Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 25, 1919, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
; THE BEE : OMAHA', SATURDAY, OCTOBER 85. 1919;
The Omaha Bee
daily (MoitNmG) evening Sunday
t: rOUWDIO BT SPWA&D BOSEWATSB
, VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR x
THB BEB rUBUSHiyO COMPANT. PROPRIETOR
MEMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
' Ths AKraUted Prem, ot waioh Tkitakl muabw. to
ttattnlr entitled u UKllt to aaMlortoa f ell sews weehe
Iraditx) to tt or not otherwise ondlted In this ptptr. and also
Um looal anra publlthed aerata. AU rlfbta of puhUoatioo at ear
serial eupstches an lUonaml,
BEE TELEPHONES!
print BrB "k"fc''ttTvlem 1000
JpeieieBl or Particular Perwa WaoSsi. I J1CI AVWV
For Nlfhl and Sunday Ssnrtss uui
atonal inpannmn
Ctmtlatloa IXpertroert -AdNrtUlot
Dj4rtmnl
Trier 10ML.
- Tyler lOML.
, Trier 100SU
, OFFICES OF THE BEE
Horn Office. Bat Bolldlnt. 171k and FaruM.
eh omen: .
Anai 4110 IratB MU I ran - isib usieumnui
Suua SUs Mlliurr are. Boota Bid J8U M Street
Coaadl Blofts U Scott It. I Wl . (it North etta
Out-of-Town Officast
New tori City M Filth A". I Wassjmtoa Mil O Street
Ohloete Beet? Bld. Lincoln IMP H Street
- SEPTEMBER CIRCULATION i
Daily 66,084 Sunday 61,893
Awtft eireuUtioei fwr th monta subscribed and from to bj
. R Bum. Circulation Minster.
Subacrlbara laa vine tha city should havo tho
to tasm. Address cbangad of tan i
Baa mailed
I required.
You should know that . ,
Omaha's postoffice" disburses
more than $200,000 monthly to
the rural route carriers of Nebraska.
What The Bee Stands For:
1. Respect for the law and maintenance of
order. - !
2. Speedy and certain punishment of crime
through the regular operation of the
- courts. -
3. Pitiless publicity and condemnation of
inefficiency, lawlessness and corup
tion in office.
4. Frank recognition and commendation
of honest and efficient public service.
5. Inculcation of Americanism as the true
j basis of good citizenship.
List day for "saving" time.
Lloyd George knows they are after him for
fair this time. .
Sugar must feej proud when it sees what
happened to hogs.
Herr Hohenzollern probably has changed
his mind by this time.,' ,
, Here is where your furnace gets its first real
try-out for the winter.
The federal grand jury is not wasting much
time over its job, either.
"Flying time" may defeat Maynard, but he's
a good game guy at that. .
"Moonshine hunters' seem to find Broad
way more fertile than the'Cumberlanda.
France has just put to death another traitor.
"La Patrie" means something over there.
Lenine has been "captured" once more, but
he must be accustomed to the process by now.
Viv$s hav'e a very annoying penchant for
breaking in on little tete-a-tetes and tea par
ties between affinities. "X'.'a. 1 1
' Tnkn T RnrfatVtW the vounirer savs the
industrial conference is "bankrupt." Yes, and
KHid hot leave anv assets. -
The president has another big job ahead of
Aim, that of "saving" the country v trom tne
threatened coal strike, vvatcn nim ao u.
Brazil is reported to be exporting corn at
the rate of 100,000 tons a week. Sounds like a
bear story. Nebraska will feed its crop as usual.
The Metropolitan Water ' board evidently
feels it is also an employer; it resists an award
to an injured employe quitejw vigorously as
any.. .- ' '. : - : ' ' ' j' .
