THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. A1AKCH 13, 190. :The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THI BEE PUBUSHtNO COMPANY. PROPRIETOR NELSON B. PPPIKB. PRESIDENT MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . Ta iaoaltUd Tnm. af mblrh Tha Ha ll I wnnbrr. ! r onlnljp antlUad to U fo imhUcMloa of all am ditrttolM ndtlad to U r aot otharwlat eralttad In thli papar. and also Ui kcal am soliUiBad aaroia. All rtstiia of publication o( our spatial sMaaarnaai ara aiao minis, BU TSLEPHONSS KesfUsaTPantoulaFaim wTntSf Tyler 1000 Far Niakt aa4 Sunday Sarvica Callt Mlartal Dajartaunt ........... Trtar 1000T. fJtfNtottm IMpanaMait .......... Trie town, 0arUataf Saparbaant .......... xlar 1001 1. OFFICES OF THE BEE Boat Offlca: lTth and Jamaa. , Hraoa OMcaa: , 4m 110 North 14th I Park mob tu MlUurr . Soma Bid Coanctl Blttfla IS Boott St. VNtlaut Out-of-Town Officaai J Tort OSes SM fifth ita. I Wuhlnftoa Hlaiat Bids. llnooln Mis Lastanworfh as 18 N St. tig Norm 40ta 1111 O St. l NEBRASKA AND GENERAL PERSHING. ' If asked what state he hails from, Our sole reply shall be: "He comes from old Nebraska And the Allied Victory 1" V New York is a proud and powerful state, .i Pennsylvania is a stronghold of loyal repub ' licanism. Massachusetts. "there.she stands," is . the head and front of New England influence. Ohio it the original and splendid cornerstone " of the Northwest Territory. Illinois is the un ' disputed commercial center of the middle west i These five great states, unrivalled in their j services to the Union in war and in peace, have long been foremost in agricultural, industrial h and business development, at well as in political tagacity. . What would be the attitude at this time of the republicans in any one of these common wealths if it were the home state of General Pershing? Is it conceivable that a single one of them would hesitate for one moment to rally to hit tupport for the presidency gladly and enthusiastically? Is there one of them that would be blind to the yalue of such a political asset for state, party and nation? ' Republican Nebraska is now stirring to the fact, and preparing to take advantage of it, that with General Pershing she has such a clear track straight to eminence in national politics, straight to the active approval of her sister states, at comes rarely , to any state, and never to many. Illinois seized such an opportunity in 1868 with General Grant New York did the same thing with Colonel Roosevelt in 1904. Nojr in 1920, comes Nebraska's chance to lead the nation in political advocacy of the greatest American figure in the greatest of wars, Gen-i eral Pershing, whose genius for organization and co-ordination, whose management as director-in-chief of the vast business machine he hind our forces in, France, whose unselfish lead ership in the decisive policy of putting the Allied forces under one supreme command, shortened the struggle many months, save'd the I: lives of many thousands of our gallant soldiers, : and won the war. v . Can any one who believes the rank and file of the republican party in Nebraska has com , mon sense, patriotism and a spirit of loyalty to i' the honor and glory of their state, doubt their hearty support of their distinguished fellow- - citizen and neighbor at the primaries on the ;j 20th of April? ;' Make no mistake. Every republican state j in the Union is looking at Nebraska and won i't deringl More than that, their leaders see the I trtnd of events the country over pointing to ? the selection of General Pershing at Chicago if Nebraska-goes to the convention united for Vim, as the will. ,. ,i Free from the animosities engendered by the conflicts of rival candidates in a score of 4' states, with a spotless record of devoted service f j and high achievement for his country, with un--;i dying fame already his, the friends of candi dates beaten in the turmoil of the convention i j by conflicting' interests will turn to hint as . naturally and as certainly as the hearts of the ' mothers of the land turned to him when their . boyi went overseas to the war. And then Nebraska will at last have a , presidential candidate who will be elected I 4 I. 1 J, i: Occupation of Constantinople. For the first time in almost 600 years, sol diers of Christian powers stand in Constantino ple other than guests of the Turkish govern ment The importance of this fact scarcely can be exaggerated; it leads to the hope that Turkish misrule over non-Turkish peoples is at an end; it ought to mean that Turkey's power in Europe is forever broken, and that what John Fiske called the "greatest crime against hu manity ever committed" is now to be atoned for. Lloyd George and his ministers must have felt the effect