Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 07, 1919, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEE : OMAHA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1919.
THE 'OMAHA BEE
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATEB
y VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
te BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tha Associated Frees, of which The BnIii meoibar. U tx
ataartalr entitled u Uu dk lot publication of tU news dlspatcnee
f oredlwd to It or not oth.rwlee credited In thu neper, and also
i it tocJ ntw published herein. All lifhu of etiblfoatlon of our
aptaui aispaicnae are auo reeema.
RFC TELEPHONES i
Mnti Plmuth CirHtnH. Alk for thenar I A innn
f Department or Particular Pereoo Wanted. J,cl
Fr N!h and Suad Sarvtca Call:
f Mitorlal Departrowit Wer 10WU
Cireuletton Department h h
AdttrUalng Department ..... Tyler 100SU
OFFICES OF THE BEE
Bon Offlca. Bm Building, 17th ud Ftroun.
Otncee: . .
Anna 4110 North 2n Para wis wwrowonn
Beam SUt Military Are. South Bid .2318 N Street
CvoacU Bluff! IS Scott St 1 Walnut , 81 North 40th
Out-of-Towa Official
Je To CUT IM rtfth Ate. I Weahlnstoe 1311 0 Street
Beeger Bias, i iinouin
OCTOBER CIRCULATION
Daily 66,315 Sunday 63,160
1 Average circulation for tha month euDecrtDea ana sworn so uj
J t g Bans, Circulation Manager.
Subscribers having tha city should have tha
to than. Addreaa ehangad aa often I
Boa mailed
I required.
You should know that
Omaha has more than 30,000
: children in daily attendance at its
splendid free public schools.
What The Bee Standi 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 ol
; . 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
basis of good citizenship.
Watch Ak-Sar-Ben expand 1
Over the top again for the Red Cross.
We may yet have to teach the bumptious
Mexican to say "Uncle."
"Boss" Murphy says he is not going. All
right, but some of his henchmen are.
Sinn Feiners object to colleens flirting with
the Sassenach. Hooroo, but the hunt is up nowl
Prohibition may have excited bolshevism
in Russia, but the chances are it has lived since
on vodka.
A loan to Poland of $250,000,000 is about to
be floated in this country. Presently they will
: all owe us something.
Secretary Baker is opposed to a separate
department of aviation. Three years ago he
did not want an army.
Vort Bethmann-Holweg is passing the buck
to his associates. He need not worry there is
obloquy enough to cover them all.
The president has put out his Thanksgiving
proclamation. Most of us may return thanks
that we are alive, but that is about all.
Some Italian coal miners haye solved their
share of the strike: "No beer, no wine, no
work. We go home." They will be missed but
not regretted.
Boston need not be inordinately puffed up
by reason of having a few illuminated crossing
policemen. It is not the first time a copper
has been "lit up."
Nebraska is not a good place for growth of
the Nonpartisan league. Political ideas of all
sorts have a hearing here, but it is hard to
coax people off into vagarious experimentation.
Herr Hohenzollern's physician has been
'.iorced to return to private practice, being un
able to exist on the allowance made him by
his employer. H. c. of 1. is surely a leveler.
Army trucks are rusting in the field at Lin
coln, while congressmen at Washington are
trying to get the War department to take care
of them. This is a proof of efficiency plus.
How sweet of the democrats to rejoice that
Governor Coolidge was elected and law and
order vindicated. But just think, what a shout
they would have sent' up If Long had come
through I .
A Borrowed Industry
For local color New York has borrowed
. i . . r ....... flnirtai f tha orlnh tr m pp t
xrcciy iiuiii c v 1 1 j "
the needs and desires of its cosmopolitan pop
ulation. From fashions to foods assorted va-
" rieties without end, and the popular demand
never seems to slacken. In a market where
millions of persons mingle and traffic it is
Xsigainst human nature that tastes and habits
should be made uniform in obedience to written
By way of enriching the life of the city,
prohibition now has the honor of presenting to
New York the bootlegger in his well-known
: part. As a fitting companion, the maker of
moonshine whisky is also introduced, under the
fostering influence of the moral forces of Mr.