A man who could run five newspapers at
one time ought to be able to look after the busi
ness of one Chamber of Commerce, no matter
how big. : - - ' .;
Kansas is going to sever athletic relations
with Nebraska. Inview of the regularity with
which the Cornhuslcers have been beating up
the Jayhawkers on the foot ball field no out
sider will blame them for wanting to quit'
Berlin politicians said "Nonsense 1" or its
German equivalent when they heard read the
telegram from the "All-Highest" to Zimmer
man, telling him to pay no attention to America.
They see things, after the fact and know' it was
nonsense.',' , ', " '. v-"V. "
Enough of the Carmagnole
i ' i.
- X - - .
Senator Watson's discovery that the federal
trade commission is a rest haven for out-o'-job
professional agitators and theorists of various
descriptions who have crept under the admin
istration wing, only confirms a general suspi
cion llong held with regard to this and other
board exercising more or less weird functions
under the government :
A tremendous urge has been, felt by this
class of citizens to go to Washington ad help
direct public affairs. The way they prefer to
do it is to get on the payroll of a commission
,of some kind that has a nice continuing ap
propriation, from congress. Once snugly placed
they can propagatte their doctrines without per
sonal expense, which beats any arrangement
they eould make Outside the payroll breast
works. It Is rather remarkable how many of these
pie patriots have landed. Pretty nearly every
community has its tale of some local addle pate
or other loon who has gone to Washington
and presently is heard of as reporting to con
guess or the attorney general or somebody that
he has (at vast expense) added two and two
together and ascertained the total to be five
and seven-eighths. -
The country hat paid a pretty stiff price
to enable these moon calves to roam around
and bump their heads together in a fog They
do all their so-called functioning in a fog. If
there isn't any when they arrive they make
one. To grope blindly in one and seize hold
... . . i . .
t tne wrong tning ana proclaim n me ngni
one is the only notion they have of accomplish
ment To see two of them get hold of each
other and waltz around, each under the im
pression that be has hold of something worth
while, would be amusing if it wasn't so expen
sive. If Senator Watson knows any way to'
end this carmagnble dance, or at least to m-
duce the dancers to perform it at their own ex-
' pense. tne country win welcome .w. miorms-
tion arid make the earliest use of it- Kansas
DEFINITE TREATY RESERVATIONS.
Putting treaty reservations into exact form
! progressing and the senate's foreign relations
committee hat adopted the phraseology of
three." - First of these provides that the United
States may participate in the activities of
League of Nations and its various commissions
only after congress has passed the necessary
laws to clothe elected representatives with the
power and authority necessary, and that none
may he appointed save by confirmation of con
gress.'' .- "V- ' '
The other two deal directly with those ar
ticles of the-treaty which refer to relations be
tween the United States and Germany, and the
award of the German colonies to the Entente
Allies. These reservations read: ' ;
Nothing in Articles 296, 297 or in any of
the annexes thereto, or in any other articles,
section or annex of the treaty of peace, with
Germany, shall, as against citisene of the
United States, be taken to mean any confirma
tion, ratification or approval of anv act other
wise illegal or in contravention of the rights'
of citizens pf the United Stattes.
The United States declines to accept any
interest as trustee or in her own right or any
responsibility for the government or disposi
tion of the overseas possessions of Germany
to which Germany renounces "her rights and
titles" to the principal allied and associated
powers under: Articles 119 to 127, inmlusive.
In a sense this foreshadows the disposition
that may be made of the Shantung section.
These reservations are intended to preserve the
interests as well as the rights of the United
States, without jeopardizing in any way the
principle involved. '
Diversity of view and opinion stilt" marks
the progress of the work, but it is hoped on
both sides that a substantial agreement will
soon be reached. Supporters of the president
now admit that the treaty can not be ratified
without reservations, ; and those who have
worked for the changes are seeking a form of
expression that will save American ideals and
institutions and n6t take the extreme form that
would destroy the purpose they nave by induc
ing a stubborn executive to exercise a pocket
veto on the work. ' " j
- ' Free jTrade and Foreign Credits.