of the wave of indignation that went np not only in England, but all over the world, when it was announced that the Turk would not be expelled from Europe. He may now redeem his prophecy, made early in the war, when he said the hour of destiny had track for the Turk, "the miserable, wretched, contemptible empire on the Bosporus." His denunciation of this race as "a human cancer, a creeping agony in the flesh of the lands they misgovern," was well applied, and deeply en dorsed by thinking, earnest people. His ulti mate decision to leave the Turk undisturbed astounded the world, and must be reversed. It it not on religious grounds that the ex- 5. pulsion of the Turk from Europe and the re ttriction of the Ottoman rule is demanded, for there are far more potent reasons for the action. J But even the difference in religion is a warrant. ! Last week Mr. Lloyd George remarked that V St Sophia would not again become a cathedral, f' for it had been a mosque too long... Six cen tones" of Mohammedan worship has given it peculiar sanctity, he holds. One might ask what of the effect of 'the nearly ten centuries of Christian worship that preceded? Do not the followers of the Galilean enshrine that first great temple' of their faith with love as ardent as that of the Camel Driver's flock? ' St. Sophia might well be restored to its' first religion as a symbol of one of the tremendous i imports of the war. ' it would be to confirm him in his long record of infamy. - I" v. 4 .- ff- The Service Man Knows. f Throngh all onr national history we have had pacifists who have dodged their duty to the country in time of war, and opposed the selec ? tion of soldiers for office after war. They are - still with us, and using the factic3 of the past v ,to influence public opinion. We went into the war with a pacifist president, a pacifist secre- The service men need no guide post to . direct them, into the party which, through all its history, has ttood for rational honor and, independence. It is the party which Claude Kitchin, democratic leader in congress, said would be made to pay for the war. ( Nor do the service men need any instruction as to the party which fought preparation for war, which sought first to avoid participation in the war when it was forced upon us by the aggressions of Germany, and later delayed to the very brink of repudiation, to go to the assistance of civ ilization in Europe. The record is plain. The service man knows. - Boltheviki Come Bearing Gifts. One of the outstanding features of the bol sheviki proffer -of peace to the civilized nations of the world is freedom of traffic in Russian products. Gold and platinum, iron, coal and oil, hides and leather, wheat and flax, and a con siderable additional list of raw materials is in cluded in the proposal that relations, be set up by which commerce may be freely carried on. In passing, it may be well to note that Ameri can knowledge of the contents of the proposal conic from abroad, publication here having been withheld by the government, because the docu ment was considered "propaganda." ' For France a particularly alluring provision is contained, the willingness of the soviet gov ernment to assume 60 per cent of the repudiated external debt of Russia. This means 60 per cent of 14,000.000,000 francs to the, French. England i expected to find in the food and tex tile materials something attractive, while to Americans the prospect of a wide market in which ability to pay is represented by a con siderable store of precious metals has an ap peal that can not be denied. Whether for prop aganda or not, Leninc's proposal is securing, considerable attention. Admitting that' Lenine is- a condition and not a theory, and that his presence is a fact, however repugnant that fact may be to our sense of (liberty and justice, and we therefore must deal through him if at all with Russia, some other factors of the problem are thrusting themselves forward. One of these as 'to do with the gold stolen from Roumania. That government will very certainly undertake to in tercept any shipment of gold from the soviet region, and the American government has de clined to interfere with this course. Therefore, Americans are warned in advance that trading with Russia will very likely land them in courts, with a more than fair prospect of seeing the purchase price seized by Roumania. Caveat Vendor applies here. : What most outsiders would like to know, is how "Russia proposes to get the surplus the soviet government boasts of down to tidewater. Food is said to be plenty in Russia, and yet famine prevails in large regions" because trans portation is lacking. Until the means for in ternal communication are restored, Russia can not carry on any extensive