Anderson's Antisaloon league, as filling a new-
want. s
I A Carolina mountaineer with a few bushels
I of corn in a hidden cove could turn out his own
Udeadly quality of whisky under conditions that
J tare denied to the enterprising chap who is re
stricted to tne narrow limits oi a tenement
ouse back room or a Bronx basement, but
their purposes are the same. Years ago, Detore
the eighteenth amendment was dreamed of, the
ripn-citizen Indian on his reservation was
birred hy statute from the purchase of alcoholic
beverages, but the illicit trader found the means
to1 carry on a prosperous commerce under the
noses of government agents. The up-to-date
New York bootlegger, in delivering his wet
goods to thirsty clients, may travel by subway
or taxicab, but with him the inducements to
beat' the law and outwit the federal officers
will be just the same.
Our own auto bandits and gunmen in their
crude way have adopted the practical methods
of the stage robbers and bad men of the wild
-west, but they wear tailor-made clothes and
make other concessions to eastern conventions.
Now that the bootleggers has put in his appear
ance in New York, it is too much to ask of him
that he shall dress according to character in
the style of the Carolina mountains or the
movies. Other things may be changed accord
ing to localities, but underneath the surface
there remains the same difference of opinion
between those who propose laws and those who
jiolatt them for profit New York World.
JOB FOR NATION'S TEACHERS.
In a considerable variety of ways the great
problem of civilization is being presented to the
Nebraska teachers now in convention here.
Able 'speakers, each a notable figure in the
broader fields of educational work, have out
lined in one or another form a phase of the
work that is expected. In each of these the
thought centers directly on the point of indi
vidual reesponsibility.
In his Thanksgiving day proclamation, the
president says:
To attain the consummation of the great
work to which the American people devoted
their manhood and the vast resources of their
country they should, as they give thanks to
God, reconsecrate themselves to these prin
ciples of right which triumphed through His
merciful goodness. Our gratitude can find
no more pressing expression than to bulwark
. with lovaltv and oatriotism those principles
for which the free peoples of the earth fought .
and died.
Along with the gospel of love must be
taught the gospel of work. Instillation of
principles of patriotism, civic righteousness, and
high regard for the law, which is included in
the former, will be unavailing unless along with
it goes convincing instruction in constructive
effort. Children must be taught that work is
man's greatest privilege, that the most arduous
toil is drugery only when the toiler has no
vision. False social values are to be dispelled,
and a more correct measure of worth estab
lished. Greed will not disappear while men
worship its fruits.
Public school teachers can bring about the
desired change more certainly. than any other
agency, for tthey have the greater opportunity.
To them the future belongs, and as they build
it so will civilization prosper. Reconsecration
in the sense the president advises is helpful,
but the inculcation of healthy ideals and sound
ideas in the minds of the school children of the
land will solidify the coming generations , on
the great principles for which Americans
fought.
Omaha the Air Mail Terminal.
Decision of the Postoffice department to
make Omaha the western terminus of the air
mail service rests on reason. From no other
point can so wide a territory in the west be
served by rail as from Omaha, and it must fol
low as well that here is the logical place for
the radiating air mail delivery. On a direct
line between New York and San Francisco, to
which point the department expects in time to
exjtend the flying mail, Omaha affords the same
relation to this new departure as to the over
land traffic of the railroads. It is the great
center of the country, has so been recognized
by careful watching men, interested in the de
velopment of transportation, whose wisdom is
guided by the choice just announced from the
head of the air mail. That the mails can be
carried by flying machines has been thor
oughly demonstrated, and that the commercial
use of the machine is increasing is admitted. The
Gate City is to be in reality a transcontinental
stopping place for the air-lane travel and traf
fic of the years ahe.ad.
When Training is Needed.
Congress will, it is reported now, heed Gen
eral Pershing's advice as to the size of the
regular army, but disregard his views on the
more important topic of universal training.
This is to be regretted. General Pershing is a
professional soldier, but he is a citizen and a
patriot, and out of the depth of his experience
has drawn wisdom for the use of his country.
When a member of the committee of congress
asked him why it was the "A. E. F." decided
the war so speedily after its entry, he answered
that the Allies held the lines while we were
training. .
People are apt to overlook the fact that
fourteen months elapsed between the declara
tion of war and Belleau Wood, where our men
were yet considered an experiment by the sol
diers of Europe. General Pershing also em
phasized the fact that an officer can not be
properly trained in ninety days. More time
must be given to the study of the details of the
profession. It is no discredit to any that the
larger part of our young officers went into with
little equipment for their work beyond a
holy determination to win and a fine concep
tion , of patriotic obligation. They never had
a chance to learn what is incumbent on an
officer.
