THIS BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1U19. The Omaha Bee DAILY ( MORNING ) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATEB . VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BES PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR MEMBERS oF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ' Tfcs lw1iwl I'rim, of htoh Tha Bite Is a iiinubrr. Is sx jlnslttly antuied to tht 'it fur piiWicnion of til naws dlipamhM cradtud to It or not oUwwim credited In this piper, and sl Hi Iraal am puMlibed herein. All rlgbti et iitibuValloo of our iiaclal dltpatbM art also renorted. "" BEE TELEPHONES! PrletU Branch Exrhini. ask for the TVlr 1000 Depanment at rrticui Penon Wanted. J I-1 xvryrv For Nifhl and Sunday Service; Call) Editorial Department War ldOnl.. Circulation Pepartmenl - .... Tyler 1001. AdnrUalnf Department Tyler 10OH1- OFFICES OF THE BEE Rome Office, Be Bulldini, 17th and Famam. Branch Offlcee: Arnee 4110 North SVh I Park I18 tTearenworth Henaoa 6114 lllltry ate. South Side 231S N Street Jouuoll Blurt is Scott St. 1 Walnut SID North 40th Out -of -Town Offlceet NYsr Tori Office J8fl Klflli Ave. I Waelilnitoo 1311 0 Street I'hlcafo Swier Bids. I Lincoln 1330 n Street " OCTOBER CIRCULATION: Daily 66,315 Sunday 63,160 Avtrate rlrculitlon for the month subscribed and iworn to b? K. R Rasan, Circulation Maneirer. Subscribers leaving tha city ahould bave The Bea mailed to than. Addreaa changed aa often aa required. You should know that Omaha insurance companies last '' year had an income of more than $25,000,000. 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 corrup 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. "Old Doc" Garfield now has his chance. D'Annunzio has left Fiume, but the Italians have not. Give the devil his due; Hindenburg says all the other explainers are lying. That Wyoming train robber is energetic enough to succeed in a regular business. Where was Tammany when the prince of Wales was given the freedom of the city? Another tube of radium has been lost in a bath tub. The moral to this is self-starting. The W. C. T. U. says it is not engaged in a crusade against tobacco, but somebody is. "Moonshine sugar" .is the latest, and per haps the most significant. Watch the flight. Louisville refused to hear Frits Kreislcr fiddle, another sign that the war ii not over. No drastic regulations for the use of coal are yet to be made, but you will lose nothing by being careful. , " ' t Chicago is combatting the high cost of street car fares. What Omaha needs is more opportunity to ride. Aft fndustrial truce for a year is proposed again. What would do more good would be for everybody to go to work. A Jersey butcher was fined $33.33 an ounce for short weight . on a beefsteak. Almost amounted to his profit on the sale. The house gets its little vacation while the senate sticks on the job. Occasionally the greater body has the advantage of the lesser. Wyoming coal miners say they are terror ized by the foreigners amongst them. It doesn't require a great deal to frighten men sometimes. The worst of the Washington I. W. W. bad men surrendered without , firing a shot. His pacifist' inclinations got the upper hand just in time. City funds are almost exhausted, but this is normal for the season. Sometime the year will end with a surplus, and then there will be a celebration. You may have noticed how the govern ment's efforts to reduce the cost of living suc ceeded. The promise was made in 1912, and still holds good never having been used. Again we are warned that if we do not feed the Armenians they will starve. At any rate, . the American commission can no longer pay salaries, so its members are coming home. Wall Street is still busy "cleaning house," and war brides are now getting back to where ordinary, stocks look like something. The process may culminate in a lot of "millionaires" trying to get their old jobs back again. THE GRAND JURY'S REPORT. ,In the report of the special grand iurv. which was called to make inquiry into the causes of the recent riot and lynching in Omaha, and to fix responsibility for the out break, just returned to the court after a ses sion of six weeks, will be found some inter esting information. "We find the rank and file of the police de partment made up of capable, brave men, will ing to follow a leader anywhere," says the grand jury, and with this statement The Bee heartily concurs. It was not the men, but the leadership that was lacking. On this point, the report goes on to say "the absence of the chief 'of police and the police commissioner at the critical and crucial period between 3:30 and 6 o'clock was unfortunate, and we feel they should have been on the job before 6 o'clock. It was apparent that there was lack of co ordination and leadership among the heads of the police force." This supports all The Bee has ever charged, that the trouble with the Omaha po lice force is that it lacked competent direction. The report of the grand jury, made after long and careful inquiry drives home the point with irresistible force. Further criticism in pres ence of such a