Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 05, 1919, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1919.
. lliHi U M il H A DEj&
f DAILY' (MORNING) EVENING--SUNDAY
iv
ft
FOUNDED BY EDWARD RQ8KWATEB '
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR.
RC . BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR
1 ' MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
i. ' ' Tb AJauoialed Pmss. of TUa li number. Is s-
jfculMly autltlad to lb iim for pubttoatlon of U news dlfpatcliM
jnditrti to H or -not MhfrwlM credited In tht tuper. end alio
th local ntP puhllihad herein. All right et oublieatloa of out
wcltl dlmwlm are alao raasmd..-. ,. -. y .
BEE TELEPHONES
. Oilnl W.ni-h IndiuiM Aftk for
DoButBMol or Particular Person Wanted.
, F Nlirh and Sunday service Cam
Danartment - . , 7 . , . . Trior 10O0L.
r . . - Trier 100SL. ;
Si! Tyler 1000
feditorlal Denartronit
Ciroulatloa Deirtinit
AdterUalni DepartnMnt
Trior 1008L.
1 OFFICES OF THE BEE ..'.
,'; Homo Office. Bat Bulldioi. 17ta and Fsrnsm.
! ' : Branch Offlceo:
. T , iiO North S4tk Park JUS TTeeTSimortb
fcanaoa (lit Military At. Souta lid 1S1S N StrMt
fouwU Bluffs IS Scott Bti 1 Walnut tit North 40th
. ....... Out-ol-Town Officesi
? To Offlo ttj Fifth Are. I WaahlnftoB 1311 O Street
Chloaao Beatar Bids. I Lincoln 1380 H Street
f OCTOBER CIRCULATION
Daily 66,315 Sunday 63,160
' Average circulation for th month subscribed and swore to bj
i: R lagan. Circulation Manaior.
til,,
SubacrfW loovlnf th eity should hav Th Be mailed
, thorn. Address chanced aa often at required.
You should know that
Omaha is headquarters for the
I Fourteenth division of the United
; States Railway Mail service.
What The Bee Stands For:
: 1.
2.
3-
4.
i
Respect for the law and maintenance erf
order. ,
Speedy and certain punishment of crime
through the regular operation of the
courts. . 4
Pitiless publicity and condemnation of
inefficiency lawlessness and corrup
tion in office,, v.
Frank recognition and commendation
of honest and efficient public service.
Inculcation of Americanism as the true
basis of good citizenship.
' Little rays .of sunshine alsdelp. "'
t Frofiteering landlords' seldom overlook an
nrtnnrriinitv. '
. r 1 1 4
' f Shortage of fuel does not mterfire Vfth the
enterprising' burglar's pestiferous 'activity. "
.'
v; A stee has just sold in Chicago at' the price
of $2.62 per' pound. This is, about the raiser's
'ideal. ' '
f The comity existing between governors in
Nebraska takes on a fearful and wonderful form
at times. . . . u .
WHY HAVE A PENITENTIARY?
Mystery surrounding the easy release from
the state penitentiary of a long-term prisoner
convicted of a serious offense may 'or may not
be impenetrable. Investigation ' properly di
rected will determine that. What the public is
most concerned in is the modus operandi by
which the liberation was effected.
A rather elaborate system for, considering
applications for paroles and pardons has been
built up in Nebraska, ostensibly for the purpose
of dividing responsibility between the executive
and members of a pardons board. Back of this
is a desire to relieve the governor of undue em
barrassment in the exercise of the pardoning
power, as well as to provide adequate' means
for determining the merits of individual cases.
An important criminal, to whom parole had
formally been refused is able to secure release
on an informal order. Some of the facts
brought out by hasty inquiry give the case an
unusual look. The .order for a "furlough" was
signed on September 8, a day on which neither
the governor nor lieutenant governor was
within the state, and when the president pro
tempore of the senate was acting' as executive.
It may not have occurred to him that anything
out of the routine course was going on, but
the outsider will be struck with the singularity
of the coincidence. Another point of moment
is the secrecy that' was observed almost for two
months befdre the order was presented, while
even more astonishing is the fact that the war
den .complacently accepted without question a
document that ordinarily must have called for
verification.