A miracle was wrought, but it might have
been done much better had a little preparatory
work smoothed the way to a big job. This
lesson of the world war should not be thrown
away by Americans. i '
Clear Track for Ak-Sar-Ben.
Subscriptions to the full amount of stock
offered by Ak-Sar-Ben have been taken. It
was a foregone conclusion that the drive would
be a success, for no thought that it would lag
ever entered the minds of the enthusiastic work
ers who enlisted in the enterprise. Just as the
group of Omaha business men who set the in
stitution on foot a quarter of a century ago
were unable to foresee the great service it has
been to the community, so it is impossible for
those of today to foretell what will be in days
to come. It is certain, though, that the new
course on which the institution has been
launched leads directly to greater growth, to a
more substantial and dignified usefulness. A
great exposition will be a worthy substitute for
the carnival, and with one of its amusement
feeatures diminished, the annual fall festival of
Ak-Sar-Ben will have a quality befitting the
importance of the interests involved. The track
is cleared and Omaha's wonderful booster or
ganization is headed for a higher goal.
J'
Representative Aswell of Louisiana, who
complains of the "partisan" activities of the
republicans, objected to allowing Republican
Leader Mondell two minutes in which to ad
dress the house on Roosevelt's birthday. No
body will ever accuse him of not being true to
his party.
Southern cotton growers are now proposing
to "withdraw" a large portion of the already
short crop until they think the price is high
enough to warrant selling. Yet the president
called the coal miners' strike "immoral."
Creel, the unforgettable, is not telling what
he thinks about congress. A definite recollec
tion persists of the time when this same Creel
apologized abjectly to congress for some things
he said in public
The iitt that the captain of the Lusitania
did not obey orders he had from the British
admiralty does not relieve the Germans of
their responsibility for that foul deed.
, Roosevelt on Mob Rule
Some of Theodore Roosevelt sayings were
put into the Congressional Record by Senator
McCormick of Illinois, in connection with a
short address on the birthday of the late former
president Some of these are so pat in their
application to the present situation that all
should read them.
The Class Agitator Any man who tries to
excite class hatred, sectional hate, hate of
creeds, any kind of hatred in our community,
though he may affect to do it in the interest
of the class he is addressing, is, in the long run,
with absolute certainty, that class' own worst
enemy. President Roosevelt in Omaha, April
27, 1903.
No Class Gains from the Misfortune of
Another There , is no worse enemy of, the
wageworker than the man who condones mob
violence in any shape or who preaches class
hatred; and surely the slightest acquaintance
with our industrial history should teach even
the most shortsighted that the times of most
suffering for our people as a whole, the times
when business is stagnant and capital suffers
from shrinkage and gets no return from its in
vestments, are exactly the times of hardship
and want and grim disaster among the poor. If
all the existing instrumentalities of wealth
could be abolished, the first and severest suf
fering would come among those of us who are
least well off at present. The wageworker is
well off only when the rest of the country is
well off. and he can best contribute to the gen
eral well being by showing sanity and a firm
purpose to do justice to others. President
Roosevelt at Syracuse, September 7, 1903.
One Law for AH Mr. Shea, I can only re
peat what I have said. I am a believer in
unions. I am an honorary member of one
union. But the union must obey the law; just
as every man. rich or poor, must obey the law.
President Roosevelt to a strike committee,'
Mav 10, 1915.
Predatory Wealth One great problem
that we have before us is to preserve the rights
of property; these can only be preserved if we
remember that they are in less jeopardy from
the socialist and the anarchist than from the
predatory man of wealth. Quoted in Lewis'
"Life of Theodore Roosevelt."
Neither Plutocracy Nor Mob This govern
ment is not and never shall be a government
by plutocracy. This government is not -and
never shall be government by a mob. It shall
continue to be in the future what it has been
in the past, a government based on the theory
that each man, rich or poor, is to be treated
simply and solely on his worth as a man; that
all his personal and property rights are to be
safeguarded; and that he is neither to wrong
others nor to suffer wrong from others.
From President Roosevelt's Message to Con
gress, December 5, 1905.
The Two Evils The triumph of the mob
is just as evil a thine as the triumph of the
plutocracy, and to have escaped one danger
avails nothing if we succumb to the other.
There is nothing to choose between.