commerce. Trading will be revived, both external and internal, but only after the Leninists or whatever cult sue-' ceeds them has again set up highways for com merce. For the present, Russia serves only as a splendid illustration of the impotency and futility of possession of the means of wealth without intelligent and competent direction to turn the raw materials into wealth. Mr. Bryan Talking Out. A press telegram from Palm Beach has an nounced Mr. Bryan's departure on a speaking tour which is to cover Washington, New York, Boston, Indiana, Illinois, Nebraska and Los Angeles. With it goes his statement of inten tion to talk politics, as follows: I am going to discuss national issues. When a man's candidacy for the presidency has been filed his candidacy becomes a proper matter for public discussion, and I am going to discuss the candidacy of any such man. I am interested in the peace treaty. I ex pect to see it ratified in a very few days. What candidate for the presidency Mr. Bryan will discuss in Nebraska may safely be left for consideration by those who know him best; but his errand, in 1 this state, is hardly likely that of a barmqnizer or compromiser. Mr. Bryan's acquaintances will doubt his ca pacity for such amiable forgetfulness as charac terized Mrs. Elizabeth Bass's recent visit to Omaha, for instance, to participate in the pro motion of the candidacy of a gentleman who opposed woman suffrage, of which Mrs. Bass is an ardent champion. Already in Washington, Mr. Bryan has said enough in his statement below to convince the democrats of the country that Mr. Wilson is faithless to the principles of his party, to Jef ferson's teachings, and to popular government: The majority must decide conditions and the minority acquiesce unless we are pre pared to repudiate the fundamental princi ples of popular government and the founda tion principles of the democratic party. It is unthinkable that democrats who for six months have been working for ratification will henceforth join with the irreconcilable enemies of the treaty to prevent ratification. Jefferson declares that acquiescence in the will of the majorjty is the first principle of republics and that applies to representative bodies as well as to peoples as a whole. Between the lines of the foregoing may be read an indictment of Mr. Wilson's disloyalty to his party and utter disregard for the will of the majority. The Black Heart of the Covenant. The Kansas City Times covers in a para graph a fact that acres of printed pages in democratic papers have sought to hide and smother. It says: If the president's position is correctly stated in the latest White House report that the compromise reservation on Article X of the league covenant is nullifying in its effect then the danger of that article in its original form has not been overestimated. If it nullifies its effect to declare that congress shall have the final and deciding word as to I the purposes .for which the military and naval forces of the United States shall be employed the need of the reservation is made very apparent The president could not - have made it clearer that Article X is a denial of American sovereignty. Fifty counties in Minnesota are reported as failing to instruct on the presidential prefer ence. This may cast a shadow on the an nounced result. 1 Admiral Sims makes thirteen charges against Josephus Daniels. That is an unlucky number for someone. The katzenjammer still prevails in Ger many. That is one place where prohibition is not to blame. "Hi" Johnson had a lone hand in North Da kota, but that will not get him the nomination. Te bank guaranty fund is due for another bump. ' Gold Exports and Inflation Fcom the Brooklyn Eagle. , The story that London and Paris are pre paring to ship to the united states some $250,000,000 gold to meet payment on the haif billion dollar Anglo-French loan due October IS was preceded and , hat been followed by several interesting developments which point to the operation of some new force in inter national finance developments which blend so well with the reports ot large gold imports mat it is already partly credited in quarters which would ordinarily suspend judgment pending the receipt of tome official announcement First we saw the Anglo-French notes advance from 93 1-2 to 98, then the recovery in sterling ex change from ?J.18 to $3.6K and, concurrently with the latter, a reduction in the price of gold in London from 129 shillings to 114 shillings, sixpence. - ' Over all was the knowledge that England and France were confronted with the un precedented task of meeting the maturity of $500,000,000 of notes in a foreign center, and doing it with due regai(' for the existing state of the money market and for the