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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1919)
4 'I'Uif UU'Li. niAUi b'tHMAV NnVfc'MRk'B 1 A 101Q . The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY V . FOUNDED BT EDWARD R08EWATE v VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR r) : THB BKB PUBLISHING COM? ANY. PROPRIETOR MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ttat associated Press. o ahtea The Use It a neuber. it a ' , jtuslrelr sntltlsd to the um for welicatloo of all own dispatches crsdired to It o? not otherwise credited ta this paper, ill also Uw locsl nam published herein AU rltt et oablieetloa of our spatial diapatchse are also reserved, BEE TELEPHONES! . ' Print Branch Bicnenre. Art fol thT'v10 1 HAD - Deoortaest or Particular Person Wiated, A jrlCr A WV ' For Nlfht ami Sunday Service Colli Editorial Department Met 10OII. ' Irculatlon Dspertmenl - Trior 1001. Adtsrtlslni Departaient - Trier 1011. ; 1 OFFICES OF. THE BEE - Bono Office. Bee Bulldlnf. 17tb end ramue. Branch Offices: . " v ' Im '4110 Nona J4tb I Park M15 10 xn worth Ileum U4 Military k South Boo Salt N Street . Council Blofi IS Scott 8U Walnut lit North oOtk Out-of-Town Offlceoi Maw Tor Clt 18 Fifth In, I Waehlngtoa Ml 0 Street Ohtcato Seeger Bldg. I Lincoln - 13U B Street OCTOBER CIRCULATION: Daily 66,315 Sunday 63,160 V Ararat circulation for the month subscribed and twota to , C a Ragan, Circulation Manager. Suboeribors leav&r the city should hove the Boa mailed to thorn. Addroao chanced aa aftoa aa required. f r. I i o Ypu should know that ! Omaha's bank clearings list year aggregated $2,819,665,975, the j largest in the history, of the city, j What The Bee Stands For: 1. Respect for the law.. arid maintenance of-:' order. - . ...V i' - p ." ' 2. Speedy and certain punishment of trim? ' - through the regular operation of the , courts. - J J. Pitiless publicity and condemnation of inefficiency lawlessness- and. corrup tion in office v - ... f , 4. Frank recognition ' and commendation - of honest and effieient:'public service. 5. Inculcation of Americanism-as' the itrue basis of good citizenship:' .v- , Come on with your coal! : , Citizenship is getting to be worth something.- The Wall Street bear is not the breed that hibernates. 7 '- - Also Kentucky is not going to be as dry as Sahara for some time. Rhode Island also offers unusual attractions to the thirsty for the next few days. , Mighty few people will worryover the smash in stocks if it brings any relief on other things.. : John D. Ryan appears to b peeved about the Frear report. He will get his chance a little later! ' ' . . - All the miners ask is a square' deal, accord ing to their acting president. And that is all the country asks from the miners. a Naturally,- "Big Bill" Haywood does not think the L W.'W. in any way responsible for the affair at-Centralia.v He is singing mighty . SOft just TrOW. " : .- 1 ' American workers are not bolshevists, con cludes an investigator after several months per sonal, contact. ' Rampant reds are imported, not produced in this country. V v Twenty years- hi prison may be adequate, punishment for' such a brute as has' just been sentenced, but the public, would feel better if it knew the term, would be served.. i-l Roumania politely and diplomatically tells - the Allies where they""ma"y go, so .far as terms of the armistice are concerned. Another little job for the League of Nations, and just about its size. ' ' ' , , - Lloyd George denies he ever sought to make i peace with the Russian reds. All the civilized governments have asked is that the bolsheviki behave themselves, which, they 'are unwilling ;.to do.V" '' - . ? .', : ' ; ."Direct' action" is bringing its inevitable re ' suits to. the I. W. W., its chief advocates in this land. Extreme views of social reform that find expression in murder will never be toler ated in America. Cloture will be adopted, very likely, to limit debate on the treaty before the senate, but it 'willnot take the form prescribed by the demo crats, who were detected in another effort to put over a .bit of sharp practice, v " ; v The death of Senator Martin of Virginia leaves vacant the place of democratic, floor leader in the senate, but the career of the demo cratic senator from Nebraska in handling the treaty does not suggest that he will succeed to the bigger job. - " ' ' Notice that Everything Is Vile j ; tt Americans remain blind to the shocking state of their morals it is not for lack of warn ings, In the bare knees of some young women - dancers at a Port Chester charity performance a reverend critic sees symptoms of "a menace to the welfare of our nation much more sutle and destructive tharf bodily sickness and dis ease;" and in Paris, a dancing, master, protest ing, against "American " contortions, says: ."Paris is resolved notto suffer any longer American immorality in the form of the shimmy-shake and other revolting importations from America." Paris declaiming against the low morals of American dancing is something. - But it is from an Atlantic City convention of reformers that the worst indictment comes. - According to one -speaker, "in public these days you caa scarcely ' tell the difference between a street woman and a church woman." And other speakers dwelt on the return to civilian life .of "millions of sol dier and sailor boys with their ideas of women lowered by their experiences overseas," and pointed out that the instruction in the avoidance of disease given to the American forces in the war "ade the social problem All the more diffi cult, because fear, the chief deterrent heretofore, had beenVemoved." - It is a sad catalogue of decadence. It is con ceivable, of ' course, that Paris should look askance at an improper dancenot of Parisian origin, and bare knees are, admittedly shocking on a suburban stage; these'are sights for Broad way. But are not the eyes of' our Atlantic City moralists unduly jaundiced? Perhaps a public that has heard all the changes rung on the cor ruption-of American morals will not take this jeremiad as seriously as its authors might wish. .New York World "THE FUTURE OF EUROPE." If the moral and material well-being of the United States of America were so intimately bound up in the fate of Europe, as our hysterical hyphenated contemporary professes to believe, ' we art in a parlous state. , Sober j thought does not lead to the conclusion so handily attained by the' World-Herald in its zeal for the league covenant without a dot on ah "i" or. a cross on a "t" other than as .put there by the president. ' . No doubt Europe does face a "red winter," and that it will be long before order is restored there, but in this resides no argument that our own land - should ' forfeit its stability because none exists in. Europe. France and England, with, whom we are more intimately associated for the 'moment, are not seriously confronted by any threat of anarchy. Politics and indus try alike are settling down to normal conditions there, and wise counsel prevails in both lands. Were we entirely involved in the Leagne of Nations, the fact would be' of little. service to Germany, specifically excluded from member ship, or to Russia, tossed on waves of unreason and without any form of government recog nizable. . . ; . To the lesser nations of Europe as to the greater, we present the spectacle of a people willing to helpj but unwilling to jeopardize all the fruits of our effort at self-government in order to aid those who show little if any un derstanding of what self-government means, and whose "red winter" will be the result not of our "myopic selfishness," but because the high-flung wIVe of ignorance and brute passion has nqt yet receded. .. . , :.' Th-. United States is under no form of .obli gation to become wet-nurse to the fledgling governments of that region, in spit of Senator Hitchcock's assertion that we made . such a pledge when, the "fourteen points" were en unciated.; We dodge no responsibility when we insist that these nations first make some show of helping themselves. Americans have not solved 'their vown problems, and may be ex cused from,- any imputation of selfishness if t&ex stick to the tasks at home.---" Lost Island in the Sea of History s : Poker-Playing Preachers. The advertisement from a Manitoba mining camp for a preacher who is "a regular he-man," and who can-protect himself in a game of poker is probably a bit fanciful, but it points very accurately to one of the needs of the day. Churchmen who have carefully studied the trend of thought agr,ee4hat men are not to be won back to the church by any of the ultra refinements of creed or dogma that gained head in the days before the war shook society's foundations. The fundamental faith in God, the truths of revealed religion, are not to be gainsaid, nor are they to be advanced by meticulous interference with the minor matters of life. Men are concerned more as to the re lations between themselves and their Maker than over the'pitiful points of belief on whichT the differences in creed are founded. - Breakjpg down the barriers that have been erected during centuries to dam the flow of hu manity's natural aspirations will not be an easy task, but some of the artificial obstacles will have to be removed. The successful preacher of the future will not need an extensive knowl edge of poker but he will get along better if he knows enough to sympathize with the man who does. play. Religion will be more effective when it teaches man that God made the world beautiful and intended that man should enjoy it," holding