Discussing the question of restoration in
Europe, a representative of a great Wall street
banking firm says credit to the extent of two
or more billions of dollars is necessary. , He
does not say so in that many words, but he
leaves an unmistakable inference that in his
opinion the government of the United States
should supply this credit, l
Secretary Redfield, who has resigned from
the cabinet, presumably to direct the affairs of
, billion-dollar pool, for promoting trade with
Europe, touches the point a little more squarely.
He proposes that the activities of the credit or
ganization be financed by the Federal Reserve
board to the extent of $500,000,000 ko $1,000,000,
000. Mr. Redfield goes deeper, and tells us:
I hope and believe that we shall open our
doors much more freely than we do now to
receive goods from abroad. We can not sell
if we do not buy.
There you have it. In order to restore
Europe, we must open qur doors wider, which
means an extension of free trade, and finance
foreign exporters through the credit of our own
country. No program could be more complete.
As 'part of the -war we have established a dye
and chemical industry, not so efficient yet as
that of the German, but growing fast, and bid
ding fair to realize the hopes of manufacturers;
the cutlery industry, chemical and optical glass,
and other lines have been restored to the list of
home products, but these will go by the board
if the program of the "European credit" boost
ers go through. ,
Americans- are interested in the restoration
of Europe, and are very willing to assist in any
reasonable way to bring about the revival over
there. Asking them to lend their credit, and
their market, both their productive power and
the consuming capacity, ; to build , up ruined
Europe that a group of eastern promoters may
profit as a result is putting too heavy a demand
on our altruism. Europe's credit will be re
stored when its people give over their petty
political squabbles and civil wars and get down
to work.-
. Omaha Grocers' Pure Food Show.
In none of our ways of living has greater
advance been made than in the process of pur
veying food. 1 I is no great stretch of time
from the day of the old-fashioned bad smelling
grocery, where multifarious odors mingled to
assail the nostrils of. whoever entered, to the
modern store, spick, span and 'sweet with fresh
air and the pungency of cleanliness.
Foods then handled in bulk are now kept in
neat and sanitary containers. Untidy shelving,
barrels and boxes have been superseded by fit
tings, fixtures and appliances for convenience
and even luxury. Where butter and few
similarly perishable articles once kept in an ice
box, the entire' display of foods, vegetables,
meats, fruits and all, is now under refrigeration.
Nothing is omitted from the modern store that
will add to safety in the matter of preservation
from taint of what is intended for man 'to con
sume. J X. '
Just as the sanitation has progressed, so the
preparation has been , diversified, and the
imagination as well as the sight appealed to.
This has all taken on the aspect of practical aid
to the housewife of today, so that the job of
catering to the wants of a family is greatly les
sened. A meal, a dinner, a banquet or a feast
piay be provided in short order, simply through
taking down the phone, calling the grocer and
telling him what to tend. Soups, fruits, dain
ties as well as the solids, delicacies undreamed
of by Lucullus or any of his guild of gourmands,,
wait the pleasure of the thrifty and discriminat
ing housewife, and lighten her labors while dispelling-her
"worries.
; And the enterprising grocers of Omaha are
going to give proof of this at the food show
which opens in the Auditorium this evening.
They will convince their customers that pure
food is pure nowadays, that good food is easy
to obtain, and may lead some into ways of
added comfort and increased economy they now
know nothing of. It is the mission of the food
show.
Qur doors to foreign producers. seem to be
open wide enough even if Secretary Redfield
doesn't think so. ' September ihows an import
record of $92,000,000 over the highest point ever
before reached, and a decrease in exports. This
ought to"be the answer to the free trader's de
mand for greater scope.
Anti-reds are reported to have captured 600,
OOO.OOG roubles In a'holshevik "Stronghold.
VVorth absst hajf i cent a pound, iv
The Mandate for Xurkey
From the New York .Timet. t.
' It is a pleasant picture which Mf. Morgen
thau gives qs of the possibilities . of Anglo
American co-operation in the near east, and he
It probably right when he says that after a few
yeara of competent administration Constanti
nople would be on its way .to becoming the
New York of the east Nevertheless, there
are several objectioni to the proposal which
he brings forward; objections both sentimental
and practical.
