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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1920)
1." : A 14 l'HE i BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1920 The Omaha Bee DAILY (llbRNINGj-EVEtflJIG-SUN&AY THE BKE PtlBUSHlNO COMPANY. FROMUETOB NEUOH B. .UPDIKE. PHESIDINT . MEMtEftS OF THE ASSOCIATED FESS Tht AMo-UtMl Vnu. of wblcb lb Bn li mtmkar. is iuiiHr iMUd to tl dm for suMlrttlou of all wt disMtehsf Ttdltti to tt of not othVlt ctMltM In till pan. Mid also V4 In Hi Mws rubllduS hwin. All rldtu of publication ot out avaalal Sspstefcas ar alao memo. . tCE TELEPHONES ' 1 Prtrata Branch Jiohaiits, ' A"i fur ths T-1.- 1aW Ixwttamt- or Particular renon Winud, 1 JHF IWfAJ , For Night an Sudor 3rvk Collt ' V.litorll Dtptrtmtnt ........... Trlof 1001. ITrcuKllAB Itarwrtintnt .......... Trior 10ML AlrtrMltng Poiiwtment .......".. Xylot lMlli ' OFFICES OF THE SEE Hoo 0ci ltth and i'tmia. Brants Ottcti: .'lllOO 4110 North 31th I Bark MIS MiaaWaMptk m Mllltarf Are. South Bid Mllli It. 10 aoon wt. I walnut III Noltk IMS ' Hiiil.Tan SRr.. . i.ououi tiuJrt f'-r ilco New York Oflcs M fifth Ata ) WwMngtoo tofor BMC I Uttoola !i!l!B; "OH, DEAJt, WHAT CAN THE MATTER BE?" ' Restive democratic leaders, deeply cbn cerned, not to say suspicious and resentful, over the president's silence on the third-term propa ganda by members of his cabinet, moved for a aliow-down in congress Thursday. Representa tive Humphreys of Mississippi, thick arid thin supporter of Mr. Wilson, voiced the anxiety of , the democrats, and with it their opposition to a tliird term. "The air," said he, "is indeed full of voices, but as I hear them they do not sound the chorus oNthe union Lincoln told us of." For party reasons "he did not mention -the "visions" of disastrous defeat under Wilson which all his party asyc,iates are-seeing. But iY was sufficient that a Mississippi democrat in good standing should mention "trie union Lin cold told of" in favorable contsast with the "new birth of freedom" of Wilson's blundering political midwifery. , Back of all this' is the surmise that Son-in-Law( McAdoo and tltc favorite of Mrs. Wilson and Tumulty, the delectable Mitcft Palmer, may after all be mere stalking horses for the despoT of the ' White House. We, fear our democratic friends arc in' for a season of 'un happy alarms. It has not been the way of Mr. Wilson to arrive openly) at his political ob jectives, and this latest gesture of disapproval in the congress is more likely to stiffen him in his ineffable obstinacy that to bring a disavowal of dVsigns that reach third-termward. What has been characterized1 as "the worst disposi tion in the wosld" is not tolerant of either private or public criticism from friend or foe. The skin over it is thin. '. ' ' y Suffrage and the South. Xo matter how soon the suffrage amendment becomes effective, in almost every southern .state Women will remain disfranchised under laws that have Jbeen enacted tO restrict voting. This is accomplishedin various-ways, one of the favorite devices being the payment of poll tax, mouths or' years before election. Educational qualifications will not so greatly, hamper the white-women, but the long residence and tax paying tests will until laws can be enacted to overcome the disability. , Merely because -the -Constitution of the t'nited States says" the right' to vote shall not be abridged because of c6lor or previous con dition f servitude, aud js now about to be amended by removing the limitation of sex, one 'does not get to vote in the south. In order that the plain word of the fundamental law can nrtU vbtfcg po.teirttTefartted and .t...' -.t. i- .t . , . . . v.vcniscu omy uy me select . lew, much m- gtnity has "been employed wjth more or less , success, but always to the end of disfranchising i-a large number of citizens of tile United States. How completely elections are under die c6n J rol of the oligarchy is shown in Virginia. In 7 the Old Dominion in 1918 there were 5S(),00d men of voting age; of these only 150,000 were able to vote under the Virginia laws, the rest being disfranchised. Of the 400,000 men dis franchised, 245,000 are, white and 155,000 col ored. Eight out. of every ten men called to serve with the colors from Virginia under the selective draft la,w were irjot permitted to vote in Virginia. Every one of these men could have voted in Nebraska in 918 if he had resided in. the state six months. ' - What about the 500,060 womea in Virginia, n, who are about to be clothed with jfte frartchise by the federal constitution? W'ill they fare any , better than their brothers?. , -.