Fundamentally they are alike in their
selfish disregard of the rights of others. From
President Roosevelt's Message to Congress,
December 2, 1906.
Rough Work.
"Perhaps I ought to tell you," said the ap
plicant for a position, "that I have just finished
serving a prison sentence."
"Oh, that's all right," said the employer. "I
won't hold' that against you. But, wait a min
ute. What kind of a prison was it?"
"A model institution, sir. The warden, God
bless him, was a father to me!"
"Ah. In that case, I'm afraid you won't do.
This job is not suited to a 'hothouse plant.'
What I want is a man with calloused hands
and a corned-beef-and cabbage appetite."
Birmingham-Age Herald.
CfteVELVET
Pu Jttibur "Brooks "Baker rmMt
WILLIAM F. RIGGE. ,
The Creighton university, like others of its
kind, is after all the harmless information it
can find. So long as science makes no quarrel,
with truth that's signed and sealed and never
fusses with the facts reliably revealed, it's free
to wander cheerfully on every kind of quest,
to prosecute its keen pursuit with energy and
zest.
The work of Father Rigge is the study of
the stars, the habits of the comets and inhabi
tants of Mars. He lies in wait with telescopes
on triggers made of hair, the secrets of the universe-to
open to the air, and stars which at
the work of other scienitsts have laughed wake
up in horror when they find he's got 'em
photographed. ,
He plots the swarming heavens and he al
ways lets us know the stars and constellations
which another month will show. He prophe
sies what's coming and he writes it for The
Bee, that those who care what stars are there
mayvgo and look and see, though many healthy
citizens can plod along for years evincing little
interest in hot and distant spheres.
For human creatures are, alas, an unobserv
ing bunch. Their points of greatest interest
are always love or lunch. Exertions of the eye,
imagination, mind or ear are found by nearly
all of us too frightfully severe; and so we scorn
the upward call of heavens all alight and
scheme for more indulgence of some ancient
appetite.
(Next Subject Albert Webb Jefferis.)
The Day We Celebrate.
Nels Lundgren, real estate and insurance,
born 1867.
John W. Hughes, secretary Guarantee
Fund Life association, born 1882.
Samuel Corneer, secretary and treasurer of
the Union Fuel company, born 1860.
' John Harburg, Wright and Wilhelmy com
pany, wholesale hardware, born in Iowa, 1859.
Mme. Sklodowska . Curie, distinguished
French scientist, chief professor in the faculty
of sciences of the University of Paris, born in
Poland, 52 years ago.
Maj. K. M. Van Zandt of Texas, commander
in chief of the United Confederate Veterans,
born in Franklin county, Tenn., 83 years ago.
Charlotte Crabtree (Lotta), celebrated act
ress, now retired, born in New York City, 72
years ago.
William Denman, former head of the United
States shipping board, born in San Francisco,
47 years ago.
Thirty Years Ago in Omaha.
Complete figures for the judicial district
make certain the election of Judge Clarkson
over Judge Davis to the district bench.
"The Still Alarm," with Harry Lacy in the
title roll is pronounced an exciting play, which
filled the Boyd to standing room capacity. The
hero fireman gets the pretty girl and puts the
villian in the discard.
W. H. Kurtz, secretary of the Patrick Land
company, while riding horseback was thrown
over a steep embankment near Farnam and
Thirty-ninth streets and broke his collarbone.
The vinegar works of Brecht & Sons and
S. F. Henner & Company have been consoli
dated and will , hereafter be known as the
Omaha Consolidated Vinegar company.
Gefftral D. B. McKibbin and wife, who have
been the guests of their son, General Purchas
ing Agent McKibbin of the Union Pacific, for
the past six weeks, left for Hot Springs, Ark.
Judge Brewer is expected here next week
to hold federal court in conjunction with Judge
Dundy.
Captain Charles F. Humphrey, assistant
quartermaster at Cheyenne, who has been here
on business, has gone to Fort Sidney,
For the Volunteer Soldier.