Finally, the point raised simultaneously by
the' lieutenant governor and the mayor, that
such proceedings tend to discredit the usual
process of obtaining justice and punishing j
criminals, can not be avoided. The fullest pos
sible inquiry should be made into the details
of this case. Inquiry may develope a state of
facts differing materially from the surface
showing, and clear away what now seems a
queer, situation. v
Bolshevism On the Baltic
'i
M Putting mine officials into jail 'may appease i
'the court, but it is men in the pits the country
really needs.
vi. A little more coal is promised Nebraska by
tfie fuel administrator, but he does not guar
antee delivery. ' ...
, V rr-atlll ttt1 M f n fit- Via C A V A 1 A fl I 1 f f1r1 111
London when seats at a boxing, match are going
fast at, $125 per seat. . , ,. .
' One -Omaha policeman has resigned because
fie tan not live on $100 a month. But quite a
number of folks have to.
, Villa has been taken again, hut by his own
iicn this fime, so hc jnay yet live to coiitributc
numerous chapters to current history. ,
j' In Paris the "national" costume for men has
appeared, but' the dear ladies will continue to
s,uit their fancies in the matter of clothing.
i Omaha bankers also agree jwifli the grand
'jury's report as to the police-' management, and
prepare to guard their own treasure vaults.
r
"Aphrodite" must " have been some "dram
fher'.if it was too strong for seasoned New
York. Probably, approached the original.
V Oklahoma's governor does not want the pro
tettion of colored' soldiers, eiyiddntly forgetting
that Uncle Sam's uniform doesn't draw
' dolor line.' ' . . ?
the
f. Volunteer coal diggers enough to man the
mines are in sight, so one phase of the'solution
appears to have passed. The next is to get
'them where the coal is. '
' t
Some Missouri coal miners went hack to
'work because they could not bear to.be idle
'nd see their neighbors freexe. This spirit
might well be imitated by others. .
I One local philosopher, viewing the state of
the union, consoles himself with the thought
' that the republican party could not possibly
, have done worse than the democrats have.
, Fighting the White Plague.
While effort more or less sporadic, directed
sometimes with and sometiriies without high
intelligence, is being made to ri.d. the earth' of
various of its ills, the national organization for
combatting tuberculosis steadily pursues its
campaign. This was carefully marked out long
ago, when-it had been fairly determined that the
disease is preventable and, even curable. Ex
perience has brought about various modifica
tions in detail, as better ways of doing the work
have been discovered or developed, but the main
purpose is unchanged. ,
One of the most deplorable sequels of the
war is the increase of tuberculosis , in . Eu
ropean countries, j This was inevitable, because
of the condition ef undernourishment and con
sequent lessing of the disease-resistive quality
of the inhabitants of the waj-stricken lands.
Danger to America is recognized in the fact
that the diseas is increasing in Europe. A more
immediate and insidious danger is the apathy
of our own people. A few years ago the coun
try was thoroughly aroused by a campaign of
intensive education, and much of good came
from the agitation, but now that the populace
has in a sense become familiar with the disease,
its presence noj longer excites the dread that
once accompanied it, Out of this has come a
sense, not of security but of indifference, and
not a little of the benefit of public education
has thus been lost, i
The Society for the Study and Prevention of
Tuberculosis is active, however, i energetically
and persistently combatting the disease to
which is ascribed 150,000 useless deaths an
nually jn the United States. Its work does not.
interfere with nor duplicate that of any of the
other moves for relieving mankind of affliction,
and so deserves the hearty support of those
who really are concerned for the welfare of hu
Santa Fe trainmen, who threaten to quit
rather than haul coal dug by volunteers, olight
. to keep in mind that they are working for Uncle
Sam and a strike of the sort they propose would
dome mighty near to being treason. ,
J Frank Polk informs Kurt von Leisner fhat
differences of view in the United States regard
ing the treaty are not to be resolved in favor
of Germany It. will do the Germans all good if
they get this fact straight in, their minds.
V
An Old' Standby
' An. average good Missouri " mule "sells for
' J00. This, sturdy animal keeps on itssure
" tooted way. regardless of. multiplying automo
biles and tractors. The steady demand, for
mules is mainly from the farms, a good sign of
Speeding up production where most needed. In
1 horse breeding also the situation is favorable,
but choice animals are wanted. Predictions of
a horseless era are no longer heard. The men-
ace seemed most serious nearly 30 years ago
when prices generally were at the lowest ebb.