-."v It is this, control of elections that preserves the '.'solid south" as a compact group on which the democratic leaders can always rely. Those wltfo say the effect is merely local do not know ' what they are talking about, or are vwillfully trying to deceive. It affects the nation in every thing, and it is an injustice to every cjtizen of " the Uuitcd States that such a condition is per mitted to prevail Emma Reaping What She Sowed. ' Emma Goldman, always crazy for excite ment and keen to arouse discontent among those -she could influence, is having an un happy time in bleak Russia. The Des Moines Capital says she hated to leave the America, ahe hated to go to the Russia she pictured in her dupes as a desirable model of government under the Soviets. , ' . s She is now where she belongs and banished from the one country she would rather live in than "any other, with nobody to blame for her unenviable plight but herself. She is said to be poverty-stricken along with her other ' troubles. ' . . ' Meanwhile there are two thousaud or more other malicious disturbers and alien enemies -ofour government "awaiting depbrtation." But they will iever be sent if the administration that paid a bonus tP draft evaders and con- f cientious objectors to military service can find a way to dodge their duty without attracting "" public attention. ' r . Pity the Sorrows of a "Boss." "FormerGoveruor Morehead hesitated and doubted a few days too long," announces the v World-Herald iu sljntorian tones. It then pro ceed to give evidence of its uniwervift devo tion to the interests of Ralph A. Clark, who is i "wet" enough to suit those who cannot bring themselves to vote for former Speaker Jackson, who is both "dry" and a Bryanite. While this exposition of the attitude of the chief organ of the unternned was being prepared, the secre . tary of state was accepting the berlted filing of - John H. Morehead, and his name will go on the ballot in default of a court order forbidding. i This presents aineat and not at all comfort- ing complication for the cohorts who arc as sembles to put the sternal aud everlasting i , kibosh on William Jennings-'Bryan. To be sure, the great eOmtnoatr is not especially 4,scour" - aged by defeat at any time; in fact he thrives on it, and a little thing like a setback in his own state will not deter him from going right ahead with' his work of reforming creation through the medium of the democratic party. The present administration at Washington originally came from Mr. Bryan's-workshop; it has been remodeled somewhat, and "now look ft the darned thing." ' Governor Morehead's presence in the cam paign will be embarrassing for the big boss and the little b, oss and. all the bosses in between who had thought to put Bryan in his place, to secure an expression of confidence from the scattered and demoralized "wrts" of the party, and may mean complications for the future. An election for United States senator is to be held in 1$22, and John H. Mbrehead figures he will lose nothing by keeping his name before the voters, regardless of howt affects the feelings of the men who want to run things. , . A Pledge to Pershing. To General Pershing and our soldier boys, we pledge our party, our property, and our We dedicate the republican party to a i most vigorous prosecution of the war and to a peace with victory. -Te republican party is and always has been loyal to our country in times 'of peace and in times of war. These sentences were inscribed on the Doug las county republican banners in 1918. The pledges were redeemed. Peace came with vic tory. ' . But the; entire spirit of that pledge is not yet carried out, nor will it be untif "the (vote of Nebraska is secured for John J. Pershing, vic torious leader of the greatest American army that ever marched to the call of Liberty. To General Pershing and our soldiers we stood pledged in 1918; to them we