him to rational accountability for his actions. Faith in God should be an inspiration and not a depressing thought. Bigotry hat made the world hideous, for ages, andiit is nearly time that jt be cast out, and that man be permitted to stand upright' In the light of heaven , and answer to his God for the things he has done as well as for the things he has left undone. Leaving It to the Voters. ! One of the beauties of the . popular-vote method of legislation is amply illuminated by the outcome of trie prohibition fight in Ohio. The voters were asked to decide on four inter related questions: ; The ratification of the fed eral constitutional 'prohibition amendment, per mission to sell 2.75 beer, to repeal the Ohio prohibitdTy lawt and an act to enforce prohibi tion. Ratification of the federal amendment was. refused, as was permission to make and sell . 275 beer; the '.state-wide prohibition law won a second time, but the law toenforce it .failed. v At this distance it is impossible to un derstand the local influences that made possible these peculiar decisions by the voters, but the result is plain. Ohio wants state but not nation-wide prohibition; does not want a diluted beer, and declines to adopt a law to enforce prohibition. A more perfect exemplification of the ability of the voters to discriminate and reach definite conclusions scarcely could be cited. 'Nebraska and the Radicals. Governor McKelvie has called upon the county attorneys of Nebraska to perform a necessary public duty, requesting that they take immediate steps to round up and evict all pro fessed I. W. W. members. This will no doubt involve a considerable effort, And some un pleasantness, but in the end It will be beneficial. Nothing contained in the I. W W. ereed is of use to the world; sympathy for these men in their unfortunate situatio ought not to blind the mind to the fact that the organization is avowedly devoted to the purpose of overturning the government under which it flourished. Its members milst equAlljs hare in responsibility for its sentiments. If the farm laborers or casual workers of . the country feel the need of organization, they can obtain membership in labor unions that will afford them ample pro tection in their rights, without exposing them to the penalties of treason to their country. Our state has been singularly free from the radical element, and it should be so kept x The Lesghians atready have surrounded t . Petrovsk, in northern Daghestan, thereby' - cutting the railway from the Baku oil field to Rostof-on-the-Don, which passes through Petrovsk. From a Recent Associated Press Dispatch From Constantinople. v Thus remote Daghestanv "an island in the sea of history," suddenly emerges into world limelight in connection With General Denikine's struggle for Russian supremacy. George Ken nan, famous explorer, in a communication to the National Geographic society, supplies the geographic setting and local color for this piece of news, as follows: - - "In the southeastern corner of European Russia, between the Black sea and the Caspian, in about the latitude of New York City, there rises abruptly from the dead level of the Tartar steppes a huge, broken wall of snowy, alpine mountains, Which has been lmownto the world for more than 2,000 years as the great range of the Caucasus. "Climate here is only a question of altitude. Out of semi-tropical valleys you may climb in a few hours to the highest , limit of vegetable life and eat your supper, if you feel so disposed, on the slow moving ice of a glacier. "The Caucasian range rriay be regarded for all ethnological purposes as a great mountain ous island in the sea of human history.Aand on that island now live together the surviving Robinson Crusoes of a score '; of shipwrecked states and nationalities the fugitive mutineers of a hundred tribal bounties. "In Daghestan there are 4,000 or 5,000 Jews, who, although they h,ave lost their language and their national character, still cling to their religion; and among the high peaks of Too shetia, in the same province, is settled a com munity of Christians, said to be the descendants of a band of medieval crusaders. But. these are exceptions; nine-tenths of the mountaineers are Mohammedans of the fiercest, most intolerant type. . "The languages and dialects spoken by the different tribes are more than 30 in number, and two-thirds of them are to be found in the province of Daghestan, at the eastern end of the range, where the ethnological diversity of the population is most marked, v "Languages spoken by only. 12 or 15 settle ments are comparatively common; and on the headwaters of the Andiski Koisu, in southwest ern Daghestan, there is an isolated village of 50 or 60 houses the Aoul of Inno'okh which has a language of its own, not spoken or under