Ilk some places in the northwest horses, were
turned adrift as not worth feeding through the
winter. At farm sales a sheep might bring but
23 cents. An alleged remedy widely supported,
and defeated several times politically, was silver
inflation. Prices have certainly advanced with
out regard to nostrums of that kind. Twenty-
1 five years ago it was charged that gold had been
1 cornered in Europe. We have now the largest
stock of gold on record.
There is clearly a .sound business-expansion
vhen the demand grows for mules and horses
as well, as a'l kinds of motor vehicles and im
, proved farm machinery. More production is
the cry, and it is heeded. Breeders of all farm
jf'n'mals have accented a, new atid higher stand-d-d.
A $1.00(1 hog isinVloge sotiosUy.' The-i-Kcc
of bacon suggests it. St. Louis Globe
. Ueuiocrat . -. -
How to Spend the Long Evenings. ,
One of our contemporaries undertakes to
express the quandary in which its readers find
themselves these days, between solitaire and
sleep, for filling in the long evenings. As an
alternative," The Bee would suggest that some
thing sweet may be snatched from adversity, if
only the individual will accept the opportunity.
Instead of dividing the evenings between sleep
and solitaire, either of which may be reckoned
among the necessaries, give a portion of it to
solid reading, sober reflection and intelligent
discussion in the family circle of the situation.
This does not mean that one must set about
a thorough course in political economy, al
though that would do nobody harm, but it does
mean a time for cleansing the mind of a lot of
false notions that have been fostered by a
course of moral and mental, treacle applied
through various agencies. It is not for the mo
ment possible to devote the evenings to watch
ing miracles performed before the camera, to
see the(bedraggled heroine brought up from the
depths of physical degradation and suddenly
mounted on a pinnacle of immaculate prosper
ity, or the honest train robber or bank burglar
given a clean-bill of health because "he paid
for it all in France." Folks now have a chance
td get away from inverted morals, diverted
principles and distorted economics, and acquire
something of a comprehending grasp on the
fundamentals of life. It is not our purpose to
prescribe a course of reading, but we may be
pardoned for making a suggestion. A good
place to start would be the editorial by George
Horace Lorimer in the last Saturday 'Evening
Post, headed "Joyriding and Jaywalking."
Ending War by Resolution.
A difference of opinion has arisen in congress
as to which of two ways to go about ending the
war with Germany and Austria by resolution.
The course suggested as an alternative to ratifi
cation of the peace treaty. Democrats express
the opinion that Mr. Wilson will give his assent
to neither, and that a resolution can not be
passed over his veto. This is equivalent to no
tice that the president's party will support him
in his present attitude. . One thing that should
not be forgotten is that' the end of the war will
bring to a termination the extraordinary powers
exercised by the president. This, would not be
a public calamity. Return to peace conditions
is earnestly desired by all. In his message to
congress the president ascribes no little part of
social unrest to the fact that peace was not
speedily restored. He is well advised that it
can not be on the basis of accepting his League
of Nations covenant. With the attitude of con
gress further disclosed, the matter now be
comes more and more one- of personal dis
position of the president. ,When he is willing
to meet the' senate half way on the treaty, the
jest will be speedily accomplisher 1
- From the New York Timet.
v Allied today in dealing with the German
Baltic army of Von Der Goltx and Avaloff
Bermondt was due largely to the fear of bol
shevism either spreading from Russia through
the Baltic states or springing up spontaneously
in them. -Now that the army which was to save
the Baltic for Germany is thoroughly beaten we
may expect to hear more talk of this. The outcry-will
probably be great, and most of it will
come, directly or otherwise, from. Gecmany.
The actual danger is very much less.
Mr. Duranty's dispatch published In yester
day's Time's indicates something of the difficul
ties, which the Letts will have, as the Esths
have had, with the "Baits" the descendants of
the mediaeval military conquerors of the coun
try. , In Latvia these are mainly German in
blood, with some Swedish and Danish elements;
in Esthonia the Swedish racial'element is much
stronger, but racial origin is not the decisive
characteristic. The Baits include a considerable
percentage of the town population and prac
tically all of the landlio'ding nobility; and,
whether German or Svve"';s'i by descent, prac
tically all of them are ("ennan in conscious
ness. Numerically they are from 4 to 8 per
cent of the population in different parts of the
Baltic territories.