Fort Crook, Neb., Nov. 4. To the
Editor of The Bee: Our attention
has been invited to a little piece of
poetry published In the Omaha Daily
News, November 4. 1919. To make
a summary of it, it told the public
that every volunteer in the military
service during tha war was a
slacker. It inferred that they vol
unteered in. order to get assigned to
some organization that would never
go over. It seems that anyone with
the average intellect would never
make such a statement
Thousands of young men volun
teered that would never have been
inducted. They gave their services
willingly to their country, lots of
them now dead, others cripples for
life. The majority of these men
came in the service before the draft
boards were even organized. Is it
fair to these men, volunteers, who
answered their country's first call to
arms, and to the mothers of many
of them who are still sleeping In
Europe, to call a volunteer a
slacker?
It is untrue that we volunteers
have shown a hatred to all Inducted
men. Many of them had very good
reasons for not volunteering. We
have been content to let them make
whatever explanation that they
deem necessary. But, on the con
trary, they not only form their own
opinion, but they desire to inform
the entire public that the volunteer
is a coward. Just consider - the
matter in your ,own mind and see
whether or not you are of the same
opinion as the writer of that little
piece of poetry.
If a man was afraid to go to the
front, would it be probable that he
would volunteer in the infantry or
artillery? For instance, the First,
Second, Third, Fourth, -42nd di
visions all volunteer organizations.
By a few volunteers of the 20th
infantry. N. F. HARRINGTON,
Company I, 20th Infantry, Fort
Crook, Neb.
Suspects a Plot. ,
Omaha, Nov. 6. To the Editor
of The Bee: I would like to men
tion a few things in regard to the
piece in the paper last night stating
that the police were making a
clean-up of "undesirables" and that
everybody must be at work. Now
that Is all right. But why do they
let the gamblers, pool room slickers
and other people that prey on the
workingman for a living alone, and
jump onto every workingman that
Is a stranger and perhaps without
much money? It is so the world
over. The police must have some
deeper scheme that the public
knows nothing about in arresting
and framing up on workingmen as
they did recently, when they took
$130 and sent that California lad to
jail for 15 days.
A WORKING MAN.
? Home Mechanic ?
Bigamy and Concubinage.
Sargent, Neb., Nov. 5. To the
Editor of The Bee: Why is the
crime greater for a man to marry
two women than for him to marry
one and live with another without
marriage?
It seems that the former is a
penitentiary offense, but the latter
is going on all over our country
without hardly a comment.
We have had an example right
here. A railroad man living with
his wife and family In another town
married a girl in our town. He goes
to Jail.
A traveling man living with his
wife and family in another town
comes here, lives with another wo
man as his wife, and he goes free.
Can you explain why this should
be? WILLIAM NEILSON.
Too Good to be True.
Humors persist that Lenine has
been assassinated, but we have't had
any luck for so long, we refuse to
get optimistic over It. Lexington
Herald.
DAILY CARTOONETTE,
I'MOINQTOLET M
HRlRftOU) UNTllHlGiH
FRlCESCOMt nrTm
. mi
n v v. i JLi
y i
DOT PUZZLE.
V - 2,
38 2o
'A 13
43 44 I ?
4 45
?53 S!?
, 50 SI 55
Does the Self-Starter Start?
By GRANT M. HYDE.
"Why doesn't the self-starter in
the car work this morning, Dad?
I stepped hard on the button and
nothing happened."
"No current, I guess, sonny. Bat
tery is low."
"What has the battery got to do
with it?"
"A self-starter, my boy, is noth
ing more nor less than a powerful
little electric motor which runs on
storage battery current and which
revolves the engine shaft. Until a
few years ago, all cars had to be
cranked by hand, because a gasoline
engine, no matter how powerful it
is, will not start of itself like a steam
engine someone must crank, or
turn the engine shaft, until the
charges in the cylinders begin to
fire. Now the cranking is done by
little electric motors called start
ers. "In our car the electric motor is
beside the engine's fly wheel so
Fifty-seven lines and you
See a that's in the zoo.
Draw from one to two and io on to the end.
that, when you press the starter but
ton, you not only swStch on the cur
rent but push the motor shaft into
gear with the fly wheel. On other
cars the motor is geared by chains,
friction clutches, or in other ways,
to the engine shaft.
"To supply current for the starter
motor, as well as the lights, electric
horn, and ignition in the engine
sparkplugs, modern 'cars have a gen
erator which makes electric current
whenever the engine is running
The current which it creates is
stored in the storage battery ready
for use at other times.
"When the starter doesn't start, it
is usually because we have used so
much current with starter or lights
that we have almost exhausted the
supply in the battery. Sometimes
the battery is wearing out, for they
seldom last, more than two years.