He seems to have in mind an American
mandate for the regions around the ttrait, An
atolia, nd Armenia as a political unit that is,
for all that will be left of the Turkish empire
after the loss of Arabia Palestine, Mesopo
tamia and Syria. The proposal that the ven
ture should be financed by the sale of "Turkish
bonds guaranteed by the United States" sug-
?ests that there will be entirely too much of
urkish flavor to the affair. Perhaps Mr. Mor
geftthau hopes to revive- in Constantinople and
Anatolia the cosmopolitanism inherited from
Rome, which continued to some degree under
the early sultans; but Turkish national and re
ligious sentiment has wrought too many out
rages on Christians, in the last century, to
make a sort of all-round and reciprocal forgive
ness of trespasses very probable. The Turks
ought to get out,-to get back into Asia. In
central Anatolia there may still be left a Turk
ish state; but in Constantinople,-in Thrace, and
in Armenia the Turk should be regarded as a
foreigner, subject to the jurisdiction of others;
It is a penalty long deserved, 'which. there it
now an excellent dpportunity to apply; if it is
not applied now, the world may suffer as much
as from the failures of 1854 and 1878.
The arguments in favor of an American
mandate for Armenia, inhabited by a progres
sive and intelligent people which would very
soon be making its own way and -paying its
own way if freed from Turkish rule, are con
siderably stronger than for any American con
trol over Anatolia. Constantinople is still an
other matter. Mr. Morgenthau is properly
solicitous for some disposition of Constantino
ple which will suit all the interested parties, in
cluding Russia. But what will suit Russia?
Presumably he means that Greek control of
the strait, whether through a mandate or by
annexation, would not; and doubtless old jeal
ousies would make Russians suspicious of any
British control. If 'Constantinople is not to
be left to its inhabitants, which is perhaps im
possible for the. present, no doubt everybody
would rather see America there than any other
state. But would the Russians expect us to
hold the strait in trust until they were ready
to take it over? To that the Greeks and others
might object. On the other hand, the Greek
population of Constantinople is likely to in
crease in numbers and influence and it is al
ready some 40 per cent ,of the whole under
any new administration. If,' at the end of a
temporary American mandate , Constantinople
should exercise self-determination and vote
union with Greece, the Russians would be no
better off. ' '
A permanent republic of the strait is a solu
tion in many ways attractive, and doubtless
somebody would have to take the mandate.
But it ought to-be dissociated.Nno less than
Armenia should be dissociated, from any sur
vival of the Turkish empire. The world has
!i ad enough of that; and we have promised to
iquidate the affairs of that empire with regard
to the. interests of the peoples, concerned.. Of
these various peoples the Turks themselves, in
view of their long record of brutality and gov
ernmental incapacity, should be considered
last. ,
Moreover, Mr. Morgenthau Is franle enough
to tell us that it might cost , $300,000,000 or
$400,000,000, whh is a respectable - sum . of
money, even in these times. We might get
some of this money back, he says, by selling
Turkish bonds backed by American guarantee.
If we sold them, we should haveito do it on the
strength of the guarantee; Turkish credit does
not attract investors at present. A trifle ex
pensive, all this; and it is hard to see what
benefit we should derive out of England's will
ingness to give us "equal rights in the Strait of
Gibraltar" by way of compensation for taking
over the Turks. . Everybody has equal rights in
the strait in peace time, and if England again
became involved in war she would hardly admit
an American garrison to the rock.
