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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1920)
s:, THfi BEE; OMAHA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 192& The Omaha Bee daily (morning) --eveningSunday j . FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSE WATER VICTOR KOSEWATER. EDITOR yHB BKE PUBLISHING COM PANT. PROPRIETOR t MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i Th IHMIIM Fmm. ol wklefe Th Be It nuabrr. I u- CmItI ntltltd th um for publlrttlon of til a dmwtchM f andltti lo It or M. otlianXM oradlted tn thi p, od alto kkt toetl nm ublitbtd twain. U rtlbta pubUcWIon o( out I tPKlU dlipttctut txi tlw rwrnd. I BEE TELEPHONES: r" " " PrtfM BrMh XieiMn. Aik for h Tvl 1 111111 BtMrtMM or PtrUcuJw Ptrtoo WutftL JrSCA X WW Fr Nlfkl and Suafcf Scrvic Cll( Mttertal Brnitmi ..... Tylir loeoL ClnuUUoa Dwuumt ... Tyltr IMili AdnrtUlni Diprtt . ... Tytar 10081. OFFICES OF THE BEE Bona Ofnc. Bw BuiloUns. l?Ua ud rtraio Brtaca vmm: Amw 4119 Worth Ulk I P' Eta Ut JaMUury An. K" Bid Ctuosll BIBl 15 Scott . I Witauf Out-of-Tows Offlcaas Iw Tort OfflM W rtftA An. Washtofioa Cblwt BMftr Bldg. I LtaMta 1613 lMTnwnrtll 331S If Kml S13 Nona 40U 1311 O Stratf 3230 H BUM! DECEMBER CIRCULATION Daily 66,000 Sunday 63,505 Aftrai rlrcutaUon for th moitUi (ubtcribtd ud (won to to Jt. B, Raiui. I'ln-ulttlon Unfr. . 3ubacrira loavln the city should hava The Be mailad to thtm. Addrwa changed aa Itan aa required. 1 You should know that Many people in Omaha do not realize that they live in one. of the scenic centers of the west. What The Bee Stands for: Respect or the law and maintenance of order. " Speedy and certain punishment of crime through the regular operation of the courts. Pitiless publicity and condemnation of in efficiency, lawlessness and corruption in of fxe. ; ;-' - - - Frank recognition "and commendation, of honest and efficient' public service. Inculcation of Americanism as the true basis of good citizenship. ' - Hugless dances? What's tlie iise? - Gusty blasts of dusty winds suggest that February is not far away. i Not being able to empty the dinner pail, the democrats took it out on the , sugar-bowL . i Herr Hohenzollern says he will not return , 'to Germany; not if he knows when he is well off. Nitro, the -'wonder city," will be embalmed is the greatest monument to graft connected with the war. ' ; France is going to fight against depopula tion, by adopting the means nature provided in the beginning. Swede employers are going to add a gen eral lockout to a 50 per cent strike. This ought to bring matters to; an issue. Old J. B. gets another setback in court at San Francisco, but it will take a lot more beat- ,; ing to make hint give up entirely. "Pussyfoot" Johnson, having been added tq, ' the famous London wax works coUectiQnmay' now rest his claim secure to immortality I ; Turning a brewery into a corn products fac tory is simply an evolutionary process. ..Some boo;e, you may remember, came from torn. According to estimates turned in, Omaha teachers ire Josing,.an average of $240 a year while holding their jobs. Some of those figures may need revision. Paving heard- real cannon boom in battle, Admiral Sims will be able Jtp .withstand, the; bombardment of -the mud batteries the demo crats have turned loose on him. "3 r - ' . Sixty-five, .hundred names are recorded as having been overlooked- by the census enumera tors. "That is enough to suggest that top much haste is not conducive to accuracy, '-'j .'' Emma Goldman and her gang have-reached that dear Petrograd, and expect to jurney an to Moscow. They have our full permission te go as far aa they like in Russia. - "Mental reservations",. novir constitute, the charge against the socialists in New York. It will take V pretty cleveV" court to determine what is going on inside a man's mind. . ! Josephus Daniels has edited. Governor Ed viztti tiame out of the list of "speakers' at the Cummings " banquet, but he needn't think he can tool or "plawte Mr. Bryan by any such sub terfuge. . , Chicago druggists are warned not to profiteer on whisky sold for flu medicine, but if the admonition has no more effect on them than it has on others, the victims may prepare to pay the price exacted. The Fontenelle Forest association is now owner of the Child's Point tract, the most beau tiful bit of woodland in Nebraska, and its preservation is thus assured. The public spir ited men and women who have taken up this work and pushed it to a success deserve more thanks, than they will ever get for their service . to the state. i Economy Several United States senators, without charging the secretary of treasury with re sponsibility for the rather grotesque situation, have pointed out that, while he is urging re trenchment and. advising congress to "cut to the bone." eliminating- aH doubtful items in the 'appropriation bills,-he actually suhmits esti- mates showing that almost every department has asked for more money to spend next year than it was allowed for its uses in the current fiscal year. The aggregate appropriations re quested xceed by $400,000,060 4hose.