In Esthonia 80 per cent of the arable land
and 84 per cent of the forests belonged to 7SS
nobles. In consequence, when the Esths got
control of their own country they passed sc.
vere measures of expropriation which split up
most of" the estates. No doubt in some cases
this worked hardship; but the" land barons had
had some centuries to make themselves loved,
and had succeeded, with a few exceptions, in
winning the bitter hatred of the populace. The
same thing is true in Latvia, where the expro
priation is still to come, and the fears of the
Baits are consequently heightened by the un
certainty of the situation. The unsuccessful
Russian revolution in 190S provoked some peas
ant risings in the Baltic states, with the burning
of manor houses and massacres of nobles, which
naturally were followed by still more, severe
reprisals when imperial authority was re-established.
It is apparent that the Baits 'are afraid
of something of the sort today, now that the
German filibustering expedition, which received
at least moral support from the land-owning
classes has collapsed. There is, however, rea
son to hope that the responsible: governments
now in control on the Baltic will prevent popu
lar outbursts such as occurred in 190S.
All this, however, is not bolshevism, nor
anything like it. It is a solution of the agrarian
problem such as is going on in Czechoslovakia
and Roumania and is about to occur in Jugo
slavia somewhat mpre extreme and attended
by harsher feeling, since local conditions were
more oppressive; but it is not bolshevism. Latvia
and Esthonia have both fought off bolshevism;
there is a good deal of socialism in both coun
tries, but very little of it has any sympathy with
the state of Lenin and Trotzky. In the winter
of 1918-19 the bolsheviki invaded the Baltic
states, with the frank declaration, published in
one of their official newspapers, that "Lith
uania, Latvia and Esthonia lie across the route
to western Europe, and constrict our revolution.
This wall between the revolutionists of Russia
and Germany must be torn down The
control of the Baltic will also give soviet Rus
sia the opportunity to act upon the Scandina
vian states."
But much has changed in a year. Spartacus
is no longer an imminent danger in Germany,
and the bolshevist drive toward the Baltic has
been stopped., The . Baltic states need peace,
even such a temporary half-peace as can be
made with soviet Russia. They tiope to regain
their feet economically by acting as commer
cial intermediaries between soyiet Russia and
western Europe, but the blockade is likely to
hinder this. But they have the strongest possi
ble interest in avoiding military alliance and in
preyenrinp infiltration; for bolshevist rule on the
Baltic will mean the end of nationalism, the
swallowing up of the newly liberated states in a
Russian mass whose rulers are no more sym
pathetic to the Letts a"d Esths than were the
Romanoffs. The new states have won their
liberty hy fighting, and national sentiment
seems strong enough to keep bolshevism out;
nor will the manners of Mr. Litvinoff,' who be
haves to 'the Baltic negotiators as Hoffmann
behaved at , Brcst-Litovsk, be likely to make
friends for his government. ,.
.
But Listening is So Hard.
Tact consists in saying things that , people
like to listen to and of listening to things that
people like to say. Youth's Companion.
CfieVELVET
HAMMER.
JOHN A. SWANSON.
When Adam was the only man, the first and
foremost chief, sartorial simplicity was great
beyond belief. He grabbed a suit of hand-me-down
from off the nearest tree and said, "It's
very cheap and plenty good enough for me."
He didn't sing of Shannon or some other Irish
scene, but he's the lad who set the styles in
wearin' of the 'green. . '
' But , since that gay and happy time the
ruthless hand of fate has gone and changed the
simple styles and brought them up to date, The
noise upon the street would be uproarious and
big if any one appeared in clothes he gathered
from the fig. We want to be resplendent beaus
and charm the giddy belles, wherefore we buy
the garnishments that Tcthn A. Swanson sells.
He always has the kind of clothes that never
lose their grip and never queer their owner with
a disconcerting rip; that never cast their buttons
as the forest casts the leaf and bring the wearer
face to face, with deep and sudden grief. He
keeps the kind of pants in which a person climbs
the fence in perfect nonchalance and with
serenest confidence.
