. S. A., former superintendent of the United States Military academy, born at De Kalb, N. Y., 64 years ago. ' J. Horace McFarfand, for many years presi dent of the American Civic Federation, born in Juniata county, Pennsylvania, 70 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. Landlord Balch of the Barker hotel gave a coaching party. Bishop J. H. Vincent of the First Methodist Episcopal conference addressed a large assem bly at the' Methodist church. John L. McCague, William E. McCague and James Lawrence have incorporated the Na tional. Bank Building company, with a capital stock of $125,000. The Young Men's Republican club met at Potter & Cobb's office and elected D. J. Dona hoe president for the ensuing year. John C. Thompson vice president, George .A. Joplin secretary and James Mcrkle treasurer. Our Free Legal Aid State your case clearly but briefly and a reliable lawyer will furnish the answer or advise in this column. Your name, will not be printed. Let The Bee Advise You. She May Sue for Divorce. F. D. B. A woman was married at 17 and had two children. Hus band was killed. Later, entered into what she thought was a com mon law marriage to a man who "could not marry on account of a wife -hopelessly insane." Two chil dren were born. They had lived to gether four years when she learned they were "not even married by common law marriage because he had a wife." She does not wish to give up the children. Is not strong enough to support all the family without the man's help. They are not happy together. Is there any way by which the woman may be "rid" of the man and yet have his help in the support of their chil dren? She does not wish the chil dren or others to learn the circum stances. The man won't leave of his own accord Answer The woman can bring an action for divorce and ask for custody of the children and alimony provided that the common law mar riage was contracted in good faith. Set Aside the Will. F. B. Please give me an answer through your free legal columns. Father died and his estate was di vided between mother and children. Mother received one-third and the balance divided between the chil dren. Mother later married a man that did not have a dime, and with the use of mother's money took up a farm which proved a success, also mother after being married in herited some money at the death of her mpther. There is one half brother in the family now. Recent ly mother died, and the understand ing is that mother left a will that our step-father was to get every thing that was left in case of death. This will, however, being framed up by the step-father before mother's death, according to his wishes. The question is: Are the children by the first husband entitled to any of the estate at mother's death? Answer If the children can have the mother's will set aside they will be entitled under the laws of descent to share in her estate. Division of Estate. C. M. S. First. One-third part to the wife, if the wife is the mother of all the children of the deceased, and there are two or more children, or one child and the issue of one or more deceased children surviving. Second. It makes no difference which survives, the property is di vided the same. Third. If the wife did not leave a will the husband re ceives one-half if there be no chil dren, nor the issue of any deceased child or children surviving; one third provided there is more than one child or the issue of a deceased child surviving. Replevin in Washington. E. C. L. I want to know about the law in the state of Washington. How many years or inside how many years can one replevin goods taken from one unlawfully? Answer An action for taking, de taining or Injuring personal prop erty, included an action for specific recovery or for any other injury to the person or rights of another not specifically enumerated, must be brought within three years under the laws of Washington, according to the published laws for the year 1917 in my possession. Referred to Commissioner. C. C. O. See Mr. Kennedy, labor commissioner, at court house, who will give you full instructions and information requested. .' - Contract for Crops. M. P. C. If your agreement for the crops was made before your contract was signed you are bound by your agreement and unless you can show that by reason of your husband's age and his impaired phy sical condition that he did not un derstand the nature of the contract, in other words, that he was mental ly incompetent at the time to make the contract, if you can prove that you need not perform the contract, but must tender back the amount received. A Wise Man. Wicks How did you manage to get your wife to give up her vaca tion? - Wiseman I gave her a potted fern for a birthday present, and she won't go away and trust it in the care of anyone else. Edinburgh Scotsman. DAILY CARTOONETTE. TJ0NT 6E RLRRMEfl-MflflflM! BOfjS RLUftmaKETOME RKH I'M 3URE YOURS Uu! v . -i r- '""fft WD HE DID- VeaV i ... I POSLAM STOPS FIERY STING OF ECZEMA "Just what my skin needed," will be your conviction after Poslam has been spread gently over your itching eczema. Unless you have ever tried Poslam you haven't the faintest idea how surely it works how quickly it soothes and smoothes out all skin ailments. You don't know its control over the fiery pangs of eczema or stubborn acne and other blemishes. Put Poslam to the test. Pick out the hardest spot you have and next morning look to see improvement. Thousands have done this to their lasting satisfaction. Sold everywhere. For free sampk write to Emergency Laboratories. 