necessity of having the redemption offer conform to the psychology of the American investor. The oainfullv slow response of the chief , American banking cities to the United Kingdom loan a tew montns ago and more recently ine lanure of a strong syndicate to float a $45,000,000 loan to three French cities had reflected the real condition of the investment market and had emphasized the need for a shining example of the stability of foreign credit seekers. Here is the main reason why England and-France should bend every effort to prove their ability and willingness to refund the loan in cash. Hence the huge-figures in the gold import story. ' The harm that might be clone to the finances of England and France, especially the latter, by a too heavy drain on their gold, supplies is a subject of interest to the United States in view of its great interests in those countries. Still the phase of the situation which comes home to all classes in this country most directly is the probable effect a great increment in our gold supply might have on domestic credit, and therefore on business, -wages and high prices. The banking authorities have been engaged in deflation to conform to shrinkage in reserves due to the Joss of gold to Argentina and to other creditor countries, a program which was serving the purpose also of bringing hoarded goods into the open and was calculated in time to break at least the advajnee in prices. The question arises, Would a great influx of gold undo all this, by furnishing the basis for greater credit? Would it be instrumental in causing a resumption of price inflation and another mad race between wages and the cost of living? On the other hand, would it not be an effective offset against a steady loss in gold to South America which, if continued unabated for any long period, would surely endanger the banking situation or reduce credit to a level where essential industries would be compelled to cur tail operations? These are questions which need not be answered until some official statement on the rumored gold imports is made. So long as the United States remains a free gold country it must bow, in a sense, to the will not only of those countries that stand as our creditors, but to the debtors as well. We cannot prevent gold from coming into the country any more than we can stop its outflow. Pine Tree Halves The Massachusetts pine tree shilling was the first, or almost the fir st, American coin. A -coin of Bermuda, ornamented with the likeness of a hog, is sometimes rated as American and given preference. Numismatists and writers of school histories almost unanimously give the honor to the pine tree coin, and its likeness is a fa miliar illustration in books of learning. Now the state of Maine, which was until March 15, 1820, a part of Massachusetts, wants another pine tree coin. A Maine congressman has introduced a -bill to authorize the coinage of 100,000 50-cent pieces in commemoration of the centenary of Maine's admission to the Union. The bill does not specify the design of these proposed half dollars, but inasmuch as Maine is the pine tree state, it may be assumed that the stately conifer will be honorably rep resented on either obverse or reverse. Hitherto it has been difficult to induce con gress to strike special coins in honor of special years and celebrations. Columbian half-dollars and Isabella quarters were struck for the Chi cago fair of 1893, while the St. Louis celebra tion of 1904 had a gold dollar for the collectors. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Ore VELVET T A X M M . I I AA rVI IVI r Lf KftiL VvN a ii a. 1 - x a md r;r i Bi)rfhur Brooks "Baker NORRIS BROWN. To rap the politician is a stale and vogue less game. We have no inclination to experi ment with same. The worthy common people need a leader who can lead, to furnish them with counsel which is suitable to heed, to tell them what should be the goal and aim of their desire, to give them weighty judgments which their interests require. , This occupation neatly fits the gifts of Nor ris Brown. He followed it, with large results in glory and renown. He, fought the needy grain trust which was hungry to acquire the wealth for whidh Nebraska farmers labor and perspire. The thankful common people saw in him a heavyweight and helped to make him senator to grace a grateful state. For though they say that gratitude is no familiar word and . is not keenly understood among the mob and herd, it is a sentiment, my friend, which one may irrigate and bring to a vigorous and profitable state. Some say ap preciation does not prosper in the mass, while others- nurse that sentiment to quantity and class. , -i But if the commoners perchance forget what Brown can do, the corporation