report is unnecessary. "Pussyfoot" Johnson Scores - The London medical students who on Thursday dragged "Pussyfoot" Johnson, the temperance strategist, from a prohibition meet ing and bore him through the streets on a plank, with opprobrious remarks and banners of protest against all promoters of thirst, must have wondered next day who had the better of it. We can tell them. It was not the students. Mr. Johnson seemed to take his medicine calmly, and when seen in hosoital afterward, said that except for an injurv to one eve he had "thoroughly enjoyed it." Of course the hurt eye was just a nuisance; it "was quite blinded and the pain was intense." There had been a hemorrhage; the police surgeon warned him that he might lose the eye, and a specialist had een called but "outside of that," said Mr. fohnson. "I had quite a good time." He even lad a kindly word for the police, who are never premature in interrupting a "medico rag;" they "worked it very smartly indeed." The phrase does not quite sound American, but in its ur bane and disarming intent, apparent through the alien reporter's idiom, the famous pussy foot method shows clearly. A man who can talk like that in hospital after such an experience as Mr. Johnson's is a good sport; and in England a good sport with ability, experience and powerful backing go far. The British beerage may well feel nervous as it contemplates the philosophical "Pussyfoot" on his cheerful bed of pain. That kind of opponent is always to b iUC(L New York World. Disposing of "Six to One." 1 By a vote of 58 to 23, more than two-thirds, the senate adopted a reservation offered by Senator Lenroot intended to effectually do away with the 6-to-l preponderance of the British vote in the council and assembly of the League of Nations. The text of the Lenroot reservation reads thus: The United States assumes no obligation to be bound by any election, decision, report or finding of the council or assembly in which any member of the league and its self-governing dominions, colonies, or parts of em pire in the aggregate have cast more than one vote, and assumes no oblfgation to be bound by any decision, report or finding of the council or assembly arising out of any dispute between the United States and any member of the league if such member or any self-governing dominion, colony, empire or part of empire united with it politically has voted. This resevation will not do away with the separate representation of the self-governing dominions of the British empire, nor of the presence of India in either council or assembly, but simply precludes either of them casting a decisive vote on a question in which one or all of them are involved with the United States as a party on the other side. The reservation will not be relished by the administration group, but the unusual support it got in the senate is a sign of the sentiment there, and which will be understood throughout the land. Nonpartisan League and Nebraska. A lengthy epistle from the state manager of the Nonpartisan League addressed to the gov ernor is really intended to be read by the people of Nebraska. As an example of special plead ing, avoiding all the main issues, it is a note worthy exhibit, t According to the writer, the Nonpartisan League has not thought of state socialism; any thing like that is far removed from its purpose and design. It only contemplates "public own ership," and then in an astute and energetic manner blandly goes on to expound the differ ence between tweedledee and tweedledum. Government ownership will break up the hated and despised monopolies that now crush the life out of the people. Mills, elevators, banks, warehouses, supply houses, everything of any kind or nature with which the farmer has to deal, will be taken over by the government and operated as a state concern. In North Dakota, where the Townley pro gram is being carried out, a notion of its work ings may be gained. It has not yet progressed far enough to convince the farmers entirely of the fallacy, but sufficient evidencejs already at hand to show that the natural order of such un sound experiments is being followed. In the case of the state-owned mill, the manager puts out a balance sheet showing a profit of $2,300 for twenty-six days' operation, while the ac counts of the state auditor show that the mill actually incurred a loss of $7,000 in that time. The manager explains this by pointing out that his balance sheet does not include the over head, which is borne by the taxpayers. Similarly this will run through the whole list. Manager Johnson is also a little unfortunate in his selection of the municipal ice plant in Omaha as an illustration of the beauty of his plan. If he were to live in this city for a time, he might discover that instead of the price of ice to the consumer having been "reduced 100 percent," as he asserts, a much different thing has hap pened. The municipal ice plant has brought considerable relief to a limited number of resi dents, but no general benefit to the community. Instead of the price of ice being reduced to the general public it has been increased, although