are' equally bound today. They did their good swork from Flanders to the Swiss Alps. By their lives they won again STnew birth for Freedom, this time for the wprld. Let us close up ranks behind them again, and give to Persuing and his sol diers a proof that a republic is not ungrateful, that it does recognize' and reward merit and appreciate high service, and is not unwilling to trust the chief magistracy of the nation in 'the hands of a tried and proven man, jrnerely. be cause bn his shoulders gleam the same stars L tliajt gleamed on the shoulders of Grant, Sher man and Sheridan. We have made a 'pledge to Pershing. Let us pay it in full. , Recalling a Revolution. In the current number of Harper's Joseph Gurney Cannon relates the circumstances that surrounded the death of the filibuster in the house when Thomas Brackett Reed delivered his epoch-making ruling and counted a quorum. The venerable ex-speaker recounts in an ab sorbingly interesting manner the incidents leading . up to, during and succeeding the episode, characterizing the actual event as the greatest riot that ever took place. He does not, however, nor can any man set it value on the actual service then performed by the speaker. It has passed from the public mind, because it has none of the glamour of heroism or tragedy that permanently fixes a (,'reat disaster, a battle or triumphant perform ance of any kind in popular memory. Histor ians will always turn to it, though, because it give life and vitality to the house of repre sentatives, making it possible to exist as a bi partisan body, and still capable of transacting public business. ' ' The parliamentary fiction that a member might be present for obstruction and not, for business was destroyed absolutely by the Reed ruling. It ended forever the power of a de signing group to effectively obstruct the or derly ' proceedings of the house, and removed the menace of minority control. The rule was upheld by the supreme court, and has been made part of the parliamentary law of the na tion. Supported by logic and reason, by precedent arid example, it was violently assailed by the opposition because it disarmed them. No longer could a willful minority by keeping silent when a vote was taken defeat the pend ing measure by breaking a quorum. That was all. - , The years that have passed since 1890, when this new law was promulgated have been busy ones, and have listened to much of acrimonious debate, but productive of good and progressive legislation, simply because Thomas Brackett Reed had the courage, the strength and the abil ity to kill the ' filibuster by a single powerful blow. -.... V We share Ted's hope, that while the' presi dent of the Irish republic is wandering on P foreign strands his secretary of state will not usurp his powers by calling1 cabinet meetings. YOSEMITE. ' N Surrounding thy green vale, Yosemite. Masking as domes ind oeaks, the Titans old, In mighty conclave, sek to thwart the hold Young gods that have usurped their empery. Some, gigantic, silent, muse; some there be 4 Of more impetuous, more aggressive mold, From whom torrential eloquence is rolled Thunders that speak in the language of the sea. When they adjourn, the sun shall darken, earth Tremble, oceans revolt and Chaos reign. And man with his achievements be no more:' Yet while the session holds, the marshaled worth Of beauty, grandeur, glory, and their train, Is ours to love, to worship and adore. . C. G. B. ' v A Wet Candidate. Governor Cox is now formally launched as Ohio's democratic candidate for the. presidency, without opposition in his home state. He has been three times elected governor in a normally republican state by its wet vote and may safely be classed with those who would ban string the prohibition amendment if given op portunity to do so. ' Senator Pomerene of Ohio, also a beneficiary of wet votes for legislators, desired to become a candidate, but was crowded out by the preponderance of Cox sentiment. The Physical Change in the President. A picture of the president, the first - taken since his illness, shows agreat change. . He seems to have aged, and there is a new ex pression on his face. There, is a droop to the mouth, and an unfamiliar look about the eyes and around them. But