- of the fistal year that began July 1. . t . ' "Why, senators bonder, do riot the executive "departments set an example of economy and f retrenchment? Is it not something resembling hyprocisy to urge congress to- reduce expendi tures while submitting estimates that mock the secretary of the treasury's economy plea? . No doubt the-enatots hav a-strong case. But, after all, under the present chaotic plan of getting appropriations and expending public ' money, no department knows what any other is doing, and no official is empowered to con-'- struct a well balanced and businesslike .budget. ,The estimates sira guesses, oftearmld-guesses. and each department gives itself the benefit of tbS doubV-fhjcagQ JSyvs, ; f BOURBONISM VS. BOLSHEVISM. One of the important questions beford the American people today is how to check the spread of radicalism. The presence of groups of men, isolated to some extent, separated by distance as well as by lack of common views other than the single purpose of fomenting revolution in the state, is symptomatic of discon tent. No argument against the soundness of our institutions is contained in the condition, but rather a suggestion that whatever wrong is complained of is superficial and not funda mental. Also, the chiefest part of any cause or occasion for dissatisfaction will more likely be found in the individual than in society.. .If this be the case, it may well be doubted if the methods adopted are the correct ones for curing the trouble. Bourbonism is as dan gerous to the orderly progress of America as is bolshevisin. Nothing of permanent good can come of either. The one means stagnation by stoppage of the natural processes of rational life, the other wreckage quite as complete through the disturbance of established systems without the substitution pf any effective method for carrying on the activities of society. 'The one assumes that we already have attained per fection, the other that we may reach the goal by a 'short cut. Between the, rigid conser vatism of the one and the artificial stimulus of the other lies the safe path. , Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell university, very tersely states the proposition: America cannot save its soul by stifling free thought and inquiry or by deporting ark loads of alien revolutionists or denying con stitutional rights to radical and even mis chievous citizens and parties. We;may rid the land of undesirables, of dan gerous agitators and criminals, thus affording society the security that follow their de parture.' But the cause is not so removed. The disturbance as yet is merely on the surface, but may ro deeper unless sober counsel is taken. America's future is in tlie linnds of the Ameri can people. . , Keeping Faith With the Soldiers. A dispatch from tlie Washington corre spondent of our amiable democratic contem porary accuses the republicans in congress' of neglecting the soldiers, particularly the sick and wounded. Especially does it lay stress on the fact that not enough money has been set aside to adequately provide for , the , -rehabilitation of the temporary disabled and the vocational training of those who jiecd the instruction. With its customary watchfulness, the World-Herald omits to publish the speech of Representative Johnson of South Dakota, who shows the facts in the case. Representative Johnson on Tuesday told the house sonic- things he. had discovered in con nection with tlie treatment of sick and wounded soldiers.' The money set apart by congress to pay for their treatment, he asserted, is not being spent. The War department and the surgeon general of the public health service have not taken advantage,. of the provisions made for these:men, -and are requiring wounded men to vacate hospital rooms before they have recov ered in order1 that others worse off may have the 'bed. He describes actually existing condi tions lhat ire shocking.." The charge that the republican party is nig gard in its "treatment of the' soldiers is prepos terous. For fifty years the democrats used as a 'standard campaign argument the prodigality with which the republicans made provision for the -men who had followedthe flag into