243 West 47th St., New York City. DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY. THE MERMAID IS KIDNAPED. (Whan the marmald says aha cannot marry the Prince of Dollars because he la rich and because ahe la plighted to Black smith Joe, the animali attack her, and Balky Sam carries tir away. The prince fiKhca to eave her from the animals.) CHAPTER IV. The Wedding Moon's Spell. HEE-HAW. the mermaid says she cannot marry the Prince of Dollars. I'll kidnap her again and carry her to where the Wed ding Moon shines on Lovers' Knoll! Hee-haw! Hee-haw!" Braying this message, Balky Sam raced along the top of the hlil with Anita, the mermaid, digging her heels into his Bides to make him go faster. For some strange reason she wanted to get away from the prince even though she confessed to loving him more ' than ever for the way he fought the animals to save her from them. From the woods came the chatter of the birds. "Cree! Chee! Flee to Lovers' Knoll and there we will sing while the Wedding Moon works its spell!" they cried. They flocked after Bal ky Sam in the silvery moonlight which was now making the open places as light as day. The prince turned to follow the mermaid, but Lonesome Bear stood in his path. "Waa-ugh! Waa-ugh! You hurt my nose!" howled Lonesome Bear, rubbing his snout, which the prince had so soundly punched. "Gr-r-ow-ugh! Get me down out of this and I'll chew you up," growled Johnny Bull, sliding from the top of the fir tree, where thy prince had thrown him by the tail. "Baa-aa! Baa-aa! Kicking isn't fair," bleated Billy Goat, wading from the mud pond into which the prince had booted him when he tried to butt the prince in the back. The three animals rushed for ward all together and the prince seemeed in for a hard battle. "We will help you," shouted Billy and Peggy, running to the prince's aid. But before they could get to He Dashed Away for Lovers' Knoll. his side the animals played a sharp trick. Johnny Bull made a quick grab at the prince's leg and the prince kicked at him. Lonesome Bear rushed forward, Billy Goat butted the prince from behind, and the brave youth went flying right over Lonesome Bear's head, land ing on his shaggy back. Then Lonesome Bear did just as Balky Sam had done with the mermaid he dashed away for Lovers' Knoll, with the prince clinging to his fur and tail. As he disappeeared into the woods, Johnny Bull set up on his haunches and howled with laugh ter. Billy Goat did the same, only Instead of howling he bleated: "Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba!" "Bow-wow, didn't we fool them fine? They thought we were mad," roared Johnny Bull. "And weren't you?" asked Peggy. "Not a bit, even when I got thrown up that tree," howled John ny Bull..' "It was all part of our plot to get them on Lovers Knoll together while the Wedding Moon was working its spell." "What's the Wedding Moon's apell?" asked Billy. "Come and see; we we missing; the fun," bleated Billy Goat. ' They raced away until they cam to an opening at the edge of a high, bluff. Here was a grassy knoll, from which one could look through the shadowy trees far out on .the country all round about. And just now the moonlight changed the whole land into a shimmering, sil very land of enchantment. It was a, beautiful spot, and made for lovers, and here were the Prince of Dollars and Anita, the mermaid. He held her clasped protectlngly In his arms, and she clung to him tightly. And every time she tried to draw away, as she had when she had fled from him at former times, Lonesome Bear would growl from the underbrush or Balky Sam would bray, and the mermaid would cling to him tighter than ever. Now the birds began to sing pret ty little love songs, and the prince began to whisper to the mermaid, and she listened happily, forgetting to try to get away. "Hoo! Hoo! All Is well! For when the Wedding Moon Bhlnes on young folks in Lovers' Knoll they are sure to wed." hooted Judge Owl. "Hey there, I'm here, too," roared a hoarse voice from up a pine tree, and there looking down through the branches was Blacksmith Joe. You're plighted to me. Miss Anita, and me you'll wed," he added as the mermaid gave a little shriek - and tore herself away from the prince. (Tomorrow will be told how Blacksmith Joe has an exciting- battle tn the air and changes his mind.) DOT PUZZLE 30 31 32, 31 29 34 35 26 'V 3t- 11 44 4& Z. 2. a 47 3 V l0' 5. 55 67 . I 7 8. '56 A lb ia .'2. i'b ' If you will trace to fifty-nine, You'll see my Caro . . Draw from one to two and sp on to the end. Established 1866 Our Obligation A bank rises to the full height of its obli gations to its patrons only when it extends sound financial guidance secured by intelligent investigation, conservative investment, ample reserve, a clean rec ord, a PERFECT BANKING SYSTEM all forcefully ad ministered by men of in tegrity and ripe banking experience. aU-C --7s- V Those of our de positors who have sought such service have found us receptive to their solicitations, and fully competent to solve their busi ness problems. The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Resources 38 MILLIONS aooDoaao 1 J RED CROWN GASOUNE a n an hp n ri No Shopping Is Necessary Locate the nearest Red Crown Service Station and drive in. You can't get bettei gasoline anywhere. You can't buy car mileage or power any cheaper. With quick-vaporizing, clean-burning, mile eating Red Crown Gasoline for fuel, and Polarine Oil the lubricant to insure quiet power, you get motoring satisfaction. The cost per gallon is no higher. The cost per mile is way down. Fill up at the nearest Red Grown Station there's always one con veniently near. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Nebraska) OMAHA SERVICE STATIONS: 18th and Cass 18th and Cuming 18th and Howard 12th and Jackson 29th and Harney 39th and Farnam 20th and Amei 45th and Grant 50th and Dodge 24th and I South Side 24th and O South Side 30th and Tucker Florence WFM CROWN GASOLINE