' His big Nebraska Clothing house is widely
known to fame, but it is only one with which
he's played the clothing game. He started here
when Omaha was young and full of grass and
proved himself a business man of quality and
class. He's built successive businesses in
clothing for the gents, and gathered as ,the
years rolled by a stately recompense. .
Next Subject El E. Calvin.
A. E. F. Men on Coal Strike.
' .Genoa, Neb., Dec. S. To the Edi
tor of The Bee: The telegram sent
to President Wilson relative to the
coal situation by F. H. Stevens, trav?
ellnsr salesman stopping at the Fon
tenelle, should be considered aa an
insult to all American soldiers and
personally la by me, and I will be
frank to tell thia gentleman so face
to face.
As to the manner In which this
strike situation has been handled, I
think it was all wrong. The situa
tion should have been taken In tow
before it reached the point of a nation-wide
walkout, and mines oper
ated by the government until opera
tors and miners threshed out their
differences. Any fair-minded per
son will concede to that argument.
But Mr " Stevens' statement
(which Is I. W. W.-ism) that the
2,600,000 A.'E. F. men were sent to
P'rance as bill collectors for Wall
street is absurd and without any
foundation, and an Insult to the
Stars and Stripes, and to the quarter-million
"buddies" who lie today
In far-away France. We did not go
to France to benefit any one, but to
protect the Integrity of this nation
and save our sister allies from
slaughter by a, band of savages
known to the woild as "Huns" and
"Boches," and the same fate our
allies received would have befallen
our nation as soon as the German
imperialism could strike at the por
tal of our country.
Revelations brought to light after
we entered the conflict makes it ob
vious to the American people that
we had In our land, a nest of Ger
man sympathizers who would have
takeh up arms to crush America at
the command of old Kaiser Bill and
his aides. And, to conclude. I will
say I will have to be In a very good
humor for any one to sincerely re
mark to my face or in my hearing
that the khaki uniform went to
France as Bill collectors for Wall
street, arid. Mr. Stevens in using this
terms is plain and pure I. W. W.
ism in all Its forms and no one but
an I. W, W. would make a like as
sertion. V.. A. BRADSHAW.
How We Have Progressed.
-The national treasury's deficit
next June, it is now estimated, 'will
be $2,491,273,345.26. We used to
think , the government was going
pretty' strong when it spent that
much, how it spends that much more
than it's got. Kansas City Star.
Money In Rice.
slt you have bought any rice re
cently you can believe the proud
boast of the Missouri farmer who
says he made a net profit of $70,000
upon BOO acres of r,ice. Louisville
Courier-Journal.
Silence Says a Iot.
Gompers says "big business is de
termined to give labor a blow be
tween the eyes," but is silent about
labor's apparent desire to lynch cap
ital and assault the public. Wall
Street Journal.
DOT PUZZLE.
The Day We Celebrate.
Rome Miller, hotel man, born 1855.
Leo A. Hoffman, undertaker, born 1880.
Viscount Jellicoe of Scapa, Britain's fa
mous naval commander now visiting Canada,
born 61 years ago.
Lieut. Gen. Sir Arthur William Currie, who
led Canada's army to victory, born at- Napper
ton. Ont., 44 years ago.
. Lord Dccies, whose wife was Miss Vivian
Gould of New York, born in England 53 years j
ago. '
Ellis Parker Butler, one of the best known
of American humorists, born at Muscatine, la., i
50 years ago. v -
Rt. Rev. Walter T. Sumner, Episcopal bishop
of Oregon, born at Manchester, N. H., 46 years
ago.
34-
35
2)5
32 3.'
47
.So
20
3b
mm
l'' 20. V
4
Trace to forty-eight and know
How I look when in the show.
Draw from on to two and io an to th end.
"Earh Money
mi
Outside f School
Boy's Workshop Before Christmas.
.... Bjr 3. H. MILLAR.
"Bobby, what under the sun are
you doing down in the cellar all the
time?" asked Bob's mother about a
week before Christmas. "It seems
to me there hasn't been an evening
or a Saturday for about a month
that I haven't heard you sawing and
hammering down there." '
"There hasn't been, mother. I've
been there all the time. I'm making
things to sell for Christmas pres
ents. Come down and I'll show
you."
So Bob's mother went with him
down to his Christmas, workshop.