Mrs. Wilson, whose picuire appears with that of her husband, looks the picture of health, and is evidently in fine humor, as well she might be with the president out on his first drive for months. ; Nebraska is fourth in number of automobile trucks owned by farmers. That will soon be remedied when our good roads campaign gets a little further along. t : '.. Mr. Bryan 'will tell Omaha today just what he expects to' do and how he plans to do it. His tale will be worth hearing. . Heaven help tfie Finns jf they ever are tcaught outside of St. Paul 1 ' President Ebcrt is certainly showing the Gerrnan reds who is boss. Pershing recruits are coming fast now A tine 0' Type or Two Now to tfio LIm. IttMht wlot foil whorVUny or. .Talk of a strike among city employes will surprise many people, who have supposed, from the appearance of the city, that most of "the de partments had struck a long vimc,ago. . i ' : -StaseerinE Statistics. '- Sir: There is no .better evidence of this coun try's phenomenal industrial growth in the last decade than is presented by statistics bearing ou the brewing and distilling industries. In 1909 there were 75,053 persons engaged In the manu facture of malt and spirituous liquors. At the present time, according to conservative esti mates, there are not less than 20,000,000. E. C. W. How to Keep Well v By Dr. W.A. EVANS "I am reading Marcus Aurelius now," con fides Mme. Galli-Curci to an interviewer. "One can never really grow tired of it, can one?" Well, if you ask us,' one can. i The plan foV saving daylight makes but in different progress. In its -present state of mind the public is disinclined to save anything. ( "Ham Bone Bill, . Dentist; old teeth irlade good as new." Therinopolis (Wyo.) Record. - Wonder what Bill thinks of the question under discussion by the Illinois dentists in convention assembled, "ShH all dead teeth be removed? s Political Upheaval in New Mexico. From the Santa Fe New Mexican. Editor New -Mexican: Being that ver since I had the use of reason, it has pleased me to associate myself with persons who, in my conception, are my best friends, num ber of those who are members of some so ciety, or political party;' I have come to realize.'during the 12 years that I-have lived in the county of Santa Fe and the 85 years of. my life, that my best-friends are to be found in the republican party, and it would be absurd for me to remain any longer In the democratic ranks, wherein I -have been acting as a member ever since I deposited my first ballot. Now, therefore, lv the undersigned, from henceforth, -declar myself to be a republican, and with the same loyalty that I served the vdemocratic party, notwithstanding that my services were never recognized !by the leaders' of the said democratic party, and will be a soldier ready to serve, at all times, in the ranks of the republican party in order to help combat the democratic hordes, that without any doubCare now getting ready for the political battle which will take place next November. In making my political change, I make it out of my spontaneous and voluntary will, without any. interest or promises' from any member of the repub lican party, and without any personal af front against any of my democratic friends. Felipe Salazar. Soliloquized the kaiser, "Back to the saw buck! There'll be no restoration tonight." The Rutilant Prof. Sir: Said the distinguised professor (name and department deleted, as he is connected with a great university, one of the fundamental doctrines of which is immersion), "Yes, I will have a little water in mine." "You will ob serve," said I, "that the sergeant of marines is taking his straight." "Oh, he is an ultra-marine," parried the d. p., "not an aqua-marine." An uplift and silence, followed by several long drawn "Ahhhhh's." Guillaume Lejeune. STUDIES IN GREATNESS. I. She would not stoop to lift a pin, She never learned to toil or -spin, But Cleopatra, anyhow. Lives only by her needle now. II. William-"would Alexander be. But now in Gordion knots you see; This fallen lord of overloads Can only saw against his cords. III. ' I loved Don Woodrow when advancing Against the windmills with Squire Lansing Alas! how little he brought back! -Sancho at least received the sack. Pan. It looks as if