Remarriage of the Divorced
One of the acute" questions before the gen
eral convention of the Episcopal church in De
troit is the forbidding of the remarriage of any
divorced person by a clergyman of that church,
for which a considerable party in the church
has been working. The matter was presented
to the committee on canons, which reported
that the proposed change was "inexpedient" by
a vote of six to five. '
The action will meet the approval of the
country and of a great part of the membership
of the Episcopal church. Nobody denies, the
evils of the cut and try again marriages,
which are facilitated by the wide divergence of
our state laws governing divorce and which
have brought scandal upon both the church and
the state. The stand of clergymen-who have
refused to ' remarry divorced persons whose
misconduct has been notorious is approved by
almost all church people. But between the
rebuke to notorious evil living embodied in such
refusals and a hard and fast rule that the-innocent
party to a divorce shall not remarry, there
is a broad gulf, across which it will be difficult,
if not impossible, to carry the membership of
any Protestant church,
Scandalous as the abuses of divorce have
been and are, divorce itself offers a relief from
msitaken marriages and from conditions the
continuance of which, under the bonds of mar
riage would be more immoral than divorce is.
The law of this state recognizes that fact by
permitting divorce for adultery, and the laws
of other conservative states have recognized
desertion, drunkenness and physical abuse as
such causes. To say that the innocent person
of such divorces shall not remarry would be to'
ignore the law of nature and to promote im
morality, and few states have gone that far. To
deny the sanction of religion to such a remar
riage of the innocent would be to weaken the
hold of the church over marriage and to in
crease respect for the sanction of the law as
administered by civil officers. Surelv no church
wishes to do that or to alienate from its in
fluence and teaching the children born of such
remarriages. The no-divorce advocates are a
minority of the laity of any Protestant church,
and the defeat of such a canon is a sign of
moral health and sanity. Brooklyn Eagle.
ron av
The Day We Celebrate.
John W. Robbins, real estate, insurance and
rentals, born 1862.
Carl S. Vrooman, late assistant secretary
of agriculture of the United born at Macon,
Mo;, 47 years ago.
Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Garland, bishop coad
jutor of the Episcopal diocese, of Pennsylvania,
born in Ireland 53 years ago.'
Frank M. Byrne, former governor of South
Dakota, born at Volney, la., 61 years ago.
John N. Willys, Toledo automoblie manu
facturer, born at Canandaigua, N. Y., 46 years
aso.
Edward W. Saunders, representative in con-d
fress of fht Fifth Virginia district, born in
ranklin county, Virginia, 59 years ago. ,
Thirty Yeara Ago in Omaha. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Barton left for a fort"
night's stay in New York.
Girl for general housework, family of three.
Good location. Mrs. J. O. Donohoe.
Miss Helen Hume has gone to St Thdmaj,
Canada, to complete her education at Alma
college. .
Mr. and Mrs. St A. D. Balcombe have gone
to Sioux City for the winter. : . :
General and Mrs. Brooke have rented Mr.
Odd and Interesting,
Every gem known to th lapidary
baa .been found in the United States.
The French National library eon
tains 71,000 booka on the French
revolution.
The Japanese never steep with
their heads to the north, but their
dead are burled In that position.
. In making champagne the grapes
are squeezed six times, each pres
sure making wine ot av different
quality. .
When a sheep was being shorn on
an Australian farm a starling's nest
with one egg; was found In its
wool. . -
The hairs from the snout of th
walrus are collected by the natives
of Alaska and exported to China,
where they are used as toothpicks.
The Ion gtalls of the shah of Per
sia's horses are dyed crimson for
six Inches at I their tips. This la a
jealously guarded privilege ot the
ruler and his sons. ,
The Ink plant of New Granada Is
a curiosity. The Jules of It can be
used as ink without any prepara
tion. At first the writlngr Is red, ,but
after a few hours it turns to a deep
black.
In Tibet one son at least of every
family must Join the church, partly
for spiritual motives, partly to gain
the temporal protection of the
monasteries, the most powerful fac
tor in the country. '
The gloves worn In Iceland are
made without fingers, and in order
that no time may be wasted in dls-
tingulshlng between right and left
each glove has two thumbs. The
hand is thrust into the first glove
taken up.
Barbers In the early days of the
Christian era were not permitted to
talk while shaving e, patron. In
deed, silence was so much appre
ciated by persons while under the
barber's hands that mutes were
preferred for this service.