"This bobsled," said he, "I figure
on selling tosMr. Collins. Jimmy
told me some time ago that he
thought his father was going to give
him a bob for Christmas, so I saw
Mr. Collins about it and he said that,
if I could make a good one, he would
DECEMBER
buy it. This one is better than any
he can find downtown. Got the idea
from Mr. Hyde's article on 'How to
Make a Bobsled.'
"Then here is an indoor flower box
that Chuck Moore is going to buy
for a present to his mother. She
has been wanting one for a long
time. Got that idea out of one of Mr.
Hyde's articles, too. Here is a
plant stand I intend to sell to An
nabelle Brown to give to her mother.
I- got thte idea for it from Mr. Hall's
book on 'Handicraft for Handy
Boys.' ' '
"These picture frames I haven't
sold yet. Cousin Dick is going to
give this umbrella stand to Aunt
Kate. It's a pippin if I do say it
myself. And this cedar chest I'm
going to try to make dad buy to give
to someone."
"Myl I've been wanting one like
that for a long time," said mother.
"Next year," Bob went on "I'll
start earlier, I'm going to' try a fire
less cookeiv. Tt doesn't look so ter
ribly hard. Then there are a lot of
other things I can make such as
clock shelves, necktie racks, towel
racks, book racks, towel rollers,
magazine racks and a dozen other
things."
, "You will certainly make some
money. Bob," .
"Sure.'and you ought to see the
presents I have stowed away for you
and dad. You'll be tickled tp death."
(Next week: "Christmas Candy
Making.")
Bovg1 and Girls'- Newapaper Servlc
Copyright, by J-
Aid to Iiusitanla Victims.
The committee of the national re
lief fund, in response to an appeal
bv the lord mayor, as treasurer of
the Mansion House fund, have vot
ed 6,125 ($30,625) for investment
by the public trustees to supplement
the vpensions of the widows and or
phans of the needy passengers who
went down In the Lusitania. The
Mansion House fund was badly sup
ported at the time, only .8,700
($43,500) being received. London
Times.
WANTED .
- t
(Joil c lv tig men. The tin demands .
Strong mlnda, great hearts, true faith and
wining nanns.
lien whom the lust of office dofs not kill:
Men whom the spoils of office can not
buy;
Men who pwsess opinion and a will:
Men who hav honor; men who will not
II;
Men who oan stand bafore a demagogue
And damn his treacherous flatteries
without winking;
Tall men, sur -clowned, who live above the
In publlo duty and In private tMnklne.
J. G. HOLLAND.
Thirty Years Ago in Omaha.
A well-attended concert was given at Trin
ity cathedral. Mrs. Cotton, leader of the choir,,
also Sang several solos which were highly ap
preciated. Plans were made to enlarge the high school
at a cost of $75,000. .
Mrs. Savage gave a "round table tea" in
honor of Mr. and Mrs. Spalding.
The engagement was announced of Miss
Ella Armstrong to Mr. George Gould.
The American Water Works company com
pleted plans for the building of a new reservoir
in Florence to cost SS0O.0U0. ,
The Choice Prizes
ofLifesare Won by the Healthy and Strong
The weak, soft, flabby muscled, deficient in vigor and vital
force, have ever had to suffer the humiliation of being ruth
lessly shoved aside by their stronger rivals.
A clear, ruddy complexion, bright eyes, hardened muscles, steady
nerves and a well knit together body of elastic step and sway, consti
tute a trump card in any game whether of love or business.
If you feel that you are
outclassed, lacking the stam
ina to stand up and claim
your own, don t delay an
other day in commencing
iw M&c . . m rmt - i
rne ureal uenerai ionic
It win restore that confidence you need to com
bat the over-opposing forces of social and busi
ness life; it will give you the heart and spirit to
do and th couraga to challenge th world to
your right to place in the Sun. because it will
rebuild your physical strength and mental power
to a state of perfect health, recharging your run
down, exhausted system with th live current of
new, rich, red blood. "LYKO" is a refreshing appe
tizer and an exceptional general tonic in those
subnormal conditions of the physical and nervous
systems, such aa muscular and mental fatigue,
nervous exhaustion, general weakness, or debility
following a protracted illness or the result of a
wasting disease. It's truly Nature's first assistant
as a restorative agent a really remarkable re
constructiveend so relishable in taste that yon
rill pleasurably anticipate the taking of it
' Sol Manufacturers:
1YKOI a sold In original peekaaMonl-. LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY
IUelturbofc Refuse . .. ..
atltubstltut Jaaaiai vity, ate,
Evcfydty Science fl
Home Mechanic In
What Makes a Bullet Go.