General Wood had captured South Dakota. We're willing he should have it, and we'll throw in North Dakota for good measure. - The Gnomes Are Stirring Then. TYom the .New Glasgow (N. S.) Enterprise. An old miner who has had 25 years' ex perience underground says that he has ob served one peculiar fact, that between 12 -and 2 o'clock at night, "if there is a loose stone or a bit of earth in ha mine, it is sure to fall. Abou-this time everything be gins to stir; and immediately after 12, al though the mine has been as still as a tomb before, particles of rock and dirt come tumbling" down; and if there is a caving piece of ground in the mine it is sure. to give way after midnight, t ' As she is wrote in London: "Permanent hair waves, with which no lady should' be with out." " "No reduction . of Income Tax Till After 9122." Richmond Independent. .That looks like a good guess Relatives Are So. Trying. From the rBlanchard (la.) Herald. Wilfred Orr was down from Omaha over Sunday to visit his cousin, Mrs. Margaret Searcy. Mrs. Searcy is slowly recovering. A fool and his Liberty bond are soon parted. B. L. T. 7W The Day We Celebrat Martin I. Brown, assistant chief clerk, B. & M. fmghtTiouse, born 1885. Maj. Gen.- Adolphus W. .Greely. LV S. A.," retired, best remembered for bis trip of ex ploration to the far north, born at Ncwbury port, Mass., 76 years ago. Maj. Gen. William S. Graves, U. S. A., com mander of the American military expedition in Siberia,-born in Texas 55 years ago. Miller J. Huggins, manager of the New York American league base ball teamf born in Cin cinnati 40 years ago. " Thirty Years Ago In Omaha. The ninth . commencement exercises of the Omaha Medical college were held at the Y. M. C A. hall. There were five graduates. Dr. S. P. Leisenring, president of the board of trustees, conferred the degrees. A heavy hailstorm visited Omaha, lasting for about twenty,minutes and followed by rain and snow. - Mr, Loran Clajk, of Albionvwas elected president -of the state association of lumber dealers in session here, at which over one hun dred lumber, yards were represented. The as sociation declined an, invitation to join the Northwestern Lumbermen's association or ganized at Minneapolis shortly efore. The German Savings bank was incorporated with a capital of $500,000. Frederick Metz was elected president. . ' . Evans and Hoey wefe at the Boyd putting on their popular entertainment, "The Parlor Match." , . - SOME SURGICAL WONDERS. t "Some four or five years ago," A. S K. writes: v"i read something about Dr. Alexis Carrel's conducting anexperiment which involved taking tho vitals out of a cat or chicken and keeping them live or some days or weeks, theorgans functioning In tlie normal way. "Will you .tell me something about the experiment?" In reply When surgery was com paratively young, John Hunter, the greatest of his, day, drew a tooth from a man and kept it alive -by planting it in a rooster's comb until he wished to use it. The idea of planting tissues from one animal into the body of another is, therefore, not new. . Tuflier, Lexar, Murphy and many cfthers did a great deal of transplan tation of tissues before Carrel's day. However, Carrel's contributions to the subject were so scientific that he was awarded a Nobelrize, and this served to advertise the subject wide ly, more widely than it ever lias rtf.en arivol-Hnafl in its rilstnrv ,Tr,nt when Voronoft implanted so-calledT interstitial glands and Lydston s friends adopted the same publicity to methods to prove that Lydston had been doing the same operation for 'many years, ' The transplantation of simple tis sues from one animal to a different animal of, the same species ,1s fre quently done with success. Among lllustratons that can be cited are transfusion of blood, skin grafting, bone grafting, grafting of tendons and ligaments. Cancers have been removed fron lower animals, kept cold ahd fresh, and then success fully planted in other animals, pro ducing cancers. . These facts having been established, it was hoped that organ transplanta tion 1 and even limb transplantation might be done effectively. Alexis Thomson, writing in the Edinburgh Medical Journal, says our hopes for the successful use.'of cold storage organs have not mater