Probably the largest baromter in
the world is that set up in the Ial
ian town of Faerza, the birthplace
of Torricelll, the discoverer of the
barometer. The liquid used is puri
fied oil in a column over 86 feet in
height
Soapstone Is largely used in China
for preserving structures built of
sandstone and other stones liable to
crumble from climatic conditions. It
is powdered and put on in the form
of paint, and will preserve build
ings for hundreds of years.
When forced to travel all' night
the Siberian natives make a practice
of stopping just before sunrise and
allowing their dogs to sleep. They
argue that .if a dog goes to sleep
while it is yet dark, and wakes up
in an hour and finds the sun shln
lngg, he will suppose that he has
had a ' full night's rest, and will
travel all day without thinking of
being tired.
IN THE BEST OF HUMOR.
"She can bake and ahe can brew." -"Brew?"
aald the colonel. "Brew, eh?
That's worth looking Into." Xanana City
Journal. ,
Mm. Knart Did the doctor aak to m
your tongue T
. Husband No; I told him about your
and he ordered ma away for a root. Boa
ton Transcript.
She And hain't the awful life of de
struction and war spoiled you for a peace
ful, harmless existence T
He Well, you see, I happen to be a
lawyer. Sydney Bulletin.
Lady Jane Have yon riven the soldflsh
fresh water. Janet?
Janot No, mum. They ain't finished
the water I gave 'am t'other day yet.
Edlnburg Scotsman.
"Whr Is your son maklnr all vthat
racket with the monkey wrenchl" x
"Preparing his thesis. He graduates next
week from an automobile college." Louis
ville Courier-Journal.
DREAMS.
They wait until the little hours. ,
When all the world swings low.
To drift within my quiet room
In endless ebb and flow;
I often think of them by day.
Whether I will or no.
They call me from my narrow bed
To lofty vaulted hails,
Where pavements heave beneath my feet
And blocks drop from the walla;
One tiny door a world away
I reach, ere the roof falla.
Or else they lead by wandering ways
To lands I do not know .
To lonely plains of ice and fire
Where dreadful monsters grow.
And shadowy armies march and march
Forever, row on row. ,
Ah, could I buy my dream tonight, ,
A love-tryst I would keep
In an old garden far away
Aetoss the .ocean deep
If I could buy my dreams just once.
Before I go to sleep.
Ethel Wolff In the Hew Tork Times.
DOT PUZZLE
24. a .a V rr
V V
3
is'48 S, ' "
;5o f 4fc
45 6
55. N
4 1
, 42 '
Fifty-eight lines and you will
Surely meet my Bill.
Draw from one to two and so on to the
end.
"Business Is Cood.Thank You"
WHY-
aw v a. m
as
n.
Ull
Newspaper Worker.
BT ELIZABETH MATIER. '
The girl who "would just love to
write" it as frequent as the older
woman whose friends have always
told her "she eould have made a
fortune with her pen."
Fondness for the work is undoubt
edly necessary for the girl who
would succeed in newspaper wdrk.
Not until she receives back her first
copy mercilessly slashed with the
editor's blue pencil does she realize
the largeness of her task and the
skill required. It may be written
in perfectly understandable English,
a gem of literary style according to
her college professor, and yet lack
the "human interest" and snap that
will "put it across."
There are plenty of people, includ
ing editors, who give slight encour
agement to the woman journalist,
r, The opportunities for women re
porters certainly are not great, be
cause women can't compete with
men. A woman reporter is as much
out of place climbing over the ruins
of a wreck as in "covering" a mur
der in the corner saloon. Nor has
Everyday Science i
liHome Mechanict ?
Why Trolley Car Wheels Spark.
By GRANT M. HIDE.
"What makes the sparks fly from
street car wheels when the track is
Icy or has leaves on it, dad?"
"That's the current going back to
the power house."
"Through the'track?" '
"Yes, sonny. You know from
what you have learned in school
wmu1 a.