this fact is not to be charged to the existence of a municipal plant, but in spite of it. And during the extreme heat of last summer, the small patrons of the "muny" plant found them selves restricted in their purchases because the demands of big ice cream factories required all the surplus the city ice plant could furnish. Nebraskans may be in a mood to follow Mr. Johnson into the Townley camp, but we doubt it. However, if they do they should not' go blindly in the belief that any man can ever get something for nothing. "He Was Good to His Mother." Out of the smoke surrounding the trail of the escaped Wyoming train robber looms the significant statement that while in the peniten tiary he "was a model prisoner," and that he purchased Liberty bonds and contributed to Red Cross funds from his savings. Just what these consisted of is not explained. If it was money he had when sent to prison, he had it from his bandit operations; if it was from earn ings while in confinement, he made a safe in vestment. At any rate, one dispatch from Wyoming states' that 75 per cent of the people of the state hope he gets away. His latest ex ploit is to hold up a train carrying an armed posse and refurnish himself with firearms No wonder his fellow citizens admire him, and take a glowing pride in his defiance of law. Jesse James never achieved anything like that. How ever, all this will not deter the pursuit of this accomplished train robber, and when Uncle Sam once more lays hold on him, the fact that "he was good to his mother" will not prevent his being stuck into an even stronger cell than the one he has escaped from. Butter has hit a new high mark in the race to "reduce" the cost of living. Does the Lever law apply only to coal miners? The Challenge of Berger's District From, the New York Times. It probably will not surprise anybody that the socialists of the Fifth Wisconsin district have renominated Victor L. Berger for con gress. Such an occurrence was to be looked for. It is the strongest socialistic district in the United States, and a large number, perhaps a majority, of the socialists in it are more im placable in their hostility to this government than Berger himself. For proof of this state ment one need go no further than the election of 1914, in which enough of them bolted Berger to defeat him for congress because he would not go to such extremes as they. They lost no time in renominating him. They even violated the rules and customs of their party in order to do it quickly. There is no other party which has such an ironclad machine and is so strictly governed by rules as the so cialist party. Its laws prescribes the mode of nomination, and it is unheard of to violate them.' Yet in this case, instead of a nomination by referendum, the Fifth Wisconsin district social ists resorted to a device sometimes used by Americans, but never by socialists, and nomi nated Berger by mass meeting. Berger's re-election is highly probable. In that case, of course, the house will again refuse to seat him, and the Fifth Wisconsin district will remain unrepresented. This game of battledore and shuttlecock may keep up for years to come, if the district remains as inveterately opposed to American institutions as it now is. There have been instances of the kind in England. The nearest approach to Berger's case was that of John Wilkes, the radical opponent of the Brit ish government who was regularly elected at election after election, despite the repeated re fusals of the House of Commons to seat him. On one occasion it unseated him though ' he had received over 1,100 votes and his opponent not quite 300. The question now before the American peo ple is whether a congress district which is con trolled by several thousand men who aim their blows at the American form of government shall be permitted to override the decision of the house that their representative is not en titled to take part in the makingof American laws. It is doing them no injustice to charge them with hostility to this government in time of war, since they were dissatisfied with even Berger because he was not sufficiently pro Cerman for their extreme taste. The issue, then, is not so much between the American people and Victor Berger as it is between the American people and the majority of the Fifth Wisconsin district. That district, if it defies the house of representatives by re electing him, will merely be challenging the United States to a test of strength. The dis pute may 'be long drawn out, but the odds are unequal and the result is not in doubt. Censorship of Hospitality " When the Good Book enjoined, "Be not for getful to entertain strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares," it failed to take account of the kind of legislation that Eng land is experiencing at the hands of its ministry of food. That body seems to have the full powers that the Hoover food administration has given over here in the United States. The dispatch states that householders in the United Kingdom are barred from entertaining their mothers-in-law or other guests longer than four weeks by an order