battle. Now, when the incompetency and mismanage ment of the War department is being disclosed, j supporters of the administration hope to save themsejves by accusing the majority in con gress of failure to.. set apart money for the care of sick and wounded soldiers. The ostrich with its head stuck'inthe sand- has the advantage di the democrats when it comes to presenting an alibi. Our Muddle With Mexico. .The resignation by Mr. .Fletcher, of his as signment as minister to Mexico may emphasize the unsettled relations between the two coun tries, but it did not come as a surprise. Six weeks ago Colonel Harvey made the flat statement--in his Weekly that Mr.. Fletcher would not return to Mexico. His experience with Car ranza was enough to convince him that that chief had no intention of taking any definite or serious steps in the direction of changing con ditions so far as Americans are concerned. In arraigning the policyof the administration,. Col onel Harvey also said the Fall resolution, ask ing for intervention, had received democratic support up to the point where it was -useful to sustain the influence of the Lansing ultimatum in the Jenkins case. When the Carranzistas at Puebla had yielded to the point of releasing the American viccconsul on bail, the pressure from Washington was removed and the Fall resolu tion was practically abandoned. The effect of this hot and cold policy, which has been pur sued by the Wilson administration from the start, with Tampico, Vera Cruz and Carrizal as. the high points along the dreary route, is shown in the contempt Carranza exhibits for the United States. The one prospect for better Un derstanding and more neighborly behavior on part of the Mexicans is in the successor to Wil son. An end will come to the farce of:"watch ful waiting" spme day. Listening to Voices From the Other World From the Baltimore American. Sir Oliver Lodge, the leading ..writer upon the subject of spiritism, has come to this coun try, and among other cities will visit Baltimore to deliver a lecture that sets forth his faith in the reality of the after life. He is hailed as a leader because of the high place he occupies as a practical scientist and a man who has conducted experimentation in the field of spiritistic phenomena with a thoroughness that no others, ocrhaos. have surpassed. Yet the eminent Eng lishman is but one of scores of men and women of distinction in letters and the sciences who have become exponents of the truth of immor tality as derived from table tipping and -like ex ercises, along with levitation, direct voice and varied forms of alleged communication with the other world. .From one end of the land, and from one entr of the world, to the other, the wave of interest in spiritualism has extended. Sir Oliver-Lodge, Prof. Hyslop and, others see in it confirmation of the essential teachings of the Christian religion and look upon their ef forts to authenticate the voices from the other side as real communications, as being the one line of proof of the after life. Without seeking to pass upon the matter, the fact that there is universal interest in. the theme is something of wllich account must be taken, and, indeed, the churches will need to treat with seriousness that which has been seized upon by multitudes of their members. Spirituistic phenomena are nothing new. The novelty of the present phase of interest in the subject is the fact that it has been given for the first time the attention that any other sub ject of scientific research is accorded, so that the bulk of evidence and the volume of experi mentation provide the amplest data for passing judgment upon 'the subject. Yet with it all there is no other subject of universal interest upon which there are as wide differences of opinion. . , Aside from the Bible, where spirit communi cation is taught absolutely, the matter is found filtering through the later religious literatures. It is seen in the Talmud, where it appears as a matter of course. The Roman Catholic church has always held to the teaching of communica tion by the spirits of the dead, both good and evil, with the living. Vet it believes and teaches that spiritism is diabolic and dangerous and should be avoided. In this it has the warrant of the Old and the New Testaments. Sir Conan Doyle, however, seeks to account for the ban of the old prophets upon communication with spirits as due to the fact that the priests of the day had a monopoly of the privilege and emolu ments from spiritualistic seances. This is, of course, fanciful, and is without warrant in the Scriptures. If there is any one thing clear in the Bible it is that