ialized. Short stretches of blood ves sels have been successfully trans planted by Murphy and others.. The transplantation of nerves has not been a sifcsess. The kidneys have been transplanted fromone part: to another part of the ijsdy of the same animal, sewing the blood ves sels together, but leaving the nerves severed. s This operation has succeeded temporarily, but never permanently, when the kidney was placed in an animal to which it did not belong. The kidney has been planted in the neck with temporary success. from one part ot the body to anoth er in the same individual or to an other of the same species m some what unsuccessful. Transplant of mora complex organs is unsuc cessful. - FROM HERE AND THERE. Prior to the war American pork and beef did not find a ready mar ket In Germany. The enormous shipments to that country slnoe Au gust comprise practically- every ar ticle in the export schedule of meat and dairy products, the gretet de mand being for bacon, lard, fresh beef and hams and shoulders, In the order named. 1 The Punjab is so called from two Persian words signifying "five" and "waters," alluding to the five rivers which flow through it. . Ireland was first termecX'The Em erald Isle" in a poem called "Erin," by Dr. Drennan, who lived in the lat ter half or the eighteenth century. Lobsters are very sensitive to cold and light, being acoustomed to the comparatively steady temperature and the obscure light ot the ocean bottom. Exposure .to strong sun light is soon fatal to them. Runners on skis have made a rec ord ot 72 feet a second, and in leap ing on skis more than 100 feet a sec ond is attained. Among uncivilised peoples the cus tom of shaking hands is unknown, and it always-affords them a great deal of amusement to see Wtte men engage In the practice. Cruikshank, the noted English srtlst, once offered $500 for proof of a violent crime committed by a teetotaler. To the day of his death the money was never claimed. In Switzerland are made clocks that do not require hands and faces. The tlmepK'co- merely stands in the hall, and one presses a button, which, by means of the phonographic inter nal arrangements, calls out the time. ' Slang Is by no means of modern date, being well known in the classic Sges. of Greece and Rome. Numer ous examples occur In the writings of Martial, Aristophanes, Terence and others. '.. v According to an ancient Irish su perstition a vicious horse could b lamoif hv u-hUnarlnor th ereed in iu riKiu rir r ruuii uu in iu, ici ear on Wednesday till It was cured which was merely a matter ot tlm. unless it had' been born at Whit suntide, -in which case it was in qurable. - . MARCH. Now March to olniont pant , ' With lto.ounahlrto ond iludowi and chUl) blaot! Ao tho brot'co owoep o'er hill ond doll, , Of better thlnft coming they loom to toll, Tho (rou ond buds oil seem to -hear And oomo right along our heart" to coerr They vie with eai'h oilier who first will bi Xp oomo out in new dree you see. Then thnre'a the robin, sweet heralder ot nrlnir. Kwith his hlpplty hop ond effort to slnav Tenuis or Hon wonaormi love una cart For plants and birds everywhere. March seems severe yet - whispers at spring. For alonir with Its shadows Joy does brln Just b quiet and listen and you will Ilea. Sweet messages of lee and care my dear, MRS. II. 8. U1LTNER. Oakland, la. T ji ii. 1 ... 1 1 ' 1 ".. . ' V ... . - ; . ' ll The thyroid and the parathyroids have been transplanted with tempor ary success. In time the organs atrophy. The ovarifes have been suc cessfully transplanted. Some of the earlier work in organ transplanta tion was that done by Tuffier and that by Lexar on transplantation of ovaries. ' , ' Guthrie transplanted the ovaries of a guinea pig and the animal bred thereafter. Morris claimed to have had at like result with a human be ing, though neither experiment has been repeated with success.