from the ministry of food. This edict, which is part of the food conserva tion program, limits the stay of a viistor in a private house to one month. In the old Anglo-Saxon law a stranger com ing to a domicile might receive hospitality for a definite period, possibly two weeks, and then he would have to go on his way. England has a habh of harking back to precedent; and it seems to be doing so in this case. But the presence of the mother-in-law by direct men tion in the law suggests that in the days of good Queen Victoria such animadiversions could not have been perpetrated. The rancor of the. entire world will be aroused over this fresh injection of the favorite butt of the. joke ster into the arena of aimless jocularity in a fresh guise. For, after all, the mother-in-law is a very useful person to have about the house to do the cooking, the knitting, the darning and to mind the baby, and her stay should not be limited to four weeks. As for eating, she sel dom makes a drain upon the pocketbook be yond that which she dispenses from her lar gesse. But the evil's done and all must rue it, and, as the poet adds, the theme is painful, so why pursue it? Baltimore American. The Oklahoma Election An election was held Saturday' to fill a va cancy in the house of representatives in the Fifth district of Oklahoma. At the last regu lar election a democrat was elected; his death caused the vacancy. There were two candidates in the election held Saturday, a republican and a democrat. The republican in his campaign took open grounds in opposition to the ratification of the proposed league of nations as written and signed by President Wilson. The democratic candi date took the opposite. The campaign was conducted along that line. The result The republican was elected by a decisive majority. The treaty man, for the league of nations without change, was snowed under. It will be remembered that Senator Reed, when about to make a speech in an Oklahoma town, was howled down and not per mitted to speak by a hoodlum mob. President Wilson once said that an over whelming majority of the American people were for the ratification of the treaty in the exact form he presented it to the senate. Every now and then something has occurred that must have raised a doubt in the president's mind as to whether he might not have been mistaken in his assumption of the overwhelm ing majority. But, like the fellow who swore the horse was 16 feet high, he may stick to his "overwhelming majority" speech. Knoxville Journal and Tribune. The Day We Celebrate. Frank L. Haller, president of the Lininger Implement company, born 1861. Dowager Queen Margherita, mother of King Victor Emmanuel of Italy, born 68 years ago. Selma Lagerlof, the leading woman author of Sweden, born in the province of Vermland, 61 years ago. Col. W. J. Wilgus, who directed the railroad work of the American expeditionary forces in France, horn in Buffalo 54 years ago. Most Rev. Patrick J. Hayes, head of the Romal Catholic archdiocese of New York, born in New York City 52 years ago. Frederic A. Hall, chancellor of Washington university, St. Louis, born at Brunswick, Me., 65 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. The republican primaries were held to elect deleeates to the republican city convention. A new city railway company was organized The capital was $500,000. and was subscribed to bv John A. McShane, William A. Paxton. J. H. Pumont. J. G. Megeath and W. A. Under wood. A brilliant ball was given at the Millard hotel by Mrs. Carter. The hotel ball room and narlors had been refinished and redecorated for the occasion and all Omaha's 400 were in attendance. Mrs. A. P. Hanchett, assisted by Mrs. H. W. Tilton of Council Bluffs, entertained in the afternoon, when the guests were favored with a literary and musical program of high merit. Honor the Flair. Omaha, Nov. 17.-To tha Editor of Tho Bee: A stranger In your city, I pick up your evening edition and note one of the things "The Bee stands for" Is "Inculcation of Amer icanism as the true basis of good citizenship." As distasteful to a bull as is the waving of anything red, so the most hateful thing to an I. W. V. or any other variety of unamerican Ism is our nationa-1 flag. Then why not carry a cut of the flag at the head of your editorial columns al ways. Tou probably did tt when we were In the so-called midst of war; why not continue to show It now that peace Is casting Its dawn rays upon the world? Tonight I attended a banquet at which "Americanization" and the program the American Legion has mapped out for Its work was touched upon, but nowhere in that hall was there a sign of Old Glory. At every gathering of either men, women or children the flag should be proudly displayed hung flat, never draped because the flag is never a "decora tion." In every church the flag should be shown, and if In any church the principles of which tho flag is only the outward symbol are not in accord, then that church has no place In the U. S. A. GRIDLEY ADAMS, Federal Advertising Agency, Chi cago. Settling Coal Strikes. Omaha, Nov. 15. To the Editor of The Bee: Let us