presidents are keeping it in view. They recognize his weight as an opponent in a scrap, and many of them guard against a possible mishap by thought fully retaining him in contracts neat and wise where he cannot consistently oppose their en terprise. Next subject: J. Laurie Wallace. The Day We Celebrate. James G. Martin, live stock commissioner, born 1864. William Jennings Bryan, former secretary of state and three times a candidate for president, born at Salem, 111., 60 years ago. Sir Lomer Gouin, for fifteen years prime minister of Quebec, born at Grondines, Que., 59 years ago. Grand Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, German minister of marine during the world war, born 71 years ago. , - Alice French (Octave Thanet), well-known author, born at Andover, Mass., 70 years ago. Moorfield Storey, eminent Boston jurist and former president of the American Bar associa tion, born at Roxbury, Mass., 75 years ago. William Wambsganss, infielder of the Cleve land American league base ball team, born at Cleveland, 26 years ago today. Thirty YeaBB Ago in Omaha. Hon. M. V. Gannon returned from a business trip to Davenport, la. The Board of Trade committee, consisting o Euclid Martin, J. S. Brady, and W. S. Nason left for -Chicago to confer with President Hughitt regarding the extension of the North western from Verdigris. Jacob J. Jobst was appointed by the mayor as superintedent of construction of the new city hall building. ' Mrs. John P. Newman, wife of Bishop New maa of. this city, was in Washington, D, C. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS llr. K.vana wilt anawer parannal In. qnirlea front rcadrra or TBa ltr, pro vided a ataniDfrf euvHop ia vnvlunad lih th qiirnlln. Ha will not dlainoa Indi vid na I ailmrnti or prrNrrllM lor them, but will (It careful attention to ail inqutrlra, imujri'c 10 tncit imiiiMiimi. .uiirMa nr. W. A. tvann. The Hrr, Omaha, Jirb. (CopyrlRht, 120, by Dr. W. A. Evana.) THE "CON" UNIVERSITY, "If that Kuy had stayed in school, that wouldn't have happened to him." The school waa the vocation- al school of the Chicago Municipal Tuberculosis sanitarium. That "guy" waa a lunger who had been a student in the school of pharmacy. Having: received a legacy, he decided to stop school. Progressing favorably at school, he relapsed, and after he haa been on a policy of Idleness for a while h'e commenced having hemor rhages. The speaker 'was one of his class fellows. The policy of having consumptives do light work Is more than B0 years old, but only a fcAv institutions practice it to any con siderable extent. , A few books have been written about, but not many. There is nothing- in this plan of treatment which is contrary to the teaching- that overwork. Including: anxiety and worry, brings on con sumption, and that rest In the open air is the keystone of treatment. These cardinal opinions stand Just where they stood before. But after a consumptive has rested In the open air until his temperature has become normal, his disease haa qu.- eted down, his weight has been re stored, and his anxieties have been allayed, from that time on the pa tient's chance for cure is increased if he will work lightly under the close direction of a physician. The advantages are several. Light work stimulates the repairing pow ers or tne Doay just as overworK hampers them. The man who feels that he will go back to life from tu sanitarium with a trade or training at which he can sustain himself is buoyed up. The man goes through his period of muscle and nerve train ing for work under the close super vision of the physicians and free fro .1 worry about money affairs. Like other universities, the Chi cago "Con" university has its col leges or departments. In the depart ment of laboratory' convalescents fitted for it are given lectures and practical laboratory work three ui four hours a day. In the pharmacy training school qualified students get some work in preparation for pharmacists' assistants. In the de- parment of X-ray and photography students do three hours' work a we-k. In the patient's undergrad uate nurses' training school a six months' course of light work, study and lectures is given. There is a course in dietetics' and cooking given. , In the department of English there are three courses. A course given by tho board of education for chil dren In the sanitarium covers uiuu. of the work ordinarily given in the grades. The children go to school four and a halt hours a day in open air rooms. There also are courses for adult English training, principal ly for the foreign born, and there also is high school preparatory work. In the commercial depart ment they teach shorthand, type writing, and commercial training. Among other departments are telegraphy, electricity, agriculture, horticulture, woodworking, sewing, embroidery, knitting, crocheting, tailoring, hairdressing, manicuring, barbering, and shoe repairing. One graduate of the barbers school. cured of the disease, earns .