stood by any other part of the whole Caucasian population. "Of course, the life, customs and social or ganizations of a people who had lived for per haps 2.000 years in almost complete isolation from all the -rest of the world presented when they 'first became -known ' many strange and archaic features. In the secluded valleys and caftyons of the eastern Caucasus it was possible to study a state of society that existed in Eng land before the Norman conquest, and see in full operation customs and legal, processes that had been obsolete everywhere else in Europe for at least a millenium. "Many of the aouls of central and southern Daghestan bear a striking resemblance to the Pueblos and cliff dwellings of New Mexico. The stone walled houses are built together in a compact mass on the steep slope of a high ter race, and the flat roofs rise in tiers of steps, one above another, just as they do in the settlements of our Pueblo Indians. The roof of one house forms a small square front yard for the occu pants of the house next above it, and ladders serve as means of intercommunication between the roofs of the ascending tiers." TJAeS tees at .. LVWA Miners' Work and Wattes. Bloomfield. Neb., November 11, To the Editor ; of The Bee: In relation to the coal miners' strike; Before the initiation of the present Btrlke, how many dayB per week did these men work, and the number of hours per day? What was the scale of wages paid? What are their present demands? What per cent of the total number of men that are out are of Ameri can btrth? J. H. M. Answer The number of days the men actually worked varies widely, all the way from none to six a week. It Is stated by the miners that they had aftout 180 days work a year, but the operators say the men volun tarily abstained from working long er. Union miners are on the 8-hour day basis. The scale of wages varied in relation to the kind of work per formed. In the Franklin County, Illinois, district, machine miners earned for the year ending with October, an average of $1,700, and hand miners $1,600 for the same time. Men on time work averaged $4 per day, although many received a much higher rate of pay. Roughly speaking, the present demands are for a 6-hour day, a 5-day week and an , increase approximately 60 per c.ent in pay. It is Impossible to an swer your last question. Ed. Bee. T. It. and the Strike. Omaha, Neb., Nov. 12. To the Editor of The Bee: How long do you suppose the present coal strike would last if our old friend. f'Teddy" Koosevelt spt in the executive seat at Washington? A similar strike was staged during his administration and in less than 48 hours after Teddy took the whip, the strike was off. Roosevelt's ultimatum to Baer, " settle the Pennsylvania coal strike In 48 hours, or I will," got the results. Baer recognised - the master's voice and knew it never spoke twice. PENNSYLVANIA." The Seat of the Trouble. , The father of the boy who has lieen in the habit of giving false -fire alarms told the Liverpool police magistrates that his son had an over active-brain. .'The magistrates however, took the view that it was the seat of the child s "emotions that wanted stimulating. Punch London. HOW to Earn Money r Outside f School ' The Professional Twister. Twisting the tail of the British lion by twisting the tale of the peace conference remains one of the ac tlvities of the professional twister. Louisville Courier-Journal. Eventually, Why Not Now. ' Let's all quit work and kick over the playhouse and starve to death In a bunch. Macon Telegraph. DOT PUZZLE. CheVELVET HAMMERS Tii) Arthur Droorts "Baker JOSEPH HOPKINS MILLARD. This era of prosperity, 0 gay and festive friend, like every good thing on the earth must some day have an end, Of what avail in that sad hour the pictures you have seen in flimsy fluttered frequence filmed upon the sillv screen? What nleasurc. from th finn pierar -which nnw I you madly, smoke if on that frowning, fatal ' day you find that; you are broke? i - Behold a fine example in another human i type, a man whose judzment is discreet, whose years are rich and ripe. 3 For 50 rounds of sea sons he has; gone at break of day to labor in his bank, where gold and notes are filed away; or if perchance they venture out to serve the aims of men, security is bonded for their com ing back again. , When Joseph Hopkins Millafd needs some coal to build a fire or lacks a lively inner tube to for,tify a tire, he is not thus dismantled in a lorn and hopeless wreck. He tells the minis ters of joy that he will send a check. Perhaps he has not always lived at your distinguished speed, but still, my hasty lad. his word will buv what he may need. When Roosevelt engineered the ditch which makes the oceans one. T. Hopkins was uoon the job to see the thing well done. As senator he