111 ' aa"
S'Tnnodc!Di
Thej Current Follow
trvBjHea.vLln'
physics that two wires are needed
to make an electrical circuit. Well,
there is only one wire above a trol
ley car, isn't there? The steel track
serves as the other wire. An electric
street car is driven by electric mo-
Vl
3;
tori fastened to the ' trucks anri
geared to the axles. It gets its cur
rent through the trolley running
along the charge wire overhead that
is connected with a dynamo or electricity-maker
in the power house.
When the motorman moves the
handle on the controller he is clos
ing a switch to complete the circuit
and allow the electricity to pass
down the trolley, through the mo
tor sand into the rail. It follows
the heavy line in this diagram. .
"In third rail systems the elevated
rail beside the track takes the place
of the trolley wire and the car has
an iron-shoe for a trolley. That's
why it. is fatal to touch a third rail
while standing on the other rail or
even on the ground you complete
the circuit' In some cities the trol
ley wire is fastened on insulated
brackets in a trench under the track
and the trolley reaches through a
slit in the ground to get the cur-
lent." : . , . ;
(Next week: "Printing on a '
Found Press.")
Boys' and Olrls' Newspaper Service.
Copyright, 11. by J. H. Millar. '
, Raising Cocanuts. -The
excellent opportunities In co
coanut farming; 1 are attracting - in-'
creased capital to the Mindanao
province, Philippine islands. It is
said that It is possible, after the
first six months of cultivation, to
make the returns from corn grown
between the cocoanut rows sufficient .
to cover all expense of opening a
cocoanut plantation.
I
she the physical strength to endure
the pressure and Irregular hours.
I here are opportunities, though.
as "special reporters" of women's
clubs, conventions and ' society
news. The chances for promotion
here are not great. The average
salary is never higher than $30 a
week.
For the clever girl, with a srood
general education and live interest
in current happenings,, who is nat
urally industrious and ' sociable,
there are three attractive openings.
I he woman s naee offers a splen
did chance to the intelligent woman
editor, not only to instruct and nelp
her many woman , readers, but to
make it of such a caliber that the
men will read it too.
The other two are feature and
"free lance" work. The feature is
usually selected to suit the individu
ality of the writer, or vice versa.
"Free lance" work is independent
of any newspaper, a good chance
for the venturesome girl who Iwants
to "strike out on her own." The
best market for free lance writers
is the Sunday magazine.
When we consider that most large
universities have established depart
ments of journalism in which many
women are enrolled, that newspapers
are demanding better and more
highly specialized work, and that
more women read the caper than
ever before, we must see a brighter
day ahead for the woman journalist
(Next week: Kindergarten
Teacher.")
coys and Girls' Newspaper Servtoe.
Copyright, HIS, by J. H. Millar.
The Growth of the Women's
Department
of the First National
Bank is the best evi
dence ,of the service
rendered by a Women's
bank.
In order to render
the same good service
as when this depart
ment was smaller, an
other ' thoroughly ex
perienced woman bank
er is now assisting Miss
Stem. 1
Both Misses 'Stem
and Soderhblm are
daily rendering the
same banking service
in the Women's Depart
ment that is accorded
in our main banking
room.
You are cordially
invited to avail your
selves of; this service,
which, include all
phases of banking. The
Women's Department
is located at the north
end of our main banking
room.
First National
iBank of Omaha
Southwest Corner 16th and Farnam Streets.
t-
"Emergency Gasolene"
More New Service
5?
BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOlf
Gasolene Gauges are unreliable and the best
of cars will run dry. Oh, for one little gallon.
A CUSTOMER SAID.
"I walked a mile to phone for some gas and
then had to wait two hours before it came."
THAT GAVE US AN IDEA
We had built gallon and half gallon red lith
ographed "emergency gasolene cans" to be car
v ried in the car.
For your convenience at all our stations
y 1 gallon size, 20c
4 gallon size, 15c "
Less Than Cost
L. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO.
Tyler 4040
President
Locomotive Auto Oil, 10 Dsgrese Below Zero. ' ,
"The Best Oil We Know."
- .
p. '