- G. P. Lydston, and V. D. Lespinasse and several others following Lydston's suggestion have implanted intersti tial glands, the operation by Voro noft which has been so much dis cussed in the newspapers recently. This organ when transplanted re mains alive for a certain time, but eventually (disappears. None of the chest organs or ab dominal organs except the kidney have ever been successfully trans planted. Efforts to' transplant sev ered limbs have been made. These efforts have not succeeded. The high est degree to success is obtained in transplanting simple tissues from one part of tho body to another. When simple' tissues from one per son are planted in another the trans plants are apt to live provided the tissues are fresh and the operation is properly done. Transplantation1 even of simple tissues taken from one animal to another of a different species is generally a failure. Transplantation of ductless glands reme The revolutionary device which makes the sounding-board of the Mason Gr-' Hamlin ppof against deterioration is called the"Tension Resonator! No other rnano has it, which is why rtoro is as long-Hved as the Mason rV Hamlin. Other Weil-Known Pianos' of lesser price but wonderful values , arc the Kranich & Bach, Vose & Sons, Sohrner, Kimball,-Brambach, Busk & Lane, Cable-Nelson and Hospe Pianos. - . . . i Almost your own terms, but at our low est cash-prices, as ev ery piano is pldinly tagged. - ' 1513 DougUa Street THE ART AND MUSIC STORE Have you seen the Fety-Leaf Clover Blossom new oa sale? Raincoats, "7 Tan Jtexutre, cut full, "48-inch, length, very, spe cial , ' $7 8. - 2 I If ll CLOTHING COMPACT . - Leatherette Coats, $10 Brown and gray, sports wear and auto coats; guaranteed waterproof. Satur day feature price. Extraordinary Values for Saturday and Monday Men's and Young Men's Ul-T-S,,. $35 to $40 $TCb SUITS . ' Men, here's a lot of mighty clever suits, and the fellow ' who hesitates about selecting his new Easter suit from this great lot is 'missing a rare opportunity for unsual savings. All the newest weaves, colors and models, high-waisted effects, 3ingle or double-breasted, one, two and three-button hole. $45 to $50 . $Cb SUITS At $39 these are the greatest suit values shown in Omaha for many a day. A big special assortment of smart new form fitting models, single and double-breasted, in plain colors and fancy mixtures. You'll like this assortment of suits and you'll appreciate the wonderful values. - Get that New Pair of Trousers Saturday And at the Palace you buy those famous Dutchess Trousers, a fully guaranteed pants. A new pair free if they do not wear. Right now we show a wonderfully complete assortment, and your odd coat and , vest can be matched very satisfactorily. , - v - $4.98 $5.98 $6.98' . Boys Suits -Specials for Saturday Saturday we take great pleasure in showing to the parents of Omaha boys what we know to.be the greatest boys' suit values ever v ' shown in Omaha. These suits are made from absolutely all-wool fab rics, and the styles are the sort to delight any youngster. 2 Pant Suits And thev are wonders for service. Built right, styled right and the fabrics are un usually smart looking; sizes 6 18 years. Choice Saturday, only , laDrics are un- u at $ J0.98 Ju-enije Suits v For the little tots from 3 to 8 years" here is a lot of mighty clever suits that will please the parents and delight the wearer. tf i Qg Plenty of good styles and lively p40 patterns - All Wool Suits : Sturdy all-wool suits in sizes 6 to 18 years, - Norfolk -and double-breasted models,' plain and novelty mixtures. This is one frf AO of the most remarkable suit offers 'iB ,jO of the new season.. Blue Serge Suits A smart apeparing blue serge suit for con- , firmation and communion wear,. all sizes from 6 to 18 years; absolutely all- C1AQQ wool, fast color serge, Norfolk plU0 and double-breasted models. . . . '" V EMERGENCY GASOLENE CANS 'trade ia rtJ "BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOlf Don't Walk When You Can Ride! w'ny walk' a tnile to phone for some gas and then wait two hours before it reaches you? v V Carry a "NICHOLAS EMERGENCY CAN" in your car all the time. It will last for years. . ' Fill it up and keep it filled. It is part of your equipment. For Your Convenience At All Our Stations. 1 gallon size', 20c; gallon size, 15c. Two good gasolenes: BLITZEN (Export Tet) . . . . . . . 30c VULCAN (Dry Test) . . ........... 27c L. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO. president Locomotive ' - and Auto Oils Keystone j f'The Best Oils We Know" Our Electric Pump Insure Accuracy Your Protection and Ours. uiWrWwtw.itWrwsi' ?i a