$15 a week by working one day and two evenings. The balance of his time he has for rest and recreation. The university is ahead of some state colleges in that it has a fine auditorium it calls the Hall for Health Education. Vaccination for KniulIM)x. E. O. E. write: "1. Will yoti please tell us something about vari ola? "2. When is It best to be vac cinated? 1 "3. How often is vaccination necessary? "4. Is the diet given in smallpox the same as in typhoid? "5. Do all the cities have the same laws about vaccination? If not, what is the difference?" REPLY. 1. Variola is smallpox. The di sease is highly contagious. Its incu bation period is 12 to 14 days. There is a period of fever lasting three to four days, followed by the period ot eruption. The' eruption is at first shotlike, then is blisterhke, and nil' ally becomes an umbilicated pus tule. It is striking in appearance on the face, the palms of the hands, and the soles of the feet. 2. In childhood and once every six years thereafter. 3. with most people vaccination at six-year intervals is often enough. Vaccination protects for a lifetime with some people. 4. There is no special diet that is to be given in smallpotf. 5. No. Some require vaccination before entering school and, in addi tion, at any time upon exposure. Some have no law, leaving the mat ter to the health officer to work out as well as he can. Ohe Shirt With Comfort Points Correctly cut yoke gives that tailored effect across the shoulders. Thera'i daw to eh afteOM ARCOMaWIQNarSTYLE WCCOrTORT An American "Spa" B taring FavorabU Comparison With ,elaiom Foroign Rtsort 160 acres of wooded grounds lo cated upon high hills; one of the most desirably situated hotels on this continent for people rwuiring absolute Rest and Recuperation A Mineral Water beneficial for Liver and Kidney disorders Scientific Massage and Baths for Kneumatic ailments. A Cafe operated upon the Euro-fnf-Ai " d'Hote" Jrices meal at sensible Information and Booklets Can Be Had at tho Retort Bureau of this paper or bjrAaMreatiar ' James P. Donahue, Proprietor Hotel Colfax and Mineral Sprints, COLFAX, IOWA On lti Rock Itiand Line What the Farmer Wtuits. Pacific Junction, la., March 12.- To the Editor of The Bee: In an swer to Mr. II. M.'s letter in The Bee. will say that 1 am a member of a farmers' organiBition in this state. I am sure from the letter he wrote that he is not a farmer, and further more, does not understand what principles the farmers' organizations stand for. We are not fighting your high wages; all we ask is a fair price for our produce, so that we can pay the price for our labor and make an honest living besides. As far as hoarding our produce and demand ing a bl? price is concerned, he is badly mistaken. Who ever shipped a car of hogs to market and forced the packer to pay a big premium for it? Who ever shipped a car of corn or wheat or oats or anything else and set his own price? Even for our, butter and eggs, we take what the speculator wants to give us. All we want is prices so that we can pay this high rent and hired help and make a living besides. In fact, we are asking for the same thing you railroad men'are, and as for kickhig because we cant hire a man for $1.50 per day, go out and talk to the farmers and they will soon tell you where the trouble is. In my opinion there are too many people in this country that try to live without working, live too high for their pocketbooks and then blame - the nigh cost of living. We farmers are not making any more now than we lld before the war; we handle a little more money, but we merely keep0 it In circulation, because we have to pay about twice as much for farming tools as we used to. A. w. OX Rea.sons for tho Bonus. Genoa, Neb., March 15. To the Editor of The Boe: I wish to ex press my views relative to the bonus for ex-soldiers. This is no pro or con proposition. The argument is, "Will we or will we not get our bonus?" I have been reading several articles of criticism on this bonus question and as yet I have failed to find any foun dation of reasonableness in said ar ticles. Reading between the lines, you ccqld detect selfish or mercenary motives by tno writers, une "bird says: "We fared as well overseas as the civilians did herein the United States." The absurdity of this state ment Is good for digestion for all A. E. F. boys, for it makes you laugh. The soldier who says we had abun dance of sugar or any other com modity over in France must have been a "dog robber" for a "ma hogany" colonel down in