Sometimes one of the battery wires
usually the positive terminal is
loose or corroded. And it may be
other things, but it is usually be
cause the battery needs charging."
(In the newspaper office again
next week "Stereotyping.")
Boys' and Glrle Newspaper Service
Copyright, 1919. y J. H. Millar
HOW
to
Earn Monev
Outside f School
The One Thing You Need Most
By J. H. MILLAR.
"He is gone," sighed Mr. Wil
liams "the old-fashioned boy, the
boy of the Alger books, who began
at the bottom and fought ,aiid
plugged his way to the. top by his
grit and courage he is 'gone. In-
stead' all the kids think about today
is how they can get the most money
by doing the least work." Mr. Wil
liams was disgusted and angry.
"Oh, it's not quite so bad as all
that," replied Mr. Frick. "There are
plenty of gobd, industrious i boys,
but let rue tell you the kind that are
scarce. Boys with initiative are the
rare species. You will find a hun
dred that can carry out an order
fairly well for every one that can
see the thing to do and do it before
the order is given. Initiative go
ing ahead and doing things on his
cwn responsibility is the most im
portant single quality that any boy
can have."
"Right you are," replied Mr. Wil
liams. "I recall two fellows that I
used to know in my college days.
One was a big husky six-footer
named Jackson; he was a cracking
good football tackle, a social leader,
and an all around college man.
Everyone said Jack would make a
big success in business. That was
twenty years ago; he lacked some
thing: today he is shipping clerk in
a small Kansas City factory.
"The other fellow was 'Noisy'
Thomas. We called him Noisy be
cause he talked so little. Nobody
paid much attention to him; he was
a skinny little runt with a drooping
shoulder on one side and pigeon-toe
on the ctlier. I remember one even
ing he remarked, 'Some one at this
school ought to sell typewriters.'
Two days later his ad appeared in
the college paper and all year he
had two sophomores selling type
writers for him. That's the way he
worked and do you know that fel
low has made such a success in the
lumber business that today he can
ride, in the same direction for forty
miles through the woods of Maine
and his horse's foot will never be
off his own land I".
Even i you are only working to
make monev outside of school hours,
remember about Noisy Thomas. He
succeeded because he was not afraid
to go ahe?d and do things.
(All girls will be reading next
week, "A Shopper for Modistes.")
Boya" and Girls' Newapaper Pervlco
Copyright, 191, by f. H. Millar.
THE WORLD'S AGE.
Who will ay tha world la dylngT
Who will say our prime is paat?
Sparks from heaven, within ue lying;,
Flash, and will flash, till the last.
Fools! who fancy Christ mistaken!
Man a tool to buy and aell;
Earth a failure. God-forsaken,
Ante-room to hell
Still the race of bero-splrlts
Pass tha lamp from hand to hand,
Age from ase the world inherits
"Wife, and child, and fatherland"
Still the youthful hunter gathera
Fiery Joy from wold and wood;
He will dara as dared his fathers
Give him causu as gaod.
Whlla a slave bewails his fetters;
While an orphar pleads in vain;
While an infant lisps his letters.
Heir of all the ages, gain;
While a Up grow ripe for kissing;
Whlla a moan from man Is wrung;
Know by every want and blessing,
That the world Is young.
CHARLES KINGSLET.
FINE ART
New Creations in picture
frame mouldings, Home
Mottos, Latest Color
Prints, Artistic Materials,
Carbon Photos, p o 1 y
chrome frames, photo
frames, Christmas gifts,
Floor Lamps, Table
Lamps, Shades in silks,
satins, decorated parch
ments, parchment shades
for decorating. :
1513 Douglas St.
The Art and Music Store.
More Power from
Less Gasoline
Besides lubrication that insures a
quiet, smooth-running motor,
rolarine Oil supplies a constant,
gas-tight seal between the piston
rings and the cylinder walls.
Polarine holds the explosive
power of the gasoline behind the
pistons. That is the secret of en
gine power and fuel economy.
iThere is no power leakage when
Polarine guards your engine. You
can use a lean, quick - burning,
economical mixture and get more
power from every gallon of gasoline
use less gasoline per mile.
Buy Polarine where you buy quick-fire,
power-full Red Crown Gasoline At
filling time look for this sign.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(NEBRASKA)
Omaha
inimi
ffiofarine
MOTOR
mic
c
a -
9
i