keep the record straight. In reply to communication signed "Pennsylvanian" regarding the action of the late President Roosevelt in settling the anthricite coal strike of 1902, permit me to remind him that Instead of settling the strike in 48 hours, he allowed the strike to continue for about five months, and then when the necessity of using coal was nearly over, with a big flourish of trumpets, he called the miners and the operators to gether In a conference which John Mitchell and his followers had been seeking throughout the controversy. But let us remember that the strike was won before Roosevelt interfered, and according to the testimony of John Mitchell In the book, "Organ ized Labor," the real result of the presidential Interference was to save the face of the operators. Allow us to remember that dur ing this strike the price of soft coal was boosted out of all reason, al though it was the hard coal miners who were on strike, and that noth ing was done by the government to protect the public from this piracy. WILLIAM B. DALY. FROM HERE AND THERE. fhA.l Around American Girl The Bible oontains 773,748 words and 3,568,480 letters. The best marksmen are usually those with gray or blue eyes. Linseed Is the nearest approach to milk In composition of any vegeta ble food. The head of a man or woman in normal health contains something like 80,000 hairs. Mushrooms, a world-wide pro duct, are as plentiful In Siberia as in tropical climes. Medical authorities declare that butter is the most nutritious article of diet, and that bacon comes next Although eggs of different species of birds greatly differ In shape, the yolks of all are Invariably, spherical. South of the equator Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro and Sydney are the three largest cities in point of population. Miss Olympia. By MOLLIE PRICE COOK. Her nickname is "Miss Olympia." You wonder why? If you've read about the Olympian games you will understand. She is the athletic American girl, the girl who excells in outdoor sports. She loves to walk. Why? Be cause she knows how. She walks at least two miles every day, some days five miles. She often goes on a 20 or 25-mile cross-country hike. Ask "Miss Olympia" if she ever gets tired and she will tell you: "Of course not. I would though if I didn't wear sensible, comfortable clothes a middy and skirt, no cor set, shoes with low heels and broad toes, when it is cold a sweater or short coat. v "Then, too, I experiment till I find what length of step is easiest for me to take. Then I walk lightly putting the balls of my feet and my toes to the ground before lowering my heels. I toe straight ahead like an Indian. I walk with my body erect, shoulders back, chest out, and chin in like a soldier. I do not saun ter along but walk quite fast." "Do you like to run, 'Miss Olym pia?' " "Yes, I run a little every day about a block at a time. I was taught to breathe deeply at all times but when I am out of doors I take long deep breaths that seem fairly DOT PUZZLE. Id 5 IS A . 14 25 t lb 5 3 1 26 3 47 Ah 2,1 34 4. 4S 3d at, a 2 55 41 44 ' 42 to lift me off the ground. Lots of girls do not breathe. They do not know how. They only heave their chests up and down. I breathe from the diaphragm pushing the waist muscles out as far as I can when I take in a breath and pulling them in when I force a breath out. Our family doctor says I am the health iest girl he ever knew." "Miss Olympia" is not conceited. She is merely telling facts. She, lives right and that means that she really lives. She has the health and physique and character which make her stand out as a leader among girls. Why shouldn't every Ameri can girl be a "Miss Olympia?" (Next week: "Turkey and Gin ger.") Boya" and Girls' Newipaper Service Copyrlfht, 191, by J. H. Millar. THE DOUGHBOY TELLS XHE WORLD. Now when you come to forty-nine, You'll see a little of mine. Draw from ona to two and so on to the end. After I've aloggred In tha muck and mire, After I've amelled the dawn; After I've looked on a land of flra And an empire emaahed and shorn; After I've gone on a soldier's path Roaring and loose and free, Winning, by luck, through the pit's o.wa wrath. Do you think you can fetter meT Think you can fetter me down, I ask, To walls and files and Ink: A shiny desk and a stiff-cuffed task Tn a city Sana a drink? After Tv harked to the big ones bresk, Ducked to their Jagged spray. Think you can thrill me with tea and cake And the charms of a cabaret T After I've known but the tent and deck TTnder hot stranger skies, Think you can collar my hull-like neck, Shoe me in toeplnch size? Tie me, perhaps, to a house and wife. Make me a shackled man Think you can get me to llva that life? You bet your last centime you cant Stewart M. Emery In Home .Sector. LIFT OFF CORNS WITH FINGERS Few Drops of "Freezone," Then Coma Lut Off No Pain I A tiny bottle of "Freezone" costs so little at any drug store; apply a few drops upon any com or callus. Instantly it stops hurting, then shortly you lift that bothersome corn or callus right off with your fingers. Truly! No humbug! 