Washing ton, D. C, for he does not know what he is talking about. Our outfit was fed pretty good compared, with the doughboys" menu when, they were in GARRISON Correct 'in Heijjhl andDedign Always aik for (pilars OLDEST BRAND IN AMERICA NL UNlTtOaMM.TCOllaCO. the lines and marching to the front in a beating rain. 1 have seen the hardships of our late war In France and have endured some myself during my overseas 1 service, from September, 1918, until Mjirch, 1919. It makes me peeved to hear these "bomb-proofora" tell ing the geneial public through the press that our .. E. K. soldiers were on a vacation "over there," and de serve no extra compensation for our service. I want to say that our only ambition was to get over the Rhine and we did. We were not thinking of bonuses during those black hours in Septem ber and October, 1918. We were too hiiav then to think of mnnpv. but we find on our return h6m there were' pay-triotlc "one dollar" year boys whose sole ambition' was the' dollar sign, with seven figures bringing: up the rear. I don't begrudge one cent anyone made In war contracts, but I do protest against the opposition be ing displayed against giving the ex soldiers bonuses by men who made millions from and behind the lines of red-blooded American soldiers who were facing all the suffering against the booties. The bonus asked for by the American Legion Is Just, and as most of the boys have mar ried since being discharged and tho. bonus given would be in most cases applied to purchasing homes or di verted into other commercial chan nels. , My plan is $50 per service month, with $100 additional for A. E. F. men, with a maximum of 18 months' service to any one ex-soldier. V. A. BRADSHAW. Ex-tanker. 1 ; Bo.wen's Value-Giving Offer for SATURDAY See our Ad vertisement in this paper on Friday. m ONE Solid GAR Guaranteed Mattresses for pure and fluffy roll edge mattresses good quality of ticking. Genuine Felt mat tresses of guaran teed quality; beau tiful art ticks and roll edge. $157i Box Springs to Order For any size or style bed. Pillows at Value-Giving Price. The Public and the Railroads We are talking about the railroads because we have the accounts of many busi ness houses which need mod ern railroad service and need a great deal more of it than they have ever had. If the customers of this bank, many of them shippers, have the transportation facil ities they need, the prosper ity of this, and every other community, is assured. The railroads have been turned back to their owners and for a long time they will be short of facilities. They must have the co-operation of the public while they build to catch up with the coun try's progress. All cars should be loaded and unloaded promptly. An increase of two tons per load ed car would be equivalent to more than 200,000 cars to the number available for public use. t, . Now is a, good time to begin saving. Suppose you open an account here today. i First National iBank of Omaha Street Floor Entrance Either Farnam or Sixteenth Street Door Established 1857 sl Coming! 1 Another Servant for the Home The sar-saving" cereal GiapeNuts finds ahandy place in homes where the cost of living is considered. "HieresaReason" Imostf impossible) L vdu -would savr" was tke ideal set rip as a goal W the J' creators of" the iJto&jSaraliit Tfus ideal was t to create apian$ which, regarcuess or cost. should so eeel air fine pianos in tone and durability thaf by sheer merif it would dominate -the market in which quality is considered more mv rtant than prii jnpe- (n inspection tenff rove to you notxr splendiaJy this ideal 'hasheen achieved. Don't JMisIs Hearing ' the Much Talked of Kranich & Bach Pianos Vose & Sons Pianos Sohmer Pianos Brambach Pianos Kimball Pianos Bush & Lane Pianos Cable-Nelson Pianos and the Hospe Pianos. Easy to buy; low prices; monthly payments. Every instrument plain ly marked; one price; cash or time. - 1513 Douglas Street THE ART AND MUSIC STORE Newly Arrived Sunlus Contract Goods 66c BROOMS, new, for KNEE BOOTS, new, 4A nQ good grade VT'eOJ HIP BOOTS, new, good grade, with strap over in- dC 7C step for mud . . . vO O TURKISH TOWELS, (-Q new, good weight OJC COTTON SOX, ordinarily sold 30c to 35c, 19c BOY SCOUT SWEATERS, army styie a lew ot these $3.75 values to clean up, 9 Summer Onion Suits Balbriggan, White Crepe, , , , Nainsook, at $1.41 , each Spring weight, long leg and short sleeve S2.41 Army Blankets Olive drab wool, repaired, in good as new shape, choice . . . . . . Army Shirts 14 to 156 only. Regulation U. S. Olive Drab No. A-l, like Oft brand new 9"tit No. 1. No holes, rips ttQ QQ or tears sPaSaJO No. 2. Repaired but good for lots of wear, 1 f anly ijl,07 Scott Army Goods Store , ,1503 Howard 4729 South 24th St. A