general dabbling with the subject is wronjf and is to he avoided. Never theless. Sir Conan Doyle seeks to make of Jesus a. medium and interprets the scenes of the transfiguration as a mediumisfic seance. The eminent novelist will find few of the orthodox believers in any of the denominations to agree with him. . All the responsible investigators of spiristic phenomena deplore general dabbling in the bubject and point their warnings in terms that probably de not deter, because they are too vague and speculative. The psychologists whose distinctive sphere has been invaded are dis posed to regard the-matter wholly as one of abnormal psychology and to look upon those who profess to have psychic powers as of more interest to investigate than the phenomena.' These they ascribe to the abnormal functioning of the individual's consciousness. Christian Science is virtually interwoven with spiritism by the nature of its teachings. To the followers of Mrs. Eddy the manifestations of spiritism are testimony to the prevalence of moral mind. They hold that one can open his consciousness to the entrance of the discarnate spirit of a murderer, drunkard, or some other evil type. So, evil possession results and the appropriate acts are induced. On the other hand, one can open up his consciousness to the divine mind that will preclude the entrance of the evil spirit or mind and bring the individual into conform ity with the mind of God. The orthodox ministry is giving some at tention to spiritism, and some ministers are Se riously seeking to ascertain at what point of contact the orthodox believer may unite with the psychics for the betterment of men and the widening of the hope of immortality. The voice from the other world, authentic or illusionary, for good or evil is one of the . loudest heard today. What are the churches going to do about it? Falling Exchange Rate. - - -It" the decline .in foreign exchange within the last few days means anything, it means good for America.-- The condition is brought about by a stiffening in bank discount rates, the prime object of which was to cleck bor rowing for speculative purposes, but which also has had the further effect of shortening Euro pean credits. A considerable part of the so called high cost of living has been due to the in flation made possible'by liberal credits, while the prices of staple articles were shot upwards and held there by. "European demand." Long ago The Bee pomted out that the end of the price-boosting would , come when the limit of ability to pay had been reached. That point does not seem far away, now. Europe has reached it, and America soon will. Out of this should proceed the readjustment. Goods held in . storehouses at seaports,, awaiting shipment abroad .will have to seek a market at home.. Europe's needs will be attended to as the folks over there get back to work, and in the mean time, the artificial scarcity at home ought soon to cease to vex consumers. Canners complain that Uncle Sam sold army supplies to consumers below actual cost But the canners already had been paid for them, and the: hungry public Was entitled to some con Challenging the Attorney , General It-developed yesterday that neither of. the sedition bills in congress now has the approval of Attorney General Palmer, although he shares with the committee the responsibility for them. In view of the dangerous power which this legislation .'seeks to employ as against speech and press in time of peace, it is sheer recklessness to proceed with such meas ures in the haphazard way that thus far has characterized the movement. Notwithstanding a considerable, body of law, national and state, on the subject of con spiracy. rebellion and other crimes intended to weaken or destroy popular .government, the attorney general has complained that the feder al statutes are not as specific in their applica tion to citizens as to aliens. If after all the vicissitudes of the' republic since 1787 we are at this late day suddenly confronted by a lack of law to punish such offenses when committed by citizens which has not yet been proved, an act in a few plain words ought to be sufficient. ' Instead of that we vhaye bills of great length that embrace within - the category of crinte almost everything that excitable or des potic officials may choose to regard as se ditions. To the Postoftke department, al ready one of the most irresponsible governmen tal agencies in tile world, whose chief has boast ed that it is superior to the courts, is given the power of life and death over publications of every description. Speech which may be only exaggerated and foolish is made subject to .outrageous penalties on the word of any in former or heresy-hunter. ' .; - If the attorney general has in mind a real crime against which the law does not run. let him name it. The sedition bills attributed to him create countless: new crimes which in fact are not crimes at all wdiere meij are free. New York World. 