headed the committee in whose charge was this impressive piece of work, responsible and large.; They looked to him for suitable install ments of advice, and in ithis tropic enterprise he cut a stack of ice. : Next Subject: Arthur F. Mullen. Athletics in the Philippines. Since our soldiers, in the early days of American occupation, held their first athletic contest in the Philippines, the natives of the is landshave taken an active interest in many forms of athletics and snorts oooular in the western world. It was not. however, until rivalry between towns and orovinces was created that a deep general interest in every form of sport was develooed. the maioritv of the people considering this indulgence a useless waste oi energy. - Nebraska building and loan associations bob up with an aggregate increase in business for the year of 15 per cent, a most encouraging showing when the conservative nature of their management is considered. Total resources now amount to almost $66,000,000, a monument to thrift and the foundation of thousands of happy homes. ": :; England's poet laureate has at last produced eight, lines of yerse of dubious quality to com memorate Armistice Day. If England is look ing for a real tribute, the poetry of the soldiers' affords a yiMt field for selection, any of its contents exceeding in value the halting lines of the laureate. . The Day We Celebrate. William H. Mick, physician, born 1877. Charles H. Marley, attorney at law, born 1879. Charles Louis de Freycinet, famous French statesman, scholar and scientist, born 91 years go- Count Tohann Bernstorff. the German am bassador, who was sent home from Washington, Dorn in London 3 years ago. Robert S. Hichens, celebrated English novel ist and psywright, born in Kent, England, 55 years ago. Bishop Luther B. Wilson of the Methodist Episcopal church born In Baltimore 63 years ago- - Dr. R. E. Blackwell, president of Randolph Macon college and president of the Educational association of the M. E. church, south, born at Warrenton, Va., 65 years ago. ' - . .-h Thirty Years Ago, in Omaha. , . . Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Stevens returned fr.oin their wedding tour Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Buchanan left in a private car for Buffalo Gap, accompanied by Miss Og den and Mr. Nye. ' The grading of Twenty-seventh street from Leavenworth to Howard was in progress Miss Carrie Maud Pemrock gave her first private musicale in this city at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. De Roberts. i Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Millard moved into their new home on Howard and Twenty-fourth streets. "Natural Gas," the farce-comedy success, was at the Boyd, with Donnelly and Girard. IC 13 15 4 7 i lb X a 2a 43 272fe .46 - 4b. e ai 45 4V .- 44- 4S41 4o 3Z 33 What has Noodle drawn? -Draw from one to two and eo on ta the end. Shopping Service. .'.By MARIHJ BCOVtLLE. "I must have this exact shade of green thread -to finish Mrs. Lard ner's dress." Thus spoke my dress maker and I glanced up from my fitting to see a brighteyed girl of 15, school books under her arm, taking the samples of cloth held out to her. "That's Margaret," Madame Jeanette remarked later. "I couldn't do-without htjr valuable services after school and on Saturdays. "A year ago she came to me say ing she wanted to ear.n money and would run errands after school. I was delighted and suggested she shop for me, buy buttons, hooks and eyes, and all those small articles that a dressmaker so often needs at the 11th hour-to finish a frock. "She proved so. bright, and dis played such good judgment that now. I. have her buy even expensive velvets' and silks and through my recommendation she does last-minute-shopping tfor two other mod istes. I pay her $4 a week, and her cirfare." s On the other hand, a girl could shop for the busy housewives at the local department stores. This note, mailed to a list of busy matrons would rapidly secure for her a clientele: "Have you some errands for me? Little errands, big errands, any that will lift some of the burden of the days from your shoulders. I am ready to buy anything you wish. Phone me to talk your shopping problems over." 1 When a girl has secured a suffi cient number of customers she can, bv patronizing continuously certain shops-; obtain from them a 10 per centjiiscount on all purchases. The customer on her part, pays to the shopper for this service a fee of 5 per cent. ' By establishing a list of customers in this way and taking the course in sewing and designing while in high school, a girl would be fitted when she was graduated, to start a "shop ping service" upon a larger scale, making yearly trips to a fashion Center , to ; .gain up-to-the-minute ideas and thus become a success in an original and interesting way. (Next week: , "Around the Gar age.") " Boye' and Girls' Newspaper Service. Copyright, HH, by J. H. Millar. Zanzibar Feels it Tr la cvnArfpfl that the eovern- ment of Zanzibar will make a pro test to. .the- United -States against, the 'adoption of prohibition. Ninety per cent of the world's crop of cloves comes from t Zanzibar. Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Motfcst Violet. ' After reading' Mr. Burleson's opin ion of himself one can only wonder how he escaped being made presi dent by acclamation. Detroit Free Press. There's Tom Marshall. With Colonel House and the presi dent both under the weather, who's going to keep the ship of state oft the rocks? Birmingham Age-Her ald. Established 1866 HOUSE WIVES will find a Check ing Account a decided help in running a home on the approved "Budget System.", Deposit your al lowance every month at the Omaha Ra tional Bank. Pay all your bills by check the stubs will be a simple form of book keeping, and the can celled checks an indis putable receipt' Tho Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Capital and Surplus, $2,ooo,qoo ? Home Mechanic ? "Mats" Made by Stereotyping. By ORAND M. HYDE. : "Dad. I can't see how the type stays on those rollers on " the big press at the newspaper ottrce. I hey run so fast that I would think it would fly off." "No. sonny, there is no type on those rollers only big solid stereo typed plates. It would never be possible to fasten all the thousands of pieces ot type in a newspaper page onto a round roller, bo what they do is make stereotyed plates. Then when the page is once made up, they can make as many plates from it as they please. VTo make the printing form of a mm- newspaper page, printers must put together thousands of pieces of type, linotype slugs, and other pieces of metal even the pictures are metal engravings. It takes a long time to do this and the page form is bulky, heavy and flat Suppose they wanted to duplicate it or to make curved duplicates for the round rolls of. a rotary press they'd have to do it all over again. But stereo typing is a quick,' cheap way of making such 'duplicates. "The first step consists in making a papier-mache (pasteboard) mold of the type form. This is done by wetting a sheet of pasteboard, spreading it over a type form, and placing the form and pasteboard in a press that is heated by steam or electricity to bake the pasteboard. The result is a matrix, or mat, that contains a mold of all the type in the form. . "The mat is then placed in a cast ing box, and motten metal is poured over it. After flowing into all the depressions in the mat, the metal hardens into a plate that is an exact copy of all the type and will print the same words and pictures. It the casting mold is curved, the mat is bent and the resulting plate is curved for. the rotarv press. Many plates may be made from one mat. "Distributors of newspaper ar ticles, ads, or pictures, often use the process .to save extra typesetting. YOU Wouldn't Think of -Sending Your Cleaning Work To Any One Else y WOULD YOU? BflESIIER BDOTIIEnS Snappy Cleaners Clever pyers- ' 2211-17 Farnam St. Phone Tyler 345 " DAILY CARTOONETTE, I'LU BU THAT flNJi ICERft ITTOCflUONrvlVIRU Tonight! I'll look like K6HI1Y MONET? Mi. IV I . 1 A I J II rC- pHEDID-. They set up the type 'of their ar ticles, make many stereotypes copies or plates ef it, and send these 'boiler plate' copies to the newspapers," (Next week: "Kickers on a Loco motive.") ........ Boyo' hd Gtrlx' Newspaper BefvieO , Copyright, 1911, by J. H. JlHlar. - ' 1 , 1 . M M IW 'or&t are tut word, After aJlDut facts are fact?, td the qreat ovAxtzaxdmq fact in the world or music is the txntapproacKable sup-emacv ot the OAtpcrior jnethods of construction, qivc it tv tone surpassing '; " anythinq ever ottainecj. or7eveV possiHe, ordinary methods or jjitMrvo-lxxildirv. Mslc as do swaryoa vo&p Cash or Tim All Sm Price. .-. , .. 'Raerfii ' (obIw ' 1513 Douglas St. Tha Art and Muste Store. Wise Investments Many men hijve be come rich through wise in , vestments. It ia hard ,to choose .good Investments In thesa days of fluctuations, but there Is one investment that is absolutely safe. That is, the good old American dollar, backed ty the United States Govern ment Dollars are cheap to day and will not buy much five years from today the dollar will be a lot scarcer and worth a lot more in pur chasing power than it is to day. It is a good invest ment to put as many dollar! as possible in the Savings Department of the First Ni tional Bank each week. These dollars will not only buy much more in a few years than they will to day, but each one will have earned a nice little sum in interest besides. -S II - First National iBank of Omaha Street Floor Entrance Either Farnam or Sixteenth Street Door