6 $ 250 $ 500 $1000 FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS Secured by centrally located Omaha Business Property where real estate values are dependable and where busi ness is prosperous. They bear 6 interest, payable semi-annually. Tax free in Nebraska. If you have been looking for a safe in vestment, this one will please" you. Descriptive literature ready. Your order received by mail or in person. AMERICAN SECURITY COMPANY N. W. Cor. 18th & Dodge. Omaha, Neb. i i :n 1 1' 1 1 ii . I iiuaini' .1 i Wiu'HWt' : um i i i r , i' i i wi, i' v ,di i :i " i !: i I I iillMrillrl fi mm H v. -1 uUiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiikuiJiiiiiiii Sports that Boys Like The Forward Pass. By H. O. PAOE. Coach, Formerly Quarterback, University ot Chicago. An ideal player is one who (1) can run and dodge in the open, (2) who can kick, and (3) who can for ward pass. The youngster learning to play foot ball asks three ques tions about passing. How when where? To be a successful passer comes the center and down 10 yards just behind the offensive backs. At least two possible receivers should always try to be in this lane, one for a short, the other for a long pass. The next best groove calls for a long 25-yard pass over the de fensive half and out at a 45 degree angle. Thus it is necessary for one end to cross over to be with his partner in receiving. Two fundamentals are essential first, passes must be thrown from five yards back of scrimmage line, and second, they must be executed with snap and accuracy in practice. About one-half the scores in college foot ball this season are due directly to clever forward passing. (Next week: "Keep fit for next season.") Bovs' and GlrK Newspaper Pervlca Copyright, 11, by J. H. Millar. An Injudicious Knock. "You ran knock a thing In such s way as to boost It," said a govern ment official In an address. "Injudi cious orators often and often mak this mistake. "ITerhaps you've heard of the r v'vallst who shouted: "'I tell you, friends, hell contain? nothing but chorus girls, v.u?ktails roulette wheels.' "Thereupon a young man In s back seat yelled; " 'Oh, death, where is thy sting?' " Detroit Free Press. only with constant practice, just like pitching in base ball. Small hands are unable to grip a ball, especially if wet, therefore lay the pigskin in the palm of the hand with the point in direction of the objective. The ends of the fingers, if time permits, should be in contact with the lacing of the ball and a trifle back of the center. Thus when the ball is thrown. with a short over-arm ac tion there will be a spin to it as the oval rolls off the finger tips, palm being underneath, producing a spiral pass. Forward passes should be made following a run or line buck which naturally draws the defensive backs up. On a third down a long pass would be proper. If checked on the goal line an out pass forward over the end should be all right as a last resort on the fourth down. Never take chances when in your own ter titory as a pass, especially forwaid and out, might be intercepted too easily. Most plays in which the forward pass figures are made to certain men running to an open spot, but the best team play comes from for ward passes made in a certain groove. As in base ball hits go in certain lanes where no one is fielding; so in foot ball pass over To Those Who Would Be Physically Fit: To those who realize tho tremendous importance of keeping tharoselvee physically in tho best of condition, and to those who already aro ill, THE SOLAR SANITARIUM offer celled. a service unex- All baths and electrical equipment useful in tho treatment of tha sick. The Solar Sanitarium Masonic Temple, 19th and Douglas. ' Phone Tyler 920. fr T I e who loves the cannot, hesitate at its C05tf. IT fliqhesr priced piano in the world, the- 15 also the most econ omical in. final cost; for its owner purchases aheauty of tone and an undying resonance and power trnequaled, or even irnapproached, by any other piano in existence, without" exception. If is the choice of' all who dis criminate and compare ustb shovr you vkxv. Christmas Pianos Twelve different, classy lines to select from. NOT TO FjJORGET The Player Pianos, Apollo Reproducing Players. Cash Prices Are Time Prices. 1513 Douglas St. The Art and Music Store. The Budget System ti 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii ii j i 1 1 1 itin i ii i ii in i ii ii i i i ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 mi iiiiiii t ii i j j of financing the home is both economical and satisfactory. A bank account for the housewife in the Women's Department of the First National pro vides the ideal way of handling the finances of the home. The plan of women maintaining a separate bank account is becom ing more popular all the time and, besides being economical, gives a sense of financial in dependence". A cordial invitation is extended to the women of Omaha to visit the Women's Department of the First." You will en joy seeing the many conveniences provided to make your banking here a pleasure. First National Bank of Omaha Street Floor Entrance Either Far nam or Sixteenth Street Door