7Y The , Day We Celebrate. ' . Thomas E. Brady, attorney, born 1871 Meyer Klein, cigar dealer, born in 1870. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., heir to the largest private fortune m the world, born in Cleveland, 46 years ago. Arthur Woods, former New York police commissioner, now an assistant to Secretary of War Baker, born in Boston SO years ago. . Barney Oldfield, one cf the. most famous of automobile racing pilots, born at Wauseon, O., M years ago. ,Koji Yamada, noted Japanese, professional lliard player, born in Tokio, 32 years ago. bi Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. Mayor Chsinj was elected chairman of the committee appointed to audit the accounts of rthe treasurer of the Irish National league at Detroit. . The comic opera, "Erminie," with Miss Helen Lamont in the title role, was playing at the :Grand theater. - - - - Thomas McCague left for Texas because of failinsr health. Captain Erb,i proprietor of the Walker House, bait Lake Uty.; was visiting Mr. swobe, landlord of the Millard hotel. Mrs: Kountze o-ave a ' dinner -with covers as - Way to Salvation. Grand Island.. Neb., Jan. 27. To the Editor of The Bee: Your Sun day editorial on "Blessing of Indus try," was one which I believe has hit the nail on the head of our 'so called progressive aj?e. What a singular shape of a man. shape of a time, have we toTlay and in this late history: how strangely do modes, creeds, formularies, and the date and place of a man's birth, modify the figure of man? You said in yur last paragraph: . "This spirit must be eradlcatedv Man must be restored to his provni place as a producer, a creator, a bringer forth of good and useful things. He must learn that industry is the only true way to happiness. Work or starve is a hard rule, but it is na ture's law.". Clearly there ran be no talk or ar gument about the theory and prac tice, which has to bo changed, but first of all. we need a understanding about man character and personal ity. Iet me put my answer Into a brief statement. One thing I know, never, on this earth, was the rela tion of man to man carried on ex cept by payment alone. If at any time, a philosophy of "Jalssez faire." competition and supply and de mand start up as the exponent of human relation, expect that it oon will end. As the ideal, the true and noble that was in man htin faded out, and nothing remains but naked egolfm, .ruthless greediness, which cannot live, his character has to bo remodeled in order to become a per sonality, which will create and produce. "Work or starve Is a hard rule, but it is nature's law.", which has to come in order that man again may become most distinctive in the fields of science, morality and art, that sot the goal and stimulate the 'aspira tion towards the ideal of personal development. This ideal is nothing less or lower than the perfect per son, and the prncticul exhortation which follow logically from this ideal is that one should be .striving Intel ligently, consistently and with un swerving constancy towards thp goal In such striving lies the secret of manhood. BERT BAHR. Will Be Watched. The plan of the four big brother, hoods to squepze out the middlemen and reduce the cost of living w ill be watched with Interest by the nation wide sisterhood of thrifty house wives. Boston Transcript. Next! General Pershing's positive asser tion that he will, "under no circum stances," be a candidate for the presidency clears up. one precinct. Next: Memphis Commercial Ap peal. v Wanting to Know. Peace : declared in Kurope will make a lot of Americans sit up and wonder when peace will be declared In- congress. Milwaukee Journal. tfhicli Is Something I-ilsc. . Congress should remember that it is asked to do something for and not to the railroads. Chicago News. DOT PUZZLE. ZA t 76 2b. y - 27 - 25 - 5Z 31- 35 2l 34a 21 I. 1 x'xz 24 2o '37 6 7 a I0 i4 s - I2 5' 54, J A TV. V v4s; A ' Trace to sixty, if, you wish, And you'll se I am a :r prdiv !iom one to two, and bo on lo the end. MEAT CAUSE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take Salts to flush Kidneys if Back hurts or Bladder bothers. It you must have your meat every day. "eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally,.says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid wlich almost par alyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel it, from the blood. They become- sluggish and .weaken, then you surfer with a dull misery in tha kidney region, sharp pains in the back-or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad . you have rheumatic twinges. The urina gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or. three tjmes during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste get fout ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy here; take a tablespoon ful in 4 glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys "will then act fine. This famous salts in made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice,, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kid neys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injure, and makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-watcj drink, The All Round Girl Red Cheeks and Pep ' Where Mable Failed. By mollis: fricb cook. Mable wanted an old-fashioned costume for a play. Grandmother had in her cedar wood chest an old lace dolman, poke bonnet, bodice, and hoop skirts of the early forties. Mable imagined herself in these lovely garments the envy of every other girl in school. Grandmother was short sighted and her hands trembled as she sewed a button on Mable's dress one morn ing. It angered Mable. She was in a hurrv and. told Grandmother so in a tone of voice not altogether feasant. That afternoon she burst into the living room with "Grand mother, I must have one of your old dreses to wear at our play. Give me the key to your chest so that V can pick out what I want." Grandmother looked calmly out of the window with her thin lips shut tight. She said nothing nor did she move from her chair. It would have been easier to push a donkey up hill than to move that determined old Sports that Make Men Pj Athletics The Cart Wheel. By DR. E. D. AN'QELL. WJjen Ralph and Allen arrived at Beppo's barn, without a word to the startled little clown, they jumped for the mat. Together, and in perfect Grandmother. Mable stamped her foot and told her mother what she thought of peevish old ladies. In came Marian, the girl next door, bringing a small box of sugared dates she had made herself. "I'm giving you these," she said, "because I haven't any grandmother of my own." Grandmother smiled and as she moved to pat Marian's hand, her glasses fell off. Marian picked them up and laughingly helped her put them on. - By and by. Grandmother asked, "Are vou in 'that pliy at school?" "Yes ma'am." "Have you a costume?' "Not yet. I simply can't find any thing." ' . "Humnh." exclaimed the old lady, MOMENTS OF MIRTH. "Ever have iny trouble with your auto mobile?" - "yes. Ever since I got it, all my wife's r!aUves expect mfi to be tholr chauffeur.' Detroit Free Press. "What effect did the war for de mocracy have on you bees?" "Oh. we're going to do away with nil queens from now on." The Home Sector. "He'i been talking1 an hour on re ligion. Is be an atheist ur a panthe ist?" "Neither. An efocntlonist." Illinois Siren. Studc Is this noodle soup? Where are the noodles? - Waiter Did you- ever se a cottare in cottage pudding? Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. ' "Tlsht lacing ta bad. Tou don't want a waist like a wasp." "Why not, doctor?" "Well, see what a disposition the wasp has." Judge. ENFORCEMENT. Look out. look out. ye wicked ones,' Who would not liquor lack: The orders have (tone out abroad. The booze hound's on the track; There're thousands of him all about, And he will run you down. Through lone and silent fields and dales, Through mazes or tne town. He never rests by night or day. He never stops to eat. He never tires though long he eocs; Hts scent vou cannot beat. He'll hang upon your trail until He s tracked you to your lair Tou cannot lose him, nor can you Throw Into him a scare. There may be othe' things forbid, Amendments be defied: But all resources nt tne iaw With this one will be tried: So woe unto you If you're caught W 1 1 bottle or with box: No mercy will you meet; you'll get All -your predtstmert knocks. Josh Wink In the Baltimore American. time, the two boys did three roll overs in succession, finishing the last one standing proudly erect. They then made a deep bow in the best professional manner, and looked toward their teacher , for his --ap- "We'll see to that. Come along with me." They wont to her room and the chest was opened rtvealing the frills and furbelows of bygone days. Marian was fitted out with the nicest things in the chest. As you fee Mable tried to force Grandmother and was met with force, tut Marian led Grandmother to help her with an invisible