' By GRANT M. HTDB.
"What makes the bullet go when
you shoot your rifle, Dad?"
"Gunpowder."
"But you didn't put any gun
powder into the rifle."
"Yes, I put in gunpowder, just like
grandfather used to put in his old
muzzle-loader. And it had to be
rammed down, with a wad and a
' eoHoat jfl
ply slip a ready-made cartridge into
the barrel and, when I pull the trig
ger, the rifle hammer drives a uuie
tiring pin into the soft metal cover
ing the percussion cap. The cart
ridge, or shell, is held in the gun oj
a little rim. A shotgun cartridge :
loaded and fired in the same way
except that the cartridge is filled
ith small shot held in Dy a wad"
(Next week: "Why the picture is
blurred."X
Boys' and Girls'
Copyright
Newspaper Servlc
mil. by j. a.
Millar.
' His Idea. '
Miss Older Do you think it K
bad luck to postpone a wedding?
Mr. Simms (crusty old bachelor',
Hat if vou DostDone It ofter
enough. Edinburgh Scotsman.
. CA&TBlDGC
bullet on top of it, and then set on
fire, just like his rifle did. But, I
did not have to do the loading and
ramming myself because I was able
to load my rifle with a cartridge--which
is simply an easy way to put
into a rifle another barrel in which
the loading has already been done
at a factory.
"In the first guns, the man who
used the gun, first poured in some
powder, through the muzzle, then a
wad, then rammed it down with a
ram-rod, then rammed a bullet !n
on top of it. To fire it he had to
set fire to the powder. Some early
guns used fuses, or matches. Then
they invented flintlocks in which a
piece of flint struck a spark from
steel to, set fire to the powder. Then
they invented percussion caps made
of a substance, like the head of p.
match, which would catch fire when
struck.
"Finally someone thought of a
cartridge a, little brass cylinder in
which the powder, wad and bullet
could be placed and rammed in ad
vance. To explode the powder, he
placed a percussion cap in the rear
end of the cartridge so that you
could strike it with the gun ham
mer. And so, to fire iny rifle, I sim-
NAME 'BAYER' ON
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Safely stops colds as told in
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Handy tin boxes containing 12
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Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceti
cacidestcr of Salicylicacid.
IMMan'llllaritftelli!
JL heoamBroreve
fllieimijirmlfai
grand finds in His piano
a. responsiveness to; Hi
changing mood such as
he never experiences
oritk any otker jriario.
TKs (Jeli
almost Kctman quality,
couplecl with a Beauty
and permanence oCtoxxe
wkicK no otker piano
in the -world can oner
Without tixceutiorvi.
makes riasonrHatnlii
the inevitable choice
of the -musician
most highly developed
musicianship.
stsx or to mote yoawny.
Christmas Pianos
Krankh & Bach Sohmcr
Vosc & Sons Brambach
Kimball' ''
Bush-Lane -Cable-Nelson
" Hospe . Apollo Players
, Culbransen Playtrs
Used Pianos $125 Up
Lowest Prices
Piano Lamps, Benches, Cabi
nets, Rolls, Scarfs and all the
Furniture for the Music Room,
at first cost when purchased with
Piano or Player.
This effects a saving of $50.
Our Cash Prices Are
Payment Prices.
v 1513 Douglas Street
The Art and Music Store
Young Men of Omaha
There are three
cardinal qualities ab
solutely necessary to
the success of any young
man. ,
These qualities arey
honesty, industry and
economy.
Add to these quali
ties the banking habit,
for the right banking
association is often of
distinct advantage in
the building of . one's
character and fortune.
A savings account
or a checking account
with the First Na
tional gives young men
a valuable banking as
sociation and often lays
the foundation for fu
ture business success.
First National
I Bank of Omaha
Street Floor Entrance
Either Far nam or Sixteenth Street Door
Established 1857