thread. She did it naturally and with perfect sincerity. This invisible thread was tact tact based upon kindness, sym pathy, and a consideration for the feelings of others. (Tomorow read about home cooking that sells.) Copyright, 1920. by J. II. Millar.' OUCH! RUB OUT RHEUMATIC PAIN Rub pain, soreness, stiffness, sciatica right out with "St. Jacobs Liniment" proval. "Fine work," said Beppo, "if. you learn all the tricks as easily and as quickly as you have learned the roll-over, you'll have me hustling for my job before another circus Sea son opens." "Are you going to teach us an other trick today Mr. Beppo?" asked Ralph. "Vou bet, and this is what it is," said Beppo, as he started off on s row -of cart wheels that took hin: completely around the barn floor. Points to Watch. "Now," said Beppp. "let , gil down to business, and remember my instructions a cart wheel, to be per fectly done, must look just exactly like a wheel with only four spokes, and no rim.. You mustn't bend a, the waist any more than is absolute ly necessary, and when the legs arc in the air the body must be perfectly rigid. Head back, chest out, aiiot arms and legs straight How to Do It. "You take a short quick step like this," said Beppo, talking as he did it "turn slightly to the right as the left foot is forward place the left hand on the ground then the; right hand get the legs well in the air, and staight right leg comes down then the left leg comes down and when you come to a standing posi tion lean a little backward as this gives a better effect. Now boys, go to it on the mat, and don't try to do more than one cart wheel at a time." The boys began their practice as Beppo, in one corner -of the barn, rehearsed a juggling stunt which he was going to use in naxt season's circus. (Tomorrow Mr. Hyde will tell what is. under the pavement.) . 1 Copyright, 1SJ0, by J. H. Millar. I I nor those ttrillinn to I pay tKe price, piano vajuc ucvona compar ison is ottered fcjr the I Count fifty! Pain gone. Rheumatism is "pain only." Not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. Stop "drugging! Rub the misery right away! Apply soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Liniment" directly upon the "tender spot," and relief comes instantly. "St. Jacobs Liniment" is a harmless rheumatism liniment whiclr never disappoints and can- not burn or discolor the skin. ' Limber .up! Stop complaining! Get a s.mall trial bottle of "St. Jacobs Liujiment" at any drug store, and in just a moment you'll be free from pain, soreness, stiffness and swelling. Don't suffer! Relief awaits you. "St. Jacobs Liniment" has relieved millions of rheumatism sufferers in the last half century, and is just as good for sciatica, neu ralgia,, lumbago, backache, sprains and swellings. Bowen's Value-Giving Offer for SATURDAY See our Ad- reriisetaent in this paper on Friday. imam 1 &um 1 mm ONE Solid CAR Guaranteed Felt Mattresses 45 lbs. of pure laysr Felt; ohoice of throe pattern, art Jtlr'ving, roll edge. 75 10 Bowen's Bedding Department offers "Value-Giring" Box Springs and Mattresses of Gusranteed Quality. v amu mat. vrven ' HKBURKET&Se" ua FUNERAL DIRECTORS Established 1878. T . - v r Itv beauty I of tone it is recoetriiwA I Igeneralk as Having no equal. And its superi . tone satliafis thai oT I I any piano bat- nonq. I - Xi bach or action it I is inimitaHy responsive to any mood or emotion? j Mrteft priced dis xnd highest praised. I ! mstigate-imd YOU I I aril have none other. In Stock j Right Now Apollo Player Grands. Apollophone (Piano, Player and Phonograph) . Brambach Boudoir' Graf)ds. Bush arid Lane Pianos. . Kimball Pianos. . Cable-Nelson Pianos. Hospe Pianos and Players. La Gonda Players. Whitney Pianos. Hinze Pianos. Cash or time all same price. Every instrument mark ed in plain figures. I I I I 1513 Douglas St. I The Art and . Music Store.l Why Support Ite Red Cross? Where Your 1919 Money Went 500.000 families of soldiers aided by home service department in U. S. 7,278 families in Omaha. 1,549 families in one month" in Omaha. WHERE YOUR 1920 MONEY GOES Aiding tubercular and shell -shock sol diers, assisting soldiers in claims for allot ments and compensation, caring for 500 dis abled soldiers in Omaha, preparing for d is- aster relief, such as tornado and influenza. EXPENSE For every dollar l-eceived one and one seventh cents was spent for management. The. percentage ratio of management to relief was , 1.8 per cent. Red Cross is the People's servant, spend-, ing the People's money, and wants you to know where and how. . - - Omaha Chapter the American Red Croat. v.. (Note: More to follow. "Watch the papers.). Pi